Dawn Vol.01 No.03c
Dawn Vol.01 No.03c
Dawn Vol.01 No.03c
JANUARY, 1911.
TEN CENTS.
If You Are Interested
5 SPIRITS
and the Destruction of San Francisco
6 PARADISE
Where Everything is Perfect.
DR- J. BALL
915 Van Ness Avenue, San Francisco
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THE MEDIATOR
A Magazine of Industrial Economy
Is a vigorous, sane, and h elp ful p ub licatio n fo r w o rk ers and
th in k ers. I t u rg es a com m on view p o in t upon em ployers and
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' D reier, E lb e rt H u b b ard , Don C am eron S hafer, C. B. B a rtle tt, and
A. G. W illiam s are a few of its c o n trib u to rs.
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J
FATHERHOOD.
By Florinda Twichell.
After all that may be said on the subject of “Motherhood,”
we can only hope to bring society up to the standard of ideals,
that perhaps already exist, for, somehow, the powers that are
supposed to control these matters have fixed a high standard for
woman in her relation to the home and the sacred duties of moth
erhood. Rut how about Fatherhood?
We may bitterly deplore the lack of a sense of responsibility
in many fathers, yet is there not some cause for the difference
in the feelings of men and women toward their offspring?
The little boy often shows a great love for dolls when he is
very young. So far as I have noticed quite as much as girls do.
but people say, “Give the boy a hammer and nails, or a toy horse
and cart, and the girl her dolls.”
I have known several boys, who as babies learned to love
their pillows, and were never willing to go to sleep without a cer
tain pillow, which to them was their baby. There was a kind of
protective love, which they seemed to feel for these pillows, or
rag doll, which ought to have been cultivated.
The thought that the boy is some time to be a father is not
less important than the possibility of motherhood. If the power
of reproduction were only held sacred, what a transforming in
fluence it would have on the lives of young men!
While the husband, if he is anything of a man, looks for
ward with tender affection to the advent of a child in his home,
the unmarried man has little feeling of regard for the child to be
born out of the bonds of wedlock, of whose being he is the author.
It may mean inconvenience, or possible disgrace, but the thought
that his own flesh and blood will be born in shame, and bear the
reproach of the world, seems to give a man little trouble.
It is all wrong. Society has been wrong for ages. The laws
are wrong. The institution of slavery fostered this inequality of
responsibility. The father saw his own offspring born into a
condition of servitude, yet he felt no responsibility, other than he
felt for his prosperity in general.
The system of social license, which young men consider their
privilege, is little better today, in some respects worse, than the
license of the slaveholders, years ago.
FATHESHOOD. 11
abounding joy in living, and it puts far off the fear of death, as
the sun of the morning shows no sign of the coming night. The
healthy baby is not a crying baby, and the healthy man does not
whine.
Health stoops to no small quarrels. Though it is ready for a
square fight, for one’s rights. Nine-tenths of all the crimes are the
creatures of ill health. Health and virtue seem to go hand in
hand.
Teach the boy that next to character he should prize his
health and preserve it. There may be great sport in football or
an aeroplane. But a broken leg is a poor old thing on which to
hobble through fifty years as the price of two hours’ fun.
There is no language to express the execration which the
grown man whispers to himself thousands of times for the fingers
he lost in some boyish folly.
Nor will the excesses of youth ever fully be repaired. Just
so much health is gone forever.—S. F. Bulletin.
GAVE IT TO HIS UNCLE.
"Doctor," said the young man with the jingling pockets,
"I have come to thank you for your valuable medicine.”
"So it helped you, did it?" replied the doctor smiling. “I
am glad of it.”
The young man nodded.
"It helped me wonderfully," he said.
“And how many bottles did you take?” inquired the medico.
“Oh, I didn’t take any of it!” replied young fur coat. “But
my uncle took one bottle of it, and now I am his sole heir.”
—Answers.
SOME ADVICE.
When you can’t jest see the light,
When things ain’t a-goin’ right,
Or the way you think they should,
Wait and see how they turn out,
Don’t go hollerin’ about,
Jest saw wood.
—New York Telegram.
DEALING W ITH THE SOCIAL EVIL.
