OCR Text |
Show EDITORIAL AUTOMOBILES SPORTS -- MINES FINANCIAL GREAT BRITAIN IS INCREASING HER CABLE CONNECTIONS; i VIENNA PREPARING FOR HARDEST WINTER IN ITS HISTORY i I Golfers in London Suffrage Leader Visits London , and Continent Great Honor Conferred on Unknown Warrior j Are Being Stricken With Nenropfobia . Brand-Ne- w Disease r . Which King George of England (center), the Ptf&ce ofWales (left center), Duke of York (behind king and Prince of Wales). Prince Henry (at left of Duke of Connaught, who may be leen just to left of constable wearing helmet, In right foreground), with the nobility, militafy and civil leaden (Prime Minister Lloyd George may be seen In right background) of England, following the casket bearing the body of the "Unknown Warrior" as it was borne into that resting place of kings, Westminster abbey, London. All England honored this unknown warrior on Armistice day, in tribute to the known and unknown dead of the great war. It was the greatest honor ever accorded a private soldier In the history of the world, it Is stated. Puzzles Physicians Makes . V ?". -- a, .v . ,w Its Appearance. f i, . - Min - 'v Ix-j- j. : Government Purchase of .Direct U. S. Cable Stock Is Considered Significant. Masses Will Have but Lit Universal Service Cable. LONDON, Dec. 4. Harley streets physicians are now treating a mysterious new disease which afflicts golfers and ' la named Jneurophobia. In one case a man attacked with could not stop waggling his driver at the ball before hitting It. He is now beating treated by a specialist in hypnotism. A promising golfer hasjiad hie career wrecked by another phtee of neurophobia, which . he developed on the Bramahott tie Fuel, and Prices of Food Are Prohibitive. , and Rich fvWar. Profiteers , Re ;ugees, However, Are Reveling in ' Luxuries. links LONDON, Dec. 4. Mrso. H. P, He played the first nine holes In two noted society and suffrage leader New of York, has arrived in London. 8he strokes under psr. On ths tenth tee, with the ; leading somewhere ot Is conferring here will visit k number of the having raised the driver the eaten and cabarets of Vienna these larger citiesandof Europe around his neck, he wss seised with a for similar condays one would think prosperity and joy ferences before returning to the United sort of temporary paralysis and could not had returned totthe capital of Austria. States! complete the swing. Champagne bottles are popping like rums, confetti and colored streamers make mardi gras every night, laymen dance with the abandon to see which one pays high prices in an American theater, women make up for the lowness and highness of their dretwes by robing 'themselves with, strings of pearls and diamonds. Men pay bllhi in four figures. ' J That is a common picture American visttdra flpd. They see also the tnou-fcae '7 races in he fall, the bettingthe-of millions of crowns, the crowds in theaters, the silk stockings on the Sing, tine de luxe stores of the arogant display of wealth by the war profiteers But out In Ottakrink and the neigh. boring wards they are preparing for the wofst winter in the history of Vienna. is hardly the right word. Preparing-There is nothing to prepare, except perSly MABTKE BIGOT, haps a little wood, a few crusts of bread and their minds. They still go to the . Internationally Famous Social Writer. Wlenerwald and cut sixty pounds of Translated Prom "Humanite. wood for their weeks allowance and some of them etill frequeht the municipal A. In her African exthem. A Dec. ARIA, high commissioner," Deputy garbage dumps and eat bite of decayed was charged to centralise the pansion France has not only de- Diagne, meat and the green, mouldy scum at the' new blackblrders in the efforts of the bottoms pf cans of American condensed manded of her colonies the beat service of the right, and he boasts of milk. I have seen as1 many as a hundred and supfood In can they having thus furnished to the shambles producf women and children there at one time. recruits. 0,000 plies. but also the best they can On July M, 1910, the war being finproduce In oannon fodder. Masses Face Starvation. A black army has been utilised, which ished nine months, conscription was prelast estimates D. his in The war profiteers, the rich refugees E. scribed for all negroes in French-Africa- n Morel, work, from other countries, the members of at eS,0eo combatants and 238,004 auxilterritories Shortly afterward the decree . on tha day of tha armistice there was extended to include Madagascar, foretga missions, the food smugglers, the iaries. Ul. were. Africa North Ike ( 14.. Senegal, mustJowel merchants and foreign visitors Upper not 000 from men, in live and Including contingents 4600; Senegal. Guinea, 4000; Ivorv Coast, muaic; luxury gay generally 4200; Dabomay, 2000, etc. Commencing but the masses of Vienna are no better Madagascar and Somaliland. How was tills Immense black army re- In. 