Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 11, 1906)
Al TTv TTTYw T m w GDIF til vi i f r fy mi . y j A STUDY OF SEA OU1XS IN MOTION. r r ;J EAOULLS are comparatively common leesa. A remarkable picture of thla nature Women's Dress In the Future. A PARISIAN coetumer haa dared to 1 ok Into the future and tell ua what wom en will wear by the middle of the present century. He banes his Ideas en the radical changes which have taken 1 An Ant Wagon. the costumes but the new Interests which! In women's lives have made these changes necessary. The desire for out of door llfe and sports will stow, and a moat Impor tant part of the wardrobe will be costumes which are suitable for flahlna. yachting, automoblllng, skating;, c. Comfortab'.a, common sense apparel during the day will I be the fashion, and only In the evening will the women of fashion appear In lux urious gowns. Such perils to human health ae arise from wearing long skirts will be forbidden by law, and all skirts will be ankle length, permitting the use of dainty openwork stockings. Aa woman's costume grow EaaJsmiUHnT! i'liMI'I'M.' ' "WVMml M The Famous Kohinoor. UCH of the fame of the great Kohi noor diamond has been due to Its romantic hlstorv. It whs founil in the mines nf In. 1 1 three ami a half FIRST RECORDED DESIGN FOR A SIDE WHEEL BOAT. centuries ago. According to the native traditions of the chiefs. It wa wrested , from the god Krishna. It became ru.val i property mid was a great cause uf strife among the princes of India. The Am bassador of James 1. to the court of the Ureat Mogul heard of It and reported Its 'reputation at home. One of its famous 'possessore was Nadir Shah, the Afghan who had conquered the reigning Mogul. According to tradition, the vanquished ruler hid the Jewel In his turban, but a woman betrave.i it hldina kIbm When HE extraordinary strength of the ant, the t WO DOttn t ntOI mtSt Siili a ft as V- rlt considering Its s.se. Is well known. It proposed that they exchange turbans as is only of late, however, that an ant a mark of friendship. The Mosul was has been .iun..,fiiltf broken tn h r- nni i i. . . - - ' " o- 1 nesj Th .I Z i . . . " "" "usiuon to re ruse and so lost the a m i. . ioiOB;rap" vi uue ui iiivbv w- jewel, T: Nall alone the coast and In the harbors k-J on the Atlantic, ns every one who has sailed about these harbors can testify. From a long association with ships the gulls are, for the most part, exceedingly tame and will fly or float about a ship In s here shown. Seagulls to the number ef many hundreds or thousands were sur rounding the photographer on thla occa sion and the group la a remarkable one in knany ways. It not only .ncludee an un usual number of birds, but Is so clear great numbers. It ia even possible to that me wing action oi me uiro. is cieariy photograph the-m with considerable sue- .indicated. Women In Cores. Ti HE women In Seoul wear a remarka ble garment, cut like a man's coat and of a vivid green. The arms, how ever, are not Inserted in trie sleeves, and the coat hungs from the head, com Dletelv shroudln the wearer. The Co- reans have a story to account ior im Tsar, Czar and Sar. TH ne Nl "HOUGH we occasionally read In the newstoaDers of the Czar, referring to Nicholas II.. he Is almost universally designated as the Tsar. Though manv learned etymologists have said that the ; national title of the Russian sovereign la a corruption of the word Caesar, like the strange garment to the effect that years German Kaiser, this is a mistake. The ago there was a war and the men of Seoul cause of the error Is that at the beginning were compelled 10 go away in such uui i jr , or tne eighteenth century we know the that they left their coats behind them. Russians only through the Poles, with The women thereupon set to work andWhom we had long International lnter mude them a supply of green coats, but course before we became acquainted with by the time they were ready the war was the Muscovites. The word "csar" ls-thelher drawn face. Dressed In black as If over, and so in order that the coats mignt Polign fjrm of th9 word ..Uar" wJtn the .. mourn a burled love, this Jilted girl not go to waste tne women uenueu BlliTt difference In the pronunciation' aiirmert amnn- the weddina: guests to wlt- Wlll ...... . - - " why they m.rb.v.i. .""