Newspaper Page Text
■ ■ m ice,
Ww
m-usmm f
mM
1 7&. glad
United
.
t, as he
:• this is
m t e
WmWs*: MBR* > '- 1
se the New York
Jg killing brought her horse suit
or
- t $150 for
cent the hna
Ws
World observes:
wmmm n tiie
, an the other hand, he doee
•like him in periods of de*
of food and shelter.”
on.) Appeal-Ava
**•
ir or merchant
i. goods, and
re is now* general eom
af tha ooontry of short
e
, . /
•1,000,000 aora
V
$,-«« «:'mi 45,.
■ ,000,000 in
r Navy, gad none
%<%r* tea than lfltt. This
%®Nj5 - tbs pay oorps,
$00k uative rank of au¬
ra*
seven to
r-V/ the first
»W may expect billets
Band unimportant
MOWS! nago to appoint
■ ompriitive
ex
r«i^|a4 : 4%*S® wadoned, and
faiad by in*
1C % »o»har. Line
heir eons into
I* ■
mm ndiadtfor
iV-'.
in
y.i
t.
mmm
1
*
rZvvwf'--
~®» dropped s word of greeting gay,
Bar look eo bright, ber tone eo sweet,
Che cams that togged at heart aadboato
Ihewotk toe heavy for asy head,
■adoriMMtofpate,
notaries I oonld aot oadontaad
With afr and step of liberty,
freed bv the sudden tilt of song
That filled the world with oheer tor
Yet was this all. A woman wise,
Bar Ufa eortehed by many a yaer,
Bed (seed me with her brave, tree eyes,
Passed co, sad ■aid/Ktood morning, dearT
argsrei A Songster, in touth^e Companion
LOYE AND HYPNOTISE
sz aaoaam xthxlbebt waiah. wm
HAT visit to Doc¬
tor Secor seemed
fatal to my hopes.
sdt* Selma had always
been somewhat er
ratio mid ohhneri
a'^B cal in her mental There
"Wi Sendenoies.
was a wayward in her in
X n dependence
«m natorutbat marked
her either for a. deluded crank or a
strong genlos. I trembled sometimes
as to whioh.
I did not love her for these abnor¬
mal her qualities, and but more and for thebeanty quiet,
of fora face, a
sympathetic personality that clam¬
bered somewhere in her nature. She
did not look kindly upon my efforts
to reclaim her from her mental fads.
•I felt at times that she believed in oe
co.lt things just to shock my sense of
proprietv. When I was folly satisfied
o t this, 1 swung around to tha other
extreme all aad Wild indulgently vagaries listened to
of her concerning
mysticism, spirits, miiid-readers aha
astral bodies.
This was how ws cams to visit D r.
Sscor, the celebrated hypnotist. I
deoided to disarm her of all Suspi¬
cion. I would not cross her in any¬
thing. But I soon had cause to re¬
gret my How approval wen I of remember tills extreme the
course.
words of the doctor when he examined
her as a subject for exhibiting hie al¬
moet supernatural power I
“I do not wish to uae you. You
hare in yon the making of a powerful
hypnotist. Yield to no one, > 9 t make A
others With yonr subjects.” * .
that he dismissed her, hut no
onrf saw the look of exaltation in her
eyes as 1 did. She was now oon
•cions of her power. Her eyes were
feverishly bright at we left the meet
fag* I knew that the mieehfef wee
done, and I quietly waited tha re
•nlte.
Selma never did things by halves.
When I saw the hooka piled upon her
I dainty knew Hide that she two nights after this etudy visit, of
hypnotism. waa first makings she shy
At wae about
boldly her new fad, but she soon launched
forth into hop ' subject. She
was reading everything about the ques¬
tion, the latest from discoveries. the first principle* X tried to up dis¬ to
courage her, and to draw her mind
toward other interesting soUeota. But
that was not Seims to yield until she
bad exhausted her pessioh, and tha
*§•' itself began 1 to eloy.^ later than
nsusT evening called
I wa* not in an enviable frame
mind. , Things had irritated me
fcday. , aad I found myself in the
elf If she would not aooep*
my love I would rive up the
argument to fores her to love aad
She could hot ba
required
determined opposition of a mind
I would conquer bar own in tha
XMZ ■.SS&ifSZ 7T£?Lm* o*
I * * *. ♦ ‘
:-i- V**
.*■
**'•••
■wrier and m
•i
ml
a | MH
Hr
r«
V- , 1 *
H%' 1j£ f* *
-
s* . X’-* fc-sr* “igr .
taMpv
|MNfd|aa**S IwMa'WI* ££££ I --.
i.^i* $S§TT he ■
rri
vr; •sri"3®*1 A
few
4ala* this is going fex
(mot out wrathfolly. “Ton
**8he* vmi her Tiand imperiously,
sod mid decidedly: said enough.
