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AcIENCE 15 MAKING MEN HARDK E OKILL. EY LIV* DESPITh BROKtEN CKS, pr.RCED HEARTS AND PARTIALLY DESTROYED BRAINS. OOLING death! That is just what it amounts to. It is happening every day. In homes '/" and hospitals, ID tents and sanitari ums. A while ago a young St. Louisan became embroiled in an argument / g another younth. There was a young Lawles was stabbed It b art. He was placed in an auto w-- and brought several miles to a L This took minutes and many ones. When the patient was placed on the operating table Swas stiUll conscious. So startling O the nature of the wound that the aiternee paled when they saw of the type that used to be hop@ aseat of the injury. Twelve less. Four of the vertebrae were required to close the were smashed. It was worse through the heart muscies. The than a broken back, for not one, Slved. He was living when the but four of the chain of bonee authorities heard from him were crushed. tod that was but a short time It was considered amastg His chance of life when he that he should have survived the fall Naturally. thea. It was tem nothing. it was a notable of the fooling of death. S -e hard to kill at times. Lt -sreew Cerainto was accidentally . hrough the head. There was no that the ball had penetrated gla tissue. No one expected the to ive. Ten years ago death have been more than certain. magiry, and especially brain sur cr made long leaps to that time. iraps have been forward. When did not ensue the eager in sw a chance to save a life. di. Little Andrew Ceratnto aeged from the hospital a a. l wae s apparently on rad to a complete recovery in of the mutilated brain tissue gus plowed by the heavy bullet was tricked of something th1t s is weMderful vitality in most thres. It does not want or Sdie. It ights against diAso mth the tInherited vigor that hve eoe down through ten generatios. In order to deth the pclentists have o take advantage of all these They have trained the war >L the white blood eorpuscles glP for them. , pthree years was once the av kie of man. Wars, famines san helped to cut down the of main's spen. No one knows ot how long the average lte move. It is changing all the b gettings onser. used to reach out through and elaim his victims In -f the best efforts of the man toght back at him with the There was something wrong. Was remedied and the death rate sad continues to sink. The good has fooled death so often in is eases that it is no longer upon as a particularly serious an. Before that time, In the days when war hospitals were deadly beead telling, an operation of any sort one of these pieeeo was grave. they had not learned as yet how to Wp slay and utterly destroy the is irw that ,we creeping every _ r" the toaterilised beds and eainlng to the clothing of 1r5me and batint In the hoa Sptaoaghme They do not exist mere They are guarded against watched by every attendamt, op and taterne of say hospital. The peseslage from this cause has Y hat is tMkting lower It it tanaoce of puzzling. bat = 10" holing death. u) love life you do well to be aew. You have a better chance ie ere of It and live out more ~ls you would have had if you ed ylesterday. You will have a .teter chance tomorrow, for some poking around with a micro may fnd something today that imasse the average life span bh decade. Some Metchnikoff i 81p g to a step further and sur Ssecmret of living a few yean from outraged nature. Y o a better chance to swindle deaft 4f a few years right now that wel hbad you lived to the days germs were unheard of ant was the most sovereign rem at the command of the healer. Schneider. a Hollander o .age. went up on a smokestac· Same painting He was worknl AM tn the air when the scaRoldtal way. A rope, poorly fastened - tl slip and he fell the full - Is the top of a shed, and bound t5ee to the ground. It was a can He Might Guess. where." demanded his wife lashing eyes, "would you be noi for me?" man glanced at the clock. I erging on midnight. He sighe as sllent--Puck. The Likeneess. crews could swear, what kind( tica