-r" . . . r . me earner part or tne last cen- older It will more nearly approach man's. ess is h-, . " , r .? . th. Vry the Sikh"' who!" rul" ownvi the but the knickerbockers will never be alto-1, u' '" ""e -hown In this case the diamond. Invaded British territory. The gether apparent. They will be veiiea Dy ai mu '7 . "7. " .T "B"'n-..,npreuP3n flsed Lahore, and some artistic arrangement of drapery I frUiu-- left .Y?.uJwP..?.ln-N ,h by occupant The veil will be to the eyes, a washaible, so that Awva hli.h .nllAt For evening wear Greek styles win pre-) me miauie ages swings were nung dj- naneierrea the Kohinoor to the crown ns long before the days of steam, having vail, and these will be worn without cor-j an Ingenious pulley device. , The rope was a token of submission. The great dla- been drawn In the thirteenth century. The aeS which will be relics or tne pai. i net iu uver a groovea wneei tni was iai- u men taxen wun intlnlte care- arrangement of IW.ID "nsuy Dhuleep Singh, the boy occupant Fwmmi e condemned as InJuflo"",!. bv ,1 .mP 1. .. h ' th" thron?. resigned the country's rev- nd If used at ' Xr.eVp Kng9 ,n exchange for an V MAT is supposed to be the first draw- lat iUwlll no longer harbor , "u"' , IV, L Wl 7 n5 becamp a British subject. I l Ing or design for o side wheeled boat Uect In Its meshes. Ilhe document which the child signed W Is reproduced herewith. It dates back IMS 1 1, t IS ti.l'1'iW.HSS llll.l.LIIS-LB )JJI.MMiM.lL!llWiJt.llLJ.ML' ,.."1 crepons and gauaes of the future days will lend themselves to the graceful draperies of the ancient toga, which will be revived. The colors of the gowns will also be se lected with more care. The Influence of the astral bodies will be considered, and the attire of the fashionable woman will corresoond to the star whose protection she desires. eota tu tne celling uy a Dracaet. i ne one iu uunuon. i who was swinging was not only pushed Jueen Ictorla used the Jewel In a brooch . , . from behind by one of his fellows, but and wore It on great occasions. This gteat Commencement Clothes ot a tentury was also netped from the front by striking diamond would not bo recognized by Its' AffO. With his foot the outstretched foot of sn- former possessors if they could see It to-i other comrade. This sport was a favorite day. Reports say that In the sixteenth THE Boston Museum of Arts has been invention was Intended for a boat to oe used in crossing the British Channel. So far as la known it Is the first design of its kind, although It antedates the side wheel steamer by fully five centuries. e- a pastime of pages. Smallest Elephant. Her Dramatic Revenue. VfNCELOT LARDPADDLE was be- i Ing wedded to the naugnty neirei-a in her palatial home, when through the porte-cochere slunk a young girl. with the Imprint of mental anguish on Li decided wear them themselves. 1 ne people wi which dlstlnitulshes the two words derived hr rii'. irlnmnh tell you If you ask them why , from the Slavonic language. . -Now for my revenge-my horrible re dress in white that this Is the Kastern The RuBSla k tne gla belong Venge!" she hissed, casting a baleful color of mourning, nnd that during a cer-L . . 