1022, this army will comprise three off than they were last winter. under the Tricolor? classes and will attain a total of 100,000 Every American in position to know, cruited Several years befora the wsr plana men. Madagascar, Somaliland and Pa members of the American mission and of enwere made for clflc Islands will furnish another 100,000, voluntary providing other American activities and members listment of blacks to form, several regi- and 100,000 will be enlisted in Algeria and of European missions who have investiwere which to in be used Africa Morocco. These contingents must serve gated and sent official reporta to their ments, . three .years, of which two years must be governments agree that starving Vienna only. In 1913 a first essay at conscription passed In France., , is certainly nb better off than last win( was attempted, which developed so quicki ter. In 1914 was for Be several that it To In Used ly possible worse Is Strikes. off. Vienna believe Soma that in France, That is why certain reports in Ameri- battalions to be expedited army was utilised during participated In the first great th Thewarblack can publications written by visitors to where they partly an the French front and war. of battles tha of stores the cafes, cabarets and the In other theaters. Black regiments partly Ring section have made such a bad Im- Veritable were sent to Macedonia; they occupied Savages. pression. For instance, one report says: enemy consulates In Greece; they were Vienna is not starving, Vienna is in Those who were In Paris In those days employed against Russia; others are now far better shape than propaganda and remember wel the passage through the in Syria, and public opinion has already uninformed sentimentality have taught suburb of those first of Sen- been outraged by revelation of tbelr conut to believe. . . . The main trouble egalese 'on their way tocontingents the front to fight duct on the Rhine. with Austria Is that she cannot get tha white men. There la no doubt hut that thl unmasses to help themselves. . . - WhatThey here veritable savages, for whom army is a magnificent weaever assistance is offered by the powers the ear for civilisation and right" was questioning pon in the hands of the men of state tn should be In the way of constructive fi- only Just-a- s other war of case a would have any coup d'etat Nations) 'strikes nances, and granted only after the estabbeen. These mercenaries practiced wholewill be by capitalism In this lishment of a system of taxation which sale assassination, even on defenseless manner. suppressed , will eventually enable Austria to liquiand numerous are consider witnesses It We to a crime to take these prisoners, date the indebtedness. prove that they even paraded towns and men, on whom is exercised the SuperiorMeat, butter, sugar, shoes, clothes village In th north spoittng necklaces ity of violence, from their homes to sufn made of ears cut from the heads of fabrics, are expensive, hut plentiful. . fer In cold countries, to tnoculst them dead. One Senegalese was even seen with the vices of our civilisation" or One may walk for mllea past windows filled with jewelry, plate, silks. , . .' at the Versailles station in 1914 trium- give them to tuberculosis, while they phantly carrying a war trophy in the wait to b sent to massacre. And w consider it a great fault to thus reduce Outlook Is Gloomy. shape of a bloody German head. But recruiting was, not fast enough, the sum of tropical labor, whioh cannot The American child welfare ' mission, and most odious means were used )e replaced. the which has been forced to extend its work by our representatives In. Africa to obFinally, the time has arrived for th until It feeds zoo.ouo children In Vienna more black soldiers. Tribal chiefs man of color, as for the white man, to ence dally, finds such reports from Amer- tain were promised cash for so many men, and refuse to sacrifice their Interests for ican visitors to the fashionable hotels, they were punished If they did not supply those which concern them not at all. the cafes, and cabarets of the Ring very harmful. It is the opinion of the welfare workers and, in fact, all Americans who investigate the masses, not the gay night life, that the picture of Vienna last winter has not been exaggerated and that no rosy hues can be splashed on the canvas this winter. The lest shipload of American flour. 