The Covington news. (Covington, Ga.) 1908-current, October 18, 1911, Page PAGE SIX, Image 10
PACE SIX APPRENTICES IN HARD TEST Medical Examination for All Entering Trade Schools of Vienna—All. irents Will Be Cured. Vienna.—Throhgh the efforts of the Vienna Merchants’ association, a med¬ ical examination of all apprentices en¬ tering the trade schools will be in¬ stituted. The measure is expected to exercise a wide reaching effect on the health of the community, especially in aiding to prevent the spread of tuber¬ culosis, which is peculiarly prevalent in the Austrian capital. It is thought that the examination will reveal many latent physical de¬ fects and ailments of which the boys themselves, have no suspicion, such as tuberculosis, weak sight, deafness, hernia, flat feet, varicose veins and heart troubles. Action will not stop with the mere discovery of an ailment, but means will be adopted to cure or relieve it, thereby increasing the work¬ ing value of the apprentice and bene flting both himself and his employer. Spectacles, trusses, special shoes and other surgical aids will be provided Doctors believe that at least 10 per cent, of all apprentices are suffering from some physical weakness. One Important effect of the examination will be the eventual exclusion of boys from unsuitable commercial life. There will also be a superintendence of weak individuals who may later de¬ velop tuberculosis and increase the alarming number of consumptives al¬ ready found in the ranks of commer¬ cial workers. While they will not be actually prohibited from engaging in trade pursuits, it is probable that con¬ sumptives will be urged in their own interest to engage in open air occupa¬ tions or to enter a sanitarium for treatment. The school principals will be advised of the results of the med¬ ical examinations and will be instruct¬ ed to supervise the weak pupils and In case of necessity to send them to a doctor for further examination. CREATES NEW ANIMAL LIFE Prof. Prizbram Makes Lizards Produce Young Without Eggs and Changes Colors. Vienna.—Prof. Prizbram’s experi¬ ments in artificially creating new spe¬ cies of animal life are bound to at¬ tract the deep Interest of scientists all over the world. At the Biological Institute here Priz¬ bram has made certain lizards produce living young instead of laying eggs. He has established the possibility of changing, on a preconceived plan, the color of animals, the form of the wings of insects very low in the scale, and the structure of their skin. He has produced these changes by apply ing high temperatures to the crea tures he experimented on, and their young have inherited these changes. Prof. Poch, the great biologist and ethnologist, says in an interview, that there are now no fixed rigid forms of animal life; man can change them in a methodical, scientific way, thus open¬ ing vast possibilities of improving and ennobling the human race. The pioneers in the wonderful work are Prof. Loeb of the University of California and Luther Burbank, and, whore they have shown the way, Prof! Prizbram has been diligently following with wonderful success. FIVE-YEAR-OLD WEIGHS 140 Colorado Tot is Not a Patent Food Baby, Either, She Insists— Can’t Get Enough to Eat. Denver, Colo.—Baby Vera Mary Jones walked, or rather waddled, proudly through the streets of Den¬ ver on a shopping trip with her mother. Vera Mary was five years old Au¬ gust 4, and her weight Is 140 pounds. Vera is happy and rosy cheeked and carries her tremendous weight with apparent pride. “Are you a patent food baby?” asked one of the curious in the Crowd that had gathered at Sixteenth and Cham¬ pa streets, to see the child wonder. “No, I aren't a patent food baby, l’se just all-kinds of a food baby,” she lisped, and her mother laughed at the child’s answer and said that she surely was an “all kinds of a food baby.” “Why, I simply can’t give that child enough to eat,” she said. “Today for luncheon she ate a big dish of mashed potatoes, two helpings of baked sal¬ mon, six slices of bread and butter, a cup of coffee and some cake, and that isn't much for Vera to eat.’ “Does she eat many eggs and drink much milk?” an onlooker ventured. “She’d drink all the milk she could get hold of, but we don’t order but a quart a day for her, and she eats lots of eggs, too.” BED BUG HALTS TELEPHONES Invade Switchboard of a Pennsylvania Town and Lines Are Tied Up_ Routed by Linemen. Hollidaysburg, Pa.