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Qe 7 TRAINS ; 5% e V. Fove Pholosraph on the Austriazn CEILING DECORATION IN A, THE DININC ROOM. mar 5 5 e’ R T in telephonic communication With the others, while the systems of muu. ven~ tilating -and lighting are unsufpassed. peror and another for the Empress, be- sides kitchen, dining and luggage cars; & saloon for the suite and another for th servants. Finally there is a carriage con- taining tools and workmen, to make any small repairs that may be necessary on the journey. The carriages are chocolate color and bear the imperial eagle in black. Yellow blinds_closely drawn, hide the in- terior from inquisitive glances, and when the crimson cloth covered ~steps are brought out the platform is closed to the publie. / In Germany when royalty travels sched- ules, express trains and everything else go by the board. At Frankfort one even- ing 1 sat in an express train for fifty-five minutes after starting time. Hundreds of \1 passengers were freiting and fuming, as g private trains. one of t heads of Europe cwn te loco- has R great whistle of th T there are The German Emperor's private train il ;' South nd teiegr a very comfortable affair. It was built appointed train. cf e by the Government at the Potsdam works i " the trip, s made at any and it has nine carriages. Outside the € - ussion Among gy B are painted in blue and cream and gol amus ppened durin; There is a saloon carriage for the Bm- lway journe; n ha but priv: te railw at 3 loyal mother’s best s a fl line of conse- ain, and King Ed- right to travel The royal d the one most generally of the trai e Queen Victoria, was built sight, and th, jesty first trav- cheered, 1 the Imagine the surprise of the p. train slowed and st t a railway ofiick crossing 7 t, and it is pu loon in the cen- _ “Down with shawl! Don't vou ges, one at each end Know you are stopping the royal train!" e first-ciass car- _ The driver had t i a1 of ans, one at each danger. Her M t ch amused. How the Czar Tra tions, but could get no explanation of th delay. Finally a “saloon” car was wnplos to our train, a roll of bright carpet laid. a section of the platform was cleared, some hothouse palms were put out and then another—a local train from somewhere or other—pulled in, and with bowings and scrapings a lot of officials escorted half a dozen “personages” from one train to the other. It was the Crown Prince and Princess —four feet long the cen- nd of the e lately 3 , one of ost / furnished trains that ever ran sly Kine Epwaro i gold; all the inetal CVer the iron road. ESome idea of its splen- # D » fod 'amd under the Gor man be had when it is stated that L IND RAILWAY the the jions and luxuriou ) they had to make other rallroad connec- mpartment and ves- $500.000 has been speut upon it. It is a = . . cork. The steel under. DPalace on wheels. It consists of eleven /. ITRAVELING. DRESS. of Greece, the latter the sister of the with mahogany and on Carriages. The royal carriages are In the = » Emperor, and the public had been held . is a carved lion’s head, with 3 & an hour—some missing conections, others < e A e e e breaking business engagements, for the ot bath’ eericlate 36 5.0 3 royal convenience. D Ik, while the royal pero ad officials. These 5 - is hung with light blue satl When traveling the stidy, which 15 - = ne of the most elaborate of royal - s 5 . Fatat e . g the study, which is an hour at night, and as the carriages are near by. Experts rccommend the use of cows, was attached to the imperial train. “with wainut {ram. the furniture being covered with ereto with a1l eonven.onced for (ransacting Bung on cxcelleht springs the motion is milk from the same cow and hence the The last carriage Is fof the train offl L TR M e Panels; ‘and the metal of the same color, Tach of the sieepi he room pri almost, imperceptible, little daughters of the Czar take their cials, and comprises a study, & sitting- o¢cignt e 55 o 1T e countrauted R ek ey el ot Ty s Aattached, as the Czar. The impetial There is In this tram a carriage devoted cows with them when they travel. room and several coupes, well stocked ; el cior ot Settcho, Pr N ad Io 1d g0ld and the elec- Well a8 & dining-room. "The aining saioon the rate of thirty-five mile o e A e while the On a recent visit of the Czar to Germany with apparatus, as tne whole of the train pY T RSRCIer OF SISO CFaN vt g 2 ot out gl -~ with chamois leather. ing the day, and about twen nursery, with fairylike swinging cots, 18 a palatial cow car, with two Holsteih Is governed from here. Each carriage IS speop e e hted by slectricity. and the . __gkitchen is_equipped with electricity for with green,s - els, heavy cooking. The carriages are so hung that gimps, bosses, all with Continued from Page Eleven. 