Newspaper Page Text
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Little Arendals, Capping Kidneys,
Regulate Red Corpuscles in
the Blood.
DISCOVERY IS IMPORTANT
Wonderful Series of Experiments
at Johns Hopkins University
Described.
WASHINGTON, Dec. 4.—That all
animal iife would perish after emo
tional excitement but for the little
organs on top of the kidneys is the
conclusion of Dr. Paul D, Lampson.
These rush millions of red corpuscles
1o the rescue, he declared, after a se
ries of wonderful experiments at the
Johns Hopkins University, Dr. Lamp
son, of the pharmacological labora
tory, announced hig discoveries to the
National Academy of Sciences, Wash
ington
Dr. Lampson's experiments «omv;
prised removing one internal organ
after another from animals under the
influence of ether The removal of
none or all of them affected the in
crease of red corpuscles, after the in-
Jection of epinephrin, until he got 10
the liver. He thus demonstrated that
the liver is the source of the red cells
or corpuscles in the blood.
Finds the Governor.
Epinephrin, as used by Dr. Lamp
son, was taken from sheep glands, It
is present in the human body, and
eéther does not affect it, making it the
logical substance for the experiments
here described.
He found that the governdr which
controls the increase of the red cells,
same as a governor regulates a steam
engine, is the adrenals.
The adrenals are small bodies can
ping the kidneys in man and other
vertebrates. In man they are oné or
two Inches long, less in width and
about one-fourth of an inch thick, and
have little vessels and nerves.
As their function was formerly un
known, his discovery of their use as
the gitardian and savior of animal life
from its own paroxvsms of emotions
and even temporary bralnstorms and
Insanity is one of the most important
of modern {imes. He concludes:
“It has been found that the red
count is under nervous control, as
shown by the increase in the number |
of red corpuscles after stimulation «f
the vago-sympathetic trunks, after
asphyxia of the brain alone, and after
emotional excitement, such as fear,
Tage, etc
A Vital Mechanism.
“It was also shown that the
adrenals play a part In this mechan
ism, as epinephrin has beeyd proved ro
be one of the most powerful means of
Increasing the number of red cels,
and as the chief physiological stimulf
which nroduce the increase, namely,
asphyxia, exercise, fear, rage, eote,, all
Cause a reflex stimulation of the
adrenals, and an increased epinephrin
outout,
“Remoxal of the adrenals was found
ta exclude the\ increase In the is
phyxia, fear and rage, and after the
Injection of pltditrin (extract from
mucous glands). although these same
animals responded to the Injectlon of
op!nnhr_in by the usual Increase in
rumber of red cells. F‘urthermnra,‘
remeoval of the adrenals is followed
after several hours hy & complete loss
of control of the red count.™
——————————
Court Settles Will
it Aft
Suit After 50 Years
WILMINGTON, DEL., Dec. 4-—Hav
ing been before the courts for nearly
half a century, the will of Thomas
Jamison was construed by Judge Brad
fast, In the United States Court, when
& decree awas entered making = valid
claim of §16,000 with twenty-nine Years'
Interest against three farms bequeathed
under his will. The farms are now
owned by J. Frank Riggs, Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Lofland and Eliza C. Green
It is provided that I?‘!hp owners deo
Bot pay the claims within sixty days a
trustee shall be appointed to sell the
farms to satisfy the decree. The de
€ree entered is for SB.OOO interest in fa-
Yor of Mrs. Catherine P Mathiesen, a
frandaughter of the testator
DOCTOR SAVES LIFE; FINED.
KANBAS CITY, Dec. ¢.—The Clreuit
Court profited $lO because Dr. Julius
Frischer had two patients at the Gen
eral Hospital too {ll tp be left alone
He bad an order 1o be In court at -
fertain hour, and was fined. The dan
mu- condition of the patients caused
m 10 be fifteen minutes late.
Don’t |
From Piles
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o
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Big Planets Made
Yellow, Violet and Red Rl(l Are Usell
With Strange Results by
Astronomer.
BALTIMORE, Dec. 4-—Using the
60-inch telescope at Mount Wilson
observatory, at Pasadena, Cal, tha
largest of its kind in the world; Dr.
