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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
66 . ”
A Horse Has Only One Leg
That Is the Solemn Truth, and It Applies to YOU
You will live longer and have better success if you will ab
sorb and utilize the wisdom in that statement, ‘‘ A horse has only
one leg.”’ To that statement we add this: ‘‘You have only ONE
vital organ in your body.’’
Here is the explanation: The horse has only ONE leg—as a
wise old gentleman said, because the other three legs are utterly
useless if anything happens to any one.
Cut one leg from a horse, and he has no more working legs
at all—for he can’t walk. Injure one leg so that it can not be
used, and the horse is as though it had no legs.
There are many organs in your body absolutely necessary
to life. You have two glands near your kidneys, for instance.
Take out one and you get a goiter. Take out the other and you
die.
If anything happens to your heart, you die, of course. With
out a liver you could not exist. The lungs are essential. From
the head down, through the spinal cord, you are a complication
of machinery, ‘‘fearfully and wonderfully made.’’
Yet, as the horse has only one leg—because he can do noth
ing if one leg is hurt—so you have only one vital organ, since
injury to one means the destruction of everything.
A well-known, highly educated man in a great Eastern city
died the other day. Every newspaper should have printed after
his death a sermon on common sense in caring for yourself.
This man, well educated, but neglecting common sense care
of his machinery, did this foolish thing. He ate heartily and im
mediately went to work in a gymnasium. His heart stopped
working and he died.
Any child might have told him that, after eating, violent
exercise is dangerous, just as eating is extremely dangerous
after violent exercise.
After you have eaten, the blood goes to the stomach; all the
energy of your machine is concentrated on the stomach. If you
exercise violently after eating, you take the blood from the
stomach-the muscles demand it and get it. The heart is then
required to do two things at once. And if the heart is weak,
you die.
After you have exercised violently, the blood rushes to the
muscles in which the exercise has taken place. If you then eat,.
the stomach suffers for lack of the blood, which is absolutely es
sential to digestion. Many men have dropped dead because they
ate heartily after violent exercise.
Almost any man knows enough not to let his horse eat or
drink until it has rested after hard work.
But not one in a hundred knows as much about himself as he
knows about the horse.
Not one in a thousand knows as much about himself as he
knows about his automobile. ;
The problem of caring for yourself is very simple.
Given a sound body, a little attention to it, and freedom
from the worry which kills, and any man might live to a hun
dred. :
The most important thing about an automobile is the en.
gine. The most important thing about your body is THE
HEART. The engine in the motor and the heart in your body
supply the power.
The next most important thing in an automobile is the car.
buretor, and, in you, THE LUNGS. The carburetor supplies the
£as to the engine, the lungs supply the oxygen and electric force
to the body.
‘l'hothirdthln‘lnthonwmoblhhofllu.udlnyour
body, FOOD.
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the lungs—just as the automobile works with the stremgth it
gets from the gasoline through the carburetor.
Our food replaces the parts that we wear out—just as the
oil in the automobile prevents wearing and friction.
Get plenty of fresh air—windows open at night. Form the
habit of deep breathing, let the oxygen and the electric force in
the air clean the blood as it passes through your lungs—then the
heart, your engine, will work well,
Eat carefully, regularly, simply and slowly—building up
with the right food the tissues, the parts of the body that you
wear out.
Sleep regularly. The time spent in sleep in your body is like
the time spent in charging a battery in the automobile.
While you are asleep your nervous system, which is your
battery, stores up foroe.
All of this could be learned in childhood and become mere
habit at the age of fifteen.
Inklings and Thinklings
£ By Wex Jones.
Had Zimri peace . . . . ? ;
St. Louls Globe-Démocrat says the only way to like rice is to put
one raisin in the pudding for each grain of rice. And then we'd sug
gest leaving out the rice,
Natural history note:
Snowballs are usually found between the collar and the neck.
Do your C&mmu peaceing early,
An edd gift for a man is one sock.
We trust there will be no hitting in the clinches when Messrs. Taft
aud Bryan meet in their debate on prohibition.
iy
A timely present for a boxer is a rtc which strikes every two
"THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
Shop Early
Shop Now
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Don’t Let Your Laziness or Selfishness Pile So
Much Extra Work on the Salesgirl That She’s Too
| Tired to Care Whether It’s Christmas Time or Not
Will There Be Any Left
to Welcome Her?
THE HOME PAPER
The History of the Moon
Is a Long Series of
Catastrophes
Garrett P. Serviss Tells of Its Birth and of Its Tragic
End, When All Its Life Was Destroyed . by Some
| Great Disaster That Has Left Its Traces Visible o
| Its Surface.
HE history of the moon ap-
T pears to have been one long
series of t;emendoun catas
trophies. Its origin, according to
the theory of Darwin, which is
now generally accepted, was a
catastrophe sublime in its mag
nitude—the tearing asunder of
the molten globe of the earth, or
more properly speaking, the
stripping off by certifugal force
of a Jarge portion of its periphery.
After the consolidation of the
moon came another chain of
catastrophes, the effects of which
are plainly visible upon the lunar
disk, and these have recently
been miade the subject of special
photographic study “by Messrs.
