THE BEE: OMAHA. SATURDAY. MAY 14. 1010. 19 I HUMOUR ; t ' M . . i .7 ."I SIDELIGHTS ALONG WASHINGTON BYWAYS LITTLE SE1MON' KM HIE WI0B1 EN 0) Spiritualism and MK' Things You Want to Know ' aletl letter I lots. 4 1 . (Pi T '' .'( Hi;- nisr Member of congress, like most ntticr folkK, believe In the old saying that all the world lovci a. lover, and they ai smiling benevolently at the latest recruit to the ranm of Pan Cupid. Henry Clayton, representative In the hoimo from Alabama, wan famed unill re cently for his readiness to sing ling and loud the praises of the democratic party. He did this on the floor of the house us , Often as he could do so without making: It , appear that he desired to have ills name in the Congressional Record as often as Robert Hi ucn Mhcoii of Arkansas. When , Mr. Clayton hd any pent-up feeling I'out the Iniriuiiy of the republican party, fl did not feel like expressing- his views In the house, he at-scinblcd his er nles around him at his hotel and told of the ' vices of the U. O. I. und of the virtues ot ( Miss Democracy, lie came pretty nearly I being a man's man. He lived with men i and spent all his time with them. Now it Is all changed. Henry Clayton la ' married. No longer can lie be found lean ing back In a hotel chair, careless of the ! approaching hour of nildliiRht. In th old ( days after the house had adjourned Clay ton walked down town with Ollie James nd Tom Heflln. Clayton continues to-walk down town each night after the house ad 1 Journs. but his old time friends are ' barred. He permits no one to Intrude when his bride joins him at the Capitol for ; a walk home, f Clayton Is so enraptured with married life that he cannot stop talking about it. When he save hla bachelor dlnne.r he began by lifting his glass and remarking fer vently, ."Here's to tho ladles, Ood bless them." The next night he was toastmaa ter at a democratic dinner and as he ln troduced each of the speakers he proposed l toast to the ladies in the same language. I (ienrral Method of I'repnrlnn Meat for Ile Table. ', The question of the amount and charac- ter of the ingredients which escape from I the meat and other changes occurring In It during cooking is too complicated to be . discussed in detail here. Much careful ex perimenting along these lines has been done In experiment station and other laboratories, and the results Khow that the losses vary considerably with the method ot cooking employed, being of course greatest where small pieces of meat are aubjected to prolonged cooking. Among the principal conclusions drawn !rom the experiments referred to are tho following: Tho chief loss In weight when meat la cooked is due to the driving off of k water. When beef Is cooked by pan broll ing that Is, seared In a hot, greased pan, a common cooking process no great loss of nutritions results, vartlcularly if the fat and other substances adhering to the pan are utilized In the preparation of ' gravy. When beef Is cooked by boiling, there is a loss of 3 to 20 per cent of ma- terial present, though this la not an actual 1 loss it the broth Is utilized for soup or in some similar way. Kven In the case of meat W'blch Is "used' for the preporatlon of beef tea or broth, the losses of nutritive material are apparently small, though much of the flavoring matter has been re nrnwVt The amount of fat found In broth vm'i'."' directly with the amount originally presentfln the meat; the fatter the meat the greater the quantity of fat In the broth. The loaa of water In cooking varies In versely with the fatness of the meat; that In, the fatter the meat the smaller Uut 'linkage duo to lots of water. In cooked meat the loss ot various constituents la In versely proportional to the i-lze ot the cut, In other; words, the smaller the piece of meat the greater the percentage of loss. Loss also appeals to be dependent some what upon the length of time the cooking Is contlriutd. When pieces of meal weigh ing one and one-halC to five pounds are cooked Jin water somew hat, under the boil ing polut there appears to be little differ ence in' the amount of material found in t broth whether the meat 1h placed In cold water cr hot water at the beginning of the cooking period. When meat is roasted In the oven the amount of material re moved 1 somewhat affected by the charac Types We Meet Every Day 1 BY BOBBIE BABBLE. Says Trivia, "Well I must confess I've