. rt v j r Elephants (Copyright, 1S1 br Frn(c O. Carpenter.) ponaenco ci 1 no f)oe. 1 nave spent the day lilting tb law ml'.la and lumber yard! of Ran goon, where the elephants aid In preparing teakwood for ahlp ANGOOX, 1910. (Sixsclal Corre- ment abroad., Teak Is on of the chief ex ports of Burma. It In to valuable that It in aold by the ton, and It brings in I7.OW.000 or SS.OOO.OOO a year. The trees ure girdled In th forests and after cutting are floated down the streams and rivers tf Rangoon. Both In the foreits Hj at the ports the handling of the Umber Is done by ele phants. They drag the lora to the streams and arrange the booms; they stack the planks and they carry all sorts of lumber t the direction of their masters. Every sawmill baa Its elephants and there are some cempasias which employ several hun Th average Institution, however, can afford but few. for the animals are costly, a green ono bringing 1400 and a prise worker often as much as 1.V0. The elephans come from the forests of Vpper Burma. The wild ones are all owned by the government, which has an elephant department to catch and care for (hem. The elephant commissioner keeps track of the wild herds and annually sends out men to bunt them and catch the young bulls. The cow elephants and a certain number of the bulla are turned back lato the forests. The bull calves are kept and trained and are finally being retained for the government use. ' In bunting the elephants, they are some times captured In pits and sometimes led Into corrals by means of tame elephants trained for the purpose. The tame beasts mix with the wild ones and lead them Into the pens, whereupon the elephant hunters sort out from the wild ones those they wish to keep and turn the others back into the forests. Most of the elephants at Ran goon have come from the government herds. la the Le taker Yards. I wish I could show you some of the huge beasts at work In the yards. They lift great logs on their tusks and stack them In piles. They carry timbers to the saws and lay the planks in order for ship ment. Their every action shows reason and they seem to calculate cause and effect. At one sawmill I saw two beaata, each as gether. . Each had a Burman, clad In big as Jumbo,' piling lumber, working to turban and gown, seated upon his head, and he was directed by him. The man used both hand and heel as well as word of mouth to tell the elephant what to do, and in addition a sharp brass hook which he Jabbed into bim if he did not obey. The logs handled were of great weight. I measured some which were twenty ft-et long and thick as a cider barrel. Either of these two elephants could lift one such log on his tusks and carry it across the yard. lie would kneel down before the middle of a log, crowd hla tusks under it and then, throwing hla great trunk over the top, would raise it bodily and carry It to the truck upon which Is was to be pushed to the buxs saw. If the log proved very heavy he would rest one end on the ground' and drag It. In toother part of the yard I watched an elephant piling lumber. He mould lift the timbers up and lay them down on the ethers as evenly as though he hsd meas ured each piece. Sometimes he rested a Vog on the pile and pushed It into place with his trunk. At ottur times he kicked It up ith his right hind foot. In some eases where It was neceasary to caiTy two legs at a time the men tied a ropi around them and the elephant would pick up the end of the rope with his trunk and placa tt aver his tusk and then, raising his iitad. walk off with It. The elephants gather up the scraps of lumber and lay them ao that the workmen can rope them into