Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 07, 1913, Image 2

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2 A HE MIST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA. CA„ SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1913. CARREL HUES Aged Jurist and Wife Barricaded in Same House ESGAPESfRDM pyr n 11r r nr n Tn +•+ +•+ •;-•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +»-i- STEPNEARERTD Gunter Divorce Suit Stirs All Alabama Society Mrs. Knte Brace Gunter and children, for whom she fights in divorce proceedings against distinguished jurist. Standing, from left to right, the children arc: (Jodouine, Wallace and Richard, while those seated are Rodney, Thomas and Phillips, The children have been constant attendants on the court hearing, and visit both their father and mother .daily. Connective Tissue Preserved Per manently in Condition of Ac tive Life by Scientist. GROWTH IS UNDER CONTROL Constant Relation Found to Ex ist Between Ceils and Me dium of Preservation. NBW YORK, Sept. 6.—The earlier experiments upon the preservation of life In animal tissues after removal from the grow? organism have set I)r. Alexin Carrol at the Rockefeller In stitute at the threshold of a yet more Important discovery. These experi ments established the facts that not only could connective tissue be pre served permanently In a condition of active life, but that under certain eas ily controlled conditions growth could take place. In I>r. Carrel’s laboratory cells have been proliferating rapidly for more than sixteen months after their re moval from the organism of which they had formed a part. Hitherto all tissue when removed from the ani mal organism has been meat; those researches establish the fact that such tissue may continue to grow Indefi nitely. As this discovery became more fa miliar to the Investigator It was dis covered that a constant relation ex isted between the rate of growth of the cell and the composition of the medium In which It Is preserved. This fact. Dr. Carrel now announce* In The Journal of Experimental Medi cine. Indicated that certain cell phe nomena of the higher animals, s»uch an multiplication, growth and senility, might now be Investigated profitably. At first blocked by lack of proper method, this investigation has now become possible through the discovery of a technique which permits strains of connective tissue to multiply In definitely in the test tubes, like micro organisms. May Postpone Do®th. A distinct character of the progress reports which I)r. Carrel presents Is simplicity and directness. How each successive Item of this investigation may be adjusted to the scheme of life In general Is nowhere set forth; It la left entirely to Inference; It Is entire ly a matter of Interpretation of some obs. jre hint. In the report now Issued It may be taken that the mention of senility 1s Intended to foreshadow an ultimate object of this lino of profound study. That would seem to mean that this re search Is advancing toward the dis covery of some means of postponing the approach of old age. But Dr. Carrel says nothing of tho aort. He confines himself to a rigidly detailed statement of this series of experiments. He describes In terms of absolute accuracy the source of the cells upon which his research has been b.'ised; he describes the medium In which they have been preserved; be gives working directions which will enable other students to repent the treatment to which the specimens have been subjected. All this detail Is very recondite; It Is Information which will Interest only those stu dents of higher physiology who may seek to check this experiment by con trol tests performed Independently. The results of this series of’re searches have the Interest that they prove conclusively that Dr. Carrel has taken yet one more step toward the goal of his Inquiry. His earlier reports established the sufficiently startling fact that the death of the gross organism by no means entailed the simultaneous death of the com ponent parts. In effect his earlier conclusion was that the animal might die. but the cells of which the animal was composed tiled In a sscondary sense only by the failure to supply the culture medium which supported their Individual life. The first conclusion reached was the proof of life after death, the survival of the cell. Time Has No Effect. Tho later Investigation has estab lished a knowledge of the character istics of the growth of connective tis sue. This has led to a new result, the indefinite proliferation of a strain of connective tissue cells outside of the organism. The strain of connective tissue originally obtained from a fragment of chicken embryo heart, which had been pulsating In the test tube for 104 days, was still actively alive after sixteen m n nths of inde pendent life and more than 190 pas sages. The rate of proliferation of the connective tissue sixteen months old equalled and even exceeded that of fresh connective tissue taken from in eight-day-old embryo. "It appears, therefore.” Dr Parrel reports In