Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 02, 1913, Image 14

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EDITORIAL. RAGE THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN HE "YK JV i . A. A the: home: paper ered a? •cripti Published Every Afternoon Except .Sunday Ky THE Ci IOOKOIA N roMPANV At 30 liasi Alabama St.. Atlanta, tin -class matter at postoffh-e at Atlanta, under act of March 1! ■ Delivered by carrier. 10 rents a week Hy mall, $.V00 a Payable In Advance EGGS IS EGGS Absolutely the Last Egg Joke. Mothers. Keep Your Babies' Hands Covered i I heir hingers And Train Them From the Beginning to Keep Out of 1 heir Mouths Copyright, 1013. Millions of mothers worry because “There is something wrong with the child's stomach.” Digestion is bad, sleep is irregular, the lips &rp crackled, un healthy looking—there are signs of the dreaded colitis, which takes so many thousands of children to the grave. False diet, foolish feeding based on ignorance, AND EAT ING AT IRREGULAR HOURS, menace the health of many children. The mother that has lost one child or more lives in constant apprehension, and is almost in despair when signs of illness show themselves. We wa"nt to-day to impress upon all mothers ONE THING THAT THEY CAN DO FOR THEIR CHILDREN. One of the most famous and one of the ablest doctors in * this country was called in by a mother to take care of a child that showed signs of illness, and his first question was this: "Does your baby put its fingers in its ipouth a great deal?” He then impressed upon the mother—the child was not quite two years old—that she must above all things prevent her baby from putting dirty fingers into its mouth. And this is the idea that we want to impress upon all moth ers TO DAY, and that without putting them to the expense of seeing the doctor quoted above. From him a few words of ( ad vice would cost twenty-five dollars. Remember that children are sometimes poisoned by disease germs IN THEIR FOOD But FAR OFTENER THEY ARE POISONED BY GERMS STICKING TO THEIR FINGERS WHICH THEY PUT INTO THEIR MOUTHS. It doesn t matter how careful you may be, your child is bound to creep on the floor, to fall down upon its hands on the sidewalk, to grasp a railing, etc. Whenever a child's hands touch the sidewalks, or railings, or the floor. THEY ARE APT TO COME IN CONTACT WITH GERMS THAT PRODUCE DISEASE. In the big cities especially this danger is great. Ignorant men who should be controlled and punished by law sit upon the benches in the parks, spitting upon the sidewalks j where little children are put to play. Tins it, actually a crime against human life—a crime none the less dreadful because it is based upon ignorance. To see a consumptive sunning himself on a bench in the public park is pitiful. You pity the unfortunate man, as he 'coughs painfully, and he deserves pity. But. as he scatters about him the germs of his disease, he is actually endangering and often destroying lives of healthy children that go to play in that park. It is impossible to keep children shut in. It is impossible to keep them from the parks and the streets and from crawling about on the floor. BUT IT IS POSSIBLE TO PROTECT THEM To the mother whom we have mentioned the able doctor said: ‘Keeping your child’s hands washed frequently is a good thing—but 4 is no protection. “Keep COTTON GLOVES ON T HE pHILD’S HANDS when It is playing anywhere outside of its nursery—and, better still, keep them on %lso wnen it plays on the nursery floor., “A child will not put cotton gloves into its mouth—it doesn’t like the feeling.” There is very simple advice for mothers that worry about their children’s health. If your baby is in the teething stage, you know how the wise old mothers will tell you that you must EXPECT trouble at that time. You are told that teething affects the stomach and causes sickness, bowel complaint, etc. Teething DOES affect the child's DIGESTION But it does not actually introduce into its system the germs that produce disease such as the dreaded Summer complaint. Children are subject to disease especially when teething BECAUSE WHEN TEETHING THEY ALWAYS HAVE THEIR FINGERS IN THEIR MOUTHS, and they are always introducing dangerous germs into their systems in that way. Two pairs of cotton gloves for the baby would not cost very much—and we wish that the managers of big stores would put such gloves on sale as an act of public usefulness, and advertise them at the very lowest possible price. Occasionally a child suffering from teething will put its fingers in its mouth in spite of wearing cotton gloves. In such a case very rough woolen gloves may be procured that will cer tainly answer the purpose. Mothers can do much, also, by making it a habit from the baby s first day to train it to keep its fingers out of its mouth. A gentle touch of the hand each time that the little fingers are put toward the lips will gradually accustom the child to the 'lotion that, its hands and its mouth must be kept