gathering would their lat resemble?" u< ppose It would be something Broke Up Church Serlices. unique occurrence broke up tI tin the German Luthers at Chicago the other Bunda of honey bees invaded ti and drove out the pastor at tion, and services had to I e, the lawn tIn front of t S TOe Much Imitation. c are ia prone to keep the ter we live with, and hence tl of our characters anid live i i i hanal. . still more amasing when be be to gan to grow stronger after the yea surgeons had done their best. By psl a seeming miracle the grayish white wit spinal cord was preserved. BSesation the remained In his limbs. Ffteen pounds gau of plaster of paris was made into a cot a jacket for him. He was messed is ye that and kept in the hospital seven or Th eight weeks. He lived and was d tin charged, not sound, but as sound as sou any man can hope to be who has fal- the en headlong from such a height and or broken tour of the bones of the spinal as column. In this case death was baf- th Sfled. Twenty years ago there would n have been a funeral within a decent sti t time after the fall we a How long will we live anyway, ah when the world as been entirely s t gone over with a steriliser? When me the germs have been hunted into their old t final hiding places? When the infected go r and diseased folk are ept carefully cu a separated from the remainder of bi- - ,t manity during the term of their Ill- to n new? ton o The United States army has started tu e fooling death on the wholesale. Troop e by troop, battery by battery and bat- o r tallon by battalion, the regular ofens li a and soldiers are being veaeelate at asainst that curse of the camp-t-- r r- pbold. Death has already bee dchet- a a ed of dosons of lives by this actioe. yo a It is hardly worth while tO keep a lst fay rs of the typhoid death In the army any to !e more, at least in these divirsion that ve ie participated in the maneuvers .o at Mex!can border last spring. There are o b not enough worth mentioing, ad be in those who have died were those who be ,n for some reason or other were not te given the vaeolne ot g. This one step aleoe will make wars e to harder to f ght Power men will die w ad In the fevered ermps. and there wHW ,i to be more for the bilets. lt or Death is beias fooled by little bot- t as ties. He is bein eheated by little t tubes of thin glan. iled with yellow- w an Ish, slrpy fluids, that are more pew- h ad erful than anything else on the ehem rt ists' shelves. They have within hdiem a 0. poessibtls of lfe or of dlssolttion. oi to They are 6b small that you could m te carry dosens of them to a side pocket M y of your coat and never feel their mi id weight or bulk. Possibties of We of and death for a whole Sity ialht be l a placed ina a pocket ase. at s "There are 60.000.00 dead bectorta t st in this little vial," says the bectertol p ogist "I can palm It. hide it, aimost t te 'ose it in my hand, and yet there is t as more power tn it than yot might put a is in a year's ordinary treatments" It atf That is the way they are tooltag u death. It is done with single things o be that are really complex tI their wort- . ce ings. Into the veins a slatklo of re dead tuberculosis germs is poure. b ou They do sot kil their ifve brethren. v a What happens is this: The body ree ne tses that there is something poisonous ro floating around In the blood. A spe- s It cdal effort is made, and more of those 1 by never-say-die warriors, the white eour b is puscles. appear from, somewhere and ur- set upon the dead and the living Lrs germs. Deth lets go unwillingly, but on the enraged white eells never easeo e ts their warfare. c an "Autognous" is the name that they a ys have given this particular type of dis ed ease relief. It fights Its own breth m ren. turns against them and treas a them. It is using "like to fight lihke t of but the whole nathre of the germ is I url changed. It Is so new that death has t Iat not become aeustomed to being lag fought tin that way. ed. hen have been ltvig with half their t 60 braise gone. With the openings whore ad- the