taken to fly-fishing less Because- 1 like this outdoor spoil I And mqr because the natty sort i Of clothes one weura when angling seems To fit my modiste's maddest dreams; I Fish ho I will, yet 1 must say T big ones always get away! "And sometimes as I whip the streams My ught stray far In Idle dreams, 'Jj ayly here and there Then suddenly I am aware Of springing rod and whirring reel; i I feel the shock from head to heel; With utmost science then I play Alas! the big fish gets away! . ' But when a tiny little mite Cornea leaping up and takes a bit t He's sure to ruin my best fly. And, though I land him high and dry, He's always such a little fish (He wouldn't fill the smallest dish). If lu'd been Digger. ' ' HlftYid been wt at ' "' n a'" lSv. '' u,'d been bigger. I dare say. and got a ; lit never sure Evidently It has become a habit, for Clay ton, atlll a newlywed, proposes a toast to the ladle even when he drlnka a glass of water. ' "Speaker Cannon I without' doubt the bent known man In the United States." declared Representative John W. Weeks of Massachusetts. "I have long been of that opinion, and last week It was con "I accompanied the speaker to Hoston, where he was to spenk before the Middle sex club. On our way back to Washing ton we stopped in New York. After breakfast the speaker suggested that e walk down to the ferry. As we started out of the 'hotel tho speaker was obliged to respond to half a dozen salutations. As we passed the first street crossing a mounted policeman saluted and said: 'Howdy, Mr. Speaker. Next we passed a milk wagon. The driver stuck his head out of the side of the wagon and called out: "Hello, Uncle Joe.' As we walked across Broadway wo encountered a squad of mounted police escorting a Chinese prince, who was being shown the sights of the city. "The officer In command of the squad recognized the speaker and -saluted, and all of his men, Instantly recognizing him, did likewise. And so it was from the mo ment we left the hotel all the way down to the ferry. Just by way of variety we met four tramps near the ferry. One of them saw us coming along and -udged his companions. When we reached them they straightened tip and respectfully passed the time of day. "I doubt If there haa ever been a pres ident of the United States whose face Is so familiar to every man, woman and child In the country aa Is that of Speaker Can non." ter of the roasting pan and similar fac tors, thus the total loss In weight Is natur ally greater in an open than in a closed pan, as the open pan offers more oppor tunity for the. evaporation of water. Judg ing from the average results of a consider able number of tests It appears that, a roast weighing six pounds raw should weigh five pounds after cooking, or in other words the loss Is about one-sixth of . the original .weight. This meana that If the raw meat costs 80 cents pe pound the cooked would represent an Increase of 4 cents a . pound . on the original cost; btit this increase would . of course be lessened If all the dippings and gravy' are utilized. With the quantities used In the ordinary home the relative losses sustained in dif ferent methods of cooking meat are not great enough to be of. particular importance with reference to economical management. However, In public ' Institutions where a small saving per day for each Inmate represents a large Item In the course of a year, It may be desirable to select meth ods Involving the least loss, which would mean that the advantage would 11 with stewing and bulling rather than with broil ing and roasting, ao far as the relative losses of materiul are concerned. The relative economy of different methods ot cookery depends very greatly, upon the kind of fuel, the form of stove and oven, and other similar factors. These vary so much under different home conditions that It Is difficult to draw general deductions, though the subject has often been inves tigated. However, it may be said that it is often possible to effect a saving If the housewife can so plan the cooking of meat and, other foods as to take full ad vantage of the heat supplied by the fuel used. The Angling Girl. What sort ot fly will most allure. Now, when I use a pretty one With every color neath the sun The trout just glance at It and glide Away up stream; while my old guide Casts an old fly, o f somber gray. Cast an old fly, of somber gray, "With finest tackle I may toll; The wise old -guide lakes all the spoil ' With simple meana. and, strange to autt, Uses all aorta of things for bait A mouse, a fly a bit ot park; I think if he should use burnt cork A fish would rise and bite It; say, You bet It wouldn't get' away!" Daily Health Hint. Physical 111 health which results from care, anxiety or any overworking of the brain, may beat be cured by simple diet, rest, sleep and exercise in the opcu air, which is belter -than luediolaia, Spa -W- Ilnmllliy and Ma Kuke H ll "lie That Humbleth Hlmsrlf Shall be Ex'alted." Would you behold a beautiful portrait? 