' " BiBB i I I M 2 JHEOGDENjTANDARD-EXAMlNER SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 24, 1920. iMiss Barney "Knew the Right Man Would Come Along in Time," and After 72 Years or More of Patient Hopefulness She Married a Centenarian pR ANDREW MALCOLM MORRISON I J It one hundred years oid. and LlvJ interesting American centenarian H has recently taken a bride in l.os An geles, California. Miss Mary Augusta Barney, the blush ing bride, gave her age. on the marriage record as at least seventy-two. And then H she H "I really do not know Ju.ct how old 1 am H I stopped thinking about my age so long ago that I have forgotten the milestones of the years." I Whatever is the exart age of the new Mrs. Morrison, she is certainly no silly, giggling young thing Her mature years H of maidenhood hare brought her to a very B' practical, if unromantic, view of matl- H mony. When asked if she thought that fl marriage at her time of life would be likely V to promise happiness, she replied: H "Oh' I never believed in early mar- -, , rlages." And the bride showed her cheerful, pa h tient philosophy of life, remarking. H "Being an old maid never bothered me any.' I knew the right man would come along in time." 1 Miss Barney WSJ entirely right a man didTcome along at last, after seventy-two years or more. H "But so many year of your allotted span of life," the reporter ventured, "have been lost that might have established you with H a happy home and grown up children, and fl perhaps grandchildren or do you and Dr. Morrison expect that even now you will be blessed by" I v"It is ridiculous and insulting." the bride Interrupted, "for people to come to us about raising a family. A man asked me to-ay what I thought about g I and I ordered him out of the house!" "Would you consider yur courtship and I marriage with your hnudr M band to be what the novelists call a 'ro I mance'?" the reporter a "I do not believe In all fhls silly twaddle H about romance. Marriage Is a partnership, as I view it. We have entered into a cove nant because the doctor and 1 have many 1 interests and tastes in common and we can be mutually helpful to each other. This is a sufficient ground for marriage I without the nonsense of romantic unreal "After looking back over the rather wide expanse of years ar.d considering ih mat rimonial experiences of your friend; and I relatives", do you consider that 'love matches' are not so durable as the less romantic marriages like your own?" the reporter asked I "Young man," said the lri'ie, fixing her j, saze sternly upon the reporter, who had evidently awakened by this last question a train of thought in hex mind, 'a woman who dresses herself as most women do to-day. with disgracefully short skirts and immodestly low bodies and scantiness of material that displays every curve, should not resent whntever insult a man might see fit to give her. It Is her dress ing that arouses the state of mind which would give utterance to such thoughts, and the way she flaunts herself lead? him to fl believe that she is looking and longing for Just such advances as he makes. "Seriou- as is the menace to morals there is still a graver danger to the health of the race In the way women dress them spires. There Is nothing that a woman could do whlrh so quickly and certainly undermines her own health and the vitality of her offspring as the wearing of high French heels. The unnatural tilt at which ehe must walk throws nil of the organs of her body out of their true position, and It is this which makes her tiro so much more easily than her mother or grandmother did under the same amount of exercise or work. Women nowadays laugh at the little three-cornered shawls that their grand mothers wore, but those little shawls were. one of the long-life preservers. They kept f the nerve centres at the back of the neck warm and protected the exposed lung area in the back from sudden chills that coie when the vitality (s a little lowered. "I feel young," Mr? Morrison continued. "and I have kept young by forgetting about how old I am. When people begin at j twenty to think 'I must look and art and feel such a way at forty and at fifty and at seventy' they give themselves the sub conscious suggestion that invariably works out the very conditions t y h i w imagined Ho themselves, and then they been to fear and to fight old age, which brings ll on I faster than ever. I "Women of to-day are burning their livej out in dissipation. They are dial Ipallng ' their energies, chasing tho rainbow of I pleasure and frottlng over the rule of the tyrant Fashion which they themselves have created. "1 hare a great deal to do in the world yet and I expect to live to an advanced I age. I do not feel any older than when I was twenty. 1 have never been married before, but Dr. Morrison Id not my first lover. I have been interested in several men in my life, but none who had the mental attainments and who were at con genial In every way as Dr. Morrison la. "There is such a strong telepathic com munication between the doctor and myself that I have had mental pictures of him thrown on my wnll at nisht when I woulri be alone and thinking of him Once I sav him 111 and in need of attention, and I lm mediately went to him and found him in Just the condition that the clairvoyant vision depicted. "My parents and grandparents all lived to be very old. I don t know their exact age. but my grandmothers on both my mother's and ray father's side reached the age of ninety This lifo to me Is simply like a day's span in which there is so much to he done, and I feel sure I will not p.iss Into some other existence until I have com pleted the work I have mapped out for me here. I am now engaged In helping my husband write his new book on pan therapy. Which we both feel sure is going to revolutionise the. practhe of medicine We have both studied all the dlfferem schools of medicine and have culled tht good from each and are putting it into definite form In this voluniu." Dr. Morrison, tho hundred-year-old super centenarian, unfolded hi philosophy of life with a merry twinkle In his eyes "There really Is no such thing as dying," the happy bridegroom asserted. "Men let their minds .stagnate and this causes the lupcuanism oi tnelr bodies to rust. When the wheels we co!l lungs, liver and heart become too rusty to function and co-ordl nate the machiuo we call tht body becomes unfit for use It i? then that the mind casts it aside and goes through the tedious process of getting another body. Whether