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Show THE 10 SUNDAY A EXAMINER, MM AS IB A UTAH SUNDAY OGDEN, A Alma mM 4 MORNING, ''' a H 18, 1?06 UMMMMMMkUOlklMhAMMM LmMmMMH MM ElMkHttSt by a Dignitary of the Church I Queerest Ghost Stories on Record, Told H NOVEMBER HH3flHCDdflHnfiEHflEHHRHMBBllK )IB0BSK0BflKS BBBflHBKBHHEHnflHBHHHHBEHHHBHKHHHSHfln2SHEfl3HHnflBHE2flHE pahfels ihjst" that fahiiied a huxhle of mis utninEM'nx mi ley iieutoh of stotkton axi fkomixext enflish civlesiaktif, says he hakes ese of a usyfiiif AIXTAXFE WITH SEYEKAL MOST AMAZINtJ SI'OiHvS' OXE IS A dlAXT EOYlTlAX, AXI CLAIMS FEIJSOXAL -- I IX A(1 OYFlt SFYEXTY MILES IX LESS TH AX FIVE MINUTES; wno allows THE EA1J OF THE MEDIUM II Y WHOM SHE THE AIM'IIDEAFOX TO EXAMINE HIM UX1EK THE MAOXIFYIXO OLASS, ANI AXOTHEK A SKITTISH LADY WHO lioXEH WAS MATEKIALIZEH." iiWWIIWIWllBBIgHHHawmHBHHFr,,ww,1w"wniBBP!lwwwwWWWWSHrwwwiissswwwwwMwnwwnwwwHWHWWinMWBimn in The 1' niton Slate and tireat Britain by Curila Vrowa. All Right Strictly Hesened. London. Not. I. Twenty yard of luualln, bundled lunel) together ii Chichester at midnight, ara declared to have arrlvod in London flva mlu ultra later. The diaranre hetween the ' e'rect line la a trifle more than seventy miles! The ex parcel poet. Imagine, too, a giant Egyptian l.UW) or more yeara old, munching an apple in the full glare of gaslights in a London drawing room in the twentieth century. Theae and other equally aatoni thactual haping thlnga are told of penings by a high dignitary of the Chureh of England. Considering the Immense amount of publicity attracted. Americana probable fcatra already learned through the cable dispatches that a rather extraor-dlnareontrorersy has been going on in tbia country between a venerable r arebdeaaon and n world famoua of the art of conjuring on the aubjent of alritpallatlc manifestation.1a The churoh dignitary In question Archdsaoaa Ttiomaa Colley, and aa this la by no mean the first tint that hie earn has figured largely in the telegram from England and always ta connection with ocnuli matter American reader may hare fell some curiosity at to the petaonallty eat inordinary of this somewhat churchman. The archdeacon s many and surprising aril titles make him worth tailing about, even wars It not far the fact that bealdra being one of the moat ardent students In England of supernatural doings, he claim te hays had perhaps the moat extraordinary psychic experteaoes of which there is a record. That such a description of the arnbdaanon'a ghostly adventure la no exaggeration can he Judged from the account of them which has Just been given to me. Aa to their significance, modem will decide Cor themselves, but meantime vK may be said that there Is no question whatever aa to the archdaaoon'a standing as a clergyman of the Church of England. After a distinguished early career la this country, ho was invited by is hop Coin so to go to South Africa, sad upon aocepting, was made archdeacon of Natal, a position which he held for many yearn. He la now rector of Stooktoa. sear Rugby, and perhaps the moat generally beloved man la that section of England Archdeacon Colley has been experimenting with supernatural phenomena for awn than thirty yearn. t)f Copyright I ill the exlrmnrd:ury experience : oping. Making there an unwrapped-t:p bundle of the attire, and loiwely pinning my card to It a lth no ether ires. I. and a frleni and the young la, IV sister sw the muslin fade xwav. iiissr,ier and fade 'Ike vapor front the lap f the little medium, it i s'hlch be claim to bare bad in tbs', tine. however, perhaps n me Is than that mi'h what he 1.1m-d- f describes lightly as the "psych reels poet." Here Is the stmy of 'he happening," which, for greater I I : I i everything round him. He ualknj ub md down tie drawing room examin ng different articles with great ,,. ler. Presently hq espied on a able a dish