OCR Text |
Show HOHOPLANE THAT FOLDS ITS WINGS VIcior'Bugo, .la the isle of Jersey. It works 'mors Independently than the first method, hut' still It is only a pro- ion gatlon vjof the hand "and ithe brain. The third method Is the' table rapping. I mean taps on a tabler'jbey seem more emphatically to be an ex- t RIDDLEDtJNIVERSE tension Mof the hand and brain.. made 'on the floor by one foot of the table have no value because least pressure can produce the SCIENTIST HAS PLANNED GREAT WORK the seesaw movement Lr.fireatejr JThinge Vet te emei man of good sense jWould fof merly have admitted that we should CamlUc Flammarion, World's Most Noted Astronomer, Is Confident He one day be able to. photograph the a human beings or store skeleton Can Discow Troths Hitherto Hidden Says: "I Believe up the voice in a photograph, or determine the chemical composition of That Scientists, by Means of New Discoveries, Are an inaccessible star? What was sci' 1 Face to Face with the Great, Principle, ence ji huMred,-lw- o hundredr-thre- e hundred years ago? Yes. in a thou sm I'1 Rap-pin- -- L W -- r c , Vi:;f V i. 1 'fii- c--f r sand f a4 - i yearswhat t IVfes .Matter. . latioo. These ..fJbJnss belong to the pay. chicai as well 'as to' the physical: They prove that we arejatill lvlng 'in the midst of an unexplored world In which "the psychic force plays a ' - lsian .Society for Spiritualistic Re search, which he founded and, of which be was president. .S". The members come together every Friday evening In - tbe assembJv room of the society "in a little ball which 'was placed under the of , St Louis The president opened with an Invocation of the " It was Bdmtttvd role as yet- Imperfectly studied. It as a good spirits, that Invisible spirits principle Is an established fact that this dyns-- .were- there and 'tried "to appresent not nism exists, though it has ben to' ua." "A certain number of and perhaps ' : will peal, were fully- - explained, selected". They were never be fully explained , any more people este4tt.4arga,4ahla than r : all to abandon to tbe spirits tlons. This is because we take our In tbe room themselves to write; these were and " ideas for realities. railed mediums. Several years later "Things Not What They Bsem." .Mendr Victorian " " For xampIertoour senses the air who had often visited the obser solid body; we pass through vatory. wrote as a medium some Is not it without effort while we xannot psss p'.ges on the Inhabitants of the through aa Iron door. Tbe converse planet Jupiter and . produced plctur Is true of electricity; It passes esque and surprising designs which through the Iron and finds the air to tried to represent men and things be a solid, almost Impassable body. as they appeared In this ' giant To the electrician a wire Is a canal of worlds. , One" of ; his sketches leading electricity across the solid showed the house of Moxart. others rock of the air." Glass Is opaque to the- - houses of Zoroaster and of Bernard electricity and transparent, to, I 'Hut Patlssy. must The Oesh la transparent to confess that the cleardrawtngs ' rays, while glass Is opaque. ly showed that Barddq was not difor example, II some one. bad rected by a spirit from thst planet .Thus, ' liaid that there could be Instantaneous The transference of thought from communication between .London and one brain, to another Is n fact proved the Invention " of thr by telepathy." Several inediumB have telegraph people would have laughed. also composed, In successive leances, - Later Jt would not have been admit-r'te- genuine romances such .ss the as possible, except on condition of of Joan of Arc. written by themthe existence of a wire. Now thaVwe selves, seeming that theri Is a kind of doubling of the. peraonslity of the have wireless telegraphy., we cab the .discovery to the explanation subject, a second, personality. As to '. ' of wireless telegraphy, spiritualism the second, planchette. became fa . miliar- witn""thts Ihfouga' the seances sjid othcr pbenomena.. Likewise. spiritualism, suto stigget: of Ume d Cirardln at the borne of DANCIN(T:FOrrAN How Princess ber Ling and Her ter "Jumped" for the ager of China. ff" and-ere-te4- -- d Sar-do- curi-ou- s i , mag-petis- " -- - Paris-befo- re - his-jtor- y ty-vpl- y 1 -- . - it Sla- According to the Prlpcess Der Ling, author of "Two Years in the Forbidden City," the old dowager empress of China showed great curiosity as to the dance customs of Europe and failed to see how any pleasure wrnld be found in such an occupation. She had been told that even old "women with white hair were to be found at balls. "Her majesty said," the .princess writes, "'I would like to 'see how you ' Jump; can you show me a little? I went in search ofjny sister and found her busy talking to the young em press. I told her that her majesty 16 see how people dance, and e mustjrtiow her. - The young empress and all the court ladles heard this and all said that lhey also wished to see: My siatenaicr-thgthniff- d noticed a large gramophone inher majesty's bedroom and that perhaps we could find some music I thought th4t.wa7.agoo4 Idea and went to ask ber for the gramophone.' She said: 'Oh, must you jump with music?' "I almost laughed when she said that and told ber it was much nicer I I ' - I' H lij.'Vv., xw - i. J VKN j v "4.