Newspaper Page Text
4A
GOOD POSITIONS
WITH UNCLE SAM
GOINGBEGGING
Eligibles for Various Positions
Are Scarce, Civil Service
Commission Finds.
MANY EXAMINATIONS SOON
One Plum, Paying $4,500, Will
Fall to Some One of the
Many Competitors.
WASHINGTON, fiept. 20—Jobs
under the Government ere jroing a
begrlng, and the Civil Service Com
mission to-day issued announcements
of examinations to be held for a num
ber of positions, almost every an
nouncement bearing this significant
statement In black-faced letters:
"As the commission has experi
enced considerable difficulty In secur
ing a sufficient number of eligibles
for postlons, qualified persons are
urged to enter this examination.”
Among the positions which the
commission seeks to fill through com
i»etltlve examinations Is that of pre
parator In the bureau of entomology
of the Department of Agriculture. The
position, according to the announce
ments, will pay the successful candi
date S6O a month. The examination
< onsists only of passing In spelling,
arithmetic, letter wrlttlng. penman
ship, copying and demonstrating,
genera] aptitude for the job. “prac
tical tests In preparing, mounting and
labeling entomological specimens,
both pinned and microscopic.”
All For S6O a Month.
Another place the commission ha*
.thus far failed to fill and for whic h
an appeal Is made Is that of a teacher
of metal working and mechanical
•Irawing in the Indian service. The
job also will pay S6O a month. In
addition to being both an arithmeti
cian and an artist, the applicant, ac
cording to the specifications, might
well have ”a knowledge of wood
turning.” However, the commission
adds, this knowledge "Is desirable,
but not efwentlal.”
The real prize position open to that
' itizen of the United States w’ho can
qualify and demonstrate his super
ority 'over his fellows pays $4,500 a
\ ear It Is the position of professor
•f pharmacology in the public health
service.
'The specific position mentioned.”
o.iyM the commission’s announcement.
Is one of much responsibility and It
is desired to secure the services of a
.nan who has broad training and ex
tensive practical experience In various
branches of pharmacology. physi
ology. physiological and pharmaceu
tical chemistry, chemotherapy, etc., as
they relate to medicine and the pub
lic health”
Ten Years’ Experience Necessary.
Those seeking to pluck this plum,
however, the commlesion insists, must
have had ten years of experience
along the lines laid down and like
wise muMt have had training that
would qualify them for the degree of
Ph. D. if they haven’t already ac
quired that distinction.
Otner jobs which are open and for
which examinations will be held dur
ing September and October are: Fifth
culturist. male, bureau of fisheries;
apprentice fish culturist, male, also in
the bureau of fisheries; structuril
draftsman, first-claw, and structural
draftsman. second-class. In the
isthmian canal service; laboratory
apprentice; male, hi the bureau of
standards dynamo tender male, at
Ellie Island. N. Y.; junior fuel engi
neer. male in the bureau of mlneM.
station at Pittsburg,
tanical laboratory work, male, in the
bureau of plant Industry; statistical
clerk, in the departmental service, and
scientific assistant departmental ser
vice.
WOMEN BARRED AS COUNTY
CLERKS IN WISCONSIN
MADISON. WIS., Sept. 20—A wom
an can not be chosen by the county
board as County Clert to fill out a
vacancy, according to an opinion of
Attorney General Owen, rendered to
Senator Teat-dale, of Sparta.
The County Clerk of Monroe Coun
ty died a few days ago and hls daugh
ter is willing to fill the position. Ow
ing to the death of the clerk, and the
fact that no deputy was appointed by
the clerk, it will he necessary for the
county board to call a meeting to elect
Consumption
The great new discovery that
is being used with wonderful
success In the external treat
ment of this most dreaded and
fatal disease is
Crouch’s Consumption
Remedy
Hundreds of testimonials your
personal friends are among them
If y«>u <>r some friend is afflicted
with this certain death disease—
investigate save a life Positive
| ly benefits; immediate relief.
Trial battle sl.