serves come through the skull I tee plugged with paran cauts, In order Yes, and ew About Pin? is, "Nothing is ever lost or totally doe ow stroyed," said the porebasor of physics. I "In that cas" said the simple and It rank perh. "how do You eapiaDn the ed fact that everybody oses umbrollas. and you uev meet aemhody who ha found one?" I of Amercean Shes Super.ir Lan- Europeaa shoe manatcturors are I unable to compete sucoeMFtl with of American 1mtl in the de as ef lasts ad tn the cuttng of pattorMs. a. Tee Pebien' the Russtan caviare Is ow mauted as ran a cure te choleOrs. one wI etee lay that tlhe doctor were too mud to the discover corned beutf and abbag and something within the mah o1 M-" be Cleveland Paini Deair Plenty of it "Had thes any es'edeme a s the man's Ieaniaty" "NIo. e~ that ees when he went e a fshias y,. he the alway told who. they amne hoIe that yes hemade the poemr uad mndS, eatcI of she int. Syears at least all danger of neuralgalo I pains. Others have managed to exist I without a stomach. The keen knife of a the surgeon having trimmed this or s gas from the body and nature having I come forward-to aid, they Uve tor I years with but little inconveniennce 9 F The enormous tumors. that are some I ! r times lifted from the cranial cavity c s sometimes destroy a part, at least. of I- the gray matter, but somehow or oth d er the patient goes on ruanning like I sa engine upon one cylinder. This Is I* the most daring type of fooling death d A generation ago there were ten. lt !teen, maybe twenty diseases that were looked upon as absolutely incur T* able. The number has been getting Y smaller. Every mow and again some ' n man finds a new way of attacking an k old disease. Others aid and the light d goes on. Another of the so-called in- I 7 curable ones are vanished. Just how a many there are, this day. no one likes 1 to say. Something might happen by I tomorrow that would make any state d mert ridiculous. 9 We used to die of typhoid, septl t- oniae, tetanus., yellow fever and ma laa. The fighters were firing and 4 stabbing in the dark so far as any real F results were concerned. The under It taker looked complacent and the grave s. yards wazed large. Some man work it lag in the fever swamps learned bow I Sto fool deathln typhoid and yellow fe Mt ver by studying mosquitoes. Still an 1e other man watched. the fly and die *e covered that death in typhoid would id be easy to baffle if the housefly could - be eliminated. Pt Diphtheria. infantile paralysis and others of the diseases of childhood re have been and are being gradually to walled of and made helpless by a bar LU rier of serums, vaccines and solutions that seem quite simple enough now * that we have become accustomed to 0 them. Death is being fooled daily w- with some colorless fluid and a tiny - hypodermic needle. - In southern Illinois. twenty years a ago there was much fever and ague. a. oftentimes resulting to death. The id same conditions then existed in south t east Missouri. These two localities ir are being cleared of the timber that il* covered them. The sun is getting be Into the lowlands where Its rays were stringers. There is not much ma Slatai In these two localities any more ol- The sun has sterilised the earth so t far as the malaria-breeding mosqult t toes are concerned. They do not breed Mt any more In such number, and there is not the chance of infection as there ag usbd to be when swarms of them flew o opit of the creek bottoms at night Stfail. of Death ik being bafled and puzszled PC by such instances everywhere. Men m. want to live and they are studying the e- means and methods by which they as aen fool death and live longest. The p scalpel and the little vial or serum are ta the worst toes of the rider on the pale or- horse. ead ag Damon and Python. wOt A certain great publisher of rather lee exacting temperament and not esp cially easy to get along with, secured ley an editor after many other editors had 1t- passed through his office. th- This editor tamed the exacting and ks sometimes querulous publisher. and e." they became great friends. The ed is itor. apparently, had the stuff in him ias to compel pleasant treatment. lag One day the editor and the publish er came into a luncheon club arm ir lta rm. re "Look at them," said another pub tall tsher. "TIere come Damon and Py der thu!"