Newspaper Page Text
Hundred-Inch Telescope To Be
Placed on MY, Wilson Expected
to Reveal New Facts.
DR. HALE WRITES OF HOPES
Reflector of Instrument Is Largest
.
in World—Secrets of Heavens
To Be Learned.
108 ANGELES, Nov, 13.-—-A book
entitied “Ten Years' Work of a Moun
tain Observatory,” by Dr. George El
lery Hale, director of the Mount Wil.
son Observatory, which has just been
published by the Carnegle Institution
of Washington, contains the first
statement of any length that Dr. Hale
has made as to what is expected of
the new.yo-lnch telescope when it is
completed next year, This will be the
largest telecope In the world, the
largest reflectors now in use belng
SO-inch telescopes, one of which has
for a number of years been a part of
the equipment on Mount Wilson,
Is this great telescope, more than
twice as powerful as any that the
world has ever had, going to make it
possible to find out how our earth
was formed and what may be expect
ed to become of 1t?
This Dr. Hale In his book declares
to be the object for which the Mount
Wilson Observatory was established a
decade ago, and the big 100-inch re
flectop is expected to make possible
wonderful gtrides In research.
Tells of Observatory Objects.
In defining the objects of the Mount
Wilson Observatory, he writes:
“The scheme of research is the
prime consideration. Let us suppose,
as in the case of the Mount Wilson
Observatory, that the chief object is
to contribute, to the highest degree
possible, to the solution of the prob
lem of stellar evolution. What was
the origin of the earth on which we
live? We know that it is a member
of a solar system, one of several
planets moving harmoniously about
& great central sun, on which they
depend for light and heat.
“And may we not hope, by learning
the relationship of the stars in mov
ing groups, and by tracing these
groups back to their former positions
in space, to reconstruct a picture of
the universe as it was long before the
solar system had taken form?"
Expects Much of Reflector,
Then about the great reflector from
which so much is expected, Dr. Hale
goes on to say:
“To the unalded vision about 5000
stars would be visible on a clear night
in the entire sky.
“Accerding to a recent estimate of
Chapman and Melotte, the heavens
contain about 219,000,000 stars, bright.
er than the twentleth magnitude,
which are within the range of our
60-inch reflector.
“If the indications afforded by
Chapman's flgures can be applied to
fainter objects, there is reason to
hope that a 100-inch telescope would
add nearly 100,000,000 still fainter
stars, many of thtm lying beyond the
boundary of the universe as at pres
ent known.
“The inconceivably great distance
of these stars makes them of peculiar
interest and importance in the;study
of the magnitude and struciure of the
sidereal system.
“But in addition to its power of
reaching out to such great distances,
a 100-inch telescope shou'd also con
tribute in large degree to the solution
of other questions. It would collect
more than twice as much light as a
60-inch reflector, and for all classes
of work this would mean a great
gain.
“Quite as important would be the
possibility of photcgraphing the spec
tra of the brighter stars with high
dispersion.”
.
Almanac Disproves
Testimony at Trial
MEDFORD, OREG., Nov. 13.—An_al
manac helped in the acquittal of Dial
Chiloquin, a Klamath Indian, charged
with stabbing Lloyd Brown in_ June
1913. Attorney Mulkey, in the Fedwral
\Court, used the tactics of Lincoln and
showed by the almanac that it was dfirk
the night the witnesses testified they
saw the fight in the "f,m of the moon.
The judge ruled that the fight was not
seen.
.
Good-Night Corns,
“Gefs-It”
Good-Boy “Gets-It”
New-Plan Corn Remedy That
Never Fails. The Simple,
Common Sense Way.
You poor corn-limpers, with corn
wrinkles and heart pains! Bit down to
night and put a few drops of “Gets-It,”
the simplest corn remedy in the world,
on your corns. You can apply it in just
¢
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“sGets-It' Ends Corn Pains. It's Bure
and Safe, too!”
a few seconds, without fuss/or trouble.
What's the use applying salves that
make toes raw and sore, that make
corns swell, bandages that make it mis
ery to walk, tape that sticks, greasy
ointment, and other contraptions. Get
rid of corns the easy way, quick, sim
ple, sure, new way. That's common
sense. Try “Gets-It" also for warts and
bunions. ‘‘Gets-It” can’'t hurt—the corn
joosens, and comes right off —clean off
wGets-1t” 1s sold at all druggists, 25¢
a bottle, or sent direct by E. Lawrence
& Co., Chicago.
Princeof Walesßeported Engaged
e e o e o o
Margherita of Denmark Fiancee
Prineess Margherita of Denmark and the Prinee of Wales,
who reported to be engaged to wed after the war
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Royal Wedding Said To Be Set For Soon After
Close of European Wark.
