Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 01, 1906, COMIC SECTION, Image 38

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THE FIRST SILK HAT EVER WORN.
r
Remodelling the Nose. j Impure Food In Germany.
IT Is not more than Ave years since ey--ONSl,L GENERAL Ql'ENTHER. '
physician of Vienna hit upnn the Idea of' I Frankfort, writes about the trial of the
I Injecting: paraffin Into the flesh as a suo-
etltute for the fibrous tissue In the living
body. Because of an accident the treat
ment was for a while most unpopular, but
previous to this a number of remarkable
operations were performed. The physician
published the history of more than thirty
successful cases treated In this way, in
which "clefts and fistula were narrowed.
I cavltlfts hprp nnri there were rilled UP.
smallpox marks were taken out, sunken; designated for dog food, and even deleterl-
Bacterla and Files.
T!"5 ntory 'hat files were entirely harm
w rites annul me iriai 01 uu s less inrf .... . v. - a
V h.n..,l - . - a . .. , ...... ncn UBeilll in II1C IUIW VI
M nK 7 . """"' "cavengers was prevalent for many
which T .h. J""1 ,h .v"!,tct. ."T' .I1' .... V5 '"' I"" with the coming of bai
German press na mi t. .W.ndant1 w.. i"... w" exploded and the fly
was charrt , 7, V nr.l...'::,:':n askance, though the
food Urns and it mas proved lhat in hit; did was nnt unnJZ
..1.1 - .1 twamts TU. .
RESULT OF A HEAD ON COLLISION.
charged with violation of the pure' amount oVZi" :r.Cu.".u""..? ." '
a I. .a. aw. a i hi. Jl.a . """vii nit iuttl,
factory large quantities of spoiled hams,
decayed sides of pork, sausage cover. that to ascer ain this f,? k x?:T"",na mK,e'
had been used before, the Intestines of were car" tod on ., S' '""C?1 "T,1!
rattle and scraps of meat which had he?n vers.tv i ho. 21, Jk ,l'1,k,n V"'"!
Intr. . wmcn nan oeen nivmca
nm aara ron.nHaill.H thai f.lllnaT In Of tha'OUS Parts Of moat attrai-taH from lha Bar- a. 1 . " " Prepared. Ill I DP Side
cheek after removal of the upper Jaw was bage barrels, were by him converted Into was Infect,.!! J.?!?
by him converted Into was lnf. . .. ,""r,. w nicn;
sausages and sold a .rood oualltv Dro- ,....... ' " a .pec:ea or nirmless
ducts. . g(1e ' eis.iy nognized. In the oh.r
In -his defence ooher butchers and trade nutrient " "rh contalnln "terile;
experts testified that the use of some of medium 'for - " u"'1 88 a cult,,r'i
these substances was customary In sau- wr., ..',, p.ac.'e,iH- Common h use fl es
The State s nrose.-ut- ana " " "rn
sage manuractiire.
conp:rtment
- - - - , - - mm H a SMin ,
lng attorney demandod that the accus. d upon or eat f m, "V "(n to "llnt
repaired and a nerve divided for the relief
of neuralgia was prevented from growing
together again."
An eminent English surgein, who has
had much success In the same line of
work. In an address which he gave before
the Medical Graduates' College not long
ago, gave hie experience with forty-three
cases of sunken nose and three prolapses.
Among these cases there were no deaths,
no sloughing of the skin anJ the results
were permanent and good. Some cases
nutrient "ntSE,1"'."' Up"" the -'"rile
were found to ho trimmer hi v hard. It IS' characterl.tir. i , ' " Bna Produced
anxious wort anil neavy responsiomiy i- Kra nauour, ine niusi eminent myiniin1 experiment
t
be sentenced to one year's Imprisonment Infects th ro""1 wnlch been1 i
nr. s .. . , ..-L... ..... ,h """vteri iney were allows t ii.-.,...ui 5
urn vaia vii Civil IISUIV, uui Vila jtmalt ,t..n , vniuumi
court Imposed only fourteen days' Itnprls-, so thaf ml.. 11, ,,ne."tn'r side of the box
onment and $238 fine.
the opportunity!
O that thev mlv,a I
, ' oiiv llltVI'
This model sausage manufacturer also Him t.1" un"'ct with the culture me-!
which seemed hopeless were eminently u'ln,ledk armr barracks and other pub- whion had hpe"' 11w;,l" the bacterial
... , . jk ....... ,iiu uiaLnuuuns w n nis virions nruu in. nnipiA. ... .
