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TUESDAY., MARCH 14, 1916.
BARON BEAN
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BRINGING UP FATHER
™ GLAD You CAME
HOME - | \impi'r Yo TO !
GO RIGHT I THE KTC HEN |
AND DISCHARGE THE (00K
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OH, IDO HOPR | " | AINT GONNA &
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PR
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The Mystery of Speech and Song
By GARRETT P. SERVISS.
“WHI you expiain the philos
ophy of this phenomencn in
whistling & tune. march, waltz
dirge, *Old Hundred, ‘Yankee Doo
die® ‘Marselllalse’ or what you
wiil, the sound n the alr, aud 1o
the war. is accurnieiy what is con -
ceived by the mind. How do you
sccomt for that production, in
e mere external vibrations of
bieathy of the mental conception”
«The Lume s In the air: the con
feption ix in the mind How does
|| GOTTA SER SHRIMP AND
|GET YHS QTRAIGHT ! |
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“xternally %o that all listeners ob
taln the secret concept of the
mind?-E 8 ¢~
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HEN you were a boy the
W first time you tried te
whistle, in imitation of
the oider boys, you probably wte
tered an unmusical and uncon
trolinble squeak. Your ear teoid
You that you were not reproduc -
ing Lhe sounds that you had heard
tm:;\ m; nttm;;“du?: ',mu 't“r&;(:
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Others puckered their lips and oc.
casinally wet them with Lheur
/ BN e eek e R R
| [MY Posß LI bry- hear <\ / You HAVE REASON TO
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by “BIRD SIR. - AAD | —~—"{ YoU SCOUNDREL® -
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COoporetght, Wa4, Newspaper Fontwme Bervice Tar Ragiwtored U K Patent Ofes
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tongues. You took advice from
the accomplished whistlers, who,
if they were particularly interest
«d in your efforts, put their hands
on thelr hips, stooped down close
in front of you. and showed vou
exaotly how 1o manage the living
instrament .
You tried over aud over again,
and when you it upon the proper
sounds you were careful 10 re
member just what shape vou had
Eiven 1o your mouth and lips, and
tust what foroe of breath vou had
exarted. Thus by dint first of im
itation and second of practice,
Coprragnt, IVIS, loternational News Nervice.
Covpcight, 1015, International News Service. Registers
Grexrt Britein Rights Reserved
Regiaterad U 5§ Patemt Offien
|SAY | WANNA BE SURE THAT MY BEST ) |
| FRIEND "CHUNKY " GETS THE CHAMPSHIP |
| NOW EAUSE | DONT WANT IT | :
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SAYING
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SW"' ) Q\a e HER !
to produce the series of sounds
which were in your memory.
1t was self-education, and when
it was finished you could whistle
any tune that yon heard because
your lips and vocal chords were
trained to produce, instinctively,
vibrations In the air correspond
ing to the sonorous concepts in
yYour mind, your ears always act
ing as crities and guldes.
Having attained this degree of
skill, it was easy for vou, if yvou
kad a talent for music, 1o whistle
tunes of your own invention, be.
cause all tunes are made up of
certain fundamental notes. and
you had learned how to set the air
vibrating to the wave froquencies
Of those notes. Rabies and birde
iearn ‘in the same way how o
prowdiiee vora! sonnds enrfenpond
e e serte e Saudiars imores -
THE ATLANT A GEORGIAN
Sherlock Holmes Never Put Over a Better One Than This—
et it [E3S L WSIST
Poo! ot [ Beeal| zmr 14y DEDUCTIONS
OWt WMTER- | 7 ARE CORRECT !
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#lons. At first these impressions
may not be connected with any
mental conceptions.
They are purely physical re
sponses Lo external influences,
Every species of bird has its own
single “song.” which is character
istic of the species, and an indi-
Vidual bird seldom gets bevond
the universal family song of its
species. But the human ehild
soon acquires a wide acqualnt
ance with many sounds, and
fearns to connect them with what
we call mental states, and thus to
express its thoughis to others by
setting up certain vibrations In
the air. This s the beginning of
language. .
Wa nead 1t enter into the dis-
Pute as to Whether or no (he mind
in sometiting exsentially fndepand.
anl ltempboracily dwelline within
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UHAT Hfikg TINJURIODs PROM ARGARET HEALY,BARo PARK.
To A LADY m THYME Av SEEDS LUIKE GATE
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the body and acting through It,
for, in efther case, the manage
ment of the nerves and muscles to
produce physical effects corre
sponding to mental conceptions
must be acquired by practice and
must be limited by the capabili
ties of the bodily functions.
Speech is perhaps man's high
est distinction from other ani
mals, and it is very interesting to
trace its gradual rise in the hu
man species, If we begin with
the brains of the earliest types of
men that have vet been discol -
ered among the fossile contained
in the upper layers of the earth,
we find that there is a certain de
velopment of those parts of the
brain which have been recognized
un aßcoeinted with the pover of
speech (Ihey jie ot the sides of
tie Lromt half of the braini. aad
Some Bird, Gents, Some Bird
By George McManus
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that there is no similar develop
ment in the brains of any lower
animals, though the manlike apes
have the rudiments,
Take, for instance, what has
been regarded as the most primi
tive human skull yet discovered,
that of the “Piltdown man,” found
in England a few years ago. Elliot
Smith, a high authority, has said
that although the brain indicated
by that skull, which may be 150,-
000 vears old, was the most prim
itive human brain that he has
ever reen, vel it already showed a
considerable development of those
parts which in modern man we
asgociate with the power of
gpeech,
To avoid misunderstanding it
siould be said that, of course. in
tnese cases, the brain itself has
not been preserved, but anatom -
iala can el what the fame of the
ATLANTA, GA.
Copyright, 1218, Internations] Mews Bervios
Registered U. & Patent Office.
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brain must have been from study
of the skull that contained it. A
Jaw which was found not far from
the spot where the Plitdown
man's skull cap lay has been re.
garded as belonging to the same
individual, and this jaw is ape
like in character, thus showing,
a 8 Professor Osborn bas pointed
out, that spesch must have oome
while the jaws were still apelike
Quite recently 1t has been as
sarted that the particular m in
quunonp‘robably did not ong
to the tdown man, but te an
anthropoid ape which may havae
heen contemporary with him, b
this doas not affect the conelumion
that the sarliest men hegan tla
speak while thelr Jaws wers stif
the lawse of apes. Hut whe J
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