it goes on and assumes a celestial body or whether it returns and takes tip again an other terrestrial body 1 am not ' prepared to say, but I know this, from the vibservatlon of the law of consenatlou of energy, man would s:ve an enormous amount of energy and an incalculable ! amount oi time- for the life of the race if he would conserve and preserve the body he al- I ready has "I have kept my mind active and alert through speaklug a number of different languages. To remember the vocabularies of tlreek, Latin. Hebrew and Sanskrit, and to keep separate in the mind the many similar, but not quite Identical, idioms of French Italian and Spanish, keep the mind polished like a warrior's sword "Where the indolent average man lets his mind and bod-v rust out. the successful business or professional man allows too nar row specializing to eat into his mainsprings like an acid My profession ts medicine, but that has not prevented me making a study of music, nor have I al lowed it to interfere with my research iuto occult sciences astronomy and metaphysics "Having a number of differ, nt Interests keeps the mind poised and balanced it also prevents insanity and aids digestion by allowing the organs to act auto matically, which they do not do when tho mind Is concentrated on them in fear or worn- over what has been eaton. "One of the very best wavs to prolong life is to find something to laugh at every day. Certain ly this is not difficult in Los Angeles. If a man could walk up Broadway from First to Kighth street without seeing something in every block to make him smile. I would suggest that he needed the services oi either an alienist or an oculist Why, if a man cannot find anvthing else to laugh at let him laugh at bis wife's temper; most of us could find a perennial source of mirth in this. Although this Is , my fourth marriage I have lived most of my one hundred years in single blessed ness. My first wife only lived two years and my second wife ono year. I have spent much of my life in travel and do not know whether or not I have any living children. "I have made it a habit of my life not to get mad easily. I entertain kind thoughts toward my fellow men, I cat plain, nutritious food and try to select a balanced diet without too much starch or too much protein at one meal, but I have never made a fad or a fetich of my food. I think most people eat too much and sleep too much. I often read or write until quite late at night and then rise early in the morning, if l feel tho need of -b ' C " v - - - 1 J ,....,.v . . 5 , pit P6I Jllililii r ' "--. ' !'" v& ' : V .". . -'V;.- ' v-' .'!V -'-Jf ' ". 'V ' ' ' -' ' ' " it' --.m - -''c; .-; h; : . I : A Sixteenth Century Royal Child Marriage for "Reasons of State' V Painted by J. A. Mitchell. the next day I take a short nap In the afternoon. "As well and strong as I feel to-day. I do not see any reason why I may not live at least fifty years more. I come of a long lived race. Ioth of my parents lived to be over eighty. "I have known the present Mrs. Morri son a reat many years. She attended the T'nlverslty of Kansas, of which I was pres ident, and there we became mutually at tached to each other. Dut wo bad known each other through correspondence long before that. It Is the mating of the mind that unites people. Ht Interests were identical with mine. She Is a skilled musician and teacher of music, she has practised medicine for many years, and she has studied deeply Into psychic phe nomena. Our mutual knowledge of these if' I" tre i things has established a telepathic com munication between us that few could un derstand " History records plenty of youthful mar riages, but not many matrimonial ventures of centenarians. In the fifteenth and six teenth centuries there were marriages of royal children for reasons of state, and the painting on this pa','e by the artist, J. A. Mitchell, pictures one of thm. The shock lug child-bride custom of India is, of course, well known and prevails at the present day. The photograph reproduced ou this page shows a thlrty-fl ve-year-old husband and bis seven-year-old wife. Human experience ha.s .shown that mar riages within a certain range of age are the best for reusons which are manifest to everybody. In most civilized countries in modern times an age limit is fixed by I I j m A Child Bride of India the Man Is Thirty-five Years Old and the Little One Eeside Him Is His Wife, Seven Years of Age. iaw, below which It is not only improper but unlawful for marriage. There is no law fixing the other extreme age beyond which matrimonial contract;; are forbidden. Hut it often happens that the courts are called upon to intervene where superan nuated lovers are about to become bride or grooms. As a rule, the objecth n Is made and the courts are called upou.tn hv Dr. Andrew M. Morrison, the One-Hundred-Year-Old Bridegroom, and His Bride, , Who Was Miss Mary Aug usta Barney. terfere with the matrimonial Ha plans because of property rea- m&k sons. In many cases It is alleged Hm that tho elderly sweetheart is BEH mentally Incompetent or Is being Kflfr victimized by somebody who Is rwBvjjP. trying to wheedle the superan- f ?l m minted but wealthy lover Into a p !'! match for sordid reasons. This. f if f Jap of course, is not the case In the InK present instance. While Doctor KMK Morrison Is a man of some dls- iJff's' Unction In bis pi-ofcs!on and ifil - w possessed of knple means, no aspersions can bo cast upon his romance. If i?n(c' Of course, the Old Testament BiHr contains a number of examples of centenarians and over taking BPS-Jj .. to themselves wives. In most of I3f ' these cases it must be said that I tho wive, were usually much r H younger than the husbands. HBk There iB no Biblical record of a W woman becoming a bride when over the allotted span of three- Ea-ffV score years and ten. On the other hand there Is a very Interesting Incident of Abraham and Sarah, who In extreme old age were RSri ' blessed with offspring. EjB&yir A very renowned scientist has IldS'TV' said that time has nothing what- J ever to do with youth, middle ago, I or old age. HSm -jx' The old adage is, that a man Ls as young as he fnuls and a woman as old as she Ittl looks. The Increasing tendency of mod- Kr5''' ern times Is toward later marriages, aocl- lt ologlsts have recently pointed out. J History' shows thai child marriages aa tmE' not very successful or desirable It will be P" interesting to see how the centenarian II jL marriage of Dr Morrison and his bride Mit turns out I