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THE MACON DAILY TELEGRAPH: SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 4, 1908
JEWISH FEAST ODD FELLOWS WILL
STARTS TODAY _ MEET HERE
FESTIVAL OF YOM KIPPUR WILL
fil APPROPRIATELY OBSERV
ED IN MACON—SPECIAL
SERVICES ARRANOED.
nti i«t <»:Tom!'"' r ‘£?
’ SCHOOL
AT HE UNIVERSITY
jco^io^n or tlw Looniof (ho llivwith 'STATE COLLEGE PROPOSES'to
Stito Olvl.lon-Loroo AttOHfinco * ' AID FARMERS IN VARIOUS
MOOES OF INSTRUC
TION. I I •
stupid looking fact appeared fn It* stead.
••Vo you see?" be mid. * W«l| tha/s
on* little alunt Ha who has no eye- (
brow* can add them to hi# face, to look
different. __ ■ __ M .
jClppiir will t>a appropriately observed! will#*‘held In Macon Tuesday- Prep-. frndanuc ui»on fJ* Uillvorfl/jr of
to-& and tomorrow by the mambeiaj aratfrba W tho oatartoiaataal af th# aa^giJ .teadlly Increases. It ha«
• /TURNS, da-. Oct. S.*-Th« at?
-if the congregation Beth l*n»«
▼toe# commencing tonight at 7 o'clock. by 1<>
MB Ktopur signifies Day of Atone- I n ,, , M that nearly two hundrad
ir.ent. Tomorrow all of the Jewish I member* win attend tlto convention,
buslnesi establishments will bb tb«a Then. »m b. .l.le««l<..from ill (he lod««
- * - •- „. l tltU*tn, mt>k. Ix-.ly,
tn* «ntlre day and atrlct adherent* of
the faith will abstain from food or
drink for a duration of Iwenty-four
houra- Tha day will bo a pent In con
gregaxkmil reading. pray era and lec*
tuna at tha aynagogue.
Tha program of servtcaa *• prepared
by Ra» M JI. Welaa. la aa followa:
^orrlcea tonight at * o’clock,
ftoloa ' 7 Mlaa Gertrud# Wschtel and
Ubi Julia OoodaJl.
Rormon: "Tha Taat of Repentance.'
Monday morning commencing at 10
Csloclc and throughout tha day* aar-
vloot and muolc.
Solo by Miss Bertha Harrla.
atlon of Roah llaa-
‘The Hina of Aaron.**
Memorial cervices In the afternoon.
Hermon: “The ilouso of Life*"
The Tom Klppur services mark tha
renclualon of the moat oolrmn of all
Jewish festivals. which began ten daya
ago with the celabral
At AanaroUs—Navy ll; Rutgers 0.
At Prince too—Prtnoe too It; Bprtogflsia
At n Al sdelphto—Pennsylvania ticab
men it; Conway Hall o.
At I titans-—Cornell 11; BaraUtoa 0.
At < amhrldgo—Harvard It; University
ef Main* 5.
At Phtiadslplito—Pennsylvania It;
At wiikeabarra Carllsla 15j Peaaayl-
ran* Plate 6.
At rrovldanco^-Rrown t: Colgate 0.
At lltchlonda Vfclla.Tr. Y.~Waat Point
aafettSuSi STSS.V
^At CharkdteavU'o-Virgima »; Ran-
”5t 'ViY.b.'.n'nlls-MInniwiU •: kf-
fenr*. ft.
At New Haven—Tale I; Kyracuoe •.
f At^goath Bethlehem. ra.-I*ehlgh S;
At Kaatoa. Pa—LaFfcyetfe H; State
Norman •.
^Burlington—Vermont I; Holy
lanover—t>arti
, 1 Agriculture 0.
At Columbus—Wooster I; Ohio
, Mtale A,
At Bloomington—Indiana It; Ifepauw 0.
At Amherst—Amherst 0; Font ham 6.
