..x<..f _ _ '_i§v, I'~'\1*&l'I3N`.' IL » rin . V. _iv ,- ' '.5' DQZILY v uoiuuNc.i searchers, 19;, _.....- .,‘.|<..',.>.fj..»~_\-'~‘ r annuals in i u un s i !letlk‘u“iil‘”i$ruiythe T0. |]|3App[AH BUX it lIlSClH{TS ‘ afdsslun. .Keep your llversnd bowels active slr.,'~‘Pl|.'msnUno, Jen. in rs .- °il|0"»1@100~'- fllluversitv of Tomsk, pin 51 . 4| £0 _'U' the first Russian WU., t7,-F0 0981! its doors to wo. m0h_= Qlptl. The present accom. ,R il but half occupied, and at :mwwwtu is highly eeneieht in me _ _ IH!! it ti thought that there 1| “Y C R004 orcule for granting de- K\‘°g_l Zledibine to women. The per- nuisdfoh based on purely material 8ro\uids,_end should not be taken ss an indication of a' coming clrange in the ptificy :of the Russian education- 61. Qltlllllehments. Moreover, the Univ|rl§_l_(‘0,l Tomek is to be open only to Women of Siberian birth. lliuun ulws ._ i Ib, _ . I E .I . " `iT|ln. 32 (Blleciall-Th Bl'ltiis‘l:1 Bgnggum havg qu"\\~ " .` . \}3°\`P 0 e Fade!- fi'2..i“.»i.."`l‘.'~“I.‘i"é`.' °“i<.“°°‘l‘.‘.”* °‘ “"0 V, ,_ e rma ians tIs- 1115119 'UK1 -other esoteric and llnor- €?.3“§’§h°h'5§'¢i‘Zi.lf.‘I,'I3“`°“‘i5`i”’f“' bl __ ,_ _lr u amma ihii Muhammed .ai-chateau. This is ;~gDgXt§lgf~ly°b§..Ur;ique Arabic; b§S., as ,` y s on recor _ n it th? author 'gystdmstically sets forth the doctrines of the various sects and r_?fl{¢ll"`tlfem. The work is of great sggficance as it supplies a very eat g¥_4$c6u'1,ft of these sectd, some of which a_re_-very important. Ohwlli -WSE b0l'l1 in A. D. 1059, and spent his early years in Tue, Khozaiah. ‘He studied under the grae, mam' al-Hareima in at Nisha-i -A. D.~ 1091 he became a pro- feldo!"'Ql¢» the Nisamiya College in Baihflirdi, vtvlhere has! worked for four years I., en re gned in order to contihue his owli studies and effect a concgrdat of ortboidoxy, reason. ll!! elim. He die in 1-his influence upon the ' opmenés- of Islam has .,--ry; yu , ,V a famous au- 2§§=§;=, Que.,-genie.-he mi- othor ~ - _ would; , 'yf he A-shaman.; 'rss Dresen _ v ‘was copie . . 1266, and iiall`6i‘fect except for a few pages at _the beginning. Jan, 21 (Special) A, Battles near Veriers, frontier, became con- illness of his child evil influences of a in the neighborhood. that she was a witch, house and shot her. he maintained that the interests of the 13.4.: `_Y,!E?1.'§ '51'-‘ WHS 22 (Bi>ecial.)-A made in chauvin- report that a new by the German fleet eclipse those of all gun.in question is projectile weighing a ton. It is extreme- however, that such a on any German some time yet, althou- of the weapon seems and particular as are given in the naval guide, the der Kriegsilotten’ ’ several sires than type navy are designed for han the standard in contrast Brit- launched two years been designed to gun, and shilll, 0! already in ,com- vessel of same t 28 (Bpcclsl )-It the rapid devel0i>- from beingxme -of ~¢esu`vlA~vU\ GRIP . ONES' y“on'~”wii§h'- tem do not‘ want no _ ` ming from of the atom' lmha-miriiad, ..i~t'.high~:'etes chargedwithout good _ , ROME, Jan. 31 (Special)-Another beautiful Roman villa, the Villa Bonaparte, which is exactly opposite the British Embassy at the begin- ning of the via Venti eettemhre, in about to disappear, to the regret of all lovers of what is green and re- freshing in Rome. The Villa Bona- parte, built by Millzia, the horticul- tural writer, was bequeathed by Pauline Borghese to her niece, the wife of Prince Charles Bonaparte, from whom it derives its name. One' of the present owners, Count Villa- lonbay I-iarra, has asked and ub- tained the permission of not only the municipal commission, but also of the Supreme Council of Antiqui- ties and Fine Arts, to build a church upon the site, and Rome will thus be the most frugal countries to being one of the most developed to luxury' that of the rare complaints made at this time of the year those that are most