UCCeSIUI mil tKlIIIB WHICH IVJ..ru rnnj - - -
oiiti. lha ihana nf nonnle's noses, and the in the Church of Scotland! is artrulnir for out by nnin . 'Tther carried
ml... k. If hn .imcrerts n Prcshvterlnn union IWhlch hn K "... molasses
.. vvn ill
one side of rhe box
HERE Is a picture of the first silk hat
ever worn. It made Its appearance In
the streets of London on January 17,
1TS7. It was worn by a Mr. John
Hetherlngton, a Iondon hatter, who took
this means of advertising his wares. Its
appearance almost caused a riot, and re
sulted in Its wearer being arrested and
New Oyster Market.
0YKTER3 of the most Interior quality,
Indigenous to the nearby coast re
gion, are brought to the markets of
Buenos Ayres and, notwithstanding
their very low grade, readily disposed of.
Oysters of a good cpiality, M. Heaupre. the
United States Minister says, would bring
a high price, have an enormous sale In the
city of Buenos Ayres. which ha a million
Inhabitants, and there Is no reason why
a most lucrative Industry of this kind could
not be established.
An Ancient Diver.
.J.
r 4
T:
'HE art of diving U, of course, a very
ancient one. and the ulio of ennnlv.
lnir nlr hv moana nf lha h.lm.l u-iu!
l,ii. i..:,ii- .' .v.' Pu-e wax
. . V ' r lnc a i .in c lq III til I,
o'der than is commonly ima lined. The
Illustration aocompanyln la from an
ancient drawing of a diver anl hU outfit
nnJc early In the last century.
T:
surgeon must be content If he succeeds .n
making a nose that shall be merely unno
tlceable. It Is no small matter to accomplish this
much, for the patients have sad stories to
tell of the ridicule, the staring In the
streets and 111 natured laughter which
make their lives a burden. But with a
nose which. If not a Greek model, will at
least permit the owner to go through life
unnoticed and freed from contempt the
surgeon has earned eternal gratttude.
Paraffin la a difficult material to use
and there are many tricks In the use of
... , . ... . . ,,,, It which must be learned before a eur-
in.1 hl?ri. in .h- . . ?TPf n Amer?'Un can remodel noses. So often some
Inal hat Is In the possession of an Amerl-j, wrcng Jufjt a the ,ast mom?nt.
a syringe leaks or cracks, the paraffin
I sets In the needle, or escapes above the
The total length of railways in Japan Is'pinton, or otherwise falls to do what It
no,w over 4..S00 miles. The gauge Is three' should. The method of Injection, says this
feet six Inches. authority, Is much the same, whether a
sunken nose Is to be remodelled or a
Isinua Is to have Its walls brought Into
, , i apposition or prolapse Is to be held up.
uanaie matting. )Tnft ,paramn fi put ln water that is well
N reply to Inquiries from a manufacturer above ite melting point, but not hot enough
of candle moulding machinery ln Clncln- to crack the bottle. Everything being
I nati. Consul General Roosevelt, of Brus- ready, draw tip four or five cubic centi
sela, says that the use of candle 1 grad- metres of paraffin; then hold the syringe
ually disappearing even ln reipoto districts undAr water, adjust the screw-nut an l
of the country, where petroleum Is now ln press out a drop or two of paraffin to rr.ke
very general use. In larao towns and lm- sure that It Is all right: then dip your
portant cities candles and petroleum have neodle for six or eight seconds Into wuterl
been superseded hy gas and electricity. that Is boiling or juM. off the boll, and
The condition of the Industry is not gooa, , men make the Injection. i
whloh Is principally attributed to the high) . . ...... I
P k' T' i f .tn.no.n,,1 Joseph Nix. the Wesleyan reformer, took
Although the use of candlea domest lo , g46 un t0 ,ed , a nlne .
Illuminating purp-vM. I. declining the,. tf.mp.r,nce me?Ung recently held In
still exist in Belgium .three Important "- ,.
ufactortes.
Materials used there In the manufac
ture of candles are stearin, stearic acld
and paraffin. Important quantities ofi
church candles, short, medium and very
long, simple and decorated, are also manu- j
factured In Belgium, About nine-tenths of
the general output Is exported. Thus It isi
shown that without the export trade the
manufacture of candles In Belgium would
be practically abandoned.