Robert Wood, professor of physics at
Johns Hopkins University, has ob
tained remarkable results in photo
graphing the moon, Saturn and Ju
piter by yellow fight and ultra-violet
and infra-red rays.
The planets showed remarkable dif
ferences when photographed by the
different lights. On Saturn a broad,
dark belt about the equator was plain
ly visible on the proofs of the ultra
violet photographs, but totally lack
ing on the others. The polar caps
and the rings of the planet also
showed differences.. !
The change In appearance wos
caused, Dr. Wood says, by some ma
terial in the planet's atmosphera,
either finely divided dust or some
absorbing gas opaque to the ultra
violet rays, but transparent to the
ordinary yellow ones. '
Jupiter showed even more markea
differences than Saturn, the mark
ings being very much more compii
cated and intricate in one than tha
other,
INDIANAPOLIS, Dec. 41t has
Just developed that the late Richard M
Milburn, Attorney Genera! of the State,
who dipd recently, while on his death
bed called Governor Ralston to his home,
told him that he knew he did not have
long to live, and asked the Chief KEx
ecutive to promise that in naming his
Successor one-third of the salary of the
office during its term should be pald to
his widow. The Governor and Mr. Mil
burn were great personal friends, and
the former made the promise.
Accordingly, E. B. Stotsenberg, of
New Albany, has been named for the
vacancy, and Im verified the report that
$2,500 of the 87,500 salary is to be turned
over to Mrs. Mllbum.
. . .
Sheriff Held Up;Finds
CHICAGO, Dec. 4 —Sherift Jacob
Miller, of Griffin, ind,, stopped off in
Chicago for an hour or two on his wny‘
home from the sheriffs' convention in
Minneapolis, and went to see a friend
on West Monroe street. Four men en
tered the elevator with him
At the second floor Miller found that
one of the men had thrust a band into
bis pocket. He grappled with the pick
bocket and, as the door was opened,
rolied out Into the corridor with him,
As the man broke away the sheriff rau‘
for his revolver and remembered, too
late, that he had left it in his grip at
the station.
.. . ‘
Wife of Minister -
Has Him Arrested]
BOSTON, Dec. {-—A warrant for
the arrest of the Rev, T, Arthur Whlu-i
ker, of Malden, president of the Wel.
fare Union of ‘Boston, on a rhurfe of |
assaulting his wife, was issued by Judge
Abbott In _the Waltham court after the
Rev. Mr. Whitaker had falled to appear
and answer to a summons served on |
him, and which, it is understood, he |
claimed was illegal
Mra. Whitaker charges that on Oec
tober 29, as a result of an altercation
over & weekly payment of §7 which her
husband had been ordered by the court
to make to her, he struck her
.
Claims 20 Cents -
'’ o
\
‘ ST. LOUIS, Dec.”d. A claim of 20
Cents agninst the Mullanphy Bank was
presented in Cireuit Judge Kinsey's
court by Gottlleb Kling, wha deciared
[that the money, has been due him since
the bank went into the hands of a re.
ceiver in 1885,
United States Senator w. J Stone,
receiver for the nk, Was present to
listen to claims F”M‘" in order to
make a final seltlement. Three claim.
Ants appeared. They were Kltn& Mrs
Christina Meyver, who claimed $3 , and
Mrs. Mary Schwartz who olaimed SB2 08
Says Lawyer Owes
SII,OOO Back Wages
KANSAS CITY, Dec. ¢.~A sult for
$1L,020 for Back wames was l‘ruu‘n( in
the Clreuit Court against James W N
Peters, a lawyer, by Agnes Crampton,
his housekeeper
In_ her petition Mrs l‘rumrlnn e
the began work for Peters July | 1810,
and continued in his employ unti July
30, 15 According to the terms of
her employment, she says, Peters was to
bave pald her §ls & week. Nhe de-
Clures he paid her only small suns but
promised her from 100 to $126 &
month If she would not feave
Former Dorothy Gates, Fighting Annulment,
Says Her Wooer Threatened Suieide.