At Aaltevllle Aahevllln Hrhonl Ct;
JOHltr High School of Tenneaaee 0.
At Columbia —University of South Car*
etiia «; lUdgewnod Athletic Club n.
At Atlanta - Georgia School Technology
£5 |fc Oonlon Institute 0.
At Maron—Merrer M; Locust Grove t.
M Car Hale. |*o.-Rick sou Id; Franklin
.'SIM Mara hall 0.
At Morgantown. W. Vn.—Weat Vir
ginia 12: Westminister d.
CAMBRIDGE. Maaa.7 Ort. 1-Vlgoroua
l'ne riungtng varied l»y Inside kicks and
fpasses and Imckod by a sturdy
.’<f. tided Harvard to defeat the
l nix realty of Maine at fontlMlI on Sol-
d'-'x* mday Id to o. The aeeond
h«if *1 whlrli many auhatltotra partlel-
pated on both aider, waa full of ermm
etnd igoae play.
ANNAPoiA rh7'Ti-The naval ara
S ' f '.W tenet Opr tied tho anaaoi
nfltVaonm hv itefcittlng llutgeta rol
ls tl* 0. Itli lmrdeon wenred tWf
Mown*. In the Prat helf and Jonea
. "e la the tmond. 1 singe kicked all
three gnale. 1
IlMIII.AVn FAl.I.s. K. V.. Oof. |.—
. ^n»e Wert l*iolnt foot Knit tea»n ntnved *ta
Initial aaiae hero todav defeating Tuftk
*. College hv 5 to «. Weat Point NM«I tn
tie Prat hglf Heebie enuaht the hall on
a forward no an and nr yn^le for a
toSJhlown Ivan failed to kirk the
. * In the aeeond naif the army aub-
•muted Ita aecend team. At one stage
had thh ball within two yards of
the artny’ii goal line.
TKW HAVEN. T'onn.. Ort 1,—By
aatng the Syracuse rntvereity elevma
» In the accond half today Tale won i
presentatlvM Hava been ntado ; paMe4 the four hundred and flAy
—nmlttodd. • ' * mark and there will be not Ira a than
' one hundred more to reglater during
the remainder of the aeaalon. J-a*t
araalon the nttendam-c reached flva
hundred. Tlila year It will go at Itait
Jaap«r, Maron, Pulaski. Putnam, Twiggs,
and Wilkinson. • . .
The follow lug letter,,'l«fua<! by District
Deputy it I. merit in regard to the aa-
se.nibly will Itf of Interest:
To tiie Offloera and Mrmbrr* of Dlvla-
Ian No. if. |. O. O. r.\
lA-ar Brothersr-Tbe /Irak meeting of
tfio eleventh dUlalon SMl M held at Odd
Fellow*' Hall, meity afreet. Macon.
on Tueadoy, October llOf.
Please pfftcrwti at ottce to alect your
repreaetitatlvea to thlw division meeting.
Raeii lodge is, atlow«d. iwh e aa many
reprerenUUtea ty thl^ tm-ejlng aa they
lodge In thlaWvl
to nve hundred and fifty. If not higher.
In tho atatft coiieg** of agricultura
there arc tnnny atudenta and tha at*
t» ndnnce In fir atrtetiy agricultural
(luanf-H will runch Movcnty-flve during
the aeaalon. exclusive of those who
r.iav attend the cotton school.
It haa been definitely determined to
hold tho cotton school again this year
for ten days In January. Arrange-
nu-nta will he mads to follow that
echool with n ten daya* session of a
farmers* school, during which time
one day will he given to the study
Change la effet
one. This da 1
of the art. If
ft]
lied.
l*t nil of
a ie*od lima,
ami bewrtita 1 ....
show that we si
dlvNInna In tha
Kaeh lodge I*
written 1 report, of
iMS' irt of the
every I of'corn.'one day to live stock, one day fl . - —HH
,'A.n «lTbi fully r.pr.- L jgjy, f.u. ukl.br «P l( . X.’J^.V^IInL'" Vh£°“&.| 1 ?Vi!8
M?Si* wnrW of umM. nraotloil Informii-
- —* not. behind tho other Hon. touching the serious problems
they have unon the farm.