1 point you to the canvas upon, which Is painted the picture of an individual going to the front, not to fall back again, but to remain steadfast, gradually making prog ress. Ho is the humble soul the picture of a man exhibiting what the famous Aug ustine called the first, second and third article of the Christian religion. The greatest problem of human life that problem which so few among men ever solve la Involved In the question, "Who am I or what am 1?" No better advice could be given to a young man, or any man for that matter, than that which Is expressed by the inscription on the walls ! of the Delphian temple and which Is as cribed to the great Athenian lawalver namely, "Know Thyself!" Ignorance on the part of man with respect to himself that lack of self-knowledge, is responsible for his unjustifiable exaltation and his consequent abasement which is thus made Inevitable. And as Ignorance of one self is productive of self-exaltation, so humil ity Is the natural consequence of self knowledge. Humility of man is the surest evidence that he knows himself. You can not flatter such a man; you cannot puff him up or make him vain. You may in language elegant in diction, adorned with rhetorical flourishes and full of sublime sentiment heap upon him much praise and thus seek to exalt him far above all others whom you may know; you may cast beautiful bouquets at his feet and shout triumphantly when some victory ha has won; you may bestow upon him precious gifts In recognition of his superior service and worth yet, knowing himself, he wll realize that He possesses many weaknesses. And while his powers and capabilities have enabled him to attain success, and he Is worthy, therefore, of great Praise, yet he will know that the future Is full of pit falls Into which there is constant danger ot falling. The spirit of self-exaltatlont Is cast out of his whole life, and accordingly his growth, development and elevation is Iterrard. I IfA I -. - The Tired Business Man BY WALTER A. SINCLAIR. "Do you think thai the comet will cause any disaster?" asked Friend Wife, anx iously. "If you entertain a fear about It, calm It," ald the Tired' Business Man. "I don't know what Professor Halley's little wan dering pet can do when thoroughly an gered, but I can't suggest a better disaster job than its carrying off a' few thousand pests who have been making positive pre dictions on the subject. While old Sirlus Is the watchdog of the heavens, and a sil ver watchdog at that, the comet seems to be a sky terrier. "It keeps men up nights until the wee hours. Or, at least, that's what they tell their wives'. It has been a blessed relief In the way of a new excuse for coming home two Jumps ahead of the milkman and tell ing the spouse that hubby has been up watching the comet. As a matter of fact most masculine persons of my acquaint ance would nut even go out nights to look at a star of course, excepting a comic opera star. "I imagine that before the open season for comets is over it will have also been blamed for the peculiar gift affected by gents rolling home after midnight and for the unexplainable laughter which accom panies this phenom. I read the other day that. Professor Somebody says that the comet Is surrounded by a stratum of laughing gas and that when It sideswipes the earth the population here will get one IQPrWOlT. W10L ET.TKE ' ("THCRES OLD SMlTVO I r-L rv -v I'LL 5LIP HlrAMY GOOD 1ISB ffioB&qp VQU jrST ffl&vj BAD HLF vr CIGARS "2i fftfj TH 5O0 ' BlLLV. T 1 , ! J ' W K COUNTElFVrLL' : CLEAR rfi I Js, f TELL HIM TO HfW MMk ' k 1 MtWT BUY THE ClGARb'"Cilii JIMP! 