Newspaper Page Text
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I Newsboy Will Give
His Leg to Save
Life of'o Girl
► CHICAGO. Sept- 2«-—Will Jam Rugh. a
.'rippled newsboy, who recently volun
teered to give his useless leg that its
eUn might be grafted to save the life
of Miss Ethel Smith, will make the sac
rifice tomorrow. Rugh and Miss Smith
will lie on adjoining tables in the oper
ating room of the Gary. Ind., hospi
tal. while the young man's leg l« amputa
ted and the still living cuticle is applied
to bums on Miss Smith's body
“WELL, I AM GONE,”
CRIES DYING MAN
BIRMINGHAM. Ala . Sept. 27-A man
'believed to be R E. Sheppard, of Nash
ville. died in Convulsions In an ambulance
here Thursday night while being hur
ried to a hospital. The man had ap
peared suddenly at a rooming house on
Second avenue, and crying: "Well. I’m
gone, good-by,” had thrown himself
across a bed.
In hta pocket was a paca issued by the
Georgia and Florida railroad to R. E.
telegraph operator, from Nash
ville to Hazlehurst. Ga. He was appar
ently about thirty-two years* old. Care
* ~ fui examination gave no clue so the
cause of death.
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Cop Who Arrested
Harry Thaw Kills
Wife and Himself
(By Associated Frees.)
NEW YORK. Sept. 27.—Anthony
Debs, the policeman who arrested Harry
K. Thaw after the latter killed Stanford
White on the Madison Square Garden
roof, shot and probably mortally wound
ed his wife last night, sent bullets Into
the thighs of two small girls and then
committed suicide.
The shooting took place in front of
the Dabs home. One bullet entered
his wife's head and others struck Mary
Collins and Katherine Hawkasworth.
neighbors' children.
TO “RESCUE” WOMEN
IN NEW FIRE DRILL
(By Associated Frees.)
NEW YORK. Sept. J?.—“An experi
mental fire.*’ in a large manufacturing
building containing many tenants will
mark the observance of Are prevention
day for which Governor Dix has desig
nated Oct. 9. A Are drill will be held in
which 1.500 employes In the building
will take part. Fire engines will re
spond to an alarm and women will be
“rescued” from upper stories.
That stop the pain, give strength to the nerves, life
and ambition to the mind and body, and do it quickly,
quietly, without loss of time.
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Lexoid Building, Cleveland. Ohio.
Send No Money;
Just This Coupon
or. H. Michell OeWerth,
1 Sgg lkxoib Building. Clcvclamo, Ohio
Please send me yonr regular, full, complete three fold Lexoid
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( Bladder Trouble and Rheuniatism.
[ My name is
Post Office
; ’ St. or R. F. D State
> Fifer Writ* Name and A<ld mm Plainly
, i
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. ATLANTA. GA., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1912.
Lost All of Her Money
But Twenty-One Cents
In Game at Hairdresser's
(By Associated Frau.)
NEW YORK, Sept. 28>—Five weil dress
ed women arrested in a hair dresser's
establishment were held today in SI,OOO
bail on a charge of gambling. Detectives
who raided the place testlAed the women
had been playing poker with Albert Tre
bits, the alleged proprietor, for forty
minutes. The* other women who looked
on were also arrested, but they were
released later. t
One of the women had $563. another
slOl, while a third had lost all her
money except 21 cents. Scores of their
friends volunteered to furnish their bail.
Aged Woman Freed
LA CROSSE, Wls., Sept. 28.—Mrs.
Charles Weideman, an aged woman of
Independence, Wis.|, accused of the
murder of her seventy-one-year-old hus
band, was acquitted by a jury at White
hall today.
Weideman was found dead in the cel
lar of his home on April 9 and it was
charged that his wife struck him down.
The defense contended death was due
to a fall.
FIRST LOVE IS WRONG.
Stf S THIS EUGENIST
Eminent Scientist Says Love
at First Sight Usually
Leads to Trouble
(Special Cable to The Journal.>
LONDON, Sept. 2s.—Dr. Havelook El
lis. the eminent author of “Studies In
Sexual Psychology,” and the more re
i contly published "Task of Social Hy
giene, ” was asked to discuss from the
standpoint of the eugenist the views ex
pressed by Sir James Chrlchton-Browne
on “Love at Arst sight.”
