CANNIBAL TRIBE TORTURE IRTIST5 CALIFORNIAN TELLS EXPERI ENCES AMONG DOBODURAS OF NEW GUINEA. EXPEDITION HAS CLOSE CALL Flesh Sliced from Limbs of Victims and Roasted Before Their Eyes— Explorer Seeking Capital for Another Trip. i.os Angeles. Cal.—Hobnobbing with headhunters in Borneo, ehumniing with <-,«nnihals in New Guinea, flirting with fair Fijians, photographing natural and physical beauty in Samoa, negotiating with tigers in Burnish, discovering ! duck-rooted swamp dwellers and all ; the time chasing butterflies and birds in out ot the way c irners of the globe arc some of the occupations which have kept H. Wilfrid Walker. F. U. ! G. B.. bus> since tie left I-os Angeles i 15 years ago. He is now here convalscing after a bout with ptomaine poisoning—more deadly than the tiger of the jungle— and planning an expedition to New > Guinea, the land of the bird of para dise and also of human beings far from ' suggestive of paradise. “New Guinea is the only country which has not yet been crossed.1' said Mr. Walker. “There is plenty of ex citement to be had there, but apart from tliii the results of such an cx jieditiun would be very valuable. I have oo'ne to America to seek capital because Jhe go-ahead jieople of this country encourage matters of this kind more than any other uatiou. I have offers of help from the government of British New Guinea and from the Koyai Geographical society, of which I am a member." The last expedition was composed of five Germans. It failed to cross the country, four of its members being either kilied and eaten or dying of fever in the interior, while the fifth .Bed the day he got back to the coast. But there is no danger of that sort of thine happening to the proposed They Have Reduced Torture to a Fine Art. American expedition, although canni bals still occupy parts of New Guinea, j The German party was very inade- ; tpiately armed. Of course it failed, 1 said Mr. Walker, but he. because of his large- experience, will be able to j ecpiip an expedition which will have little to fear from the natives, no mat ter how blood-thirsty they may be and uo matter how great their liking for human flesh. As a matter of fact they don't con- 1 sider “white meat" so good as black, in that the cannibals of New Guinea are like the Fiji islanders. Mr. Walker explored the interior of FIJI and talked with the old men. reclaimed cannibals, who freely expressed their opinion about white men and went into detail as to which part of our anatomy is the most toothsome. They said: “Human flesh is much better than pig." and yelled out "venaka” (very good! la such a way as to show they meant it. “White man is not so good »s Hji man. tie loo salty and fat. in New Guinea Mr. Walker accom panied a punitive cxiiedition against the IXiboduras. a tribe of gentle folk of somewhat eccentric habits. They j uace noi to kill their enemies too j WMicttlv. and every one who is not of , their tithe is an enemy. They are an j economical people, are the Do bod liras, j and they have reduced torture to a' fine art. They tie up their prisoners, whom they look upon as foodstuffs, feeding them and keeping them alive as long as possible, but skinning a leg nr an arm one day and cutting slices off It on the next and roasting it be fore the victim's eyes—if those organs hare not previously tiben gouged out as sweetmeats for the children. When there is an abundance of food these genial folk bring on a live man as a special dish at their banquets. They trepan the skull, taking out a small piece ol the boot and then extract the hot living brains with wooden s|>oons. thereby obtaining a delicacy which •hey declare to be unejpialcd. The expedition was hard pressed one night and Mr. Walker and his com panions luul visions of being served up as dishes for the hospitable Dobo duras Fortunately they escaped, but it was a close call. Changes in Earth's Surface flu- surface of the earth is under ,, ilemty transformation, through the agency or man, bat hai-s wo when- is the plant life ot the SOAP ECONOMY DRIVES MAN TO LIFE IN GAVE HERMIT VOWS NEVER TO WASH OR WORK AGAIN BECAUSE HE WAS REFU8ED CLEANSER. Hazelton, Pa.