The Omaha Sunday -Bee Magazine Page Copyright, 1111, by Amerlcan-Enmlner. dreat Britain Right P.rT4. A Test Tube Filled Cdt! vith Germs of eVbu ' ' " '..v I j the New RiU U' UV.VO U UUUUU j v " ' - e i i j i " i i J of Children 'A. . WVX Ptfi, Are V . v , ? f Fed on W IK - YV JJ Goat.t r -f " 1 -a W - m Science Begins Its Battle with a Fever Germ Which Has Been Brought Here from Malta and Which Forms a Serious Menace to America's Health By Rene Bache GOATS' milk, rrcquently pre scribed by doctors, and be lleved to be superior to cows' milk because It Is less likely to carry tuberculosis terms, has been found to be responsible (or a new and even more serious disease. - So serious Is the matter consid ered that the War Department, which bas officially taken It ' In band, has kept it wholly secret up to the present moment. The estab lishment ot a "field laboratory" at Langtry, Tex., to make a study ot the new plague, was carefully with held from publication even the dis covery of the existence of the dls- - ease along the Texas border belnt known only to a few officers of the nedlcal corps of the army. The malady in question Is Malta fever, and Its Infection Is derived ( from goats. It gets Us name from the fact that for a long time It has been very bad on the Island ot Malta though more or lest preva lent all along the shores of the Mediterranean'. Within the last few years, however, the Maltese have managed to get rid of It almost en tirely by killing off the Infected " t 1 X Milk Are Exposed to the Danger of Malta Fever. One of the Texas Goat Farms, Where the New Disease First Made Its Appearance. The Tosjgenburff Goat, Whose Milk Is Free From Tuberculosis Germs but May Carry the ' Fever Microbe. " ' (oats and replacing tbem with others of the warn variety from Gibraltar, where the disease was unknown. The ecenery of Malta is mostly arranged on a vertical plan, with rugged mountains and steep cliffs, so that cows cannot very well be kept there. Hence the goats, on which dependence Is had for milk. Goats from Malta are among the animals forbidden to land In our own country, under the regulations promulgated by the Department of Agriculture. The restriction, how ever, haa not proved of much value apparently, inasmuch as large num bers of Maltese goats have been brought If) to Texas over the Mexi can border. Doubtless it is from them that the infection has come. The great goat-ralslng region ot the United States 1 in Texas, ex tending for 300 miles along the Rio Grande and thence northward about ninety miles. It Includes the Nueces and Lower Pecos districts a region of ranges of low. undulat ing hills, .traversed by many rocky canyons. For the most part It la arid and barren and covered wlth desert scrub. The breeding of goats Is the principal industry of the in habitants. For some years past physicians in that part of the country have made note ot a good many rather mysterious cases ot a relapsing fe ver that did not. respond to treat ment. The sufferers died only, in a email percentage of Instances, but often they were physically incapaci tated for many months, being even unable to walk. No sooner would they get better than they were over taken by a fresh onset ot the mal ady. It was very puzzling, and no suspicion of Its true nature seems to have been entertained. Com monly it was taken for a kind ot typhoid with unusual symptoms. It bas been especially prevalent Why One Marriage in Every Nine Ends in Divorce By Simon Ei Patten Prefessor of Political Economy at the Unlvsrsltv of Pennsylvania. T TNDERLYINO all divorces, all unhappy mar M Hagea and all resulting evils will be found the fundamental economic problem based upon the almost universal dependence ot women. When society shall make women flnan- ' daily Independent, politically Independent and personally Independent ot their husbands, anJ of other men, the divorce problem will have been . solved, the home will become a place of per petual peace and the family will reach Its high est estate. ' ,fTbe time passed years ago when normal women were actually, or even in theory, depend ent upon men for a llvlnj. This Is proved by the va.t and growing army of self supporting women cf all ages in all parts of the world and la all manner of occupation Women are successful aa doctors, lawyers, preachers, as merchants, as nurses, architects snd engineers; some of them engnge la general contracting; Philadelphia bas at least one woman plumber; a Western city has a woman police officer, a Philadelphia theatre had a woman tor Its special officer, and thus wo find in every vo cation of man a woman making good. It U against the whole scheme ot human de velopment to hold one cliis dependent, upon another. The fundamental wrong of slavery was in the dependence of the slave and the exercise ef the authority born of such dependence. Had the Biave received full pay for lils services the authority cf his master would have diminished lu exact ratio to tbla pay, and the usefulness of the slave would have increased in the same ratio. 