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Evening Standard from London, Greater London, England • 19

Publication:
Evening Standardi
Location:
London, Greater London, England
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

EVENING STANDARD AND ST JAMES'S GAZETTE 19 PHYSICAL PHENOMENA SOCIETY WEDDINGS LONDON DISCOVERY OF ELECTRICAL RADIATIONS MAJOR DICKIN AND MISS STOPFORD THE THE DRESS JTTTY i TOIL The Chapel Royal Hampton Court Palace" which was beautifully decorated with white hydrangeas roses and lilies was the sceue of the wedding of Major Spencer Dickin Bays 6on of Captain Dickin of op-pington House Wem Salop and Miss Norah Stopford daughter of the late Lieut -Colonel Horace Robert Stopford Coldstream Guards who was killed in the South African war and of Mrs Stopford of Hampton Court Palace The choral service was conducted by the Rev A Ingram Chaplam-m-Ordinary to the King at Hampton Court Palace assisted by the Rev Thurlow The bride who given away by her brother bub-Lieutenaut Itoliert Stoplord wore a dress ot silver gauae with a lung eatin train veiled with mousst line de sole and trimmed with Brussels lace Her veil of the same lace was lent by Mr Burges Watson aud fell from a wreath of ualural orange flowers in her hair There were seven bridesmaid in attendance tho Misses Katie and Dorothy Dickin (sisters of the bridegroom) Miss Beryl Stopford Saekville Miss Nora Muodowcl Miss lleen O'Neal (coudnn oi the bride) Miss Violet Gordon and Miss Heaton Armstrong They wore dreesos of soft creamy satin simply marie with a short square train and revers of pale pink tulle and laee and their hats were of the same lace adorned with large pink tulle bows and pink and mauve sweet peas Major Dickin pieecntcd each with a Carrickmaeross lace fan on stick of mother-of-paarl and the bouquets they carried were of shaded mauve blue and pink sweet peas A Ing Queen's Bays acted as best man A detachment of noncommissioned officers of the Queen's Buys lined the aisle of the church during the service Among those invited to tho wedding were Winifred Countess of Arran Visaount and Viscountess Wobvoley Viscount and Viscountess Barrington Ladv Clarke Jervoite the Dowager Counties of Guilford Colonel ami Mrs Pratt and Mrs Copland Parry Subsequently a reception woe held in the beautiful oak room at Hampton Court Palace the band of the 2nd Dragoon Guards Queen's Buys supplying the music Later in the day Major aud Mrs 8 Dickin left for a motor tour The bride wore a going-away drewa of pale apricot charmeuse covered with old Brussels lace and a large black hat trimmed with cream roses and two black lancer plunuw Among the many handsome wedding presents was a silver statuette from the subalterns of the Queen's Bays Scrubbing the surface of the teeth with powders or pastes does not thoroughly cleanse them it leaves their condition and that of the mouth unimproved What the teeth and mouth need is Odol which antiscptically purifies the mouth and cleanses every part of all the teeth not merely where they show (Special Interview) Some interesting statements on the electrical radiations which surround the human body were made to one of our representatives to-ay in an interview with Dr Walter Kilner whose discovery of tho emanation of aura from the body is the subject of much discussion in he medical world During the pasit two dnys the American newspapers have been full I a remarkable claim which has been made by Dr Patrick O'Dounell a Chicago physician who asserts tliat by observing those electrical emanations enveloping a dying man he was able to see tho vital spark leave the man's body aud to photograph the phenomenon Dr O'Dounell is an X-rays expert who has been demonstrating to the medical faculty in the States and ho is reported to have claimed that ho saa associated with Dr Kilner in London Dr Kilner however this morning said that he knew nothing whatever of the American scientist and had never seen him He cukt hnd no record of him in the medical ci rectories nor at St Thomas's Hospital where Dr Kilner was the electrician As for Dr O'Donnell's claim to have photographed tho vital Dr Kilner remaitiod very sceptical he said liwvo been unable to photograph the aurt in spite of the most extensive experiments with the linnet and quickest exposure plates on the market 1 have not been rewarded with the faintest semblance of a result in that direction and unless Dr O'Donnell has invented some spociul plate which 1 can't think possible in tins brief tune 1 don't see how he can have achieved this result The aura have always hiitted the camera in my experience My diacovery of the aura' he added era not accident but the outcome of yeara of work on the theory that aomn such radiation surrounded the fiuman body 1 was looking for something rather of a different nature to tho aura however when 1 found the existence of these emanations I cannot tell you the nature of the aura I simply know that tliev exist and I hope and believe that after further research they will prove of great benefit to the medical faculty in diagnosing disease Some of my colleagues consider that this is