bundles They also work at piling the boards and loading them for the steameia The managers tell me many of these beasta are employed In the forests and at the lumber camps up country. They are used for all sorts of heavy transpor- Heroes in EX can well puse a moment In their busy round of affairs to contemplate the deed of a Tel low mortal when he serte. his -Z l country or his n.ighbors. We ...a Tieed not fur- th. cnniM'a muuth nr the ei.gu'fing aave to merit praise. Deeds aorthily performed, without ttought of reuard, atthout knowledge that the facta would become known, without an applauJing throng to spur one on. are the kind lint show heroism is not a lost trait. When on Ivbruaiy a the lihltiouse keeper at Green ledgc, ' Conn., rowed ashore, tclllr.g his assistant 10 remain in charge until his return, the young man thought little of the solitude. He was faithful to his duty, and for a day vr two did not greatly concern himself about the auaenca of hi. chief. But at th. end of aeek, when he had beu keeping vigil T-Khi aid day, fur the fog along the coast made It necej.iar,'y t keep the gaso- T"-" engtnea running tj sound the fg m, In .ddittun t ke pinj the light. auroJrg at bight. LU aaislaut was so tx- -111. d 1 umber yard, of Ran- according to the depth of th. water, tow- Hi! V':' ; . l,,' ' 7'.-; V . . . . -J ah 7 I" . "J? Ml as Lumber Shovers a Feature of Burmese Industrial Life taticn. Ther not onW carry the logs to the streams, but aid In forming the rafts and booms. Tliey wade or swim about, according to the depth of the water, tow ing the lops this way and that. When the logs come to the ports they break the booms by pushing out the key log. They then take the timbers out of the water and put them on the cara, which earry them to tlje mills. . In some places the elephants work to gether, and I am told there are boss ele phants which keep the others up to their work and pound them with their' trunks when they lag. In some yards each ele phant has Its own job, one class being used to carry bay for the stables and to mix the bran, molasses and other food which form the dally rations of the beasts in that establishment. Beasts Watch Waiek the Clack. These elephants at Rangoon are partic ular as to their working hours. They seem to almost watch the clock, for they get restless as the noon hour approaches and top now and then to wait for the bell. When the whistle sounds and the bell' rings at 12 o'clock they will drop what ever they have on their tusks and bolt for the feeding sheds. It Is the same at night. I am told they have to be carefully fed and that each must have his bath twice a day. At one of the yards I saw them washing the beasts. The elephants sat down while buckets of water were thrown over them. After that their masters UUB" rougn orusnes ana curried them, as It were, all over. As the water was dsshed upon them they wagged their tails and flapped their ears and grunted in Joy. I asked one of the men if the beasts were hard to handle. He replied: "No, sight of a mouse, for fear, perhaps, that the animal may run up his trunk. As I left one of the sswmills 1 threw a piece of silver to the man on the biggest elephant. He rubbed the beast's head with his heel and thereupon the elephant threw his great trunk high Into the air and gave me a royal salute. " White Eleahaat. Burma ranks with Slam as the Isnd of the white elephant. The people here are Buddhists, and they believe that th. souls of human beings, when they pass away. go Into the bodies of animals. Moreover, they think that th. .plrlt. of th. good and noble go Into the bodies of whits anl- and noble go into the bodies