“I can illustrate this point no better," said General Theodore
A. Bingham, formerly Police Comissioner of New York, "than by
relating Toledo’s experience. During the administration of the
late Mayor Jones, ‘Golden Rule Jones,’ a deputation of clergymen
called on Mayor Jones and told him that the city of Toledo de
manded the suppression of the social evil. Respectable people
could bear it no longer; they demanded that every woman of evil
repute be compelled to leave Toledo.
“ ‘Gentlemen,’ said Mayor Jones, seriously, ‘not one of you
loathes the social evil more than I. Not one of you would more
gladly put a stop to the whole wretched business. And if you
can suggest any way on earth in which it can be done I shall be
only too thankful to work with you. You may “send these
women out”—where shall we send them? To Cleveland? To
Akron? Would that be fair? And if they remain here, are you
willing to help them earn an honest living? They have to keep
on living you know. Are you willing to befriend them, uplift
them, protect them? I will take one of them to my home. Will
each of you ?’
“Of course they were not willing, not a man of them. Then,
after a lot of discussion and hot words that got nowhere, Mayor
Jones said:
" ‘Gentlemen, I cannot drive these women out of town; I
cannot suppress this evil in Toledo. But I can segregate and con
trol it,’ and he did.
“There is no such thing in Toledo as a white slave. The po
lice would not permit it. Any woman in the district knows that
as long as she obeys the police rules she may claim police
protection. There is no such thing as police graft in Toledo.
This is possible only because they have a thoroughly efficient,
honest and intelligent Chief of Police, and his work is backed up
by an absolutely honest, sincere and intelligent Mayor, Brand
Whitlock.
Cleveland is another Ohio city which has had a police chief
brave enough to acknowledge the fact that there is such a thing
as a social evil. Chief Kohler, backed by Tom Johnson when he
was Mayor, dealt with the matter precisely as Mayor Jones dealt
with it and as Mayor Whitlock in Toledo continues to deal with
it. They have their redlight district in Cleveland, but they have
DEALING WITH THE SOCIAL EVIL. 15
ASTRO-BICCHEMISTRY
T hin signifies a know ledge th at the w hole race mnat soon
know . And w hy? B ecause su ffering h um anity is liftin g its voice
fo r som ething m ore real than d ying sy stem s of drugs. J u s t 2c.
stam p w ill b rin g m y circ u la rs to you, and th e ir con tents w ill s a tis
fy fa ir m inds th is is no fake, fad o r creed. On the o th er hand, I
p ositively claim th ere are 12 m in erals know n as 12 salts of the
e arth and air, th a t w ill cure all m ental and physical ills. A ddress
A. J. STRAUGHAN, 820 Andefcson St., Pittsburg, Pa.
Send B irth Date for Free Birth Card.
TO A SKELETON.
Behold that ruin! 'Twas a skull
Onee of the Ethereal Spirit full.
This narrow cell was L ife’s retreat,
This space was thought’s mysterious seat.
What beauteous visions filled this spot!
What dreams of pleasure long forgot!
Nor hope, nor joy, nor love, nor fear.
Have left one trace of record here.
Beneath this mouldering canopy :
Once shone the bright and busy eye;
But start not at the dismal void—
If social love that eye employed, :
If with no lawless fire it gleamed,
But through the dews of kindness beamed.
That eye shall be forever bright
When stars and sun are sunk in night.
Within this hollow cavern hung
The ready, swift and tuneful tongue;
If falsehood’s honey it disdained
And when it could not praise, was chained;
If bold in Virtue’s cause it spoke,
Vet gentle concord never broke—
This silent tongue shall plead for thee
When time unveils Eternity.
Say, did these fingers delve the mine?
Or with the envied rubies shine?
To hew the rock or wear the gem :
Can little now avail to them.
But if the page of truth they sought.
Or comfort to the mourner brought,
These hands a richer meed shall claim
Than all that wait on wealth or fame. :
Avails it whether bare or shod
These feet the paths of duty trod?
if from the bowers of Ease they fled,
To seek Affliction’s humble shed; '
If Grandeur’s guilty bribe they spurned.
And home to Virtue’s cot returned,
These feet with Angel’s wings shall vie
And tread the palace of the sky.
—Unidentified.
SHAKESPEARE’S GHOSTS.
All Shakespeare's ghosts had met with violent deaths.
These are almost the only spirits who have a motive sufficiently
strong to hold them near to the earth. When Banquo was
being murdered he knew that Macbeth was the instigator of
the crime. Hence, his exclamation to his son: “O, treachery!