summation, "that time has no effect on the tiMSues Isolated from the organism and preserved by means or the technique described. During the sixteenth month of life in vitro the cells Increased rapidly In number and were able In a short time to pro duce a large quantity of new tissue This fact, therefore, definitely dem onstrates that the tisanes were not in a -rtate of survival, a» was the case In certain earlier experiments, but in n condition of real life, since the cells t>f which they were composed, like micro-organisms, multiplied Indefi nitely in the culture medium." PASSING OF ‘KANGAROO WALK’ GRIEVES DOCTOR KIRKSVILLE, MO., Sept. 6—"It was a mistake when the straight front corset and the kangaroo walk went out of style, as both were natural and beneficial," said Dr. Ernest C. Bond, of Milwaukee, in an address to the .^American Osteopathic Association. JAIL ATTIRED AS A WOMAN Notorious Pickpocket Exchanges Clothes With a "Fair” Visitor and Makes Quick Getaway. Sensation Follows Sensation as Father of Montgomery’s Mayor Fights for Children. MONTGOMERY, ALA., Sept. 8 — Barricades and bitterness are stoutly established In the beautiful home of Colonel W. A. Gunter, former Justice of the State Supreme Court and a leading lawyer of Alabama. The di vorce suit In which Colonel Gunter and his wife, Mrs Kate Bragg Gunter, a leader In Montgomery’s intellectual wet. made sensational charges each against the other, has caused neither to leave the ancestral homo on Clay ton street. They live each In a wing apart front the other, neither recognizing the other on the rare occasions when by chance they' meet. Between them their six children pass each day, the youngest of whom is but 4 years old, and the oldest fn her early ’teens. It Is about the children that the tight is the bitterest. The Gunter divorce case has stirred Montgomery to its depths. After foul months of taking testimony, the pro ceedings In open court have been con cluded. but no decree has come yet. The city in its sentiments is divided between sympathy for Colonel Gun ter, who Is 79 years old, and for his | wife, who is little more than 40. Sons Political Power*. The case was full of spectacular features, chief among which was the figure of Mrs Gunter, lighting almost single-handed against a powerful fac tion. composed of her aged husband’s sons and daughters by a former mar riage, the sons being the acknowl edged political powers of the city. Then there was the figure of the aged defendant himself, engaging In a rough-and-tumble fight with his wife’s counsel In the courtroom. The litigation lor absolute divorce, the possession of the six children, the possession cf a fortune of $40,000, the fact that both parties continue to 11 Ye at the family home—all these have been features to arouse Montgomery. Divorces' among the best families of historic old Montgomery are so rare that when Mrs. Gunter filed suit, alleging that the Jurist had threat ened on one occasion to blow her head off," to kill himself and end all marital unhappiness, it caused more than a flutter of excitement in fash ionable capital society. The approaching storm was dis cussed behind closed doors, but never on the streets. Montgomery was passing through experiences hereto fore unknown where family scandals are not a part of the everyday life. Newspapers were discreetly oblivious. The parties were very prominent. Then when the aged man answered the divorce charge with a counter suit, filing it in the court of his son. judge Gaston Gunter, City Court head, former Mayor and now ac knowledged political “boss’* of Mont gomery. it created a furore. Imme diately the city began to take sides in the affair W. A. Gunter. Jr., an other son of the defendant by first marriage and present Mayor of the city, begun to attend every session of the hearing along with Police Com missioner C Patrick McIntyre, the mainstay of the city political "ma chine." who was named associate counsel for the defendant. The daily sessions of the trial began to as sume the aspects of a municipal c au cus. bent on solving some problem confronting the administration Says He Was Defrauded. In his counter suit the aged man. who assisted in his own case, inti mated that he had been defrauded in marriage. He was 86 years old. and the bride was 28 when the mar riage was performed. His petition stated that when he had married the pretty Kate Bragg, a descendant of General Braxton Bragg, he thought | he was marrying “a Jewel without a flaw.” but that he had found out in I the fourteen years of married life that her temper was ungovernable, and "though she be as fair as the I fair Ophelia." he could no longer live ; with her. I Judge John R. Tyson, former Su preme Court chief justice, was em ployed as special counsel by Colonel Gunter. When Mrs. Tyson objected to her husband prosecuting Mrs. Gunter because of her own personal friendship for the plaintiff, he ‘aban doned the case. The next counsel to be engaged was Police Commissioner McIntyre. City business was practically abandoned, and a line of