The Covington news. (Covington, Ga.) 1908-current, September 08, 1909, Image 6
Some Daring Pranks Played Upon Royal Personages. A FLOWER FOR THE KAISER. Decorations That Made His Majesty Explode With Wrath—A Medical Di¬ ploma Fer a Prince of Wales—The Duke and the Stockbrokers. Some years ago a paragraph appear¬ ed In a Berlin daily stating that Prince Henry, who had just returned from his visit to the United States, had brought home as a present to his brother a number of plants of a new variety of crimson carnation. “As every one knows,” the paragraph con¬ cluded, ‘‘the red carnation is his im¬ perial majesty’s favorite flower.” On the day after the publication of this news the kaiser was due at Aix la-Chapelle. A member of the town council suggested that every one in the town wear a buttonhole of the kaiser’s favorite flower. The suggestion was at once acted on. The frock coated members of the deputation which waited next morning on the platform each wore proudly a buttonhole of the deepest crimson. The poor fellows could not conceive why the kaiser’s demeanor was so freezing. He dismissed them with a few words, got into his carriage and drove off. At the town hall was another deputa¬ tion, similarly decorated. Then his majesty’s wrath exploded. “What is the meaning of this insult?” he de¬ manded. Some one explained, and then one of the kaiser’s attendants took the mayor aside. “My dear sir,” he said, “surely you know that the red caruation is the emblem of the Social Democrats aud of all flowers the one which his majesty chiefly detests!” Many years ago King Edward VII.. then Prince of Wales, was the sub¬ ject of a stupid hoax. He received a letter informing him of his unanimous election as honorary member of the Princeton medical faculty and signed by three students. With his invariable courtesy the recipient requested his private secretary to acknowledge it. The reply said, “His royal highness will remember with pride and satis¬ faction the mark of distinction re¬ ceived at the hands of the Princeton medical faculty.” As a matter of fact, there is not aud never was such an organization. As impudent a hoax as ever was heard of was perpetrated in 1904 upon a Belgian paper. A letter purporting to be in the handwriting and above the signature of Princess Louise of Coburg was received by the editor, who very foolishly published it with¬ out first assuring himself as to its gen¬ uineness. This letter gave a long catalogue of the wrongs of Princess Louise and of her sisters and constituted a most brutal attack upon her father, the king of the Belgians. The letter was at once copied by a number of other papers, including more than one in England. Naturally it gave great pain to the princess her¬ self, and the only wonder is that a prosecution for libel was not the im¬ mediate result. Some years ago a young American woman who was staying in Copen¬ hagen made a bet with a friend that she would propose to the king of Den¬ mark. On one of the king’s public reception days the American lady found her way to the royal residence. “What can 1 do for you, madam?” asked the king. “Your majesty, I desired to ask you If you would like to marry me?” w T as the reply. The king merely smiled. “1 am afraid I am a little too old,” he said, and at the same moment he beckoned to one of the officials to con¬ duct the lady to the door. He had put her down as a harmless lunatic. A joke of rather a rough order was played upon the first cousin of the em¬ peror of Austria, the Archduke Sal¬ vator, once when he was in Paris. He was passing the bourse—the Parisian equivalent of the Stock Exchange— when his companion, a lanky young French count, suggested that he might look inside. “If you walk straight in,” he said, ‘‘no one will notice you. They will take you for a stockbroker.” The duke took him at his word, but of course be was no sooner inside than he was recognized as a His silk hat was instantly spirited away, and he was at once surrounded by a mob of dealers with notebooks shouting fabulous offers to buy or sell stock. The duke had a desperate struggle to reach the front lobby, and when at iast he got there, hatless and less, he found that some genial soul had pinned a long price list to the tails of his coat. It is not likely that any sovereign ever got a more scare than did Ferdinand of Bulgaria some five years ago. His private retary, a young baron, was away in Austria on a vacation when a letter arrived for his royal master ing that he did not propose to return and that he would be glad for the sum of £40,000: otherwise, he wrote, would be compelled to sell a of secret documents which he taken away with him. Instantly Prince Ferdinand patched a couple of secret service voys in chase of his missing whom they ran to ground shooting on his own estate. investigation proved the missive to nothing but a hoax.