Sl.la lnatltutf*
hool It
to aubmlt a
work*during ths
of members,
prospects, etc.
also a report of tha wldotrs and orphans
supported from, tha funds of fha lodge,
or from the funds In th« hands of the
grand master. * u •
We win gtvs you a hearty weic
Fraternally yours, ■/>
It. T*. CHRKK
Division Deputy Crand Meat
wo rush* ■ Cov took the hail
—Jt. the miartrrhftck. made a tong
ard fuss and Brown fell on the hall.
*»- *- •- -• * •» ovo - tti«»
_____ ... _ missed
. goai In tl»c drat half the pu»y waa all
pip i«ie-a territory. Once gyraruaw rush*
•H the hall to Vale’s fifteen-vnrd lln? and
-< * n made a trv f»»r a goal from tha
.t ut but the halt HU tha goat t*oai.
g Weir Mitchell worn showing a nsw
governaag their treasure* of houss and
garden. Behind a b«* hedgs thsy
nauaed. ,
“This Is tha place whara birds
are burled.** said on# of the children.
At the head of a tiny grave waa
mlaeert a white hoard. Printed on It In
Irregular character*, with a lead pen-
afl. w-erc thee« words;
-Here lie our Robing; one a wsek
add. on* only an egg.**
TWO PAIR OF -PANTS
PUT TBIR JAIL
TROUSERS FIGUPED PROMINENT-
LY IN CONVICTION . OF TWO
NEGROES IN CITY COURT
YESTERDAY.
There were two rasea heard In the
city court yuaterday and In both con
viction of the defendant resulted.
Joo Walton was charged With simple
larceny and waa sentenced to serve
alg months or pav a line of forty dol
lars. It was proven that he stole a
pair of trousers from a clothing com
pany, snatching' them .off of a dlapluy
rack outside of the etlubUJhmcnt.
Henry |#auur. H.e pressing club ne
gro. who look a* ten’dollar bill from the
trousers of Mr. Alfred, Burnett, was
Mao found guilty, and was given the
earn* aentenca sa In ths former case,
lie was charged with simple larceny.
State Farmers' Institute,
At the eloae of this school ..
proposed to have n state farmers' In
st Itute, at which ll Is hoped to have
several thousand farmers present. At
thH time it Is proposed ttat tha new
agricultural hall he dedicated. All
atate organisations and societies will
be Invited to ho repfeaented on that
occasion. Thert will follow a throe
days' 1 discussion of farm problems and
during that time It la hoped that each
county fn th* statk will have at toast
one representative present. A series
of addresses by practical and scien
tific teachers will be arranged.
] Kdueational Train.
It 4»at not been deflenltely deter
mined whether the educational train
will he run again this season, but It
probably will. Five railroads have al
ready consented to carry We train
free of charge and the others hava
the matter under advisement. It Is
ciulte likely that ths train will bo run
again. ,
REAL SHERLOGK HOLMES
HAZING IS DELIGHTFUL
PHILADELPHIA, Oct. •.—If the
warning of Miss M. 'Oary Thomas,
president of RrVn Mawr College, Is
needed, Mlaa I Men Taft, daughter of
William II. Taft, Win la a freshman
In the college, probably will escape
(basing along wit It the other freak-
men. In hor addres* to the students
yesterday Mlaa Thomas -declared bas
ing to he unlovely, ungenerous, child
ish and vulgar.
“This survival of savagery ought to
he Nlamped out of mtn'a colleges," she
said. “It la really a social crime for
women students, without any aurh
stupid traditions behind fiem to Intro-
(duce, even fatnUv and afar off, auch
childish horseplay."