2 ok they will fit to any gauge of tracks, and rose, shamrock and thistle” pat- YT €< T E VE1 LE RO P ET o bty ,}'fi:{'ed“.‘,‘} T enmiafan St L I e voral Do 2 e s, & t ng wi " " LR STy e steps that they can pass throug ® nare + switg ofiégi refrain of a comic song. L ence Quarterly, a thin pamphlet which | 0% demesyln msy or Belgtum, and blinds, edged with r n con Weeks, and all i carefully Sl ; Tiih efrain of 2 comic son sets down the services for every T 's sleepin; and white hea"). ile che- , and all 1 refully copyrighted he Emperor's _sleeplng . manufactured for the , wa remain behind the veil. only a matter of less than niue rs since Christian Science first took on ary Baker G. Eddy. For Sunday, equipped with his own fleld bed, without once in mesmerist, had hit upon the comforling tion. Every member of a branch church by 5 1091, the subject, for instance, is | Which he never travels; a marble wash- according to an official biograph: ver of thought that ‘“‘disease is an error of the in any part of the United States was en- 1843, “to Cclonel George W. Gl S pr T chyrohly: shave a8 hoq Charlgston, S. C., and after his d to mind and not a real thing.” Sickness is couraged to take membership in the Iirst, and Fallen Mah.” After {wo |Stand with silver faucets; wardrobes, ilee tiain cost $20000 and the| been previous atiempt in A e Dr.AsaG. B bt b “obersonal fear and be. or mother, Church at the low rate of 31 & hymus and notice reading 'there is a | clothespresses and a folding writing-table, Oyl 00, o The, curtains are| jaunching the religion in church form, but kddy,” the na Hefst © Poor Quimby—ho dicd poor, in year. In this way its real, what might be Golden Text from Hosea 14:L. Then fol- | The Emperor's private saloon is entered r 5 are sus- |t appears to have practically fajled, tor 188 ere should, it s al 1866-was mot the man to make a school called its “fighting strength,” can be lows a responsive reading from Psalms |through his sleeping room. The walls . small gilt figures costing ten | jn e . bEervi e a sddy, - - :a t. in fa p 1-1T (3 k4 e - Dtember, 1862 ooourred the real “ger. ©bserver, be a little more about Dr. Eddy, or found a cult. He did not, in fact, ally gauged, for what member who carried a 73:1-17, the Congregation answerl the | decorated in olive, the furniturs Iis o - "h_axmmf«‘crg:lt g'wtmv;hmx\::;' ting together,” when, Lo P Geal (8¢5 for he surely came within tie great pe- his theory to religion.. It needed a more banner in the ‘cause would fgil to forward Bible reader. N g olive green, and the curtains and por- s are baid 1o have sme the|tian Science Church Manual, “at he ricd and gave the lady the name by which subtle mind {o do that, and Mary Baker her or his dollar and have Ierself or hap- There are two reafies In the Mother | tieres are of harmonizing colors. It con- €| quest of the Rev. Mary Baker G. Kddy,. *he will go down to posterity. The date Glover bad that mind, allied to an acute 1y himself enrolied? We hear of the thou- Church in Boston a couple of weeks ago | tains some rare works of art, and the Precanticas Mk twelve of her students and ehurch mem. 0f Mr. Glover's departure is not set down, business perception. In 1866 she had made: sands outside this membership, and no Septimus J. Hanna, a pale, siim, clean |celling is a masterpiece of one of Aus- ition en. bers met and reor; but it 13 sald to_have been not long after the requisite combination, According to doubt they exist, for truth is enjoined on shaven, thoughtful man, read from Mrs. , tFia's greatest modern painters. the King’s person and insure | diction, the Ch: hreh und his marriage. Yet. theze husbands are, her own statement she founded the first all Christlan Seientists at most times, Eddy's book, end a very stout lady with | At onejend of the Emperor's private pliot engine is sent fifteen t the Fij harch 404 after all, mere mortal details in a epirli school of Christian S¢lence mind healing but the 18,000 are the “regular army,” and an agreeable voice, a ' Mrs. ora. saloon afid sleeping apartment is the room d of every royal train and At this meeting twenty others of Tesion where soul