Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 23, 1913, Image 12

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/ • EDITORIAL RAGE The Atlanta Georgian THE HOME PAPER THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday By THE GEORGIAN COMPANY At 20 East Alabama St., Atlanta. Ga. Entered as second-class matter*at postofflro at Atlanta, under act of March 3.1873 Subscription Price—Delivered by carrier, 10 cents a week. By mall, $5 00 a year Payable in Advance. The Beginning of Marriage Haphazard Reflections on Grave T opics (Copyright, 1913.) At stated times we mortals have stated visitations. One day it is the gTippe, next day the financial problem. Then it is the marriage and divorce question, with much learned expounding by the good and the pure, such as bishops and members of Sorosis. What is marriage? How did it begin? Whence does it come? Why is it a feature of human life wherever that life is found? You must begin with such questions. Always study begin nings. Nothing can be learned by taking hold of a thing in the middle and examining its imperfections. The first priest to join man and woman together was no benign being with lawn sleeves and soul-stirring words. Marriage was brought about on this earth by the will and wisdom of God Almighty working through primitive babyhood. In the old days, when the world was cruder, men and wom en ran wild through forests and swamps. They fought nature, fought each other, as savage as other beasts around them. There was no love; there was no marriage. The instincts of self preservation and of reproduction worked alone to keep the race here through its hard childhood. In the Run of the News But in cold stone caves or in rough nests under fallen tree trunks savage children were born and nursed by their savage mothers with savage affection. Through those infants of the stone age, or of ages much earlier, marriage and pure affection came into the world. It is not hard to reproduce in our minds the picture of the first marriage. A savage woman, half human, half ape, with rough, matted locks hanging round her face, sits holding her new-born baby, protecting it from wind and cold. It is a queer baby, covered perhaps with reddish hair, its brow no higher than a rat’s. Its jaw protrudes; its tiny, grimy hands clutch with monkey power all things within reach. Along comes the father, full of plans to kill a mammoth or a cave bear; interested in his stone-tipped club, but caring noth ing for the mother, who has been for some time only a whining nuisance. He stops for a second to look at the small creature which he has added to earth's animal life. Its misshapen skull, ferret eyes, miniature shoulders—some thing about it reminds him of his royal self, as studied in the pool. He stoops to look closer. His bristly hairs are grabbed, and a weird, insane, toothless grin lights up the little monkey face. Then the savage takes a new view of life; there the mar riage institution and the marriage problem are born simultan eously. Says the mammoth hunter, with whistling words and hoarse throat sounds half articulated : “I like this baby. He's like me. Let me hold him. Don't you go out with him looking for food, and don’t leave him alone while I’m gone. I've got a bear located. No one can beat me killing bears. I’ll bring the bear's heart to you this evening. You can give this baby some of the blood. It will do him good. Don’t have anything to say to that mammoth hunter in the next swamp. I want you to stick to me. I'll look after you. I have taken a fancy to that baby. He looks very much like me.” Off goes the father, and that savage mother, in a primitive way, is a wife. Hereafter she is to be cared for. Bears will be killed for her, even while she has children to keep her busy and unattractive. Society takes a new turn and the red-haired baby has done it. To childhood, helpless and beautiful, we owe marriage and all that growth of morality which is gradually making us really civilized. The basis of all real growth is altruism; and altruism, the inclination to think more of others than of yourself, came into the world through the cradle. IMMODEST Thing- • SPUT SK1R.T TraMSPWEHT ^ SKIR.T KE.W PotT LflORUATL iN e.N<SLAr<t> -rut POT Trtt KfcTTLE BLACK. ~r — if cats Turn into hm>le. strings AKt> FISH T U< *N INTO <SLUE_ WILL GRASS TORN into HOPPER** - 1 DON’T KNOW- -DO you? >J CBN'T T’ou INVITE ME To YOUR MOUSE To DINNER AFTER The lecTure ? WORKING- IT FOR ALL IT’S WORTH Drawn by HAL COFFMAN, the Famous Cartoonist. Ella Wheeler Wilcox Writes On Women Smokers Smoking Is Serious Drawback to Equal Franchise, and in Additiou Is One of the Greatest Beauty Destroyers Women Contend With. The influence of childhood has transformed mere animal at traction into unselfish affection. It has substituted family life for savage life. The interests of childhood demand that mar riage and its responsibilities be held sacred. Duty to future generations demands that divorce be made difficult and considered a misfortune. Marriage, brought into the world through the influence of children, should be dissolved only with due regard for the inter ests of children. An unhappy marriage is earth’s worst affliction. Quite true. But it is not affliction wasted. Examples are needed to warn the young against the matri monial recklessness which underlies most unhappy marriages. Unhappy wives and