NEW YORK, Dec. 4—Did young
Philip Herrman, son of a mlillionaire
contracter, ratify his arriage to
pretty Dorothy Gates by visiting her
once after he became 18 years of age?
This i& the questicn which Supreme
Court Justice Gavegan wngl called
pon to answer in an annuitment ag
tion. He heard Dorothy, whose goid
€n hair hangs about her ears, say that
her husband came to see her at least
four times, but “Phil” insisted he
called on her only once.
“1 will take briefs,” said the court,
“upon the question whether one visit
after the age of 18 constitutes legal
ratifieation of the marriage. 1 have
found only one case so far on this
ppiut and it seems to be in favor of
declaring the marriage binding.”
Met in a Restaurant.
Mrs. Herrman is & aiminutive, blue
eved girl of 19 She liyes with Mrs.
Ethel Lorraine Belmont, wife of young
Raymond Belmont, .at No. 251 West
Fifty-first street. She was playing in
“Watceh Your Step” last January when
#he met “Phil” in a Broadway restau
rart,
Q. You were a chorus girl? A. 1
was not. Show girls are five feet six
tell. I'm a pony and ponies are hard
to get.
Q. You smoke and drink, Mrs. Herr
man? A. 1 smoke cigarettes—if they
are the right brand. 1 drink high
balls,
Q. How many? A, Never more than
three. 1 know what some men have
| ' '
'Marrled on Dare, Live
™
Apart,Wife Now Sues
\
| it
‘Wedding Year Ago Sequel to Chance
Remark Made at a
Party.
READING. PA, Dec. ¢ -—-Married on
a 4 dare at Elktom, Md.,, on October 12,
1914, Albert Michaells, of Philadelphia,
and his Reading bride never lived to
-sethnr. the woman says in a suit for
Ivorce heard here. A divorce was
recommended by John K. Hahn, mas
ter on the grouna of improper con- |
duct by the husband. Both are about
20 years of age. 1
That Michaelis promised to provide
a home inside of two months and that
he later failed to do so was part of the
complaint n{alnnt him. The wedding
was a sequel to a chance remark at a
party at which both were guests, the
couple later taking on the suggestion
and immediately separating. They
went to their respective homes.
Here are extracts from insuiting let
ters she says he sent to her:
“1 only married ?ou on a dare and
would never live with you."
“l do not want you to use my name,
:;n I don’t consider you my wife one
e
“I think you are a very foolish girl
to be wasting your time this wug. You
know you are not wanted down here at
all, o I think that it would be best ir
you remain home "’
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FREE TO LADIES and CHILDREN
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Will make any home beautiful. 1.000 Fine Land.
scapes, hand-painted in oil, given away FREE to our
friends and customers,
DECEMBER 20, 1915.
As an advertisement of our formal opening of the
New Sign Studio, 70'; Peachtree
These paintings have beautiful Gold Frames and
can not be bought for $25.00.
The Pictures Are Not For Sale
Ouly a small price for the Frame.
Believing in this method of advertising, is offering to you
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Just to Advertise
Come to our Studio Dee. 15, 1915. For Five Days
these paintings will be on display prior to our opening
date Dec, 20, 1915
Ladies Cordially Invited
“The Sign Studio’’ Paints Signe That Are Different
~any kind, always best—that's all
HEARST’'S SUNDAY AMERICAN. ATLANTA. GA., SUNDAY. DECEMBER 5. 1915
never learned-—to take just enough
and no more,
Q. Tall us about your marriage. A.
Philip was very mueh in love with
me. He begged me to marry him at
least ‘6O times. He finally told me
he'd kill himself unless I married him.
I did marry him to save his life and
because I loved him.
Says Father Kissed Her.
Q. Did his father visit you? A. Yes.
Ha warned me not to marry him—as
his son was only a schoolboy. Then,
afler our marriage, he said he had no
objection to me as a daughter-in-law.
In fact, he kised'the bride. That's
me, %
! Q. Mr. Herrman kissed you? A. He
certainly did.
