HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1929-05-16, Page 6•
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. .. •
• .. a bound.19 rol 0 We e
,11 L.-, ' are that the slopes .ikt .the .0.1.je, war_
,Itolii In. by :OtaigOg. Wane •Oltr .t.to:
‘licirtIL, and Feat. a; Platia'a , OrNO,
-,,- - - .' 7 -•-• • i lwOose:-,144.0./.4144,4190-m0,4--efert.
,,,00.• •
crni May •Vield Rell4 ,of triangttley •litt4resses opt) Yarda or
Ider. Than Galleys -9
Caligula
- •
• TEMra,
a 'HAS Piveit Up
nusliels Of „Votive
Offerings
..:'IteMe4:41ell.M.ore't win .00p..ii4r..3,0:4
• isoareIs: .Triolok,Neisi have atkit94'0a.
*to"' 1:krtis0;; lAdo$410,!Itrork.*
niore 40011,04 and 30 Tast 4101, 71.tit
, _ .
BP* columns. whole Structgre-
ceitiOte4; IA, acres.: • .
.The edge of thtetentele le now 100
Yet:de:WM the Xidge • Of -ithe lake, ,but
it 14 'eUPPesed that the "waters Of the
lake forreerly ftente" ,to, it. The
area,,hee: yielded .bushels et 'votive
ot-
erings losto4;•statitette and thee.;
unneae Color
Berinese...cow4. at festival
ti/eglets., treasure . hunters, tourists. . delightful sight,!end. ,dliferent fronte
-aad Pilirtute ' ,•• "Sthce Sigtior Wee-, for exetailii ,an English crowd ptp,
tit 'gave perraissioe.,te a group. ot tie • #air as light triton darkness. . . .,To
private, 6.4e# ,te 4004 interest has. 4•00.,00., happy pureav-oproni,his
• ..*.e,e4r,;to the • general public. of Bur -,..414.1447.• igpap5V. TOy' S
erie end the Uniteil'SSetes‘ Some are keraiief of , orange (which somehow
' ,•'• : anttions, to see Whet 'those two oshiee ..never . seem... to otoo) and .41o.,briett..
'••Wilielt are 'knetwn to•hava'Oean on thec,:ir.•0,:lorod.pape aetbrella, is to -Wish
.7
lake L41.0,,Fe.:eTe.:eie:NiereteallY like for ..a 'return ..ef 'tli.o, owl,' oid.. goo
•, , 'Toe, VAgtta ,pio.411190,eg: of ' Poetic: ilesertli^ ;.ivieit We me.ii as well ne,Woirietti-tVere
`•'`•tiOns, Of 'Oleopetra'e 'hagtieePPeni't.o.,:not
. . . . afraid to go 'abroad in '.0•11:' 00'
'their imaginatiee..: •, ., : • • ., .rbravery Of cOior......:
•- .• MehtiOlegiete, go ferthet7; they also 'During. my :first day or, ea, In Ran:
•.... bone to and important 'replants of
-- goon 1 was thoroughly absorbed in
•' on11444°.18 'il:fflaiii- TI,1.1-14•011.1944.04'$n everything r tow. --the movement •life
" the mud :of the. placid lake., arid•ar.t!ie . and •calar,. the variety ' it races, the.
.Welnike *here Dina Nenserenale. was ...queer tUnibledown shops over -flowing
' ..vi...a4IPP.tt .' 404 ' propitiated •wivm • On to.... the ",:littered , Pavement,' ." the.
R.01110 .Was •young. ' 'Centuries*...befOro 66lies'. tugging- at 'freight -car the
••.Caltgula's ganef
s fleeted ea, '11-7i4.t-ia',8:. half -naked, .. laughing :children, • the•.
, Mirror.".' • • . '-'• ' • .. ,'-• •• ..7 :•bullocks, ' the, lop-eared goats, • the ;'elis;
' 7.• ' .. ' : May Hold Treasneers.•.. •• • • • : Phanta (for I, saw, eletihatiteon . tny.