'rh.lrptl fhB rvrllllc .i. .1 hri. .nj :m. it wa. a. melo- bottle of acid she dashed fhtac1orrrwer.tedn.otfhreqPu,ly feWr? VffJI JlVJj" ' reduced to thirty-one In the . " ' j jT.ij vm. 1 . i. 1.. ;lnngunge. The Cathollo Slavs. mioi n.i nnn.nim tr. on.'Poles. avlng kept the Latin alphabet or v, ,h -... .hmnk h.irit before common forward. liae tnei ..sh. v-. .old! more economical and convenient to con tlnue to wear that color permanently. A Strange Family. Stop her!" cried many -.r ti" r 3 Tki- fit. twenty-rour signs, were compeiiea to re- h(,r unnlnchng eye. Opposite the cower sort io the combination of double letters , COUDia the fury Daused a second and to take the place of the slbillant ccm-jthen the acirt in tiny drops on thel century the stone weighe I 1H3 cnrais. a! I bresented with two suits of gorgeous French traveller one hundred years later I apparel which were worn at gradua put the weight at i:80, to which It had been' tion tiy two of the ancestors of former reduced by unskilful cutting. When Vo-'Mi'or s"uel Green, of Boston. These ; torla saw It, in the middle of the lust cen- forebears were graduated from Harvard tury. It was a shallow, dull gray stone, more ,nan a hundred years ago, and yet with a flat top. Irregular tiny facets hid "ie colrs of the garments they wore on been cut In the sides, and from the Kuro-llhat occasion are as bright as when they pean standpoint the gem was in miseral le were Imported and the material is ex shape. On account of Its romantic history I tremely well preserved. There Is a coat of It was with great regret that the public' elaborately brocaded and decorated black heard that the Queen had ordered the s'onelratln. a waistcoat of blue satin and a pair recut. It was feared that It mlfrht be'f satin breeches, which look meagre In shattered In the process and there was Proportion to the sice of these garments no Enrllnh 1 inl.lorv In n-l.i.m tr umiM ho! HOWIJiVS. I Intrusted. A celebrated Amsterdam (lia-! The dress of the Harvard student was I board, led by the Mayor. The beds con- mond cutter was summoned to London, rigidly prescribed by Ihe laws of the col- vegetaoies ana grain are inspeoi- fpeclal machinery was made for the our ve 1111 ab(int the year 1SJ8. It was to con- . ana the teachers explain how the va pose and the work begar "Vthe worshopoti"1" of b!ack at- breasted, wlth; Plants are grown during the taljt the crown Jewellers a t Wln tVn rS"op0f a rolling rape, square at the end and with u"tl0 are asked by the peas- : The Prince Conso assiMte l bv the Duke f" Haps. The wiistcoat was of black which the teacher endeavors to an- JyZ-lJtr-AfVJt or all black ooda. or. when of cot- clMrly. If the peasants have no seed ... .. .....biimi, rn me nmciiiiiviy m mo- . .. . . ..i iwith wli ch to ner mnnt It K treelv up- l', fir nti - ' Ti Revival of Floating Gardens. HE teachers of agriculture In Russia have revived the floating gardena 01 past ages, but Instead of being a means for the lavish expenditure of money the object ls.one of utility entirely. These teachers were Impressed with the fact that the most prosperous farms lay along water course, so they resolved to experiment with large floating gardens, which should be laid out on barges of great width. This was accordingly done, and as s'oun as the Ice melted these experiment stations drifted down the stream to warmer climates, where the seeds sprouted and the grain grew and ripened. As eacn birpe floats along It stops at each village, where the church bell ale rung to an nounce Its arrival, and the people flock on tion and the shnplng nnd polishing wi nt on for thlrtv-Bv. faV: ,h- k-m, collar. The students were not allowed to , 'f'";,. ""-""'J 1" " .was turned out, a second water diamond f ppear within the limits of the college or.an(1 nave deed,d that u , the moPt effect or conventional shape, but with the ex-;1""" ' 7 ' "L,rlve method yet discovered for popularls- :traordlnary diameter of one and three- A paste copy la kept In sonnnts which alphabet. The are "cs' found In the Cyrillic! ,M -j .m... wA,ryr presents rorme one 01 "Huh! Plated Just as I thouKnt: ' sne T: so fortunate as to possess a "night gown otherwise a dressing gown. In the regula- HK elephant whose picture Is shown n V. I I- 1 . u H 1 V,, I'OKC ,B 111 mil KCI LUIt Hvuu , xd.ed rin, Tt 1. ..lnlmerf In h- Ihe eighths Inches. t.t 1 