Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 212, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 September 1913 — Page 2

Gen. Felix Diaz, -whom President Huerta has sent to represent Mexico in will not be received by that : country as minister, according to recent dispatches. Our illustration shows Diaz wearing a white waistcoat and : friends, as he was about to sail tor Japan.

DUAL NATURE GASES

Instances Which Outshine Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Account of On« Woman Who Had as Many as Ten Personalities —English Doctor’s Theory—Many Strange Hallucinations. London. —Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde most look to their laurels. British scientists have uncovered instances of human beings who possessed as many as ten different personalities. One in particular could change her mood every hour in the day. A remarkable example is that of William Sharp, who shook off. his male mental characteristics and became a woman in heart and mind. Sharp when a youth ran away and joined a band of gypsies. When he returned to society he took up literature and decided he wanted to become a poet He found he could not portray his Ideals while plain William Sharp. He would sit down, take upon himself a feminine tone and write books as Fiona Macleod. He used to say he could write out of his heart in a way he could not do as William Sharp. Fiona always was spoken of as a separate person, and he even wrote letters to her. There was a real difference in the literary style, and even in the handwriting. Another case was that of a Miss Beauchamp, who had what is described as a multiple personality. It was recorded of her that she could change her personality hour by hour. In one of her characters she was described as a saint, very prim and' rigidly conscientious, quite incapable of dishonesty. In another character she relaxed somewhat, and in the third personality she was known as Sally, chiefly because of her mischievous, troublesome and nasty behavior. Miss Beauchamp, like most women, disliked spiders intensely, but it was 'astonishing to find that her third personality, Sally, loved them and collected them in her trinket box. Often she would scream on discovering the very spider she had so carefully placed in the trinket box herself. Sally would write letters people to whom Miss Beauchamp would not speak. In this way sbe found herself In for appointments with persons she would not think of meeting as Miss Beauchamp. ■> It was easy to see which character was in possession by the way she walked, by the clothes she wore and by the manner in which she shook hands. Again there was the case of the Rev. Ansel Baughan, who awoke one day to find himself living under the name of Brown a long way from his home. He had wandered there and had been living there for two months, keeping a shop. These extraordinary cases of dual personality are eclipsed by this case: This woman evidenced the possession of no fewer than ten different personalities. one of which was, of course, her normal self. Her abnormal states were: 1. A childish mood, in which she referred to herself as a thing, or a good thing, even signing letters in this fashion. t. A passionate mood, in which she liecame intensely irate, and even went so far as to bite her clothes. This personality was very much better educated than that of the thing, and the letters written by her while under Its Influence were in a vastly different handwriting. During this mood she referred to herself as Old Nick. I. Every now and again the patient became deaf and dumb. During these stages she would communicate with her fellows only by talking on her Angers, the method of which l*niffuage she understood slightly in her ,;r . v. : . *

CENERAL FELIX DIAZ NOT WANTED BY JAPAN

normal state. Always ter transition from this mood would-be to that of the good thing, but frequently she would be a deaf mute for days at a time. 4. A mood in which she imagined herself only three days old. 6. An even more remarkable mood, in which she thought that Bhe had been born only the night before. 6. A terrible mood, in which many degeneracies were evidenced. While under this control she invariably referred to herself as “the dreadful wicked creature,” and gloried in her wickedness. 7. A Burprising moral and docile mood, in which she referred to herself as “pretty dear,” “good creature,” or “Tom’s darling.” 8. Several periods in which she was proved to be quite blind, but—in spite of this—able to draw with wonderful skill. 9. A state of paralysis reprtiduced from a former illness. A British psychologist’s investigations proved that memory of one personality continued from the last appearance of that same personality. There was thus a continuity of the same personality, though each one was Ignorant of every other one.

Ready to March on Capital

Buffragettes Gathering at Hyattsvllle, Md., Just Before Starting to Waahlngton City. Hyattsville, Md. —Suffragettes from all over the United States gathered here to proceed to Washington. Hyattsvllle is a short distance outside the national capital, and at that place they were received by the mayor, presented with the key to the city and a general round of speech making occurred. Members of the United States senate committee on suffrage spoke, and then the procession headed for the capitol, where the women presented their petitions to the senate. This pic-

Suffragettes at Hyattsville.

ture is a general view of the gathering and shows the speakers’ stand with the automobiles of the suffragists drawn up around it

Injunction Against Mother-In-Law.