—An Invasion of bed bug3 put the local telephone ex¬ change entirely out of service the oth¬ er day. Although subscribers rang vigorously, they w'ere unable to raise central. When the cause became known the town was astounded. The bed bugs had taken up their abode behind the switchboard at the centra! office, bred, waxed and prospered They had dined on the wire and elec¬ tric equipment and stopped all the afternoon chats of the subscribers After a gallon of exterminator had been used by linemen, service was re¬ sumed DIABOLICAL ATTEMPT TO WRECK PRESIDENT’S TRAIN. Thirty-Six Sticks of Dynamite Found By Bridge Watchman, Tied to Viaduct Over Which) Special Train Later Passed. SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 16.—A re¬ port recleved here today by officials of the Southern Pacific Railway com¬ pany from a section foreman of the road at Naples, California, gave de¬ tails of the discovery of thirty six sticks of dynamite under the Cairtan viaduct, twenty miles North of San¬ ta Baa - bar a, sevroal hours before Pres ident Taft’s special train passed over tiie bridge enroute to Los Angeles this morning. The dynamite was found after the watchman engaged in a revolver battle with two men" who escaped. The dynamite was discovered at two o’clock this morning. The Presi¬ dent’s -train passed over the bridge at 5:51 o’clock. The night watchman saw two men on the bridge shortly before two o’clock. They were at the opposite end of hte 1,000 foot, span and ran when ordered to halt. The watchman hurried across the bridge, firing several shots which were returned. After the pair had escaped the watchman returned to the bridge and began an investigation. Near the cen¬ ter of the span lodged on one of t H e supports of the viaduct be found the thirty six sticks of dynamite with a ten foot fuse attached to one of the sticks. He left the find unitouche going immediately to Santa Barbara and notifying the officials. Sheriff Wines, of Santa Barbara county, went immediately to the bridge with several deputies and re¬ moved tiie dynamise. A general search, for the men is on. FOR LOSS OF HER HAIR GiRL SUES FOR $10,000. Other members of Sears Family Sue Street Railway Company. Alleging that m the street railway, accident on September 24, when an incoming Grant Park car was thrown from its trucks at th osliarp curve at Hill street, her hair was torn from its roots and that she was otherwise seriously injured, Mrrs. Luta Sears has filed suit for $10,000 against the Georgia Railway and Electric -Compa¬ ny. Miss Norine Sears, Marie Sears an J. W. Sears join in the petition for damages, the total amount of which is $30,000. Miss Norine Sears, a school teach¬ er, sues for $10,00, alleging painful and permanent injuries. Marie Sears a minor, sues for $5,000, and J. W. Sears, the husband of Mrs. Luta Sear sues for $3,000 on account of the in¬ juries to his wife and $2,000 for the injuries received by his daughter. Reuben R. Arnold represents the plaintiffs. The accident in which the petition¬ ers were injured was av ery unusual one, the body of the car being throw from the trucks whne the car struck a sharp curve at Hill street. There were many people on board, but no one was killed.—Atlanta Constitution Importance of Typewriter. The typewriter rankB as one of the most Important Inventions of the last half a century in the promotion of business and the spread of intelli¬ gence. Like the telephone, sewing machine, automobile, etc., its loss would cause the world to slow down a bit. As He Understood It. A Chinese boy, who was learning English, came across the passage in his Testament, “We have piped unto you, and ye have not danced," ren¬ dered it thus: "We have toot, toot to you. what the matter you no Jump.” Everything Put Right. “Father, the duke has proposed, and we want to be married immediately.” “All right. Here’s a check for your million. Tell the duke to step in and I’ll give him a dollar to get the li¬ cense.”—Louisville Courier-Journal. Rule for Success. Having begun in one line, resolve to fight it out on that line, to lead in It; adopt every improvement, have the best machinery, and know the most about it.—Andrew Carnegie. Vast Wealth Wasted. According to the American Machin¬ ist, it has been estimated that there Is lost annually more than a million and a half barrels of oil by the burn¬ ing of oil wells. Rich Woods Put to Base Uses. Rosewood and mahogany are so plentiful In Mexico that some of the copper mines there are timbered with rosewood, while mahogany is used as fuel for the engines. Obvious. The man who gets much satisfaction out of the fact that lie has a high, aristocratic instep never worries about the height vf his brow. Trained to Use Both Hands. The children of Japan are trained as ambidexters, using both bands equally well. THE COVINGTON NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1911. WHY CHILDREN TELL STORIES Egotism and Vanity Are Chief Causes of Falsehoods and Habit Is Difficult One to Cure. Boston.