Miss Thom*# speech on baaing may
have hern caused by ths report that
when tho breakfast gong sounded so
phomores seised the freshmen In eev-
oral dormitory dining halls, compelled
them to alt unon Me floor toiler fash
ion. sing "Home. Itweet Home," In
unison, feed caeh other with tiny tea
spoons while blindfolded, and sip wa*
ter poured out of the mouths of bronss
tea not s.
The eserelses the freshman say,
were a "most delightful" Initiation.
Chickweed Sellars.
The vendor uf chickweed In Paris U
a well known figure. The sellers are
numerous and thtdr on* Is one of the
most noteworthy of tkoss that re
sound In ths morning In the streets
of the French C*6ltal. According to
ths 'Bulletin dst Halles, there are
about 100.000 canaries In ths capital,
and the dally consumption of chick-
weed Is estimated at IMCi. This sum
looks large hut l( only allows 2 cents
for eAch bird A Paris contemporary w ., . .
y l - h M. grfoL ° f 2SSSR bl* tBSWSii^rftj. "TX
the Weed. • laaturnlne yImh \-anlah«xl and. * mam
Modem Detective Vary Different From
Sleuth of Romanes.
• Real detect Ivo work ’Isn't what It
la described to be In the story hooka,"
said Detective Bmart. of the Maryland
Private aaency. last week, settling
back In hla chair for a comfortable
talk, save ths Baltimore Hnn.
"On the olio hand you gse Hherlock
Holmes, who stays at home and thinks
out hla cases. Ho has the mental noso
of a bloodhound, lie reads volumes In
small things which would tell nothing
to th* ordinary man. He sera mud on
a man's boots and Immediately de
ducts what part of tho country that
man rams from, what time It was
when he left and what day and how
many children he has or may aspect
to have before the end of hla life.
“On tho other hand I* the sleuth of
tho dime novels and tha melodrama
stage, who sneaka around In dark cor
ners, biases through hi* teeth, haa
black eyes and long black hair—when
he la not In disguise—and can change
hlinaelf by a few deft touches from the
simulacrum of n normal ipsn to that
of a goose-girl or a hodcarrler
"The real detective Ilea somewhere
between these two. lie must think
and ho muat have a few arts’ Hut
having mustered a simple technique,
all that ho needs are ability to hold
hla tongue, unobsirualveneta, general
ly patience. Ingenuity, perservsrance
and a certain modicum of courage,
(liven these, and success In the pro
fession Is simply a matter of work, aa
In any other field.
"The Yankee makes the host deter-
five as a rule. Few Southerners have
Just the required natural equipment
They ar* too romantic, for one thing,
and they have sentimental Ideas. Then
they ore not bo patient, nor so Ingen
ious aa their northern brethren.
, "You aak whst Is the technique of
the detective?" He blew a long cloud
of smoke Into the tlr. watched until
It dissolved Into nothing, looked
around at the left hand secret door to
sea if there were any visitors In the
outer office and took up the tale ones
more.
"Well, first of all. I guess, the good
unrnveter of secrets must know how
to change his a pc*ran-v when neaps*
■■ry. Although you neednt think It
Is as Important na the books nay It Is
--well, at times li |* •'onvenleni to
know how to make two or Hires dif
ferent beings out of youraelf.
“The mo«t conspicuous features In the
human countenance are the evs-brows.
the eyes and ths mouth. If a man who
has verv heavy evc-hrows that meet
across the forehead shews thsm off he-
tween the eyes, just shove the nose, he
rhsnsee his appearance almost tn
not * vary great!
f the refinements I
you .darken the rotor of i
.... . JHi. ladfca are acquainted with
this fact. And If Xu use a wee bit of
helladons. the pupil* will enlarge eo that
they seem very muefb darker and larger
than ordinary. Hmail lines drawn at the
juncture of the lids also alter nature.
There Is tl»at old matter of mustache,
H<-nd a married man home without hla
mustache and there will be jl greater
storm than If he hung hla shoes on the
ha track and carried hie stovepjpe up
stairs to put beside wlfey'a Number
Twos. It changes him so' much, you
imp. and women do hate change—change
of circumstances, that Is.
