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About The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 20, 1907)
"S-3?5SV32-S -- '-.' .-'';'' - i-.7 A- "',v " , ,jc V "4 S ,' '4. I - -- zs GAVE F0EMAN LIFE BEFORE THE KINO OF KINGS. I! 1 I I? Your Wish - for Better Underw'r Has Come True fe In The MUNSNG v' scientifically made with flat elastic seams of the best Egyp- : V J, , - tian cotton or Australian wool and 'fits every movement of the body with ease and comfort You'll find the weight . . "' ' .and kind you want in our underwear - department WtmciT Vests and Pants, 50c U 41.50 Wsmen's Unlsn Sultt $1.00 ts .w.. 2.75 MlMe .and Child rens'Un It n8ulU95oA 1.25 Unless You Wear the MUNSING, Ytu Danl Knaw the Gtmfort ! vv ... - .. . ODD GERMAN lkJR SOME THINGS YOU CANT DO IN THE FATHERLAND. FhM of Five Dollars far Rebuking a Telephone Girl A Kiss In ths trscts of Russia Costs Thrss Dollars. There are places in Germany where job Biust be very careful what you wear.- In Saxony you are liable to get ram la as a socialist if you don a red tie; and at Ketschendorf a visitor re ceived a visit and reprimand from the local police because he wrote them a letter la red ink. Ems has put its foot down about long trains. t Ladies are forbidden to wear them while taking the waters or attending the promenade concerts. The notice points out the danger of casting dust to fly where there are so Many Invalids. There is a grain of comfort for the smart woman vis itor at the end of the notice, In the shape of aa order that men shall not sssoke daring the hours when the. in valids are taking their walks. The town council of Herrnskrechea Boss further than that of Ebs. Its law runs: "The draggling of ladles' is forbidden on pain of a of 26 crowns." A 'similar' -enact- at has recently come into force at Nordhauses. A -fine ojf two dollars Is the penalty for the 'first offense, $2.50' for the second, and a day's Im prisonment for the third. Germany, take It all around, is more fall of .ridiculous and tiresome rules and regulations, than any other coun try on earth. Paragraph 68 of the municipal regulations governing bur ials at Glessen, in Hesse, was as fol lows: "Interments are only permit ted after death has taken place.. .In. all other cases a certificate signed by the mayor Is required.' Moral: Don't Incur the enmity of the mayor of Glessen or you may find yourself un derground before you "'are' ready Seriously speaking, there is one thing which the visitor to Germany should be most careful about; not to Insult any government official. The German idea of insult Is different' from ours. A tourist who, after long de lay at a Carlsruhe telephone, cried: "Are yon asleep, miss?" was arrest ed and fined five dollars for "an un justifiable Insult" la Hamburg the street car regula tions are no dead letter. When the car is fun .a' sign "Besetzt" is hung out, meaning "occupied." Supposing a lady, then, gets la and a 'man gets up and offers, her his seat, he, unfor tunate fellow, is promptly ejected by the conductor. la Russia kisses given in public, whether la the street or a restaurant, or even at the open window of a pri vate house, are actionable. - A kiss in the open streets costs the offender three dollars. It Is a sober fact tt is Russia a man may not kiss his wife in public. France has a number of laws which strikes the stranger as odd. It Is, for Instance, illegal to take water from the sea. Ton see, you might be icing to make salt, which is a 'gov ernment monopoly. Another enact most, sot a bad one In its way, but which would be very likely to be In fringed by American, families travel ing with children. Is to the effect that no solid food may. be given to sables sader one year old. Aleo-nurses may sot use far their charges any sort of bottle with a rubber tube. The tsbes, harbor poi- Is. more apt to raise the of the foreign official ts la The best fitting, the most comfortable, the longest wearing underwear made. The above are not pur words, but the re jnarks of our customers who have worn the Munsing and wouldn't take any other as a gift We knew this to be true . and want you to know, it, too! A trial means another .friend for our underwear department. The Munsing is pflht bubbbbbbbbbbv AM bbbbbbV asms? EMM te ' mucn M TOur flirty Is worth to be Z?tSS&2ml'?2Z you most pay for each photo yon take; in Morocco the camera is