of whits ani mals, and aa the elephant 1. one of th. largest of beaata, every white elephant contains the soul of a hero. King Thlbaw, the last native ruler -of Burma, had a palace for his white elephants, and they were treated like kings. When they went out umbrella, of white and gold were held over them, and they bad golden tassels ln their ear. and golden plat, on their fore- 1 j. 1 . . . , . ur.ua. ibcj tn uimra oany in aceniea Maters and they drank out of vessels dec- Oa Ated Willi iTOld. Each bflmt ha.il h1 nm-n ttendAnU, mho did notblnc but wait upon mis roai ncast. 11 naa tta place upon the flag and also upen the principal coins. With th. awakening of the country and the new movements, however, auper.tltions ar. passing away. Tb. better cla.se. think much aa we do. and his majeaty the king keep, his whit, elephants only out of sentiment and respect for the beliefs of his Civil Life , , hausted that with difficulty he dragged uiinKiL iiwuu cm ne neia to his post, and after nine da)., when his food sup ply a a exhausted, relief came. His predicament became known through the fact that his chief had forged a check and left the vicinity. This led to an in vestigation and the succoring of the vigil keeper. Such monotony as he expert em. id often drives lishtt.ouiks keeper, in sane. He was nut alone fighting against death by siarvatijn. but he waa keeping the lights burning and tlie fug horn sound ing the warning bias is. It waa a case of human endurance, a .id the man of deter mination won. Such htrulsm aa his is the kind that counts. He did fcot look for the plaudits of the world. Ilia thoughts were only of bis duty, lie had to concern about ad vancement, and tne pay Is not sufficient to make a man strive aa this man did. lie did his duty. The opportunity does not cuine to every man to show sucti traits, but every man ruuuld be encouraged to set as worthy an example IX wcaaiuu x e auuc. VYsjLinioA HcraliL - .. ,1,... anarv ihev mik no bnnea of lDry 100"o airty rauier tnan white. , ... r - ; ' - inui men worn as hard as the animals and killmrtuT" 1 ! their color come, from a ' ,uck and PPerlty. projected, it will be the gateway to west- The cap,tal. Rangoon, from a-here I write. ,he white sweat stand, out uTon th"r The elephant Is touchy and if anything dlBe"8 somewhat like leprosy, and that Gatew.r"7oi-.h f1"" " WeIL Tn' citr h" now a '?Ut ,Wenty mUe from thft mouth ot b,ack 'kin they drag th. freight on- creep. uTder the Set on hi. back he .. sometimes cause, the animal sffected I writ" thU Tter in "hat ishe most th UP UaV.d, "L'TT"' th. "f'V m " grows restle,and cannot work well, to go cr.ay. Indeed, a white elephant is up-to-date, booming cUy of the far ,1 , eitend'' Ck laU m , Z he greatest of the own.d by tne Europeans, and even auto! 1.1., wui ...mh.. i.u. . .. ,ul . ' ooommg city of the far east, the flat alluvial Irawadi oelta. It la backed world s great rivers. It rises somewhere In mobiles, with Hindoo ,h.ff. . . - " ' k " . v... - . nu ai . ...... rejoicuiar. lor ir 1 a innkMi imin . . - vrnrii nrf in xw n.nn .1. .1 - j .. 1 ..m. in tv . k. t.. ... a i .1 him. and the man who found a white ele- "n luau "lti lnstrumenta of averted into the drainage ditches the soil without th. .7.7 oi . ei . . k ' na BMWin- lool"1 morB Mohammedan women, close veiled; Arab, phant and brought it to the palace was ) 10 ork to oif- the crk 1 furnish the motive medium for a means of YrLsat? Th ,;ke D" "f th' ,rTf'at Prt f Kllnop lh,n ,n f" cap''- Ea,t lndUn oIdl"s in tur. ennobled, and paid no taiea for th. rest trOUb! W't', lh Bi ,nd L,tue PapUllon "oatlng of the monster dredge barges machmes