—London WAYS OF TOE ORIENT, Queer Ideas About Alleviating Bodily Suffering. MAGIC CURES OF THE TURKS. The Treatment to Which Crippled Children Are Subjected—Bunches of Garlic and Strings of Blue Beads as Panaceas Against All Kinds of Ills. A stone strikes some part of the body of an oriental aud inflicts a wound. The train of ideas that this accident would produce iu his mind would run something like tIlls: The stone is the cause of pain, the cause of the wound, It is the principal origin of the trouble. But the essence of every origin is bid¬ den, secret and therefore sacred. The stone becomes au awe inspiring fetich. The wound is neglected. The fetich j has to be propitiated. This simple il | lustration is borne out aud supported i by everyday experience which med i ical men encounter in the east. Another instance may be derived from among the lower classes of the Greek population of Constantinople. A child falls and cuts his head. The first thought of the parent is to be sure not to wash and to bind up the wound, still less to call medical assistance, however grave the cut may turn out to be. This is always an afterthought, which very often comes so late that the help of a surgeon can prove of no use. The first thing the father or mother of the injured child thinks of doing is to pour over the shoulder upon the place of the accident a libation of wine or sugared water and to whisper in per¬ forming this some mysterious formula supposed to possess supernatural effi¬ cacy against every form of evil. The Moslems are addicted to the queerest practices for purposes of heal¬ ing or alleviating bodily pain. A Turk, for instance, in distress or suffering from some disease, however severe, knows of no better remedy than to fix a piece of his dress, torn off with true oriental equanimity, to an iron bar of some saint’s tomb or to drink water from a tumbler into which he has pre¬ viously put a sheet of paper with writ¬ ings from the Koran. Sometimes he will take a jar, the interior of which has been written all over with strange formulae and signs. He will then fill it with water, wait till these formulae and signs have been thoroughly dis¬ solved and drink the singular solution with an absolute faitb in its wonder working efficacy. Sheltered by the somber cypresses of the great Mohammedan cemetery at Scutari (the ancient Chrysopolis on the Asiatic coast of the Bosporus) there stands in picturesque solitude the tomb of a horse. Every Friday afternoon Turkish mothers carry to that tomb their crippled children to be submitted by a select “khodja” (priest) to an ex¬ traordinary course of treatment. These children are dragged, with their dis¬ eased limbs dangling over the hillock, from one end of the tomb to the other aud then back again in the same fash¬ ion. The occult influence emanating from this hillock is supposed to be au all efficient panacea. It is not diificult to trace in this case the crude, imperfect association of ideas. The horse has long been con¬ sidered an emblem of vigor, typifying, as Euskin says, “the flow and foreq of life.” Hence the belief of the ori¬ ental, inherited, no doubt, from the Greeks, in the all conquering virtue and influence of occult and mysterious efHuvia which are supposed to emanate constantly from a horse’s tomb. The wearing of a necklace of blue beads or of garlic as a potent means of keening away disease or of warding off the evil eye is quite a universal matter of sincere belief in the whole of Turkey. This superstition is shared, as is well known, by the lower classes of many a country in civilized eastern Europe. There, however, it is not so universal and flagrant as in the orient. There is scarcely a house in the Moslem, Greek and Armenian districts of the population of Constantinople which has not hanging above its en¬ trance door a collection of garlic and scarcely a beast of toil which has not attached to some part of it a string of blue beads. Among the uneducated it is impossible to find an individual who does not pin absolute faith to the all healing power of such charms, especially of blue beads, which are supposed to be au unfailing panacea j against every possible ill. Less general is the belief iu the east in the baleful influence of the planets Saturn and Mars upon the constitution of the human body, upon its four car¬ ] dinal humors—blood, phlegm, yellow bile and black bile. These planets are considered by some orientals, especial¬ ly in the far south, as the unmistak¬ able causes of all sorts of ailments. Woe unto him who begins any work when Saturn or Mars is iu the ascend¬ ant.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. If Only. Miss Enpec (engaged to Tommy)— When you proposed to me you said that if I would only say the right word you would be the happiest man la the world. Tommy—Ah! If you bad only said it! —Illustrated Bits. Perilous. “Were you ever in a railroad disas¬ ter?” “Yes—I once kissed the wrong girl while going through a tunnel.’’—Cleve¬ land Leader. It’s the fellow who minds his p’s and q’s that sleeps on flowery beds of e’s.