'T-AL.L. fmght. f - LL, WWm I'll gf-t' J -i'.':! -alM v r J flmmm a smoke: . fevSLI 4b M t amy way- iJ WAS PLUGGED- C2w' TTSYOUP THtRtiS MISTER take that lHw- Vault VKhY Y t&K J S. rh KICKED 'J .V uOrME TWO TwtHT Y FIVE T rr""" YOU WORKED THAT TimE CEMT STTRAiCHT CiCAiRl VvTo CftMCOMCC TOO OFTtN ' SMOKE? IPAY-. j MOW HAND ME SEVEMTY LTHE5E By Ksy. J. E. Hnmmon. Pastor Xountie Memorial Church. made sine' It us 'a principle of life. Hu mility is the price of exaltation. The grain of wheat that Is cast Into the ground In exalted In the harvest which In due time It will bring forth; the tiny seed, though it lies buried In tho soil and must undergo the process of decay is in due time exalted in the beauty and fragrance of the rose. The young man finds him self unpopular among his fellows, often hu miliatedbeginning at the lowest round of the' ladder, occupying an Insignificant and lowly positon in an important and prominent business but in due time ky honest service, fidelity, and diligence and with humidity of mind, he Is exalted to a better and higher position, and up he goes to the very top of tho ladder. "He that humbleth himself shall be exalted." David at one time, when It was proposed to him to brcome a son-in-law of King Haul, feeling his utter un worthiness, said: "Who am I and what Is my life or my father's family In Israel that I should be come the son-in-law of the king? Seemeth it to you a light matter to become the king's son-in-law, seeing I am a poor man sniff and then laugh themselves to death. Jolly finish! Of course, all grouches will survive, because they haven't a laugh In them. ".Still that's just supposing that no gas trust gets to the supply first and puts In quarter in the slot meters to peddle the cyanogen gas. Queer'gas, eh? Sounds like the name of aome county In New York. "In addition to this laugh-and-the-comet-laughs-wlth-you line I read that some tele scope experts have discovered that the tail of the comet Is freighted down with cathode CPA TURESUAD HEW YORK CVENINQ TJOM fliEW YORK and lightly esteemed?" And yet he who felt himself unworthy of a king's daugh ter was In due time exalted to the king's throne. I'oor lame Mephlbosbeth, son of Jonathan, rtrelving recognition at the hands of David, fell on his face before him, saying: "What is thy servant that thou shouldst look upon such a dead dog ns 1 am?" was given an exalted position at the king's table as one of his sous and became the master of all the servants of the house ot Zlbii. John the Liaptlst, feel ing unworthy even to stoop down and un loose the latches of the shoes of Him whose coming he appeared In the Judean Wilderness to announce. Is counted worthy to be His harbinger. Paul, though on be ing made an apostle declared himself un worthy of the name and later cried out, "I am less than the leHst of the saints," and again Just before his martyrdom having reached the most sublime heights of Chris tian attainment, exclaimed, "I am the chief of sinners," lives today In history as the greatest of the apostles, the chief of saints and the noblest Christian hero that the world has evfr known. Truly he that humbleth himself shall be exalted. "The bird that sours on highest wing Builds on the ground her lowly nest; And she that doth most sweetly sing Mings In the shade when all things rest. In lark and nightingale we see What honor has humility.'' "When Mary chose the better part. She meekly sat at Jesus' feet; And Lydla's gently opened heart Was made for Uod's own temple meet; Fairest and best adorned Is she Whose clothing Is humility." "The saint that wears heaven's brightest crown In deepest adoration bends; The weight of glory bows him down The most when his soul ascends; Nearest the throne Itself must be The footstool of humility." The lesson of humility , is hard to learn. Experience is a good teacher, but much humiliation can be avoided by sitting aa a pupil at the feet of Him who said, "Learn of me; for I am meek and lowly of heart." There men learn to know them selves and to know oneself is to possess the charming virtue of humility. Tells Friend Wife the Comet is a Sky Terrier. J) bands. Don't know what they arc, but If they turn out good we can all go out In the park nights this summer and listen to the cathode band concerts. "Everything considered . unusual by per sons of short memory can be attributed to the comet these days. The high cost of living, the trusts, the perverseness ot the weather In getting bad at the beginning of the base .ball season, the spectacles of leg islators confessing about bribes in Pitts burg, Albany and Chicago, the