NEW YORK, Nov. 13.—From Lon
don comes the persistently repeated
rumor that the Prince of Wales will
proclaim his engagement to Princess
Margherita of Denmark at the end of
the war.
If the rumor be true, the future
King of England will get a wonderful
ly accomplished Queen, for the Prin
cess, who is but 20 years old, has been
graduated from the University of Co
penhagen as a doctor of philosophy.
The Princess Margherita, a niece of
Queen Alexandra, has been in Eng
land and had been working as a nurse
in the military hospital at Harrogate
until her strength gave out. She is
His Tack Bag Burst
1S lackK bag bursLs,
Lumberman Innocently Sews Mile of
Popular Highway With
. Barbs.
JOHNSTOWN, PA., Nov.l3.—A lum
berman with a paper bag of tacks con
taining six pounds of the kind used in
fastening down tar paper, caused —-~h
walling and profanity among automo
bile drivers_and owners here the other
day.
Nat Hanson, the lumberman, who
lives in the mountains near New Flor
ence, did not notice that Hhis bag of
tacks burst just after he had started
for home, strewing the contents glong
the highway, a splendid macadam road
much used by automoblles traveling
from this city to nearby towns.
Fvery automobile that passed over the
road got from five to fifty punctures.
More than forty cars were pulled into
garages along the route with flat tires.
Investigation showed that for a mile
the road was thickly strewn with the
big tacks measuring an inch in length.
With their big, heavy flat heads, the
punturers had landed point up when
they hit the road
Angry automobilists hastily got to
gether and prepared to prosecute the
miscreant who had barbed the road.
Hanson came to town for more tacks
to replace those that were lost and the
story leaked out. He will not be pros
ecuted. %
Two Obstinate Men
SMITH CENTER, KANS, Nov. 13.
This county boasts two of the most
contrary men in Kansas. Last fall
one man refused to pay the price
asked by corn-huskers and vowed he
would let his field rot before he would
yield. To-day the field, containing
about 2,000 bushels of grain, still
stands, and is grown up with a dense
crop of sunflowers.
The other contrary man is a neigh
bor of the first. He husked 1,000
bushels of his crop, stored it in an un
covered crib, and said it would remain
there till it brought him 75 cents a
bushel. It is still there, but ruined by
thé season's heavy rains.
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN. ATLANTA, GA. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1915
row taking a course in practical
housekeeping in one of the famous
schools of her native country.
At this domestic school the puplils,
whether of royal or less exalted birth,
begin with menial work such as dish
washing, and gradually advance until,
when leaving the school, they are fully
capable of taking care of a first-class
hotel. 2
The Princess has inherited from her
mother, the late Princess Marie of Or
leans, a gift for palntlnr. She is very
musical and possesses a cultivated
singing voice.
The Princess’ father is Prince Val
demar of Denmark.
WomanFightsCougar
Wields Iron Pipe With Telling Ef
fect on Wild Animal—Clothing
Torn to Shreds.
ABERDEEN, 'WASH., Nov. 13.—8 y
giving battle with a piece of iron pipe
to a cougar which had attacked her,
Mrs. E. Burckhard saved her baby's
life and her own near Taholah, 30 miles
from here.
Mrs. Burckhard was walking along a
mountain trail toward a placer where
her husband was at work, carrying her
baby, when she came across a cougar
pursuing a fox. As Mrs. Burckhard
came opposite, the cougar abandoned
its chase and made toward her.
Seizing a piece of pipe beside the trail
the woman faced the infuriated animal
as it plunged, tearing away part of her
dress. A fierce battle ensued, during
which the cougar ripped the woman'’s
clothing to ribbons. The baby clung
tightly to her neck, but she manaied
to wield her weagon to such effect that
the cougar was finally put to flight.
Finds Lost-Money
LEWISTON, PA., Nov. 13.—Barney
Shields had the secret service working
overtime for twenty-four hours seeking
a second-story worker who he thought
rifled his trousers pockets as they dan
gled from the bedpost in his room.
Shields suddenly recalled a dream of
the previous night, in which burglars
played an important part, and, visiting
the cache portrayed in his dream, found
his roll intact. Shields says he must
have changed the hiding place of the
money while in a somnambulistic state.
T i eAt
Man 111, Begs Year
In Prison to Get Well
LEAVENWORTH, KANS., Nov. 13,
Harry M. Ross, charged with imper
sonating a Federal officer and sen
tenced to four months in jall, plead
ed with Federal Judge Pollock to sen- |
tence him 10 a year in prison. |
Ross said he was ill and knew he
would get proper medical attention in
the prison. He thanked the court
when the request was granied. A
Evolution of Insects and Vegeta
tion Is Faster Than Ours.