, Though leaden pipes with Emperor first day), all the,:riotens atifi kale+
.Sillguie's naMe., An theM;. and tiltis,.. 408040 cOittegien of the: Piet' eplto:
[with that of Tiberius; hare been feint ' Weed ..ln the, sunlit ' streets and .bya-
. On.:' or ,near • the' hulks, during -format...ways. of .the...0.urnieso-eapgal,,,T,-,-
--.- atteinpts. thTflillici-theM,''.eiperte„ara 77The •whole- kit • of the • high-class
not agreed as to whether the vee-LBurmege 4,414,01,....etul.it is
;71i-g–:reidify.rbelonged.,;-liti,;entpero 2"—Crese7"..fittiti,
, • .• • , „ .
lung to the Temple Djana. Suclj1 of fine white', linen over it ,and a
•Fetnalfg Of marble and retisitledeeera SlfingYi or skirt, Of some .bright -col -
tions -es are now in Roman museums ored •iiilk reaching to the feet and
are Carried. out in red, green and , fastened merely by 'heine tucked in
white, the symbolic Colors Of•thogod- it the Witiet,•,JUst as 'one lueint in a
dess. Red Meant" the infernal fires, 'bath. teWet, Embroidered sandals on
:•,'Whitti the pallor Of -the Inaba goddess, the bare feet complete the costume,
Luna; green • atived' for. the Weeded. though a.,fine sCari. of ,gauze silk is
• Slopea..014 banks. 'Oddly en, sometimes added. in this stnlide
they are Italy's.. flag cOlora, to- , tire PO Pirmeee,..lady•tan ;challenge
' • , , Coniparigoa,wlth any i'ller09Pan •Wo-
, Tradition ' and old • iegegen.,Itatte en- man, however well turned out, and
'-"lialiCed the idea of .great wealth on she has the additional • advantage of
•, board both, shine,' , Unfortunately no.: being • thie to Weer any amount • of
. hedk. has IOU a, Posterity When. or jewellery without appearing Vulgar or
nOW the. Were sink. One legend 19 Overdressed: •.-Oite tan't etilitin why,
,thet: WO a,: th, a I .the Authority but it is sit. • , • , •
-
Of 'a' Roman despot,hadthein sunk The i;man's costume is practically
•
with his ‘'.guesta on 'board' to °rah
-a perfect day, with a remarkable sight.
Previous Efforts at Salvage , • •
. ,..Effortt to salve•the Eihips and secure
•been•made, several since. thanis A,ifi° • sPeol,a1 Oen',
• nal • ebbe* made an 4iteti4t, get sins he wears', instead of ,a "hing71.7
:up atiPpelied treasure °Wit the fit,- a "•Pasell'''.'''arhtah. telt eheile.r.girme4t.
teen& chhtory,.. ;sot 046.ukt :but:very much- ampler. , • •
brought Maori from Genoa !The favorite and predominept Color
• act oit LI lit for "ungyis" is rose Oink; but neither
the satne as, the rrometei With.the
exception of the "gaung-haiittg.P., or
head. scarf; hut he fastens. his
'flungyi with. bunch froneinstead
• theix.real. or Imaginary treasures ham. °f eamt14.7 at the aide'as 18 the *6'
• • a r gbarrels, • they.
t• Itiled:$0 -budge theN chest, -broke- the.
boWe of the steelier: ship and &Are It
. • up in deepen': •A Century, • passed,
••• and Only the Inhabitants of the,neigh•-'
-boring towns', ";Nenti and Dienzatio,
. 'Visited the 'wrecks,. taking Whatever
• they could find for thinmeltbs' and
• .keeping- ne the tradition •of buried
...wealth; .•• • - • • . • •
The second attemPt. wait Made by..
.. • engineers front Milani; 'They-01We-
. • ed, the.hull -of the smaller shtp,, sair-
• ed • Pieces of timber and abandoned
the .task when a ,cable broke•and• had
, weather set in: • -The lake Wap,
id.to keep itelseerets then nnt111827,
. When •Annesio• Fli$C011i went dawn,'
• 'found 'some . tiles with. Tiberious)t
name eri: them, Many copper nails,
pieces of mosia°, lead, piping, figure-
' beads' end so birth,: but Ito treasure'
chest. The Most . valuable bit of
bronze r.tid*decoratien went into the
Vatican ninseuni,,Wheie they. teinaht,
,. and late the ecitittyard Of a house be,
Lingingto Priem •
in 1994 Princess Jena Crain!, wile
owned file lake, allowed Signor Eliseo •
• Boraght to:try his hand ,With the
• Ing Shipt. ,Some bronze °Weds were
salved, •
••••-• .• • • TeroPle of Diana
The Pascist 'governinent tteetne to
have doubts about the reedits 'ot the
.preicent experiment and has not ee-
:, coeraged the plan for draining the
whIle of the lake: , Much will depend
Open what is-tound oa and near :the
smatter hulk. , It. itilelda fine works
f art. Mussolini ;may allow further
operation'.