hav.T m?rmm .d.r'dC",S '" he l0 cra " i"t Chinese with queues hanging of hi. life. When th. British took the their verdict. which ar. to eat their way through ahfng ut 100 (So cub" ylrt a m nTh p T T tH f th &,'dn d" their ",k " th counts they captured th. whit, eleph.nt.. Whereat the farmer folk determined the lh ' artificial water- etch Th" whole oratfon of cuttinTtn h r "m" ,','am t"."" ",'r I B ' P"e.', h" r,r1e white elephant has any semblance of roy- "era set about the work of design- '"'" ' operation com- eralcs from Gilmore to Fspilllon came right UD to the wharvea and we and lumber vard. in h. .. . JhT .'! th,r. worship him, and th. kin. now and ute t VI. . ,', T turtle " spel.tZ eeed1nei f. " floatI"8 dcr'"'t" Warding house to be found in all As. wheel, saw a new picture of til. Burmese then ride, out upon on. in great state. or l-.ol0 a. . tU forngaln t0 lh -orkmen. They are aorkihg at This city 1. more cosmopolitan than bl.graph .how. which 1. on. of th. .tran,. The national coat of arm. la a picture of f ..' . .,."Pl " f1111"" " een fit . ' "na nd utl ',ar" craft, aa. hom( Dro. ri. Calcutta. Cairo or Constantinople. It 1. est of the f.r east. Ml, , - l' -'", - , . : . . . - 1IM r, lanas or we h ? . 1 ' - '. '.',. A . "tV -- . - - . ... 'Jill world, and It exports mors km than a. c I 1 l - r r - ' i - -, 1 - ' . , " -- ' vju avv fw.wyvw. II :. ..' I ; - ! 1 ... . v V - v III America. Jr. ELEPHAhTT psopla. He hag elephant stables connected with his oalaoes. and there are several of these so-cslled white animals in the stalls, t 1... .... i kok- Th ,ra h.mM tn Ktonm .,, . ... were waicnea Dy Keepers, wbo cnewea tna K.t.t . .v. .u a- fc- aa Siva m ymk I. au WIS (I MJm tut UUUQ1 the ei.phanta perform for me. color Showing AP1LUON CREEK will soon P ce out of a Job. It is Ume. Knr W V ear a 1 cantiiriaa -a. ... bond stream has L. uf Uh drjunago for the mobt cenalHaay eT p.n.m .Uk D laxy niea- PPUon creek is a graceful genius of Indolence, ln somnolence, as always procrastinating of carrying the ahl,.h n 1 11 . . I , . l geologically put in commla.Vn " w iuiwku 1. ntn in. rm . . . . ' - -norrunateiy for that ambitlonlesa, slug- ard "treamlet. the farmer folk of '"rn Isebr!lk tre littUe for the cul- tlvatlon of scenerv at th. e .11 i 4i- . ","UMU" 01 "CI cree to lie un- productive and worse than ' " man uiseit-Jia, So , w neMime ana techn.ci en- diminutive, will bmm. but certain aavy. meaningless lines on the old maps. Seventeen miles of canal, will do the work. COSt CI SO miictt naa . . . . of the richest land In Nebraska. , , ..." Um of approalmately 30.O00 1. to be expended in tne aramage district within the little " " 7 f""-" J oetora completion on May I, 1U. This mean, si- (L -u-i a 1C1Hureiy wastrel Bcrt drive of Omaha, th. market center of th. In th. n,. ,.r , J deaoslt i sn , ,hr, .hor ""rnoon I took a . i . ..... -rf . iiuui . uvj iiia wrenr inina 11 in. nmn r m. c Fn i ni unnrr ine irnnn iun. I ni m.. . . . 01 aay carrying off the water meat i.t,a -.iu . ' .. . " w " ----- -- out into tne countrr. The basin when It chose, but almost fr.r .h. , . " " . . """" "uo . . ' . n overhead trolley, and the .iiowins 11 10 tie about this It .tray, aimlessly about w.v- 1." V...T:. I T" . 1. ZL u'' ' elgh. " '1! ."..A; ,1,ndo ,n Jcket calico trousers, and water to the Missouri asaln frm i,.-"', ' V.t." "4r. " V.. . . J"e m"" .Z .ul Is .u ro, J""t nd flnk 'h1- lu ii 11 11 11 mm . rtimi........ ...... muui.