-Saturday Evening Post. Forbidden Fruit. de Mrs. Jones-White-Your luncheons los. are always so successful. dear. Do tell and me how you select your menus." the Mrs. Smithb-Brown-My physician las, gave me a list of things I shouldn't has eat and I choose the dishes from that A Bibliophile. "He has a collection of books that ealmost any man mght ery." th "Indeed" S "Yea. They how a sum total of . tOO0 tI bank deplosits." Pratee Will Make Perft. as Practic thyself even in the thtgs ee which thou despairest bf accomplirbs o mgt.r even the left hand. which r is tieectual for all other thingls for - want tof practice, holds the bridle mere vlgorodly tuhan the rglht hand; for it has been pratced tin this MUness Aerelrls that -S-* r OIi55RL" be In tie year 31 of our era Thesie re esi the GOrat ilssued as edict -e bt as peganlsm and heatntt thiugese 'h Renna empli IS GRANDDAUGHTER OF KEY Mrs. Norweod Gives Manuerspit of 0Star 8pingled Sanner" to Washington Relative. Texarkanr. Ark.-Mrs. Rebecac T Norwood of this place. grnaddaughter of Francts Scott Key. author of 'The r Star Spangled Banner." has gone to Washington with some priceless sou Svenirs of her illustrlos ancestor She will deliver to a cousin. Attorney Pranis 8ecott Key Smit . a copy of the original volume of Key's poems +. and an early manuscript of "The Star Spangled Banner." In the poet's ows h handwriting. Mrs. Norwood is a daughter of Dan tel Turner. who married Ann Key. eldest daughter of the poet. A great grandfather was Joseph Turner. one time governor of North Caroin a Her father served under Admirl Parra L wl th at or Mr. Rebecoa T. Norwood. g t when he was in command of the a-' me Mare Island navy yard in San Frau- d =vtry lc~ A sister, who recently died. t . of w Mrs. J. Mills Browns. wife of a tl t- former surgeon ieneral of the United p liluse tates army. a i Is Mrs. Norwood is one of the charter t th aembers of the Francis Scott Key t] ten. Memorial Association. Sbe is lnter- a that ested I a reproduction of the old vol. a cur ume of Key poems, that its proceeds a tint may be added to a fund for the preoet ome ration of the Key homestead In t an Georgetown. now part of Washington. ight She visited her grandfather there ign.- when she was only 13 years old Al 1 how though she only saw him twies sad s ikoes the when she was very young. she s by has some Interelting reminlacenem of tate- him. lepti TREE TAKES ON HUMAN FORM and The "Ballet irl" Is One of the Re. real markable Curieestles of Nature ader- in New Hampshire. rave . work- Milford, N. a-One of tde remark., bow, able euriosities of nature is the "an. w oe let Girl" tree on the road from MIl i an ford, to the railroad station at Pose die- mah. rould The formation of the limbs of the could tree is such that when the leaves come oat it gives a remarktable repro and sentation of a ballet girl and is fml (hood ther 'trenstfied If a breese Is blow nally ing. and the figure moves with a mo tbar- ties tt unlike that of one going tions through the latest two-step. now The tree was uert discovered by d to some summer guests, for although It daily tiny ague. The tl itiS that ittlng I mS more th so Dosqo r N breed - thereme - there night hssed "Blilet -l Tree." Mea a the directly besnde a much-tmravled thy road its peculiar outline had nsot The raochd Ofwth enougah to attrct oh m are ervatlon. a n So much has the anque trneo at tracted attention that it is aoretally cared for by the road agent whio has rather arge of that se Ion. d SANE FOURTH IS APPROVED Medical Record Shewe Remarkable g sad Derease i. Number eq Lve Lee and Throughout Country. a him New York.