Insurgent rise up and sit down, the snuffing out of Uncle Joe, the announced retirement of Aldrich and Hale, the Back from Elba movement, the admission of Poe and. Po cahontas to the Hall of Fame, the meat boycott, the Ballinger-Pinchot controversy, the opera consolidation and accompanying twitters by the song birds, large hats and small dresses In fact everything you can think of Is laid up to the comet. "If we didn't have a silly season every year anywhere from twelve months up I'd say that the comet caused that, too. It's a great thing to Invite a man out to a little friendly quarter limit game and have htm tell his wife that he la going to observe the comet, but if he comes tlptolng home In the dark he's liable to step on the comet's tail and wake the household." "Will the comet assure good crops asked Friend Wife. "The O. O. P. tends to that," said the Tired Business Man. (Copyright, 1S10, by the N. Y. Herald Co.) HERALD CtXl. . ATKkihtt H ' .' t cars aUf collar s- i-' J Vss- It slate writing has deceived . Its thou sands, the tricks of the sealed letter and pellet writer have deceived their tens of thousands. The list of these trick Is so long, the variations of each trick are so many, and the results ao thoroughly mys tifying to the uninitiated, that it Is email wonder that even the highly Intelligent at least are forced to the conclusion that theie in truth In the work of the spiritualist. It Is of no use to trust one's )es In these things, for seeing is not always believing. The profits that grow out of exhibitions of sealed letter trkks are so great that they can be ar ranged with very elaborate settings. Here, for Instance. Is an account of a seance that has mystified every, living soul who has attended It, with the possible ex ception of the few experts In the ails of legerdemain who have come to get Ideas. Sitters are asked to write their names and their questions on paper brought by thetii selves, or even to write and seal them brfore polng to the seance. Then the man after gives each sitter a number, which Is placed on the sitter's envelope. - The med ium Is duly blindfolded on the stage, a lady's glovo being placed between the hand kerchief and the eyes, to make sure the blindfold is sight-proof. Then a volunteer spectator Is asked to take the managers hat and collect the envelopes and carry them to the stage. He does so. The man ager takes the hat, covers It with a cloth, hands it back to the volunteer, who holds It In his own lap during the whole per formance. Then the manager makes a fifteen min ute speech about the miracles of spiritual ism, after which the performance Is ready to begin. Tho medium, seated behind a flower-covered table at the rear of the stage, announces- that he hears the call of some spirit, the son of a certain sitter present, who Inquired about this spirit. Silence reigns. ' No one announces that he made the Inquiry: Then the hand of the blindfolded medium points to a sitter and declares that he wrote the message, and proceeds to tell him the answer. The doubter winces and declares he no, longer doubts. Then the medium hears another spirit, which wishes to speak to Mrs. So and So. It Is a son who was drowned. The spirit answers her questions to her satisfaction, and she la convinced. One after another hvara his questions answered, his location In the crowd pointed out. After all the questions have been answered the writers arc requested to call and get their letters. They do so and find them Intact And they go away completely mystified. It Is impossible, you say. Certainly. But when the manager received the hat from the volunteer, he. substituted another hat. The medium has' a confederate Who secured the messages, opened them and sent them to the medium, who, behind hla flowers, read them one by one, having worked the bandage over his eyes up slightly by moving his eyebrows. When he got through he returned them to the confederate, who sealed them In duplicate numbered envelopes and placed them on the top of a little table In the wings. When the volunteer was through with his hat-holding performance, the manager took the hat, poured the dummy letter! on the table and bade the sitters claim their mis sives. In moving the table from behind the wings the real letters were substituted for the dummies and everybody got his in.tiinij. hnfk ancorrilnir n Its numh.r There are a vast number