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Even Have ‘Highbrows.
PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 13.-—Bugy
have actual mental {llusions and psy
chological de sions as have Insane
persons, The an be crazed by fear
There are high brows “low
bhrows and o brows"” among bugs
just as there are among human De
ings
Insects and plants have souls, whith
are never situated in the stomachs
These are some of the resuits de
duced by Professor Henry G. Walters,
of Langhorne, president of the Plant
Research Institute, after long exper
iments in the psychology of plant and
insect life. The bug, Professor Walters
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says, is making greater progress in
evolution than we are.
“Some plants, animals and higher
insects movolfln&mro rapidly than
man,” he continued in the course of
an interview. “That's why they xo
insane.”
The Soul Defined.
“Is that because they have souls?”’
he was asked. ?
“Why, yes,” he replied with a smila;
“if you will allow me my own high
brow definition of a soul. [ can give
it to you in 24 words. It is the defi
nition of the soul of a rose or of,a
sea urchin or of Governor Brumbaugn
or of a praying mantis or of a cedar
or of Jim MeNichol. If you can sur
vive the definition, here it Is: A soul
ifs that invisible self-constructing!
form, force and motion which, in ceils
and brain images, self-constructs
them into tissues and memories.
“In those 24 words you have my
conceptioh of a soul. It is strictly
in harmony with Henri Bergson's phi
losophy of creative evolution. It
takes us back to Plato and Aristotie
and to the spiritual aspects of nature.
The souls of some of the trees and
roses are fulfilling far more noble
purposes than the souls of some poli
ticians. The bee works solely for the
good of all the bees; the politician
only for his bank account.”
Grasshopper’s lllusion.
Roses and cedars, the professor
sald, are not capable of illuslons and
delusions, but he has demonstrated by
practical experiments that certaln ir
sects are. If moths were not mentally
capable of {llusions they would not
destroy themselves in light or flame,
he pointed out.
“By producing refractive rays in
glass you may see for vourself that a
grasshopper, too, Is capable of illu
slons,” he added. “This insect misin.
terprets the real meaning of an ap
tical impression on its eye, and,
therefore, is capable of mental or psy
chological illusion in the strictest
sense of the word, as used by the
greatest alienists in the world.”
TH E C Q SINO SKATING
RINK
91 SOUTH PRYOR STREET.
SPECIAL ATTRACTION
THIS WEEK—Charlle Chaplin Impersonator.
SESSIONS—9:3O to 11 a. m.; 2:30 to 5:30 p. m.; 7:30 to 11 p. m.
Sol. J. Boley Co.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
DRY GOODS, CLOTHING,
SHOES AND HATS
409 Broad St. - - - ATHENS, GA.
Skulls Suggest Existence of Pig
my People or Strange Indian
Ostracism.
LLOS ANGELES, Nov. 11--Reveal
ing either a race of hitherto unknown
pigmies, or the cstracizing of the un
fit by the aborigines of the l'u-inr'
Coast, 30 strange malformed skulls
and other interesting remains hu,i
been dug up near here by De Moss
Bowers and Charles T. Hrown, nm--‘
teur archaeologists |
“Whether the relles are of xlgmlen‘
or & primitive form of eugenics is &
question [ can't answer,” says Bow«
ers. “Tre skulls are by far the small
est that 1 have encountered in 30
years of excavating for Indlan re
mains in California, The malforma
tion of the skulls may be highly sig
nificant.
“Though I can't answer whether
these were the skulls of the unfit, the
morally depraved, who had been os
tracized, or those of pigmies, I can
answer another question. It is grown
men and women. The maturity of the
teeth show this
“In the graves we found olias or
cooking bowls of steatite, serpentine
bowls, and knives of chert aflixed to
redwood handles by asphaltum. Now,
steatite is found only on Santa Cata«
lina Island, while no deposits of ser
pentine are known outside of San
Luis Oblspo County.
“Bvidently these pigmlies traded
with the channel and so-called Mis
sion Indians. Bones from the head of
a whale, pamnted red on the inside,
were used as the head and footstone
of the burial carn, though the burial
place is nearly 100 miles from the sea
“A mystifying find in the calrn was
a baked clay bowl. The Indians of
Arizona and New Mexico knew how
to bake clay, but those of California,
80 far as we know, did not. It might
be that we have here a strange isolat.
ed tribe that is related to others of
which we know nothing
“Copper vessels of Spanish work
manship wers also found in the grave,
along with Venetian blue beads and
stone and shell beads, This liking for
ornaments shows that the tribe was
not depraved below the esthetle level
“SBome shell ornaments were also
found of a boring so minute that it
suggests that these plemies were ar
tificers of no mean ability. Fine spec
{mens of fishhooks were also dug up
together with the ear ornaments of
shells.”
