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THE SUNDAY CALL. Orkhkhhhkk 7 y : — @* >k k ok ckkk ‘ @k % kA kK kok ok —— mmer.’ who is at the other ge, takes up the cue a i ran and sentimentally s t s a friend by licking tr s forehead. of the over he 5% o ln T 2 = @ <=ldglliglC T4 ha s to have a re and as s has been so traiped, but tI2 secret is that when Hartm speaks the line he rubs his forehead with n little of the rasp- berry syrup, end presto “Bummer” car- all over the n the business of the play. “Bummer” epent three hours in front of the camera, and Hartman and *“Doc’ Leahy being satisfied with the rehearsal, ihe last view secured by the photographer ager and the comedian to take a drink, to end of an arduous’ re- pictures in front of when first invited to enter !y Hartman and Some CEocentrie Wounds. ‘ot yet have medical men and the pub- enerally ceased to wonder at the na- of the wounds Inflicted by the mod- ern bullet. A soldier may die of blood poisoning caused by the scratching of his hand on the lock of his gun, but he may be bored through and through by the en- emy’s bullets and after a week or two in the hospital come out as Wwell and fit as back of the irst entrance millimeters and that during the sixtieth Pohl assures us that such a bellef is en- tire v erroneous. He has made many care- m rements of halr, and he says ing the twentieth year of one's e growth does not exceed fifteen AKISS ON FOREHEAD IS ONLY TRIEND" e the man who fought and ran away, and thereby lived to fight another day. Sir ‘William MacCormae, the great English surgeon, who has been in the fleld in South Africa, describes for the Lancet some especially interesting cases of re- cent gunshot wounds. At Spion Kop a major had a shell wound in the head five inches 1ong and three inches wide, ex- tending from behind the left ear to the nape of the neck. The skull was exposea behind the ear for a circle the size of a quarter dollar. Then a bullet hit him in the left side of the back and went straight across, coming out on the other side. For a few days he lost power in his legs, but in three weeks from the day of the battle he was doing well. In the same battle a private was hit just above the left nostril, the bullet com- ing out behind the right ear. He Is deaf in this ear, but otherwise he says he feels perfectly well. Another private recelved a bullet in the ok dok ok k k@ %ok ok ko A @ AN END g Photos b:;Busbnell. g right side of his neck, on a level with his chin, and it came out at the correspond- ing point on the other side of the neck. He bled freely, but both wounds healed. At first there was paralysis of both arms, but that gradually is disappearing. Still another private took his bullet ex- actly in the breastbone, two inches below THE DONKEY SEE THE JO ’E?fls TO SUCCEJSFUL REHEARSAL AND THE MAMAGERS TREAT . i ————————w’ the arm, coming out on the inside at the bend, and then passed into the chest, leaving the man finally at the back of the nec! e top. The missile departed by way of No one can predict the devious path of the back part of the upper right arm. a modern bullet. There was the case of The wounds healed, and Sir Willlam asks, a private who was hit on the outer part “How did the great vessels escane?” of the left elbow. The bullet went through