energetically put forward are against the dearness of _caviar and the tyranny of the tip. Both seem to indicate rather indirectly, but no less plainly, that there is a superfluity of funds somewhere, but both are treat- ed tt f nt This may not mean much to the or- Y 3 m - other hand ,Germany to-day .has u bigger cconsumption ofthe article than any other country in Europe, even including Russia. PARIS, Jan. 23 (Special)-The credulity of the twentieth century does not seem to have abated a jot from that of the Middle Ages, to judge by the columns of advertise- ments inserted by the tribe of ior- tune-tellers, prophets, add f‘voy- antes" day after day in the V Paris press. - For nobocresould-‘~pai~4&s turns, and as the- number and vol- ume, of the appeals ,of these gentry steadily increase, it can only be sr- gued that their dupes are also on the increase. Some of the advertisements are extremely amusing, although it is astounding that any sane man ‘or woman can be attracted ,by them. To take a few atrandomi "Do you wish to expel bad luck. ' To annihil- ate unknown persecutorsf To trium%h over disappointed love? To recov r your health morally lost?" _Who-is the euderer from` unknown persecu- tors and the loss of moral health envied joy, beauty, and wealth, The advertisement proceeds: "Only the ‘Sorcerer of the Far West’ can give you the infallible means to suc- ceed in all you undertake. N9 regrets and no misgivings! Do not him, as he gives it for nothing!" The "sorcerer" is apparentlya phil- anthropic practicism, but those who that they cannot be given perpetual joy, beauty, and wealth without some modest remuneration. , e "*-'_"***'“'*" , PARIS, Jan. 23 (Special)-Since M. 'Lcbaudy's assumption ofthe atylei and title of "Emperor of Saha1'a,", it appyenre there has for some time peat been a French *King of Arabia and Syria,” who was 'appointed this wise. The Vicomte de Brasil, who is a great traveller in the East, met ai $40,000 in exchange for this title. The Vicomte de Brenilnaturllly thought' it a stiipie.;|°r»= tin heqvss iietieeii that this dum hadfbeen-‘.deposited in ensues hshk to my forth royal Benin for expenses, and wlthlthe (fi-, of nearly $5,000 started fill* town Bil.Ay1in he of the tribes over by L, and you feel bully for months Put aside--just once-the Salts, Cathartic Pills, Castor Oils or purge.- tive waters which merely iorce 9 passageway through the bowels, but do not thoroughly cleanse, freshen and purify these drainage or ailment- ary organs, and have no eilect what- ever upon the liver and stomach, Keep your inside organs pure and fresh- with Cascarets, which ‘thor- oughly cleanse the stomach, remove the undigested, sour and fermentiug food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system all the constipated waste matter and poisons in the in- testines and bowels. A Cascaret tonight will make you feel great by morning. They work while you sleep-never gripe, sicken d'°p"i"°d °f °”° °f its hmgs- ,and cost only 10 cents a box from '--'---~l-------"~--'-----' your druggist. Millions of men and women take 8, Cascaret now and then and never have Headache, Blllious- ncss, coated tongue, Indigeetion, Sour Stomach or .Consripated bow- els. Csscarets belong in every house- hold. Children just love to take them. -vv\-~v~v-.~\».»~.,.