DOCTORS RAISE DEAD .n‘, -_ - ,, The idea of reenacitntlng those who were not believed to be dead, but only in a state of suspended animation. has been superseded by that of actually bringing back to life those who are known to be dead. Only one thing is lacking in the result of the experi- ments made in this direction in the hospitals here-the resnimated dead having not yet artlc‘nlated, so far as is really known. Everything hut this one function has been restored and it will be only a question of time when that last stroke will be added to the marvels of science revealed in the foregoing se- quence. it has long been s theory that death did not take place entirely in the corporal body' until some time after the usual symptom indicated that death in a normal manner had occurred. Thene will be remembered also in connection with this intensely inter- esting subject that some. time ago a number of French nvants -superintend- ed the taking or n series or flashlight photographs at the exact moment of death of a patient in one of the hosj‘l- tnls. The photographs revealed the fact the: a small splrnl column ascended from the body, which ultimately form- ed into a cloud and passed through the ceiling of the room. ' This vapory form, which seemed to wrenthe itself intp some semblance'of the human ï¬gure, ‘was supposed to be the subtle eatence, oi- spirit form. legv- ing the body. A more material essence W than this was surmised to have re- mained in the body. but there ‘wah ev- ery sign of death nppnrent upon which the physician relies to base his mortu- uy diagnosis. All such questions as these were, of course, left aside by time surgeons at the operation to be described, the phy- tics} body “one concerning them in their experiment 9nd conclusions. a current was used, to complete {allure of the operation. With certain im- provements the instrument will doubt- lels prove an enormous life saver, but in the meantime it has been found that it in applicable to less important cases. Inch as deafness, blindness and lack of speech. By its power the dumb are being made to speak, the den! to hear and the blind to see. ' ‘ wit the cost of being considered sacre- ligious I will any that this repetition of old time miracles in now being add- ed to by cases resembling that of the nising of Jaims' daggbter. Starting Item the fact that after death the tissues lose their irritability within certain but varying times the doctors at ï¬rst‘undertook a number '0! experiments upon dogs to demonstrate that should certain stimulants be ap- plied before this function disappeared, the vital Organs would again resume their usual conditions. u... v- â€"v -___ ' That is a wonderful invention and by It: means several important experi~ meats have been made. resulting, in tome cases, to complete restoration of the patient. In others partial succes- ouiy has been attained. the dimcuity of gauging the force of current required either having led to paralysis of the brain cells or, in cases wherg too_nlight . 8070x381 of tha governqrs of North- wootoi-n states are uniting in oppo- sition to the consolidation of the Hertha-n Paciï¬c spa Great Northern Bath-cad. Gov. Rogers of Wash- ington my call extra union of the auto mamaâ€. -.. ..V mun ; such a feat has just been accomplish- ed in one of the hospitals, here, of which I have authentic details from one of the surgeons who was present when the ghastly operation was per- termed. Sometime ago I wrote you of 3 won- damn invention which had been ap. plied to the many means already in use for the purpose or resuscitation. it was an instrument which when nppiiedIto' u..- Ina-u"- -_- ..___‘ the suricular nervés started vibration in the brain loading to stimulation of the muscles and through them ultimate reaction of the entire‘system. “T31"; it this can be done It will be one o! the greatest miracles of the new century, » - ,,v._I_ ‘Peris letter: Ca'n the dead be call- ed back, if on}, for a brief time, in or- der to express thou Int words which were on the loved lip’s when they pass- edawayi U _ _ WONDERFUL .OPERATIONS H - PM HOQPITAL. chat Openqd and new; lunged-â€" Rotated Patient n11- After Liv- ing Again for an Hour. Thoy Were able by post-marten ex- TO FIGHT N. P. DEAL. es had by this time n was viewing his 2 kind or stupeiled ovements of the man t he was making an te, his lips moving The patient's: opened and .th surroundings i manner. By th it was obvious . attempt to‘ arti ‘ slightly in the He was now sitting posture , his hand in th stand. Nopatt tempt his no to the edge of tectly natural to drop to ‘the was standing move in the d stand. Then a A sudden cont commenced, 'w tunes of the fa tension where lated to assume a the bed’antL/waved rectionpot. the wash- , t being made to in- the patient turned a .bed and in a per- 'ner allowed his legs 1‘. In a minute he and attempting to tion of the wash- resulted in the tea- -belng drawn up to it produced a terribly ghastly effect. ‘ en the figure totter- ed and the for . hich had twice ‘been a man tell in tquivering‘ mass upon the bed. -I i e moved. U i lnjcctiom of , it were new given and brandy was: mod down the thront of the patient. Subsequent e to have been said there is o . ed patient who ‘ ed partially whilst lying um; Of course in (:3: case the opening of the corpse and -_ - absolute proof from e heart‘that life had' ‘with the possibility that this was s « ply a ease of resusciâ€" tation of suspefled animation. While there a;;,.