Omaha, Neb.—Lester L. King, a wealthy business man here, secured an injunction enjoining his mother-in-law, Mrs. Levi Gardner, of Harvard. Hi., to keep out of his home. Mrs. Gardner has been visiting the King family for Borne months and, according to King, caused trouble between him and his wife. Mother-in-law refused to leave when requested to do v

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

WOLVES CIRCLE THE COUPLE

Mlnneapolts Man and His Wife Sav« Lives by Building Fire for Night. i Shotley, Minn. —Mr. and Mrs. Roj Boyd of Minneapolis were in danger ol being killed by a pack of wolves, ao cording to the story they told here and saved their lives by building a fire The Boyds have been camping on Up per Red lake and became lost. Dark ness overtook them. Suddenly th« pack began circling them. Mrs. Boyd became hysterical. Mr. Boyd hurriedlj started a fire. The wolves paced bacli and forth all night At daybreak ths Boyds made their way back to camp.

Women Should Be Beaten.

Jersey City, N. J. —That a woman should be beaten once a week and oo casionally be imprisoned on a bread and water diet, is the opinion of John S. Mclntosh of Woodbridge, N. J., who practiced the theory so his wife Ella testified, in her suit for divorce here.

Crosses Ocean in Dark.

Plymouth, Eng.—The captain of th« steamship Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosso which arrived here from N.ew York reports that the vessel steamed tht 3,000 miles by dead reckoning. Cloud* and mist throughout the voyage pre vented observations being taken.

so, and King obtained the lnjuno tlon.

MUCH DISTRESS IN JERUSALEM

Great Suffering Prevails as Result o( the Warring Factions In Europe. London. —Jerusalem, “with a popula tlon of from 50,000 to 60,000 Jews, 13y 000 Christians and 12,000 Moslems, it in sore straits, according to Consul P. J. McGregor in a report to the for eign office. As a result of the war and the consequent falling off in the pil grim and tourist traffic, on which Je rusalem mainly subsists, business hat been unusually slack and great dip tress prevails. The enormous increase it) the cost of living, to which attention has re cently been called, remains unchanged and there are no signs of improvement in that respect. The main industry ol Jerusalem is the production of souve nirs and articles de piete in olivt wood and mother-of-pearl. The last named industry has hitherto been t specialty of the inhabitants of Beth lehem, but it is now carried on tc some extent by Bethlehfemites estab lished in Paris, who send their good* to Jerusalem for sale.

CAMERA’S EYE CATCHES CRIME

Mixed in Scene Focused, Photographei Saw One Man Stabbing Another. Pittsburgh.—While making a photo graph of the Monongahela valley front a hill overlooking Braddock, Ray Cal vert of Swlssvale saw focused on th« ground glass of his camera a man wltt knife uplifted attack another. In hit excitement the photograhper fell ovel an embankment wrecking his machine Calvert notified the police and they arrived on the scene in time to And Anthony Goura crawling away with t dozen stab wound in his body. He hat been robbed of f 126 by a fellow-coun-tryman. The highwayman’s victim it in'a serious condition.- The assailant escaped.

Famed Lift Saver Is Dead.

Middletown, N. Y.—Captain Patrick Grace, seventy-six. Who had a record of having saved eighty-nine person* from drowning, is dead at his home U Montgomery. He had been awarded a medal by congress for bravery.