300,000 tons, tha gift of the Uratn corporation, Is In the port of Trieste unloading. Austria has bread to last until January 1, 1921. I asked a member of the cabinet what Austria would do then. r 11s shrugged his shoulders for answer. Colonel W. Causey, who has charge of . the coal ghlpmente in central Europe, told me he has been able to obtain a litmore coal for Austria, but it must go tle Into the industries. That means the poor will freese as they did last year. The number of unemployed Is greater If anything. Those who abuse Austria for not settling down to work are of tne industrial and economical Written for Universal Servlet by they acquire new vitality thereby. Sub, , situation, stance like arsenate of potassium and Famous French Physiologist. , nitrate of thallium increase th activity 4. Unless antiseptic Dec. ARI8, Employment la Scarce, ef micro organlama five or six times, for are alternated or changed often, instance, when once the latter have beThere is little rhanne of employment, of come Immune to the poison. Other antithey may stimulate the activity little ohasce ot getting more coal te run inhave less stimulating effect, but the industries, little chance of getting septic dangerous microbe organlama raw materials from outside for these InIn other I have yet to come acroaa a single case them. stead of germ decreasing In dustries, little chance of getting new words, instead killing of having a prophylactic of aa antlsepticated" activity. This is invariably stimulated. machinery, little chance of getting new effect, they may be positively harmful. The of consequence this Is that in orcreditor little chance of Importing the 74 A11 the germs lurking In a sore, for per cent of the nation's foodstuffs which Instance, or in the mucus cavities of the der to properly disinfect sores or mucus a cavities different come from mtrtt outside, little chance body, like the mouth, are not destroyed antiseptic should be used every day. In this way ths microbes of anything but death or onion with anuse of an antiseptic solution. A cannot the by adapt themselves to the toxin. other nation. That Is Austria In a nut- certain number Inevitably aurvlve, and . Antiseptics . may be classed in four shell. IHp groups: great Oxydant, such as hypo- About the only notable difference betheir tween last winter and this la the presimmune chlorides. hypobromldea, iodl ns., chloride, osone, In permanganate of potassium, etc; ence of foodstuffs the shops. But to the antiseptic and thrive in spite of such as salts of mercury, of that difference interests only the well It, In some cases ths process of adap- metallic, of silver, sine, copper, iron, eto.: aromatic folio. At 0 crowns a pound for meat tation requires scarcely twenty-fou- r ilka phenol, salicylate, thyme, napthol! cannot th workingman buy it, becansa boors. creosote, etc.) and. finally, antiseptics it means two or three days pay. The Furthermore, not only do microbe or- like formal, chloroform, fluorures, boric well to do who last year bought their ganisms become Immune to th toxin of foodstuffs largely from smugglers at dou- the antlseptla within a short time, but acid. etc. ble the price, now may pur base In the Frequent Change Needed. ' stores at the single marked price. The Austrian government, which last but th fame, the beauty end th music If (his claaaification Is roughyear mads out a budget showing some of Vienna, and Vienna cannot live on ly. the antiseptics of theadopted group Either th peace should be used one day, those first thing above 7,000,000,000 crowns deficit, these things alone. of the secthis year hag a budget doubling Its def- treaty must rsvlse the borders or Au- ond the next day, ami those of th third icit. stria mut Join another nation. another day, etc. There la nothing to tax but the few The majority of American residents of The necessity of changing antiseptics ea tobacco, salt, poets Vienna ere of the opinion that Austria s applies to tooth washes, (or Instance, as monopolies such and telegraphs, hut ths limit la being union to Germany would be a misfortune well as to solutions used for Internal for Vienna they oppoe It, yet realise troubles. The same system may also be riwched when the telegraph rate In country A hose paper money is almost U U one logical solution of an otherwise applied In the treatment of tuberculosis, worthless amounts to mote In dollars and insoluble economic problem. end It Is a fact that tJkewlss the majority of Viennese with new mrdltatlon acts most forcefully every rents than the rate of Its better neigh dur1 dread the have whom , bora spoken thought ing the first days . Vienna cannot help Itself, It was si- of becoming part of th Deutsche (letch. Parasites of malaria. syphilis, typhoid, tes vs dependent upon ths crown If Pwltssrland would have them, they etc., also become hnniun to medicaments these lands have been would gladly Join. Hungary ta too reac- absorbed by the patient, and. In order to lands, and governments indopeildent given tionary for them. - They do 'not know kill such parasites, altsrnatsd medicaments ere distinctly advocated. The peace treaty cut everythlg away what to do. v v Said to Be Probable That New Ones Will Be Laid " in 'Atlantic" arid Pacific. Rel-mo- By GEORGE 8EUOES, Cbln,o' Tribune Salt take Tribune Cable. VIENNA, Dec. 4. From the looks sum-aglet- s kettle-d- Grave Menace in Blacks Conscripted From Colonies Is Seen by