As James S. Herrman, father of
“Phil,” is now suing to have the mar
riage annulled, his coynsel expressed
surprise,
Young Herrman was called to tes
tify. :
“No,” he said “1 dién’'t call on Dor
othy four times after I was 18. It
wae only once-—on June 5 last. She
invited me to remain. Except on that
occasion 1 never lived, with her as
man and wife after my eighteenth
birthday.
Young Herrman told of taxi
“hopping” with Miss Gates before
their wedding. They visited many
cases in the bright light district, he
sald. During the courtship and after
ward young Herrman continued to
live with his parepts at N.. 238 West
Seventy-first street.
o —————
Bessie Snow Elopes
l . .
With Geo. Blizzard
Met Once at Party, and Married in
August, Keeping It Secret
\ Until Recently.
PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 4.—Miss
Bessie Snow, who used to live at No.
25 West Hign street, Germantown. was
unable to withstand warm protestations
of eternal affection by a young man she
had known only a month, and, melting
with love, eloped. Her new name is
Bllzzard —Mrs. George Blizzard.
It was early in July when Miss Snow
became acquainted with Blizzard, ‘a
street car conductor. She had often
ridden on his car on her way to Tempile
University, where she studied dressmak.
ing, but did not know him until he
was introduced by a mutual friend at a
party.
Blizzard called on her oniy once be
fore their ! marriage, according to the
bride, her stepmother objecting to his
attertions. .
On August 9 they decided to marry,
and Miss Bessie Snow, without lettir
hey mother kno’-. came downtown ans
met her beau hey took a train on the
B. and O, on which to Elkton tiey did
lu The rest of the story you already
now.
News of the wedding has Just leaked
out. The b~ ide Is 19 years old and the,
bridegroom is 27. ¢
Aftair With Married
Exact Charge Withheld by CoMmit
tee Exßollmg Middleshoro,
y.. Minister..
LEXINGTON,, KY., Dec. 4-B. F.
Chatham, former pastor of a church at
Middiesboro, hasi been pronounced to
be guilty of misconduct with a married
woman of his congregation, expelled
from the Methodist Episcopal Chureh,
South, by a comittee of ministers ap-
L»‘nimml by Bishop James Atkins, of the
Lentucky Conference, to investigate the
case and to take action.
The committee was in session until
3:30 in the morning hearing testimony
and writing the verdict, which was for
warded to Bishop Atkins. - Chatham
was defended by the Rev’ (3. W. Cates,
of Carlisle, and the Rev. W. T. Arnold,
of Fort Thomas, acted as prosecutor
Both of the ministers deciined to make
known any of the statements by wit
nesses at the trial.
GO WEST TO SEEK MATES.
SUNBURY, PA, Dec. 4. —Miss Maude
Kehler, Miss Mary Ditzler and Miss Bes
sie l‘nr’ln.«u each 18, of Sunbury, have
left sos New City, Oreg. They said
they iearned there are more single men
in the West than here, aml_as they have
reiatives there, they will try their luck.
(%OAL TOO GREEN TO BURN.
MINNEAPOLIS, Dge. 4.—Coal too
green to burn has hjon found at the
bottom of Lake Nokomis. Small par
tic'es brought to the surface by a dredge
being used at the lake have been ana-
Ivzed by university geologists and re
ported on as genuine coal
ATLANTA Th . w k
et et ememsteet sst me——
Beginning Tomorrow Night and Contiruing Twice Daily, at 2:30 and 8:15 p.m.
e et stemeetmeste set B ity e S e e D VEW P
THE CONQUEROR IS COMING!
o
sttt el ot d i %
D. W. GRIFFITH'S 25anme,
18,000 People| e | 3,000 Horses 3
Penoma?:coes at the | 3 Fflunded upon
Liberty 'l:heatev, . ’ i
New York Thos. Dlxnn S
Pcrrou‘omoan\ex succeSSfUl i
At Forrest Theater
Ph:laddpbu O F A Nuvel
Pe"tf::s'::an.e\ ’ and Play
: At (olpmal Theater
I Chicago “Ihe
‘ A'f;j"":::;;:‘.‘ . ATI | Clansman™
5,000 Scenes | Cost 500,000
— SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA OF 30 s
Decisive Battles of the Civil War—Sherman’s March to the Sea— Cities Built Up
s E E Only to be Destroyed Before Your Eyes —Grant and Lee at Appomat;ox The
Assassination of Abraham Lincoln—Petersburg at the Crest of the Mighty In
vasion-—What it Cost the Mothers, Wives and Sisters of the South The Rise of
the Ku Klux Klan—The Coming of the Prince of Peace.