—“Because my board ing house mistress refused me soap, I have vowed never again to wash or work." ' Thus did John Posar warn dis pensers of pot-roasts and prunes of the effect of practicing ttoo rigid economy as to the bath, when he was found living as a hermit in a cave. Posar was discovered by four West Hazleton young men while walking along the railroad between this city and Black Ridge. The cave was about 8x10 feet and six feet high, in a lonely spot in the woods a short distance front the He Looked Like a Typical Man from Borneo. tracks. At the entrance a wood fire was burning. The big man within said he had been the lone occupant of the strange place for the iast six months. Posar added that he took to the wild life because half a year ago, when he returned to his boarding house at West Hazleton from the Black Ridge colliery, where he worked, the board ing mistress refused to give him sjoap with which to wash himself. Leaving the house, he vowed he would never wash or work again. He looked like a typical man from Borneo. He said he was 38 years of age and had a wife and child in Hungary. Tlie man's clothes were in rags and his hair long. His shoes were nearly worn off his feet. The cave was devoid of cooking ltensils,. except a dinner pail and a ] coffee I Kittle that Posar carried with j him to work the list day he labored in the mines. Not a morsel of food was found in the cave, the pail and liottie being fHled with water. Posar told the men who came across him that he lived on water and herbs which he got ! in the woods. Chief of Police Turnbach, the United | Charities and Poor Director Leib were notified of the man's manner of living. They captured him and took him to his former hoarding house. FACES DEATH IN A MILE RltJE. With Unconscious Girl in Arms, Con ductor Clings to Narrow Perch. Cedai viile, Va.—A perilous ride of over a mite on the narrow platform of a freight car, which was traveling at high speed, with an unconscious woman in his arms, was the experi ence of Freight Conductor A. J. Frances of the Norfolk & Western railway. While Frances' train was at Shenandoah Junction a young woman, in her taste to reach a passenger train, attempted to climb over the | freight, disregarding the protests of : Frances. While she was midway between the i cars the train started, throwing her off her feet. She would have been crushed to death beneath the wheels had not Frances sprung to the rescue ; and caught her in the act of falling. ; She promptly fainted in his arms and j throughout the run the train accom ! pushed before stopping Frances clung ! to his precarious position, holding the I unconscious girl. Fish Splits Man’s Arm. South Korwalk. Conn.—Louis Heim of Danbury was injured and John Stobe was knocked into Lons Island sound by a piammoth stlngflree, a spe cies of skate which Heim caught while fishing for blackfish. The stingnree weighed 60 pounds and it took several men to land him. The tall is covered with poisonous prongs, and Heim, one of whose arm3 was laid open with a sweep of the tall, is givltig the wound very atten live care. The party was out in William j/ | Unbolts' lauach when the catch w® i made. The stingaree was the lar/s^ ever caught in the sound. , /d Child Dies from Eating Wf*' New Orleans.—After Ueiiu' &10 I pital iuinate for two weeks /epfight to the relief of Pearl Flry*'“°3e I years old. of Nicholson, _)ranna!s ! illness was unique in 0fer stom' I An autopsy revealeiL^* its normal ! ach was distended ./batted hair. : size and was fin^neinerlsis, or ‘ She was suffering ®nd h«r Per‘ • hook-worm" ha,r had ' verted eaten neair ** r halr aha couid head arjr \ _ lay Lai/ V—-~ :_i JLd plantathrive .quite as re WHISPER FOR HELP HEMPOLICE DOCTOR’S WIFE TELEPHONES ALARM FROM UNDER HER BEDCLOTHES. TELLS OF BURGLAR IN HOUSE Awakened by Growl of Dog to Hear Robber Rummaging in Next Room—Faints After Noti fying Station. Williamsport, Pa—The wife of a physician, Mrs. G. Franklin Bell, played the part of a clever detective in her home while a burglar was ran sacking the drawers in several pieces of furniture in an adjoining room, with the communicating door open. Mrs. Bell was awakened by the low growl of the house dog, which was lying at the head of the stairs. She raised herself in her bed and heard plainly the robber rummaging in the next room. Not daring to call for help, as her husband was not at home, she reached to a table which stood at the head of the bed, and on which two telephones rested, which were used by the doctor for answering night calls. She pulled one telephone under the bed quilt and then ducked her head snugly under the covers and tele phoned to the police station, which was not far from her home. She whispered through tne pnone, but loudly enough to be distinctly un derstood by the officer at the station. The robber went on with his work and evidently never suspected his danger until a policeman came run ning toward the house blowing his signal whistle in hopes of raising an other patrolman whom he could call on for assistance. Mrs. Bell heard the man run from the room and go down the stairs jumping over the head of the