husbands are human lighthouses— lonely, but useful. A man who marries a woman undertakes to make her happy and keep her busy. If he keeps his contract, she will keep hers. If he fails, he has no right to experiment on another un fortunate. The divorce class is a self-indulgent, malformed elass, not worth notice. As a matter of fact, there really is no marriage or divorce problem which sensible beings need consider. At present men are not good enough to be trusted with lib eral marriage or divorce laws. When they are good enough the laws will not be wanted. For the man fully developed and fully moral will know what he is doing when he goes into a marriage contract. His stability of character will insure permanency. There will be no need of laws. By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. (Copyright, 1913, by American-Journal- Lxaminer. > I T is unfortunate for the great and good cause of equal franchise that women are growing into ungraceful and un hygienic habits in the world we call civilized. Smoking women arc every where evident; and the habit once indulged in occasionally by the few r daring ones is now in dulged openly and almost con stantly In European lands; and, of course, American women are following suit, as is their custom toward older countries. A middle-aged woman or an old woman smoking in a public place is a sight to make angels weep and men sigh over the memory of their mothers. The young girls who smoke in public or anywhere else ought to make men pause and hesitate before thinking of asking these young women to perpetuate their species. And to perpetuate the species and bring normal, healthy and moral men and women into the world is the real business of every young woman, however we may regard other occupations for her, and however wide we are trying to make her sphere of usefulness. Nerves and Nicotine. Field Marshal Lord Methuen has now come to the front in an open denunciation of the smoking woman. He declares woman has not man’s “sense of proportion” and does not know* when to stop. But he also believes the smoking habit, especially the cigarette habit, a serious detriment to men. Lord Methuen says: “A man is constitutionally * stronger than a woman, and his nerves will stand the strain of nicotine much better than hers will. “Then, again, the throat, chest and lungs, which are some of the principal organs affected by ex cessive cigarette smoking. are more susceptible in the female sex. and consequently irritation is set up the more quickly. “But l think it is the eyes which «i;e most affected by the habit. After excessive indulgence, these organs generally become weak- looking and uncertain, and often assume a watery appearance. “Another symptom of the habit ual cigarette smoker is a nasty, troublesome cough, particularly in the morning, which arises from the irritation caused by the nico- line to the throat and chest. This is more often the cape with the person who inhales the smoke—a habit which, I am sorry to say, is pretty general among cigarette smokers.* “1 think you will agree that these ailments do not add to the attractiveness or the charm of the gentle sex, but then, in addition, strong to overcome. Many wom en who are subject to nervous breakdowns and who are sent to “rest cures” and sanitariums to recover from “overwork” or “over- pleasuring” are really suffering from nicotine poisoning, were the truth known. It seems appalling that such a condition of society should exist; appalling that smoking among women has attained such a hold upon the community that men like Lord Methuen are alarmed. , But it is well that one Such man has raised his voice in pro test. The craze for smoking started with tho English women, and it is befitting that English men should make some effort at mitigating the evil. For evil it is, and one which menaces the generations to come. If woman Is to have the fran chise, and use it to better the world, let her not emulate the vices of men to prove her worth and ability. And let her value her beauty and health and attractiveness enough to enable her to give up the disgusting cigarette habit. Let us hope Lord Methuen is a prophet when he says: Should Give Up Smoking. “I do not think the time is far distant when there will be as strong a crusade against smoking to excess as there has been against drinking to excess. “I believe it will be the doctors who will lead the crusade against excessive smoking. “They will tell a person plainly that it is ruination to his nerves to smoke cigarettes, as some peo ple do, from the age of 10 years onward/’ ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. you have to consider the dele terious effect cigarette smoking has upon the heart and the nerves. “The cigarette habit among la dies is deplored by all doctors, but particularly in r.egard to the younger members of the sex. “At middle age the effects are not so much pronounced, or, per haps. not so noticeable, hut in the case of a young girl her develop ment is undoubtedly impeded, and this must have a detrimental ef fect upon the future of the race.” It is gratifying to lovers of the human racq to have a man of brain and position take this stand toward the smoking habit, espe cially an Englishman, for it is English women of prominence who have made the unwholesome custom fashionable. There are a million more wom en than men in England, and