- -- t . xT frw ft - v K JWADVJlNCZnv wished. that new French monoplane, "Marcey," which' Just been through successful tests at Iscy ioeI I MoIIneaux, is an example of, the latest types of aeroplanes, so constructed that their "limbs" are Jointed and movable. The "Marcey" when at rest folds Its wings as if it were a huge flying beetle. Our picture shows the monoplane with Its wings open and shut " T'HE - e; Society's View Treasurer Frowns on Scheme, but Fur Dealer Has Nothing but 'v . Praise for It Animal Bergh Corona, L. I. This city is to have a cat farm, to be run on the same plan sis a chicken farm- - or any other kind of farm. The scheme' originated with residents of Corona who foresee a fortune in selling tbe skins of tbe tats. Judging by the sentiment prevailing against cat farms, however, the Corona Catskin company, as It Is to be called, .will nave troubles of its iEB-biif- very long. ore ; The company was organized recenteatdihat application for ly nd a charter will be made to the secretary of state within a few days 7 The n omln a - sums prom for all stray cats that can be gathered as oters-are-o-i- University Has , ' t- my Smoked- ' Heads.., ' ' - " '' ' preserving; the full contour of the features, are approximately 200 years tattoo with musics as otherwise one could old., They are the grotesquely beads orsTepwtTraerrie6rffirernie""ea (aorl of New; Zealand, who were first nucha to have the gramophone discovered ln1770 by the famous ex- 'Vnu ulHinrf Itia tn km..nlil hill p ton.p-.wi Gordon- - explained that looked over a lot of records, but thej "Professor were beads the preserved by a process were sll Chinese songs, but at last and were kept for we found a waits, so we started to of smoking them reasons that Caucasians same tbe lot" of dance." i We could See that' ancestors. The of their keep pictures people were looking at us who per heads are not of revolting, gruesome baps thought that we were cmxy. most sensitive and highly even to the ' .3Vhen we' had finished we found ber person. majesty laughing at us. She saldVl Imaginative ?The faces are smooth and do hot coold never do that.11 Are you "not more than auggesV human: flesh dliry turningnround &nd round TTt the face of a wax dolL The eyes are suppose your legs must be very tired closed and the hair la also. It is very pretty, and Just like The entire fsce -- is covered ;.with the girls used to do centuries ago fanciful though 'symmetrical .figures, In China I know, that It Is difficult tattooed' are during life." Tbe Maori and one ought to have any amount of the of entire Polythe tribe only grace to do It, but I don't think It nesian .race who preserved their would look nice to see a man dancing heads. The people of Borneo also, prewith a girl like object t the serve heads, but do not tattoo their hand around the girl's waist; I like faces as did the Maori : ; to see the girls dance together V - According to Dr.- Gordon, the-- preserved leads! are very rare, there be' to "be Jn j ing only two or three known .Salesmanship... : collecbesides the existence Robley To be regarded ju a successful salea tion at" Columbia" university; which many you- must be able to sell thing Amer-- ' sb to obutalns nearly a that'Uui- purchuer does not . - a. mr.ditri4 !1; i. -- well-preserv- thatJ ' r't s C'.'-.-'C'- h seore.-Nort- bur . --J- t. lean -- ... Point Out Fatal in tbe blood. . Tbey can never under stand each other and tne woman win Mistake After Five Years be .the one who suffers." " y Trl1' at The princess was wonderfully tired In a new Parisian frock and erNew Tork. "Never marry an. Ori mine toque trimmed with -- sweeping;? ental it's a fatal alBtake" said the aigrettes. " beautiful Princess Hassan,' who, beThe skirt of the frock, by the way. fore her marriage to a cousin of the was made slmpiy bt a wide border of khedlve - of Egypt, was "Miss Ola lace over nothing but chlffoolNo n actress. " Humphrey of California. were worn underneath. After five years' absence from ber na "All tbe frocks are made In that has arrived fashion in tive land, Parisian dJLcndoit jio wl and no netflrnnfa vnrn - . abtr . I ...... v - . . . . .rcuiaiu . n. I ticw anys r i r j ' ai wie iuicKtsruucb- a.ddel ' ;' er before going to join ber mother in Pennsylvania Museum Princess Hassan of Chlckasha. Okla. Prof. George U. Gordon, director j)f the .University of PenhsyTvahla museunj. has Just receiv-ed- , tbrpugh his agents In London, three human . heads whlcb although ''.vr-f7'?