I w Dll-W ns-V.r.cr . ... ,, I - t h rPaT tt 1 1st n t t Vi l;LJ h,"T. "J."" .V".JSvr" flXl 7,1" - P?,ntl"f.'to tne e',la'e-?r.,'"w . Am?"elePha.nt ,n. worla- ml?;nn u;,ho, w,, ;holler shall goe out W his chamber with v" vn. n " im At inia exposure, ine wcuuhir wiuuu is aisDucea dv at least a score ot . .. ; " fa ,.1a .1 the Tower of London, but the ' "ons enforced In ltf.r. one may read:-"No nhitllnp aha I evjta nl 1 r r i a t- sn K n- SB-1 t p Ti HE maternal Instinct of the chicken Is often manifested In curious ways. A chicken In Missouri recently gained fame by voluntarily taking on herself me responsibility of mothering a family of puppies. The happy family Is ehown In the accompanying photograph. The dogs seem entirely satislled with their foster mother, and the family Is a very happy one. , The Fuel of the Future. T was In January of 1901 that the first "o" gusher" was discovered In Bouthrast Ti'X.h. Since that time the enormous out rln, Cesa.-evna and Ceearevlteh, as a trib ute to their Imaginary origin. But the word tsar has no Latin etymology and lajretall tobacco dealers In Japan. not a translation of the wora uaesar. - e e e-e-oe eeeeeeeee WAKE OF AN AUTOMOBILE BOAT I jAt 1 ma exposure, me weuu.uK wiuuu aisputea by at least a score or - diamond -.i.h. VnVr.VoV. V . out coate, cloake, gowne. and every one nutuy t.K inur r,ami s u . ue 1 .1 nam at tne present day. The little.-,-. T. ..7.. -. .,n nnn n , shall wear modest anil sober habit, wlth- ware ana departed naumy, wnne tne """- ieuow was born In captivity near London. "l ..v.vv.v. out Rtrana.ei rUfn,n like or new fangled ding feast settled Into gloom. land haa been exhibited during the past ' fashion ; nor shall any weare go!d or silver year U over the continent of Europe. j South America has about twice the area'or such ornaments; neither shiill It be law- and about one-half the population of the.fil 'or any to weare long halre or fore orne llluetrious writers like Voltaire and h'tny took their name tags off the plated animals at the present day. mi'ni-oimun, The same rule applies to the derivatives of the word tsar tsarine, tsarevna, tsare- vltch These words are even sidled Cesa According to a recent report from To- klo there are 1.786 wholesale and 235.414 SSSBSSSBUBBBBSSSSS'. mVa'-f3galil T HE wonderful speed of auto motor boats results, ss might be Imagined, In creating a wake much greater than that ot any other class of bouts pro- put has Increased yearly, till there are 1 Portlouate to the slae. While tearing hundreds of oil wells, which give up nun dred of thousands of gallons of oil. But it Is impossible to get any Idea nf the quantity thus added to the world's supply unless we contrast the output of the first Blxtv oil wells with the combined output of the world previous to the time of this great discovery In Texas. In the Pennsyl vania and California oil fields, snd even ,n the Corslcana field, there are acres of producing walls, yet they, with all those of' the rest of the world, can produce but about one-eighth aa much oil aa the first sixty "gushers' which were discovered In Texas. In the year 1900 the oil production of the world amounted to 13S.000.0U0 barrels, or J78.U00 barrela a day. This output was di vided among Russia, producing 68,000 000 barrels; the United States. 68.0u0.OU0; the Dutch East Indies, 3,000,000; Austria, 2.500.000 ; Roumanla. 2.000,0u0; and a half doien other countries the remaining 5.0U0.UU0. The Corslcana field produces about l.OuO.OOrt barrels annually. The "gushers" In Texas have altogether s ca pacity which can bs conservatively esti mated at 1,000,000 barrela a day. This la more than eight times as much sa the dally output of the world for 1900. It raises the annual production from lSO.Ooo.ooo to 1.095.000.000 barrels. At thirty cents per bar rel the Texas discovery has Increased the value of the product $287,100,000 annually. Cores has a population of about 6.000. 