Defendant, a practicing physician forty-five years of age, was convicted of committing “the felony of abortion” upon one Ruby Seese, in Bates county, Missouri, on July 9, 1912. The first count of the information charges the crime to have been perpetrated by inserting metal instruments into the womb of the prosecutrix with intent to cause an abortion; and the second count charges the administering of drugs to prosecutrix with the same felonious intent. At the close of the State’s testimony, the prosecuting attorney elected to stand upon the first count charging an unlawful use of instruments, as denounced by section 4458, Revised Statutes 1909.
From a judgment finding defendant guilty and fixing his punishment at a fine of $200 and. one year in the county jail, he appeals.
The evidence discloses that about ten o’clock on the evening of July 9, 1912, while defendant and prosecutrix were leaving his office, they met the father of prosecutrix. He was in an angry mood and assaulted defendant on the street. On the same night the father also caused the defendant to be arrested on a charge of rape upon prosecutrix. The defendant was locked up on said charge of rape for some three months, when that charge was voluntarily dismissed by the State, and the information filed charging’ him with the felony of abortion.
*177To prove a motive for defendant’s alleged acts-in trying to produce an abortion upon prosecutrix, the State introduced evidence tending to prove that defendant had kept company with her for several weeks, and that he had ravished her on May 15, 1912. Her version of this transaction is that on the night of May 15th the defendant walked with her to a point-near a cemetery in the suburbs of Butler, Missouri, and, “by placing a handkerchief saturated with some kind of sweet-smelling stuff to her nose and mouth” caused her to immediately become unconscious, and while in that condition he took her into a near-by field, and had sexual intercourse with her. That she was so completely overcome by the anaesthetic so applied toiler nose and mouth by defendant while they were walking along the street that she scarcely realized the act of sexual intercourse until they were returning to her home, when defendant told her of it and requested her not to tell her family.
Prosecutrix further testified that she missed her menstrual periods due to occur on May 25 and June 25, 1912, and that, her health becoming poor, she informed defendant of her condition, and thereupon he called her to his office and inserted a metal instrument, into her sexual organs.
Two witnesses for the defendant testified that they were driving along the road at the point where prosecutrix claimed she was taken into a field and ravished.. Those witnesses stated that they saw defendant and prosecutrix near the cemetery as they returned home, and according to their evidence defendant did not either chloroform or take prosecutrix into a field,, nor have sexual intercourse with her on that occasion. Three physicians testifying on behalf of defendant, and two on behalf of the State, completely discredit, the evidence of prosecutrix to the effect that she was placed under an anaesthetic while walking along the-*178street. All five of these physicians concurred in the opinion that there was. no known anaesthetic which would cause a person to immediately become unconscious if applied while the victim was walking in the open air — that it would require from eight minutes to a half an hour to chloroform an adult person while walking or standing erect, if it could be done at all.
The defendant himself denied the alleged act of intercourse on May 15th,' but admitted that he did have sexual intercourse with prosecutrix on June 5th at his office, and twice thereafter at the same place.
The prosecutrix testified that defendant inserted a metal instrument into her private parts at his office twice in the month of June, and again on the night of July 9, 1912. That on July 12, 1912, she took sick and remained in bed a week with a discharge from her womb. She and her mother both testified that during this sickness she had a heavy menstrual flow and passed some pieces of clotted blood the size of a silver quarter. No physician was called during that sickness. The five physicians who testified in the case were unanimous in the opinion that if the prosecutrix became pregnant from the alleged act of sexual intercourse on May 15th the foetus would have been too large to have been concealed in a blood clot the size of a silver quarter on July 12th of the same year.
Doctor Chastain, called as a witness by the State, and Doctor Foster, who testified for defendant, stated that they were called to the home of the prosecutrix to examine her and find out if an abortion had been performed upon her, and that upon such examination they did not discover any evidence of an abortion. The evidence is not clear as to when this examination was made, except that it was in the summer of 1912. Doctor Chastain testified that there was ‘ ‘ a little abrasion of the mucous membrane of her uterine canal— very slight,” and not sufficient to cause her to abort.
*179There was evidence of three witnesses tending to corroborate prosecutrix that she was ill about July 12, 1912, while four other witnesses testified that she was not ill at that time, but was well and out on the streets almost daily.