“I remember when 1 waa a boy my
father came home one time minus his
usual whiskers, and it took him and my
mother one week’s eareest effort to per
suade me that lie really was the author
of my being. I was very young and I
beaan to run tip to men on the etreeta
who resembled the old Image of the dear
dad and cry ‘iwpa.’ which was somewhat
embarrassing to the old folks. A change
In the cut of u man's Iteurd or mustache
causes • great difference In facflU en
semble.
•'It la always a good thing for a de-
tertlve to he smooth shave,i. Then he
has no compunctions ubout sacrificing
beauty to duty on occasions. He can put
a mustache <m when he needs to and
leave It off wh«*n he likes.
"How does ho put It on? With shoe
maker’s wax? Well," here his voice
gathered much scorn—“that’s another of
"The teick of the hair U lined with
muslin guuxc, which makes It hold to
the akin very nicely. Rometime*," hie
face assumed a rueful smile, "It sticks
tighter than a porus plaster.
"Lines drawn from the base of tu
nose around the ends of tho mouth girt
lun appearance of age and worry also of
[moroseness. Little marks of black be
tween the eyebrows and across the fore
head wither a fresh face Into age.. A
line drawn Just below the lower lip
makes the chin seem more prominent*.
Darken the outlines of the Jaws If you
want to give your face an augular look.
Itun lines around the roots of the nose
If you want that feature to seem more
prominent.
I “A mole can be made of black wax
and glued to the skin wherever It Is
thought that It will prove a good addi
tion. Bears can be imitated by collod
ion. drawn In n ragged line across the
skin, wltli a red line painted in the
center.
| "Naturally good teeth can be blacken
ed so as to seem decayed. A tooth cov
ered with silver or gold foil will seem
to be artificial. This last Is quite effec
tive. Make the experiment some time
with a little bit of sliver foil on a front
tooth before a mirror If you want to see
different face from the one that Ua-
lly looks at you.
•The hair and th# mustache must 'gee L
a certain extent, too. A man may !
have dark hair and a itght mustache, it*
Is true, but you will notice that both nr#»
of the same general color. Also It Is not,
wire to put gray locks above a boyish 1
face, and vice versa.
I “A last Important thing In make-up la'
the ability to act a part. This Is Inborn I
and can't be acquired, except with long
study. You might dresa youraelf how
you please and unless you made yourself
fit the clothes your real character would!
show through like slicks In a scarecrow.]
"But the main thing In detective work
lie Ingenuity. You muat know how to
adapt everything to your own purpoaer
Disguising and all that sort of thing **<
all right; and necessary at times, hm
they play a very small part off stage.
"There are numberless little tricks <>
I the profession that a man picks up gi
he goes along. Huppose. for Instance,
have only HO In my pocket and I wish
to have a whole hlg wad. what do I dot!'
The reporter gave It un. having unsuc
cessfully tackled tha problem for himself
—nny times.
’Well. I take a copy of the Sun. fo!
yeral times, press It flat, and then
J bill upon 1C Then I run a si
knife all around the edges. After*
|I take up the money and beneath It .JRi
a number of allpe of newspaper Just-the
lalie of a twnk note and resembling tl In
some particular* very much. T
I ”1 tske my other bills, put aomc on
one side of the paper, some on the other,
roll all together and snap a rubber band
around the whole. The edges of ctlt
newspaper look exactly like die edges of
a hank note and the paper
$35.00-
$3.50 Down
and
$1.00 a Week
■PNPMWHHM paper has the same I
crispness. Also It wears very muchrlui a
hill does. Bo I have a bundle of newe-f
neper end hills that looks like several
mundret^oHar^m^^eall^vort^onljM
I !?er
to them”' asked the reporter, specula
tively.