• OE .even greater ,Interest than the,
disc'overlei abottt Caligufa's, galley
play be tedge • connected with the
..Temple of Diana, -whose •rentains,
partly uncovered. in 1885, lie, on the
mirtimest *here -tot the lake, itatnedt
• .ately abo've the • galleys.
Need is aboitt three miles in.circum- •
terence and the forest.grownwalls et
the old crater` in •whloh it lies. slope
Upward' fromthe edge of the lake
les: On the north there is a
ce like thon
'three, sti
level spa,e'are.
kheatre. When Ctta of an amphi
aligula:began hie
i bloody reign . brief an yearst after
ifixion: • this eriCuttiaCribed
the • cruc
zFlrestf- halt
dec.adent, w•erkkip.. ••rred time after lime foe
hmurder
Is rtg a_drantatte....bondel
• had. recuten-
taries—te 'of the -reigning.
lima stiecession or his merdater,
Wane gemorenais had it Ouriotta aS.
,ztortment he was
-.a goddes, of fertility, both Platt and
otMildbirtli, 6f fittnters' and. of
rfthIha1'410110 .the stattt,
eties 'found. trVer this space,
thoge of blase always inew thegin gOatleso le • naming teatime,
husking. •ii/411 glitter and bow 'or Willi
Melt• women hesitate .to appear in
•
apple green, Peacock blue, vivid
• orange -Or ,flame, purple or any other
coicir that strikes. their fancy. •
The
colors seldom clash, andIam inclined
to think that the Burmese must have
a .natural instinct for color, though
:some people.put it down to the light.
ManYuf the limgyie are In Meek pat-
terns, and it le .'often •pessitrie to tell
bythe Pattern of his lungyffrora what
district. a !lien halis. • .Blue*tis not
often met: With except further north,
where it Is worn by. Shans, Shaft Tay -
°Oki, LieRV713,1Ceehillar:1414.000T tribes'-
folk;..but these not true Burmese,
and rose plak• remains the distinctive'
sartorial color of burma. .
Burnie land ' of stinshine, land of
ignorance—the ignorance. that :is
bliss; land. of childish superstition
and *sfittPle faith; land of the yellow
robe; laid ot talk; . . : lotus,4and
where time. is not money but far more
precioug; ..here motteY has little in-
trinsic ratite and misers are ,not; land.
of laughing :children:, land of color,
And, above all, land ef • luminous—
the happiness•that beta of content.
.Edmonds, in "Peacoeks and
pagodas•.".. ,
' •
litivetv 4Pge,8 Colorful Monsters
,
. .
,utioti ;ye: Man* Fathoms
0 atRoi-ei Sekrin-”asiVi*es
. P
' - ,',-• --,-,,,,a
Monarch., Nolli• Unclerst.a.nal •Oce0o#,raPheyi:, 0...iii;;I Whipy
° Aoonlabes Among:Ponp:
. ' zerm of Paetieat .:
' .,41400es : : •
•
•
;•••
AI%
ONE ' POy'Ti:EY FARM P.F101,4CES 100,000 EGGS: EVERY DAY
1:00,000 eggs', itheut three-cluerterli:.0? output ot_41,Ranyjuede' &Tina- ,Los Angeles, "laid Atilt: forinsPectiOn.
Theiktanyinedetatm- keep 300,000 hens'..end 200,000 baby chicks
_Aeri oto
7
life • is to, be seen: for many miles.
Ifierairforkwaysi
.'• , , Mistakable :in the 'nildst of.. the bleik.
Aviatot, on -• Routine. ,Flight; desed.„ • " • • ". • .