-A decrea of li lost from 862 to 67 snd of the number of abthb persons Injured from 4.449 to 1,603 was b arm the result of same Fourth leglelatlon in the nine years beg1aitig with 193 r pub ad ending with 1911. This sartg of ad Py- human Ie is showa in the repart of Independsne day saccidents. issued by the JournAl of the Medical usociation. The ornal credits the great usartg is life and limb to the nation-wide cheons campaign which began more than a Do tell decade ago agaist the omd tirme ce bration of the mation's birthday. The ralan decrease is shown by the followting oldn't table: 1903. 1911. o that K -lled---- .....----------. 8 Died from lockrjaw...-.. Inured .............4.44) 1.61 is that in the nine years 1.719 pereOn have been killed, and 37.410 were blared. ftal of wheep Sets Robbers Flying. Kaston. Pa.-JohU KLots of this city was awakened at 3 o'clock by a tug at his bed clothin&, md by a dim lght thlins is the room saw two men setly re win gora the covers from his bed. Re which e so statled that he sat upright ias for and yelled. smd the men rnehad ker i rdol a. t Spends tlJ0da Year 6. Seeks km DIe#g. Cal-A5Wutlag htht kes e -..NemL husband *e **3 51, 1 yea awbeo d eess thas $11 for her etire wareabe. Myrs OG s 3s S mm planags e Grumge. bIn e N I M Ne.. and CIa salt far divie New News of Yesterday I - I By L 1J. EDWARDS evarts and the Great Scientist Senator's Problem In Natural kSoenee Propounded to Savant Who Was t eortig a Brilliant Company c at DiWne. ta "I have been told many very late eating aneodotes about William M. w varts. but I do sot know u which th llustrates the keen wit and the humor to which were so prominent among the d many characteristics of Mr. Evart w that compares with an ancident which ti eamr under my own observatlao." aid at ea. Charles 8. IParchfl, who was see retary of the treasury Ia the lattertt half of President Ceveland's brat ad- a ilnlstratioe. "I was a guest t a dhiner which q was gives in 1888 when Mr. Evah ts a was still in the seate. by a very pra om neat public oSetal at Washlnlten. It a war, In the character of the men who b were gathered around the table. er- o hape as brilliant a dinner as any i II which I participated while I Was member of Mr. Cleveland's adumisI tration. Semator varts was one d the tl most distInulshed ot the guests WaS II eat; and, as sel at a dinner which n Mr. Evarts graced with his premanc the best o good fellowship and a true t east of reuas. and humor. and wit were the eperienasa of the guests "There happened to be at this dil nor a man of great achievement u a scientist. He was, however. a goed deal of a drysdust, and be seemed to be disposed to tabfnt soemse 1teo the ovearuatIa, of to apply an oww particular kmowledge to every sta meat which was maed After awhlle the persistence of this ieasstitc go teman palled a Itites pe the guits although ek himselfr emed to be d aware of that fat. Not even the host, notwithstanding his perfect courtesy, was abl fully to oceel his anoy amo at these learned and amsUtl ilterpodlatise. "At ast Senato rEvalt we bhad been, appareatly. a patient and earn eat stener, addressed the ml o eel ence, sayths: S'I hae been macb tiarestsd. po. saser, to what ses have Sid; sad It has osseeued to me tlt pesesl y~es may e ale to emSl11 a e1seW law of asrts, whichb L ma df, have ver bra spe to eutasb r to fad S ne who sesl egplal.' - I dsuld be delighted.' add the presw. 'What Is It?" "*aingm amttra the attention of Mde En deoh Nemal PerNa Oi De lr Sad uaesesculey Undertook to * MaYke o ritish Rel an Aarkea Literary Work. "my atI,.o city or Portiad. Me.. has bee the brth pu16 of a 9o0 I may ydis agulaed ms, but of all tf them I semetimes thik I a preadet fI of Joys NestL" said Themes B Rae to me nut Is alfer he bad rCI trom enagrem ar taken up his r mrt deuoe M New Tesk ity eta thle p5 tice oi law. "I smppoe have sever beard ot Jobs IuIl; pt l tlo e nr haL 4cI dt alastedeath ctary he was a volkus uo"e writer f soveis. Ime et th --leadiig wapaper iltstr t h t country. aan a sympatheda advier W all strugslia g yrm wriears oase la them igar AUsa Pe. LAd he WM t a plaeoer et Amerte lema ers In Ia liad. ie was, b1 bdlt, the trt Ameraes. who maud ams lagisdm read as Aserteam iterary work. eml it is besaus e aet oaut de1ibrasM to do this that I am so prol f bstl John ReIA died bI the ooeateel year, at the ripe e o age of alibt. three, bht years beore that I ad oeome to be mamber d absmnLs I rIeds, ad orn b i, owlm alips I sMl I now he set abou makisng msglsa take atices o Amercales writers. 