a source of danger to its owner, and at Constat tinople It is forbidden to carry any photographic apparatus anywhere near the sultan's palace. Baltimore News. MARKL- r.SH IN THE SEA. Thousands of Them Caught, Number ed and Put Back in British Channel. Catching fish, measuring and mark ing themand then returning them to the sea with the chance of retailing them later is part of the workcarried on by the Marine Biological Associa tion of Great Britain, says Discovery. By means of a steam trawler the fish are caught in the usual way. Each haul Is carefully recorded, the fish are counted and measured and all de tails of locality, time, number, spe cies, sex and size are put down, to gether with accurate observations on the water, the depth and bottom of the sea, the kinds and quality of food available, etc. These data are subse quently tabulated and charted. The method of mriHg the fish Is interesting and ' has been attended -with valuable results. The fish chief ly used during the few years the ex periment has been in progress 'have been plaice, because the proposals which have been made to. Interfere .with the catching, of them were based on lnauequate knowledge. The fish are marked on the 'dorsal surface with a very thin convex metal disk bearing a number. This Is at tached to a fine silver wire which Is passed through the thinner part of the fish near the fin and secured on the under side by a small bone button. The fish do not appear to suffer incon venience and their growthv Is not In terfered with In any way. The thoroughness with which the North sea is swept by the nets of the fishing fleets Is demonstrated by the fact that, out of 5,039 marked plaice of all sizes 992 were recaptured with in a year. This represents 19.7 'per cent, or nearly one-fifth, but for the medium-sized fish the figures are far higher, ranging from 28.4 to 39 per cent for the whole of the North sea and to 43 per cent. In the more north ern portions. . The' men of the regular fishing fleet cooperate by forwarding to the labor atory of the association at Lowestoft all the marked fish they catch. At the laboratory reference to the records easily establishes how much the fish have gained In size and weight since the previous catching. Moreover, the distance between the spot where it was released and the place where It was again caught gives an Idea as to its movements. ' ' A Little Mixed. "The late Marion Story. Julian Story's brother, was a great Sports man ..u - - . . . r "" "" w i or oroaer. "He is a splendid angler. I used to like to hear him tell fish stories, for In his case these stories were always ao less amusing than true. "Mr. Story was once fishing for tar pon In Florida. He fished In a motor boat and his companion' was s cracker a Florida cracker. "Suddealy the cracker got s site, save a great Jerk backward, and then presto, he was splashing and floun dering is the water. The huge fish bad pulled him overboard. "Drop your rod!' shouted Mr. Story. and he started, the motor, and in a few minutes reached the cracker sad him sack oa board. "The mis said: as he began te wring out his clothes: "What I want to know is la thta or was thai fish . .waw. JV m .bbbbbbbbbbbbo bbbbbbbbbbbsbbbbbbbbbbI bbbbbbbbbbt bbbbbbbbbbi .bbbbbbb l-jbbbbbY " T8U H8I APES YOUTH. Chinese Empress Retains "Youth" by Use of Cosmetics and a Whip. Nowhere, does a woman, whether the most beautiful, most courted or most Intriguing, make a more elabor ate or fastidious toilet than does Tsc HsL dowager empress of China, the Flowery Realm. Tsu HsI Is In her seventy-fourth year; her flatterers tell her she looks like 25; her enemies reluctantly but truthfully confess she looks like 45. Her beauty Is only a tradition to-day, bnt authentic accounts of it describe her in her youth as tall, big-eyed, black-haired, finely formed. No fewer than nine young ladles of the Imperial suite assist at the em press' toilet It Is doubtful If , the best i'beautifier" In Paris, the. most expert "restorer of youth" In all Europe knows more about paint powder, and cosmetics than these nine noble hand maidens. And their intense desire to please Tsu HsI rarely 'flags. When it does the empress thrashes them with a rattan on most sensitive surfaces. First ithe well-born lady's maids cover the empress face with a deli cate, creamy composition, then they rouge her until her cheeks 'flame In the "autumnal glory of enchanting womanhood." Their task completed, tentatively, a great mirror is rolled to the couch on which reclines "the source of all good, the font of all pow er." Tsu Hal studies her acquired complexion-most critically. Perhaps it does not bloom sufficiently; then her rattan comes in play; sometimes her maids rouge her1 imperial majesty twice or thrice before her appearance realizes, her Ideal and satisfies her in tense vanity. The monotony -of the 'toi let Is varied by lively song, the .recital of poems, the narration of court gos sipand by the swish of the rattan, -v Thus, "made up," illness cannot.pale Tsu HsL Even If she cannot rise, she is massaged, rouged, pencilled. She suffered a stroke of paralysis recently fromwhich she Is recovering. But even when she was at the worst she could have smiled in the face of death with the countenance of a lovely ma tron. SCOTCH UNIVERSITIES. Taking a Prominent Part in Develop ment of British Nation. The prince of Wales's visit to Glas gow to inaugurate the university ex tension buildings once more appro priately emphasizes the important part which Scottish universities are taking in the development of the na tional life. This Is the second en largement which Glasgow has been compelled to make within half century- ' The university, too, has behind it quite a venerable air of antiquity, as well as the hall-mark of modem utility. Its foundation dates back four centuries and s half, andllke, all the Scottish, universities except Edin burgh, which Is a post-reformation royal foundation, it owes Its existence to ancient ecclesiastical authority. In point of age, however, Glasgow holds only second place In Scotland's hon orable academic record. Aberdeen following la a good third. Edinburgh came into being about a century later. But the oldest of the Scottish univer sities Is two centuries younger than Cambridge. As for Oxford, her aca demic segiwwtsgs are quite lost is the base of Anglo-Saxon antiquity. The town was known as a seat of learning la the year . London Globe. Doing Venice. Fair Americas (raring musicians siBgiBg airs from TI TroTatore") Say! Taei Italians ain't vurry orig inal. Guess I've heard that tuae oa our street organs is New York since I-wan ill rsmih to ON FIELD OF HONOR. s Teek Fire of Opponent Without R tumief It, and Then Refused to Sheet When Adversary Was Defcnseli " The public has read with much in terest the stories from San Francisco involving Patrick Calhoun, a former. South Carolinian, who is charged with being Implicated in the San Francisco scandals. According to the Rome Tribune, s Georgia paper, Calhoun spared the life of John'D. Williamson,, president of the Chattanooga ft Rome railroad, by firing his- revolver in the air after accepting a challenge to a duel with Williamson. The Tribune says: "In 1887 John D. Williamson, who is well remembered In Rome as having built the first horse car line In this city, was president of the old Chatta nooga, Rome ft Columbus railroad, now the Chattanooga branch of the Central of Georgia. At a meeting of railroad men in Atlanta, held some time during the winter 'of that year, Williamson got info an altercation with Par Calhoun, who was at that time a high official connected with the Piedmont Air Line railway, and the lie was passed. "As It Is now recalled,xWUllamson was the one who charged the other withlying, and Calhoun Issued the challenge for a fight according to the code. Williamson accepted and named Jack King, who was then president of the old Merchants' National bank here and a large stockholder in the Chatta nooga, Rome ft Columbus railroad, as his second. Mr. King's death occurred at his home here about' three years ago. "Mr. Calhoun's second was Capt Henry Jackson, one of Atlanta's most "prominent attorneys at that time. "Revolvers were the weapons chosen and the spot selected was on the Rome ft Decatur railroad, now a branch of the Southern, somewhere between Rome and Gadsden. "Calhoun with his second and an other surgeon, went around through Gadsden and came up the road to about the Georgia line, where they found Williamson in waiting. Both cars, with their special engines, stood on the track, while the duel was in progress, about 50 yards away. "Williamson won the toss for posi tion, and as the sun was setting chose to stand at the edge of the woods, with the light behind