| nover se vown noopt e : Baicany. 7he, 81 ond 1301 Qe
Now or Never! =zt Prices 103 .o, o e
AVOID THE WEEK - END CROWDS ... coOmMme EAaARLYy
Wife Says Husband Boasted of
' ‘ ‘
Having ‘Lots of Girls,” Includ
ing Above Name in List.
NEW YORK, Dec. 4.—Mrs. KEvelyn
M. Stuart, of No. 720 Riverside drive,
ieft her husband after he told her he
could get “lots of girls prettier and
younger” than she. One of these, he
told her, is “Phoebe Snow, of Chi
cago.”
Mra. Stuart sued for a separation
decree. In her complaint she outlines
the story .of her married life with
John Ross Stuart. He was served in
the office of the American Steel Foun
dries at No. 30 Cthurch street. Most
of the time he is traveling between
New York and Chicago on business,
His wife alleges he has a very ag
gravating habit ¢f departing and re
turning unexpectediy from his busi
ness trips. He also, she declares, has
“an ungovernable temper, flies in a
rage and swears.”
One night recently, she says, he re.
turned home unexpectedly. She had
been out dining with a “Mr. Shore.”
When she got home her husband
cross-examined her. She told where
she had teen. 'l'he next day, she as
serts, he visited the restaurants she
had been in and questioned employees
in her presence as to her conduct.
Her father came to town to visit
her. They strolled down Broadway
and she pointed out Shanley's as a
place of general interest. “Yes, she
knows too much about those places,”
her husband said to her father. He
also told her father she “must have
an affinity,” .and asked him to ques
tion her about certain hotels.
A year ago, she adds, her husband
went to the Army-Navy football
game with another woman. On. his
return he was guilty, she says, of the
following acts:
Accused her of going through his
pockets for loose change.
Slapped her face,
Threatened to “spoil her pretty blue
eves
Accused her of being a flirt
Threw money on the flaor and told
her, if she wanted it. to pick it up.
Proposed she get a diverce.
Stuart denies the charges.
. . .
Finds Glove in Fish;
'
-
Would Wed Owter
REDONDO BEACH, CAL Dec. 4
Redondo maidens are all a-flutter sgince
an announcement was made by Charles
A. Find'ay, a visitor from Tampa, Fla.,
that the young lady whose hand will
fit a white kid glove which he has in
his possession may become Mrs. Find
lay, with a trip to the Southland thrown
m
Findlay, while dressing a huge vellow
tail which he caught from wharf No. 2,
found as a portion of the fish's recent
meal a kid g'ove marked with the in
itials “R. A. B.’ The glove is unusual
ly small—size five
Finds His Lost Molars
Frozen in Ice Cake
But Purchaser of the Ice Says For
mer Owner Can’'t Have Them
Until He' Pays:
CO.\'NELLSV[I;LE. PA.. Dec. 4.—
“Bill” Gomer works for a local ice com
pany. Last winter he was employved at
a pond helping cut a supply for hot
weather consumption. Bill 5905‘8 false
teeth. Omne of his companions at the
pond cracked a cold weather joke and
Gomer opened his mouth to laugh. The
teeth dropped out and splashed through
a hole in the ice. Nothing particularly
singular about it, of course. But lis
ten:
Several days ago Bill was taking out
a large cake of ice for a Connellsville
customer. Bill suddenly stiffened and
stared. So did the customer. Gomer’s
| Baze was rooted on the cake of ‘Ce’l and
small wonder, for from its crystal’cen
|ter, grinning sardonically at him, were
| Bill Gomer's frapped grinders. The man
who had bought the cake of ice says
Bill may have the teeth~if he pays the
price. Having paid for the ice, he nat
urally lays claim to its interior posses
sions.