perhaps the habit first originated in woman's desire for man's so ciety, and in her loneliness she found even the smell of his cigar smoke solace. There was once a romantic girl living in a retired country place who asked her lover to smoke into a bottle that she might let the smoke escape some lonely evening during his absence and imagine him present. Present Smoking; Craze. However the present smoking craze originated, it is most unfor tunate. It Is bad enough for pos terity to have the vices of the fathers to combat, but what hope can the world have of a higher humanity when both parents have vitiated their blood and destroyed their nervous systems by nico tine? A young woman on one of the large ocean liners was seen al ways with a cigarette between her lips. She remarked to some fellow passengers that she had taken the cure once at a sanita rium, but that the habit was too Positions Wanted By THOMAS TAPPER. A BOUT this time, as the al manac used to say, there will be lots of young men looking for jobs. They are graduates. Everybody loves to give a graduate advice, to tell him how ' and what to do that he may suc ceed. The reason why people do this is not that they love to preach. It is because, having grown older, they have discovered what a precious thing it is to be YOUNG, what an amazing op portunity there is for anyone who is about to go to work with the STRENGTH AND FAITH OF YOUTH in the right hand. The business world is a place of keen competition. To look at it from the outside makes one think that the effort to walk in. find a chance and make good is impos sible. But it can be done. Once landed on the job. the graduate will probably be too busy to remember the advice he has received. This will do him no serious harm if he becomes a dis coverer. He must discover these facts: 1. Success never comes by parcel post. It is the blossom on the slow-growing plant which PERTINENT PARAGRAPHS Hammerstein finds a Caruso laying bricks. “Gold” ones? • • * “I should worry about a nation al crisis and get a wrinkle in my lecture roll.” * * * Lawyer whose wife has been awarded alimony should have had her for his client. Poverty is often the wheel of virtue. balance Members who took a trip under the sea were looking for a naval training station, not a site for a public building. • * • Wouldn’t take the chance of sending that $5,000,000 American Express Company melon by freight. * • * Pennsylvania abolishes State conventions. Bread line for poli ticians will form on the left. By GARRETT P. SERVISS starts as a seed and is watched, watered and nursed for about half a century. 2. To stand up to the swiftness of the business game demands a clear mind, a clean body, an ac tive imagination, the capacity for silent observation and a spirit of good nature that takes a blow’ the way a punching bag does. 3. At ten dollars a week these five qualities are being financed at two dollars each. The rate is low. But this standard of value is not fixed. It can be run up to any figure ope likes. 4. There are no idiles of suc cess that apply equallv in all cases. But no man ever lived »who could get along, who could succeed in his own way, without the Great Five w T e have named. 5. But there are absolutely def inite rules for failure. And the basis of them is an unclean mind, a body thrown out of tune by dissipation, affection bestow’ed upon a couple of bad habits, the inclination to tell shady stories and a tendency of dodging the truth. These and their kind will put a young man on the scrap heap and keep him there. And a scrap heap is a most un comfortable substitue flor a mattress. T HE mystery of mysteries in science is the attraction of gravitation—that very force of nature that is the most fa miliar to us all! It seems strange that the most familiar thing in the world should be, at the same time, the most in explicable—but so it is. In order to see clearly wherein the mystery consists, let us first consider what gravitation appears to be. It is gravitation that gives the property of weight to all bodies. If there were no gravita tion, we could float like thistle downs, and infinitely better than thistledowns: for they, too, are finally brought down by gravita tion. It is gravitation that brings a cannon bail eventually to the earth, no matter how swiftly it may be projected. The faster it starts the farther it will go, but during every second of its flight it drops the same distance vertical ly toward the earth, whether the speed Imparted to it by the pow der is 500 or 3,000 feet per second. Gravitation acts on a moving body exactly as well as on one at rest. It is gravitation that curbs the motion of the moon and keeps it in an orbit of which the earth is the active focus. Governs Earth’s Motion. So, too, it is gravitation that governs the earth in Its motion around the sun, preventing it from flying away into boundless space. Astronomy show’s that gravita tion acts between all the planets and all the stars and controls their motions with respect to one another. Now, this mysterious force ap pears to be an attraction, as if theTe were elastic cords connect ing all the bodies in space and tending to draw them together. But space, as far as our senses can detect, is empty. There are no elastic cords and no physical connections whatever between as tronomical bodies, or between a flying stone, or cannon ball, and the