him. They took their places, armed with five-chambered re volvers, and the terms were that each was to fire until the chambers were ex hausted or until one or the other fell. It is said that the seconds became in volved in a quarrel themselves while on the ground, and that pistols were drawn. "At the word 'fire' Williamson fired at Calhoun, and then, as fast as he could pull his trigger, emptied his gun, only tofind his opponent unhurt Cal houn had not fired a shot, but stood with his revolver upraised. It looked as though he had Williamson at his mercy, for he was privileged, accord ing 'to the code, to fire at will. "The Roman, It Is said, looked at Calhoun Intently, probably expecting to receive a bullet the next instant, and when Calhoun said, 'I have five bullets here, with either one of which I can take your life,' Williamson re plied: " 'Fire, sir, I am ready to receive them.' . J "For reply Calhoun slowly raised his revolver until it. pointed straight above his head, and then pulled the trigger five times, discharging every bullet In the air. Williamson was thunderstruck, and when Calhoun smiled and made a motion as though , to approach him, he took the first step, and they met between the pegs which they had been toeing. "Calhoun' and Williamson returned on the hitter's car, and when they reached Rome they were again fast friends, and there was nothing to indi cate that' they had come so near to shedding each other's blood. It is said that on the way up several small bot tles were drunk to each other's health, in renewal of their friendship." Richmond Times Dispatch. -The One-Sided Humor of Spain. The Spanish peasant is the most polished gentleman in the 'world, but the provincial dandy is not a pleasant person. He does hot limit himself to admiring one (which might be en dured); he laughs at one. Since the. foreign city hat is different from the Spanish town hat, the Spanish town bat laughs and points its finger; even a lady hat will do this. It never oc curs to the Spanish provincial head gear that it is very funny, too that is because a Spaniard is under it, and therefore it must be right; If the for eign city hat laughed, the resentment would be deep. Louise Closser Hale, in Harper's. Electrical Plant. A plant has been discovered in Nic aragua which appears to be charged with electricity. If one of its branches Is touched with the naked hand, a dis tinct shock similar to that produced by a battery is felt Its influence upon a magnetic needle is noticeable at half a dozen yards, and as one gets nearer the plant this influence in creases. If the instrument Is placed in the center of the bush it will as sume a circular movement. The in tensity of the influence manifested seems to "depend upon the time of day-t , Amiel to Wives. Never to tire, never to grow cold; to be patient,, sympathetic, tender; to look for the budding flower and the .opening heart; to hope always; like God, to love always this is duty Amlel. Good Management Generally it Is good to commit the beginning of "all 'great actions to Ar gus with a .hundred eyes; and the ends of them to Briareus with a hun dred hands; first to watch and then Calhoun's Magnanimity Pious Man Could Net Suffer I tien te Player. A pious mas was engaged in prayer while -traveling- on the highway. One of the nobles of the land, who knew him, was passing by, and saluted him, but the pious man did not mind the salutation and continued his prayer. The nnblemaa became vexed, and with a great effort be waited till the mas had finished his prayers; whereupon he, in an excited manner, said to him: "Thou art a stupid fellow for. thou hast sinned against thine own law, which commands man to take care of life. But thou has just risked thy life unnecessarily. Why did you not re spond to. my salutation? If I had split your head open with my sword, who could have called me to account?" "Sir! I pray, suppress your wrath; I hope to quiet you, if youjrill allow me only a few words in reply. Think for instance, that while you were standing in conversation with your king, a friend In passing by saluted youl Should you like to be interrupt ed in your conversation with the king in order to answer that salutation?" "Woe unto me, if I were to do so:" "Now, I pray, dear sir! consider only the respect you thus pay to man! A mortal man, who is here to-day and to-morrow in the grave, while