Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 17, 1913, Image 14

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X l t-lAVE. HERE A CoKMUNICATiOK > TmeA-' : ^§§ / SIGNATURE op IS ILLE-OtBLE. IX UOOK'jX LIKE "VU&WUG 5 ORVALRUS^.' IT »S AS FOLLOWS. 1 — ^ "AT TME PRESENT IMPINGEMENT of AFFAIRS THE UNITED STATES Will PUR&ue a Policy” oF < FLAMBUNlKTiOUS CoNSERv/ATbR.ieiLlTY 5LFNJ)tP WITH A TOUCH of ABS<?UATULOUS r —; ^ \ WATCHFULOSITY AN£> WAITFULME5S! j. / ,^ 7 ' P^Y, HUERTA SAYS L 'You RE A BoNtMtAD) Amp Your lectures \ \. ! Vot Does) }>OT MEAN 1 . Xof'his EDITORIAL PAGE The Atlanta Georgian THE HOME PAPER THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN Published by THE GEORGIAN COMPANY At 20 East Alabama flt Atlanta, Oa Entered «e reoond-clans matter at poitnfict at Atlanta, under art of March 3. 1" • • HKARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN and THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN will be malbd t" aubecribers anywhere In the United statc.R, Canada and Mexico. . • * n t) for 1.60 tut 11 7$, x t *3 60 for $7 00. < hanjfc f address made as often aa desired. Furt-iga Bubacrlptlon rates on application. ___________________ How Would YOU Write This? A Lesson in Expressing Ideas for Our 'l oung I roplr. Cosortiht. ISta, \v Stw Coouaat fi-H II II I 11-1 I I < fi-l-l H4 H I l-H I n 1 HI I H I I I I I H H H 4-+-HHIIIIHWHII 'H'+'H H-H I l H-l "I IHI H' < i « ^ +**++ f THE CRUISE OF THE “PIFFLE” To write well is, first, to HAVE a good idea and then know how to get the idea from yonr head into another man s head, simph and easily, without waste of words and without effort on the part of the man who reads. The art of making YOUR thought plain and clear to others is highly important—not only to the writer, but to every human being The clerk is a good clerk when he can put his idea easily into the mind of a customer. A good mother can get her thoughts, the goodness of her heart, easily into the minds of her children. The art of making yourself clear in speech or writing, and easily understood, is like every other art. ONE THAT MUST BE PRACTISED So here is a lesson to-day for the boys at high school and the older men who wish that they were at high school LEARNING We take an extract from an advertisement of the works of Rudyard Kipling. The extract was written by Edmund Gosse, a well-known writer. Here it is. Read it quickly, without stopping, and see if you understand immediately just what the writer meant "Not fewer distinguished men of letters profess to have 'discovered’ Mr. Kipling than there were cities of old in which Horner was born. Yet, in fact, the discovery was not much more creditable to them than it would be, on a Summer night, to contrive to notice a comet flying across the sky.” That was intended as a very simple statement, one to be in? rtantly absorbed by the reading mind. But IS it such a statement" Take your pencil and paper and see for yourself just how much better, how much more simply, how much more briefly, YOU can express the thought that Edmund Gosse tried to get from his mind into your mind. This is a good chance for readers to practise the art of ex pressing a simple thought simply. For the idea is to make a simple striking COMPARISON. Imagination that invents or spontaneously expresses thought in apt comparison is the good imagination. The writing quoted above is bad, because it begins with the word ‘NOT.” You will feel instinctively that to begin by saying NOT is something like harnessing a horse with his nose against the dashboard. You will also see that the dragging in of a number of cities in which Homer was supposed to have been born checks the thought that the writer wanted to express and makes the reader stumble and hesitate, instead of getting the idea into his mind IMME DIATELY. We give you this quotation from the Rudyard Kipling adver tisement not in a spirit of silly criticism, but with a desire to have a good many young men PRACTISE THOUGHT and expression. Write out for yourself the best way in which YOU could ex press the idea that Edmund Gosse wishes to convey. He might have said, for example: The critics who say they discovered' Kipling are as ridieu lous as the hoptoad on the railroad track who said he discovered the approaching locomotive headlight.” Or he might say: When the lighthouse keeper sends the light across the water the little fish says, 'I have discovered the lighthouse.’ That fish is the critic who said, 'I have discovered Kipling.’ ” Or you could compare the little unimportant critic who “dis covers ’ ’ the great writer to be beetles, moths and other tiny flying creaures of the night that flock to and discover the electric arc light, Except for that light THEY would be invisible. And ex cept for the light of that which they criticise, the critics as a rule would be invisible. Many a critic who “discovers" a great man is simply an obscure little fluttering moth, lighted np for a moment, made visi ble by the light that the great man casts upon him. The human race has practised almost everything EXCEPT THINKING. Thinking and writing or speaking must go together. There is no real thought that is not expressed in words. You cannot think EXCEPT IN WORDS Try it. The animals cannot THINK, they can only feel, because they possess no language with which to express and formulate thought. Men deal with each other, convince each other, by thought and through the expression of thought in words. The man who can think well and express his thoughts well and simply and find a SHORT, EASY ROAD TO THE MIND OF THE OTHER MAN is the man who succeeds. PRACTISE THOUGHT AND THE WRITING AND SPEAK ING OF YOUR THOUGHT. I • rornifht. 