Fly, good Fleance, fly! thou may’st revenge.” And it was the
strength of this impression of his former friend’s treachery
which brought his new-born spirit into Macbeth’s presence,
with the twenty mortal gashes on his head, which had caused
his death.
The ghost of Hamlet’s father was imbued with the alto
gether unworthy motive of revenge on his brother and the
queen. Caesar’s ghost was naturally enough concerned with the
downfall of Brutus and the triumph of his own political friends.
All the ghosts which appeared to Richard III were interested
in his overthrow and in the triumph of Richmond, independently
of their own personal wrongs.
The visitations of ghosts are like the proverbial angel’s
visits, few and far between. Banquo’s ghost was really an ap
parition ; and these are of daily occurence. When a man meets
with a sudden and violent death his spirit will immediately visit
the person he was most strongly attached to. The spirit of a
man killed in an accident and having no strong affection for any
particular person, will stay around the scene of the accident
till he can pull himself together and gain control of his new
found psychic faculties. In the play of Romeo and Juliet, after
having tried in vain to avoid a quarrel with Tybalt, who had
just killed Mercutio, Romeo says, “Now, Tybalt, Mercutio’s
soul is but a little way above our heads, and thou or I must
keep him company.” Romeo had no doubt of the soul’s exist
ence after the death of the body. Neither had Hamlet. For
when Horatio tried to prevent Hamlet following the ghost, he
says: “Why, what should be the fear, I do not set my life at a
pin’s fee, and for my soul, what can it do to that, being a thing
immortal as itself?” Again, King John says: “Within this
wall of flesh there is a soul.” It is evident that to Shakespeare
the soul was a distinct entity; and that at death the soul left the
body with all the attributes and functions of life intact. And the
play of Hamlet clearly shows that if a spirit stays among the
18 THE DAWN.
scenes of its former life it is actuated by the same selfish and
unworthy motives that make human life in the aggregate appear
so sordid and unlovable. Hamlet’s glowing tribute to his father
may have fitted him physically; but his ghost never manifested
any such moral qualities as the eulogium calls for. As a matter
of fact, a ghost can never be good, in the best sense of the word.
There is a common saying that all is fair in love and war. But
it is not. No doubt Caesar justified himself under the circum
stances, in visiting Brutus. But a ghost always has the cards
stacked and the dice loaded in his own favor. He always has his
adversary at a disadvantage. He waits till he has got him at the
brink of a precipice and then he appears and tells him that he
has got him where he wants him and pushes him over. This is
not fair, even if it is justifiable, and if we are high spirited enough
the best we can do is to follow the example of Brutus, who says:
“Our enemies have beat us to the p it; it is more worthy to leap in
ourselves, than tarry till they push us.”
Have thy tools ready, God will find thee work.—Charles Kings
ley.
DOCTOR FELL.
I do not love you, Doctor Fell; the reason why, I’ll briefly
tell:
The doctor of the olden days had kindly words and pleasant
ways: and though his pills were on the bum, and sent folks off
to Kingdom Come, and though he liked to swell the hosts of
skeletons and sheeted ghosts, it never was his foolish plan to use
a saw on every man. Unlike the modern maniacs, who carve their
patients with an axe, he dealt out calomel or nux, and soaked us
for a pair of bucks, and if he killed us—good old soul! he left us
to be planted whole.
When I am sickly and unstrung, you ask me to unfurl my
tongue; you feel my pulse and prod my back, and say my liver’s
out of whack, and then you shed your vest and coat, and push a
lantern down my throat, and say, “Great Caesar! W hat a heart!
I’ll have to take you all apart." And on your table I am laid,
while you go out to hunt a spade, to dig around among my works
and find the blamed old germ that lurks around the angles of my
frame—the way you carve me is a shame.
W hen winter comes, with frost and snow, I have a chilblain
on my toe; and when for liniment I beg, you want to amputate
my leg; and when my throat gets sore and raw, you want to cure
it with a saw; to cure my baldness, you, I ween, would run me
through a guillotine. A leg of mine is now at rest among the
doctors of the West; an Eastern doctor has in brine about eight
inches of my spine; the jaw that once adorned mv mouth is kept
in pickle in the South.
I do not love you, Doctor Fell; you carve too fluently and
well; I fear you and your edged tools; I’ll send to correspondence
schools for absent treatment when I'm ill—or hit the good old-
fashioned pill.—Walt Mason in the Emporia Gazette.