Army Training for
Students Indorsed
PORTLAND, OREG., Nov, 13.—Ald.
ed by action of the Portland school
board, advocates of a proposal to en
courage high school boys to acquire
knowledge of the rudiments of mili
tary training are pushing the plan
The school board, by unanimous
vote, indorsed military drill and In
struction for high school boys by
adopting a resolution to allow school
credits for those who joined the State
land and naval militia, and for at
tendance at drills.
OREGON CITY HITS JITNEYS.
OREGON CITY, OREG., Nov. 13.—
Action taken by the City Council here
will virtually put out of business all
jitneys running between this eity and
Portland The Couneil has passed an
ordinance which requires that all jit
neys secure a franchise to make the
run. Each franchise holder must put
up a bond of £5,000 snd pay a quar
terly license fee of SSO.
Choose Your
Gift With Care
HE gift is ever a con
stant reminder of the
giver. How impor
tant it is, then, that your re
membrance to your friends or
bride be a suitable selection.
Here you may find dainty
pieces for personal adorn
ment—bracelets; la val
lieres: rings; cuff-buttons.
Or, there are articles for
home use—silver; toilet sets,
vases. We also have a splen
did lot of those timepleces of
merit-—
ELGIN WATCHES.
Take time to stop in.
Jeweler,
No. 10 East Hunter Street.
There is economy in a few
steps around the corner.
01 |
Marriage of‘Bab&. 4,
Is Annulled by Court
Oklahoma Law Forbidding W“‘la‘}
of Girls Under 16 Is Rigidly |
Enforced. |
OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLA, Nov, 18
Marriages in Oklahoma when the bride
is less than 1§ are vold, even when
her parents consent. That s the de
ciston of Judge Clark, of the IMstrict
Court, g.:d on that :‘nmnd ho.h:: fl
nulled the marriage ”fl- . -
;I:Ofl. aged 2, and Helen Houser, aged
Dimon, a Frisco Rallroad fireman, fell
=‘a"bvo \m:.;u u:a ‘gm after mm
every am passed
g‘uuo:.d u..r mu.::. Jnmu.u One
went to t Mrs.
3.'."’:“‘3' he was ‘m. o u-".‘i' her
""o gEave our consent 1o the marriage
to prevent an Mnh" Houser and
his wife testified. Mrs. Houser sald she
dil not know the girl's age had been
given as 16 when she went with Dimon
1o get the marriage license. She sald
she was asked to sign a book nfiu
Jher consent to tc marriage. and did not
know she had taken an osth that the
girl was 16 years old,
Prize-Winning Pupil
To Be Candy ghemist
MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 18-~The
youthful ambition of hundreds of
boys and girls to be official candy
samplers stands good to be realized
by Miss Rebecca Mason, a senior at
the University of Minnesota. She is
going to be a candy and sugar
chemist,
Miss Mason, who has won second
place in the Alpha Chl Sigma scholar
ship contest, which is conducted
yearly to determine the highest
standing chemistry students in the
country, voiced this ambition. The
other successful candidate in the con
test was a boy.
“l am glad I won the honor only
for the reason that it may help me
got just such a an-mon." she says
“Think of it, candy and candy, loads
and loads of It all around you."
. .
Kidnaps Two Girls
CHICAGO, Nov. 13 ~Armed with shot.
guns with which they held a Eunul
mob at bay, a crowd of boys sdrup:x
two 18. year-old girls from the Ilinois
‘State Training Schools for Girls at Gen
eva, a suburb, 'nu";m-. May Rosen
'cnn, of Chicago, a Elora Collins, of
nrrr:lu, 11, were captured and re
}turn to the Yome.
It's Grandmother's Recipe to
Bring Back Color and
Luster to Hair.
That beautfful, even shade of dark
glossy hair can only be had by brew.
ing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sul
phur. Your hair is your charm. It
makes or mars the face When 1t
fades, turns gray, streaked and looks
dry, wispy and scraggy, just an appli
cation or two of Sage and Sulphur
enhances its appearance a hundred
fold,
Don’t bother to prepare the toniec;
you can get from any drug store a 50.
cent bottle of “Wyeth's Sage and Sul
phur Compound,” ready to use. This
can always be depended upon to bring
back the natural color, thickness and
luster of your hair and remove dan
druff, stop scalp itching and falling
halr.