‘ among the lower anâ€" imals familiar tee of hibernation or the torpor whic proceeds from heat or cold that pass :~. « of season, man d on account of their complicated an f~ my more easily {all into torpor or :.-arent;- death. Anyone whose vital me-r-‘nery has been thrown out of order by Hvere strain. excess or depression maï¬ss into and out of this state of obiai death provided they have will . nt reserve strength for the purpos?‘ , Upon feeling . pulse it was found to be strong an mist. the Java be- ing tightly clen' ted. ' ‘ The man was? sive again. Not a momen ~,» as lost in sewing up and dresslng t ‘E gvarious wounds and conveying the ' lent from opal-fling table to bed. _ me breathln 1 the patient con-' tinned satisfact y and after ten min. utes had passe a movement: under the sheet thro we: the body show- ed that th'e am :and ‘legs were beta; moved. $1}. These appar from shocks ca lightning or ele sunstroke, asp cotism, convul failure and m least two per are supposed t to an improper by the physlci sqmption that poeureandmer' 896i theheart to decentrac ’msotthetomnand rfeepiratio‘n. wh'i. continued for a few hours. The me' was later tried up- on eï¬iglde twt giro“b otter death. The heart contra ut teeb ly only, and noon storm: {go ï¬rst patient with whom success v9 attained was a men who had commit éfed suicide by taking chloroform.- TM tract that he was ac- tually deed was t accepted until af- ter artiï¬cial roe. atlon and all the us- ual remedies )1 been applied. Even air had been b‘ n into the lungs but the patient's p e did not reveal the slightest symptc f of existing vitality â€"not the hints attempt at respira- tion. . He was on 1gtnmomsiy pronounced dead and it we eclded to make the ï¬rst attempt at , 5m message. i The chest we: pened and the heart 1gratmed by the†‘ d of the operator. It was compressed d allowed to dilate. At ï¬rst no can i {ition of the walls could be felt, b after as few compres- aione the rythm the heart was grad- ually resumed ultnneoualy air was forcibly blown i » the lungs, and the cheat pressed t Emma reepirntion. The heart was zed steadily for 30 minutes, when pira‘tory gasp oc- curred. Smnetixi - yet elapsed before the patient res; ‘yid unaided and then it was only at i ‘_ §vais._ _ .v "â€"v â€"-- After the o- :- nteediiy for ton {ion had continued ', more the heart con- tracted vigoroul-t" the repsirntione be~ came norniai. t 3;, ‘pupiie oi the eyes contracted nndxcjjiiiation commenced with inspiretiju .4: 3nd expiration. The surprise g Vibited by those con- ducting the one " n can. be imagined. Nothing like an 4 ‘4 its hgd ever been recorded in the {tail of actual medical «nice. After the one: steadily tor tout tncted vigorous came hernia], ti contracted and with inspiration The autopsy ‘ has actually 0 of the chest m with this extr equal to such a been accompll ad, Therefore th alslng of the dead has ANTON -EBARDY M. F. S. S. up!v u The Turkis Arabia, who some timer ha now occupy t dar. Thére h village in_ Me London Tid spider. my box it not wonder! try as he ma; this top? “Hg said, ‘(fl way back and stand ‘roops In El Reds}. e not been paid for fmutlnled. The rebels lgrand mosque at Jed- e been murders and deaths may resuit ad by gunshot wounds, to shocks. concussion, in, anaesthesia, nar- . apoplexy or heart y other things. At t of persons interred e buried alive owing agnosis of their cases and a premature as- ath has taken place. one Proves that death met and the opening tioned 'in connection dinnry operation was nu: Papaâ€"See that spinning his web. is ? Do you reflect that. no spider could spin n the patient turned a bed and In a per- huer allowed his legs mt. In a minute he :lsted to assume a the bed'antLpnved .ractlon_of.the wash- »t being made to in- i In those old fashioned times she en- gJoyed the honor of motherhood and was considered of much greater impor- tance than being an on producing mu- chine. That was all changed with the introduction of the incubetor system. ,which not only cuts oil several days in the period of hutchinx. but does the business in n genernliy more satisfac- tory