“A first love is nearly always wrong,”
he said. “You cannot call love at Arst
sight entirely an instinct, for one does
not always know what the instincts are.
Everyone is a bundle of many instincts.
Someone may come along who satisfies
one of these instincts, and it is called
•love at first sight.' The tragedy oc
curs when, with better knowledge, it is
found that the other instincts are left
untouched and the one satisfied merely
superficial. A love is very complex,
for it is made up of many different
feelings. Herbert Spencer found nine:
1. The physical influence of sex.
2. The feeling for beauty.
$. Affection. '
4. Admiration and respect.
5. Love bf approbation.
6. Self-esteem.
7. Proprietary feeling.
8. Extension of the liberty of action
from the absence of personal barriers.
9. The exaltation of sympathies.
“People who talk about the blind and
irresistible force of passion are them
selves blind to every ordinary psycho
logical fact. Passion, when it occurs,
requires in normal persons cumulative
and prolonged forces to impart to it full
momentum. In its early stages it Is un
der the control of< many influences, in
cluding influences of reason. If it were
not so there could be no sexual selection,
nor any social organization. Roswell
Johnson says truly that while it is un
deniable that love when once established
defies rational consideration, yet we
mus remark that sexual selection pro
creeds usually through two stages, Arst
being one of the mere mutual attraction
and interest. Lt is in this stage that
the will and reason art! operative. Not
that I Would suggest that instinct be
overruled; it is usually the interference
with instinct which produces bad re
sults. Wealth, position and worldly con
venience are great barriers to love. Cer
tain people who ought not to have chil
dren get married because one or the oth
er has money. A girl who is not at
tractive in any other way is chosen for
her wealth or position. It is such un
ions, and not those inspired by the
wholesome instincts of wholesome woo
ers which lead if not to the abstract
’deterioration of the race,' at all events
in numberless cases to the abiding un
happiness of persons who choose a mate
without realizing hoW that mate is like
ly to develop, or what sort of children
may probably be expected from the
union. It is a fact that a large number
of the children of purely love matches
have been distinguished people. Among
illegitimate children are Leonardo da
Vinci, Erasmus, Boccaclo, d'Alembert
end Julie de Laspinasse. The reason
I think, is that the strong' impulses
which lead to the defiance of custom
were passed on aqd transformed into
intellect.
■lt is a common to say that
eugenics would destroy love;: ft would
Instead enlarge ths boundaries of love.
It would form a new class among
which people find their affini
ties—a« class Os healthy people, which
ought to be a large class. There is no
'opposition between engenics and lovy;
it is merely an altering of ideals, the
forming of new channels through which
lov e may flow. The play of love,
however free it may appear, is really
limited in a humber of directions. Peo
ple do not tend to fall in love with
those who are In racial respects a con
trast to themselves; they do not tend
to fall in love with foreigners; they do
not tend to be attracted to the ugly,
th e diseased, the deformed; nor do they
fall in love as a rule out of their own
class. They might be attracted, but
they would put the matter out of the
mind at once, knowing that it was im
possible. Even ‘love at first sight’ is
an instinct largely controlled by ideas.
Stendhal, the French writer, calls it a
process of crystallization. He gives
the demonstration of putting a stick in
to a solution and watching the grad
ual growth of crystals round it. Thus
even little defects in a woman's face,
he says, such as a smallpox pit, will
attract the man who loves her and
throw him into a deep reverie when
seen in another woman. It is because
he has experienced a thousand feelings,
for the most part delicious, in the
presence of that smallpox mark that
they are renewed with incredible vi
vacity on sight of this sign, even upon
the face of another woman. Stendhal
quotes a case of a man who loved a
very thin woman who was marked
,/pvitlx .smallpox. She died and some
time later he was thrown into the
company of two women, one very beau
tiful. the other marked with smallpox
and almost ugly. He married the sec
ond. If in such a case, says Stendhal,
we come to prefer and love ugliness, it
is only because in such a case ugliness
has become beauty. Love has gradual
ly crystallized the defects as well ss
the qualities.