is everything. What is “about the year 1567, with only one stu- the rest a more or less elastic host. Tak- Gragg, rcad from the Bible. After the | of his adjutant “3 ald de camp In attend- red of traffic ffteen min-| Mrs. Eddy’s students and members of ier Materfal now is that Mrs. Bddy was born dent.” Thereatter we hear of her through Ing the membership of 1802 at 3 per cent Psalms came the “sermon,” of alternate | ance, and at the other that of his personal e. To any one in any way | former church wére elected members of Somewhere between 1816 and 1524, in the her own book at Tilton, N. H.; Lynn of the present membership, we observe (exis by the two readers. While one was | Servant and bodyguard. The entrance to ¥ith the working of the train | this church, woodland hamlet of Bow, near Coricord, (June. 1573) and Salem, Mass, applylng that it gained ¢ per cent in 1893, advanced reading the other listened with an air of | both is by folding-doors, which can be pos dfl»‘yh}:umul_ed. It states| on the list of the elect of that day N. H. She came of Puritan parents, Mark the Quimby methods and writing various 10 per cent in 1894, fell off to 6 per cent In great attention, Judge Hanna always giv- | opened and shut by a spring within reach § that the royal train will | was Calvin A. Frye. Stick a pin in thai, Baker being her father's name and Abi- publications heading more and more 1895 and down to 2 per cent in 1896. In 1897 ing a sort of little plous appearing bow | of the Emperor s bed. pe sum op at each station and full par- | and refiect that he 15 closest of all to Mps, 8all B. Baker her mother's. They christ- toward the goal, It was in 187 that the it rose again to ¢ per cent, but it shows in when Mrs. Grags ended her e o . Mrs, 3 L y 5 , . e: 2 of ustrian mperial the stoppage of certain other | Eddy now. and as desirable on that ac- ened her Mary Baker. She comes of fight- first edition of “Science and Health' ap- 1898, 1899 and 1900 the great respective = After the scrmon there is :l::f; by a "'m‘e &lrg:\‘: é‘?rm-_( ‘haudsomest Tallway pony. Sihar tiies and regula- | sount, in & ‘minor degree. to see ae the Ing blood, for she ciaims as ancestors pearec. From that date on we may con- gains of 24, 21 and 22 per cent! lady and a collection, and then a chora] | carriages in the world and containa four Y. &merfd to. All| founder. General John Macneil of Lundys TLan sider the bark launched and the proposi- _ And the mainspring of all this is the hymn led by a male singer. The service | rooms. The first Is a corridor hallway, st be Soenel oF last the Small Beginnings. General Henry Knox of revolutionary tion that “Mind is All and ‘matter 1is fertile brain of one very clever woman. lasts about an hour and a quarter. The |with lounges, uphoistered [n leather, and pped at least half fame; Captain John Lanewell, an Indian naught” and the corollary that “Life, Tt is perfectly understandable, therefore, congregation was all well dressed; in fact, | gives entrance to the smoKing-room, con- r before the train is due. Nothing | Mrs. Eddy was not by any means a poor fighter, and Sir John Macnefl, “‘a British 7Truth and L. r betore the train is due & was not ny mes ighter, Macnefl, s :d Love are all powerful and ever that her rellgion and healing system poor Christian Sci eed| 2 nd lounges. Through '1“;1""_ L'f..q 1n}:1":rr‘?uk¥.g;) T!l"w ;1:7:lfil&r!ln’dlwl“.‘cv:‘nh;‘{;nlh:op‘:;»(.(m church Embassador to Persia.”” Combativethere- present,” while the “opposite of Truth— should _gpul More quickly to womenr, ' Iy lv_“e' ity Bl fl""'.::&é‘-‘-- :r;’m[ ::::l::ux:ial;i ldn“r:mpfldmr’ g e ufm . Drivers g r own state- fore, on one side, her Puritan ancestry called error, sin, sickness, disease, deat! the membership of the Mother Chyrch the lute in all the churches, and every service |the dining-room, upholstered in bronz of walting trains are instructed to pre.