Ea-l one Medicine Co.,
7 Hill Street Atlanta, Ga.
Guaranteed Fresh Conntrv
EGGS
LU Doz,
VWn wit m ——mJ
I Annette Kellerman Has Rival in Chinese Girl
IZamlock Lowe Is Perfect Physical Woman
H Q IVALS for title of “world’s most perfect physical woman.” On the left is Miss Zamlock I
||j *A. Lowe, the California Chinese girl, while Annette Kellerman, the famous Australian |
swimmer, is shown on the right. I
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Daughter of San Francisco Celes
tial Is Student of Law at the
State University.
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 20.—An
nette Kellerman has a rival, and a
formidable one, for the title of '‘the
‘ world’s most perfect physical wom
( an.” And strangely enough, the rival
Is not of Caucasion blood. She is a
pure Chinese girl, but everything that
a Chinese girl is not supposed to be.
» The popular idea of the Chinese
" woman, with bandaged feet and
stunted growth, r»f seclusion amount
ing almost to slavery, must undergo a
! change,* for here in California there
is a young Chinese woman who is
physically perfect, according to Occi
dental standards, who is studying law
and who is an ardent upholder of
| equal suffrage.
She is Miss Zamlock Lowe, daugh
ter of a prominent merchant of San
Francisco, and is the only woman of
her race who is enrolled in the law
course at the University of California.
She is not very tall, just 5 feet 3.2
inches, to be exact to a decimal, but,
"with lovely symmetry conforming to
Fresh Fish|
. It matters not how high the H
‘ j cost of living may soar, you will ■
find fresh fish of every kind at Bi
our market every day And ourß
j prices will appeal to you as be-B I
ing very reasonable indeed.
Fresh Oysters Every Day |
Empire Fish Market!
112 Whitehall Street
T. W. Reynolds, Salesman. E
Phones: h
Main 2223 J. Standard 1053.il
MMBt - 7 - r
Fatp/e measurements of
RIVAL VENUSES
LERMAN. ZAMLOCK LOWE.
Weight 119.4 lbs.
Height (standing) 63.2 in.
Height (sitting) 33.3 in.
Girtn of nock 12.2 in.
Girth of chest 30.6 in.
. v-.ov Chest expanded 33.1 in.
s 25.50 in.. Girth of waist 24.2 in.
J 35.75 In Girth of hips 37.6 in.
S 21.50 in Girth of thigh \ 22.4 in.
i 13.50 in Girth of calf 13.8 in.
j 10.75 in Girth of upper arm ...11.4 in.
9.25 in Girth of forearm 0.1 in.
her height,” the staid statistics of
measurement tell of a figure fem
-1 ininely perfect.
Nature, in her sudden leap from the
confines of aeons of tradition, was not
unaided by Miss Lowe. Not that fig
ural perfection was her object. Indeed,
for the healthy body that would best
serve her brain was her desire, and
to this end she has undertaken gym
nastic work and a careful diet that
includes the best and simplest of Chi
nese and American foods.
Mrs. M McGee, phvskal culture !n-
■
•
■ Kansas Fanners Now
I Insuring Pigs' Lives
State Has Plan to Protect Stock
Raising Against Any Pos
sible Loss.
TOPEKA. Sept. 30.—The State of
l Kansas is offering to sell a life Insur
' ance policy on every pig In the State
I at from 25 cents to 50 cents for each
|i pig Upon the payment of that much
I lard cash the State Is practically
; willing to guarantee to the farmer
that he will get the market price for
I the pig when it Is old enough to mar
i ket, and the market price for an ordl
nary pig at the present time ia from
sl2 to $lB So the Kansas insurance
i premium payment is very light, and.
in addition. It only has to be paid
I once during the life of the pig.
When the State completes the
! spending of some $12,000 this fall it
i may be able to reduce the premiums
| of pig life insurance, and the cost wiD
• then bo even less.
TTEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1913.
structress at the university, discov
ered Miss Lowe’s perfection of meas
urements In the ordinary course of’
taking initial measurements of those
entered in the class.