- flesh other than for food purposes, but this, to my mind, would be unjustl-flab- le cruelty to animals. The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Aniupwlthin a reasonable freight rate mals wlllcertainly Investigate such radiusHaving possession of these an institution if it becomes effective. cats; they Intend to go into the busiThe use of common, ordinary domes-ti- c ness on a large-sealcatsklns ""finie" furbuslhessTar ' Should this ' schemeljecome effec- though not common, has been heard tive the first to oppose Itwlll un- of In this city. The fur sometimes doubtedly be the Society for thePre-ventio- n appears on the market under various of Cruelty to, Animals, x trade names, and a select lot of skins. Henry Bergh, treasurer of the so- it TsKald, can 1e utilized to such adciety and a member of the board of vantages to make a fine appearance. I. Freundiicb-p-f I. Freundllch managers, when asked About such a it scheme recently, said that in his opin- Sons, furriers, saTd,tbat in his opin-- . ion the society would be authorized to ion there would be a blgnarket for a . interfere. r catskin Industry, so largvafacltr "l don't think the object attained by that enough cats 'the drthe killing of cats by wholesale," he mand could never be raised. said, would be Justifiable. Of course "I would not be surprised at all to it raises a point which would first see such Industries flourish in the futhave to be decided. .. :. ure." "The promoters of the catskin comNose May Grow On Again. pany might argue that killing cats for "" Albany, Nt X. Michael Beiios nose killing birds for their feathers. I was cut off with a razors elgbtf hours doubt whether 1t would be-- justifiable Iater""theemberM to kill cats under, any consideration where the fight 43ccurredr.anl.r unless the flesh of the animal Js to be Just before Bunsetaurgeons- - grafted It " used" as food. Of course, I realize back In position. . Tbey believe 'that'.' some use might be made of the the Operation will be successful " that Will Market Gats Company Proposes to Raise Tabbies for Their Fur. - ' li Dow- the-eean- ee - fc EMPRESS ion ! -- x" slcMjdenefl.z"-- i telepathy and set forth in "the Mysterious psychic Force" and "The Unknown," Teome to .the same conclusion: that the soul exists aa a real entity Independent of the body. It is endowed with faculties still unknown to science. ' It is able to act at a dis tance without the Intervention MJ&al., senses. There exists In 'nature a myriad . activity, a psychic element, the essential nature of which Is still - hidden from us. 1 Ever since was aboy of 16 years of age. along with my studies In astronomy I have been at work studyThe study of ing these questions. spiritualism was quite accidental - One day in the month of November, 1861 under the galleries of the Odeon, I espied a book entitled "The Book of SpirH8.w"byAlIan"Kardecr r bought it and read it with avidltyu severaj chipters seeming to me to "agree with the scientific basis of the book I was their writlngTTbe'Trurality "of Inhabited Worlds,?"! hunted up the author, who insisted that I should enter, a 'ffi&f x. myriad activity, a psychic element-- , the essential nature of which Is still hidden from us, but which some day will be understood by a further study of spiritualism, discoveries In -- J a. Order. I may sum up the whole matter with the single statement that there exists In ha ture, as I said before, a . sk,Tri 5. -- V".. e are not simply a material order, that they belongrta higher, a psychical , 1 tvvf . - ji:. -- r I ivi' ' i s, f . V,:f. - ' &dpl e Our actuarondilion will be tfl that what the knowledge of tfie dog IB to ,the "cultivated man. now that Is to say, there is no possible comparison ; There are properties of matter. which are completely hidden from us, and humanity is endowed with faculties still unknown to us These experiments, as well as those I have made in telepathy, lead me sheHsMam T lntelli-genc- be? one of CAMILLE FLAMMARION, of astronomers and French scientists, baa set himself the problem of trying to solve the riddle of