dog, which barked loudly. She then jumped from her bed and, raising a window, informed the officer what was go ing on. , The officer waited a few minutes for the robber to come out, but no She Ducked Her Head Under the Con ers and Telephoned the Police. one appeared, and then Patrol'/ Segebrecht entered the house 'asr' side door. The robber was too to be caught in a trap. He hid i/n“ a closed door until he heard / °." fleer walk by, and then he rr* us escape. "I never was so frighten life," said Mrs. Bell, in ta. friend about the robbery. wl%nu>anied by Sprln/vJ“' ‘“^Zfer, a muscular friends,/*>r^z ^trmhand, residing young .A*61 n^IJ’in Menard county, neaf/^"ee“Vrm of Henry Austin to we/ t0 ir As Schafer started home tr/e hop10t where a bad-tempered ftoss/ kept, Austin warned him /teer/anger of entering the lot. or m near the center of the pasture tier’s friends, who bad remained >£ind, were horrified to see him st acked by the animal and knocked !own by the first onslaught. As the teer charged a second time Schafer anded a blow behind the animal's ear hat dropped it as though shot. When Schafer’s friends gained bis side the teer was dead. Dutch Plan World'* Exposition. The Dutch intend to celebrate the centenary reestablishment of their national independence by a world ex position, to be held at The Hague in the year 1913. The exposition ground and guaranty fund have already been secured. MONEY NEVER - . 91 Joker’s Humorous Placard on the Wall at Monte Carlo. “I saw Wilbur Wright fty at Le Mans," said a Chicagoan. "It was great. Afterward 1 bad the pleasure of. iwieMac w'tlt Mr. Wri^Hf and Xs>nn Botiee. the motor builder, who is one of his most ardent supporters. ^’Wa taiked at luncheon about flying, CONQUERS k LIONESS IN FURIOUS ENCOUNTER TRANSVAAL TROOPER SEIZES WITH BARE HANDS JAWS OF RAGING BEAST. Johannesburg.—Prom Messina comes a striking story of a Transvaal police trooper’s terrible encounter with a lioness. On his way from Rhodes’ Drift to Messina, Trooper Eagle met some transport riders, who had just killed two young lions. A little further ou he encountered the parents, which were following the wagons up. The lioness approached and growled menacingly, and the trooper fired, hi* bullet shattering her shoulder. He at once made off for the camp, intending to get assistance, as he knew the lioness was badly hurt. She, how ever. headed him off. and about a All the Time the Brute Was BitiO and Clawing Him. quarter of a mile further <^n s>'anS upon him. tearing him from his or®e His carbine was knocked oui°r 0)s hand. Fortunately, he landed00 feet, the horse clearing fro* ondt‘r him when the lioness spraiy Eag who is a powerful fellow, before she had inflicted seversl^rrlb o wounds- al most severing *eral «“ge/S f trooper's righ/and w,th her teeth' while there we aeve[al huge gashes of great deiJ/° 03/lnghs The left arm was al/jadl-v, lace™ted Hnding ^self free- Eagle ldcked „ hi n-flne and raised it again, but foun/ltnsef P°we’less to use it • „ . fis wounds. Just then two owing , , . , men wrad beard the shot, came up and d-Atclled the lioness, and after ward :/>nve'ed tke wounded man to Mes1/' In tb*s d*strict recently four lfoiv erc killed ln a single week. /lway has a giant ghost. ' .parition Eight Feet High Leaps Into the River. f f Dublin.—A spectral figure, gray iu color and about eight feet in height, is said to have haunted the railway line near Galway for nights. The apparition, which is described as “tapering toward the top,” walks from the railway viaduct across the bank of the stream and then disap pears. A number of people have visited the place toward midnight, when the apparition is due to appear. One man declares thy: he saw it jump from the top of th^ viaduct into the Corrib, where it ctfsnppeared. It was lot “drowned," however, for on the succeeding night it was seen again by/ a number of students from Queen's jfcollfege, Galway. One of the student volunteered to go over and talk f ifit, but when it appeared he ciunyctl his mind. / On t Sunday evening a party of six armed with shotguns, revolvers and sticks, sallied forth to "lay the ghost. They had been in ambush but a short time only when the spec ter loomed up before them. One of the men raised a revolver, but before he could fire he fell In a swoon. The expedition wub abandoned and the man was taken into Galway, where he was medically attended. These strange reports have created excitement In the district, and search parties are out nightly for the purpose of unraveling the mystery.. First Chew Breaks Teeth. Gumbcro, Del.