A German archeologist Once Made a
map Of, plaCe :after infinite lither.
out the photographs ; taken in a. feir
minutes, show thaplan of the city: in
far, more detail and ,at. gonwpoints.
wjth: more 'clarity. Pictures taken. at
w closet. range even show the iakonts Of
,workers have. recentlY• !Mind '•ne individnal hougee, many of slime only
Method of .intinite value • in -aerial
photography Some tithe ago s..--,T9nriikoetehmei..ocoajoritkr, a.ph
Crawford,: editor of "Antiquity," Made
the :eldest inhabited city, in•theiwOrid,
showed Erbil,
it tont: Of the Royal Air Force. Stations the
the sem* of Alexander .the
In the Middle- East and 'returned with Great's, battle. It stands high abOve,
a collection of, aerial pictures new.. on.:
exhiliitioirkeMbed'uotirrtt8iIrm'i-074d.w.g4ichi
coiliary, ratae.c.hc. '
eccording to Mt,
been taken with any thought of their 1 Crawford, ' "represents . 'tetituries , of
„archeological value, but Were Made In anitileipal dirt." , • ' . • -
the routine 'Patter flighti of the air -
It Is het. only in the Middle East
men who geard. the frontiers Of Meso- I
potoodg., ,1 • • „ • that- aerial photography ha gadded to
Our ,knoWledge a tittles long ago: Mr
The 'Hite§ Of deserted 'cities. caughti
rawford„himselt,has carried out an
the , attention ..rrhen • *Wed from C
air- and therefore were sitapped as• air surrey of some of the southWeitt-
ern Counties Of England Width. reveal::
'landmarks likely to be Useful for reap-
, , ed. a number of prehistoric works:un-
ping pet:poses. • .
der' the bare grass of the 'Downlieds.
This, quite .necidentally, a great.
On •oue oecasion. 'a ,Photograph. of
deal- of valuableinforination regarding
what appeared from the ground to be
ancient cities, Which; Crumbled , away •
ati ordinary ploug.hed- field revealed
2,000 Years' and More ago and now lie
faint .bet perfectly clearlinesWhich
ethicist buried in the desert sands, has'
on Investigation proved to be the re.
come POr-the camera, when
Mains of a• stone -age settleinent.
Operated from the- 'air; reveals much
In- another part of the country'. the.
that is lost t� the eye Woking at the
aerial camera has played h great patr-
Same object from the ground ' •
In the 'excavations of a Homan' camp
These photographs laY bare . the
where- e numbee of 'discoveries have
'skeletons of the providing in
recently been made.. - •
Over Eastern Desert, "Acci
. tient* Photographs Re-
mains of Hatra
London.- Archeological research
• fact peas showing the arraugomeats
Of the streets and the layouts'of itle
large buildings • and public ,spaces.
Such pictures'are of value to arche01-
ogIste who wish to excavate, for they
show at jest which spat their watt
may be concentrated Most usefully.
Among idr, Crawford'i'collection 'le
a eerie* of pictures of Hatra,•a "ghost"
city some seventy miles from 'Mosta.
APproaching Hatra by hiri no sign of
A Contrast in Condnct
London -Referee (Cons.) : The ques,
tion of Prohibition deft not interest
• us; it is solely the concern Of the Ant.
ericanIe-eple. But its legal enforce-
ment on the y).* seas is another mat-
ter, itirelving as !raja
important •question of the'freedom of
Seas. We congratulate the British
and Canadian Government Mt piety'
handling of the I'm Mine case; they
have acted with admirable coelness•
and restraint and avoided giving un-
necessary Offence to the -American
peeple; and the affair, of Mr. Fish s
yacht, and, the, outburst of anger
which resulted in the United States
will! serve to throw the dignified on.
duct of the British and Canadian
Governments into high relief.
ttliare year, idea ot
fleavetiV• ' • ''
and.- rf'T iferte-nt 'attd
sugar howls With' the lids Offi"
• •
Mohair comes frorn the Angora
goatand South 'Western 'reta.S.IY•now
the, great' eentre for the grolin_g_of
thliT-TraTeg; Ttl.414.71filtiiro Via a half
Angora pate in die State
Irish Judge (to litigant in witness-
, • . .
box): "Look , here,- sir, tell me • no
mere unnede,ssary lies. Such lies as,
your attorney advises you .are neces-
sary for the presentation of your
fraudulent case I•will liken to, but if
you 'tell me another um11ecessai7 lie,
I'll put you in the dock." .