French Writer r trans-Atlant- claim-existe- ( xf r;7. , J at--th- - Kaemt-nergtras- se Aside From Fact That Many of the Negroes Were Veritable Savages, Author Declares They Should Not Be Taken From Homes. , ;y Copyright Underwood furnlah-000-inn- ... Ger-ma- , Famous French Physiologist Tells How to Bag Microbes 1 s J Points Out That Organisms Not Only Become Immune5, to Toxin ot Single Antiseptic, but Actually Thrive Upon It. Igno-len- well-know- n far-flu- jsr , J ' A Underwood, - New York. French Reformers Faror Abolishment p tf ST. JOHN'S. N. F Dee. 4. (By the Associated Press) Cable , authorities here see In th recent announcement by th British government of lta purchase from th shareholders of the stock of ths Direct United State Cable company an attempt by that governmeift to break up American control of most of tha ic cables which, It Js forf th past eight years It te pointed onl here that, although nearly every cable under th Atlantia ocean wa mad In Great Britiln and laid by British ships and British workers, United States interests. In the past few years, have acquired control ot the majority of these 'lines, excepting, . of course, th German cables tlken over by the allies during the war end the French lines from Brest to St. Pierre and New , j York, ' As showing th predominance ot th United States in the control or Atlantic cable lines, It la poinetd out here that tbe two main systems are those of the Coman American mercial Cable company, concern headed by Clarence Mackay of New York, and the Western Union system, which operates not only the Western Union cables, but leased the and Direct United States cable line tn 1913. Thl arrangement. It Is aid here, ha resulted in th control by America of the two most important transatlantic cable systems It ta understood bar also that th French cable have a friendly relation with tha Western .Union system, Anglo-ATneric- an of Meal, at Noon Many, Involuntary Wives of Turks and Arabs Refuse to Lfcave Their Husbands. 1 SAMSOLN. Asia Minor, Dec.. 4. (By the Associated Press.) Entente and American officials and relief workers entrusted with th tank of restoring Armenian girls and women to their families have found that many of the girls who in the war were forcibly taken into harems and became the Involuntary wives of Turks and Arabs, preferred to continue as Turkish wives, and were unwilling to leave their husbands. They feared the hardships of Ufe among fellow countrymen, who knew be-of their servitude. Some of the girls came attached to their foreign husbands and said they liked the life Into which they had fallen. Where the girls had children the problem was doubly hard. The lot of some of the educated women and girls .was much more pitiable than that of those who had enjoyed no advantages. American women relief workers found on case In central Turkey espegirl who cially perplexing. An Armenian was graduated from one of the American mission colleges wa taken captive in th early part of the war. A prominent Turkish official whose only wife had the girl Into his home. recently died took children became much His mother and th to attached girl, whose superior edu-of cation made her an Important member the community. Th Turk wa very influential and, Arthrough th influence of the young from menian, saved Armenian refugees and to the He girl proposed persecution. she finally married him. When the relief worker went to the Turkish home to find whether the young bride desired to be freed from her husband, there was consternation in the house. The Turk and his mother and children were devoted to the girl and begged the Americans not to force her to leave. 1h ' young wife had one child Th relief worker talked to the Armenian wife privately and tout her they would not Insist upon her leaving If sno wanted to stay. She told them she could not leave her child, that the Turk had been kind to her and ahe felt that by remaining tn the village as th wife of Its most prominent official she could be of to Armenian than in greater assistance Th Turkish husband any other way.were and his family overjoved when the Amerli-antold them they would not take the girl away. He promised he would not take another wife and gave th American rugs and other glfj as an expression of appellation, New ' Cry to Decreae Con-- umption .Threaten v, Revolution in Pari. ' Hear-- - . ' 1 , j Most Unusual Instrument Universal Service Cable. PARIS, Deg, 4. Something near a revolution ia threatened In France a th result of an effort by Joseph Vaselviere to increase production and decrease consumption in FTance by abolishing th . noon meal. ' . To make up for the hot repast of four or five courses dearly beloved of French workmen. Vaaslvier seriously proposes that a law should be pawned compelling everyone to eat breakfast a la Amert-ctl- n. ( College Professor Announces'; Invention! ' of French Millions of francs ar wasted dally by the prodigal two hours stolen from the middle of the day for the purpose of gorgMoreover, when ing." says Vaaalvlere. a large meal is eaten at noen-- a sort of la produced, which preautointoxication v vents work In the afternoon. 