'Whoe John Nea was a youag mr there appeared tIn ue i the Eams c:arterly revlews the amw mI quesatis: 'Whi reads Amer eu bootr That quetIes hmelamu mear Amerlicam a4 It touched a jaw spot tI Amerlcam lits for mere them hal a eastury. It made JobL Neal espealla y sary. By that time a sad writtea sever works of etie I or asealOtao sad blography. aio so quite asturly o he e very ktel I the slr impli that Britles q80 lon. "Well. several years after the quman ties had bees aLhsd John Neal a neoueod to his treius 'that he was p til to' bgload. - What do yes latesd to thertr they ashed b , Has N Need t0o cet Money. The psdeas of Menses is so rie fst she regads ad -e with oa teml t n ..e seeeusiu , afier a barglary, she atmordsd a magistrate by swan that she aevur easmte her mon" rad did sot hkno which of ser I"wls bad bees ettes, as se aover tar es! to bAd at hew m"a si bad 1M." -a the easgerate I sna prie. M qwr do p magse your 1 o .« replied the pieusse, "wte I O shopplag I just an a beg with amoej an buy what I wst Thet is the s of it. - M- t iPer Wrumg. Two bmo t werh 'ugme e o re tn is as m tr5tolley ear wse w r~tes! to toh ethb ar a Salt "f ir ase beL i her dpe S rsesd i ameow. sawelu hee 0i =100m her peshafete the sweapr the eitb'e empay t this way. dean II tMr Erts tok freia the oooler bY 4 his de a hbampgae" bottle whibl I coataseat perhaps a thid t Its orts least aontts. as place the bottle I upon the table. "'mre mor.' be ad, wish yo would e al to why it is that., the lwfer part o 5a bottle citl- I tag upkrteoas ft rO s thea ter stretb Is to be toeed. I other words, why the upper half t a bot tle at hamipa somes t be ess tarmulath the'ashe levor half "The prdtemer lashed ute atV, at the battle at .b ampa a ow ma meats. "That is, dese, a very aresttus question; 1 sever had It eiled ts at attentls bfer.' be hod at lat. 1 cannot at this momSI ofr rue thae a surmise i the war at senopI ; but I should be happy o mde* W1er7 caretal isaveuslgatlit bet, is estab Isb te teat as s asOW h 4 sd s e1, to dseeear th soen.' I ,Weil. ei feaster a3r1ts. 1 SthInak at ewn maietemm as b o ina .msbsahr the Deerey 'at the flat: but, as Iam 1tmp to sat at the odeseuene I so Slutr i ..e as to the esmpanaOMa' I Solved Problem For Morse - =. , H --".' .' -- · i Hew Peh C-p - tn W Ieouls,.. Wh I Nags PaIssib U)H ~tslnng qaul i febS~i the owso -tmo".T I Wi - ma eaeeiSt as dowW wt UsA Ufteid W am 61 the 1st. AsrSa ". MewInr of N Maw Toi I r lSWW imbb the M MO i wwle Ma W wb'ki4. elrte Qsept. the pMMwiitN?1 ,' ' W u` uWebil -w poo1db. to fy the mWA. ble betwem the eqWim O N *emfW amir tv36.~' WI. cowsUE' ma~im Ma4I w~gsE,~ buW SI - t PWll thSU Ma ' 0. W. ~L~r etrrr n et he r - mm 1ueýF - esIf we't h is I lop-' u$tie ;holw * m5 - taso wealeaM s Tahe " 1 a * o to-*MM ' *ad ·sln. emeaes ba wWeb s - asPh as CAm.t es s ltw esata bSr *kt he, pee na.mes? 0 Y r- w -l br, n are adse -w1al tor'y t nss Mld . i. w" .1 uk. n g smer Mb al" e" as as m oe .ers w . es wawal m~ i s -g ba 4$ ~an $01 sanet a"o , w a sc, oe lw 3e* a sehesai -o s a tar a ourae w u sni.re a ,s reat benmo. e rs ae et ssem we ma -nr abm, <dmeib s tw. Teeo e .a 4e as ,M ease st r a w* wMts t d . . at str . .-s 40 .b4* Wal eslt Huter -wh be anm s det s'am wnsau s tmlet 0ar Was a l aetea. 4 'b eheg.g * ilU i tests tot aarr rsbsl :*in thi sad olm Neansal es , I: rMe nri, b oa. hit.les ageeits tbe wosl laviehi 5 1n a Vif? dasef war. Weo, at bee gee bSItW people do vo ow AenesM Mt?7ary warok amd *e that w be bIroe the ee I adl thde eeerseUt U rn yee wE rseel NN- Nass o them.' n lee seesse Jhas Niss retwram is aand s ael se"d was "s eeu d for the rsS 41 1 i e la iteaorr werb. Lad r taIb. It ought to be r am.mbeid riot N Wa Joba Neal e tersaed. e... wi was the mrt Assess to seew" the peonple Oreat BrllaIs to use as Ameuica wee, iate estr that mo bsiad wea ebatg the wes at hsalaure {asCesseM, sn.' I. $. asw.,n Anl 3--1 Rap. the Modern Churrh I - Ph., AIMgS IMWhs CausIs Mew. Mew . burnb is e ofto 3UUtmamo Wh. believ the -r kos a . Md usd ow kamas ev., -V an them. sad tut mea- Sm Ien aeflem.I - agi. ~ Mwe. Jose"h IAL @4.1 - Set.w burn ma thek a t4.51 aos /o . sem m tke as ike f a.