I my self, who stood facing the King of Kings, the immortal King, what should I have done?" The nobleman assuaged his wrath, and the pious man. continued his Journey in peace. Students' Practical Test You won't get fat on crackers and milk. Four days dieting under direction of the medical department of the Uni versity of Minnesota has reduced the weight of five men engaged in the ex periment from one-quarter ot a pound to three and one-half pounds. The sophomore medical class in physiolo gy was given practice in the determin ation of food values by having some of their number detailed as a food test squad. The men were given three meals each day, each meal consisting of about three and one-half ounces of crackers, one-half ounce of butter and one and two-fifths pints of milk. The comparatively great loss of weight of some of the men. all ot whom started in In the best physical condition, is believed to have demon strated that the restrictions placed upon them would kill the ordinary man in a short time. Meals were served at regular hours, and all the food given was the best to be had of its kind. None of the men ate any think outside of what was served up by the medical .department Minne apolis Journal. A Caddy's Joke. James Anderson, of the Scottish American Golf club, smiled at a poor player on the Van Courtlandt Park links in New York. "He reminds me of a chap I used to know," said Mr. Anderson. "This chap played so badly that even his caddies made a butt of him. He got a ball badly ..bunkered one day, and, do what he would, he couldn't get it out again. Whack, whack, whack, he went, miss ing it every time. After half an hour's work, he wiped his wet face with his handkerchief, and turned despairing ly to the caddy. "'Hang it.' he said, 1 have tried all my clubs on this confounded ball. What on earth am I to do now? "The caddy laughed harshly. '"Give it a swat with yer bag,' he said. An Everyday Word. "The things some people, do not know are astonishing." .observed the pedant. "To every man you meet the word penknife is familiar, yet plenty of them would give It up if you asked them how the name originated. The odd part Is 'that they never stop to wonder. Of course, readers know that not so long ago, before steel pens were in general use, the clerk's instrument was a quill. Sharpening one end of this was all that was necessary to make a pen, and every man was his own penmaker and small knives were kept for this purpose. Yes,' of course, you knew all this before, but there are a good many folks who do not." Force, of a Cyclone. Careful estimate of force of a cy clone and the energy required to keep a hurricane in active operation, reveals the presence of a power-that makes the mightiest efforts of a man appear as nothing in comparison. A force equal to more than 400,000-horse-power was estimated as developed In a West Indian cyclone. This greatly exceeds the power that could be de veloped by all the means within the range of man's capabilities. Were steam, water, windmills and the strength of all men and animals com bined they could not even approach the tremendous force of this mighty power. Reviving an Ancient Game. One of the recent revivals 4s the ancient game of bowls, which now bids fair to take once again a leading place among the sports of Merrie England. As a matter of fact, it is just as good a game to-day as, it was in the time of Raleigh or in the remote Anglo Saxon times.. From a medical point of view we have nothing but praise for' this most excellent of recreations. It provides open air exercise and amuse ment for old and young, it is admira bly fitted for many invalids, and above all It is one of the best of what may be called natural opiates. Medical Press. The New Quartz Industry. In the past few years the smelting of quarts, to be cast into a great va riety of vases, capsules, crucibles, hol low tubes, and so forth, has assumed considerable industrial importance. Quartz melted In the electric furnace form a glass of iridescent brilliance, with which many kinds of Jewels asd ornaments are made. It cam be col ored with great ease, asd Is a great variety of tones and shades. In lab oratories; apparatus made of smelted quarts has become practically India- NEW MUSIC STOM FE have onened a new moato store In ture store on Eleventh street and will handle a complete line of flrst class pianos. Oar