“That love is guided by ideas. !s
proved also by the different ideals of
beauty and love-worthiness which pre
vail in various countries. Eugenics
will so guide th e ideas that new Ideals
will be formed which will instinctively
and unconsciously Influence the Im
pulses of men and women. It will do
all this the mor e surely since the eu
genic Ideal will lead men and women
to reject as partners only the men and
women who are naturally unfit—the
diseased, the abnormal, the weaklings—
and conscience will thus be on the side
of the impulse. I quite agree with Jir
James Crichton-Browne when he says
that much more precise information as
to the transmission of character is
necessary before we could venture to
exercise any extensive control over hu
man mating. Eugenics takes two
forms —positive and negative. The neg
ative would prevent the bad marriage,
and the positive promote the good, but
the first is easier than the second. W*J
do not know yet what qualities can be
transmitted nor how they mix! It is
best to trust to the people themselves
and get the new ideals instilled; then
they will love in the right direction—
if not at first sight.”
DAMAGES ASKED FOR
WOUNDING OF MARINES
(By Aiaociated Frees.)
PANAMA, Sept. 27.—A claim in con
nection with the fatal Aght between Pan
aman police and United States soldiers
and marines on July 4 was presented to
the government here yesterday by Wil
liam W. Andrews, secretary of the Amer
ican legation. The amount of pecuniary
compensation for the killing of R. W.
David, an American citizen, and the
wounding of several marines and sol
diers on that occasion has not been spe
-xa-ui Xnvastiyatinn,
COLUMBIA BODY WON’T
151 ROOSEVELT TO GOME
Chamber of Commerce De
clines to Join in Invitation of
National Corn Show
(BY STAFF CORRESPONDENT.)
COLUMBIA, S. C., Sept. 28-The Colum
bia chamber of commerce has declined
to join the National Corn exposition of
ficials in an invitation to Col. Theodore
Roosevtl to attend the national corn
show in January and make an address.
The refusal of chamber of commerce
was on the ground that South Carolina
was supporting Woodrow Wilson for
president, and an invitation to Roose
velt at this time might be considered
as lending too much aid to the “Bull
Moose” movement.
The National Corn exposition officials
were contemplating extending an invi
tation to* Colonel Roosevelt through a
personal friend of his to attend the corn
exposition and make an address. Defi
nite action on this subject had not been
determined on, but was practically set
tled and the chamber of commerce was
asked to join in the Invitation. With
visions of the “Bull Moose” which has
been threatened to invade this sttete they
promptly declined at this time to Invite
Colonel Roosevelt because they said in
substance South Carolina is for Wood
row Wilson, does not want to do any
thing which would seem to aid and abet
his rival, Colonel
It is said that the corn exposition offi
cials also consider inviting Gov. Wood
row Wilson and President Taft, but they
decline to make any statement for pub
lication on any of the matters.
Asked for a statement about the cham
ber of commerce refusing to join in the
invitation to Roosevelt, the corn exposi
tion officials said they had nothing to
say.
Mayor Gibbes, of Columbia, also declin
ed to join in the invitation to Roosevelt
in these words: “I, as mayor of the
city of Columbia, individually refuse to
sanction the invitation to Theodore
Roosevelt, because I do not believe in
giving him a political boost, when I am
of the opinion that either Wilson or Taft
is preferable to him for president. But
if a majority of council vote for me to
write a letter sanctioning the invitation
I will do so, but it will be over my most
vehement protest.”
HYGIENE CONGRESS
DISCUSSES IMMIGRANTS
(By Associated Fress.)
WASHINGTON, Sept. 27.-Problems of
emigration and of Immigration, discuss
ed by foreign and American authorities
who have studied the question first hand,
were among those of chief interest on
today’s program of the fifteenth Inter
national Congress on Hygiene and Dem
ography. •
The scientific distribution of immi
grants in the United States, both as a
social and economic necessity, and the
hygienic side of the immigration ques
tioh, were topics. Among those to
speak were Dr. M. Serrati, of the royal
Italian navy; Drs. Stich and Herxfeld,
Germany; Dr. John oCntas, Greece; Dr.