000. Seoul, ths capital, haa 23.000 anri through the water with the speed of railroad train the disturbance is out of all proportion to the length or the beam of the boat. The following wave. In fact, la often higher than the boat Itself. A re- It has been pointed out by an eminent! doctor that bald headed men never suffer j from consumption, and that a tendency to I naioness is an assurance that the dreaded scourge will pass over him. The doctor had under treatment mor than .1. dred cases, snd he makes the further state ment that In a census of more than five 1 thousand tuberculosis cases he failed to discover a single sufferer who was bald. - e e e Floating Islands, great rivers of the ocen the ocean currents, carrv mnn things from one point to another hut none more remarkable then e . Ing Islands. Theee islands were .'n.i.iw parts of low lying river banks, which In i .storm or flood have broken away and been! icnrrled out to sea. The tropical rivers, the! Orinoco, the A mi ion and the Plata carry 11u1.11 unKiiieiiii ot land to thei ocean. Some are of large site and carry! animals and vesetatlon even at i.J I eluding trees, the roots of which servs to' I hold the land together and the lmvea anil I m.i.ir.hl. nixture of one nf these boats, branches act as 8atls These lln 1, aii.il taken while olng at full speed. Is here ally break up soon, but under favorable shown. The boat Is the Napier li., the conditions they travel long dlstahcee. winner of the 40-foot class In the recent soveriimeiit nas records or an Island races at Monaco. United States. tops, nor to use curling, crlspenlng, Using or powdering their halre. par- WHERE SLEDDING HAS BECOME A FINE ART. h -. v?vi.v. yy. , ;V-, 'Wfi THE ocea thlni wiissMiss ms T,lT . s-t W nr jj- 352 the most popular fo"m. These are madi rather short and with a view of nooommo- which voyaged -about In 1S93 and made the dating but one person. They are readily longest Journey known to us of any piece i guided and are under Instant control. A than S12.oou.0uo worth Is second in value. Turnip Bread. HAT might In all seriousness be classed among the "lost arts" la the varied use of vegetables. The present generation eata them either raw or simply cooked, the most complex prepara tion oemg in the form of pie or pudding of land. It was first seen off Florida, and .t ,., ..,.,1 apparently had an area of about two acres '" B'rn,,!!W;-e.i It was thickly covered with trees, .nd In .who wwm inn 11 ijiBii. ii irav- lelled slowly in the Quit Stream, with occa sional undulations to show where the ground swell was working underneath. It probably left Its river anchorage In the spring, for It appeared In the latitude of Wilmington. Del., In July of that year. No large animal life was seen upon It, but there must have been myriads of the creep ing things which abound In the tropics. By the end of August It had passed Cape Cod and was headed for the Qrand Banks. It followed the steamer lanes accurately, and reported by several steamers. A N the northern countries of Europs ' common winter scene In the Austrian sleddhis or tobogganing has been re- Tyrol is shown In the accompanying Illus duced to a tine art. A small sledge j tratlon, with scores and even hundreds of ralBed about two feet from the grouna is these sleds In use. So perfect la the con trol of these sleds that a long line of them will descend a hill at great speed with only a few Inches clearance between them. Ing Intelligent ants. farming among the peas- Three Legged Chicken. H: ,., e e e e e - I , Siberia has the bigRest forest area of any How the Brontosaurua Was Found.!60"'1)- on earth, yet the timber for the construction of the eastern end of the HEAVY washout caused by a freshet Trans-Siberian Railway all came from the Chinese Figurines. 