Colorado's Wonderland

ESTES PARK is not only the wonderland of Colorado, but it cannot be surpassed in’ mountain grandeur by any other district in the world. It stands unique and alone in Its scenic majesty. It has a setting of marvelous beauty. Throughout the summer it is a garden of wild flowers —a veritable blaze of color that charms and fascinates the eye. And because of the variety of altituflff And temperature, a single species may bloom all summer, disappearing here today, perhaps, but simultaneously appear yonder where the season is not so far advanced. The columbine, the state flower of Colorado, is one of these. Where Acres of Flowers Bloom. These flowers are of every conceivable slse, color .and variety; sometimes acres upon acres in solid banks of color, at other times in huge, bright and many-colored meadow carpets. In the region above timberline, as if to relieve the bleak aspect, are found some of the flower-lovers’ treasures, the blossoms of brightest hue. Mariposa lilies bloom in millions. The dainty blue-fringed gentian is found in the glacier meadows. Among the thousand other varieties blooming every season In the park are the wild red rose, buttercup, marigold, lupine, orchid, aster,anemone, sulphur 'flower, purple locoweed, blue beard tongue, gray mountain sage, pink shooting star, monkshood, monkey flower, wild tiger lily, Iris, penstemon, stonecrop, cone flower, valerian, crane’s bill, larkspur, Indian paint brush, violet and wild pansies. Through the summer months may be found also in profnsion the wild strawberries, smaller than their cultivated brothers, but of much finer flavor. A ride up Wind river trail through the sunshot woodland of whispering aspens, in the cool of a summer morning, is a rich experience to the true lover of nature and one which he will never forget. The dimensions of this new park and game preserve are 42 miles east and west by 24 miles north and south. This region has 24 miles of the continental divide and all of the Mummy range; and it touches the Rabbit Ear and Medicine Bow ranges. In It are a score of snow-piled peaks and upward of 50 glacier lakes. Long’s peak, king of the Rockies, is the central and most commanding point in this mountain world. It stands 14,271 feet above the tides and is more than 100 feet higher than Pike’s peak. It has been rather fancifully named the “American Matterhorn," and when we consider that one side 1b Actually Inaccessible, perhaps it Is worth the comparison, for the Matterhorn has been amended on all sides, though its easiest line of ascent is harder to conquer than is the ordinary route of Long's peak. The pathway winds upward through evergreen groves, mixed with aspen at the lower levels, past babbling brook and noisy waterfall, until timberline, with itß battered, wind-blown treAfl Is reached. Shortly after all tree growth ceases and still steadily climbing upward, the edge of Boulder Field is reached. Boulder Field Is well named. It is a dreary, forbidding expanse of great slabs of granite—some as much as 30 to 40 teet in length—with boulders, great ana small, heaped between. Across this Jumble lies the way—there Is no road—and progress Is simply a series of Jumps from two to four feet. Situated at the far end is the Key Hole, a great deft in the wall of the

mountain, through which one must pass in order to climb the peak from the west side. The east face is inaccessible, as it is an enormous wall of granite, 2,000 feet high. Peaks 3,000 Feet High. Through and beyond the Key Hole one looks down upon a grand amphitheater formed by nature. Chasm lake, which is on one side of Long’s peak, at an altitude of 11,100 feet, has a setting wild as those of any lake In the world. It is a rocky rent between three granite peaks, and 3,000 feet of broken walls anl precipices tower above it. The cliffs and crags above the lake have flung„oown wreckage and strewn its shores in fierce confusion. Here and there this wreckage is cemented together with winter’s drifted snow. Miniature lceburgs float io the lake all summer. Here and there are mossy spaces, scattered alpine flowers, some beds of sedge, and an occasional flock of white ptarmigan to soften a little the fierce wildness of this mountain world. Three miles from Chasm lake are glaciers older than the Pyramids, yet always exposed to the sun. They include Hallet, Andrews, Tyndall, Sprague, Black and others. Hallet glar cier is the largest and probably the best known and is easiest of access. The altitude of the lake is 11,100 feet, while the glacier, only three miles away, has an elevation of 14,600 feet It is on the Bide of Mummy mountain, a huge mass of ice nearly two miles long and 1,000 feet high. Usually it is seen at its beßt in August, as it takes nearly all summer for the melting of the previous winter’s snow from the surface and crevasses. When seen at this time, the solid ice glitters like blue steel in the sunlight, and one finds it hard to realize that it is midsummer. Glaciers, huge moraines, polished granite floors and a score pf glacier lakes are but a few of the many records of the last glacial epoch. The moraines are Immense mounds and ridges of rock and debris deposited by glaciers that moved through the park centuries ago. Mill’s moraine, extending east from Long’s peak and the moraine in Morine park are two of the principal ones. It is between Hallett and Mil’s glaciers that the famous ice palaces are situated —diamond walled and celled, fltyshing and glinting. Here the frost king reigns supreme. This peculiar form of ice formation cannot be found at less than <13,000 feet, and in no other place in the world. The effect of entrance is one of striking wierdness. The tiny flame of your candle is caught by a million diamonds and reflected again and again. There is the blending brilliancy of sclntlllatlngvllght and fantastic Bhapes in frieze and fresco, the delicate crystals of elfin tracery and lace, a forest of fragile tendrils. It is a scene of regal splendor, more wonderful than anything that Aladdin O¥OT pictured. Bierstadt, the artist, spent months among these solitary scenes, and one of the glacier lakes bears his name. Here, for years, Lord Dunraven had large holdings. Profesor Hayden, the father of the Yellowstone National park, says of Estes park: “Not only has nature amply supplied thlß valley with features of rare beauty, but It has distributed them that the eye of an artist may rest with satisfaction oo the completed picture presented.” Give the average man half a chan os and he will want it aIL