(ini imj i ... in in. ' . n, r. .... a... "he Para 11 Inn lk.:n. r.; . . .. flourishing title. Indeed soellsTr. f-m k Ur ,h'r y throun the soil, tossing signed to carry off all the water of the loitering stream'-et. ..1 . "ide thre nd half cubic ard r mUhout "'erflow, even at flood time. The have bsnded together and at an aaLa " ' mouUirul- Th "-"test of thr ma- fT' ot the cut I. to be en- i TIIE CtttAITA SUNDAY BEE: ATOIL 4. IK LUMBER UPPER BUHMA tisually a rogue elephant, M vne which should, always be watched and never al- lowed to go loose, Th .inh.nt. nn In tahtt at. Hiss fit Bangkok are from the northern tart of qi am . . 01 tna country oeiong to - the klna-. hut -th. m.n .-a - " sw a-'ea-a i S4 VS ga ,rhit" elephant is still rewarded, and the a(,vent of new causes general Lazy Papio How to that for a trifle more than $13 an acre lard which 1. r,. e ....... . a ZZT. , ZTT! IV'l reclamation nroleet hr 1- h'd noW tor "M The salvation of th. ion, e, .a i . . i . i i . . . ... .a. C." . !T " '"er, discharging Into wiu aaieauun nvgr na nw k -s-r rannb T the construction of the mighty drain- system which Is to turn the marshes of the flood plain of the Big and Little Pinkii lntn . t, "ww, a. wi a 1 vv - uuoi area, a great array or machinery Is being put into use tne jeeMna'. Itarnint mat nf . in cree-t are to be made to do some work. Papio near Sey mour lake. Each of these dredging machines consists of heavy barges of large earning capacity equipped with moiisLer machine, which "tuu iuiuc, VI 111 11 VI MJI 111 Tn" Lunching of the Mud Turtle was not an J'rif of ceremony. T-- automobile load, of engineers and contractors, to- gether with the men who have bullded the unnanasome boat, were ail that gathered to see her slip down the a.ys into the" tuuia nave Deen nouanr siir.mna nrr ha r u . ,1,. 1 1 . nn min the ... m-mi inrim. ...... 1 -- ' -a mu earrv Jlljfc as, iPW ir.ini risT rtfak inan CI f If 1 T cr at sb'It vaia. 1 ,r I at.. - m n Ban n n r im mra raai t at at l I sii,a. . IJIULHlOny IB 0 M ACMlnn .ha kar A- J j r,1atl. k..HJIn . I : " u-u ahnt.t th. iw.i .J , L. . ,n U1 general ana me machinery to be put aboard "v ' icw url""- a Burmese girl, dressed In a cotton aa. aoout tnat little Job direction of th. m i.nmi.. . .i.. . , . . win mnfi, .v.. ....... . . . . . . - 17, 1910. . till . " ' ' ..I ' -( Ml in 'trmirisr'ifi,'' iW Ranjroon Is the capital of Burma, a-roviner faster than ralrutta. It la It alreadv .t.n. thlrrf amo th. a-reat TiQriM f f h Tnrl'as amnlra rmr1lnr th , as " ' heel, of Bombav. and th.r. ar- manv h L propnesy mat it wui eventually be tne Dig- -. .i, .... T .1 w . aa vaa. v awufcaasaaa nsia, Jj lUff HOI Q SC. k the mouth of the Irawadi. It forms the only rate to one of the richest valleys of the Behave '. ' ". ' ""u urf n n- - nt'iatua uuiL anil nillfMl m nt a ..r 1. .h. had r.r .... . ' . .... t.r. where It I. now Ving t ed ,h .1,. . w.- "... "eavy lumber and timbers. A crane eighty feet long weighing twenty tons will carry the big dredge bucket. - The lower end of the drainage sstem where the cut is .ometime. twentv e'rht . e.Bni leel in deuta, is beinar cut hv hi th. contractor call In, technical i,hi..r. . .... 9 M-o- t the vality. of the creeks.r The big canal will cave a waterway of 110 feet, while the amaller ill have a waternay of .ixty feet. These big canals ' the use of the soil ex- The eicavation work is being done by the Pollard-Campbell Dredging company of Omaha The Towl engineering comn.nv of Omaha and Kanaas City was employed by the etorkboider. of the district out the work. to lay 1 ....... vu-t OIC Lllff IVilU (JlaVBB. K 1 1 I I D IT DaTm-asll m Ua w 1 w ..... BUUv iwc .. j aa, inq j a cunmrucva or - - 1 " was mron over ner shoulders Thltf ma.'liUa Ae.aa. Ji .1 erecuun ot nign oanas on and the river I. now filed with gr,at . earner, loadm, for