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Show HAS A HEW TIIEOBY. NOT ME ART POWER tt - THE MOTIVE OP LIFE, tf para af ( Iwalul Aetiaa at Pat Haart Paaipla IMw (aaa4 fk Plaaararaa BiaH ClmUlM at !. R. M. J. RODER-Ml'N- D of WUcon-t- a ha propound to a new theory the U end povtr that propelt tl blood. Though ministering to the tilt of the honest u folk In far-awa- y - toon, the pinery doctor it a graduate of Munt, and tbla fact adda latter to bit idea, in short; bt anna that tba heart doet not more tba blood or. force iu circulation;... that the air on breathe it tbt Incentive to blood action, and that tbt heart relatively acta at a mer governor of " m machine. Dr. Rodermund it evidently bold and tine re, for be wrote the following to a Chicago member of the profeatton who atked for a full explanation of bit " ' theory; Dear Doctor: I am pleated that a few persona are at least becoming Interested In the subject of my theory of the circulation of the blood. Of course 1 cannot expect to btve my theory accepted in such an Important matter, Inasmuch 4 int the tlnrt physician that ever framed such an Idea. Ai 1 am not known that meana skepticism. Well, I think that will prov good In the end, for I did not want to spring a fad on tbs profession or the world. The profession now rests on n foundation of fads and will be written about in the future se a great humbug. 2 mean medicine not surgery, I claim and can demonstrate that internal medicine can be as accurate as surgery, and hope to live to set a revolution Incur practice. But 1 tear It will have to proceed from the pressure , of public opinion. blast M. Ds don't care. All the In- - terest they have la expressed In lbs thought, "How much can I make out - - v ZL 'Sr quart foot of ih body's surface, and by breathing the lungs stay charged them and to th farmer whs PHILIPPINE PIRATES. ues their waters. The bores, however, have the great merit of being InfiniteARTESIAN WELLS THAT YIELD ly cheaper, and at the same time yield- FIERCE MOROS OVERRAN THE ing a very copious supply. Here arMILLIONS OF OALLONS, ISLANDS. tesian wells are obtained by drilling with machines similar to those need tka Graat Oayrae at Ckamfcerlala. A in slaking oil or gas wells. The depth Thay Wara Croat aa Blradtklmty aa Kaap Tkra tka SyaataTO CaaM ? I) , That Staada aS tka Baa4 ( tka to which 'it Is necessary to go In wder LSI la Tbla Caoatry It Wabdarfal to strike winter varies from 400 feet la Ckack latU Ska Daft l BOEING' FOR WATER. from birth until death. Another proof of the power that boldpropels the blood is furnished by ing the breath, The longer you bold the breath the slower and feebler the pulsation becomes In every single person, well or sick. Try it on yourself, but not too long, gnd note the slowing Part or aura of the pulse, snd see how full end bounding the circulation becomes after (Special Letter.) . taking a few inspiration of Jure air. ANY regions yet In many Instances tbs rate of the pulse ktj remain where you will Increase from seven to twelve might pick up gold beau, besides being much stronger, and things, only By suddenly cutting off the breaththere's no water ing, at by hanging or drowning, the mothere, so the forpulse beat keeps up full for a few tunes remain unacments, but gradually becomes feebler, and as the lung cells become exhausted quired. ' Yet sub-- . terrsnean water is of their air supply the circulation stop e; and life is extinct fery-wherv. Why do you feel so sluggish In mnggy weather. Just befor a storm quires to be tapped. or during any hot weather? Because The tapping la done by machinery, you do not get the force and power of which bores a feole, say, six Inches in th circulation of the blood. For the diameter and a half a mile deep, more Uck or quality or of oxygen In the air or less. That bole is lined aa It prothe pulse wilt be found weaker, not ceeds with steel pipes screwed Into flow. If these artesian having the volume nor force as in each other, bores don't exactly turn a howling clear or cold weather. . reason people Suffocate by g idrnes into a smiling garden, they at in a room, or when packed in a closed least render habitable immense tracts This ha been the case room, or In room filled with smoke, of country. In is from want of oxygen and not from more particularly in Australia. as 4ormadjtsupQed, al Queensland mauy of tfae. squatters though the smoke or gases are