L ’ I don't know about that, hut this
lewsnsper stunt Is a common trick wlth|
-onlldenre men. and almost everybody
that handles money knows It now, IfL
that la. what you mean," said MU'
Bmart. kindly. ■ ■
I "I once waa up agalnat It for an axe
cues to atay tn a certain neighborhood th
Western Pennsylvania." said the detec-
— -- ‘ivelv, a ft#r a pause of several
MfllWfPS^^Thle sounds peculiar, but It
wasn't I had already been In the town
longer than an ordinary person, and I
waa afraid of suspicion,
"Ho, I thought up the only original,
great and Instantaneous oil-testing ma
chine. With this I spent a happy and
profitable three weeks there. 1 have
never put the apparatus cii the market
and never will, t guess.
“First of all I had better explain that
the part of iho country 1, apeak of was
undergoing one of tta periodical excite-
tnents about oil. Nobody ever did And
any. but everybody thought he or the
next person would do eo every other
minute,
I mounted an old brass telescope on
transit tripod. Under the seat of the
trlimd upon which the Instrument rested
1 placed an electric hatter end a 'busaer.*
i Placed a button where 1 could reach It.
By pressing It the 'buiser' would make
"Then I tied 18 wires to the tripod. At
the free end of each of these was a
braes tube. In c*oh end of which was *
small bottle. That was the apparatus.
"I would take It to a fleld. with a
couple of my men to h-lp me. Then l
would plant the tripod near the farm
er's house and begin to aqulnt through
S husluese-ltke fashion.
While I worked I would have the men
running the wlree out and sticking the
l H’Kf* l n! £ ground at various places.
! wklle.« directed them very carefully."
•Hold on a minute." said the reporter.
You spoke of two little bottles '
•Hold
PVnu uwkWM
i ends of the tubes.
In the
were those
“Well, there were two bottles •* -
tuba. — ——
On4 of them 1 would nil
The other I would leave empty.
THESE PRICES MONDAY ONLY
lUL
MEN’S SUITS
v> 1: -MO
Upon Which You SAVE
$2.50 TO $7.50
We offer this chance for you to secure a New Fall
or Winter Suit right at the opening of the
Season at prices you pay at the end
of the season.
* SEE THEM IN WINDOW
454 THIRD STREET
SUITS that were made to sell regularly for $12.50 and (£1 (Y (Y(Y
worth that, this sale epAl/.l/V/
SUITS that are not found in any other store priced <£10^0
below $15.00 for tomorrow - - - -
SUITS that are worth every cent of $18.00 and sold by C A A
some dealers for $20.00, Saturday - - - l aPIJ.vU
SUITS that are “jam up” in quality, style and workmanship, that you
see in windows and in stores $25.00 and $27.50, we $20.00
$2.50
will make a special run on for the one day, Monday, at 1
$3.00 MEN’S FELT HATS, Monday for -
THE DIXIE COMPANY,
454 THIRD STREET, MACON, GA.'
effort. . No doubt the Impulse that makes
you say 'Hello' or stretch out your hand
is the sum of a number of acne® imprea-
ruons. so nuit.bctoue and so Involved thgt
you toUld not attempt lo classify them.
"Still, there ere eom«rflxed rules ti-ot
can be borne in mind on thie question.
The color of the eyes never changes. The
carriage of the body and Its general shape
Is usually, constant, and natural blem-
lcnea and scars can't be done away with.
"Every man haa certain little mar
tin lams and personal traits. It Is only
by the most constant effort of will that
he cat* sluff them or altar them. He
walks, ha talks, he shake* hands—oe
doos everything In a certain characteris
tic fashion.
"It Is a difficult matter to penetrate
disguises always. The knack of doing so
I comeg only with long experience. It Is
a faculty that depends to a great de
gree upon natural quickness of sight and
iretenttvenesa of memory, but It la ac
quired to a great degree. ♦
I “Sometimes your mind works uncon-
scoulsly In recognising a man. One time
I waa sitting In a train. Across the alelo
' om I thought a perfect
l looked at him and
FIRESIDE POLITICS
turned owsy.