British Settlers
London Times. (Ind.) The State
Governments throughout ..fAnstralia
tend; at least in times of Labor admin-
istrations, to be iukeWarm towards
schemes Immigiations as attempts
"to force a pace' which will depress the
standard of life. yet Wegtera Atm -
which suffers like' the rest of
thaanitti, from having too high a
pr4Fairtiun. of its citizens in One town,
has gone to great expense in the last
few years in its bold 'Attempt to find
a new method of settlement which
"would enable whole families to be set-
tled near together on virgin lend. The
Group Settlement Scheme has-been
found in ten years to bertoo,expeesive
for e resources of .the b. a ut t
experience,: theugh costly, is still an
• Prince's 00311ke :to:7En+ •
41,104.04,4 .0740
markable. They are as ,•dletinotV o:d•-•,''Saterday 'Erealtiel,POst." ci erage
dent . physical conaegnenees...habltint or the Sek.,'qUoteS.. Charles
4041: chWge.;, • • ,
r.r.taline: s 01;:e-olottilioro6k4.14kali:t74,11,14.011..gol.!1.:::;.!;::!1:81-i.4:i.14.'7(i..a.,',...t,nt'u..ilta.
-lives 1,000 fatho a
Vhat the.' ah4uge:,. le • may be:. best. , down.
iixptessefl. by, this ,Wordsi; *41.44:he 4s. vaiii;t:41.F.'146titli that .suggests a steam' •
said to. liave. utteredte one ;tif 411,. :flatosyei, 4iid; a ;$11,Stensiblethat
nurses: 'You . have; learaed„ Betsy. ee .U:111iiteeMnittodete anything his *OtitK. : ,:.•
:*:.4ftol.t.ailkj11§XInplobe$;,liiis: an •addresit ifl the oeoits• • .;
,e'verYnetituary -kind of Mau,.. but one .01, ifx0fl at.:about oiie a3.41.;
who has Pi. lire . in Crory eXtraordin- a ,hitif inih4 :belo*. the surface.' • • "4'1'
.• • • •
•
'err kind :of: a way.. that SoMetinle0 Bathyterele:'whieh to taketftwo and'
Seeme to have ao Attie sense in it.".",•':,a lialf 400'46m/4:kis nine long feel;
; OM: 10 more or. iisee -Abe freqttcntOre..On `the forward dna that 'extend
...theme ot. the sovereign's 04.ierantion; back to ':hts.tajl. A inuch longer one, •
With his nurses anct•dabtors, ,Whe ;nn-
iderstand7h1m-better thairlisfiy one .else.
,for • they have seen iim through 'a long
Iuziess andthrough angering that
could herelieved only by opiates.'
• •Catohes•Attitime of thet•Prince
I it: is -not to be wondered: at that,
after'King •Oeorge been
through,: the artificialities inseparable
'from: .his way Of life.,,tuive become
clearer ,to hlitt than they werebefore
hie Mimeo. When he •went to the:aea
Wail at Critigweil to See the crowd, be-
le:iv, wblckha4 been •allOried by hie
direction to „gather on the htire, he
said..teone.et hiestiff: ii,tt is good' to
seereatliuman beings again. .I could
v4Isklyere -.(A.4. of theni.",
NOW the monarch:is able .10.'sYmpa-•
thizewith and-understand:the chink&
pt the..Brineti 'et Wales for ceremony
and the endWforMelity of, life
,OUrt.• ..•
What. lasting •effeet, If any; .• the:
King* changed Outlook on life,. or
kitten:his own ay of life, will:have,
remains to be seen., Its .ipintediate,
eftect, notverer, has beea to give he
servant Metes at Buckingham Palace,
Windsor Castle. and •Sandringham the
full beneflt of an absent court;whiph
hitheete has Meant for the +oral ser•
venni a.•period, eit "dliSciPlined
ness."
Idis-
Servant Discipline 'Ffelaxed..
