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Show MOTIONS j r0Yoke a Disastrous I iijj in East. Has a Curiously Stimu-j,ling Stimu-j,ling Effect Upon the Nerve Centers. ilL ivrned Men Havo to Sny Dl&rdtag Embrace by "Woman 'Tbflt Broke Man's Rib. fkTORK, May IS. The case of ive young woman of Niagara tW. was ,nnucncod' 33 snc K fjJJ?,',,' the rcd rays oC llsnt in ( jt'csraphic dark-room to hug- n fj eTnar. so violently as to break one I s, prcsc-nts certain pbysllo-l pbysllo-l dud psychical phenomena worthy ''sfuch. These dispatches have debt de-bt ito the young man, Walter Lor-I. Lor-I. IRIga. N Y bad sued Miss Ma- jig Calm of Niagara Falls for ?2000 H for the consequences of this J pire act of hers. Her defense is iiKlectlfic men have established tho ; ciiat ruby rays have a distinctly j. FKitlve cJTcct upon the emotions, . dthat they did provoke this dlsas- Ea huff- I, j(' Women Emotional. 1 hW. D. O'Sulllvan, at once a pro-' pro-' psychologist, a medical-legal ex-l'i ex-l'i r.tsi a student of all iknds of out-i out-i CKfiinmon lore, gave a verdict yes-f yes-f &j la support of Miss Du Calm's ' il?ka. "Women;" said Dr. O'Sul-'u, O'Sul-'u, "are emotional. It is their dls-iruilnc dls-iruilnc characteristic, governing b actions. They are also, as a rule, NMghly susceptible to the common fecei of color-vibration and sound-rjjjot sound-rjjjot than men are. Now it is cs-Psie-J that red has a curiously tiitiag effect upon the nerve ccn-i ccn-i Rtd produces the most Intense ritions. That Intense ganglionic ac-Lj ac-Lj Is Induced in the cerebral and bl centers by a prolonged stlmula-tjeder stlmula-tjeder the actinic red rays of light i"(tct well recognized In medicine. , jjQ of 'light healers' has founded its ! Red in Thought Portrait. hL Charles W. Leadbeter of lxn-tifco lxn-tifco recently lectured before the fflork branch of the Theosophlcal lirtr on the colors of souls and astral te, produced a color-picture of the-t the-t ud emotional condition of a 61 man In love. It Is noteworthy i red vols predominant in this taM portrait " There was a streak Fetn, denoting his Jealousy, and an e ot yellow, the color denoting ttual action. rli Eas Broken Hecord. tQel M. Friend, a lawyer, whose acc leads him frequently Into Jtvolvlng the psychology of tho 6oas, said. "This case as described newest, the latest, I might say, itolt. Woman often break hearts, Wines break a man in the pecu- 1 cnase, but when it comes to ribs tho fair defendant in .' 'Wn hns also broken the record. i tell the Jury if I were de--? this young woman that a man wld me In like circumstances wtpbe cast out by society. A man 'Bins the affections of a girl, who Brenuous in her love that she al-Eahlm al-Eahlm to death and then seeks his soul with pecuniary dam-3 dam-3 not belong to the men of this Nation. ; Hays From Ruby Lips, l?1 proposition, I am afraid i?cUon bro"gbt by the huggee J R the hugger will not pan out f kTy' llUD'-red rays, particu-9 particu-9 "htn cmlttud by niby-rcd lips, it '."t' d0 havo a stlmulutlng ef-it!;, ef-it!;, T c,notions. But whether uci will ever become a sulilclent j r to a complaint such as Is made ; W doubtful 'j1 raso years ago in which. : WK??!.temcnt or tr emotions 5 lY- . iUse ot 'two-Hp' salve, tho . Jeor the two participants was ' Jlr.u1 recUcct the facts, the ) alt,ouBb the defend- f Warn ful young woman, did tlUr Jury cItl,r"ed, it was held t. Ie,was,C011trlbl,t0r' negligence i . 1 |