Everybody uses “Wyeth's” Sage
and Sulphur because it darkens so
naturally and evenly that nobody can
tell it ha® been applied. You simply
dampen a sponge or soft brush with
it and draw this through the hair,
taking one small strand at a time; by
morning the gray hair has disap
peared, and after another application
it becomes beautifully dark and ap
pears glossy, lustrous and abundant.
—Advertisement.
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It is ilmperative to close out our vast stock regardiess of cost. Thousands of pleased people took advantage
of this unheard.of reduction last weefl—thousands more will do so this week. After that, laggards will have to
take their chances. The best designs and values will soon be gone. Comne to-morrow or order by mall; do this
to-day If you can not call. Every article warranted to wear and preserve [tg appearance,
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RADIUS JEWELRY €O, 75 foireesh| 000
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Bank President and Wife Take
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| BT. LOUIS, Nov. 13.—Maurice V
!Ju)tu, vice president of the lilinols
Trust Company, and reputed to be
the wealthiest man in Kast St Louls
and St Clalr County, with his wife,
Mrs. Reine Jovee has adopted a 3-
year-old girl from a foundiing home
The adoption papers were filed w ith
Judge Messick at Bellevilie The
father testifiod he was unable to pro
vide for the child
The child is Luella Watson, daugh
ter of John W. Watson, an Arkansas
farmer. Watson formerly lived In St
Louls’ When his wife died he placed
the child In the home in St Louis
County. The child was seen by Mr
and Mrs. Joyce on a visit they pald to
the home last summer
Mr. and Mrs. Joyce have no chil.
dren. Their home at No, 1000 Penn
sylvania avenue is one of the finest In
East St. Louls. Mr. Joyce is a grad
uate of Harvard and for twenty years
practiced law in East St Louls be
fore going into the banking business
He was a candidate for Mayor at one
time, but was defeated
Mrs. Joyee formerly was Miss Relne
Jones, daughter of the late presidgnt
of the St. Louls National Stock Yerds
Mr. Joyvece is one of the most promi
nent men in southern Illinols. He is
vice president of the KEast St Louls
Commercial Club
“MOVIES” MADE HIM SEASICK.
HUTCHINSON, KANS, Nov, 13—
John Stevesson, farm hand, had to be
taken to the hospital after a picture
show he saw. The fllms were of the
navy, with & number of views show
ing boats rolling in high seas and all
that. It was so realistic that it re
minded Stevesson of his trip across
the Atlantic and made him seasick
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Woman, Asking Divorce, Tells
Story of Occurrences After
She Tasted Liquor,
BAN FRANCISCO, Nov, 13— Polfte
leal campaigns in Kern County have
strange aftermaths, If the story which
Mrs. Lawrence Merriam told Judge
Van Nostrand is criterion.
In October, 1914, Mrs. Merriam tes
tified, she was employed as & clerk In
a store at Fellows Life in that town
was dull until the campalgn for the
district attorneyship opened.
One day Merriam secured & larde
automobile, rounded up a likely par.
iy of citizens of both sexes and took
them to Bakersfleld to proselyte for
his candidate
Although Mrs. Merriam had never
met her future hushand until that day,
she gladly embraced the opportunity
to become a real dy.d-u-m"“
politician
On arrival in Bakersfield, and being
an unsophisticated coun!ry.z!fl. she
snid, she was easlly persuaded that it
was necessary to drink & certaln
amount of liquor to be & real politi
clan. She consented to the extent of
two glasses. She remembered nothlng
more until she awoke four days later,
on October 22, in a house in Fellows
Merriam was there and informed her
she was his wife,
She tried to escape, but he stopped
her with a revolver, When he left sahe
appealed to a neighbor for assistance.
He took her in an automobile to Tafe,
where she thought she had 3489 'n
the bank. She found, however, that
she had signed checks {n favor of her
husband aggregating S4OO. She se
cured her SSO and flew to San Fran
cisco
Judge Van Nostrand was somewhat
skeptical that two drinks could cause
a stupor which lasted four days, but
granted the decree,
THIS GREAT SALE
Includes Rings, Pins, Brooches,
Studs, Earrings, Link Buttons,
Combs, Fobs, Chains, Efc., Etc.
BEAUTIFUL, BRILLIANT, DAZZLING
RADIUS DIAMONDS
FORMER PRICES
$1.50 to $4.50 $ I_9__:.(_)_
WhTILPéy Last Each
All Watches at Cost During This Sale
MAIL ORDERS o 2stv ‘s
ke ki P b
3