Candles are moulded by machinery. The
machines are of German, French and Eng
lish origin, the German made machine pre
dominating. The capacity of machines In
use varies from, eighty to four hundred
moulds. Average dally production la about
thirty-five thousand pounds (or each fac
tory. The candle Industry In the Venetian
provinces is a comparatively Important
one. The statistics fjr me pon or ventce
how that the exportation exceeded the
importation by about t'JlO.tTiO In the calen-
Hai vonr 1U T.ni-ffai rmantltleS ar ulSO
shipped t other parts of Italy, of which I
there Is no official record. Altogether the!
field Is a fair one for exploitation by manu
facturers of candle making machinery, al
though it Is a fact that the rapidly extend
ing use of electricity, even in mall vil
lages, correiativflv reduces the more prim
itive methods of Illumination. .
Th consumption of this article In Spain
Is fairly lar?i the principal uso being for
domestic purposes, coaches and churches.
Those for the latter are handmade and of
There la but one factory In the
district, located at devllle, using machinery
of French and German origin. The Arm
declined to suite the composition used In I
the manufacture of Its candles or the num
ber of moulds to the several machines.
ft '
. .... .
a??W
,4 '- "
-jw .j ' vim ' av
..ji-s . f '
IS u
iitf r
Remarkable Ice Formation.
A Fifteenth Century Clock.
H.-tT
e.
I : ;" ... .;f-. j
ml i ,, , a '"t. .v 1
B Vl.1T tiv'' ?V.-'"
which had been mixed vln """"" w"h
one side of A-elJ0-W bfl.c,er"1 ,n!
an hour Into, .11 " nozrn ""a. Half
sides .. . ' "lr connect ng the two
"ome r'coT.ctV.ri? t Bt"--"
As soon as th?. .! e ,tPrlle nutrient.
was co" "red and n,,?' ''"mPl"'f,"1 the d""
J?. !r. and Put "a.v to develoo. A
hundred colonies of Xi Lt? VV hM' a unl1ue P""'H"n in railroad history
formed on the sierfo n, . acl7il1 hm,.'n hls case the lighter locomotive actuallj
,P on collisions are by no means safety without Its being dislodged. A
nconnnon, but he remarkable re
sults of such an encounter, which oc
curred on a rallro.ul In Massachusetts
inarkahle feature of the collision was that
the front of the lower locomotive was very
slightly damaged in the encounter.
The Making of a Forest.
experiment was ie;iento,t with ,J ,1-1 ." ro,lp ov"r th engine It encountered and
let cultures with the .Um .i. .. ,,u-.fecame firmly wedged on top of
proved that the norm. r, T'l , ," " " 'ecure was Its ;
colonies v , fr"m ,"'llr.h .th:to draw H for
torioi i ,i. ., vu uueciea ma
from 'viV 6 ",rBt coml'rtment and not
from acclJental sources. Other groups of
flies were allowed to come In conlact with
Ini but wlth no Infected material,
and the yellow, red a'ld violet colonies
were not produced. Further proof that tho
tiles were the only means of transmitting
the bacteria was made hy placing the m
fected miterlal In the first compartment,
but with no lllcs. The result was that the
dishes of nutrient In this case produced no
colonies.
A Ixmdon advertiser offers for $IJ or a
gramophon a gray African parrot, six
So! years old. that can speak distinctly eiitht
secure was Its position that It was possible hundred words and uses sentences of from
considerable distance In i twenty to thirty words.
Honesty in Apple.
see
OF the many remarkable undertakings! The Canadian government Is trying to
of the United States Forestry Com- prevent slicrtslghu-d Canadian exporters
mission none will, be watched wltn'rom making the mistake of m.srepresent
more Interest than the experiments In. lng the fruit they send to English market",
forest making. The movement was begun It Is reported that some wholesale Cam
In 11X13 and was ln many ways the mostdian dealers In apples have falsely marked
Important work of the kind ever under- inferior shipments of fruit to England, and
taken. It Is a new nlan for .nlvlno- the 'n:t the practice of '"faelna- un" barrels
problem of forest destruction by growing and cases of apples with fine fruit, putting
new forests un.lt. K a , u Inferior nnnlcs 'n tho nontro rt IV,A hiar,.U
i ... uiiuvi hid lair Ul I1IH fillVCIH '".I ..... ......... ......