separate. Meanwhile we advise mothers of children under five years of age—and. better still, up to seven years of age—to try this ex periment of keeping them gloved with cotton when they play on park sidewalks or street sidewalks exposed to disease germs. P. S Some mothers will say: Well, my baby always had his hand-: in his mouth, and HE didn't have gloves, and HE didn't gei any disease.” We are giad to hear it. But what is true of one child is not true of another. And what is true of a child one day is not true of the same child ANOTHER DAY. A child absolutely healthy and strong is aftle to throw off and get rid of the disease germs that get into its system. A per fectly healthy child with a heart acting strongly and the blood in good condition could swallow a good many tuberculosis germs without getting consumption. But as soon as something happens, when ilie vitality is low. the heart action feeble, THE GERMo ARE NOT THROWN J} : F They establish a foothold, they breed with lightning rapid id then it is too late to ave the child. Prevention is better n cure, and there i, no better prevention than keeping .he child i j .vn hands from putting diseases into its mouth. I QUEER That HEW Doesn't ■ 7 L LAN EC,C,S’ K' MR PERKiNt WHAT IS 1 [ QIT A CHJ_NEE EQC, The BEST W4H To MAKE ( AND PUT IT IN HER NEST Breach of Promise Suits Dorothy Dix Says That Every Mau Has a Right to (Miangt* His Miiid- \o Woman Who Is Really Hurt Will Drag Her Wounds Before the Public For Money. By DOROTHY DIX. A TELLING blow for ?ex equality has just been struck by a Brooklyn Su preme Court Justice who has ruled that the right to change your mind is not the sole pre rogative of woman. Mere man has the same privilege. In a breach of promise case, in which a fair lady was suing a faithless swain for renegging on his promise to marry her the Justice made the following rule: “In the modern days of suf frage agitation,” he said, "we must not be too revere with the men. as long as no unfair ad vantage has been taken of the women “I am not going to let this young man rot in jail because he has changed his mind about mar rying this* girl. We must remem ber that the lady always reserves U> herself the right to change her mind at any moment, and it seems to me the man ought to have the same right,” Good for the Judge! That de cision is based on good soun/d sense and justice. Moreover, it proves what we .suffragists have always contended, and that Is that equal rights for women will mean equal rights for men. and be just as much to men’s advantage as they will be to women’s. The breach of promise suit has never been anything more or less than blackmail disguised as senti ment. No woman whose heart was really hurt would drag her wounds before the public for the sake of a little money. No wom an with a vestige of delicacy or refinement in her composition would try to force a man to mar ry her who had tired of her and was trying to get rid of her. Not a Business Deal. It is absurdity to contend that a proposal of marriage is in the same class with a business prop osition, and that a man should be held financially responsible for not carrying out a matrimonial en gagement as he would be for not fulfilling a business contract. The very essense of courtship are the emotions of 'ove, attraction, fasci nation and desire that a woman rouses in a man's breast, and when these are gone—when lie no longer loves her, when she no longer attracts or fascinates him and he has ceased to want her— her claim upon him is forfeited, and as a matter of fact, it would be a nice point of law to decide whether the woman who can no longer deliver the goods ij-u’t the What Are World one who has defaulted on the con tract, and not the man. Moreover, Cupid is no piker, lie is a dead game sport, and when ever a man or a woman sits down to the love game he or she must play the limit and take the risks. In addition, this is also to be said —that although women generally get a cold deal in matrimony they hold the trump hand in courtship. For it is the custom of men to woo maids with flow ? ers and candy, and books and theater tickets, and restaurant feeds, so that Romeo has paid his score as DOROTHY DIX. he went along, and even if he balks at the altar the account still stands in the woman’s favor. Truly, ’ti« better to have been wooed and jilted than never to have been wooed at all! In deciding that a man has a right to change his mind about getting married and cannot be as sessed heavy damages for doing so the Brooklyn Justice has done a notable service to humanity. The breach cf promise case should be thrown out of court and a man not only given the privilege of withdrawing from a matrimonial engagement if he decides that for any reason it would be best for him to do >o, but he should be backed up by public opinion in doing it. Thousands of men, carried away by the impulse of the mo ment or some wave of transient sentiment, have popped the ques tion to girls that they knew' were