~ s~irnws'bnis a a hIe buinma - #h) smile urb M sa. *e - its* t ue eosala -Ou -'r? -I·Q~wtr L sastb aA .4w--&U~rt t "r Il as Bum basl-w shift I V .so warsn oat Om t!. loadi ý.rM . wasbst -ft-Aio a Wbdft of es" bud.. si go Sow woe ca1 SWhat. th ba bees your ezperl ence? the prelo ar asked. "« eaa state it lI a few words, pro teasor.' sad Mr. Evarts. 'I have apo many oceasloos observed that the bOrt or upper half of a bottle of chae* pagne or other spirituous liquor 4d not bega to have the stimulattig s feet upon these who drank in my pres eane wMib the ecoad. or lower, half of the battle had upon them; eo I have inferred that there must be some sclitite law which explains why the upper balt of a bottle of champagest for hIstance, I lass stimulating tha the lower belt' SThat Is. indeed an eztraorde~tu bet: the pafessor replied gravely. 1 am greatly ihdesied to you for havieg eanlled It to y attention. I shall Iae *eed at oee to ask. reuearhea.' "And the p esnIR actueally did ae see, what all the other guests resad perceived, thm $e6ater Evurts wa making sly fn of linm. or that the rease was seglarpt why the sea bad half of a bette o hampage Re duped a far meoe stlmalat tag seet thea the ,mit Ipa" Lot >0 ,.W Come. 'There Is ftogUree fre a mar a twoma han tha e o mi nnh _ M teo min" aless. e- Gassu Plr qorl w.s a parso t sis U oat Preeoa Erie .. who ts eeA 'a* modm aoeltrlat ttispsra as the Mote. .3: Sam, the fMesmd O at whe b, o twn pautre.aS cheaus to rm das Mir OmCe Mt weram viutHr due alt Tst UF aloieust M 4,i s. toId 1 -esp aaist , l p1M s V.Y amt to i Ie p rim ag boFtte 6hrmssa3iO mas- - ees her i!!r n 3OS sat a mslt pretl Who rr as the IIMr She wi b * arlt s ii tW ho tmn e . lentee* aM spdrud - tbhe 1d ood ,i t .-"ret tea, salat it1' Maatiu lp 4 Wa ra. irsa to e a we . we~ aet~ t It em Uamne3 ast , w' p o t.t. w09W*S ' Sa aPsh m rsMo. ProWg a4 A fm t s. - hsesh 1 e s. * wto th et gha;a. ie e r • tale. ll t tb oa 6eld .a Sas 1 'eii ai~oo $eteod It h atI Irw thint f a ' r asaeS ith for bil to es tL o 'wp tasteao at *ssde> F Therospse Wr. Coopor ass M Wi. W*te Mo to tet lUe have a tolgrash wire, Was tbt was doae Mr - a. or1 at M es sead ats tmo It t W mae tt of a (gI bottle weic/ sad bgou tiera the botile. ras e thn an Proesesor Worse would haie to do toesllte his wireo would be to at ota*r0. sttatc them to rlre.s. sat I his wire theigh these RIh 034s sea that '0ar ul* d Uilrr a ybl to a ttermast Omits of the I - srts areast ft woo, bt tact.he dhe 4ote septod by.Prof essr More. obabtots tha " , p3si9 mathod of bhertts the wires: d ia.euh, betorn or ve sares atur boS*I sOsb. Protrwot toIas easM t he bauiles gsas bulb of t*0 tle tgraph peta Ibe made at the lD3 e tactry. S-f to w""mm msa Mr Hewtt. wos told me tMs leldist, "Seto Couoer a ws amate with bolt the perfet. a a of the Motas to*Srspi apparatus * Sad with '** seooseoal terlog of the .ots. ab&S." U teeurvlath. 4 by 3 1. . gwuard AS U5 3l.mmL..& "If the se the world gst mon ? tra the woMd as some of the home I slits ethrbes et t from the home m"git board, they would so to 3 fia ogbtaalag oeeyr cadet "I th maa Is the ebreb who doesat puts p the dollar wo doe put up the holler." som a'dam mea may or qay not tai emastlca to RO. Brese's Ceo. Feahes by Example. I ~a Sfed Harper Cooley. W dt l ieedetsry of the Associted Clubs at Des r t Scleace, has done I mueL to edeeste the chllrsa of se . lst WMe la Now Tork The chal 1 dre` . a t tbher motbera toe are L ta ht to osek and to seaw. ad )7 e ample pA gtis them leas ai ara pere- s el eala tsewr r The mdsts Idea of a piker seems Sto be say man wbo IYe Wttbls Mbbr eme