0: F the many varieties of figures which are made In China of every conceivable material none are more Intereatlnr than the clay figures of Tlen-Tsln. The material Is a silt which compares In fineness with inr modelling A century sgo. man multiplied their uses clay known The cnlnra nn from lls-ht waa with a great deal of wisdom and Ingenuity, .gray and pale yellow to dark red and alate 'month later tt was In mldooean, north From the Chinese rsdlsh was drawn a With this material the artist models his west of the Axores, and It began to show very superior oil, excellent for table usei figure, dries it, and with a brush addsithe effect of lta long voyage, for it was ss well ss for light snd medicinal pur- color where It .will be most effective. Red much more compact. It wss not seen poses. The parsnip furnished a very ds-ls applied to the Hps and cheekj, black to.again, and it probably went to pieces dur lectabls wine, while from the fresh starch I the hair snd brown to the eyes. The most;1" the October gales. It had travelled at of potatoes was made a very good size. ' Inters. tino- n .rt n 1. miin. nt least a thousand miles, and If, as was which, by mixture with chalk, formed an clothes to these tinv tiaurea for th .r- supposed. It had corns from ths Orinoco, lists are realists and these Images are studies representing the dramatic, pathet ic ridiculous or horrible side of dally life. One figure Is that of an opium smok er, wnose nones are coming tnrough hla tlon 0f animal and vegetable species. .riii a.iiu vi iiune rHKS are iiuruiy ueceni. excellent material for stucco workers. Ths most noteworthy use of vegetables, however, seems to have been In the mak ing of bread. At k time of failure In the wheat crop. It was demonstrated that very good bread ran be made from turnips. They are first prepared as s vegetable; cleaned and cooked In the usual way. When mashed, a greater part of the water la pressed out of them and the pulp then mixed with an equal quantity In weight of wheat meal. The dough la set to ralce with veaat and men treated in the uannl conetantly Increasing. . Already 50.00 manner kneaded, made into loaves and tt had covered twice that distance. 1 1 Is pos. sible that such Islands, under favorable circumstances, might in past ages have made the Journey from America to Europe or Africa, thus bringing about a distribu- japanes live in the kingdom. No less inan ss.000,000 has been spent on rail ways. Ths foreign trsds wss worth t26.CI.iB7 last year. The young Sultan of Johore possesses One great peculiarity. Many years ago an aocldent with a horse resulted in nearly the whole of hla teeth being knocked out. Thess have been replsoed by teeth of solid gold, In each of which a large diamond has been Inserted, and as they become uncovered, even In the act of smiling, the effect la most wlerd. baked. The bread Is "found to be s little swseter than the regulation kind, but fully as light and white. If cut immediately. It will taste of the turnip, but to no dis agreeable extent, while In twenty-four houra after baking, all trace of the vege table will have disappeared. If .turnips can be used for bread,' why not parsnips, carrots, potatoes or any fsrlnaceous tuber? The potato pudding and the sweet eotato pie have very little taste of the respective roots from which they are made, and this quslity should be still less noticeable In ths esse of bread. )) 6J 6 S WINO OF A MOTH ENLARGED. "I J Another Is that of a beggar, who ex poses a ghastly wound or points to the stump of an arm or leg. A third Is a gambler whose vices have ruined him. A fourth Is a farmer endeavoring to lead a refractory pig to market. A fifth La a porter staggering under his load. And so the Hat runs on, the statues showing every type, trade snd romance. The mod elling is the best In ths empire and Is the only school of Chinese art which has not been crushed by conventionalism and his torical motives. From the door of the store where one has paused to buy these figurines one has only to look Into the street to see the char-' acters, alive snd real, of the modelled I miniatures. The only