There were also two witnesses who testified that prosecutrix admitted that her menstrual flow came at its regular time during the months of May and June, 1912. Another witness, who was present at the preliminary examination when defendant was charged with rape, stated that at said preliminary the prosecutrix swore that her monthlies were regular during May and June, 1912. Her evidence at said preliminary was not preserved in writing.
According to the evidence of prosecutrix defendant only had sexual intercourse with her twice' — once on May 15, 1912, at the time she contends that she was placed under the influence of an anaesthetic, and again on July 9th at defendant’s office; that twice during June, and again on July 9th, defendant placed her on his operating chair and inserted a speculum in her vagina and placed some wet cotton on a metal instrument and inserted it into her private parts. On this point the prosecutrix was interrogated, and gave answers, as follows:
“Q. • Did he tell you what he was doing it for? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. What did he say about it? A. To keep me out of a family way.
“Q. Did you say get or keep¶ A. To get.”
Prosecutrix further testified that the insertion of the instrument into her private parts made her feel weak and sick. On this point defendant denied that he had inserted any instrument into the womb of prosecutrix, but admitted that after he had sexual intercourse with her in his office he inserted into her vagina a uterine forcep with some wet cotton for the purpose of cleansing her sexual organs and preventing concep*180tion. That at no time did he have any cause to think that she was pregnant, and that at no time did he insert any instrument into her womb or do anything to her with the intention of causing an abortion.
On the point of using instruments Doctor Chastain, a physician of thirty years’ experience, called by the State, testified on cross-examination that it was sometimes necessary to produce an abortion to save the life of a pregnant woman, in which event it was not usual to place cotton on the instrument to be inserted into the womb, but that cotton was sometimes inserted in the vagina for cleansing purposes.
Some ten witnesses testified that prior to his arrest on July 9th the defendant sustained a good reputation as a law-abiding and moral man. Such further evidence, as is necessary to a full understanding of the case, will be recited in our opinion.
For reversal defendant relies upon (1) the unconstitutionality of the law upon which the judgment of conviction rests; (2) improper remarks of the assistant prosecuting attorney; (3) lack of substantial evidence to support the conviction; and, (4) admission of improper evidence.
OPINION.
Law Constitutional. The first ground relied upon for reversal is that section 4458, Revised Statutes 1909, under which de-. fendant was convicted, is invalid, because the legislative bill under which said section was ena<Jecl embraces more than one subject, and the purpose of the bill was not clearly expressed in the title of such bill, as required by section 28, article 4, Constitution of Missouri.
The title to said bill (Laws 1907, p. 230) expresses an intent to repeal section 1825, Revised Statutes 1899, and to enact a new section in lieu thereof, so that we must look to the provisions of said section 1825, supra, *181and ascertain if the same subject has been dealt with in the new section as in the one which was repealed. [State ex rel. Dickason v. County Court, 128 Mo. 427.]
Section 1825, Revised Statutes 1899, denounces as a crime the use of any instrument upon a woman pregnant with a quick child with intent to destroy such child, when the act is unnecessary to preserve the life of the mother. The only material change in said section, as amended in 1907, so far as it relates to the act with which defendant is charged, is that the amendment makes it a felony to unnecessarily use any instrument upon a woman with intent to promote a miscarriage or abortion, whether the woman be pregnant or not at the time such instrument be so used.
It is undoubtedly true that the purpose of both statutes was to prevent criminal abortions, and the General Assembly doubtless believed the best plan to extirpate this character of crimes was to prevent all attempts to bring them about. It is true that section 4458, supra, as amended, creates two separate crimes, to-wit: the “felony of abortion,” and manslaughter by causing the death of a pregnant woman or her child; but the two crimes are so closely related that we are constrained to hold that it was not a violation of the Constitution to include them both in one section; but it would doubtless have created much less confusion if the two crimes had been dealt with in separate sections.
In the recent case of State ex rel. Evans v. Gordon, 245 Mo. 12, the constitutionality of section 11830, Revised Statutes 1909, was challenged on the same grounds as the law now in judgment. The title to the law construed in the Evans ease simply purported to add two new sections to the chapter entitled “Of the Treasury. ’f Prior to that enactment the State Treasurer had not been charged with any duties pertaining to contested elections, and it was urged that as section 11830, supra, was intended to affect election con*182tests by withholding’ the salary of contestees such purpose should have been expressed in the title of that bill, but this court, In Banc, ruled adversely to the contention and upheld the law. If the title to a legislative bill is not misleading, it is seldom that the law will be invalid on the ground that all the purposes of the bill are not fully expressed in the title. [O’Connor v. Transit Co., 198 Mo. l. c. 638-9.]