| Ment, having founded In 1851 a Boston In y 8 et Tt 8 “ . - gave her that turn for spiritual wrestling is the fals¢ testimony of the material women count for 72 per cent and the men calls for at least t Mai v ther, magnificentl N M RS B S T S e S R I R I A L eg testimony of the materlaj womBn coURL{or I8 Ber OO onureh: Hdny poske -t Luee. of Magy Baker |miver and goid 1500 vuiie ate divided into e eyt st~ ‘" B it e At dzg o ]nu'x,. ents England as naturally as a sea fog begets the Metaphysical College helped it,"and At a seryice on & recent Sunday iIn the Their church manual throws much light aneis, in which are oil paintings in n ) ealers”” dur- collisions off the coast. Joseph Smith, it helped the college, and converts and Mother Church at Boston the proportion on their organization and teachilx‘f‘ : eavy frames. At the smokflxg-mm end pproaches to wviaducts are all| Ing the ensuing seven years, It was a wh M . sarded and B che: i Al who founded ormonism, was born in cash came in together, An era of steady seemed to be about the same, but the men Metaphysi Ci cent sideboard, heavily lad ricdand "no one'1s"permuiua | cheay afair 1o run.“The course s Fepre: Vermont and Quimby wis o Now Hamp- income and increase of humbers, but in Whe were there evinced s decorous fervor o ot 1 Do e st Ane teaahor | with wiiver. and the entire’ wail behind it v, except oficials and servants oo | Mrs. Bady, auring thircy "halt. ‘!imm y bg shire man, Bispham Young was d Ver- crease that lacked real coherence, set in, of bellef that quite equaled that of the of obstetrics therein must be an M. D, :: is one immense mirror. ays, and mont boy. with toward the end of the 'S0s a gradual women, and the collection was made by well as a bellever, Hverywhere we fin} | There are three extension tables, which, they are forbidden to make any | Lhe fee is stated to hi B ] Y | Looks like pmdufl"" ‘;%‘%ern sl?g% mr\:net:: Her Debt to Dr, Quimby, slackening, Thereupon Mrs, Bddy retired nice-looking young men, There was & its laws ironbound and autocratie, and |when drawn out, form one large center juties of the masters of stations| Years, Allowing for a liberal discount Whenever she hegan it Is un i b from active healing, as we have seen, male reader and a female reader, a male everywhere they lead to more and more |table with seating a rommedations for which the royal train must pass| the Found . numbers 3 Nt on ; she hegan it is uncertain, but and took her hook work in hand with organist, a male hymn leader and a fe- gales of Mrs. Bddy's work; ixteen diners. The Emperor never dines arly defined. They must personally | @mounts were .ai.,,,,v""‘w‘..-“",.{fg- "’,‘"“‘: :,’;,“,:fi".’,?’a{“‘u';f' :fl;‘;‘."u“:)’“{‘r‘“{“‘h“‘ her great vigor, male solofst, and a0l Were clever in thelr “'hers 18 & MORthIy ealled the Jourmal Alone when traveling, and the dining= ot and the (haln peas Mupt| Up her Soltase i 1ol vin the helont of 1 BRe Hpairently danics thaL £he ever ba pil 408 sha smerwed to found: her pew FeSpecti¥e PAFSK and n weekly called the Sentinel,” Fhese | table I8 always fully decupled by the Em- points, are responsible for the | colleges—and started in to revise her book, harshly in her book; f'nu there was muech for the convenience of the Emperor and el v'.".L‘r'...}L’“{,T.,'f‘.fl.‘»'im:(: m. :pugd“.': "'x.'3'131,"'.'J“J,‘S‘(.,’"{Z“fi'n"."e"".""“""" dabbiing in it and Kkindred curlous things ?yfu"ntfl&:wn; n?&' &‘n::’db%lm.l ni?'z?.'.{? ness s-"z'n"z’:fif’»fif- ‘fi‘n’l:a 34:4'!“ J'r'»'c'!gi 'gltlohsnf.uurlens' :nfl:‘:uaw:rllum lh L his suite bk clctanh taCiciots, 1, Sacen| 30 s Seutio 6 pnt oiOlaC e (g, birh ot et B, P PR, g b oher b waasetn Ny aonfol e of, e fpfes v recevel b imbasnig s | i Kipe 1t Besiane, e on ,‘L:f"f'f'—'y’":":? ?;.':‘z:':,.y.,‘]‘m: :; ;:‘1:, m';l’l;fiw:su‘rlugl‘l.' A lamnmu{:ll abseurity & "' ?- " and una»rdlmr }n Miss Dr:m Rumbers three hundred to’l". I!:g ‘é:):l {7&?"@ F "’W%'«'l’ 1 P ; 7 "; 3¢ 5’:‘-’?“”‘“" that neisher Mr. Wrye | demogratle of an T seversimn 4‘“3 s ng'luhlln and ot] or, b cured Mrs, Glover of some trouble Wonderful Record of Growth, 88 put her at al Tu';'m ou'fm'flv[n?u o Y’lau ;x.."#..w“""i':" ."' *n“:fl.fm avent m:fi:w i ‘oscupying & roval 3»\;}5‘!‘- o n b i om siving. tha mats should clear up or The polnts at some places on the royal| ters whieh the falt to he route are padlocked oW, for Jater on they may be as hard to u’;&“" g%%éf was 0 Jing, mi;g?gs;’n‘,. A church must have funds, that fa - L5 BRTY fero are no sermons fjed on we et :‘?’g.:.;?" Al o fll:m i L A it g fl , #ha n earriagm i O the train, which carries two guards| get st as the minor fact 1 ¢ A § "““;z: to he and the ususl ord AttRcRmONt {. &' v facts In the Jife whom all deseribe as an eceentrie fellow, AEreed on every hand, and the Chureh of gepyices, Bomething of the nature & '.I have » b the | hakespoute, "Hm Wi (wiee travellng round the country as & Christ, Bolentist, would not be AD exgep- Mians hés been UILII“ '}:1 overy Buns 1 lm‘ “W‘Vn v'rto“mn l‘l m unvm.l: st Y —D