drawback to these works of urt Is their extreme fragility, ( tor, though the clay Is modelled on a trameworK. it is so unconeslve that a slight Jar will often break off a hand or foot. Assyrian Organ. -tt- HEAVY washout causeu Dy a ireanei iiani-Diuennn itauway an came rrom tn ln the spring was the Immediate cause, United States. It was brought from Ore lot the finding of the great brontoBau- gon, being Shipped across to Vladlvostock, rua at Liramle, Wyo.. in 1902. The thence transported by rail to the banks of water cut a deep gully across the plain and a tributary of the Amur and loaded Into left the sacrum and a few other bones of j barges to be towed to Its destinations, the animal exposed. The bones were not! Texas Is the greatest pecan growing sec found In position, but in heips. One of theltlnn In the world. Pecans are s valuable heaps was uncovered and traces of anothenfuod. product. Cultivation of pecana Is a were found, ao there was a regular line ot 'Profitable Industry, the trees in many pointers which greatly facilitated the;Orchards being valued at lluu each. Kx-Jr,,- iperts declare the crop will pay more In the bones of this animal were ootaineo, in Fat's Ehlllalab, (nr GENUINE shlllalah of ths best I sort." said an Irish gentleman. I I'll not a simple cudgel cut from the wayside. It grows to matu rity under the care of the man who Intends ! to use it. Pat will elect promising THE most familiar objects are usual ly unrecognisable when (xmuad through a powerful microscope. If the human eye, for Instance, were to suddenly acquire the power of enlarging everytii ng which came Into Ha vision one srauid &ad himself la aa eallrel stxaxkfslls stature. blackthorn shoot, snd having marked It. .watch It develop to the proper alse. 'When It Is strong and stouthe digs It up. 'carefully leaving enough of the bulbous root to serve as s handle. After It is thor-j Roughly pruned, the butt end Is placed In I warm ashes night after night to season tt. I As soon aa It is aapless snd hsrd, he cuts It Into shape snd puts It in a pickle of i salt water, afterward rubbing In train 0:1, i with a bit of leather for many hours. The : next thing to do Is to shoot magpie, .catch Its blood In a cup, and with this! polish the blackthorn until It Is a deep , rich black with a mahogany tint. A shlllalah mads In this carsful fashion and tipped with a atael or Iron ferrule is a handsome snd serviceable weapon. ' v? 'iy i-Yj M ' Je. , j a I a I I aa - . .-alias kn.iu k .. k ni.,A organ date, back at least to the second J'. h" ?,ZJlST. " I ZStJM c.omfr'1" wpifiu.JV u on"' ou to tourist. ct ln o, mou,d.d century of the Christian era and per hSDS much earlier. The accomuanvina- ' illustration shows a statue of an wTan u terra cotta which i; produced from a photograph of a part of i the old country. But bsck In ths hill. S.,., back nearly two thoussnd veare a lo brought $350. Wellington, on one of the antsnnas of a moth, ths pals I .here there la nlant. of time an M.efc- alc nesriyiwo inoussna years. 11 . cantraxv. la bv no mean. In demand a. Tussock variety Showing Its complete thorns, th. shillalah become, sn- object 1 p7rfoT mprlsld pipe, of gV Juated lo k ot h" hlUr b"" v"lud " - SuZ structure. Familiar a. U the moth. It U 0f loving care in the making and you al- unith sSi und board and barrel iti Napoleon ha. len aa h gh a. lluO and s. "ontl Zl" f 4n4 ties wUlla. W part j $5. whU. a lock of lx,rd fcyron's ott its sioiure. lev ' I hair iwaie Ous ssro brwusrht $V7.0v luts s eluding all ths limb boAes but two, nearly all the dorsals and more than one-half the cervicles. The heaviest bone taken out was the sacrum, estimated to weigh two thousand pjunds. When It had been load ad on a wagon It was all a heavy team could do to start It and mova It over road, ss smooth and hard as asshalt. The prehistoric brontosaurus was sn Im mense beaet, with a short body and an Immensely long tall and neck. The anl- Imal