unfitted to be their wives, and rued their folly before the words were off of their lips. Thousands of other men have honestly the Real Wonders of the As it Exists To-day? T By DR T B. GREGORY. f'M-IE fall of New Orleans—51 >ear» ago—was a blow to the Confederacy from which it never recovered. At the time Farragut and Por ter were steaming triumphantly up to the levees of the Creole city at the mouth of the Father of Waters, McClellan was gath ering his mighty host for the “On to Richmond” campaign which was to end, a little while later. In ignominious defeat on the banks of the James; and, guided by the matchless genius of Lee. the Army of Northern Virginia was to score victory after victory on the soil of the Old Dominion: but at New Orleans the Fed eral* held the grand strategic point, the key to the great river which penetrated far into the territory of the seceded States, and divided from its eastern half the rich cornfields of the West and Southwest, upon which, later on. the Confederacy was to de pend for the bread and meat that was to maintain its armies. The Blockade Policy. The policy of holding New Or leans at all hazard, as the one su premely .vital point on the line of defense, seems never to have ^li ned the minds of the Confeder ate authorities: and the oit> was surrendered without a tenth part of the resistance that was after ward made a; many points of much less strategic importance. Front firm to last the Missis sippi River was the key to the military problem with both sides. \\ hu ll side coma anded that river would ..iso command the issue of It was no new thought. From as far bark as the earliest period <•- the F e tc), « nations on the N, r: . A menean t ’em;♦ V ras liver was. as In political as in geographical sig nificance, the master feature of the whole situation. That was why Frenchman, Spaniard and Englishman looked upon the mighty stream with such greedy “Louisiana Purchase.” or, if that was impossible, to at least se cure possession of the city of New Orleans. The country that held New Orleans would hold the Mississippi River, and the coun try that controlled the Mississippi River would' control the political fortunes of the North American Continent. American history, from the treaty of Ghent straight' down to the final rounding out of the Republic with the successful negotiations of the Gadsden Pur chase, is full of diplomatic gym nastics regarding the Mississippi River. In the light of all this, it will be seen how great a victory it was that Farragut won when he silenced Forts St. Philio and Jackson and steamed on to the capture of New Orleans. Pertinent Paragraphs When the first symptoms of j love's young drefam do not cause a fellow to have a frog in his throat, they are not real. The under dog does not care much for the sympathy that can not be touched for a loan. When a man can not carry his good nature home he had better drop it altogether. A young woman in a dream gown is often a rude awakening in the matter of a disposition. Seek the truth, but do not im- j agine that every man you meet j is handin’ 3 ' it to you. It is often hard in our dealings to curb the clamor of prejudice. ie man \\ not go a! as lie goe ;*r mark-enansh p. is haif true By GARRETT P. SERVISS. ^ r AM convinced," says an I l epistolary friend, "that the Panama Canal is the greatest wonder of construction that the world has ever known, and I don't see how it is ever to be exceeded, unless the i’nited States should carry out Mr. Riker's idea of diverting and con trolling the Gulf Stream by means of a gigantic jetty thrown across the banks of Newfound land. But I should like to know whether you regard such things ns a true measure of the su periority of modern times. Couldn’t you make a list of seven modern wonders that would bet ter represent the rea progress of mankind?" Has Been Going Forward. If I wer*- going to offer a list of seven modern wonders, con ceived in this sense, of the ap plication of the mind to some thing outside itself. I should wish, first, to define the term -modern,” and T would make it include the three centuries that have elapsed since the days of Galileo. The world has never gone backward since his time. He was the first great experimental philosopher, and when he dropped a ten- pound and a one-pound cannon ball from the Leaning Tower of Pisa, and proved, by occular demonstration, that they took the same time to fall to the bottom'. overthrew forever the ancient method of drawing blind infer ences about the physical world .f the mind, instead of using lenses as a test and the in- tellig* nee as a guide and inter preter. So. 1 should head the list of seven modern wonders w^th the discovery of the Law of Gravita tion. which Galileo began experi- m ntaiiy. and Newton completed mathematically. To that law—although we do not > et Un • w what gravitation is In its essence -we owe n«*t only our accurate knowledge of the universe, but many of our great est engineering triumphs. Second