1913, Intimation*! Nf*i Barrie* “Hooray!” “Avast!” “Hip, hip!” “Oh, you Juice!” “Shiver my binnacle lights!” This outburst of sailor-like expressions was uttered by the gallant crew of the peace ship “Piffle.” The occasion was the annual banquet of the “Society for the Prevention of Hurting the Feelings of Mexicans!” When the applause had subsided Admiral Juice arose and said: “We have with us to-night as our honored guest one of the most peaceful men on record. Our old friend Rip Van Winkle went away from home in order to have peace and slept twenty years! But he has nothing on us! When it comes to peacefulness we have got him faded!” As the fearless Admiral ceased speaking the mellow voices of the ship’s quartette were heard in the following chorus. “Way down in distant Mexico they’re having quite a time, With murder-fests and arson-fests and other brands of crime! But it can’t go on forever, and we’ll give a joyful whoop When the frost is on Carranza and Huerta’s in the soup! rU"l"H-i-l-l l'> l H , l-H-l-l-H"H"H"H"l i l I I I I l-l-l-H M I H-H-H H I'H- I 1 1 1 I II H-H 1 1 1 I I 1 I Mince Pie Time The Easiest Way Only a few days till Christmas. While there are persons who would go the society for the suppression of useless giving one better and start an organization of vigilantes for the purpose of catching and lynching Santa Claus, the fleeting desire to do so generally is born of the knowledge that there is too little to do all we wish. A good way to get the Christmas business over is to sit down quietly and read the advertisements, Then with a list of those you are to remember, decide what you want for them. Shop early and have it over. Then after that, picking up the presents for those you forgot will be easier. The First Woman Doctor gy «ek. thqmas b. Gregory % { T was 64 years ago that Eliza beth Blackwell, a young Englishwoman who had made America her home, resolved that she would enter college with a view of studying medicine and surgery In endeavoring to carry out her resolution Miss Blackwell met with Herculean difficulties. She was told in emphatic language by her best friends that it was high ly improper for a woman to study medicine, and that no decent woman would think of becoming a medical practitioner. As for a lady practicing surgery, that was absolutely out of the question. In addition to ail this was the very much more serious obsta cle of prejudice among the medi cal school people. Where would she And a medical college that would admit a woman to its lec ture rooms and laboratories? The young woman applied to more than a dozen of the leading medi cal schools of the country and was invariably turned down. They had no use for her. They greeted her appeal with the moat derisive laughter. Finally, how ever. she received word from a small college in Geneva, N. Y., announcing that her application had been favorably considered, and that she would be admitted as a student whenever si e should present herself. The students treated Miss Blackwell with kindness and re spect, but the women of Geneva were ‘•shocked.” They stared at her as though she had been a curious animal.” and declared she was “either % bad woman, whose designs would gradually become evident, or that, being crazy, an outbreak of insanity would soon manifest itself." Graduating at the head of her class. Miss Blackwell, after study ing in the hospitals of Europe, returned to New York and be gan the practice of medicine— the first woman doctor in the United States. As a practitioner she was a marked success, and hers is the honor of having found ed the institution out of which grew the present “New York In firmary and the College for Women." MYSTERIES OF SCIENCE AND NATURE Question Again Arises Whether the Pithecan thropus of Java Was'a Man or a Monkey, or a Being Intermediate Between Them. By GARRETT P. SERVISS T HE problem of the famous ape-man of Java, the "pith ecanthropus erectus," is a Rain under discusaion by the paleontologists (students of an cient life), and they still are un able to agTee whether this mys terious creature was a kind of primitive human being or only an extraordinary specimen of the ape tribe who happened to be horn with a big head. A French writer has pnt the ac tual situation among the learned men In a few words: “For some the pithecanthropus is a man; for others he is a monkey; for others still he is an animal intermediary between man and monkey.” The average reader may say to himself that he doesn't care what the pithecanthropus was. Bather the pithecanthropus! But that would be a very unintelligent atti tude to assume. We have arrived at a period of intellectual develop ment when what is called pre-his tory has as great (if not greater) importance for us as history itself. The Pithecanthropus, if in Ancestral Line, Is Interesting. If the pithecanthropus really be longs in our ancestral