respon- count their sheep by the hundred thousible for tba disappearance of the oxy- sand; and In the old days the mortality among the flocks in times of drouth gen. The doomed Another practical Illustration I, was simply appalling. when cutting the arteries of th necks animals would crowd in on the rapidly of bullocks in a slaughter house with- diminishing water boles, or storage out cutting the trachea. aqL when the places, and, convert the frontage Into animals have nearly bled to desth.tbs a desert, till at length they were too blood running leisurely, they often weak to travel back to the abundant efforts to breathe pasturage wblh no longer availed several strong mk when the pulsation and spurting of tbemr The spouting bore changed all thaL One photograph here reproducthe blood will renew with activity, Another strong argument that the ed show a flock of sheep drinking at heart cannot propel the blood is that an artesian stream. This la Camstse (all other things being equal) Is bridge Downs (No 1) Bore. situated In the northern divie measure of power. It Is estimated on a sheep-ru- n that the heart In order to accomplish sion of Queensland This bore Is S42 the task of propelling the blood to all feet deep, and yields 200,000 gallons a evday. parts of the body exerts a power at After a good flow lg struck by bgring ery pulsation equal to fifty pounds, varying in different persons according tbs water has to be led In the required to health, labor, etc. This would bs direction; in other words, an artificial equal to 200,000 pounds every hour stream is formed, which flows for miles awake snd asleep and this would across the country. Its course being mean that the heart puts forth energy marked In due time by a riband of sufficient to raise Us own weight 20,000 rushes. To make the channel, an enormous plow la used. This plow Is formed of logs, arranged 4m the shape of the letter V, the apex being shod with Iron. The whole concern la dragAusged by perhaps twenty bullocks, tralia may be said to have found salvation in bores. There are now in western Queensland alone some 454 of them, and their total depth exceeds J00 miles. Qf these bores, 817 overflow, with aa aggregate output of 192, 137,240 gallons dally. This same colony will soon possess the deepest bore In the world. At the beginning of this year the Bltnerah bore was abandoned, waterless, at 4,000 feet, but boring was recommenced when water was struct at WarbreccsD, at about the sane depth. It was decided to continue th Blmerah bore down to 5,000 feeL so that when completed it will be the costliest and deepest hole In the world. The height to which the water is oftin In BoIh thrown Is extraordinary. City, Ida., one of the five bores throw Its stream 85 feet Into the air. Which reminds one that towns as well as wild pasture lands often derive their water supply from bores. The bores of America are protected by law; those of .Australia soon will bs. Now and then "bores are failures. - Their water may. .turn out brackish or saline, or may not jput in an appearance at all. The second New Wales bore is Youngerrlns bore, and Is on the road, lrrora county. It Is 165 feet Ideep, and yields 175.000 gallons a day. This bore waters all the year round 600 horses, 90,000 cattle, and 115,000 sheep, which it good evidence of Its utility. All bores do not throw np their water as seen in these pictures. Sometimes th water only rises to within 100 feet - Tnt Bourke-Henger-fo- DR. RODERMUND. which create dishonesty. few have Integrity with progressive ef lt, tention. i .J i A In- Study and test this subject of th You will he delighted to circulation. find It correct every time. It Is a universal law,' T'lave been Tfylngto prove during four years that I was wrong, but ths testa never faUed. It U nearly SuO years since Harvey demonstrated that the blood circulates In the blood vessels. During theta centuries all teachers on tha subject of phyalolbgy have maintained that the heart was a pump and by its muscular blood th contraction propelled throughout the body. Dr. Rodermund Insists that this theory la absurdly false, and an Absolut physical impossibility. According to his thesis tha heart turn so more to do with the propelling of the blood through the arteries than tba stomach or Uver. I am convinced." he writes, that the power which propels the blood 1 received through the lungs and not performed by the heart. My first