Husband Fails to Get
‘ .
Meals; Wife Sues
EVANSVILLE, IND., Dec, 4.—Mrs.
Nicholas Statheson is suing her hus
band for divorce because he did not
have the meals ready at the provper
hours. When she testified in the caase
she said the breach opened by his fail
iure to serve meals on time was wid
ened when she returned home ear.y
from work and found another woman
in their apartment,
She said they agreed, on marrying,
that the husband was to do the housa
work, while she earned the family's
livelihpod. The judge took the case
under advisement. Mrs, Statheson is
a candy maker. ‘
Cost State $500,000
EAU CLAIRE, WIS., Dec. 4.—Whole
sale frauds, which are estimated to have
cost the State $500,000 in the last few
vears, in connection with the bounties
|on the scalp of wolves, which were
never killed, are-alleged by Deputy Con
servation Warden Henry Lee, who has
Ibeon carrving on an investigation here.
C. 8. Ferguson and James 8. Nichol
son, former presidents of the village of
Fairchild, pleaded Fullt_v to issuing false
certificates on wolves which were not
killed. Nicholson was fined $240 and
Ferguson $l2O, and it was shown that
the village presidents got $5 for each
false certificate issued.
.
Started With Dollar;
'
MILWAUKEE, WIS, Dec. 4.—Oscar
'anc! Walter Poppert, twin sons of Mr,
sand Mrs. Henry Poppert. had less than
1 *1 between them when they left home
'fiflfon years ago to seek their fortunes.
They went to Alaska. When they re
turend home a few days ago for a visit
they sald they owned Alaska mining
property worth several hundred thou
sand dollars
They will go back to Alaska about
December 1 to develop their property. It
is on Midnight Creek, just opposite the
Guggenheim claims. The men earned
ltheir grubstake by whaling and cattle
herding.
Woman’s Long Vigil Rewarded
When Husband Is Released
1
on Parole,
FRANKFORT, KY., Dec. 4—The
reunion of a faithful bride and hee
convict husband took place at ¢ 3
gate of the Reformatory here whe
William Bowling, sentenced to life
imprisonment in Elliott County
1898, was released on parole His
wife, whom he marricd while on bo:
awaiting trial, came to Frankfort sey -
enteen years ago and has worked hera
ever since, saving -her wages and
working for: the relezse of her hys
band.
The only mark against Bowling ¥
prison record was occasioned bv h
resentment of a fellow prisoner's re.
mark” that no prisoner's wife wuas
faithful to him. Bowling stabbed tha
defamer with a pair of shears, but no;
fatally.
The crime with which Bowling was
charged was atrocious, but the evi
dence against him was wholly cir
cumstantial and Appellate Judge .
B. Hannah, who defended him. and
many other prominent men in that
section expressed belief in hiz inno
cence
Bowling’'s grandparents, on whose
farm Bowling lived with his mother,
were found dead by him in bed ons
morning at their home on the samsa
farin. They had been beaten to deat!
No one, so far as known, could
proiit by their death excepting Bowl
ing and his mother, and a blacksmith
testified that a peculiar mark in the
hoof prints of a horse that had been
tied to his grandfather's house was®
similar to a mark he had observed on
the shoe of Bowling’s horse. His
mother said he had been home the
night before,
Villagers' Dreams of
.
Wealth Soon Vanish
HAGERSTOWN, MD,, Dec 1
Dreams of the streets being paved with
gold flitted through the minds of the
inhabitants of Funkstown when worl
men .employed on the new State road
dug up ore containing vellow metal
“'Gold, by heck, and it's here by the
peck,”” exclaimed the discoverer as he
examined several pieces of vellow rocl &
The news spread like wild-fire and
Scores of citizens soon were on the
scene with picks, digging with visions
of wealth in their minds “Only firon
pyrites,”” said a Hagerstown mineralo
gist, who examined samples of ore
brought here for analvsis %
. .
Genuine Jellico Coal
$4.25 a Ton.
ATLANTA COAL CO.
. 2260. Atl. 692.