At King,Oeorge's request •the eltecIp-
,
Unary rules at all the royal residence§
asset of great value. -1f ,the last, ten have been relaxed and the servants;
Oars have not yielded the results ,m,re
especially -those et Buckingham .
hoped for there is plenty to put to, the palace, have been having quite a good
credit side of -the ledger. Access to time of it recently entertaining their
the lands to the South-West, bus been friends in the servants. hall at dances,
opened up under , the impetus of a
large State scheme, and the wonderful
initiative Of the Kingsley Fairbridge
Farm. Schools have shown 'haw Zng-
lish children drawn from the paorest
quartet to out great cities, may be
conver d betimes into healthy young
Australians; ' • •
Bug Pitcher: How's 'at for gettiu
'ern over the plate:
•
• Good news for the deprest sugar ta-
dustry. `The early strawberry States
promise nearly 9,000,000 more quarts
than a year age—Boeton Herald.
•
. . Engliih. Girls Are Strong Por Athletics
. .
•
444fAko,•''
Coneerts and supper 'parties'. '
That Queen Mary' • herself should
eheertilly agree to the. suspen-
sion tite ordinary rules; which tare
prevailed , at the roya! residences In.
the absence .of the •court, and which
forbad 4 the, servatits' tO, hold any kind.
ot eetertainment, evidence that her
husband's illness bus had effect al-
so -On ker„
Six 'months ago it 'w,ottld have been
unthinkable• that Queen Mari could
have so Willingly agreed to the relaxa-
tion of the discipline in the royal
household as she, has done. , •
• • It is probably ,true to say that lite
to King George ,a.ed Queen Mary will
never again mean to either quite what
It meant before the King's illitese
Should the King regain. coraplete good
health lite.to both will signify' some;
thing More than it has thine hitherto,
something that Will bring the busi-
ness ef heing a king into closer relit-
•tionship with the ordinary business a
livIng.',, '
Bank Rate and Trade
London Evening Standard (Ind.
Cons.) : If the gold standard must be
managed, let it be . tilanaged. solely in
the interests of our own trade. So fir
Mir central hank policy has, follewed
the initiative of Ameritit and has•
humbly adopted what suits •the. Fed-
eral Reserve rtuthoritles Thus. we
have no* a tiani,c-rate of 5% per cent,
• and Our trade has hadno cheap ntioney
since -103. It is time for the Bank
of England to tell.the world,that it is
no one's.serVitor *Indio trY the eXperi-
ment• of giving our trade nioney at a
cheap rate, Matter what America
may say, lf, at the Satel time'stepe
aro taken by both the Bank and the
Government to stimulate' home indttst
try co.ufage will, pay.
On the St, Lawrence Canak
The • tcital traffic, including tiOtit
throegh and Way, ushig Canadian
canals Along the' st. Lawrence River,
amonnted to 9.411,512,' tous:' The
•
through traffic which traversed the en-
tire length of the, canals amounted to
7,321.:3is •
gradnat srAne
VitfIT triTlege; aren't, yeti?"
lle—..-Mo—doti't • ,•''ott think a fellow.
can. learn how . „drink and neck
girl without going to eollege?"
Understand .i t your 'Wife tvA n
44 to go to the Riviera?" "Yea, she
attached to the back .of his head, flies
-astern like the hOmewaeil-bound .pe'n= •
nant of a 'anan-otwar. ' Two others are • •
'beneath' his 'gaunt body..., How .docs be '
employ them?: • • ••
•.In '•two elongate heaci,:cavities.otthe -
fikelesit'lpnope, which is found •only. in,:
.the :rein:cite-depths, 'there' Is littitin-
ous• geletipe., Why? If • 1, 'could, thee'
• toyer tiositively . just.hjw those plies! .
• phoreacent organs of ':lphops .serve
'WI I ' sitindt feel repaid. for 'AIL my ,
;years Of invastiglithitt.:, • There. are •
.tuit• . even 'diatingnishable, .trikeit
"redintentarypoi.: or :of optic ..nervee...•
Is he jest a, bliniv.limplighter- Of the
deep? A.Poet 'might be content. with: . • . •
such an answer„.itt3iettaAnc1entist-,-
.•Insozne Cases the dem) sea hits`
color as rich in, tones as OtroWP.•-The
'beam trawlof. the, Albatitis_6014.0 •
times used to bring to the surface- a.