forcible thought that th herfdoea not propel the blood wa In observing the We find tn the pulse of sick people. tick that the weaker the patient and tha weaker the action of the heart the faster the circulation. Again, we have very quick circulation of the blood where the pulse Is as full and strong Ai In the healthy subJecL Take, tor Instance the circulation in children. The younger or more delicate the child the faster the circulation. Tracing these well known facte to foetal life. It Is still faster, tut at the birth of w can notice several An Infant changes that are strong and Incontestable evidence In demonstrating the power that prope'a tbe blood. child "The lungs of the new-bor- n Art charged by air pressure. This air greur 1 about 2.004 pounds to every feet every hoar where an active pedestrian climbing a mountain can raise himself only about of that distance. These estimates refute themselves. That It Is aoms tremendous force thar doca send the trtixjdthTuugtrthr arteries is easily seen by It spurting for yards when an artery la cut; but that the heart and blood vessels could withstand all this dynamic pressure from birth until death la Impossible. What machinery could withstand alt this terrible strain? Had we not better look about us and tee If nature has not provided some other means more rational, less liable to derangement, not contradicted by every law of dynamics? This tremendous power necessary to tba .circulation of th blood la tbe same as that which furnishes the motive power throughout universal nature. It Is tarnished through the lungs by tbs air we breathe. Instead of the blood carrying oxygen through tha system. It la the oxygen from the air that sends th blood bounding through all the minute capillary blood vessels, exactly reversing the Old theory that has been believed la by us for nearly three centuries, other words. It Is the oxygen breathe based on the fundamental law j of electricity." th -- llfklMl af Alt Liquid. Additional experiments by Frofesso. Dewar have shown that liquid hydrogen Is by far the lightest of all known liquids Iu density Is that of water, and, curiously enough, this happens to be the same ratio of density that hydrogen In ths gaseous state bears to sir. Heretofore tbe lightest liquid known, has beefi liquefied marab-ga- a, which possesses about s the density ct water. ' two-fifth- F-ri- feeL The photograph reproduced shews the greatest artesian bores In America, with the possible excepwell at 8L Augusttion of the The Illustration shown a ine, Fla stream of water being solid eight-inc- h thrown to a height of 12H feet above Observe tbe top of the well casing. th man with a bucket lover his head by way of a protected helmeL" During tbe tests of this well the stream was reduced to about two inehes, when th great pressure that was exerted forced the water to a height of 162 feeL This bore is 692 feet deep and th pressure is 104 pounds to the square inch. The flow is 6,264.000 gallons per day, Tbe tiemendous force of the flow may be Judged from the reproductlon,show-fn- g S sheet of heavy boiler Iron, with a considerable hole worn through it In less than three days owing to the The water striking It continuously. two smaller boles on each side contained bolts when this piece of iron was braced to the front of the well to divert it, and the bolt heads were com- to 1,200 ra Out, r ELECTRICITY ga tktkaranur Ceana AND LOVE. Wraltod to Ckrak af tka Lattor. Mere is a variation of the old story f the true lovers and tbe cruel parent A prepossessing young woman, living In the vicinity of Seventh and Tasker streets, haa a steady,! and also a father. The latter does not approve of the former, and la at no pains to disguise his sentiments in the matter. When expostulated with for receiving the visits of th young man th heroine protested that he came merely as a cua-ucaller. But the old man was suspicious, and he summoned to his aid aa electrical worker. At either end of tbe parlor sofa, underneath the cushion, contact plates were fitted in such a way that the weight of tha person over each one of the of plate pairs would close an electric circuit, ringing a email gong In another part of the dwelling. The peculiarity of the arrangement was that both pairs of plates had to be brought Into contact In order to complete the circuit, and this conld be effected only by two persons occupying the sofa. When ths objectionable