—How lying children can be cured and the habit prevented was told by Rev. Robert Swickerath, S. J., professor of pedagogy in Holy Cross college, in one of ten lectures he de¬ livered before the Catholic teachers’ institute which closed recently at Bos¬ ton- college. ‘‘Liars must not be taken either too lightly or too seriously,” he said, “but every means must be taken by educa¬ tors to cure them.” Prevention he regards as more im¬ portant than the actual curing, yet In every case lying will crop out from time to time, requiring the utmost care, prudence, vigilance and tact of the best teachers. Said he: “Lying should .above all, be pre¬ vented. Much can be prevented by prudence and tact and by systematic treatment of children. If a child has caused any disturbance and the teach¬ er, especially one who Is known to Inflict invariable severe punishments, angrily charges him with the offense, the child will usually deny the- deed in sheer excitement. One lie leads to another. “A teacher as a rule should not Immediately Insist on arguing the case but await a better opportunity, until the child has calmed down. A teacher who is generally sympathetic, patient, Judicious in inquiries, reas¬ onable In punishment, will seldom be told a lie. “It Is much more difficult to assign general remedies for the cure of the habit of Jylng. Here, as In other cases, a specific remedy Is needed. It Is Imoprtant to know that the lies are different according to the source from which they flow. “The most common of all lies is that arising from sheer egotism. Lies are used to shield one from censure and punishment as the umbrella Is employed to protect one from rain and hail. Sometimes the source Is T anity; children boast at times even d wickedness, to appear bold before comrades. “It is certain that some given to lying, when once thoroughly aware of the disgracefulness of this habit, oon celved such a horror against it that they became disgusted with every¬ thing dishonest and developed charac¬ ters known for uprightness and hon¬ esty.” HAREMS ARE FEW IN TURKEY Mistaken Idea That Each Husband Takes Advantage of Plural Mar¬ riages—Polygamy Is Rare. Constantinople.—There exists in Europe and Amerlck a mistaken no¬ tion that almost every married Turk has several wives, that he is at lib¬ erty to marry as many times as he likes, and that It is for him Just as eaBy to divorce a wife as to change an overcoat. Polygamy In Turkey Is the exception, and not the rule, the majority of the Osmanlis having but one wife. In the metropolis Itself polygamy does not amount to five per cent It Is rarely met with In other big centers of the Ottoman em¬ pire, save among the richest and most powerful functionaries, and even then plurality of wives Is an excep¬ tion. The legal number of wives is four. Only the padtshah and caliph Is al¬ lowed to have more, being a person beyond and above limitations and re¬ strictions of that kind. The prophet Mohammed had seven wives, and All, the fourth In the succession of the caliphate, had nine. One of the chief causes of the plu¬ rality of wives being so rare among the Turks Is that, while the prophet and the Koran permit the faithful worshipers of Islam to marry four times, they also provide Btrlct Injunc¬ tions of a religious and ethical na¬ ture, which every Mussulman has to adhere to If he doesn’t wont to be excommunicated from the fold of orthodox Islamlsm. Thus, a Turk who is desirous of contracting a sec¬ ond marriage is bound by an explicit law to provide for his new life com¬ panion a separate dwelling place, in every respect similar to that of his first wife, as well as an equal num¬ ber of slaves and servants. FAMOUS OLD HOTEL IS SOLD Star and Garter of Georgian Days No Longer Paying Venture—Be Con¬ verted Into Modern Inn. London.—The famous old Star and Garter hotel at Richmond, where lords and ladies of the olden times danced and made merry, was sold a few days ago for $90,000. This hotel was the magnet of fash¬ ion from the time that Lady Betty, guided to it by her link boys, met there the beaux of Georgian days, un¬ til the coming of the automobile made the distance between It and London so short that persons went to hotels fur¬ ther afield and forced the proprietors to close the doors. The new purchasers, however, be¬ lieve that, converting It Into a modern hotel, they will be able to renew Its prosperity by catering to those who wish to be near enough to London to reach the city In a short time and yet be “far from the madding crowd.” 8ees Record Wheat Crop. Minenapolis, Minn.