measured seventy-five to ninety feet I In length over ail, and weighed ln life from thirty to fifty tons, according toi age. The uumore orontosaurus must nave1 measured eighty feet In length and elgh- teen feet In height. Only one or twu large skeletons have ever been uncov-i ered, one of these being In the bone room ln the Wyoming State University and the other ln the museum of an Eaatern col-1 Ibge. The head of the brontosaurua la! very small ln proportion to the slae nf the; animal. The denUtlon is weak, there be ing but one row of small round teeth In the upper and under Jaws. This shows that the animal must have lived on very! soft and tender vegetation, probably grow ing under water, the brontosaurua feeding much as the moose of to-day, on lily pads I and rank grasses mat nourish In the shal low, muddy water of alow running rivers snd lakes. When the fossils of Gllmore's bron tosaurus were on the cars for shipment they weighed eighty thousand pounds. And H Is estimated that In life the animal could nut have weighed less than forty tons. The Manchuria Dally Report, the Jap anese paper published In Nlu-Chwang, J Manchuria, recently said editorially : "We repeat that every inch of ianchurla un der Japanese occupation now has been i bought for a dear price In blood and1 money. Hence Japan Is Its legitimate! owner. China has rorteilea ner suseralnty over tt by once making, so to speak, s present of It to Kussla.", j A mxrket has Just been opened In Paris where the b.ur of famous personages Is on sale. One may examine there and buy locks from the heads of royal, military, political and literary notabilities. Aa re in which various notabilities of past times are held. Nelson Is easily first. La.t June a wisp of about two dozen of the famous admiral s , hairs were knocked down for 125, and a he contrary. Is by no means ln demand, ERE Is a three legged chicken very much alive and In every way normal except for Us multiplicity of feet. The chicken was hatched ln an incubator In the conventional manner, and Is now being carefully reared ln the hope that It will propogate its peculiar species. All three of Its legs are perfectly formed, and in walking, except that It is somewhat lame. It moves about much the same aa other chickens. In standing It rests all three ot Its feet on the ground, thus form ing a regular tripod. China haa recently laaued an edict pro hibiting, except In the treaty ports, the aale ot metal rimmed spectacles. Tan ahoss are also tabooed, and any one deal ing ln them renders himself liable to de capitation. This latter drastic regulation la dus to ths fact that yellow is there the imperial color, to be worn by none aave members of the royal family. Restaurant keepers of Berlin are in the midst of a war with their guests as to whether "broedchen" shall be free with meals or be charged for ln the bill. From time Immemorial lier liners have eaten as many rolls ss they desired, but the res taurateurs determined to put the bread Into the reckoning. They hung up notice, to that effect In their dining room., but their guest, tore down the placarda and refused to pay for their "broedchen." see RELIGIOUS FANATICISM IN AMERICA. p-aaUJSJ.miJ,!...'..' III , L-WJSJSSSlSjWejaswaS T Is commonly supposed that religious . for collecting contributions will bs fanatlc'sm uf the sort which expresses 'In the foreground. Itself in self-torture is a thing of the re-I mole past, dating back to the Middle' At Oers. Germany, a man who had I .t Age. At this very day. however, sucn a tooth pulled sued the dentist for Lha abuses are to be found on ue American tooth, the dentist desiring to keeo it on nent. in Mexico. The accompanying account of Its curious thaua mi.i m. iihntnuranh . lulu . m f .xlran wnmen In Ini nivnar.hln . . I . n., ... v w . w v . r .. v ... ... ' --.' v. i eu vwiuu MTrlilesI hair swwsi Hues eg bruuUt W.it. lus act ef daing peaancs. Ths bowl used against Lbs dentist. . . : . . . 9