Romeo made his next visit everything was serene until about 10:45, when tbe old folks supposedly had retired. Then the tell-taelectric buzzer went off, and the old gentleman with startling alacrity presented himself at the parlor door. What nohe saw shocked hit tions of propriety, for In his youth young people were not permitted to sit without a large and yawning space between them, and this particular pair of young people sat very close together, indeed. The employment of modern science in this instance to dam up th course of true love a as a signal success. The poor gill, according to the neighbors, is training on plain bakers rolls and ice water, while the luckless lover declares that "the old 'man chucked such a scare Into me that a mogul locomotive couldnt drag me within a mile of the house. Philadelphia Record. Prof. Dean C. Worcester of the University of Michigan contributes an article on The Malay Pirates of the Philippines" to the Century. - ProL Worcester says of the dreadedMoros of ths southern Philippines: The Mo-rcatered the Philippines from Borneo at about the time of the Spanish discovery. They first settled In Sulu and Basllan, but rapidly spread over the numerous small islanda of the Sulu and Tawl Tawl archipelagoes and eventually occupied the whole of the great island of Mindanao to ths east, snd Balabae and ths southern third of Palawan to the wesL Before their conquest of Palawan was. completed they had their first serious collision with Spanish troops, snd have not since been able to extend their territory; but what they had taken they have continued to hold. Hostilities between Moroe and Spaniards were precipitated by an unprovoked attack by the latter upon one of the Moro chiefs of north Mindanao. The attacking fores was almost asnlhllated, and the fanatical passions of tbe Moroa were aroused. They forthwith began to organize forays against the Spanish and native towns of the central and northern Islands, and from the outset met with great success Their principal soon became annual expeditions events With each recurring southeast monsoon hordes of them manned their war praus and sailed north, where the coasts until the they harried Cnange of monsoons warned them to return home.' Thousands of captives CAMBRIDGE NO. L were taken. Men were compelled to harvest their own crops for the benefit th the force off of cut by pletely of their captors, and were then butchwater. WORLDS DIRTIEST PEOPLE. ered In cold blood, while women snd children were carried away, ths for- kotldflDti of the" Caneaana Who BmI HONEST' MINERS. " mer to enrich the seraglios of Moro Four Daji Wek and Never Wulh Gold Dust Is Lying Around Cara, chiefs, the latter to be brought up as According to Le Petit Journal of laanly la Ika Kloadlka. slaves. For two and a half centuries Paris, the dirtiest people in the world, Much baa been written of the wonEmthis state of affairs continued. dirtier even than Lieut Peary found ders of the Klondike gold fields, a corboldened continued ths the Eskimo, hate recently been dissuccess, by respondent writes, but practically Moros no longer eonflned their atten- covered by a Russian traveler and exnothing has been B&ld of the almost to defenseless natives. Span- - plorer, M. Zienoviff, In the Caucasus. tion the miners. phenomenal honesty, of the tab planters and government officials They dwell la aa almost inaccessible What amazed me most during my first were killed or held for ransom. But mountain range In a strip of territory few days in Dawson City was the reck the delight of the grim Moslem war- between the Black sea and the Caspian leu way in which mlnera left thou riors was to make prisoners of the sea; and for the last 2,564 years, acsands of pounds worth of gold exposSpantsh priests and friars, toward cording to the scientist, they have reed In empty cabins and tents, as if inhamained in the same primeval condiviting the first comer to help himself. whom they displayed the bitterest tred, Islands which had once been tion. They are railed Svtnctiaa, and There were millions lying about without any one looking after them, hnd prosperous were almost depopulated. their village, although consisting of Even foreign sailing Vessels were at- miserable atone hovels, without any ) far as one could qee,they. belonged to nobody. I explored many of these tacked and captured. The Spaniards attempt at form" or adornment, even cabins