Yon have I
This was so unlike Selma that
*gk SBarSSiSS .S?£fSSi
2
sufiuarsi'iA. £
jar-*585 I oonld speak
gry. But before a
tony sigh came from Selma. Shewas
breathing bard and fast Did she
think to triumph over me, to bring
my mind under her control? She
might have e strong personality, bat 1
was willing to test my own powers
against hern I braced myself for the
ordeal, and returned her steady which gase.
The sudden were of strength
swept over me seemed to confuse and
mystify her. She sighed again, and
clutched her hands nervously. Then
she gradually grew quiet end passive,
Her hands seemed to lose their power,
and her whole form dropped wild back into
her chair listlessly. possessed A I feeling felt that of
exaltation me.
I had triumphed. She was in my
power. I oonld do with her. as I
H t —
Then came the strong desire to
make her love me. I oonld force lor
to that against her will. She oouid
not woape. I had come to declare my
love. Iwould first tell her of it, and
if she refused my pleadings I would
command her to love me.
“Seims,” I spoke dowly,' and unnatural, and my
voice sounded strange
“Yon are in my head power.” dightly
She raised her as if to
resist
“Not entirely,” she faltered. “I
hsve failed, bat yon have not wholly
1
“But I can,” I answered.
“No, no, I shall not yield. You can
no farther.”
It was a far-away voice, and it
to me Selma. softly. The It seemed itself nn
that of room
peculiar. There was something
the etmosphere that was enervat¬
My own limbs were the dragging chair. The me
heavily startled into
me. -
“Selma, you must do my bidding,”
again, determined to try the
of my power. “What 1 com¬
von mast do.”
She laughed a low, silvery lsogh.
mockingly, she added:
“Yon are over-estimating your
power ae I over-estimatad mine. I
am not your subject yet.’’
It was not neoeaaary to tell me this.
X oonld set that our two minds were
Struggling for the mastery, and eaoh
was baffled by beyond the other. My feelings
were felt strange almost I comprehension.
I as if was in a trance.
I realized that if I should yield one
inoh Selma would triumph and obtain
oomplete ascendancy over me. A
weakening sensation crept upo n my
limbs and nearly paralysed then*.
The thought that I was yielding inoh
by inoh roused me, and I recovered
my strength again with a great effort
As I I regained seemed possession of my pow¬
ers, Selma to waver ana grow
shall oonquer,” I muttered, more
to my myself. “Yon must yield. I
shall read your life, and make you tall
me of the future 1”
Her hands fluttered
threatened her eyelids to drooped, oollapse Her before whole form For
me.
the moment I had gained the subtle
power over her. Eg)hat
“Tell me, & I ask df
my hand. “It is
mf T* longer. You are
nUMi
ianttklnllf ”
CL* nodded mt, and wl
« _ .a : * ■'
st answer yon; rat yon
m: msm '
mi
I Zmjr***. L..V
ttAfm
tfi 1
.u m m
. ■p I *> A
.*»»«* *ijw# *! i '■ $ ■4
MMml i F tf f 1 i
n it
ift - i* A
t*f8Naik>£3nft%fe • ■ l |
l
mm m
^YoIThave it within yi>ul^of#l0
relieve me. ” *
_ I ,__ hare
“Then I will do it as soon as must
_ OT6t ** I
^SrsSSsy 2r£:eis=s ,» The
-g - *
TStesasaaitah It
of the whole buaineas. was rumwos almoet
to the mind and nervee. I
dreaded the result of snob a strain
upon Selma with her sensitive, emo
tional nature. ......
draw *‘Belease my influence, me, Selma, I said, and I W1 suddenly ^
raising my head,
But as my eyes met her bright ©nee
a delicious sensation stole over me.
My spirits rose with a jump, The
heavy oppression was withdrawn. I
only realized that Selma was before
me—bright, beautiful, entrancing.