1 Just so with women. Onco a woman shall be come self-supporting then shall she become self-ret-pectlug. When she shall become thoroughly self respecting and wholly Independent, then she also shall become a fit companion for her logical mate and meet htm on a common ground ot mor ality where love and affection, mutual help, mutual Interest and every other esseutlal to right living and right thinking come in logical order and lu natural sequence. Wners a wo.iian Is wholly dependent on tho husband her spirit rebels, is theu subdued sal tnally she becomes the cringing, dUtasteful and useless factor lu the scheme of human develop ment Her offspring sutlers because ot this mental altitude, to toe resulting physical deter ioration, it follows, then, when a woman shall bate loit her spirit and her pride and ber charm, she llkewi.se loses the interest, and sometimes the support of her husband and becomes a public Charge. t Taking the mutual attraction for granted a man normal In every respect, anj a woman con scious ot ber personal attractlveuess, secure In ber financial Independence, each seeking nothing more than an opportunity to live a normal lite tinder decent conditions, sharing each other's burdens equally and fairly, each meet lug a proper share ot all obligations, financial and moral the constant eource of turmoil and strife within the home, which may be aunimarlied In the single word "money,- is wholly eliminated. The woman has her own income, the man haa bis own Income, and are like partners, dealing fairly one with the other. The expenses are shared, as they should be shared, by those who Incur tbem, and all of their time Is devoted to the carrying out of their several economlo ven turer, yielding to each the Increments necessary to the happiness of both. Such a situation breeds confidence, commands respect, builds up tho woman, strengthens the man, and makes for all that Is best In the strengthening of society. , The marriage relationship Is In law and In fact a contract perfectly right and. entirely proper, but the two parties to this or any other contract should make the best bargain possible, always being fair. In the marriage contract the woman offers much, glvea much and has every right under the law to demand much snd to get all she can. It Is entirely wrong for a man to give all and get nothing, juet as it H entirely wrong for a woman to cease to be an economic factor in the scheme of life as soon aa she becomes a wife. A dependent is a pauper whether she be made wife or widow, and a womau who lives on the earnings of a man Is scarcely much stronger or . better In the final analysis than a man w ho lives on the earnings ot a woman. True bappiuess will only come when both the man and the woman earn each In proportion to their ability, and the wise man and the wise woman will have a clear understanding as to the esrning capacity of each other before enterins upon the serious affairs of married life. There can be no love, and there is no love where there is no respect, and there can be no repect where dependence falls upon one or upon the other ot a marriage contract. The whole scheme of domestic relatlonshlo nar rows itself down to the fair, frank an equitable In Edwards County, at the head of the Nueces River. Twenty-flve cases occurred recently in the practise of one doctor at Rock Springs, in the Nueces River Canyon. There and elsewhere it is known among the people as "slow fever," "Rio Grande fever," and, very suggestively." as "goat fever." In fact, goats have been popularly suspected of being accountable ' for the trouble, which seemed to afflict only persons who drank goats' milk or were intimate ly associated with goats. The region is sparsely settled which is doubtless the reason why the prevalence of the disease was eo slow to attract attention.' When, not Ionic ago, It came under the no tice of the army doctors, immediate alarm was taken, and the War De partment sent two surgeons, Thomai 1j. Ferenbaugh and Ernest R. Gen try, to make an Investigation. They established a field laboratory at Langtry and by bacteriological testa ascertained that the blood ot the sufferers did actually contain the germ of Malta fever. What had been only suspected was thus made a certainty. The discovery was deemed of the utmost Importance, inasmuch as the mal ady bas recently been spreading in other parts of the world, especially in South Africa, and has become a very serious problem. It is not or dinarily fatal though once in a while it does assume a malignant and very dangerous form. Dut it Is exhausting, being characterized by long-continued fever, with frequent The Sun's Puzzling Behavior Explained meeting of the financial obligations Incurred, the which devotion can,be expressed' and fulfilled; support herself and therefore haa to bo sup ported. The normal girl and the normal man who are both capable of earning their own living do not think of these things. What we want to do with the marriage and divorce question Is to keep people In a normal condition, and those who are not in this condition must be brought back. Just as soon as you get people away from the normal state you make one 'set of people slaves ot another set. This means the decreasing ot our Intellectual or emotional natures and the breaking down of social standards. We have spoken of the girl who Is lacking In ability, or In opportunity to earn enough to sup port herself. Now we speak of the girl who is kept at home with certain duties to perform but no income-making power. This sort of woman is absolutely dependent on a man who has the Income-earning power to satisfy her wants. We evlucate a woman to spend $1,500 a year, whereas she has an Income-earning power of only 300. When she faces life she therefore haa to choose between the man whom she may love but wjio cannot earn the $1,&00. and the man she cares little about but who can provide the necessary means for such luxuries. Just as long as we have women who are not taught to have an earning capacltyiwe are going to have many, many cases of this KinJ. The