Peter H. Bryce, chief of the Canadian
immigration service, and Surgeon General
Stoner. United States public health serv
ice. Methods of pauperism, woman in
dustrial life, tenement houses, smoke
nuisances in industrial cities and child
labor were other subjects discussed.
MAY ABANDON BOAT
ASHORE OFF PENSACOLA
(By AiMciated Preu.)
PENSACOLA, Fla-, Sept. 27.—Ten
days’ work by wrecking tugs have
failed to salvage the British
Coniston, Gibraltar, for Port St. Joe;
which went aground thirty miles east of
here in a storm.
Reports state that her hull is taking
water and unless a channel can be cut
to the vessel by dredges, she will have
to be abandoned. A prize of $50,000 is
held out for the wreckers if the vessel
is floated.
Elks Have Barbecue
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
LAGRANGE, Ga., Sept. 27.—About 300
Elks were iq attendance at the annual
barbecue held in Ferrell’s grove Thurs
day afternoon by the local lodge of
Elks, and visitors were present from
West Point, Newnan. Roanoke, Hogans
ville and other nearby points. About
the same number were present with
their wives and lady friends for the re
ception 'and dance in the Elks home
Thursday night. The affair was one of
the largest in point of attendance ever
given by the local lodge.
Promote Chinese Loan
BERLIN, Sept. 28.—The placing of
$10,000,000 of a further independent
Chinese loan in Germany is being ar
ranged between the Hamburg export
firm of George Westendorf and the syn
dicate of Charles Birch Crisp, which
issued the last independent loan in Eng
land. This statement is made in a dis
patch from Hamburg today, which does
not mention the total of the new loan,
but states that it is to be guaranteed
by the receipts from railroads and
mines. »
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ASTHMA SUFFERERS
A New Home Cure That Any One Can U«e
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We especially want to send it to those appar
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This free offer is too important to neglect a
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FMBB ASTHMA COVFOW.
FRONTIER ASTHMA CO., Room 2W-C.
Niagara and Hudson St*., Buffalo. N. Y.
Send free trial of your method to:
(advt.)
PARKER
HAIR BALSAM
Wy w* Clean«c* and beaatincs the haxXL
ftigj Pron.otts « luxurUnt growth.
Mover Fails to Restore Gray
■ -OK H “ r to lu Tcuthful Color.
Prevents hair falling.
Wo and at DrwMk
SOUTH GEORGIA BOYS
WILL MARCH TO FAIR
I
Corn Clubs Will Attend South
Georgia Exposition in Regi
ment Formation
TIFTON, Ga., Sept. 28.—The Com
club boys of south Georgia will march
in column formation to the South
Georgia exposition at Tifton Saturday,
Nov. 2d, in jubilee celebration of their
victories and successes in increasing
ing acreage and yield per acre of corn
ijn the south Georgia territory.
Marshaled by Prof. G .V. Cunning
ham. the Corn club director for south
Georgia, and each boy carrying the em
blem of his victory, a corn stalk, they
will form it the Tifton chamber of
conjmerce and march to the exposition.
It will be a proud hour for a thou
sand or more boys in jthis column, a
prouder hour for their parents, who
will look on with knowledge that it
was their children who taught them
that south Georgia territory is ready
to give up several times more than
fourteen bushels per acre, which was
the average when the boys began the
campaign of education of the olper
folks.
Reaching the exposition grounds the
Corn club host will follow Professor
Cunningham to the Corn club exhibition
the big agricultural building where
five hundred or more exhibits of corn
will be on display, and where the for
ty or more prizes will be awarded the
young victors.
Each one of the boys in addition to
his stalk of corn will wear a badge of
membership presented by the exposi
tion association. Following this por
tion of the program the boys will pro
ceed to the auditorium where they will
listen to a few addresses by authori
ties of the United States agricultural
department and after that will enjoy
a frolic with the riding devices, amuse
ment features and other attractions on
the grounds. While the Boys' Corn
clubs are on the center of the stage, so
to speak, Miss Mary Cresswell, state
director for the department of the
Girls’ Canning club, surrounded by her
girls, will be the honored guests of
the occasion.