My tongue was now free, and in the
most eloquent language I I poured out
the story of my passion. advanced even rose her
from my ohair and to
aide. She waa still sitting motionless,
with her hands hanging listlessly by
her side. She answered my question*
m i child—as a mere automaton,
There was no animation or emotion in
her words or voice. She wag en
tranced, recoiled hypnotised, Tht truth
I from her.
flashed across my mind in an instant
At my bidding die had reliquished her
subtle power over my mind, but in my
enthusiasm I had forgotten to release
,her. From a partial state of hypno
tism she had then rapidly fallen into a
totally quiesoent, passive oondition. I
had unoonsoioudv taken undue advan
tage of her and obtained her meohani
cal confessions of love. disquietude. The thought
filled me remorse and
I turned from her and bowed my
head on my hands. The whole night's
experience had been disagreeable and
even horrible to me. I vowed that it
would be the last time I should ever
tamper with hypnotism or other un¬
seen mental forces. I dreaded to look
around and see what effect the whole
oocnrrenoe had upon Selma. She waa
qoiet and immovable, but her hard
breathing fell monotonously upon my
ears.
“Selma,” I said, finally, turning to
her, “let ns never try this experiment
again.” looked and shuddered.
She np at me
She wes now in her normal condition.
The feverish brilliancy of her eyes had
disappeared. “No, never,” she murmured. “It
seems as if I was waking out of a
dream. Bat it was a delicious dream,
or at least part of it I thought
that—’’
A flush tinged hex cheeks, and th<
dropped “What, her Selma?” eyes. I
asked. '
•No thing, except that we were to*
gether , and that I waa happy.”
She remembered nothing. Her con¬
fessions of love wore a secret with me.
With them atill: ringing in my ears, 1
then repeated i my tale of devotion,
knowing foil foil Wei Well beforehand that sh«
loved me, thong: though I—Home outwardly she might
and Country.
Seven laaint Miles Above Toer Head.
If tt were possible to rite above th«
mosphere which surrounds th<
it would appear as s
would ball of, be wrapped tire, while in
'
tarEl—>f The explanation is this: There of
taming oddity
not nor oonld not be any sense
tion of light conveyed: the to the i- with¬ brain
|h the medium of i ering ayes eye<
atmosphere or som aim
Hair to the son’* rays to aot upon.
But, on the contrary, if the atmos¬
phere of out earth extended to e
height of 700 miles, the sun’s heat and
I in
y.ry a
v
■
A
-4.
■ w. ti
?.,4v^v4| ' n4*ss?**rie
i. i-mt AfVc^mir’- r ; ^
■
..
* W'.*
Him larwurwiiN y+st
WWW •a.:
ilitr “4'
A 4 SSf WiAwS %
W
ALLOWING 0
”
<
ABTICLBS THAT HA'
(JOKE DOWN BOMB THBOAT8.
A Idttte Girt Who Swallowed a Big
p r ii of Lead—A Watch In His
Stomal. •
T-T-THE T T T “«?%***'*"*£*: eight-yeer-old daughter of
| er in the Ou.e»ro» JdJv.
£X£5S e^ed'tobee^ttin
sa^^ssjMiB. sSSa. £&r«j
She «
crncieting egoey, end ley lot on ea
tin dhy without propel atteadoaee.
^TJtSrSSJwST^l ° STothTititt.rZr“
* tt
w
dZssstt&Z treatment he endoeeded in getting rid
fi
would hate been impossible unless the
child oonld hate been remoted to a
E£L£?! 2
<«*■ et the nttUttt
Jr xpr different s^SsSSfi people. A burly
much in
NewTork policeman, shallow who looked
large enough to almost any
thing with impunity, onoe detected a
burglar in the aot, and chased him
tigorously for seteral blocks, ffiip
ping on the edge of the curb, he fell
heavily, became unconscious, and the
burglar got away. The officer was
taken in an ambnlanoe to the nearest
dispensary, where he was injuries carefully ex
amined. No external oonld
be found, but he died within two or
three hours. An autopsy revealed the
fact that When he fell he swallowed his
false teeth, although he had kept hjs
searet so well that no one lady suspected should
him of Slaving any. That a
be able to swallow her artifioial teeth
and lire quite a long time afterward,
while e man of almost exoeptional instantaneous- strength
should be killed
ly by the came process, is ons of those
medical mysteries not easy to solve.
In another case a bartender had an
alteration with 1 a customer, him who
threw a glass at him and hit in
the mouth, unfortunately, knocking out the three teeth,
whioh, bartender
swallowed. He was not otherwise
badly injured, but suffered pain al
most incessantly after the ooonrrenoe,
and after two years died from the
effects of the opposition peculiar accident. to this is
In exact the
ease frequently swmlowed quoted watoh and of a lunatic euf
who a never
fared in the slightest degree whioh in oon*
sequence. authenticated The case, is an
one, took plaoe in an
Eastern asylum, where a lady had
called upon her Incarcerated husband,
After trying various enable efforts to quiet talk
him sufficiently to him to
with comparative reason, she took her
watoh out of her waistband, and point¬
ing to the face said that in two hours
the man’s time would be up and lie
oonld go home with her.