—E. J. Welser, a Fargo banker, sent to Frank E. Hol¬ ton, a Minneapolis banker, an esti¬ mate of the crop of North Dakota, In which he places the wheat production at 80,000,000 bushels, the greatest In the history of the Btate, with the ex¬ ception of the crop of 190*. The Time the Place and the SHOE The TIME to buy your fall shoes is now because the se I lection is best. The PLACE to buy your shoes is at Mobley's because \u the only place in town where you can buy WALK OYER Shoes. The SHOE to buy is the AVALR-OVER Shoe because it’ s still the best “all round” shoe made. This has been one of the best seasons we have ever exper¬ ienced up to this date, especially in made to measure suits, Our business in this line grows steadily. Ask some of customers why this is true. Come in and look over our line of samples and you will see that we can please you in any style and price. E. H. Mobley Mens Department Two Big Stores Covington ■ ■ciiiim iiiii Fish Aro Rushing Down Bear River In Idaho to the Great 8alt Lake— Mud Lake Is Wiped Out. Boise, Idaho.—“Carp by the hun¬ dreds of tons aro rolling down the Bear river, fairly tumbling over each other In their hurry and swallowing every living thing In their path. This flood of fish will not stop entirely till It reaches Great Salt Lake and is pickled In the brine." This is the Interesting situation He ber Q. Hale, chief clerk of the Btate land board, left at the outlet of Mud lake In the southeastern part of Idaho Just before his return to the city from his vacation. "Bear river Is not the direct outlet of Bear lake, as many suppose,” said Mr. Hale. “Bear river flows through Mud lake and there is a Bhort stream that empties Bear lake Into Mud lake. “Some yp.rs ago the carp was In¬ troduced into Mud lake. They have multiplied with wonderful rapidity. They were not disturbed. Being a low grade fish, nobody seemed to care to catch and eat them, especially as there was an abundance of fine high grade fish In Bear lake, near by. As a result Mud lake fairly swarmed with great fat carp. “A short time ago the Telluride Power oompany undertook to straight¬ en out the channel of Bear river to give Increased power. This resulted In draining the water out of Mud lake almost entirely. In this way the fiBb were forced Into the river, and there they are now in immense quantities trying to force their way down the stream. “Of course Mud lake Is now a thing of the past. It was a very shallow lake with a mud bottom, a fine field for carp, which delights In burrowing In the mud for food. Now with the water drained off the lake bottom will be brought under cultivation or con¬ verted Into pasture land.” Water Girl In Naw Feat. New York.—Adeline Trapp, 20 years old, of Brooklyn, the little school teacher who surprised the sporting world five weeks ago when she swam from Yonkers to Forty-third street, 17 miles, accomplished a more difficult feat the other day when Bhe swam from Norfh Beach to Rob¬ bins Reef, near Livingston, Stateft Island. She covered the 22^6 miles In 5 hours 7 minutes and 30 seconds. Game Birds Plentiful. Grand Rapids, Minn.—Game Ward en Jesse Harry says game birds of all kinds will be more plentiful this fall than during the last five years. He says ducks are more plentiful, and that partridges are present In great numbers. Deer are plentiful also, and on the less frequented roads it is not unusual to Mtt five ot mix during a day’s travel TO THE LADIES We invite everybody in the city of Covington to vifit our dij store Thursday afternoon at 4 o’clock at which time we will open a five pound box of Norris Can and ask you to tample same. This candy is make of the pu r and best sugars and flavors and we place it against any can on the market Visit our store on the above date and you will bear us ( in this statement. Remember, its a Free Sample that we you to try. Brook’s Drug Store. Bell Bulletins 12—RECEIVERS OFF THE HOOK You’d be surprised to know how many telephone receivers are left off the hook every day, not only in residences, but in business offices. Sometimes it is done through care¬ lessness and often by accident. 9 An extension desk set located on a table or desk is apt to be moved into such a position that the receiver rests on a book or is displaced in some equally simple manner. In homes, children and servants are most frequently re¬ sponsible for this trouble. When a receiver is left off the hook and the operator is unable to attract the attention of the sub¬ SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY IJ AND TELEGRAPH the “howler is conn and produces a loud noise, a fails to cause the subscriber place the receiver, the telep « out of order until an employ® reach the place and put» ceiver on the hook. When your receiver is ° hook no one can call result is annoying to you, who wish to telephone )* told your telephone is are order,” and to us. So, you see, it « tant to all of us that the r . remain in pl*<» '' he “ * phone is not in use.