. new steel for tools Is being placed on ment. The s-ene of this endeavor Is In the an(1 ,non branding them as first quality,
the market. It can be hardened by simply !sand hills of Western Nebraska where the na i"'en frequent. To check this the ("ana
aeating to a high temperature and allow-commission hopes to cover 'these bare lIlan authorities have Imposed heavy fines
'I.!', to CO?' the alr To1" made out! reaches of drifting sand with sturdy nine 1,1 eacn case In wnich conviction was pro
of this steel do not become s.ift through forests. siuruy pine cuni(. Tje AuH.rU,an eX,or,eri hnve ,on
grow.ng hot while being worked. Tj the uninitiated the sp ;t selected seems mirkets hy the same shortsighted met ho ls,
The finest army Y. M. C. A. building In hopeless to the success of the undertaking. an1 wl" ne we lf ,ne' Profit by these
the world Is to be erected at Fort Leaven-ibut the scientists tell us that this region energet:c methods taken hy the Canadian
worth, Kan., the largest military post In1 was once the bottom of a sea It Is the aullllrltles. A market once lost by misri-p.
10 regain man
i the United States. It is a gift of a woman lowest point In this region and thus gets reaentatlnn is more difficult
-ho withholds her name from the public the drainage from the surrounding pla- to esUbll8h new market.
land It will cost Jti.OOO.
An Indian Newsboy.
Talking machines Wanted.
HK present prosperous stnte of trade
In Honduras has caused an Increased
Jim mi for phonographs and talking
machines of various kinds. Many of.
the small country stores are purchaslrg
phonographs for the amusement of their
patrons. Now that talking machines are
becoming so well known and liked the
demand for flrtt class h!h priced Instru
ments Is Increasing. Many persons are
sailing the cheaper machines originally
purchased to buy those uf a better grade.
The outlook ln Honduras for an increased
sale of phonographs and talking machines
very vncuuraging, ana ior meir sate aii i
Spanish-America offers a most attractive
market, one that should receive particular :
attention.
Lima, the historic capital of Peru, Is to
have a system of electric street railroads
operated by power obtained from fulls In
th Rlmac River, thirty miles from the ,
city. The cars used will be American and
so will the electric, machinery and the '
track. i
Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt rejoices In the
possession of a veritable thimble of Queen
Elizabeth.
A Royal Artist.
f
j If W)M
i
i.. -.'.
r
ao2
T:
HIS remarkable Ice formation Is not
an Inverted Icicle, but the result of
a rain storm beating upon a lamp
post In freesing weather. The wind.
which continued In the same direction, Is;
of course, responsible for the pecular
formation of the loe. The lamp post was
Increased thereby to several times its
natural slxe, and continued to wear its
coat of Ice for many days.
Bacon in Canada,
A-ONSUL HARVEY, of Fort
HV .il "'; fl UN
If- , m
i I!
f . i. . ... . ' .. a-..., V.II
mnaaian snore opposite BufTalo.
V shods some new light on the much dls
cussed subject of American bacon ln
Canada, giving the statement of some live I
stock men that Canadian often h.. . I
(inferior grade of hoga that are rejected by
I American packers, which may account for
(part of the general complaints against the
ammais from the Stales. Canadian pack
ers, however, are particular about the anl
jmala hey klU for export, as Canada cured
! bacon scIIb, the consul states, higher ln
jlrreat Britain than any other except the
'Danish. American packers should also
;note the sta;ement that Canadian bacon
I Is cured more than ours, which takes but
(a few hours, while the Canadian process
takes days. American bacon sells lower
ithan the home product at FWt Erie after
! paying two cents per pound duty.
I No beef cattle are exported to the States
from this district. Beef retails three cents
i higher per pound than In BufTalo. Among
i farm products going to Buffalo are lambs,
icalves, hides, live poultry end clover, tlm
jothy and blue grass seed in considerable
quantity. For racing purpose tiOO to 900
American horses are sent here annually,
while 97 Canadian horses, valued at $19,678,
were exi-orted from Fort Erie last year
to HufTilo and Mew York cltv Th.au la.ita.