“ Ml of a au.._
that I knew who that
"All of % sudden the feeling came <
thought and thought, and couldn’t assure
myself that I was right on this point and
yet all the while my mind kept knocking
away back tn my head. 'You know this
nan, you know this man.’
"At last l put the subject out of my
isad. I thought I did. anyhew. 'The
feeling came to you without your know
ing where It came from,' I said to my«
self. 'And I gneea it can tell you what
jMjaa^ aay. |f It haa anything,
“I looked out of the window. All of
a sudden a name flashed across —
~ nan.' I said to n
r. It a pe
—in looking for for lire years.
1 got off at, the next station, notified
headquarters by telegraph, and he waa
arrested on suspicion when he got off the
train. T»e. he wrae the party desired.
"Now. *ome people would call that
Providence. I simply gey that my mind
was carrying.on processes it had become
•red to without my being conscious of
i It do this often?"
*-u. I wltdt It did. It l....... ....
let of work, wouldn't It?" he Isughed.
"After all." said Mr. Smart, "the good
detgetIve la a member of the church.
Hv men would put a *Jihe In the ground 1 who can tat,three meals a day and keep,
with either the oil-filled bottle or the. rebtt"
empty on# at the top as I directed. Do'
you understand?
W.> can givo DftvonportF, made in oak or mnhog-
itnizcJ birch frames, covered iu imitation leather or
Wt tero-toned velour, *ith largo wardrobe box
underneath, cedar lined.
Morris Chairs, $6.98,
$1.00 Down 50c Per Week
This chair is made in bierh. finished in imitation
golden oak; full spring neat, upholstered in best
grndo imitation teatker; cu«hf<$s cun h« eaiity re
moved for dusting or airing purpoFes; has brasa
rod .rnd bracket; reclining adjustment.
Sanders Furniture Co.,
464—Second St.--464
T- tfyj • BotHUHR
m
" '
(S
laBKMHBft; KOCH’S THEORY
GETS SEVERE BLOW
' «n,t ,11
. . - .ratchtr
i what 1 tad to— n wortil'iK f,»r.
th. lltll, cUU.tr,>, --.Mild hr watrMng.
I wouM exclaim, itat tound*
•' TVtat arc y' doin'' mold ilk tta
termer.
" *t.notin' for oil.' 1 would >1\'.
I "Th-n I wn'.ld wo lo on- of th- iLtlO
tutao omt riill out n bottle. Pcrtixp, I
! -%>uM full out ,n empty one. t wool I
fiown then. nn.t look puts led. r-rbopo
.1 wo.ild b- n full —n—.
I " -Here It ta' I would ear •! otwxy.
t—w tbe-e w»» oil In thlo tend.’
•Then th- term-r and f would tar* .
WASHINGTON, Oof. 1—A olgtial
victory »a» today won by the oppon
ent* of the theory ndvanced by Dr.
Robert Koch lb* eminent Qermxn
Pclontlxt mlnimtilng th»d*n(crof hu-
mui tnfocUon from bovine tuberculous
tarllll when the Sixth Trlernl.il Inter-
nxtlontl ConiroM on Tnberculooio.
ju.t before tins! pdjournmont placed
it,elf Muirrly on record In opposition
*« the view* of the German exvxnt.
; “ rSTld'j^Tta'J? '.'.'y'T'hi; Th* conjrotwr^ ov„ tW. momrntou.
way S#me frtenffs wtm# me aharllv issue, which haa oren in# subject or
5 after I left that the pries ef tanq hafl spirited debate during th# entire pro-
; tens up JAO per rent |w the nelghWhe-'l ceedtnga of the eon great reached Its
I mr work. The neooie thought climax today when that body by unan-
' «e% n LLs?j5Sw5 ara, b,. mm ***
! Isn«! fo- lhre« times what It coat h!r\
n«1 fre
• of anerW
{ had better espial' ...
aretWi were »w og a rather tgno.wat and
■aid »>*e reporter.