—One chew of to bacco broke two front teeth for Lewes Roach the other day and probably will cost him a $20 dentist's bill. Roach bought a piece of tobacco for five cents, and with the first chew two of his teeth cracked oft as they struck something hard in the middle of the plug. Roach investigated, and was aslonished to find a small iron bolt running through the tobacco. Monkey Smashes a Double. York, Pa.—Constable Jacob Cookes of the Seventh ward has had to get rid of a Jonah monkey. Pompey, es caping from his cage, saw himself in the fine dining-room mirror, and threw dishes at the mirror tilt the monkey counterfeit was demolished. Loss, <60 COMES BACK i transition, we talked about gambling, that other form of high flight. • Mr. Wright, like Sir Hiram Maxim, takes a great interest in Monte Carlo. Bnt he, like Sir Hiram, believes that it 1* . the game. '* ‘No,’ he said, ‘the rules iure too un-! fair to ttoff player. With unlirsttsii estate ST1IIENTS LOCKED W I FREIGHT CUP /_ COMPELLED TO SHIVER IN ORESp SUITS UNTIL RESCUED BY i THEIR FRIENDS. CLIMAX OF FRESHMEN DA^E Upper Classmen of Medical Colleg at Chicago Give Beginners an Ub pleasant Experience—Girls Routed by Pepper. Chicago.—As the climax to a knee by the freshmen class of a roflical college in this city the other fight, the sophomore, junior and bnior students captured 20 of the >resh men and locked them In a box hr on the Illinois Central tracks. They were held prisoner: until others who attended the dancon in vitation released them by teamg off ths door of the car. All of tit fresh men wore evening dress, an when rescued they were thoroughljchilled from the experience. Previous to taking the eshmen from' the hall where the d*ce was held, the seniors and otheritudents had torn the flags and banfrs from the walls of the dance hall, /ted pep per and formaldehyde werciprinkled over the floor, while the fnesinen and their partners were whiriinoround to the strains of a wait*, anqthe com bination drove the /Iris frorthe hall. Several gallons of sweet sder that was purchased by the frehmen to queDCh their thirst was confccated by thy other students, and the sme thing happened to the ice cream, 'hich was I intended for the girls. ' Failure of the freshmen to invite rhe other classes to the annual 'blowout" was the caus of the trouble. The freshmen obsrved the closest secrecy regarding le dance, but the matter came to t’ ears of the other students duringthe after noon. A meeting of the sophomre, junior and senior classes was died after dinner and plans wore laidto circum They Were Held Prisonis in a Box Car. vent the holding of t; freshmen soiree. At ten o'clock the dail was under full sway. Uninvited stlents to the number of 100 marckedn a body to the hall and took posksion. Ban ners and flags of the ffehmen class decorated the walls, at these were the first objects for ass It. Some of the freshmen tried to trevent the others from tearing d*n the class emblems, but they werjthrust aside. Formaldehyde, whichjoesn't smell like attar of roses, ami red pepper were then strewn over je flood. This had the desired result f driving the freshmen's sweetheartstam the hall. The next event on thprogram was to capture 20 of the reshmen and march them to the ijiois Central tracks, three blocks Tjn the dance hall. Sophcmores, junfe and seniors were clad in heavy ov< oats, but the freshmen were compel to shiver in their ballroom attire. While the freshmen ere prisoners in the box car, the ler students sang “In the Good Old Summer Time," as they walkeiway. Raccoon Blew OijLantern. Chester, N. Y.—Jam Myers and H. B. Tuthlll were out er coons the other night and locate one in a tree which it was impostle to climb. They fired 35 shots thout dislodg ing the animal, so y fastened a lighted lantern to t! tree six feet from the ground am vent for more cartridges. On the return they found that the coon ad descended, blown out the lante light and es caped. Woman of Eighty l ed as a Man. Butte, Mont.—The nddeu death at Manhattan of “Sar ly” Jones, 80 years old, disclosed je fact that, in stead of being a ma as everyone in the vicinity of Manhtan for the last 18 years had thoug, Jones was a woman. This discov r resulted when the undertaker too charge of the body. She chewed t acco and drank and associated free! with men as a cook. During courtship Ife is all pie. After marriage it is iable to be tiiso ail pi. (PRISONER WHS WAY TO LIBERTY WITH TEETH MAN IN JAIL GNAWS THROUGH TWO HEAVY BEAMS ONLY TO BE RECAPTURED. Erfurt, Germany.