Ever notice how much fuss men make about their honor—on the stage? . v ,: 1 1 1 Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gams, reduces inSamnstion,allay* paln,cur*a wind m botilejUr Isn’t it queer how many of yonr friends are broke when you want to borrow a few dollars?

New Woman.

Mrs. Knicker —Are you going to take a course in a business college? Mrs. Bocker —Yes; I want to find out how to get more money out of Jack. —Judge.

FACE BROKE OUT IN PIMPLES

Falls City. Neb.—'“My troublfe began when I was about sixteen. My face broke out In little pimples at first. They were red and sore and then became like little boils. I pffcked at my face continually and it made my face red and Bore looking and then I would wake up at night and scratch it. It was a source of continual annoyance to me, as my face was always red and splotched and burned all the time'. “I tried -, and others, but I could find nothing to cure it. I had been troubled about two years before I found Cutlcura Soap and' Ointment _ 1 sent for a sample of Cutlcura Soap and Ointment and tried them and I then bought some. 1 washed my face good with the Cutlcura Soap «u*d hot water at plight and then applied the Cutlcura Ointment, In the morning .1 washed It off with the Cutlcura Soap and hot water. In two days I noticed a decided improvement, while in three weeks _the cure was complete.” (Signed) Judd Knowles, Jan. 10, 1913. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each tree,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address postcard “Cutlcura, Dept L, Boston.” —Adv.

Egged Off.

De Wolf Hopper, at a luncheon in New York, said of a bad actor: “He's had hints enough to quit the stage, dear knowa He’s had more hints than Phatt. “Phatt, after a brief experience on the road as ‘Hamlet,’ returned to his Job in Canal street. “‘How did you come to leave the stage?’ I asked him one night. “‘I had hints that I wasn't suited to it,’ he replied. “Thinking the critics, I said: “ ‘Aha, .the little birds told you, eh?' “ ‘Well,’ said he, ‘they’d have become birds, I suppose, if they’d been allowed to hatch.’ ”

Same Thing.

In the early days of Arizona, an elderly and pompous chief justice was presiding at the trial of a murder case. An aged negro had been ruthlessly killed, and the only eye witness to the murder was a very small negro boy. When he was called to give his testimony, the lawyer for the defense objected on the ground that he was too young to know the nature of an oath, and in examining him asked: “What would happen to you if you told a lie?” “De debbll *ud git me!” the boy replied “Yes, and I’d get you," sternly said the chief justice. “Dat’s jus’ what I said!” answered the boy.—National Monthly.

Hearth-Hunger.

"Beyond the need for bread, a woman’s needs are two; deeper than all cravings save the mother’s paßsion, firm-rooted in our hndless past, is the hearth-hunger. The trees that sweep my chimney have their roots at the world’s core! The flowers in my dooryard have grown there for a thousand years! What milenniums have done, shall decades undo? We are not so shallow, so plastic as that! We will go into the mills; the shops, the offices, if we must, but we know we are off the track of life. Neither our desire nor our power Is there.” —Cornelia A. P. Comer, in Atlantic.

Like a Pleasant Thought of an old friend — Post Toasties with cream. V ' / Sweet, crop bits of white Indian com, toatted to an appetizing, golden brown. A delightful food for breakfail, lunch or supper always ready to serve instantly from the package. “The Memory Linger w” For pleasing variation sprinkle some Grape-Nuts over i saucer of Pott Toasties, then add cream. The combined flavour is tome, thing to remember. Poctum Cereal Company, Limited Battle Creak, Michigan