Without a moment’s warning the
maniac snatched at the watoh so vio¬
lently Hud the chain broke. He im¬
mediately swallowed the watoh mid
about two inobas 1 of chain. The
shrieks of the lady brought ho the at¬
tendant in from the door, fearing
that the patient had become violent.
When the actual facts hastily wore summoned, explained
the dootors were
and the would general opinion be rid was of that patient the
who seylom had been soon perpetual a of
a aouroe
a small one, hot it was
than an inch in diameter
than a third of i inch thick,
feet that M was an open-face watch
ing and and that cutting the danger the of man’s the glam insides break¬ to
pieces was obvious. No difficulty of
nay Und ooonrred, however, and after
re
with typhoid forex. His ph yA«lttn«
but the friends of the
'■mm do
win* sees buried with him.
aSusi
*
i ** ■.. It there
asna*4ki are
m. *P
w. tv
| at mm
fra 5 4*-*
4 V - - rvw wpRssa t
*
ratsfwigwid •: -«•< rweeusB*c^se» ■srif I
- - as :
3^-4i ■ -
him almoet blatantly. A
briufatew gammoned remoted
seconds and said that
if he had Wen when the ao
Mwiiy ted ho could hate sated
the patient. record oi
Numerous eases are on
people bv allowing live objects, frogs,
BMiUuKl otter obi.oti<m.bl» 1°™* tttta «w
mg thing, heeu-g bee.
V'^J.'SSS, SJt«oS «*»
w. !■*
&5Steytsri to .£*
gSSSfettJs tt !**?© “g
drWrihg, “
J“h“l “*!“• , lioth w thnee who
wdnZktfft- M which F?rtwettly. i. wintered
howerer,
^MSLSttlMSS tteni»men» ^iontyofin.^-.
ihne introdnoed mto the^yetetn end
sS« fc
the case. • <#• ..__. Iw^^okher ...
Th *.* xpr ^? I i fluid
attstL 1
oil, it straggled «*» so violently - *g thft ^ a
of castor tiolent oil went oooghmg^ras the wrong way and h
child’s life oonld not be 8av ® d *
Only one romance m connection n
with swallowing was told^by the young
physician. sThis was in
two famdtes who lived in New Jersey
and were distantly ^nnectei. For
two generations a feud amounting al
most to a vendette had beem in pro
grew and no member of one family
ever spoke to a member of the other
as they passed by. Ou one occasion,
while making dinner of a large boned
flah, a young lady in one of the fanu
Heaswallpw^ a good-sixed and^ bone, had which her
stuck in hex throat, soon
in a very dangerous oondition.
One of the neighbors, who was sit*
ting at the table, and who was not
branches aware of of the the fend family, between rushed the out and two
called in a distant cousin of the young
lady who he knew to be a medical
student. The young m« promptly
responded to the call ond by the wdop
tion of practical remedies, not even re
motely conneoted with either medicins
or surgery, soon got the obstruction
out of the way and had the young »*dj
restored to health. Her parents were
so grateful that they lost sight of the
vendetta and asked the young
call again, which he did repeatedly* Wr
finally falling in love with tbe
patient, and putting a stop to Urn fam*
lly feud by aid of a marriage ltaense
and a very hilarious wedding party,
The age of he raldry i s WcU- nigh past
or the young ««wpw wwwld o«t»fniy
have adopted a fishbone as their crest
—|Sfc Louis Globe-Democrat ,,
SL ~ (
* WWUlfTI, DIM
The poasii>itities in a ease do not
prove it.
Instruction is bat an incidental part
of eduoation.
To educate is to unfold, and to in¬
struct is to enfold.
A breakfast-table or a long voyage
for dose acquaintance.
Most men are wilBflg to die for
their country of old age. »
Once your friend does you an IB
torn he will never forgive yon.
Inherited wealth dose not neoee
sarily render a man despicable.
Loosen your grip on others some¬
times, but never upon yourself, rft ,
Mod women nowadays are fair jpst
in proportion as they are false.
Longing for the future h
pendent in regret for the past
No one knows the right wey
barred fore time,
To
of it -A
mint “a ulQ
BTl or SO
itmustbean *1
ease which can r— »a
an
A A 41
Dr. ■-1 1
: j »-->
BsW?A»sr
i
lie rwH m r* at®r r :tfrpk
i an V Mr iri . <
^rt pTiTis^gy r > *
-
i-