the universe, . Along with his astronomical studies be Is trying to find if the Marconi wireless telephone, radium, telepathy, and spiritualism are some of the manifestations of this same great power. tion, mln d readl ng, are as real aa electricity and other forces found in physics and chemistry, only of a higher order,- - for they have in them something vital and a kind of mental ' ity. My experiments made during many years with .spiritualism, and its man! festations have shown me that these psychic forces are Worthy of being - soies-tlfi- c After ome.thlrty, yearf jDftudj; er&ur.aed. jilthle tb a -- aeei-of anirTHvetflgatlon he "has set forth the At present they have analysis. - result of this work in "The Myste- - been as little studied as in the time of - rlous Psychic Force," which was be Ptolemy and' have not yet found their gun some yearn before in bis work Newton, yet they fairly obtrude them calledJTeynknown.l ,. InJMs..Mok selves joLmut- ,n.Qtlce-anixry out. to he gives the result of bis Investiga- be examined.- That Is not so strange tion In spiritualism, and la "The Un- - when , we remember that the earth -planets were" circling about the knowhheMJil,iheJquaatloasmental telepathy, dreams, etc Though sun In their harmonious orbits, while approaching the subject differently, astronomical theories saw in them lie comes to the same conclusion in only'a complicated mass of seventy- v both of these studies. nlnectystalllne was encircling the earth with its com- 1 By C A MJUUEMFl, A MM AB I QN plleated currents long before they. wireless telephone and tele were arrested In their flight- - The graph have proven that . the stars were darting their rays through earth, as well as the air, has tbe ether before any hum" eye bad powers of transmission that been raised to them. Soul Independent of Body. were never Imagined a quarter of a From all my experiments, both In century ago.- - Interesting as these dls-- ' coveriesare In themselves, tbey are those gleaned from spiritualism and more interesting, because "they are urging scientists on to find the same laws and principles Intelepathy, spiritualism, and hypnotism. I find the same laws governing mental telepathy that prevail in the Marconi and the wireless telephone, and think that these are Only the first steps of greater discoveries that are - to come. I admit that investigation of mental, telepathy and spiritualism baa brought" me face to face with a great psychic , force more .powerful '177 than electricity, radium and other " physical forces. la only an appearance." - The mysterious forces we are studying ftre -- tiemBeliearmanifestatlonsof the universal dynamism' with which our -five senses put us imperfectly into re- - will human -- W-- f ed. I ; -- pet--ttco- the-princ- h 1 . Oaklandr Cat' The princess spoke, feelingly " and somewhat knowingly on the subject of marriages between members of the Oriental and Occidental, nations, for ber life as a member of the kbedive'a Immediate family was one thst was far from romantic and happy. ' "To begin wi.th," she said, "an American girl is far too independently brought up and too spoiled by her own countrymen to be dominated in the manner an Oriental expects his wife to be. Tou see, my meeting with the Prince Hassan was ,po. romantlcand I was so1 overpowered by his great manner and his magnificence that I married him 1mpnls1velyinef two -- . months'-courtshi- 77- p. - " have always been Impulsive and I shaU lways;be so. My marriage jUi fylnce Hassan should have taken some of that quality out of me, but it "1 bssn't i. .. :,y know.f however,- - enough" to give advice topther American girls' and the advice. Is 'never to marry people of Oriental origin or with Ortcntal strains -- "I ". MEETS DEATH IN WIRE FENCE Pennsylvanlan, Unable Free Himself, Freezes, While Friends 8earch. '.' Wealthy - t J. Pottsvllle, Pa. Too weak to free , himself from a barbed wire fence that held, him captive on a mountain nree miles from here, Louis Stoffregen, 80 years old. a wealthy resident pf Potta-vlll- e, was frozen to death. While hi '" body was swaying about In tbe wind hundreds of friends searched the val- - . ley below. v; Mr. Stoffregen left home in the after-noon to take ft walk.,?He apparently : climbed the mountain," and was held 1 1 fasrwhen" his clothing caught In - wire- - fejee. - The " aged man. 11 was probably, exhausted, by the long climb, and his feeble shouts were lost in the rush of the wind.; Friends started the Search when he IT failed td' reach honie Vt dark. , State policemen, who had bce:calledln climbed thjinQun:ain and la M th , 'A d : f 51v |