of" variations to this trick. In one the medium wears a turban with a large1 tassel over the ear, which conceals a. watch case telephone re ceiver. His, heela are covered with a cop per plate to which the wire leading from the heel to the ear la soldered. The copper plate Is placed In contact with two secret tacks In the floor, and a confederate under the stage opens the letters and reads them. In still another variation the aittera write their questions on tablets handed them for the purpose. A lower sheet has been treated with a coating of invisible parra fine. When the sitters .tear off their questions and fold them up and place them In their pockets, the attendant take the pads down to the front and place them on a table. Here, while the attention of the audience la attracted elsewhere, a con federate lowers a trap door in the tablo and substitutes dummy pads for the real ones. A Utle plumbago and charcoal makes legible the impressions on the parafflne and the confederate under the stage com municates the questions through the tele phone to the medium. On other occasloni the sitters write their message on their own paper and put them In their pockets, after having shown them to the assistant uii the floor. He passes the message by a telegraph code to the medium on the stage. Another trick, very mystifying and seem ingly conclusive, la that ot reading sealed pellets by the dozen, every one with ab solute accuracy. This requires, for Its best manipulation, a confederate among the spectators, though It often Is practiced sii.gie-handed. livery person present Is The Onlooker 9 Fierce discussion raging about the date the straw hat comes In. Open season be gins June 15 ordinarily, but the comet may shift it this year. tfee that a rich woman has been arrested as a smuggler. Naturally. Persons in that business generally amass aome coin until found out, and some run or) quite a while. Having been made a Great Dane in Co penhagen. Colonel Itooiievelt has bi er) made a Midnight Hon In Norway and publicly referred to as a demigod and a human en gine. They surely are not Joshing the colonel, are they? That the world betterment is no myth is evidenced by the fact that the girls of Harnard college yesterday afternoon held their annual field day games and for the first time In five years It did not rain. Oirl of t struck by lightning because she was wearing corseta manufactured by her self out of discarded tin cans Illustrate) tbe eternal feminine somewhat. Man wants to be released from Sing Ming because he a vegetarian and the diet doesn't agree with him. I'm! Ought to have thought of that before; besides, prices are away up and maybe It's fc( well as It is. Colorado man on a rampage was lassoed with a clothesline by a ranch bred woman and roped to a water plug until the arrival cast, where he would have run against a house broke woman and been sent to hos asked to write a Question on a hIIp and hand It In laiefully folded and rolled Inl a tiny pellet. All the pellets are placed lefor the medium In a little basket. Ha telln what fne question l and then openJ the pellet to verlfy'll. A sitter acknowl edges It to be hi. Then he tells the other (m by one. with never a slip or a word missed It Is very puxxllug. but the ex planation is easy. Tim medium knows In advance the iiueMiun the confederate will sk. He also knows his pellet by an un detectable fold known only to them. He announces this question and then piiks u4 a pellet to vcilfy It. Hut the pellet he takes up and opens Is not the one written by the confederate. He announces that he was right. He ha thus gotten on liell.-t ahead ir the game and he reads the mess.age on pellet number two and dt dares It to correspond with pellet tium Ur three. Uy thus opening a pellet ahead of the one he processes to have, read he. is able to see eveiy pcilet In advance of announcing its contents. ' One of the most mystifying tricks of the average medium Is to have tho sitter' write down the names ot halt' a dozen people,- some real. Home fictitious, and one dead. After Hie names are written they are .cut aatt by the sitter, handed to the medium, who tolds the slips and plates them In a basket beneath the table or In a human skull on top of the table. The sitter takes them out, onv by one, and when the name of t tie departed friend appears, the medium promptly announces ,ii f ilie tact and tolls the