of baked apples, i atm hi eat them. The medium , dozen feet away at the other end of the room. He had refused an appi averring that he eou.d taste those the Egyptian at the other end of the men in the full glare of the gaslights ru As the Egyptian finished gobbling. the apples 1 held a piece of paper to-- ti.is materialized f,:rtu we had to do with an auclent ileuizeu of the valle. of the Nile, who In stature reminde, me of a mummy of gigantic proper lions I orce saw In some museum at first tiling in the Milan er Rome, lie was. however, hi fount thKT no menu u mummy now, though as to than five niincto hi dead body. It may be that Ms aliont seventy n. tr n:ltn! earthly remain yet. In some mummy case, arc slowly crumbling into dust. goods In 1 onj.iii "The bronze hued skin of our abnorchance hotel bv Tl-ia inh tfnif - o.- oeci.'tivra'.lv boll.y mal visitor which 1 was suffered very rnl'nx ttor... tclj and vouched tor bv a respected pTar of and natural')- t ro' panlon with us close I. to scrutinise with my Stanhope the church. is, however, little lesr mortals. Exhaling again to invisibll- pportunity that cu'ild be J sired for what place. cloatly Then was rceu steaming. a from a kettle spout, through the texLure ant He after-w.trruhi'tauce of the medium's thick t bed taken loss a little be!. w the left brei.it, filament, w i cy aerial flight of j the side, a from Chichester wrc.ld be almost Invisible until win it delivery of the an 1jch or two inches of uur frieud's an when at a I bn.lv. Then It grew In density in a which o:ld step cloudy something. parcels po-t- . - pinned to It face jusl as he '. eJ. rul seeing my name and alin- - le wired to me and card so had fallen upon bad gotten lot;: int'-.-urei- v i okai-rvic- d'-it- , .l to.-ar- li-.- :!- e s ! y "pro-feaao- AitrimEtrov coi.i.b 'hicb Haa Bscn tus ttosus ot Many ot vatEatat-tub Who Veualiae let iouet. a octet at atocniew. I give aocuiacy, own words: Nous KauaMiisa.y Marias el in the arrlideacoH's At Boulhaaa, some years ago. I with no Uttle discomfort wore all day under my clothes and next the akin several yards of white muslin. la the evening, still wearing It, I cycled to Chichester for a surprise visit to a young lady medium uf my own devel- - I " eat was then nearly midnight and I had willed the musllu to go to London to a friend. Next day came a lelegiaiu from my friend quickly followed by n letter to the effdet that at the first hotel he had chanced on having been to the opera and missed the last train that would hare taken my friend to Ills home out of London the muslin uiprlsltig than many ot the account of extraordinary niaierialltatlzns' witnessed by him in London and elsewhere given to me by Archdeacon Colley. According to him, the scene of these generally haa been hta drawing room during the evening with gas lights flaring from many chandeliers, while the coming of the psychic bodies has been as follows: Aa a column of support, standing at hla right aide, I .with mv lefr arm at the back, usually upheld our entranced medlum( having thus the best a ishwtoh guipriUna toc'ktov. atAdventure with "Bptma ity in a cloud (sucked hack into hla buy I were they withdrawn from us wistfully gazing on their mysterious departure, and noting thla or that particular phase of It within a few Inches of the point of their Inscrutable disappearance and envanishmenr. Thus, according to the archdeacon, came the moat "remarkable of all hla psychic visiter,' whom he named the Mabedl." ''From nty own knowledge of and travel In Egypt," rays the archdeacon, I straightway guessed that In ABCTIDKAl'Ok iUU.sk't St MM KB HOISB. Himifc Pipe' Through Which th Children of the Pariah Scriptural Tsais sag Are lUwardsd with Pennies and Oraagas. lens, and olwerve the- - flenp markings, ward the medium, and the akin and the finger nails aud toe nails, tbs core of the applea eaten by 'the Hismall