automobiles thronged the curbing In front of the County Courthouse all during the trial. A large number of the city’s fashion able leaders were witnesses and spec tators In the hearing. Those testify ing on the stand totalled 114, most of whom were women and residents of Clayton street, the society neighbor hood in which the Gunter’s live. At one time the six small children took the stand to say who they wished to live with in the event of a permanent separation. They unanimously chose the mother. Lawyer’s Face Slapped. During the first week of the trial Colonel Gunter created a sensation in the courtroom when in a fit of anger he Interrupted his counsel while an alienist was testifying about Mr. Gun ter's mental condition. Following a heated dispute with the opposing counsel regarding the admission of certain testimony tending to show that his wife was possessed of a vio lent temper he ran across the room and raising his clinched fist attacked the opposing lawyer. Close behind him came Mrs; Darrington Semple, a daughter by the first marriage and head of a fashionable school f"r girls in New York city. Brushing her fa ther aside before the astonished vic tim of the attack could defend him self. she seized the latter and vigor ously slapped his cheeks. The fight was stopped when Mrs. J. Kirkman Jackson, her sister, swooned away and had to be carried from the courtroom News of the melee reached the ear of Judge Gas ton Gunter In his chambers on the second floor of the court building. He bounded down the stairway and rush- j ed Into the Chancery courtroom j where he declared In heated tones [ that he would make a personal matter j of the case If anyone dared lay hands upon the elder man. Hostilities almost opened again i when Mrs. Gunter took the stand. She openlj defied Judge Gaston Gunter, branding him as dishonest when she | sought to show cause why she did not want him appointed adminlstra- | tor in her husband’s will. Calls "Boss’’ Dishonest. “I would rather be in my grave than to see that man appointed guar dian for my children; he is dishon est and r.ot to be trusted." The city "boss” later assailed her from the stand as being an adventuress who had married his father fey* money. And so sensation after sensation followed. Pathos had Its place when the children romped In the corridors of the court building while their fa ther and mother wrangled out their differences through four mnoths of testimony Sometimes little Rodney, 4 years of age, would crawl into his mother’s lap. She would rock him to sleep oblivious of the court proceed ings for the time being. All through the long spectacular le gal battle the home at No. 608 Clay ton itreet was divided, yet undivided After a day of bitterness, charges of cruelty and domestic infelicity, the aged man and his wife with the six children would return to the house Mrs Gunter had barricaded herself in the upper wing of the house, while the aged father and husband occu pied the lower one. The children went to and fro. but the two princi pals Ignored the presence of the oth er, never resorting to speech or show ing recognition. Despite Its sensational features, the Montgomery newspapers did not pub lish details of the hearing in fact, the proceedings were Ignored alto gether. SUES TWIN BROTHERS ON FREEZE-OUT GAME CHARGE SOUTH BEND, IND., Sept. 6 —Charg ing that his two brothers have "frozen" him out of a part interest in the Elbel Brothers’ music store, Herman Elbel has filed suit against Richard and Rob ert Elbel, asking the appointment of a receiver to sell the concern and divide the proceeds. The Elbel Brothers have been In business here nearly thirty years. The plaintiff alleges he offered to sell his share for $25,000, but that his brothers refused to buy. Colonel Wil liam A. Gunter, former Justice of the Supreme Court of Alabama and one of the South’s most distinguished jurists, as he appears on the streets of Montgomery. This picture was taken as he walked to the court-house to attend his divorce trial. STREET CAR SMOKERS WIN ONLY WITH AID OF WOMEN ST. JOSEPH, MO., Sept. 6—The practice of smoking on street cars here was saved from a death blow when the Federation of Women’s Clubs voted overwhelmingly that smoking on the rear platforms of the cars was not ob jectionable. The street car company and the board of health requested the Women’s Feder ation. comprising delegates from all the city clubs, to pass on the subject. MOTHER OF 17 IS DEAD. COLUMBUS. OHIO, Sept. 6.—Fol lowing the birth of her seventeenth child, Mrs. John O’Dcnneil, aged 39, died at a local hospital. PAN FRANCISCO, Pept. 8.