—Philadelphia Record. THE COVINGTON NEWS Evans Lunsford W. T. Milner. LUNSFORD & MILNER Wholesale and Retail BUILDERS SUPPLIES I Lumber, Laths, Shingles, Sash, Doors, Blinds Paints, Lead, Oil, Lime, Brick, Cement, Mill work a Specialty 1 A Complete Stock of High Grade Roofings and Wall Plasters j j We carry the largest and best assorted stock of Building Material in this setion of the state, and as we buy only from the best mills in the south, our gradings are considerably ABOVE THE AVERAGE. Estimates and prices cheerfully £ given. Contract work at closest prices consistent with honest work and material 1 i , BE WE WILL SURE SAVE TO YOU SEE MONEY, US BEFORE TIME ANI) YOU WORRY BUILD { A BURGLAR’S ADVICE. Where to Keep a Revolver at Night and How to Use It. 1 fake my pen in hand (o write you an answer to the mug that signs his name "Victim” what says that a bolt on your bedroom door nights will make you safe from burglars coming into the room and shooting your head off aud to tell him the only way to be safe from harm by burglars is to lay still when they tells you to and after they has gone to collect from the burglary Insurance company. Your man “Victim” is a dull guy if he thinks a bolt will stop any one that knows his trade, because we always puts a gimlet hole through the panel right back of the bolt and slides it back quiet and easy just the same way as we puts holes through the panel back of dead latches on outside doors, because there ain’t nothing will stop a man that knows the trade only a steel door with an iron crossbar back of it and electric contacts all round. What’s more is that any man that sleeps with a pistol under his pillow is a chump, because that's where we always feels for it the first thing and gets it before proceeding to the busi¬ ness of the evening, the right place to keep a pistol being in the front hall hanging on a nail where you ain’t liable to do no damage to the bed¬ room walls and furniture with it. be¬ sides its being bad for nervous people to wake up in the night and feel for a pistol that ain’t there no more. If a guy wants to take a pistol to bed j j with him and thinks he’s got nerve enough to use it the proper place for it j is not under the pillow, because that’s where we always look for it, but it’s j at the foot of the bed. about where ] you can stretch out with your toes so that when you wake up and feel the burglar’s hand searching under your i pillow you can lay' still till he moves over to the bureau, when you will have plenty of time to get hold of your gun with your toes and pull it up gen¬ tle and slow like you was still fast asleep till you get your grip on it and then if you are quick enough to make j tlie burglar shoot in the smoke all right, but If you ain’t got the nerve for the job you’d better not have no guns around, because lie will shoot next. Having been in the bolt slipping and pistol collecting business for nine years. I guess I know the game, and if 1 knowed where your mug “Victim” lives I would just come up some even¬ ing and pinch his gun for him to show him his bolt is no good.—Sloppy Mike in New York Sun. Two Apologies For a Hat. A Kansas City man who had lost his hat at a public function in that metropolis caused the following unique advertisement to be published in the local papers: The undersigned will deem it a great favor if the gentleman who inadvertently took the undersigned's new silk hat on i the occasion of the reception of the Lo¬ tos club, leaving an inferior headpiece in¬ stead, will have the goodness to return said silk hat. Not only will the gentle¬ man receive the undersigned's warmest ! thanks for his kindness, but the apologies of the undersigned—the apology for the trouble tlie undersigned may have caused him and “the apology for a hat” which he has conferred upon the undersigned. —St. Louis Republic. ] Hypothetical Questions. ‘Wlmt will your motile* say to you when you get home?” said one boy. “She’ll start iu by asking me some hypothetical questions,” answered pre¬ cocious Willie. “What are they?” “Questions that she thiilca she knows the answers to before she starts to talk.”—Washington Star. Reproved. The Young Doctor—Just think; six i of my patients recovered this week. | The Old Doctor—It’s your own fault, j my boy. You spend too much time at the club.—New York Life. Enjoyment stops where Indolence be gins.—rollock. PROFITS CUT ALL TO PIECES ON PIANOS . Ten or Fifteen Different Makes. $10 Profit on Factory Prices. See This Line Before You Make Your Purchase. It Means Money To you. C. A. HARWELL, Leader In Furniture and Undertaking Covington, Ga. ♦< I ♦ Patronize I I White ♦ I ♦ Barbers ♦ I i ♦ I We have neat and well ♦ a I kept shop, equipped with I ♦ new furniture and supplied with hot and cold water. We ♦ ask for your trade from the I fact that we do first class ♦ work and white barbers all I the way through. ♦ $ ♦ I W. J. Gober ♦ I Covington, - Ga. ♦ ♦ I. FOR SALE—Fine Homer Pigeons. $1.00 per pair J. M. Aakon. if. r ♦ i We Carry a Good Stock of I ♦ i Trusses and adjust sieentifieallv j ♦ i them ♦ i for relief of hearnia. Read what a ♦ ♦ i customer says: I ♦ ♦ July 6, 1909. | ♦ i Aiken, Ga., DR. J. A. WRIGHT, ♦ i ♦ Covington, Ga. I ♦ ♦ Dear Doctor:— ♦ ! My truss is all O. K. aud I telling the good news to I am ^ i every one. I feel like a new man. I wish you may live long f i to benefit suffering humanity. Yours very truly, g ♦ The above i was an Unusually Bad Case. g ♦ i We carry a full line of Spectacles and can test your eyes and flf | ♦ your glasses according to the most approved scientific methods. We , i guarantee satisfaction to those who deal with us. f ♦ j ♦ Dr. J. A. WRIGHT i ♦ $4