THE ONLY WAY.
Mrs. Exe : “Goodby. I’m sorry my husband isn’t in. I wish
I knew some way of keeping him at home a little more.”
Mrs. Wye: “Let him buy a motor car.”
Mrs. Exe: “Why, he’d be out more than ever then.”
Mrs. W ye: “Oh, dear, no! Mrs. Dasher tells me her hus-
bought a motor car a few days ago, and the doctor says he won't
be out for six weeks.”—Illustrated Bits.
«Q' >
BUILDERS.
:‘
All are architects of Fate,
Working in these walls of Time;
Some with massive deeds and great,
Some with ornaments of rhyme.
Nothing useless is, or low;
Each thing in its place is best;
And what seems but idle show
Strengthens and supports the rest.
For the structure that we raise,
Time is with materials filled;
Our to days and yesterdays
Are the blocks with which we build.
Truly shape and fashion these;
Leave no yawning gaps between;
Think not, because no man sees,
Such things will remain unseen.
In the elder days of Art,
Builders wrought with greatest care
Each minute and unseen part;
For the Gods see everywhere.
bet us do our work as well,
Both the unseen and the seen;
Make the house, whore gods may dwell.
Beautiful, entire, and clean.
Else our lives are incomplete,
Standing in these walls of Time,
Broken stairways, where the feet
Stumble as they seek to climb.
Build to-day, then, strong and sure,
With a firm and ample base;
And ascending and secure
Shall to-morrow find its place.
:
Thus alone can we attain
To those turrets where the eye
Sees the world as one vast plain,
And one boundless reach of sky.
—LONGFELLOW. -
JESUS OF NAZARETH.
A man of absolute honesty would be a center of terrific and
everlasting force (or magnetism) in the world. He would be an
iconoclast crushing, like a rod of steel, everything of weakness or
evil that would happen to get before him.
Was there ever such a man? I believe there was, namely,
Jesus of Nazareth. His absolute earnestness could not brook the
curves of contemporary hypocrisy, and so heroically unmasked
them; His perfect sincerity could not tolerate the serpents in the
soul of the Pharisee, and so mercilessly dragged them out into the
light; His unswerving honesty could not endure the deceptions
in high places, and so forced the final issue. This quality in Him
was heroic, His sincerity supreme.
This is the fundamental rationale of the marvelous influence
His name and spirit have exerted in the world. He attracts men
to Him. Men feel His strength and trust in it. His is the most
magnetic personality that ever lived.
But suppose, for one moment, that men should doubt His
earnestness, honesty and sincerity! Suppose that they should
suspect that He secretly possessed the very curves, compromises
and cowardlinesses which He pitied and condemned in others.
His power, attraction and marvelous magnetism would then in
stantly cease. 1he man who wishes to destroy Christianity
would simply have to prove—if he could—the insincerity of Jesus,
but it is a curious fact in history that every attempt to do this has
resulted in more firmly establishing the diametrically opposite
thesis, namely, His honesty, sincerity and unimpeachable earnest
ness. He stands there in history the one moral straight line,
“without variableness or shadow of turning.” Is it any wonder,
then, that He was a Master of Mind! and could read the minds of
men ?
(Copyrighted, 1906, by S. L. Krebs.)
TELLING COUNTERFEITS.
i
Sweet to the world, and grateful to the skies.
—POPE.
INCOMPATIBILITY.
Perchance ’twas the fault of the life that they led;
Perchance ’twas the fault of the novels they read;
Perchance ’twas a fault in themselves; I am bound not
To say: this I know—that these two creatures found not
In each other some sign they expected to find
Of a something unnamed in the heart or the mind;
And, missing it, each felt a right to complain
Of a sadness which each found no word to explain.
Whatever it was, the world noticed not it
In the light-hearted beauty, the light-hearted wit.
Still, as once with the actors in Greece, ’tis the ease,
Each must speak to the crowd with a mask on his face.
—OWEN MEREDITH.
DECEPTION.
When first the red savage call’d Man strode, a king,
Through the wilds of creation—the very first thing
That his naked intelligence taught him to feel
Was the shame of himself; and the wish to conceal
Was the first step in art. From the apron which Eve
In Eden sat down out of fig-leaves to weave,
To the furbelow’d flounce and the broad crinoline
Of my lady—you all know of course whom I mean—
This art of concealment has greatly increas’d.