—Jim Cummerford, alias FYank White, a no torious pickpocket and ex-convict, es caped from the Alameda County Jail by exchanging clothes with a young woman caller. The exchange of clothing wan made while the corridor of the Jail was filled with Sunday visitors. The girl slipped off a white duck suit and a picture hat and stood forth In the man’p costume she had on under this. The prisoner put the girl’s suit on over his own clothes, fastened on the hat, which had a wig and veil at tached. and the couple, accompanied by another young man, walked out of the door past the unsuspecting Jailer. Deputy Sheriff Stachler was hood winked so badly that he shook hands with the bogus girl at the gate. He heard a giggle and thought it was a sob. Stachler missed hip prisoner a mo ment later, and gave the alarm, but the man and the two confederates who had helped him to escape had disap peared. A handsome young man and a pret ty girl called nt the Jail In mid-after noon, just at the time when the cor ridor of the Jail was thronged with visitors. They asked to see "Frank White." Stachler, remembering the alias, called In Cummerford and gave them a corner of the corridor In which to visit. Then he was called to an upper floor. When he returned, the young man and the tall girl dressed In white stood at the Jail door w'aitlng to be let out. Stachler was busy, but he remem bered the very agreeable young couple who had called to see "White," and he promptly unlocked the door for them. As they were passing out. a tall, slen der young man stepped to the door and crowded out with thorn. Stachler knew he was not on* of the prisoners and, although he did not remember letting him in, he assumed that he was a visitor. He shook hands with all three and dismissed them. Cummerford wap awaiting trial on a charge of grand larceny. He waR ar rested June 29 with George Hoye, alias Burnes, alias Rllev. by Inspec tors Green and Gallagher of the Oak land detective bureau, for picking the pocket of K. lato, a Japanese, of a wallet containing $10 and a small, check, aR he hoarded a street car with a baby In his arms. Three pickpock ets were Implicated, and hut two were arrested. Cummerford served a two- year term at Folsom prison for as sault with a deadly weapon. MANNING' latent SUCTION S5 COME TO ME I Examine YourTeeth Free! the fact that hundreds of patients have been treated successful ly and satisfactorily by me since the opening of my Atlanta office some months ago, amply demon strating that I do Dental Work Painlessly and that my service is strictly MODERN and agreeable in every re spect. I want to thank .the people of Atlanta and vicinity for their kind patronage so gen erously extended to me and I promise faithfully to give the best Dental Service for the least money. My prices «r« the lowest: Set of Teeth $5 Gold Fillings $1 up Platinum and Porcelain Fillings . .50c to $1 Gold Crowns and Bridge Work $3, $4, $5 Teeth without Plates, $1 per tooth. Work guaranteed for 15 years. Terms, Don’t worry; these are arranged to suit. Painless Extracting and cleaning FREE, wher# other work is being done. Appointments c«n be made by Phone 1298. DR. WH1TLAVV, PAINLESS DENTIST 73 1-2 WHITEHALL STREET. Opposite Vaudette Theaterj Fourth Door South of J. M. High Store. Open Daily, 8 a. m. to 8 p. m.; Sundays, 10 to 5. Lady Attendant. Ladies’ Rest Room. Phone 1298. FALL OPENING SALE Pianos, Player-Pianos,Organs Monday and for the week, we place on sale special designed styles of modern-made Pianos and Player-Pianos at a GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES. THIS SALE INCLUDES Everetts, Harvards, Daytons, H. P. Nelson, Steinberg, Mason & Co., Mellville Clark Apollo Player-Pianos, together with other high-grade makes of Pianofortes. Sample of What You Buy Player-Piano (mahogany finish, C97C ftft bench, music) «pZ./D.UU Player-Piano (mahogany finish, d*q rn HO bench, music) «pjDU.UU Upright Piano (mahogany finish, (tl C7 HA stool and scarf) «pI0i .UU Upright Piano (mahogany finish, Cl 07 AH stool and scarf) 1«/ • .UU THE UNDERSELLING PIANO STORE Is the slogan of this firm. More musical homes and teachers of Atlanta use and indorse the pianos we sell than any other store in the South. We in vite your consideration of the merit of our pianos. See us before you buy and you become a customer of this store. EASY PAYMENTS SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Prices and Catalogues Mailed on Request MANNING PIANO COMPANY 52 North Pryor St. Opp. Lowry Bank COMING ALII, Grialir 555SSE5»Se22S555SSS228S5S Minstrels 28th-Year of the World’s Greatest Indoor Show —28th—On a Plane of Magnificence Beyond Compare. “THE MINSTRELS OF THE NATIONS” An International Specta cle. The Military Powers of P the World in Review. The Songs of All Na tions—the Flags and Em- | blems of All Countries. The Aviation Meet. The Airships. Bert Swor’s Latest Lift. The Daysof’61 Pastimes and Dances of Long Ago. In Panama A View of the Locks and Course of the Great Canal from the Atlantic to the Pacific. All the Old Favorites and Many New Ones. William Walters’ Gold Band SpecialTrain of Cars ATLANTA Thursday, Friday, Saturday SEPT. 25, 26, 27 Matinee Saturday Sept. 27th Will Also Appear Sept. 23—Charleston. Sept. 24—Augusta. Sept. 29—Nashville. Oct. 1-2—Memphis. Oct. 3-4—Birmingham. P. S.—"Watch Your self Go By,” one of the popular books of the day, by Al. G. Field. For sale by newsdealers, or sent prepaid by addressing Field Publishing Com pany, 50 Broad Street, Columbus ,0hio.