HE clock shown In the accompanying were coach, draught, driving and hunting
Illustration Is the work of a Holland horses.
clockmaker of the fifteenth century.' The largest article of export from that
It works were md nf wn,i th district la natural gas ,wJilch Is produced
mechanism being kept In motion by the 1,1 laa-ge quantities. Most of It Is piped to
weight of two stones. Desnlte its cruda BiTilo, the amount being estimated at
imillpi irnaau.
ft t
tV..
;
.. -S a' f A -a, I
teaus, which Is a condition necessary fori
the growth of a forest. Though the top!
iSoll may he dry the soil underneath Is al-l
.ways moist, the very dryness of the sandj
above serving to keep the dampness from
evaporation, no matter how hot the sun1
iu7 snine upon it. There are certain trees
j mostly pines, which have Urge lap roots!
These grow downward to a great length
?hnedrorTH moh""-e which " stored
there and the trees are -well nm.ri.hort
growth fPfe heen known to make a
growth of from fifteen to eighteen feet In
ten year, under exactly the4 conditions
This part of Nebraska Is used for grax
lng. poor as It l , , . .. . .
1 hv Vi..v, , oiosi sorrounaea
i by rich farming lands. The co-operation
,L cattlemen has been secured by
fJfTfnment to keeP thla embryo forest
exTHmon5,ravae1 by flrM- Th two
Jr h S rfBeTV" wh'ch have been es
taoi.shed In this section comprise 211.0U0
acres, a nursery was established at Hal-
'Xf, h . h a"ey of ,he Mld,,le R'ver,
i-.h. , "T ,ee1 P-tected by
laths Nearly six hundred pounds of seed,
principally Western yellow pine and Jack
pine, were prepared for the spring sow
ing. Various scattered areas sre being
sown; later these, by extending the
amounts, are to be united Into one great
forest It will. Indeed, be a marvellous
undertaking, and. If successful, will change
the face of the plains.
A Mask Design.
Proposals for enabling persona to prepay
replies to letters sent abroad will be dis
cussed at the Postal Union Congress at
Rome next April.
London Stcne.
construction, after all these years It Is "'W-0'1" cubic feet per day.
sun able to run after a fashion and keep,
aomewhero non iha nrr.,,.f
El Mi1
mil 'ar
Plillnsnn)i av CV, . .l
j va. aiuaviug,
i pBW men. even after shaving them
I selves for years, understand the
I philosophy of the thing," said a
New York physician the other day. .
'The use of soap lather prior to shaving
the beard Is regarded merely as a means
or Facilitating the troublesome operation.
Soap Is said to extract the oilv mailers
jfrom the hair and thus to render It brittle
v mai m uiaue or tne rasor saws through
It easily, for, after all, shaving ts a deli
cate sawing process. With sensitive skins,
of course, a soap of good quality, and
preferably free from alkaline excess, Is
d"i!rahle.
"On (he other hand, It might be thoutrht
ANY of the royal personages In
urope have taken up as a fad aome
art work, ana in several casts n that n eco,. nf .ileal! o,ni
to be very proflolent The iM.ATA mor, ,.,,, i fhn . n.,. . .!
Three years ago one fifty-thousandth of
a pound of radium could be had in Lon
don for li. but now that the Austrian
r. i m . an n.nk h i.a ih. .. .. . . . , .v. ta no worw anmfliani i n a . . ...
K,.....,.rU ,c rinnon " , r , oeara more reaany than a pure soao or
of radium that amount-a mere speck- Tsarina of Russia, for Instance, is very superfat.e(i ,oap- ne corroi)ive offaH.t of
would cost t3S0. successful lr. carving In wood, and several tllkall ta IeavM n0 doubt .
t royal family of Great Brltatn are wh d(fBcrlptIon of ,oap .hou1 v"0
artists of no mean attainment. Herewith R., KKia, i,. 1 , HJ
No fewer than five Shakespearian plays , ,hn a picture of one of the grand- .J.0'! tlmtrt'knt.
were being given at di.Terent theatres in j..i. V ,k. vn of Fnil.in huMilv r-e th tn that of a saponlfler of the natural
Berlin during the lirsi week in February, nrtged In decorating a bok cover
NOVEL FORM OF COVERED WAGON.
f ..$.-w'a;':-.
s r.t.-? , ... -( . j - r-f r'- i
oil of the hair, ln spite of the fact that
thoe who use the raxor frequently cut
themselves. It Is rarely that snythln?