line he is as interesting a figure as the remote past contains We see him, with his big bushy head, his crooked legs, his bent hack, his long arms, away back there close to the point where the paths divided which led in one direction to the cities of men and the wonders of the mind, and in the other direction to the tropical forests and the haunts of climbing creatures to whom na ture gave, as in mockery, human masks hiding only brute brains. He stands there the most an cient, the most distant, of the crea tures which felt the impulse of awakening humanity. He Is almost at the bottom of the long hill. He is striking into the nar row path which leads continually upward. Around him aVe other beings to whom the same oppor tunity came, who were led* to the beginning of the same straight, mounting way. but who turned aside, leaving him to pursue alone his pilgrimage. It is a curious and significant fact that after the discovery of the remains of the pithecanthropus in 1892 an anthropologist undertook to reconstruct, upon anatomical principles, the missing jaw (for nothing of the head was found ex cept the top of the skull and a few scattered teeth), and several years later there was discovered at Mauer, in Germany, a human jaw precisely corresponding with tha» which the anthropologist had at tributed to the pithecanthropus. To which must be added the fa** that the best authorities assign to “the man of Mauer” an antiq uity corresponding with that which has generally been assigned to the pithecanthropus. At the same time there are au thorities who deny to the pithe canthropus a place in the line of human descent. Among these is Professor Bouie, of Paris, who thinks it probable that the piths- can thro pus was a species erf giant monkey, allied to the gibbons, and superior to its congeners not only in stature hut also in sire of skull in which it approached the lower limit for man. There may have been a group of these overgrown gibbons de veloped in Java, thinks Professor Bouie, and they may bavo been driven into extinction by virtue of the very fact that they were not physically developed in accord with their environment. Admits There Is a Great Resemblance to the Human Type. Professor Bouie himself admits that there are resemblances to the human type in the pithecan thropus. and that its skull seems to have been Intermediate in form between that of the monkey and that of man. but he denies that such resemblances and correspon dences necessarily prove a rea! an cestral relationship. But even If this vtow of the Parts anthropologist be admitted as probably correct It hardly at ail diminishes the interest of the pithecanthropus, because It only reveals In that creature a being which certainly made a start to ward human evolution, though It may never have fairly entered upon the path. Type Serves to Show How Difficult Was the Development. It serves to show bow difficult was the work of developing man out of a lower animal type. Na ture had, apparently, to try again and again, with that patience and that contempt of expense which abe always exhibits, and at last she succeeded. So whether the pithecanthropus was a primitive man, carrying locked up in him all the wooden ful possibilities of evolution which that state of being would imply, or whether he was only an aspir ing ape who could not make good his hold on a higher level of exist ence, we must read about him and the controversies he' excites with equal interest. Questions Answered THE LOMBARDS. F. O.—The Lombards were originally a Teutonic, or rather Scandinavian, folk. Gradually they Worked their way south ward from the land of Odin and Thor to the fair plans of North ern Italy, which they entered about the middle or end of the sixth century. They changed their Paganism lor the heterodox form of Christianity known as Arian- ism, and between 750 and 800 were conquered by Pepin and Charlemagne. For conquering the Lombards Pepin was crowned King of France by the Pope, and Charlemagne, later on. was made Emperor. In return the Popes were given a big slice of terri tory around Rome. THE EVERGLADES. G. H. R.—The region down in Florida known as the "Ever glades” is not as yet available t<>r cultivation, although it is under stood that an attempt is Hein* made by the State to reclaim ' territory. The region is 70 rn 1 long and 60 wide, the water being from one to six feet deep, studded thickly with ridges, or islan- - from one-fourth of an a ere ! '* hundreds of acres in extent. Ol of the water grows a rank gru- from six to ten feet high, vegetable deposits of the Evei glades are enormous, and beyoi a doubt the great swamp, 'vaen thoroughly drained, will pro dm amazing crops, especially of ba nanas and plantain and o her subtropical fruits. STARS AND STRIPES "The stocking is a bad purse," says -Major Sylvester, the Capi tal's head cop. A roll does make it look kind of lumpy in these days of slit skirts. * * * Mayor Harrison says Chicago restaurants are places to eat, not dance. Quite different from many In New York. Statistics show 88,b00.000 mals are killed annually In l/nited States. And the autonn bile slaughter is keeping pace. * * * Naval Note—Secretary of St- Bryan should receive Secret of the Navy Daniels on board tub "Grapejuice" with all t- honors of—peace,