earth. How, then, can there be an attraction? In order that a body may be attracted or drawn, there must be something to draw it. Gravitation does the trick, but completely hides from us the mechanism through which it acts. We can discover no mechanism at all. When an unfortunate aeroplan- ist drops from his machine at a height of a thousand feet, he be gins at once to fall toward the earth as if it were pulling him; but how can it pull if it has noth ing to pull with? You may think at first sight that it Is the air which acts as an intermediary; but that is not so, because the earth and the moon “pull” upon A Basket of Figs By REV. THOMAS B. GREGORY. I T was 266 years ago, in the city of Naples, that a basket of figs created a revolution which resulted in the death of 500 men, many of them members of the ancient nobility; the burn ing of scores of villas and palaces, and the elevation 'to power of a peasant whose entire possessions would not have brought the price of a decent suit of clothes. The owner of the basket of figs was asked to pay the royal tax upon the fruit; he refused to do so, and emptied his basket upon the street. Close, by stood Masa- niello, the fisherman, young, handsome, brave and “chock full” of the old eternal sense of jus tice and right. Poor and humble as he was. Masaniello possessed a commanding personality, the “gift imperial” of magnetizing men, and outraged by the injustice he had witnessed he sounded the call of arms. Arming themselves, the popu lace, with Masaniello at their head, drove out the Spanish Vice roy. liberated the prisoners of the customs, burnt the houses of the King's creatures, destroyed the offices of the tax collectors, and made short work of ridding the AT , • c r Mysteries ot Science and Nature Force of Gravitation Controls Cannon Balls, Baseballs, Moons, Planets, Suns and Stars Without Visible Means of 1| .0**’' s v>onneciion. one another with a force equal to the strength of a steel cable five hundred miles in diameter; but there is no air, and no other tan gible thing in the open space, 240,000 miles across, that gaps between the moon and the earth* Then gravitation exerts the .«ame force at every instant No matter how fast the falling aero naut may be descending at any moment, gravitation will keep on adding speed as if he had just started. Disregarding the slight retardation produced by the re sistance of the air, he will fall 16 feet in the first second, 48 feet in the second second, 80 feet in the third second, gaining 32 feet In his velocity during every sec ond after the first. Falls 10.000 Feet in 25 Seconds. From a height of 1,000 feet h© will come down in about eight seconds, and will strike the ground with a velocity of about 256 feet per second. From a height of 10,000 feet he would fall in about 25 seconds, and w’ould strike with a velocity of 400 feet per second. The same kind of calculation can be applied to the gravitation between the earth and the moon. If the £*oon were not in motion across the direction of the earth’s “pull” it would fall to the earth in about 116 hours. Now, to return to the mystery, 'how is this force exerted? Is it really a pull as it seems to be? The answer to which science is tending is that instead of being a pull, gravitation is a push; in other words, that the falling aero naut is pushed toward the ground and the moon is pushed toward the earth. On the face of it one might think that nothing was gained by this theory, because it ssems as impossible that a push should be exerted without a tangible con nection as a pull. But the clew is found in the supposed properties of that invisible, intangible, all- pervading medium called the ether. Waves of Ether. This, to be sure, is explaining one mystery by another, for we know nothing- about the ether except that it conveys the waves of light and electricity, but, at any rate, it affords a conceivable explanation of gravitation. I have no space to go into this ex planation, which has recently- been developed by Dr. Charles F. Brush, but an idea of its natuTe may be formed from the state ment that it regards the ether as being filled with a peculiar form of waves, and that material bodies may intercept these waves in such a way as to be pushed toward one another on account of the diminished effect of the ether waves in the space between the bodies. city of the tyrannical nobility and their henchmen. In a trice Masaniello was mas ter of Naples. The Viceroy was forced to remove the hated taxes, and in his rude shanty home the barefooted fisherman, in rude, democratic fashion, but with an eye single to justice and human ity, disposed of the petitions and complaints that were handed to him. But Nature is inexorable, and in establishing her balances she is worse than a thousand Shy- locks. For an entire week the entire care of a city of hundreds of thousands of inhabitants had fallen upon Masaniello. He was general. Judge, legislator, and’ for the whole time he had hardly slept or eaten. The combined physical and mental strain was more than he could bear, and the fisherman’s brain began to reeL He became a maniac and did ail sorts of violent things; and in stead of loving him and caring for him until he regained his san ity, the fools killed and buried him like a dog. But despite this the name of Masaniello will live forever in the memory of the lov-. ers of liberty and justice.