, more serious than a cut follows, the slight
i wound generally healing quickly, and the
!r:sk of septicaemia ariKing In this way
I would seem to be almost nil. In the ma
jority of cases It Is clear that the raxur
blade must be bacterlologlcally clean,
.which may be attributed to the fact that
probably It is dipped Into hot or sterilized
water before ue, or else that the soap
lat.her Is antiseptic. The latter explana
tion seems the more probable of the two
"The amount of soap rubbed on the skin
Is considerable If the shsvlng Is to be In
'any degree comfortable, and soap has con
siderable antiseptic power, a six per cent
solution being sufficient to destroy the
typhoid bacillus. There can be little doubt,
therefore, that the skin Is rendered sterile;
by the llbersl application of soap, and this
fact Is in favor of any cut that may be!
1 made remaining healthy, and without any!
; serious consequence. In a word, soap In
(he operation of shaving not only facili
tates the process, but plays the same valu-;
able rAle. when the shaver is unlucky!
enough to cut himself, as does the antlsep-.
tie In surgery.
T!
ENT wgnns take the plave of cur-
ing automobiles ln many ICuropran
countries, and since they offer much
of the earns comfort at a greatly re
duced expense they are In common use.
The latest dtsUn in V'lil wagons Is shown
ln the photograph reproduced herewith.
j Black Spanish lace shawls are pre
scribe! ror wear in r-i giana next sum
operation of housekeeping may be carried nler-..Tht.U. ,,wsuw. ?' ,ne carriage of
" V "
i ?C til.
j, ' ' t J . .,aS
Al
BOMBAY newsboy Is usually of II. e
Sutrl casf, which is several deriee
above thst 3t an ordinary coolie, iie
carries a sign, aa shown In the picture, j
telling the latest news of Interest. This,
! newsboy receives from ten to twelve cents
I or, rather, in Sudlan money, five to six i
annas, a day, one anna being equal to two
; cents of American money. The Bombay
newsboy wears shoes something uncom
mon for the Fait Indian native but he has
become a Christian and feels It necessary
to adopt some of the expensive habits ot
j Western civilization, which Is gradually
i being carried to the Far East.
.--
The Rev. Sllvesttr Hon.e has a billiard
room at Whltefleld Tsbernacle. London.
i " il J
I
' J ' ar.'
EN JONSON gained distinction as
prince of masiiue writers. He wrote
least twenty-nine, and thev were
performed by the several Inns In the
great banqueting hall at Whitehall which
James 1. built. The benchers promoted
such entertainments, having the nower of
I levying the necessary sums, which were
considerable, "Tim Triumph of Peace," for
example, costing lliifi.otin. The members of
he different Inns excelled In acting, sing
ing and dancing. The masque performed
before Her Majesty In 1594 gave her rpe
clal pleasure, and on the courtiers danc
ing a measure for her delectation after
ward she exclaimed. In her incisive fush
lon. "What! Shall we have bread nd
cheese after the banquet." This picture,
which decornted the programme, was from
the pencil of a noted cartoonist of that
lime.
! Secret of Sayagea.
CIVBN very low types of savages are able
I to do many things which the modern
Lsclentlst cannot explain, and sometimes
to beat the white man at his own game.
Servals le Roy, a conjurer, on one occa-
j slon took a trip up the Congo. His feats
of magic delighted the natives, and their
professional magicians would frequently
show the greatest Interest In his tricks. At
j last, however, he met one who was more
than his match. This man took an ordi
nary turnip and made It change Into a
! human face. How h did it the Belgian
conjurer has never succeeded ln dUcov-
ierlng.
Some of these African wizard profess
'to be able to turn themselves into lions or
I other animals, and so travel vast distances
and find out the plans of their enemies. Be
this as it may. It Is quite certain that
j these tribes have means of finding out with
telegraphic rapidity occurrences at great
distances. I
I About five years ago Dr. R. w. FWkin
I accompanied ilinln Pacha on a tour I
I through Uganda and the territory beyond I
It. The Doctor then travelled northward j
I toward tha Soudan. At last be got to'
jlado, atoou-t a thousand miles south of.
i Khartoum. One morning after his arrival
a koal wizard told him that during Ihe1
(trv1irtis night he had b.n at Mesohera el!
tf k, on -the Nile. &'M miles sway, and that
jtwo steam rs had Just arrived there.