The designation of the crime of attempting to commit a criminal abortion as the “felony of abortion” is, in a broad, general sense, a misnomer, but it is. not permissible to allow a law to perish because it is not couched in grammatical language. The fact that the specific acts which constitute the crime are set out in the statute makes the legislative purpose so plain that such intent is not greatly obscured by the use of the words “felony of abortion.”
This precise point was raised in the case of State ex rel. v. Shields, 230 Mo. 91, and the issue there determined adversely to the contention of defendant here. We are content to abide the conclusion reached in that case.
Remarks Attorney. II. In his opening argument the special prosecutor said:
“.This girl that never had had a breath of slander against her until this serpent crossed her path—
“By Mr. Jackson: Object to him calling defendant a serpent.
“By the Court: Go ahead.
“To which defendant excépted and now excepts.”
The foregoing remark of the special prosecutor was assigned as error in defendant’s motion for new trial, and is urged here for reversal. Under the peculiar facts of this case, we find that the foregoing remark, receiving as it did the express approval of the trial court, constituted reversible error.
*183Improper arguments are a class of errors unto themselves, and no hard-and-fast rule can be laid down by which their vicious effects shall be measured. When the evidence of guilt is overwhelming and the verdict is not unusually severe, it is difficult to say that the improper remarks produced any harmful effect. Such was our decision in the case of State v. Baker, 246 Mo. 357, l. c. 376. Quite a different rule arises in cases like the one at bar, where the evidence of guilt is very meager and unconvincing, and the prosecutor undertakes to secure a conviction by arousing prejudice in the minds of the jury through the use of epithets and other improper argument. [State v. Hess, 240 Mo. 147, l. c. 160.]
Evidence insufficient, III. After a careful reading of the record, we are convinced that the evidence is not sufficiently substantial to support the judgment of conviction. The evidence of prosecutrix is discredited, and, I might say, proven to be untrue by other' disinterested witnesses called by the State. That prosecutrix could not have been ravished, as she testified she was, on May 15,1912, is established by the testimony of eminent physicians called by the State — one of them a member of the State Board of Health. Her.-testimony to the effect that she had a miscarriage about July 12, 1912, is likewise disproved by the State’s own witnesses. This leaves the one fact to be determined: whether or not defendant did use instruments upon her with intent to promote a miscarriage or abortion. The defendant admits using some wet cotton with forceps in her private parts to prevent conception. Doctor Chastain, an old and experienced doctor called by the State, testified that a physician seeking to cause an abortion would not place cotton on his probe to be inserted into the womb. That, ordinarily, cotton would only be used for cleansing purposes; so at this vital point the defendant is cor*184roborated, and the prosecutrix again discredited, by the State’s own witnesses. When the prosecutrix was first asked if the defendant stated what his object was when he inserted the instrument into her private parts, .she replied: “To keep me out of a family way.” It is true that when prompted by the prosecuting attorney she testified that defendant stated to get her out of a family way. Defendant’s counsel did not object to the prosecutrix being thus improperly led, and the most important evidence in the whole case placed in her mouth by the prosecuting’ attorney; but we have a right to consider the method by which this evidence was elicited in determining whether, under all the circumstances, it was sufficient to support the verdict.
The prosecuting attorney or the father of prosecutrix caused two eminent physicians to make a physical examination of the prosecutrix to see if an abortion had been performed on her. One of those physicians was summoned by the State, and the other by the defendant, and they both testified that they found no evidence that an abortion had been performed; neither did they find such wounds, bruises or lacerations in or upon her womb as to indicate that an attempted abortion had been committed with instruments.
The record does not contain such substantial evidence that defendant committed the crime of which he was convicted as the laws require. No one can be deprived of his liberty upon evidence which is only strong enough to arouse a suspicion of guilt. [State v. Francis, 199 Mo. 671; State v. Johnson, 209 Mo. 346.] This view renders it unnecessary to consider alleged errors in the admission of evidence. . The case was carefully tried after elaborate preparation on both sides, and we do not think any useful purpose would be subserved by remanding it for a new trial.
We, therefore, reverse the judgment of the trial court and discharge the defendant.
Walker, P. J., and Faris, J., concur.