A whole world lies cryptic in each human breast;
And that drama of passion as old as the hills,
Which the moral of all men in each man fulfills,
Is only reveal’d now and then to our eyes
In the newspaper files and the courts of assize.
—OWEN MEREDITH.
♦
WOUNDS.
Think not that deepest wounds
Are made with steel. ‘
A loved one’s thoughtless word
May cleave the heart;
A trust betrayed— no balm
That hurt can heal;
And stings of conscience burn
W ith endless smart.
— Progress Magazine.
OLD AGE.
Recent investigations in the world of science indicate a great
change in the opinions and views of physiologists and more ad
vanced students, as to old age as a disease in man.
Prof. Loeb, of the University of California, has attracted the
attention of the world of science by his recent researches and
studies.
The hardening of the arteries especially, and the deposit of
foreign substances in the system observable in old age is a disease
which has not been considered or treated, but is now found to re
spond to scientific treatment. The psychological side of the ques
tion is forging ahead in the world of science.
The mind, the most important factor of all, is being more
carefully studied than ever before, and the world of science of to
day is becoming convinced that a century of life, barring accident,
can be secured by every one who takes the necessary steps to
retain and enjoy it.—Extract from article read before the Medico-
Legal Society of New York, December meeting, 1907, by Clark
Bell, Esq.,LL. D., of New York.
THE PRESIDENT AND THE POSTOFFICE DEFICIENCY.
President Taft in his message to Cogress says:: “The ex
perts of the Postoffice Department show that we are furnishing
to the owners of magazines a service worth millions more than
they pay for or than justice requires.’' There is no good reason
for the Government coddling the magazine business. If a man
sends one piece of merchandise a year he only has to pay one cent
an ounce. And the merchant who sends a million ounces a year
by mail has to pay a cent for each ounce. Printed matter should
be governed by similar uniform rules. The rates should be put
as low as possible, but any one should be able to send a single
magazine at the same rate as a thousand or ten thousand can be
sent. Special privileges are always abused; and the privilege of
getting second-class rating is no exception to the rule. The rules
demand a bona fide subscription list of paid in advance subscrib
ers amounting to at least fifty per cent of the total number of
copies printed. It would be impossible to get such an extensive
list of subscribers for a magazine prior to its publication, because
people want to learn the character of a magazine before they sub-
30 THE DAWN.
scribe for it. And yet within the last few months a fiction maga
zine has been issued with second-class rating from the first num
ber. Probably a hundred thousand copies were sent out through
the News companies. But this is only one more instance of our
up-to-date way of doing things where the law is always on the
side of the one who can swear the hardest.
MEDICAL RESEARCH ROMANCE.
In the history of research are many romances. Of the discov
ery that malaria was caused by mosquitoes it is related how Dr.
Low and Dr. Sambon lived in the malarious Roman Campagna
without quinine. They retired at sunset to a mosquito proof hut,
with double doors and windows of wire net, and they did not
leave until sunrise. The fact that they remained immune while
the attendants sleeping outside contracted malaria confirmed the
belief that the mosquitoes were responsible. But how did they
carry the disease? At first it was thought to be by water. To
settle the question live mosquitoes, which had bitten infected
peasants, were sent home, and two members of the school sub
mitted to be bitten by them. They both went down with malaria.
Again, how did the mosquitoes transmit the germ? By cutting
sections of the proboscis the malarious parasite was found; it
breaks through the skin of the proboscis and is transmitted at the
time of the sting. From the first conjecture to the final proof
was a series of careful experiments, ending with the slicing of
the mosquito’s proboscis; now this is finer than fine hair. It is
necessary to stop to think. For it is easier to imagine the tri
umph of the proof than the delicate operation that produced it.—
London Standard.
THE REWARD OF THE WORKER.
Mere task work is harder to do than that which is undertaken
with enthusiasm, and this enthusiasm comes from interest in the
labor at hand. What is sheer drudgery to one man will be a de
light to another; hard work in the form of recreation is only play;
and therefore the importance of choosing one’s work wisely, so
that it be in conformity with one’s tastes, inclination and capaci
ties, is very great. But, after every effort has been made to select
a pursuit wisely, it still remains a fact that the man who has made
MISCELLANEOUS. 31
I T h e N au tilu s.
SELF-HELP THROUGH SELF KNOWLEDGE
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