prices defy all competition. ; Remember we are per manently located in Columbus. HENRY J. BECKER Manager HUSKS STILL GROWN AN ABUNDANCE OF THE PRODIGAL FOOD SONS. FOR Arabs and Mocrs Eat Carobs Cyprus Exports Them as Food for Cat tle te a Very Larje Extent. The "husks" of the parable. of the prodigal son are still extant in the countries bordering on the Mediter ranean. Consul General G. B. Ravn dal writes from Beirut as follows con cerning this food: i "Arabs and A'oors eat them. In the south of Europe carobs are employed aa food for horses, cattle and swine. In Cyprus, next to barley, they con stitute the principal article for ex port The total yield of the island of carobs or locust beans (not to be confounded with St John's bread), in 1906, amounted to 69,000 tons. In Au gust the carob tree is seen bearing both flowers and ripe fruit The lat ter is a pod, brown and leathery, four to eight inches long, a little curved, and containing a fleshy and at last mealy pulp, of an agreeable sweet taste, in which lie a number of shin ing brown seeds; these are bitter aad of no use. "On account of the abundant sugar contained in carobs, the latter form a nutritious and fattening food for horses and cattle. England, for the feeding of cattle, imports large quan tities of carobs, in the form of flour (that they may be more digestible) from Spain, Italy, Crete, Samos and Cyprus. Most of the Cyprus carobr however, are exported in bulk, and the grinding is done in England. A considerable quantity of this 'cattle food' is exported from Great Britain to the United States. If proper steam ing, facilities existed between the United States and Levant carobs would probably be carried direct to the United States to be prepared there into cattle food. Carobs are also used in considerable quantities especially in France, for distillation, and the spirits obtained are deemed choice. Carobs are also employed for the pro duction of a semi-liquid substance, resembling molasses, largely used in the manufacture of oriental sweets. The carob tree, which is quite dis tinct from the locust tree of America, seems to prefer the mild climate of the southern sea coasts and islands of the Mediterranean. It is, however, found in the Lebanon, for instance, and its introduction into the north of India has been recommended on the supposition that it would prove an important addition to the resources of the country and a valuable safeguard against famine. The produce is ex ceeding abundant, some trees yield ing as much as 900 'pounds of pods. The wood is hard and much valued, and the bark and leaves are- used for tanning. The carob tree propagates freely. The cultivated trees have all been grafted. Copper in Japan. Copper, with a value of 112,000,000, stands, first on the list of metals of Japanese production. Gold follows with $2,000,000; then sliver with $1, 630,000, and iron with $1,300,000. Lead shows $160,000; antimony, $45,000, and manganese, $40,000. The value of the sulphur output was $287,000, and the value of other mine products is trifling. The future of Japan's min ing industry, with the exception of coal, is entirely speculative, with the chances against its important devel opment In any line. Yet probably as long as there are indications of metals there will be hope and holes In the ground. Uncle Sam's Limit ,The secretary of agriculture pro tests against the irresponsible an nouncements that the government stamp is equivalent to a guarantee that goods so stamped are exactly as represented as to quality. Uncle Sam guarantees nothing. He only inspects as far as he .is able, but' he does not insure the purchaser against possible adulteration. The government .does all it can to maintain the standard, but if the manufacturer puts other ma terial in the package the action must be a ken against him and not the ".