manner than did the mother hen: 0n the top floor are located the incu- batora in which the nnhatched eggs are placed on a tray and eubiected to a heat of about 90 degrees, the hatching occupying several daya. Beneath the tray. in which are hatched about one thousand chickene a day. are the brood- era. and here in a temperature of about 90 degrees the chicka main for 21 daya. After being born one day feed- ing cOInmencee, the fa being millet ground oats and canary . For ~eg dret week they are fed ï¬e timee a ( the amount of food .bei gradually creased although given us oiten. t} diet being gradually changed to incl the coareer grains. By the rapid forcing method of h In; adopted it take: only a week or to bring the chlcken to I weight of pdpndlfl 7.7 The chlcken In then taken to the f below. where a. 'very limited spas. allowed for the mnnlng around when a number of cramming mach ore located. The crowded pen on this noon the ï¬rst and last glimpse the mix chicken catches ’ot the world which it is born, for here it begin fatten rapidly. as the cramming chiueil~ force an ahnormll qumtlty food down its thfoat. It takes from two to four voek bring the weight at these chicken: to about six pounds. at which time an enctly in shape for market. Besides this there in the necessity of mien all around which lauds to the ultimate production or the mnnumctur- ed chicken. ' The entire blunt In not. II but one fast mnchlno, each floor of which I: de- voted to the chicken-producing bull- They sre then removed to the below where are the gulliotines plucking machines. Here they are posed of more rapidly then in an the foregoing processes. the killing dressing being csrried out with greatest speed possible so that fowl may be placed in the pecking rel as nearly warm as possible reach the market while perfectly f: His Bar and Cigars. A singular old man has died in Vien- na in his seventy-third year. He d with the reputation of being the m t extct man on record. From his twenty- aeventh yoar he kept an accurate oc- count of everything he bought and whot he paid (or ‘it. In the twenty-seven years of his convivial life be consumed 28.786 glasses '0! beer. He gave up drinking in his ï¬fty-fourth yen. but even during his but sickness. rusing the number of hih‘cixm to 628,713. or In Iverge or 13,667 a year. The old-fashioned Plymouth Rock hen considered one was faithfully do- ing her duty 11' she laid them three dozen eggs a year. but the modern mn- chlne-made hen 1- “fold that her ‘hend will go of! If she does not keep the rec- ord up to two hundred. In one of the largest poultry produc- lng‘placel of the East 3 large plant has recently been imbued which is proba- bly the mostpertect In the world. v It is a surprlsl'ng factthat the p nets of thla establishment receive ter favor at the hands of poultry bu In the large cities than does the fashioned farm-{ed product. The ( on of the plant expect to make a tune out or their enterprise and really making money fast already. According to a Chicago paper. four young and pretty married women of St. Bernard’s church, in Englewood. Chira- co. attired themselves in infants' cloth- ing sud personated the tsmous Omsby 'qusdruplets in the church fair. until their husbands found it out and broke up the show. The production was I complete surprise to the hushsuds. who held so indignation meeting. Then the church lost the best money-making scheme in the fair. 'rrue'tha listen in only A crude carry- in; out of a marvelous scientiï¬c dream of the great Pasteur. by which he hop- ed to help out the ebbiux population of the world from big lubontory. but it in a. paying business institution and we may noon see it brought to e perfection of mechanism which will elimiunte the few natural features remaining. There are no mo're poets. no more ur- cadian lovers. go more Damon and Py- thlu friendships. and hqutherg _m_'e to “can, uu L’ ‘uylu unluymu. n The acme of ufllflnrlanum has b reachedâ€"the Industry 0! manuhctur- in: chicken: established. The establishment in Rome of an American library bu been ordered by royal decree. The library will contain :11 publiculons relating to the new world since its discovery. v..-“ __V ._ ..._, ____. 