The exhibits of the Girls’ Canning
clubs adjacent to the Corn club show
will oe just as Interesting in demon
stration and advancement of the girls
of south Georgia in gardening and can
ning. These exhibits will consist of
tomatoes and a variety of other veg
etables.
Have You Got
Rheumatism?
1 Homs Treatment Made Up of the
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50,000 BOX2S FREE.
Deformity of the Hands in General
Chronic Articular Rheumatism.
For Rheumatism, Gout. Lumbago, Sciatica,
Paia in the Back, or any other form of uric
add tn the blood, a compound of Stiillngia,
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have been cuied by this simple remedy. These
Ingredients can be obtained in proper proportion,
combined in tablet form from John A. Smith,
6349 Smith BWg.. Milwaukee, Wto.. the prepa
ration being known as Gloria Tonic and 50,000
boxes are offered free to introduce it. Any
sufferer who will write Mr. Smith will receive
a box of these tablets, free for trial.
(Advertitement.)
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woman who needs it and will send me a postal card asking for it. To U|
safeguard you from the curiosity of your neighbors and immediate 111
family I will mail you this matter under plain sealed cover so that no 111
one need know what you are getting. Address
ELOISE RAE, IH3 Austen Bldg., Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111.
Let Me Send You
A Treatment of My
Catarrh Cure Free
V. E. GAUSS
I Will Tsks Any Case if Catarrh, Me Matte* •
How Christo, or What Stage it la in.
and Prove ENTIRELY AT MY
OWN EXPENSE. That « ’
it Can Be Cured
Curing Catarrh has been my busi
ness for years, and during this time
over one million people have come to
me from all over the land for treat,-
ment and advice. My method is orig
inal. I cure the disease by’ first cur
ing th e cause. Thus my combined
treatment cures where all else fails. I
can demonstrate to you in just a few
days’ time that my method is quick,
sure and complete, because it rids the
system of the poisonous germs that
cause catarrh. Send your name and
address at once to C. E. Gauss, and he -
will send you the treatment referred
to Fill out the coupon below.
. _ __ ___
FREE
This coupon is good for a pack
age of GAUSS COMBINED CA
TARRH CURE send free by mail.
Simply fill in name and address
on dotted lines below, and mail to
C. E. GAUSS, 3531 Main St.. Mar
shall. Mich.
(Adrertisemeat.)
To Women
Who Dread
Motjierhood
InfOTnurtton Hew They May Ohre Birth to
Happy, Healthy Children Absolutely With
out Fear of pain. Sent free
No woman need any long
er dread the pains of
childbirth. Di. J. H.
Dye devoted his life
to relieving the sor
rows of women. He has
proven that the pain at
childbirth need no longer
feared by woman and we ;
will gladly tell you how it may
be done absolutely free of charge. Send your
name and address to Dr. J. H. Dye Medical
Institute, 127 Lewis Block, Buffalo, N.Y. and
we will send you, postpaid, his wonderful book
which tells howto give birth to happy, healthy
children, absolutely without fear of pain, also
how to become a mother. Do not delay but
write TO-DAY.
Rheumatism
A Heme Cure Given by One Who Hid It
In the spring of 1»3 I wa* attacked by
Muscular and Inflammatory Rheumatism. I
suffered ss only those who bsve it know, for
over three years. I tried remedy <fte . r
remedy, and doctor after doctor, but such
relief as I received was only temporary.
Finally. I found a remedy that cured me
completely, and it has never returned. I
have given It to a number who were terribly
afflicted and even bedridden with Rheuma
tism. and It effected a eure in every case.
I want every sufferer from any form of
rheumatic trouble to try this marvelous heal
ing power. Don’t semi a cent; rim ply maU
your name and address ami I will send it
free to try. If. after you have used U and
It has poven itself to be that long-looked-for
mean* of curing yonr Rheumatism, you may
send the price of it, one dollar, but, under
stand. I do not want your money unless you
sre perfectly sstisfled to seed it. Isn’t that
fair? Why suffer any longer when poeltlve
relief Is thus offered you free? Don’t delay.
Write today.
Mary H. Jackson. No. 118 Alhambra Bldg.,
Syracuse, N. Y.