~ "agnse of confidence," but the judge who heard the case decided, after hearing the extraordinary story, as ma ers o mome . th ' 1 1 I th H t I i h is , at the offences compsued of were “ 3 rs p°'°° cm' ar as r m probably imaginary, nd o - uited 25 Pe' cent' in tha °°“rB° 0' the 79°" the Vicomte. Unless,a howgvgr? the and has been given a' further in°r°“` documents produced were forgeries, °d Price during th° last Nw Weeks' there certainly seems to have been _ some foundation for tho Vlcomte’s dinar American for the forei u ar ~ credulity, and in any case he had a ket for caviar is restricted. On the most amusing experiencm LONDON, Jan. 23 (Special)-The "Daily Telegraph," says:-It has not escaped the attention of the ocean traveller that, while freight charges have of late been sensibly in- creased, there has been no general movement for the advance of passen- ger rates. It was stated by an ocean traffic manager the other day-and he produced facts and figures to prove it-that during the last quar- ter of__a century the increase in pass- 'ghggg-.rates has been no more, on the average, than about $1.25 per head. In the same period, he sayfl. H012 0"' ly have the speed of ships and the comforts: passengers greatly ln- proved, but there has been an ad- vance in the‘cost of coal and provis- ions of from 25 to 40 per cent. On this showing the steamshill ¢0!1\lf5-D' 195 would appear to have exercised their powers of charge somewhat modestly, although it is freiilwntlv asserted that in this age of steam- ship conferences the ocean voyager is helpless in the grill Of U`““9~ _ HAMBURG, Jan. za termini)-A remarkable incident occurred ‘at the of ‘ Lohen- wliovwlould not ily "to recover tg? ‘md ,,°f 5 performagci Munidpay, grin at the Ham u E Opera I-louse. The audience was dis- persing, when a man rushed from the front row of the stnlls and bega3tt0 horsewhip the conductor, Herr 0 KlemDerer. dt b a Ham hesitate to ask for information from Th° Bssaunut pmve (int ect Hel.; burg engineer and arc e , Walther Puritz. WMS” WU” is the prima donna of the municipal OPGYH- The conductor spfflllg “T055 the apply to him will doubtless discover . d t ma ssauanm, railing and relillv 0 8 attack with his fists. In a letter to the press Herr Pur- itz declares that the conductor [had Cramps at Night no other French claimant has arisehi ‘- ‘for ro al prerogatives in Africa. But Agoninfng Pain Prevented by Keev- - ing Nervillne Handy on the Shelf. certain Nicholas Belifl, »'v)li_0;0lBi’€d A CASE IN POINT ILLUSTRATED Deadly cramps-the symptoms are not to be mistaken. Suddenly and -without warning the patient °1P°fi- 'lnoss such agony in the stomach as letters patent. He then sized ld.; to contort the countenance and cause him to' cry aloud for help .Then it is that the wonderful Dow- ar of Nerviline can make itself felt- .it cures so quickly- summer I was stricken with a attack of cramps. I feared in my stomach would ‘eyes bulged out and the vein! forehead stood out like whip- cries ‘attracted a nsi¢hU°\'» assistance, and ful handed me hill ¢ Nervfline in BOMB pain. In .ten sec- Narviline has I this loeaiitii SM for_ cramlll. ¢'|ilF"h° stomach and" NYG! my friends to IIB’ '-wiuiamsburz-" afford ti; 0 .l. LEGARDE, ~- u--_ Who Wea Deserted By Her Parents As Having An Evil Eye. Endures Much Hardship. e -*_ ~ GENEVA, Jan. 31 (Special)-Ina forest near Rorsehach, on the Swiss- Austrian frontier, two Swiss wood- cutters found a famished girl and as- sisted her down to the valley. In had German she explained that she belonged to a Gipsy tribe, which had recently driven her away for posses- sing the “evil eye," and her parents did not want her to return. She has only one eye, the sight of the second having been lost in an accident. She did not know her name. or nge, but called herself Nina. The girl appears to have endured many hardships, but it will be very difficult to find her parents. who have driven her from borne, ns there are many bands of Gipsies at this .part of the frontier trying to enter Switzerland and being constantly re- pulsed by the Swiss gendarmes_ When she has recovered and is in better health “Nina” will probably be hand- ed over to the Austrian authorities. It is an unfortunate case of supersti- tion among the wandering gipsy tribes infesting the Swiss frontiers. »_~wwwwwww“ refusedla challenge to a duel follow- ing a domestic incident. GENEVA, Jan. 23 (Special)-Mme. H'0I1€l;l_