-species ,of :fish with a ptnk, and. bine
, body and .checolate colored
a' Creature:as :might'. he .cenceived by •
the peaty cook of a big hotel. There •
were others that had 'eyes like moon
stones, .,in hitt& .headsfitted to
gracefully proportioned brown, bodies
' Chauliedna has a' savage :Meath,. .
arnied with long teeth, but Mere tee
streak of eriiiMeni. :Meng hie ..lairer• • •
jawthat. might • have.: ;teen enameled
.tbheehrinal'iythli. 'egliririClis"AnPaninirrn
a4.rland juat
eh
gold, as. if t�. 'suggest tharthe .Pees, ••
via,n . loot of' he. sunken •galleons. or
§,nitht had. net..been eternally hist. '
• SacCopharynx" has absurdly' .small
•eyes right in'the'tip•Of his snout, and.
'goes about • his, submarine Witness
spewing ; a . row of- phosphorescent
Iights alotig each „side . trent stem to
I 'Stern. ',like 'a rivet, steamer' c.arrying.
eicnic by night. •' ' •
• . . •
. " •
ealmg Powers
Of Kings Foqund,
Many Believers
Dien Princes Were Fooled by
. General .Credulerice,. says- .
• .
. magazine. :Writer • .
• . The Most aniazing 'tale , which the .
credulityof the 'world has. ever fUe-
-nigher; saye Agnes Replier '.'The
Atlantic Monthly," in the many. chap:
tered history of touching for king'a
evil. From the 'days of the
Coifessor hi Englaild (this is a mat-,
ter of tradition), from the • dayit
Clots in Fiance, clear -down' to the
days of • proteund skepticiszn and
dawning revolution, men clang to the
belief that scrofula • was healed by
the royal 'touch;
"There nothing that can cure the
king's' evil: but a 'prince," • Wrote LY1y,
in his "Euphues4; and the world,
learned -or ignorant' agreed -.with MM..
It Was claimed that tide inysterious
power lay in the hands of French 'and
English monarchs because they bed
been'enointed vottfi• the *red chrism:
but Cherie' II, the most etteeeseful Of
royal 'Practitioner touched at Breda,
niugee and Britstels before the '
.stOraliono and deyout beliererti cross-
ed the channel to be touched by -the
old pretenderWilflato having
sotirly declined -this prerogative of-
4.1rol4pli.nliPit.irity., piety, profligacy, in no
.
•
way affected the healing poWer. The
people regarded their kings as .
Ro-
man Catholics regard theit prieste. •
They were cohdafts through which
flowed certain ginteelrrespectitre of
their own v*orthiness or unWortbiness '
•Loule XI wa§ fully ati-congolentiOut , •
In tnitcliteg "as Was Sand Loafs, OCT •
1?mletin"dlisP• ehisdefulfiCcimniettet4
• A man is never s,afil. or.comfortable
until he is. right. With C01,18CieeCo.."
- Photo -greener% "What can / do tor
you, iitallamel" Lady: "1. would •Iike.
MIS PhetOgraph enlarged, but--eleeee -.---
leare the mouth: as it es." •• • .
.. •
J)t
f CelotAtte`e -letter' to tire Carl ,
dint AtehlYishop , of Toledo, ,Stielti.
tinted -San-to Valuate; Jan; 1:2.• 141Z
.deSeribing- firer ocbedrtien "-SW—
. .
.to CililaT 'waft lately -d.tscitiereg •
•
.SPAitta.,e1.1d,riti, now in New. Twit, • •
, chop a n . e oinh no in • . dlEitt
a goose ,Ft turkey, two kick% ail ArGod, •
wake," vr4tAt taMity4tlift, podeta. •
fpnir, of, hatter,. haft It potylid o
• mAiels
j,ILOAL111.1.01-,..t1--fiteed-fiVill, g4, ()and IrOtars, add two polittda
Ntiet Or tie crust; rub willt•vol.k•s.....6
• e:
TVere peiiiiir-I•26eitettterS' Wf.tre tit *And- • •C`;tsr:.- • Ka -T4 e of wati-0•16-, wireit-the"‘ . • bad alre ail y 4o:16. Ye I, t holt!: (ia
ee'en-air Wathfitg restirt 'OW 0, f r
"itilicriekEatir4. 1,6 dance: taearita• • • . ;. •
and refused," • .„*..Titt.i` 40444,-,iltrit• Ate- -of Vatter tri the glItIFY; 1,T9 itTteit
pet ee e seaion: and 3ou have a YO'lt hit
• s e goose
•
• , my permi,gion," ' pie, 'Record tiig' :Neltmgb .
•
• .
',0••
'
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