7 be no more Innocent iitï¬e chickens strutting around so 31in in the enu- bennce of their innocent joy and flap~ pin: their fluffy little wings in the flour. dirty old barnyard. , Bolton letter: On by one the bean- mm Illusion: of our youth ude away into the dull monotonous chkground ot fact. Artiï¬cially But“ The“ Chicken. Arc Fund by cumming 1;:- chinu, Without Suing Dnylight BIG mm ls'umsm '1‘0 “ODUOI mu. WILL MAKE CHICKENS BOLTON KELWA)’. "Where In June-Y" numb-ed Shem n he climbed Into the cum. “At the stable. I thoughtâ€"w. â€"-mlxht hue the ï¬rst ride of the us. son toletherf Konnebec Journal, Maine: Th: on highway holdup 1: reported Dexter. ind is 1 little out of tho nun. even In this game Infected It “med About three mile: fro: village. nd Henry Allen tells the a follow: ‘ 7 "Come on. tuber for s duh on the Ipeedny! Everybodyj‘u out." Once on the boulenrd. beyond bud- nou tunic ond cable can, he might the have looked here‘ and there on dull brownstone house. when fanni- nowed Into the Shepard colon. When the avenue rose sheer ubovo the wom'o edge. he might have looked ocrou tho strum to hln In" holding- In tho Pulluadol. from which. It won predicted the an would eventually (luv [to wu- er uupply. But he was not thinking of thou things. A faraway look come into his n-yesAnnd he paid no heed to his oon'u occuionnl comments on paging ve- hicles until ï¬nally Reginald round who: comfort he could. in his own gaunt. But an the homes stopped More the bank Mr. Shanna noticed the thence of his his English comma. A tall. square shouldered ï¬gure Ipnng out Ind tossed back the fur robes. than wured n mmlnar greeting to the mm on the step. It wu Reginald. ’ I If the elder Shepard m not Nu so absorbed ‘ln ltudyln‘ the set of the new human. he might hue chewed In his won't voles an Inxloul not: and in the ndjustmeat o! the robe- mm (Inn ordllury mug nollcltgdo. "l waa panning along. my the one nether nattera than my eurr lugs. when l waa startled almost polnt of a plucky fevllng by the snort of a deer. Very nature jumped and, as I looked ahead c there. standing on the road I see the. outline of a large buck dc the twlllght. 1 Immediately thre an at him, and the weapon tall hlttlnx the mark. I thought w threw the ax that would come endlng‘ the incident, but not no. back was no. ao’eaally trightene stood there, hla body erect. and brlng down ï¬rst one forward le then the other wlth a stamp sounded pretty loud on t e hard “1 advanced toward h In, thl Buttosiu his overcast to the throat. he strode down the nossic corridor. put the press csges behind which the bunk clerks were cuties up the dsy's accounts. sad threw open the door. whose curtsins had been tightly draws. As he stood on the threshold s plessed light came intd his shrewd my eyes. Round the corner. with cilnk of silver chsins end jingle of bells, swept his (1'- orite teem of hlscks. The present Mrs. Shepsrd was most considerste of her hushsnd's wishes snd testes. Sleigh- ins was one of the hsnker's Mat plenum. end she remembered the fleet. blunt unuvk but so \ x ‘ ' duh-mu \u a... ‘8} m 57 M08 Shep-rd dhmlued hln secre- fl an ad walked to the vlndow. The “amnion sun anti: d38- :llng light on the ï¬rst snowfall, tnd above the chug a! th. cable an sounded the am tingle o! the 11011!!- bells on the boulevard. 7 A Coungoouo Buck Give: 1 l ' Mon 3 Lively Sensation. He drew In Li! breath Quickly. X1366 ,â€"§hepar€l_‘ at with 1}!- null Inr INA Twis- man) U! h? A DEER. A. l. “pew-u, picture changed to the an! m " brought home her hat ellk ares. lb! her blue one shone gllstenlng fold: over ha' Later came the mlekln and monds. but nothing that nude th- hnlf no happy on thet nut ellh d!“ And dny by my .- he numeral h realised the: there was math: '53. ha team could not bl! heckâ€"‘0 mun health or hb‘elllet. mull- VII- When n m I." over and for»!- long. wenry you Kitty had hill â€5 undor the graceful mnrhle she“. I ‘- Iome mlntreu cum to the It.†furnllhed mandon on the Iv Thoughtlue people uld it In so be- tunnte all round. for the m Shepard was not the sort of n m tepreeldeovermchahoneotto cultlute the people who would he...- __ mA-gnl culuuw an puny-u v... ..-._.- ml to a run; on like A The second In. m nhly mpted to the position. the schools which would give dren the best eociel sandinx. sided over a dinner able deecrihshle grace and tea. Shepard was elected to congre- tntely circulated that his wife mncy had been worth more , pelcn purpoees then hie, goodly Klthie'e socisl debut wee set for week. Already the society pnpers were singing of her prospects. her gowns .4 her beauty. and she looked it†Kitty q! the sleigh ride years can. -__A, 3‘ Egg 1; aiiiiiiigil “Either. I not to till you ,thiu"â€" _ . - ....â€"- They were almost home. and It. young fellow was getting dam Stocks and bonds might be of a III- mount importance tenet: of ltty. H when the blood rune riot in the IUD of youth lite hold: other more vital “mama. Mr. Shepard routed tinsel! with a impatient shrugâ€"a check. of m A physician's practice in the lat gut in not proï¬table even when hacked by inm‘l'enti'al parents and Meade. II “ OI , Begin-Id lifted the whip net-V6.11. end the blacks apnu forward. "Well father. I wint m 3e! nun“. I know I'm young and have my m to nuke, butlryou loveasirl all... why. It give. you mom“ to “It tor battle- mere money.†Am â€11' up dun-II m. mummï¬mw