'Americans are famous for tlielr energy and progresstveness, and most of It is due to the fact that they eat a large breakfast and then work right on through until the evening, with only about half an hour's rest at noon, during which a glass of milk and a scone constitute their lunch. "Not only would production be intensified If the American day were adopted, but workers could save thousands yearly by not having to travel home at noon,- On of th two German cables across the Atlantic seised by the allies during th war was diverted so that lta terminals were at Pensance, England, and Universal Service Cable. K. 8. The European end of Halifax, 4. of By careful study PARIS, Dee. languages and phonetics Abbe Rousselot, the other German line was diverted from at tha College de FTance, Paris, Emden to Brest, France. firofeesor an instrument revealing the exThis left only on German cable unact location of bidden batteries and subder , British control and there was no marines. I was especially Interested in phoguarantee that this arrangement would netics," explained the abbe.- - I discov- be allowed to continue tn the future. At mounered by comparing the language of taineers with that of people living in th th big cable conferencl In Washington In October last, which considered the plains that languages degenerate phonetically mors in the valleys than in the distribution of German cable seised by In trying to find the reason the allies, the mountains. claim by tb for this phenomena 1 discovered that lan- United States ta principal understood hr to have guages are transformed by the way the been that these cables should be surlarynx is contracted and by th force rendered by Great Britain and Franc with which a syllable te uttered, I invented an Instrument which would and be internationalised It these powers should be unwilling to agree to their register, much aa does a barometer, the transfer to the United States sound waves emitted in speech, for I Th Direct United States cable conwas much interested in th question, and which has been purchased by th I asked M, Demas, th noted singer, to trol, -- When he sing before my Instrument. opened his mouth th Instrument broke into pieces, 'like the roar of a cannon ! I exclaimed. Idea occurred to And suddenly th me that the cannon's deflagration corre to the contraction of the human ponds larynx, while the eound waves of the projectile correspond to th sound waves of the spoken word. If my Instrument could register sound waves of the human voice, 1 calculated one could be made to register traces that Is of the explosive. I registered the sound waves at three ' . different stages. From these three points, by means of a more complicated apPARIS, Dec. 4 Many annoying pass- paratus. It Is perfectly simple to draw i port formalities will be done away with circle, the center of which represents th If the council of the league of nations body.' By the use of this adopts the recommendation of the pass- Instrument, st the end of the war, hidden laeven and th different cannon batteries which conference terminated its port bors after agreeing on all details ot a composing the batteries 4 were located within a minute' time. uniform tvpe of International passport. The conference, which was occupied Languages, phonetics, ballistics evalso with the question of railroad com- erything hangs together. has perfected an In Abbe Rousselot establishrecommended ths munications, trument built on the same principles for ment of direct express train services between all European capitals. the detection of submarines. Modification Urged on Passport Formalities sound-emitti- Physical Life Held Immortal' by German Medical Specialist '' h is-so- rt drills have gotten down deep enough to IB estimated that they tquch Oil. and it 11100 feet before tapping must go at least the reservoirs, Seymour K. J. Cox of Houston. Tetaa. who brouxht two specially bdllt airto France to compete for th GorplanesBennett don cup, has become interested In the oil proposition end is leaving representatives hero to sink wells for htin. Hs la convinced that there Is plenty of oil beneath the surface In France. been struck in the nelghborv Oil hood of Tanalcra and experiments are and Abeing carried on In Morocco lgeria for further welts, v hundred graduates of the More than French hchool of Mines are working on the oil prospects and it Is predicted that France will be producing petroleum in appreciable quantities in 1921. bs : Required as Safeguard. This second line wss required by tn British government as' a safeguard in Ger-to " the one-tlcase of any damage man cable. At Halifax both these Imperial cable connect with the Canadian