on the list, in the order of time, might stand the invention of the Telescope, which, as a means of research, must also be credited to Galileo, who worked entirely in the modern spirit of h out the GARRETT P. SERVISS. using the mind as a means and not as an end in the exploration of the material world. By the in vention of the telescope, and its corailary. the microscope, modern man enabled himself to penetrate, at the same time, the mysteries of illimitable space and the secrets of the realm of the infinitely lit tle. Third, let us place the devel opment of the science of Chemis try, which has taught us so much about the constitution of matter, and which, some think, may yet reveal the secret of life itself. To reveal only a small part of what chemistry has achieved would, in itself, require a long article. There is hardly any part of human life and activity in which it does- not play its role. But there are certain things that have grown out of chemical experimentation which are, perhaps, worthy to stand by themselves in our list. Among these I would put, as the fourth wonder, Photography. Be ginning as a means of obtaining pictures of the human face, more accurate in their details than the hand could draw, photography has now become a means of discov ering things invisible to the eye, both upon the earth and in the heavens. The greatest astronom ical discoveries of recent years have been effected by photogra phy. By using the X-ray, and by selecting certain chosen waves of light, we can picture, by photog raphy, things hidden behind bar riers impenetrable to ordinary vision, and things on distant bod ies in space which are veiled from the eye by the confusing effects of too many kinds of light. Fifth, *1 would put the inven tion of the Spectroscope, an In strument which enables us to analyze light and to use it a? a means of investigating the nature of substances and bodies, not only upon the earth, but also In the sky. To the spectroscope we owe our knowledge of the consti tution of the sun and the other star a Present Inventions. Sixth, comes the use of Elec tricity, in telegraphy, and in the product ton of light, and the trans ference of power. These things are so recent that everybody knows all about them, or, at least knows what their nature is. Seventh, the establishment of the Law of Evolution. The idea of some such law was dimly pres ent in the mind? of some ancient philosophers, but, after their man ner, they never thought of test ing it by close observation of na ture. Most of them used their minds w ith about as much practi cal effect as a miller would use his mill if he merely set the wheels turning, grinding only air and getting nothing but air out of thought themselves in love at the time they became engaged to women, but found themselves disillusioned long before their wedding day. Thousands of men are so completely out of love and disenchanted with their prospec tive wives that they would rather face the hangman than the preacher on their marriage morn. Want to Be Jilted. These men would give ten years of their lives to unsay the words they have uttered, to take back the promise they have given, to be free of the women that they know will hang like millstones about their necks, but they lack the courage to break their en gagements. Many a man does everything In his power to force the girl to jilt him. He picks quarrels with her. He neglects her. Sometimes he even tries to tell her that he doesn’t love her any more, hut the more he at tempts to break away, the tighter she clings, and the more she weeps, and in the end he gives in and lets himself be led like a lamb to the slaughter because he hasn’t the nerve to hurt her or to be branded as a quitter. Let no man think that he is do ing a noble and heroic thing to marry a woman after he has ceased to love her. He is doing her the most cruel wrong that one human being can inflict on another, and it would be a kinder act if he killed her than it is to marry her. He is sure to neglect her, to let her see how 9he bores him and what a burden she is on him. and to break her heart w ith a thousand little evidences of his indifference. It takes his martyrdom out on her, and she pays every day of her life for his having been co erced into an unwilling marriage. The affection of a man for his wife cools down from the boiling point to sub-normal even when he’s crazy about her when they got married, but Heaven help the unfortunate woman whose hus band's love was at the zero point on their wedding day! Believe me. she knows what a long, cold winter is like. Therefore, in justice to hhnself and kindness to the woman, any man should take advantage of his right to change his mind if he de cides that he has changed his heart, no matter how many en gagement rings he has given, nor how many vows of constancy he has sworn. Let him duck and Tun, though he were at the very foot of the altar. It would save his life, and be a blessing to the woman. N 1 ) / * , * ' iff