hands, wrist, feet and ankles; ked!' fell from the mediums lips Into lth tha Famous that paper. Of another and equally surprising materialisation tha archdeacon told cast of expression ; the haiighty aa follows: One also Joined ua whow I and my prominent, black, piercing hut not unkindly eyes; hair lank and Jet, with wief had lu the flesh long ago known mustaches and beard; long and droop- as 'Alice.' Her womanly shape grew ing limbs, wiry and muscular, and from the left aide of tha entranced feet K Inches. height some The Mahedl' was interested In (Continued on Paft Fifteen.) the swarthy, hairy arms and nether limbs to the knee; the features mobile with life, yet at times with a sphinx-lik- e It la claimed that in Naw Turk aa may a aa more wall dressed w tunes than In any other city in th world. Th sve rat lies not so much in ths clothe themselves as In ths way they ara worn and th general grooming of th wearer. One reason of ths perfectly groomed appearance of eo many of theae women la the well made corsets that they wear. Every year, la fact, women ara paying more atteniloa to the subject of corsets, and consequently are wearing better grades. If It W have had Olbson girls and vrt-oother sort uf girl, but now we are to have a new artistic ideal In the hip less girl. No more ia th fashionable Acfigure to resemble an hourglass. centuated hip curves are to be if not by nature, then by art, which la to say by masaaga and meltus ban-lahe- d. ing machines. The melting marhlne Is a new device of the beauty doctors. It Is a kind of stiff hip corset with an electrical attachment. by means of which, through the agency or heat and pressure, the dimensions of th hip are reduced at the rate of an Inch an hour. To the uninitiated It appears like an Inatrs-meof torture, but the beauty doctor declares It la positively harmle Similar devices are hla for reduclaf double china fatty ankles, etc. But whatever the means, the gtri cf th hour I to present a chastely hlpirst figure. Her shoulders must be brnsA her waist slender and her hips narnt rower than her shoulders. This," said the artist's modelI H "gives her a handsome figure. Rre-the figure of a man and of statue, and Is attractive In a girt."say Furthermore, the artist's model that the feminine type for 1M7 Issimbe tall, slender and of an artistic desire ta plicity. Bo all maidens who set sboul be a la mods will please and making themselves tall, slender k simple. B B Whether you look smart or like freak this winter depends on the angle t which you wear your turban." wh the brother to the later The had Just come back to town. o first time I strolled up Fifth avenue neve that I afternoon a runny thought In the history of headgear had so maw of (urbane been eerre different style up to ua There were hundreds of them, to au appearances. But after I had studio the thing a bit I mn-i- e the discovery that every blessed toque was exactff were like every other toque, only they com- the of on at different points put pasa- - rnl "Now. here's a pointer for you. can add ten years to your looks or was turoff five Just by adjusting tha nesr ban to suit your face. j qles. Mcassltjr Ike least I B B On all sides one hears the same etorf of the surprising vogue which Isa corded yellow this winter for beHroom wear. Like everything else wh,cJJ -ultra fashionable and much talked in the realm of woman's attire, yell will probably be as extensively be r by the wrong woman as It will the right and will lose half Its tlveness In consequence. The enormio r range of different shade In this will, however, lessen the possibility tint, selecting an unbecoming corn ro from pale primrose to deep e there ere some dozen or more graao-tionof tone. . ne One or two striking gowns have colored chiffon ty made of lem-in- -1 with applications of the ett cloth, a combination whlrh Is as live In t'lf'iwli'i of evening gowns It is novel t |