during their owners absence, did not tamely submit to this state of such as nature might suggest to them, and In the very first cabin entered I affairs. Expedition after expedition la not without a certain picturesquewas organized. Millions of dollars and ness when seen from a distance. Withsaw a dirty, tattered blanket careless ly thrown over two mackerel kits. I thousands of lives were wasted. Temin, .however, the huts are desperately lifted the blanket and found that the porary successes were gained, hut they filthy, being filled witty rags, skins, kits were almost full to the brim with resulted In no permanent advantage. vermin and dirt of every description. gold dust and nuggets to the value of On several occasions landings were Like the Eskimo and certain Austraat least 5,000. The miner was out made on Sulu Itself, forts built, and lian tribes and the Pueblos, they have prospecting on Bear creek, and had no garrisons established, only to be drlV' no fireplaces, their cooking being done more anxiety about his pile than If en from the island or massacred to a by a fire kindled In a hole scooped ont It were safely housed In the bank of man. The steel weapons of the Moros In the middle of the floor. In these It was the same la nearly were of the best, and for years they houses, many of which measure only England. every cabin I entered. Gold greeted were really better armed than th 10x14 feeL men and women and chilme everywhere. There were shelves Spaniards; hut with the improvement dren are huddled together, aa many full of oil cans, meat tins, fruit Jars, In firearms the Spaniards gained an as eight or twelve persons often occuand buckskin snd walrus bags, packed advantage in which the Moros 913. not pying a single hut, and In the winter with the precious metal, all as unproshare. Such cannon end rifles as they their cattle and mountain sheep share tected as If they were full of potatoes. possessed were antiquated, and they their quarters. Every aperture is closOne Norwegian miner on Hunker had difficulty In getting ammunition; ed on account of the cold. Horrible creek-ha- d made a strong box of a but it was not until the day of rapid diseases arise from this long imprlaon-men- L steam gunpair of canvas overalls, the legs of fire guns and light-dra- ft aggravated by an abnormal conwhich he had sewn up. 1 lifted the un- boats that they were finally confined sumption of arrak, a distilled drink of canny safe." and found that it weigh- to the southern waters of the archl the Asiatics. Strange as It may seem, ' ed a good 100 pounds, every, ounce of pelago. An efficient patrol of gunthey have adopted the holidays decreed which was virgin gold, and the least boats was established, and the Moro by almost every religious eecL Thus value I could place on these dirty over- praus were forbidden to put to sea four days In a week no work Is done. alls wa 5,044. There were without first obtaining a written per- The only Industries of the people are oil cans full of gold carelessly mit from the nearest Spanish govern- f&rmlgg. bee culture and cattle breedpushed under the miners balks, every or. They were also ordered to fly the ing; and throughout their territory one of which held a fortune, for which Spanish flag. When a prau was en- there is not a single manufactured armost men strove a lifetime. Out on countered that did not show the flag, ticle. i Eldorado creek there is a settlement or was not provided with a passports, of miners who have no fewer than 14 it was rammed and cut In two, or sunk MARIE TEMPESTS HUSBAND. rich claims, and are washing out gold by the fire of machine-gun- s. No quarat the rate of many thousands of ter was given. As opportunity offered This is the young actor who has just pounds a week. Their strong room Is the gunboats shelled the Moro villages, married Marie Tempest, the well- a common galvanized' washing tub, and which- were built over the sea and so when I was there it was three-quarte-rs could be easily reached. Sulu, which full of gold, and much too heavy had always been the seat of governHad I ment and the residence of the reigning for two strong men to lift. been inclined I might have pinched saltans, was destroyed In 1876, and a Gold thousands of pounds worth. military post established Spanish abounded on every aidewhfeh seemed where!? Had tregn.Ai first therMare to belong to nobody. Even If a miner had a disagreeable habit