The height first struck her atten
tion, it being close to that of Annette
Kellerman, the Australian swimmer,
whose measurements perfect.
Then Mrs. McGee noticed other fig
ures corresponding and on checking
up she announced Miss Lowe to be
equally perfect in figure with Miss
Kellerman.
Weds Foster Father
On Wife's Dying Wish
Bride of 25 Says Foster Mother
Urged Her to Take Her
Place.
CHICAGO. Sept. 20—" When I be
came the bride of my foster father,
the dying wish of my foster mother.
Mr. Worth s first wife, was fulfilled.
Mr and Mrs. Worth reared me us
their daughter from the time 1 was
4 years of age, but 1 was never legal
ly adopted by them.”
This was the statement made by
Mrs. Marjorie Payne Worth, aged
25. when she told of her marriage to
William Worth. 44 years her senior,
which took place at Windsor Park,
where the bride has resided since the
death of her foster mother in July.
"I was devoted to my foster parents.
Mrs. Worth and I were like mother
and daughter, and we were a happy
quartet, for Mrs. Worth's father. Mo
zart Whittier, made his home with us
for years.” |
4-YEAR-DLDBQY
15 MASTER OF
POLYSYLLABLES
Words Like “Spondylotherapy”
and “Polycotyledon” Baby
Talk of Youngster.
DETROIT, Sept. 20.—" The boy with
the mirror brain” is what they call
4-year-old George Herbert VanVleet.
His exceptional mental activity dates
back to early babyhood.
At an age when the average young
ster’s vocabulary consists of a series
of sounds that no one but a doting
parent could by any stretch of th?
imagination construe as representing
even “googoo,” George was talking
distinctly, repeating words that would
stump many a grown-up.
By the time he was 16 months old
he astonished physicians who had
ben attracted by stories of his ability
when such simple words as spondylo
therapy, polycotyledon, mataptergold,
limnanthaceae rolled off hls tongue as
easily as if they contained but on?
syllable.
To-day, just turned 4, there is not a
word in the English language that,
having heard once, he will nut repeat,
with astonishing clearness of enun
ciation. *
He has never been taught to read.
All letters look alike to him when
they are coupled together.
“We have never crowded George iq
the least,” said Mr. VanVleet, when
the fear was expressed that such
precocity, if encouraged, might lead ij
a mental breakdown in a short time.
“It is only necessary for him to hear
anything once. A statement settles
back in his brain to be brought so
at will. We have never undertaken
to teach him to read, as we were
fearful of imposing too severe a
strain. How one small head man
ages to contain such a mass of de
tail is too much for me. I only kn.iw
that it does and ; .1 willing to ec
someone else do the explu.nlng.”
In other respects Georra is an or
dinary. wideawake, fun-loving young
ster to whom life is one round of joy.
He is fond of the games common w ith
children of hls age an 1 is popular
with his playmates. But when ill
these pall, he seoks relief in poring
over maps or in other ways acquir
ing a fund of information out of all
keeping with his years.
English Sparrows
Used to Halt Weevil
Feathered Gamins Are Welcomed in
Alfalfa Fields of Western
States.
MADISON, WIS., Sept. 20.—The
English sparrow has found a claim to
usefulness. The most despised of
birds promises to be of service In
checking the spread of the alfalfa
weevil.
The spread of this pest has
ened the destruction of the alfalfa
Industry In Utah. Wyoming and
Southern Idaho and caused much
alarm among growers of the plant in
Wisconsin and other Middle Western
States.
That the seed introduction theory
of spread Is false has been definitely
proved by T. H. Parks and James G.
Sanders, plant experts, respectively, to
the Idaho Agricultural College and the
University of Wisconsin's College of
Agriculture. Their investigations
have shown that the weevil feeds
upon leaves and stems of the plant,
but never upon the seed. On the
other hand, there is every possibility
of spread in the fact that the beetle
or Its eggs may be carried from dis
trict to district In the hay upon which
it feeds.