Pacific railway line across Canada. Cablegrams transmitted from London are th Atlantia carriedby this route across Pacific cablo. and Canada and thenc by which ta also a pert of th Imperial system, to Australia, New Zealand and other points in the tar east The growth of cable traffic I understood to be continuing and already ha been agitation In Great Britain and tn Australia for the duplication of th Pacific cable and some Britishers have advocated th laying of a new Imperial line , across ths Atlantic, so that possibly th ecliem now being developed may result in by the British authorities new line across both oceans. thr Developing Wireless. It Is regarded her as by no means unlikely that wireless telegraphy may also be developed bv an Imperial scheme controlled by th British government. A by Sir parliamentary committee, beaded Henry Norman, recently mad an of a of favor in policy report wireless stations encircling the whole world several units which might th Among compose such a wireless system Is th big wireless station at St. Johns, erected during th war for naval purposes and still operated by the British sdmlialty. paBy thts means the Newfoundland dislengthy dslly, per now recelv th patches from Great Britainforas part ofpurempire propaganda plan adopted poses. empir- of Cells Dictatorily Held Together by the Soul, He Declares. r parts of Franc. Geologists who have studied the soli and nxk formations that there ar certainly large deposits within a reasonable distance ot th surface. Welle ar being 'sOnk on the Rivert, In th mountainous region of Auvergne and even round about Varla, Ho far no government, extends from te Harbor Grace,' N. F., and thence to Halifax, N. B. Th understanding here ta that this lin will be taken over by the British government and worked in connection with th former German reble to Halifax, thus giving th British Imperial service two cables Instead of on. British rx-tn- lv ' FRENCH PEOPLE HOPE Death Is Simply tfie Dissolution of a Community FOR BIG OIL BOOM By HENRY WALES. Chicago TrlbuseAsIt Lake Tribuss Cable, Petroleum experts PARIS, Nor. 27. are beginning to drill for ell In various german Cable Diverted. ' , . By KARL H. YON 'WIEGAND. Universal Barrie Staff Correspondent. , Dec. . Physical life J Death 1s merely a BERLIN, of Individual has proven th indestructibility and Immortality of the Individual. single or unlcell " So declares n ttchlclch. a professor Carl Ludwig German medical speclallat. In his new treaties. Th Problem of Death." Ho says "Death ta elmply th dlsoolu. tlon of a community of cells dlctstorlsily held together by tne eout. It dissolves cellular stats confederation Into renewever Th cells, jinsrthy," ing themselves, are regrouped Around another soul.. Tbs aMolutor tndeotructiOHIty and immortsltly of the Individual or "unlcell." ho asserts, has been proven by science all along the line. Professor Hchlelrh holds that study ot death has boon neglected by sctoncs tn Not In life, but in favor of sturtv of Ilf death. Is hidden th mystery ot ail being and existence life-cel- ls pout-mort- al - 'Before our temporal so limited period of existence Ilea en ocean of death.' It constitute a titanic grav he writes. of being. After us rushes an equally Dm I tics ocean tb home of death and be tween th two Inconceivabilities ther4 flow Certh tiny,, thin rivulet Ilf tainly the tremendous world apparatus, the mtghtv organisation of creative pow r manifested In all the miracles of tn stars, th milky way and the suns, can not have been assembled around this thread-lik- e rivulet this grain of sand th axle of the All cannot be turning around this bit of Ilf. That would be madness and this nalv conception of ours, so If our lta were th hlahest gift, th on and only thing BU valuable and Important ta absurd lions of gold around the ot a goldsn pennv. 1 he universe conaletja tlon of Icy dead material around a tiny fragment of a glass splinter. ' Professor Rclilelch consider that tn discovery of th immortality of the unl- world-econom- ic dust-grain I e-owned cells, first mad by Professor Welssmaa thirty years ago. will In Urn b counted as on of the greatest achlevemsnts H declare that there l of science. neither death nor dying among protoxoa, bacteria, monads, etc., but an sternal g ot th chain of continuity of am form and sulwtantlality. . Schleich goes into details of th elements of the cells, their capacity for and thetr IndestructlolMty. Srnerntloti ho declares, has an arrestlv Influence upon th cells, and aavs that burkil la th natural wsv of returning the cells to eaith and not through cremation, the indivldusl rot into which dlsrotve He stiqngiy opposes original elements. lire-bcjn- the latter. The goal anil porine of existence lls vs Srhletrh, "Hue Is only Into a passageway, only a gala that and which only of a higher realm being, for human eyea ta full of night and dark, In death, ' ness.-- ' !! |