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Show FREAK EUROPEAN PAPERS. H Plana to Win Readera Failed to Pf H long Their Lives. H A French mogaztno writer who hl H been looV'ni; Into tho subject ot trout . H newspapers thinks that one of tin I H moot remarkable ot these was Uk H Lumlnarln, published In Madrid. Thai M ink with which it was printed contain- - H ed a small percentage ot phosphorona. H to that the letters wero visible and the H paper could be read In the dark. H Next after this ho finds remark M ble the case of the Regal, printed vita H an ink guaranteed nonpolsonoui on -H thin sheets 'of dough. After absorav H Ing all tho Information tho sheet coa H talned pno could eat It, thus dorMnf M from It nourishment for mind anil H body. safl The publisher ot a new Parisian B journal, Lo Blen 'Etre, promised tc 'M all subscribers for 40 consecutive. M years a pension and free burlaL Is ( B splto of the inducement subscribers .M were so few that the paper died In t M month. It was followed shortly aftci M by a paper called Lo Moucholr, th H handkerchief. It wob prlntod on pa H per1 such as the so-called Japanese iH napkins aro made ot and might 'tx ?H used in case tho reader forgot or lost iM his handkerchief. It did not last tons , ! At two different French seacoast re- W sorts nowspapera called tho Courloi 'H dea Halgnours (Bathers' Courier) and H La Nalade, which doesn't need trana '; latlon, were printed on waterproof paper. Tho inducement was that th jH bather could take his paper Into tht V,H sea with hlra and read It while ho en 4H Joyed his bath. '.H Tho climax of utility 'seems to b , jm reached in Norway, whero some ol V tho newspapers used so tough a quail VH ty of paper that It can bo cut lntc ,fl strips and twisted Into serviceable ! rope when tho nows Is all read. " siiiiiiiiBsiissssiiiiiiiissiisssssassissssssssssaissssssssssssssssssssassss BH |