BOY SUDDENLY INSANE;
GREW TOO RAPIDLY
MARINETTE. WIS.. Sept. 20.
Growing too rapidly is the principal
reason given for the sudedn insanity
of Ray Kennison, the 15-year-old son
of the Rev. C. S. Kennison. The youth
stands nix feet two inches in height
and is growing rapidly. The boy was
brought before Judge Davis, of the
County Court, who ordered him com
mitted to the State Hospital for the
Insane at Oshkosh. The father has
taken a pastorate in Missouri and has
moved to that State.
• PENNY
SAVE 1
YDU '
■WI
On Building Materials
Sajje half the cost of your
Sash, Doors, Blinds, Paint,
Glass, Varnish, Roofing,
Tiling, Mantels. Grates,
Hardware, Wall Paper.
We can supply EVERYTHING nsed, J
in constructing Buildings at 25 o to
60% less than usual dealers prices.
*5 ’I ■ <4 11 1 ■ tltlHil l
Fl”
Costs you I Costs us
*| I Catalogs. 18c
For Port Card | Postsje 7c
We would not spend this 25c
If we did not feet sure onr Catalog
would secure your order.
Louis Gallaher Co.,
Established 1871
Building Materials
Browfbtoß St., Dept. 4 P. 0. Bos 280
Savannah, Ga. Baltimore, Md.
Japanese Strain in
Alaskan Indians
Head of Rodman Wanamaker Expe
dition Returns From Exploring
Trip to Neah Bay.
TACOMA, WASH., Sept. 20—After
studying Indian tribes at Neah Bay
and elsewhere, Dr. Joseph Dixon, head
of the Rodman Wanamaker expedi
tion. returned from Cape Flattery, at
the entrance to the Straits of Fuca.
Dr. Dixon is accompanied by hls son
and Major McLaughlin, of the United
States Army.
"Neah Bay Indians are a combina
tion of Russians, Japanese and Eski
mos,” said Dr. Dixon. "They are a
squatty, short type, and extremely in
teresting. From a viewpoint of char,
acter study, they are valuable.”
This confirms the view advanced
twenty years ago by Judge James
Wickersham, now Alaska delegate in
Congress, and by others since, that
Western Washington Slwash tribes
sprang from Japanese wafted across
the Pacific voluntarily or otherwise
by the Japanese current centuries
ago.
Doctor Calls Kissing
Fine, and Also Safe
Physician Disagrees With ’ Theory
That Osculation Is in Any Way
Dangerous.
PITTSBURG. Sept. 20.—Kissing,
“as a general proposition,” was ap
proved to-day by Dr. J. F. Edwards,
head of the City Bureau of Infectious
Diseases.
“Kissing is as old as the human
race,” said Dr. Edwards. “What harm
Is there in it? It is not the puny
creature that sits around and spoons.
Usually the men anu women addicted
to this love affection are strong and
healthy.
“Weaklings do not have enougn
energy to spoon. There is no special
danger in kissing.”
‘Woodrow City' Fails;
Women Banish Title
Suffragists of Illinois Prevent Name
of President From Gracing
Map of State.
CHICAGO, Sept. 20.—Women of
Spring Road and Villa Park, two
communities on the Aurora, Elgin and
Chicago electric ’•oad southwest ot
Elmhurst, arose in their might at the
polls and prevented the name of
Woodrow’ from gracing the map of
Illinois to-day.
The proposition at the special elec
tion to incorporate both communities
into the village of Woodrow’, named
after President Wilson, was defeated
by a vote of 139 to 76. Ninety-two
women voted, most of them against
the proposition.
Baby Is Killed by
Drinking Absinthe
Boy Finds Bottle and Gives It to
Child, Who Dies Soon After
Taking Doje.
CHICAGO. Sent. 20.—After finding
a nice-looking tattle yesterday, 5-
year-old Henry Kloskl generously
gave it to 6-month-old Eugene Rock
well, of No. 5125 Belmont avenue.