Loewy and Luiseux, of the Paris
Observatory. It may not be gen
erally know that scores of the
huge cicatrices that scar the face
of the moon can plainly be seen
by anybody, without any of the
instruments of an observatory,
thanks to the remarkable powers
of the “prism binoculars,” many
varieties of which have, within a
few years past, been invented and
placed upon the market. With
one of these litle instruments, no
more cumbrous than an opera
glass, such objects as the great
lunar rings of Copernicus, Tycho,
Manilius, Menelaus, Clavius,
Archimedes and many more are
distinctly, not to say startlingly,
exhibited. The vast mysterious
rays that start at Tycho and tra
verse the lunar plains and moun
tains for hundreds of miles on all
sides are clearly shown, and the
amount of detail visible on the
broad dark plains, called ‘“seas,”
is astonishing when we consider
the exceedingly modest propor
tions of the instrument of ob
servation. Of course, in order to
see the endless finer details one
must employ a telescope.
On the moon, as among the
others, photography has proved
itself capable of revealing many
things not visible to the eye, even
when aided by powerful tele
scopes. Moreover, many of the
less conspicuous lunar features
are so complicated and, also, so
confusingly graduated with light
and shade, that no draughtsman
can correctly represept them. For
these reasons astronomers who
seek to penetrate the ultimate
secrets of thé lunar world have
come to depend largely upon pho
tographers’ pictures.
For several years past Messrs,
Loewy and Luiseux have assidu
ously photographed the moon in
all its phases and under all {llum
inations, and, taking their pho
tographs for a basis, they have
studied the innumerable ques
tions relating to Its past and
present conditions, and partic
ularly the bearing of the past
upon the present. Finally they
have presented to the French
Academy of Sciences a series of
conclusions concerning the lunar
world which possess the highest
interest and which are founded
upon their personal Investiga
tions.
To begin with, they dicuss the
theory which was suggested by a
ONCE-OVERS
STAND UP AND KNOCK DOWN.
Don’t play the “baby act” and expect sympathy in your business.
Of course you won't get it. Why should you?
You are supposed to be grown up before you enter the business
world. At least you have a man's struggle on, if you enter into compe
tition with other men, and you must expect a fight before you succeed.
Don't be in the position of the little boy who hits his playmate on
the back as hard as he can then cries and squeals if his blows are re
turned.
M%h!thfinflmmmmmmmmm
In business, men stake the savings of their lives. It is a serious
proposition.
You.unvm.mynvyuobmmm.mnmm
half the vorryudeu‘oththohnmmltbovmluwnhck
to your job.
!odonotntlnwm:‘mnlmmeuom-pmmotho
knocks as they come and hit back.
Depend on yourself. Don't lean on anybody,
Adwmy.mmemmmulnlb
wwmmmmmu:uu':mmmm
By Garrett P. Serviss.
German astronmer, Gruithuisen,
50 years ago, and which has re.
cently been revived in various
forms by others, that the gl
gantic ring mountains on the
moon, many of which are from 49
to 80 miles in diameter, and pos.
sess central peaks in the midst
of the deep depressions within
their encircling walls, were creat
ed not by volcanic action, like
the comparatively insignificant
craters on the earth, but by the
fall upon the moon of huge mass
es which partially liquefied the
surrounding surface and cast up
~ vast viscid rings, which after.
ward solidified. Similar phenom
ena, it has been noted, are pro
duced when stones are dropped
into soft mud. They are also
seen when projectiles are fired
against a target and a melting
occurs.
It has been supposed by the ad
vocates of this theory that a ring
of circulating bodies once sur
rounded the earth at approxi
mately the distance of the moon,
and these are supposed to have
been gradually drawn in upon the
moon. The theory is attractive
to the imagination, and it finds a
certaln degree of support in the
actual existence of rings com
posed of independent masses sur
rounding the planet Saturn. But
Messrs. Loewy and Luiseux con
clude that this is not the true
explanation of the origin of the
lunar formations. On the con
trary, they think that the great
lumar ring mountains were creat
ed by volcanic eruptions. They
are also of the opinion that the
“seas” once contained water. This
would favor the supposition that
the lunar globe was formerly
habitable. But, if so, its end as
an inhabited world must have
been a catastrophe of the most
fearful character. Its whole
surface is more or less pitted with
Immense craters. It is impossi
ble to conceive that life could
continue to exist upon a world
whose crust was thus torn apart
in every direction. The streaks
running for hundreds of miles
stralght away from the crater
Tycho are supposed by many as
tronomers to mark huge lines of
fissure where the globe of the
moon was split apart, the crev
ices being fllled with material of
a lighter color than the surround
ing surface,
Whichever view we adopt—that
of a bombardment, pitting the
moon as thoroughly as ever a
battleship was pitted by shells, or
¢ that of a universal upheaval of
the surface by voleanic explosions
~it is evident that the end of the
moon as a living world was any
thing but a peaceful one. The
earth has now, at least, no ring
of bodles surrounding it ready to
fall upon its surface, and, on the
other hand, its volcanle energies
appear to have been far greater
h:: the past than they are likely
to be In the future. We may,
therefore, anticipate that it will
never be the scene of such a
world tragedy as has evidently
been played upon the stage of its
satellite.