, already Where to th*
"it Isn't »•*•*#<
"1 have noted '
Jwtnm*#at r-'W.
.ta*ta n ^ Mr. Smart.
*1 * show t» to vog -ren# day."
"It la nre*tea»re Often to b# able to
nerntra*# .’.Wnulre%. Mew and women
a—lor from th* law are far more ape »o
'•‘he to dfaguiae than geteethrs are.
They have a ereeter respect for U. I Imre
been trying to thing how to teh you to
**• abtn to pick m*t a re* I man from h»*
fa**- f»opt. bnt i g.v%t think t ran.
•It I- ha*d to d*nn|e whet the act of
recnmttlnn K. ewvkcw You see a P*re m
me Vann end Inst* nxh* von are readv to
■peak. Too are get cocsdous of n-autal
Ing the "possibility" of human Infec-
tkm from the bovine tuberculeux ta-
dill. The text of the reeo'.ti.ion which
n xi on* of x xevtta of official dcclerx*
tlont li x. follow.:
Anti-Koch R.eolutlon.
“Reeolred. That th* ntmoxt efforts
should M continued In th* (mimic
xxaie.t totarculo*!* to prevent th* con-
vcyanc* from man to man of luber-
cuioal* a* th* moat Important nnutv**
of Ita dfetme.
-That preventive measure* bo eon-
tinued ara Inst bovine taberculml* tnj
that th* pnaslbtllty of rhw ^opayatioo
of this to man be mcomLod-
This official exprer.mn whl.-b waa
on* «f tta most Important rmults ef
lb* (ceeion* of th* e*n*r*«( wa* free-
cd with prclunc«d cheers. Dr. Koch
PHii/PIATER:
“What Docs ‘My Policies’ Mean, Motner?"
proval.
The action of tha congress w ill like
ly put a quietus to furthes agitation,
at least until the next meeting of the
congress In Home. till. One of the
moat pleasant surprises of, tb« doting
•ccnca of th* eftOgress war the appear-1
ane* for the first time dp ring Its pro- 4
erodings of rrMldcnt RaoscvcU. Inaj
characterlstfo address President Roos*- 1
vHt paid a Bobahl* tfiMMs to the aa- l
scmblage of so many aclentlsts of in
ternational reputation. The president
•poke la port as follows:
“It to difficult for us to reL:ix>' the J ttafosdw
effect of the MKraord nrv changes* the 1 re-.wi.ig
extraordinary progress in ^rtaln lines tnkVbiU
of social codeavor during the last two, rta nxt:^
or three generations; and In no other I sonal and scl hygiene Jn an schools
manifestation of human activity havfl ,>r tnlnlnr teachers; tho establish-
the chance* heon oulta so far nachb # m *‘ nt ln o0,left> * nJ universities ofl
- m tve lwm” cour-.Hn hy»icne »r.4 .antitstion: tb,
SF tn Lie sDiuiv to grmppto with dlsJN ?, ubluhljjent ^ pUy pounds as an
‘ Rtai.ui Pom-rm..» i j Important means of preventing tuber-
Results of Con fl ress Labors. ] culoato; the establishment of hosrUali
-Among the results of the labors of [for treating advanced cases; sanatoria
thn'gathering was the adoption of *9ror curing cases; and the establishment
‘ ndlng the oblige-.of dispensaries and day and night
of lu > C-^t an.pa for ambulance cases: which can-
:u cuu»iderrd !e^ ■ r.ot enter hospitals and sanatoria
r ii>p re-autatlon of far tori- .‘♦j — — •
hops.- the abolition of Tn the Northern Territory, that rad
* •- labor of wdns^ofl ^lttronleai section — * m
W —
drrn and the securing of 1
ings eo as to increase tbeT Y“
owrer'of tho communis n*y ^..
* ajtd other dtoqafee. Oth^rT<iii .
endorsed instruction In per*.j powdery ctoy.
t rad
whlcl