man's side of this problem Is quite differ ent. The young man of to day has the notion that he should support a wife, and consequently he emphasizes this fact. .in himself, often to the extent of deceiving himself. He does not look to any income-earning power in his wife; he looks to her face, her figure, her style, and gets the idea, which bas a great deal of good In it and much bad, that women are to be supported. The Photographs of the Descending Sun Taken at In girl he marries, unless ahe has the earning t.rvali t,f Fiftton Mmnlm sK yj tt i , uurn uui HIIUW IIIO VKIUV Oi Ills IDCOmO OT bow to use it. and in most cases she becomes dissatisfied with the resulting chaos. Married life snould be a brighter lite, a life in relapses, and no cure for It Is known. It was traced only a few years ago to goats In Malta, where the germ, was found In the milk of the animals. The microbe, known to science as Micrococcus melitensis, is a remarkably tiny ball-shaped bacterium. It occurs In enormous numbers in the milk of the infected animals, through the drinking ot which it is communlctted to human beings. There is a suspicion, how ever, that it may also be conveyed by the dust of places where sick goats are confined such dust find " ing its way Into the lungs in breath ing. The regulation excluding Malta goats from the United States has been in force for the last half-dozen years In 1903 slxty-iflve of the ani mal, seemingly In healthy condi tion, were shipped from the island of Malta to this country on the steamer Joshua Nicholson. . Their milk was drunk in quantities by the officers and crew, and almost every man on board .was struck down by Malta fever. It waa In the same year that Cap tain Charles F. Craig, an army sur geon, found a nurse sick with the disease in a hospital in Washing ton. She had contracted it appar ently from contact with sick sol diers from the Philippines, : where Malta fever prevails to a consider able extent. There have also been a few "laboratory cases" infec tions due to accident In handling the germs. The recent investigations made by the War Department have proved beyond question that Malta fever is "endemic" 1. e., permanently es tablished, in Texas. Apparently the infected area is practically the whole of the goat-raising region In that State. Most cases of the dis ease among the ranchers are con tracted In the Spring, from March to June, when whole families liter ally live with the herds, teaching the kids to suckle. Special note Is made of the fact that the infection haa a way of running through fam ilies which occupy dwellings sur rounded by goat pens Dust may have something, to do with the mat ter In such instances; and It is A Greatly Enlarged Culture of the New Fever Germs When Fed on Gelatine the Germs Form Themselves Into Little Round Clusters. rather curious to find that the goat raisers themselves, suspecting such an origin of the mischief, some times call the malady "dust fever." So well established Is the connec tion of the disease with goats that Mexicans will not drink the milk of the animals unboiled. But the Americans, for the most part, neg lect this very obvious and sensible precaution. The army surgeons. In ihe course of their investigations, made trips from Langtry for hundreds of miles, visiting all parts of the goat-raising section. They took a few sample goats from each herd and examined their blood and milk. In about 20 per cent of the animals the infec- tlon was found to be present The magnitude of the goat-ralslng industry in that region may be Judged from the fact that In F.d wards County alone there are 176, 000 goats, scattered about in herds of COO to 6,000. In nearly every herd there are a few Malta goats, but the great majority , are pure bred Angoras. The Angoras, which are reared for their wonderful fleeces, were first brought to this country from Asia Minor. Within recent years nearly all of those Im ported have been from South Africa. But both South Africa and Asia Minor are badly Infected with Malta fever. The Angora goat is a very beautiful creature milk-white, with spirally . twisted horns and silvery wool ar ranged In long ringlets over the whole ot its body, so as to look as if curled on a curling stick. It seems to have been originally a wild Persian species, but was first reared for its fleece In the Angora district among the Taurus Moun tains. Its wool wss spun by the Is-t raelites in the time of Moses. Im mense quantities of It are used to day, under the name of "mohair,".' In the making of dress goods. The S beautiful and costly "camel's-hair'V shawls are woven of Angora fleece.' The Turks used to have rigid reg ulatloDs against the exportation of these goats, and the first four An goras fetched to the United States were secured by Dr. W. C. Bailey, ot San Jose, Cal. He cut off their wool, smuggled them across the Bosphorous under a boat load of hay, transformed them Into black sheep by sprinkling them with coal dust, drove them in this disguise through the streets of Constantino ple and managed to get them aboard a steamship without discovery. The demand for mohair is far greater than the supply, and at the present time the business of raising Angora. goats is being taken tip in many parts of the country. If they become generally infected with 1 Malta fever it will be a very serious matter for which reason, now that discovery of the mischief bas been made in Texas, the Govern ment authorities will take all pos sible measures to stamp it out. IT----EnSnF"'''1"' "' "' " I'' 1 1 lllllli,nilHiMW'ilf HW IIWIIHII