Japan. China, Aus- tralia, India. Europe and North and South Among them are river boats and barges which have brought rice In from the country, and there are great fleets at the mllla loading and unloading their cargoes. Rice Is the money crop of the country and It makes the Burmese comparatively rich. Banna la a Blra'a Eye. But. before I go further, let me give you a birdseye view of this country. You all know its location. Better perhaps than the Bostonlan, who. when asked where It was, replied: "Burma? Burma? Of course I know where It Is. I have a cousin out there, but be calls It Bermuda." The Burma from wbih I am writing Is away off hue on the opus!te side of the world. It lies nesr the eastern shores of the Bay uf Bengal, several hundred miles south of the Himalaya mountains and Jimt across the way from the peninsula of Hin dustan, on the north It rens close to Tibet, and on the east it skirts the Chinese province of Tunnan .and French Indo China. with the Siamese states on the vuuin. inn country is as Jong as irom Canada to ,h. Mexican gulf and wider than from New Tork to Cleveland. It is bigger south. Tho country is as long as from .h. J.-. n . .v.. n .... uEitueaaaf Ve tnsj DL-sMlinu ws.,.i- a. A i 1 . ,A innnoA .7 -,k .a l-I ... ' best dressed and most lovable people of . . " v ASllsV On the Irawaal. Tibet and flows a thouaand rmlea through this country before It reaches the sea It carries oown so mucn silt mat tne due a atet. of the Buy of Bengal are made yellow by It. In coming here we traveled for hours through what looked like pea soup before we caught sight of land, and In the river Itself the water was as brown " 11 I'. 11 as, 1 it 11 nruiiiiriiL III Lilt- tn . 1 1 I II If 1 1 1 ' aKa-3 ma; Biuiue FUCIC eS h.,- ... . . ... The dredge, are alaay. kept work- in. ,k. , . scour the course clean. . -'omin P to Rangoun the stream Is often several miles wide and the shore, ' ,h moa,h fHr Part tht huE8sI the Bor,h b,nK we cou,1 ard!y ,, . k. m.,tt, .... " " t,;n,m' wnere tne Burma on company has t m Mnnrmmia rat injaa-iaaa ti1 t hun mtmm rrA " -" ...v. "-a.u Vti -iiit.ii, fKn luuiurr East Indian rather than ku-.tiese, and It Restored Lite XTtlE.N' artificial respiration, and the untiriiig efforts of two hospital physicians, saved the lifs of -Baby" Wilke, I weeks' old. son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wilke of 1S8 Lynch street, naMu. j Brooklyn, ln the Eastern District hospital of thst borough. The little fellow was so close to death that all tests to detect breathing failed to show anything; th pulse practically was still, snd it was al most lirposib! to detect any action of the heart for at leaat fifteen minute, at times. The body, too, waa cold, rigid and discolored. Notwithstanding such discouraging con dlUonx, Drs. Dlebuvlcski and Cohn re- -- i""u. intjr were rewaroea finally py see- ..... , ..ant afterward th, youngster opened Its eye. and Ugan to cry. Mother', milk was placed lu a dropper and supplied to hh trUU " Um' ,n ,,!W hour, he baby was well enough to nu... naturally, and it 1. Uu,ught now It 1. out c danger. Those who saw the child aay they never ki.e of a case In which a person so near death was dragged ba-k to life. There were those who instated the baby was dad. The doctors detected, however. Jul ........ .... .k..v a wun ana aevotea heir energy and ki:i to strengthening It. has people of every nation and of a1 most every tribe of the Asiatic continent. It has 60.000 Chinese, a large number of Slalav R AAA .L lOO.Wo' IndlansTrom ai par U o?Wnd" .,.. The people ar. of wlors. black, while, yellow and brown, and th.v all sorts of costumes, Th. t-i.. coolies are naked, except tor a clota round the waist ajid a red or whita turban. Their black skins shine like Jet under the tropical sun. Many of the Chinese are rich, and they are clad li Uks or fine cottons, while the Burmese strut about In silk skirts of the most delicate colors, their heads covered with gorgeous silk turbans. They wear'Jack- of silk or fine cotton, and move about buman butterflies here and there trough the crowd. In addition there are tall-hatted. long-coated Parseea from Bombay, worshipers of fire, who are da- vot1 to banking and. trading, and lean, skinny black Chettles. money lenders Irom a,"r' who ear only a aheet of cotton wrapped" around their bare ter- sons. There are Indian boys In cape of gold thread, cotton Jackets and waist cloths; Hindoo women with rings in their noses, and Burmese girls clad In cotton or silk, with plugs in their ears. The costumes are so many I cannot describe them. Oa the Streets. t.rti Jouhtrt"hr.,1c,ty"bl.ULr olTZr? animals, and in strange vehicle!. tS ' ' TBMCjes. TtlB DM Ha n ITBf a K f as V.. V, - .7 iivj uj , m J HOW Of ""f.1'? haU,.ld bjr n Iodla 7 nd "y ranuw) or uurmin. Thi heavr freight la .k . . ' irejgnx is a ragged oer the roads in carts by the humped cattle of Hindu stan, and great loads of goods are pushed ana puuea along by half-naked men. The bans. I rids about in a gharry at a cost of about 10 cents a trip, and my baggage was carried from the steamer to the hotel , tart drawn by breech-clouted Hln- doo,. f)n the way I saw a Burman riding a bicycle plated with nickle He had. pu,w hls red ,Uk ,kirt h, thighs, and I observed that he had silver clasps on each lg. Ju.t over the knee, to li s. I .a. I TI. . ..... ann llf rmlsrht mm Via. a saasa sasj g vV. treet car trip railway was cars were " " classes, tne rir.t of I n order to th. an,.", T ona- .ln ,order 10 tn People I rode Bh. harf f.t tirar ln her h.Bd. .d .moke. Behind roe were two Hindoos wearing skull caps embroidered with gold, nl Burmese gentleman, well clad and wearing amber plugs in his ears. In front . . ... . . t. . cuimcn woman, wun a baby lit her arms. The child's head was shaved a i v.twi, vAt-triJiiiiB k jncn oa in rrown 1110 viae 01 a aoiiar. Ana men tnere vr FRANK ' Q. CARPENTER. to a Baby The baby, who ha. not yet been named was taken to the hospital on February II. It had been suffering from an ailment which the outside physician, had been unable to dlagnosa or to cute. Drs. Ub- ovlcakl and Cohen examined th. patient ,n1 "-' 11 wss suffering from stomach troub.e. A sedative waa administered. The case waa watched closely. On Thursday nlaht the baby went Into convluslons. Its body became blue and Its pulse dropped to pi actually nothing. Red and black splotches appeared on the skin. Hot and cold water plunges were used. There was no response. Oxygen then waa given, but without affect. The form stif fened and the eyes turned upward. Mir- ur ana otner tests ror breath were applied They showed no traces of the child's breath There was a warm area on tne shoulders and the chest, and that in,plrM th. Aoolon wkh K , Uley .ucceeded In bringing the child back to consciousness trom " ""t'J early ye.terd.r th. DHbJr w4, r.vked t. ft of J vul.lons. with a particularly severe one 4t , &eloctu Tbit llra evfn fh doefo.. thought life extinct. They continued, how- ever, to force oxygen Into baby's lung, and to resort to artificial respiration, It was not until fifteen minutes after. waid that the heart, lungs, resn'rator oigana, ana the pulae began to thomselvea. Ntw Tork Prats, y. , J i ; itf '.T1S-- .-0-1 i a mi jj ''.'j.t lot , 1 t . en .s :! 1 -.J 7 :