—The police have captured a man named Schaarschmidt, who escaped from the Gera jail three weeks ago. The manner of his flight makes one of the most remarkable of all of those told in the romances of prison heroes. Crossing the one window of his cell within was an oak beam 7x7 inches square. Outside the window was an other beam nine inches thick. These were his only bars besides the mas sive masonry of the building. That is to say, there were no metal bars be tween these wooden barriers. But the wood, toughened by age, was enough to make any prisoner He Spent Seven Months Gnawing Through the Outer Bar. without tools despair. Schaarschmidt had not even the metal shank from his shoes to make a saw of, for he had only felt slippers in his dungeon. He got to work with his teeth, how ever, upon the inside beam. It took him three months to gnaw through this formidable barrier. He could only work when he was certain that his guards were out of sight and hearing. Before their expected return he al ways covered up the ravages his teeth had made with a structure of brown bread, saved from his rations. This bread patch closely resembled the color of the wood and as his work progressed it had to be handled with extreme care to prevent its. crumbling and betraying kirn. Schaarschmidt spent seven months in the same patient toll, gnawing like a rat through the outer bar. One night he judged that the apertures were large enough and he squeezed through. The space was so small and the 1(1 inches of jagged ends of the beam were so rough that he tore his body frightfully. When he was caught the prison sur geons who examined him found that he had worn his teeth down to stumps and that his body was terribly lacer ated. His jaws were developed ab normally by his superhuman exertions to win his way to liberty. AUTO RIPS OFF HIS PANTS. Victim of Peculiar Accident Has to Drees Himself in Barrel. Greenwich, Conn.—Robert Lee, a bookkeeper in the employ of Maher Bros., was stripped of his trousers in an automobile accident the other day and had to dress himself in a barrel, pending the arrival of first aid to the injured. Apart from the casualty to the garment and the shock to his sensibilities Lee was Unhurt, but he was much disturbed in mind until as sistance reached him. Martin Christensen, a contractor, was driving the machine when the emergency broke snapped, and Lee, who was crossing the street, was struck and knocked down. Some part of the gear caught his trousers and peeled them off like the skin of an orange. Lee leaped to his undressed legs and with a shriek ran into the nearest store. !t happened to be one in. which half a dozen women w'ere shop ping, and then there were more shrieks. Fortunately, the barrel was near at hand and Lee did an acrobatic act in getting into it. He stayed there until Mr. Christensen, having learned the nature of the accident, ' went to a clothing store and purchased a .new pair of trousers for the victim. Real Tramp Is This Canine. Aberdeen, S. D.—A new kind of hobo has put in an appearance in this part of the state. It is a dog that has all the habits and instincts of-the west em tramp. The dog makes trips over the Mil waukee extension, using freight trains at will, for it has made friends with all the train crews. The dog has been named Boomer, and frequently visits a town, makes friends, and eats a few meals, but it refuses to remain. When the next freight comes along the dog jumps aboard the caboose, wags his tail and barks a farewell. Wherever It goes it is well-treated. Boomer seems to know all about the trains, when they are due and the di rection they are going, and he seldom - is carried back immediately toward the place he has just left. Boomer resembles a shepherd iDg with pronounced retriever habits. One reason why a good many more ladies are not getting divorces in Ne vada is that applicants are compelled to mention their ages in papers which become part of the public records. The night riders hat e been active recently, but the college hazers can still, point with pride to the fact that IWW ora hAo4in«r «11 rt( Viora in nrr*Wit/». I ing crippMgHMMMNH NEWS NOTES OF INTEREST FROM VARIOUS SECTIONS. ALL SUBJECTS TOUCHES UPON Religious, Social, Agricultural, Polit ical and Other Matters Given Due Consideration. Hastings will soon have one of the finest auditoriums in the state. Mr. Hatyer, proprietor of the Edison theater in that city, is just finishing a new building which will be amply large to accommodate Hastings audi ences. If the decision recently handed down by the supreme court is of the scope the lawyers in Central City be lieve Chapman is likely to be without a saloon shortly and Merrick county will be entirely without saloons, save for the one at Silver Creek. David Sherwood, ex-county commis sioner of 't'hayer county, was found