of dropping leaves his cabin for a week or more he In from time to time and wiping out simply leaves a notice to this effect the garrison. It was constantly reinattached to tha walla He never thinka forced or renewed, however, so that of putting a guard over hie pile. Of from 1876 to the present day the Spancourse there have been attempts at ish occupation at this point has been theft, but the perpetrators have been almost continuous. In one recent Invariably detected. Child Wanted a Dlrsna case the thief managed to carry hh booty a distance of, ten miles, when - The lawyer was sitting at his desk cold and exhaustion compelled him to absorbed in the preparation of a brief. take shelter at the cabin of one of the So bent was he on his work that be mlnera His hosts suspicion was did not hear the door as It was pushed aroused by the man conduct and by gently .open, and ?ee the curly head the bags of gold, for which he could that was thrust Into hla office. A litGREAT SPOUTING BORE AT not satisfactorily acoounL Tha miner tle eob attracted his notice, and turnS. detained his guesL communicated, with ing he saw a face that was streaked of the surface, in which case It has to some of hia fellows; and fifteen of them with recent tear and told plainly that be pumped up. As might be supposed, assembled in the but, and sat in Judg- the little ones feelings had been hurt. the quality of water varies greatly. ment on the thief. He was found guil- "Well, my little one did you want to Yes. Are you a lawyer?" Occasionally It possesses medicinal ty, and half a dozen bullets put a sud- see met" I want," and properties, so that the local people and den end to bis career. Such cases, What is It you want?" their cattle are obliged to take it In however, are very rare, and It speaks there was a resolute ring in her voice, COSMO STUART. homeopathic doseeuntll they grow ac- volumes for the honesty of the 40,000 I want a divorce from my papa and known actress. Cosmo Stuart Is only customed to 1L- - Around the Kulkyne men who are now gathered In Dawson mamma. - I want it real quick, too." his stage name, for In reality he is a government bore, in New South Wales, City, and they can see hundreds of son of Lord Henry Gordon Lennox. Aioltst Hospital carcasses of thousands of pounds worth of gold We found strewn th believed that hospi- He is considered quite a Is It generally success from even effects who had died without of kangaroos, thinking l tals were unknown to the ancients, but In lying about - stags England. produced by the bad and poisonous laying hands on 1L the London Standard reports that the Another Queensland bora la water. remains of an ancient hospital have Tka Girl. her depicted the Thprlagoona, No. Admiral Portor Oaly Pnlk The wife of a certain bookseller pre- been unearthed near Baden, containing 11, which eject a terrific volume of Admiral Porter was forever running rooms with one with fourteen eleven many after sons, supplied him water from the bowels of the earth sented Into print, and his penchant for this The good man carried his kind of medical, pharmaceutical and kind of casing. The depth another. through a six-inthing was a source of great anof the bore U 1.710 feet, and Its dally professional spirit In family life, so he surgical apparatus, probes, tubes, pin- noyance to GrauL who was his stanch even Secundus." and cers. Instruments, Primus," cauterizing Dow 2,000,000 gallons. The temper' named them friend, What do yon think of Porter ture of the water la 118 degree F. A "Tertlus, snd bo on to Declmus." He a Collection of safety pins for bandag- man admiral?" was asked of the gen-w- al splendid spouting artesian well is used concluded It was time to stop at ths ing wounds. ' There are also medicine on one occasion. Why," respondfor power In operating the electric eleventh, o he named him Finis." tpoona of bone snd silver, measuring ed Grant, with a Quiet Emile, he would was yet vessels. Jars and pots of ointment, he light plant at Chamberlain. S, D. The But It was not finis. There greatest admiral since Nelson If daughter this time some .still containing traces of the he the canal and reservoir systems of Irriga- another to come never learned to write." had Tlt-Blt- a used." ber ointment called "Errata," be tion are very costly both to those who rjyXl the-gase- s, construct 12-in- al os le Jft -- f -- rd five-gall- on - , m a CHAM-BERLAI- -- r -- |