I The Doctor, who had been away from civ-'
iillxation so lorg that he knew nothing of
the retaking of the Soudan, laughed at the
news. But the m'logo. or wizard. Insisted'
It was true, defcrlln-d the people on the
I boats and spoke of one Englishman, short,:
with a big beard, WTm had letters for Dr.
Felkin.
Queen Louise of Denmark Is said to be
the richest princess in Europe. Hhe Is be
lieved to have Inherited llo.U'Kl.uol) from
her mother's father, who was Prince
Frederick of the Netherlands. She re
ceived another fortune from her father.
King Charles of Sweden.
ON DON stone Is perhaps tne 1110.1 in-
irm"'.?. nlslorln TeUc in 1111 London. Kmployers of barbers In the West Knd
f rom 'his point when London was a 0f London are combining to do away with
itoman c ty distances were measured . tips. They say the tips are not only ob
all directions. To-day a busv air.. '',..... .in,i,.. ..... . ',. ,.
niniaea! I. 1. I. a ,i , iiuhmiub lu ........ v .... . w ...... o, " n v i"un ill
P' ..y. J''." '? rar,,fu".v Preserved. The, waste of time by the barbers In the foim
!ln
accompany illustration shows the method
cniijiujeu 10 preserve it.
of excess of attention to customers who
give the highest tips.
:t.tj.
STREET DANCER3 OF INDIA.
i im imit twstfc mm t
la-
. r w
-r-.fi
U 1
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i
V
.
'. S . t
. H
1 I r ..-'
. t v,. JW 14.. '?
a
ANTING .n India Is held In the high-
He said he was coming to Ladoi I J. . rL . " 7 ? . "lry-.. ' l" r",n tne aance they
; token of mirth and affection ln that hot '
on within.
f Til. I. .another "narrowest" building . . :
I v A a vi... w l. Wn I"1" iva. ill. uao- ... ,rl. ,,f arroteSoue tllturen 1'hi .
yr- of Sn!n and Mmm Kia. Th.. lia-.i. K,.iia, i i. . tor belitves that ne never was more than ,. Mr. 11M1,uiiv about hi. ver old Accompanied only by n Indian half.
Pull Mi.l Oasette remarks thst mh.n .v.J 1 . ". J ...T v. ,r' F a few miles from his native village In his " . n.nv ...n.i ar.a.i breed Lillian K. Malcolm, a w.m.:. i
AaVaaA , , ' " iii u . a r. k u i it T vfLiaiiieas ur 1 u S Carried . , , , V, ,. . . , 1 11,1 wa. ....... j - ... - - ... . ' ....... .,.,-
,... v ..ui ,Z . u, ' " ' "' r was -.bout t o on sucv-essfully wltr.ln its narrow mail. ,:,- " ,fm T!',ln l"V ni1 others ,tl.llln(, ,ne dancing girls are the musicians. Ing pros pan tor In Nevada, .ays she din
waxrey Yhol. u full hlnoded Creek la- u rH ,A th booksellers nf Taiminn ., i i . ., A . ' ,v. i .... nf his kill. mu.-t have a far greater com- ..... ..i.uin w.-l .1 i,iin. - i.i...a .., ,i.fl in lha f.ii.ihln. nf i.,a u-
1 . ., , . , ........ - - . . . ,r J in unv I . . . . aj,ia:eJt VI I . e aV - , eai i. n -- . . .... a i ,, u vi - - - " ...w a iiuri.i
a lan, .evrr.ty-tlvt v ,i! a o' age. hid h s ......... n.i i . it i.. :.-n!v iha .i.a.i.. .i., a. ...v.-. ,i . r.. . , t ,.n.i over tne mynter.es of lelratrat.li- ...... i . .. tk.. . j .. vi,.i,ni , I,.. ..f I va i h v.. iia.u i.i- ... ....a.
' h . h "hr day i Uk nui.ei. '-'- n-and for Uvurgs iandt ' Conauvlo." .occupied for many years. ,than any Laroptato. Imium the dancing g.rls whirl slaiul and copper and gold on. If her story of lite
Tk waou is so arraiiged that ths entirei J, lacks. , ' Stickle eacn uititr un me nu aua cum, a nnd oe oorreci it is morui nuiiiuiis.
iiiiivj' v .. . .. jt " ' Ing Illustration, with each other, perdu
8
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