"Here’s a bottle for baby,” he said,
kindly.
The bottle contained absinthe, and
Baby Rockwell died a short time aft
er being taken to St. Ann's Hospital.
The police traced the story of the
bottle and the Coroner was notified.
,4- z ’ u /
••x . a «
I Five different grades of rice including DOMINO were placed under the
magnifying glass and then photographed. No. 1 representes DOMINO,
while the others represent various inferior grades.
.. We believe that by serving only the best
- quality of head rice to the consumer, in a
! sanitary package, we can enormously in- P
crease the consumption by judicious 7
. e advertising. «
••• For this purpose we have planned
• w a broa.d campaign or
and invite the co-operntion of the Trade
a.nd the Consumer.
10c eund 25c Patcka.g£es
AT YOUR GROCERS
Book of Recipes on application
NEW ORLEANS
Bit
D.A.R.HEftDTO
BE VISITOR fll
KNOXVILLEFAIR
Mrs. William Cumming Story Will
Deliver Address on Patriotic
Day at Exposition.
KNOXVILLE, Sept. 20.—Elaborate
preparations are being made by the
Woman’s Department of the National
Conservation Exposition for Daugh
ters of the Revolution Day, which
will be the feature of October 3.
National Interest centers In this oc
casion, as Mrs. William Cumming
Story, president general of the D.
A. R., will be the principal speaker
of the day.
Letters have been mailed to all the
national officers of the D. A. R., and
to all State regents, inviting them to
visit the exposition on that day and
deliver a five minutes' addresa It
Is expected that the presence of Mrs.
Story Win draw a large number of
the Daughters to Knoxville and their
advent will be the cause of much so
cial and patriotic activity.
Os equal interest will be October
4, which has been selected as Panama
Day. On that occasion Senator Dun
can U. Fletcher, of Florida, president
of the Southern Commercial Con
gress; John Barrett, director of the
Pan-American Association, and Dr.
Clarence J. Owens, secretary of the
Southern Commercial Congress, will
deliver addresses, all dealing with the
Importance of the opening of the
Panama Canal from a Southern
viewpoint.
Good Measure
Nothing so quickly builds np a
business as a reputation for giving
good measure.
That’s the secret of Red Seal Shoes.
Long service records of from six
to ten months wear * are coming in
every day.
Keep this in mind in selecting
your next line of shoes.
Salesman by appointment.
J. K. Orr Shoe Co.
Red Seal Shoe Factory
Atlanta.
Mail Orders on Way, Same Day
iDOMINOg
ffiy ßlCE a
Woman Sues to Have
Pictures Mailed
Seeks to Restrain Postmaster From
Holding Them Up as Objec
tionable Matter.
CHICAGO, Sept. 20.—The question
of whether a postmaster has the right
under the law to hold up pictures or
any other mall matter he decides is
improper or objectionable was dis
cussed before Federal Judge A. L.
Sanborn. The casus belli was a bill
filed by Mrs. Ivy V. Sturtevant, own
er of the Hicks Publishing Company,
asking that the postmaster be re
strained from interfering with the
passage through the malls of cer
tain pictures printed by the publish
ing company. _
Elopes With Woman
Twice His Own Age
Youthful Bridegroom Wanted To Be
Sure of Sensible Spouse,
He Says.
BOSTON. Sept. 20.— Alfred Mc-
Glone, 21 years old, of South Brain
tree, eloped with Anna Lobate, Stt
years old, it became known to-day.
The couple went quietly to Braintree
and were married two weeks ago. Mb-
McGlone said:
"I wanted a sensible helpmate an4Lw*
picked out a woman twice my age ti
be sure of it”
Mrs. McGlone said: **l told Mm thaf
I was too old for him, but ho said
that he was satisfied.”
$2.50 TO BIRMINGHAM
and return, September 22.
Special train leaves Old De
pot 8:30 a. m., arrive Bir
mingham 1:30 p. m. Tickets
good returning on regular
trains until September 25.
SEABOARD.
JyTV Ay
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