dead in a room in the Alexandria hotel. He had gone to the room to prepare for a trip and dropped dead of heart failure. Mr. Sherwood was one of the oldest residents of the county and was commissioner twc consecutive terms during the time the $75,000 court house was being built. Farmers should all have telephones. Write to us #and learn how to get the best service for the least money. Nebraska Telephone Company, 18th and Douglas streets, Omaha. “Use the Bell.” Mrs. R. A. Cottle sold her eighty acre farm near Colon in Saunders county to Charles Davis for $9,000. Mrs. Cottle when a young woman got title to this land by preemption. She was a girl about twenty years of age then—fifty years ago this winter. Her maiden name was Rebecca Keeler and she was among the earliest set tlers, having come to Saunders coun ty in 1857. The government inspector was called to Auburn to examine the cat ! tie in the dairy herd of Nixon & Har ris, and twenty-two head of the herd were pronounced affected with tuber culosis. These cattle had been separ ated from the cows that were giving milk for the trade, and had been kepi in other pastures because of the fact that Harris & Sons hod found that they were not doing well, though they had kept in good order in all cases. Mrs. Mathilda Ruser and John Sla ger have been taken to the peniten tiary at Lincoln to begin their terms of punishment for having plotted to kill Mrs. Ruser’s husband, Emil Ruser of Sarpy county, as he lay asleep in bed. They both pleaded guilty and Mrs. Ruser was sentenced to one year and Slager to six years. They were taken to the Douglas county jail for safe keeping until Sheriff Spear man of Sarpy county was ready to take them to Lincoln. Joseph Walter, against whom a complaint had been made on an in sanity charge, sent word to Sheriff Sammons of Buffalo county that he would shoot if any attempt were made to take him. He purchased the gun and a good supply of ammuntfjlMi:, and when he was arrested in a crowd [Of Christmas shoppers he trid to carry out the threat, but was captured without difficulty and taken care of. Waiter was released from the asylum only a few weeks ago. Judge Gutterson, prosecuting attor ney for Custer county, was badly in jured by being caught between two automobiles while driving in a buggy with his wife. He was taking the middle of the road, when the two machines, driven respectively by Messrs Willing and Johnston, at tempted to pass on either side. The horses took fright and made a tuick turn and upset the buggy, throwing the occupants violently out. One ear was torn from the judge’s head. The First Christian church of Fre mont will pay oft all its indebtedness on New Year’s day, when the annual meeting is held. It is enabled toiio so by a “lift” it has been given by the trustees of a church which re cently disbanded at Maple Creek. The Maple Creek church agreed to'give the Fremont church the $500 it had in its treasury for the purpose of pay ing off the church debt, provided an equal amount was subscribed in Fre-, mont. It was announced in the church that the amount had been sub scribed. The State Board of Educational Lands and Funds made a bid for the Douglas county court house bonds, formally agreeing to take them in block at par or take them in such amounts as Douglas county commis sioners may desire, with sixty days' notice. It is the understanding that Douglas county has an offer for the entire $1,000,000 of bonds in a block, but the terms of the bid make it pos sible for the county board to sell the bonds, as it needs the money. The offer of the board will net the state 4 per cdnt. Charles Colle, long a resident of Dawes county, committed suicide some time December 18 or 19 about three miles northeast of Chacon. He cut his throat with a razor from far to ear. Red Willow county furnishes a case of swift justice. Josiah S. Calvert robbed an intoxicated friend Saturday night, was arrested on Sunday, ap peared in district court Monday and pleaded guilty and was sentenced to one year in the penitentiary, to Vhicii he was talien by the sheriff the same night. The amount involved v as $60. Calvert is 23 years old. Elmer Hannon of Auburn under went a surgical operation at the hos pital in Omaha for the removal of the appendix, and at last accounts the patient was doing well. Mr. Harmon is the man who is to be deputy oil inspector in that district under the incoming governor. The one story dwelling on the Pella farm, four miles ncrlh*esi of Te cumseh and occupied by J. W. Morris was burned to the srrrmnrt fh^nWKm with the contents^ Scr.i;> iii saving tne lives Of his wUjt_ and five lttCa-xhllji • -—r-r—•