name. This trick Is one of the mor-t legitimate n J and at the same time the must surprising of all. Here mcdlumlstlc power actually l brought Into play. The medium really dues divine the very thought of the sitter; but ho does it by the use of his must carefully trained powers of observation. He knows that In writing the names of.pcrmins the sitter already has made up his mind about the departed friend. The others ho will think about momentarily before writing them down. The medium watches the writ ing operation intently. He notices It may be only an Instantaneous hesitation before, each name until the real one comes, in id that goes dOu without the slightest pause. The medium notes which iiiiino this Is In Its order on the sheet of paper, and when, the list is cut Into slips and handed to him, he gives that one an .unobserved different fold. When the slips are all placed In the basket and shaken up and the sitter draws tllem out one hy one, the muaiuin recognizes It' by this method of folding. Having seen the name when folding the slip he carries It hi his memory until the slip Is produced from the ' basket, only tho most expert truth seeker ever has been able to unravel this test, and It has converted Its thousands to spiritualism. . Many a sitter has carried to a seance a message In a sealed envelope and has taken ' "l' away from It the message undisturbed, atnlj",) has found his answer' to that message wri- b:M-ti ten on the Inside of the envcloDe itself. Ha ' Is at a loss to account for this by natural (,, means. As a matter . of fact tho medium.' has a half dimeii ways in which he may read the message. In some he may read it by the use of an egg tester,, which often will show through several thicknesses of paper. Or, a little alcohol and a sponge will make an envelope temporarily transparent.. The medium ascertains tho questions, and then by the art of mirror, or reverse.- ".' a writing, places a message on a slip of paper wlth a copying pencil. The lower flap of ah ' envelope Is usually easy to open. Ho opens , ' i envelope la usually easy to open. Ho opens it, tlips In the n. e -sake, fuce to the etiveloj o, . 'hi and by running hiH hand over a piece ot paper on top of the envelope, makes, the message copy Itself on the Inside of the envelope. He then withdraws his Blip ot paper, seals the lower flap and returns the . , letter to the sitter. .. ; , In one brightly conceived method of mes- iiU sage reading the sitter writes his quesdoua, ' J'.f,'' on a tablet. He then lays it face downward' ,'uVr( on a table. In this table there Is a tiny ' trap-door, slightly smaller than tho writ- ' Ing pad, upon which the questions are written. Straightway the medium reads the message, and otherwise describes it, and' the Bitter has his last doubt removed. He goea away absolutely convinced. The medium simply let down the trap door after the pad . had . been properly placed' over It, and a series of reflecting glasses mado tho questions visible to him, but not to the sitter. Sometimes the medium takes the sitter's pellet, holds it to Ills forehead and shortly after answers the question it contains. Sub stitution Is effected here, and it may be said that there are a hundred different tricks which depend on clever aubstitutlon. When a sittej- displays a tendency to divine the tricks of the medium there Is always a convenient tfuge behind the excuses that the sitter does not lend himself to the opera tion of the occult forces, that the medium Is exhausted or one or another of a dozen excuses. BY TSEDEBIO J. HA8KIW.. Tomorrow Spiritualism and - Magic. VI Kope-tylng and Rapping. pital to have a flatiron removed from his skull. One good thing about tho bakers' strike, and .that is a temporary check to the out- ' I put of that gastronomic horror known as . bread pudding. If Signor Caruso, as intimated, comes here and prosecutes his Black Hand perse- ' " cutors he will still further enhance the ,' esteem In which he Is held aa an artist, THE EASIEST WAY. "How do you manage- to cl On bo well with your wife? Don't you ever have, any differences of opinion ?' ' "Sure, we do, but I don't let he know It" t ,1 t .'It V ti I I e'M. ;') f 1. Vi T 8 -n Mm ...is fiuo , -'Mill lm i ilw -. V , . ; i lU a I t,. ,l :n 1. 1 iiii iml ,ii ...ii ' fii'J,i i oi j ho. .-. Is , (I ' 1 IT 'jil'f "i. bill ; 7 nil j T( !i ' HI A. .,: 'lit . ' i M Ji ; If . . iii AVI. I t