-.. ument Cattle Industry in Mexico, The cattle industry of the state of Tamllpas is coming to the front One stockman and commission man alone, Bartolo Rodriguez, shipped 48,660 head last year to Cuba and Yucatan, which amounted to $1,500,066. .He has a fine ranch sear the City of Tampico called Moste Alto, with 3M head of cows ssd bulls, costing about $506 ahead, imported from the Ualted States aad Switserlasd. Careful es timate made by the shippers to the sorts of Tampico places the tots h. .. i. .a m. ... ..I . ""w - " " munm in UN I area at !J66Jst. Mexican. HmU the Landon lxurni- BROS. AN AMAZING EVOLUTION. Only Sixteen Seedl Orsnsss w 1I7S, New Ten Millie Mr. La Salle A. Maynard tells "Ths Story of the Seedless Orange" hi The World To-Day. Mrs. Luther C Tib bits of California obtained Is 1878 mar orange shoots from the agricultural department at Washington, seat there by William F. Judsoa, Americas ess sul at Bahia, Brazil. They were pre sented to him by s native, who had several shoots of a seedless orssgs tree growing W a swamp os the Ama zon. "Mrs. Tibbits brought the sUsst trees carefully home and her husband planted them in the gardes. One died, another was chewed up by s predatory cow, but two lived, and five years later produced 16 oranges. These 16 golden s'.bes and their immediate successors produced results compar-' able only in value to the famous dis covery of another kind of gold is lutter's millrace, and brought fame md no small fortune to their lucky wner." The new orange could be produced mly by budding, and the first buds ;old at $1 each, and later at S6 a lozen. One box of naval oranges was Town In 1880; since then the asasal product has risen to ie.00v.6es boxes. md "the two trees which the cow did tot chew have multiplied to over 4. )06,600." The original parent tree living in 1903 was transferred to the yard of the Glen wood hotel at River side, Cal., President Roosevelt aiding n the ceremony of transplantation. Last year the tree bore two bushels f choice fruit which, of course, were xpressed to the White House. Is outhern California alone $100,006.60e 3 invested in citrus fruit culture, hiefly of oranges, and is related Is lustries. ESK'MO IS NATURE FAKER. Thinks That Bears SheuM Re Treated 1 Like Gentlemen. The Eskimo can say that he had a friendly feeling toward ail living things, notwithstanding that he fed on flesh and that wild beasts some times fed oa him, says the Contem porary Review. Not that he ever talked of wild beasts, for he -had no tame ones. He had not a vocabulary of rude terms about animals. He was inclined to credit every species with many potential merits. The Eskimo is afraid very much afraid of bears. Yet he is the first to admit that the bear is capable of acting like the fin est gentlemen. A woman was Is a fright at seeing a bear, aad so gave him a partridge; that bear never for got the trifling service, but brought her newly killed seals ever after. As other bear saved the life of three men who wished to reward him.. He polite ly declined their oflTer. bat If Is whiter time they should see s bsldsesssi bear will they induce their compan ions to spare him? After so saytae: he plunged into the sea. Next wister a bear was sighted and they were go ing tb hunt him, when these men. re membering what had happeaed. begged the hunters to wait till they had a look at him. Sure enough It was "their own bear!" They told the others to prepare a feast for him. asd when he-had refreshed himself he lay down to sleep and the children played around him. Presently he awoke asd ate a little more, after which he west aown to tne sea, leaped is. and never seen again. The Sultan'. Kitchen. The imperial kitchen of the sattsa of Turkey is more like a fortress man a place to cook his meals, for It has as armor-plated door, asd' Is fit ted with locks which ess be opened only by one man. Aa each course is prepsred R Is placed os s silver dish, which m sealed with red wax by the oflkdal responsible for his sovereign's food, and then a black velvet cover is placed over the dish to keep It warm. says Home Chat A procession of people follows the meal into the Imperial chamber the seals being brakes is the sultans presence, and often the kehu-dihi i. requested to taste some particular dish. The cost of the esltss'a food does sot exceed 1.666 a yesr. for It is mostly entrees ssd soiled eggs: but to feed the ssmerosa members of his household and pay all eotneetie jycK lessens sis annual incc of 2,606.666 by 15,666 a week. Wsflner ss s Curative Aseet Versos Lee has told somewhere the tory of the marvelous effects of Wsa ser os a headache; it may be proved y misht at the Qsemrt HtfL. a, after a time, succumb to what m m. um x sysaotlsm: tb , vmost to clear the sir, least to lull na faA v j, -1 , ... AMm UK SrSSBl si WSKS OBly the SSSSS of - - - i. " g ite V mMx V.i,.l '-v.li5-;- . ,1 1 a .- wm --vT- sgra.Tig BT iT T TSMBBwif'' rr i