IBMHiiHiWWMuq Size Remains Actually Unchanged. sharing of expenses and the facing of the eco-. notnic issues as they develop during the term ot the contract. The question of marriage Is simply a question of Income. Wa are alt creatures of emotions, passion and desire. The theme of love is a natural element in the human soul; it is not a foreign germ that bas to be Injected into the body and cultivated. It is alreaJy in the soul and only awaits to be aroused. There Is no reason w hy we should not combine love on the oue band with the Income power on the other, providing society keeps the normal man within limits. For Instauce, if girl is earning, say $10 a week, and Is In contact with normal men who are earning 20 a week, why then she will pick out the kind ot man she likes, he the kind ot woman he likes, and they will have reasons for coming together and living together. They both are equally capable of earning sufficient for their individual needs, and therefore are not depend ent on each other. This ia what seems to be perfectly normal. But then again, it Is Indeed bard to blame a girl who Is earning only i a week w ho ia pos sensed of good looks, good figure and is generally pleasing to the eye for celling herself for 1100. 000. hbe Is not capable ot earning enough to but on the other hand nobody should be forced Into It because they lack Income. To get an equilibrium we mint cut down the education of women to spend rather than earn, or we must raise their earning power to a higher point. As long as men do not want women to earn a living there will be trouble. The only thing a woman baa to sell is herself, and it she cannot earn euough to support herself then in most cades ibe sells herself. It Is a false doctrine to tell a person to get married and learn to love afterward. Love can not express itself without Income. Jus, as soon as you get a person on any other basis their natural and normul feelings are suppressed, they become subordinate and this subordination shapes their whole lives. Ixive Is the sociallxlng of income. Sexual Im pulse is an inherited sentiment and shouU not be called by the title of love, nor should it l! ma le the basis ot marriage. As soon aa you combine sexual Impulse with Income-earning capacity then you have trouble. The way to prevent divorce is to set up a new Ideal of marriage. Sexual impulse will never make for happy marriage. The combining ot the Income-earning capacity will, however, make the group permanent Instead of the individual - and will put the family on a sound basis ivr rOST persons have noticed, perhaps with won der, that the sun appears considerably smaller at midday than shortly after rising or before setting In fact, that on Its rising course It de creases in size, spparently, and on Its descending course gradually regains Its proportions observed at the beginning of day. This puzzling phenomenon has been variously ex plained. The most familiar explanation Is that when the sun Is on or near the horizon the layers of vapor in the lower atmosphere act as a convex lens, magnify ing it and confusing Its actual outline with a sort of luminous aureole that surrounds it. Another explanation la that when on the horizon the sun is viewed In comparison with objects on the landscape, and therefore the illusiou ot greater size la created, which disappears as the orb rises farther and farther out of the range of such comparisons. It is said that proof ot this theory Is obtained by look ing at the evening or morning sun through a long tube that excludes other objects, in which case the illusion ot extra bulk disappears. Recently, photographs of the sun taken st Intervals during Its afternoon course from the senitb to the horizon proved to be of exactly the same size show. Ing that the camera lens and the photographic plate do not share In the illusion experienced by the human eye and brain. The camera also destroys the Illusion of decrease in size through greater brilliancy of the sun at the zenith than at the horizon. The most interesting and satisfactory explanation of all, however, is that the Imaginary vault of the sky beneath which the sun rolls along on its dally course is ellptical, or flattened. Instead of being n semi circle. A simple diagram shows the effect ot this upon the apparent size of the sun at morning, noon and evening. A semi-circle described from a base line shows the actual path of the sun at different periods of its course from the horizon to the zenitlj. Small circles of equal size along this true path indicate the unvarying size of the sun. At the centre of the bass line, directly beneath the zenith, stands the observer; but less than one-third of the distance to the true xenith, where the sun is at noon, is the zenith of the ellptical heavens of his imagination. Lines drawn from each side of the sun's disc at the true zenith must converge at the ob server's eye. Therefore, at the much closer xenith of the imaginary ellptical path ot the sun that orb's disc must appear correspondingly smaller. As the beginnings of the true arc and of the ellpti cal path at the horizon are identical, there, Is no illusion at that point. The illusion Increases with the flattening of the eliptic toward the zenith. Stars, being bo distant and being mere points in stead of visible discs, are not affected by this tdiosyn cracy of human vision. o i -'j v. i::::::;:;;:;;n Diagram Showing Why the Sun Appears Smaller at the Zenith Than on the Horizon. The Semi-Circle Represents the Sun's Actuai Path, Which Our Vision Flattens, as Shown.