tho fringe of great discovery the outworks of a very big thing During the post three year I have made extensile experiments on subjects of both acxes and all age and have recorded them sad I find that the aura alter in shape and appearance with the health or ill-health of the Dr Kilner produced the bulky records of hia observations and showed how ths alterations In the electrical radiations surrounding his subjects had revealed the presence of epilepsy of hysteria of neuralgia sciatica and other complaint in them Frequently they have indicated a pain the presence of which the patient had withheld from the doctor with the object of testing the efficacy of the discovery in diagnosis in the Aura It is interesting to note how the sura differ in succeeding stages of life and between the sexes Kur instance during childhood in both sexes the atmospheric envelope is very similar is each rasa but in adolesce that wliich stir- i rounds the girl more extensive than the aura about the boy and later in life the electrical radiations from a woman are much more extensive than those from a mail t'urioualy enough in some cases there is a complete hiatus from certain parts of the anatomy and is disease the aura frequently bulgaa in the vicinity of the affected part Ntateno its as to the appearance of the au'S roving liflb nit to the lay Mind Dr Kilner indly gave a demonstration Tho arreena which revest the human atmosphere are slides 4 glass which enclose liquid composed of a boIuIhm of In vanin having rich bine tint Having ls I into lie sunlight through one of these altdce in order to make the eyes mo IS sensitive I turned towards a black curtain against which the dovtor having eicluilsd the light held hia hand Ihs electro al radiation from hia fingers was Mainly visible through the dirynnin st reset llava emanated from Ilia Insert and extender! Into the darhnese for mveral kiea and aa the wyes became more eerwstomed ths entire hand was plainly enveloped in xiaible atmosphere lightly Inmineseewt mist Aa his hands nswe brought nearer to one a net tier the ei is ns loins I ngtliened to meet Vpnn the wilhslrswnl of magnet from the news of the nun it was eo that the radiations hovered about the poles of the instrument a feet which will deuhtleaa assist scientist determining the ntturw of the sura Dr Kilner remeihed that the phonemes Was entirely physical and that there was tathmg Mcultiat or rlairvoyaiit about It He oniribwtwl tbe interesting statement that having so senaiiiand hia eyse by repeated ohaer-Vstiog through tbe screen he Was now able to 1 ttinguish the anra In a darhened room ansi gainst a Mask background by the naked rya FARM KILL 10 WHIlK OVCLINO WILLIAMSON DAVI3 GARDE The marriage took place it Eorlaahall Parish Church Staffordshire of Mr George Frederick Wiltiaaaaon son of the late Mr Williamson of Green Hull Derbyshire and Mias Mary (Mina Davis Garde only daughter of Mr and Mrs Richard Davis Garde of Hiana Ecrles-hull The ceremony was performed by the Rev Ernest Williamson brother of the bridegroom awieted bv the Rev Edwards Two little Mis Mary Lowe and Master Tommy Halt both wearing white satin with silver trimmings the latter having eilv er buttons hia gift from the bride and four bridesmaid Miss Forbes (cousin of the bride) Mia Munsl WiUiameon (sister of the bridegroom I Miss Salt and Mias Whitby followed the bride up the siale The bridesmaids had dresses of soft ssxe blue satin with large collars of silver hue ami hats of blue aerophone bound with silver and wreaths of tiny pink roses while sell carried a shower bouquet of pink sweet pea and wore a gold safety pin brooch their presents from the bridegroom The bridegroom was attended by Mr Charles Ackers who acted as Host man After the reception at Hiana the bride and bridegroom left for a tour in tho English Lake district Being antiseptic Odol arrests dental decay and being liquid it penetrates even the minutest cracks anJ crevices in and between the teeth and hy a remarkable property peculiar to Odol alone it permeates the guma and mucoua membrane (racing the whole ntouth from all harmful germ and keeping if free and fresh and wholraome and (hr breath delightfully fragrant foMjgjjfjejwjra 1 he conneiaacur 1 comment on the marked stnnothnrM fvd i I'ulity "i a 1 adig Egyptian' Cigarette in fact many say that they are the only igaictL at anv price that give full agtiafauUon AFIADIS Cairo CIGAUETTRS bride cousin actv-l as tram bearer in frock of while Ince over aatia sad there were also four hrMleamaida Mia Molly Fili Cnnlilfe Miss Joy nr ife I the breiv'stalatersb lea Irene Ironside i sister of the brntrgrani) and Mtaa Evelyn IliHiWy who wore driwsea of pale blue satin with unite of hydrangea mauve ninon over or idler! embroideries and their Urge straw huts were trimmed with tulle I ws in blue and mauve Mr Ruprt Farrant acted aa heat man Among the man invited to the wedding were laud and lowly Htt hin Imril and Isdy Devon jcrt lord and Ledy Oorell Sir George an Lndy Hastings Mir Alfred snd ldy East Mir Mitchell and ld It hell Thomson Mir Frederick and Lady irrU' Hir lluhert and Lady Llrwcltvn Mnilih Mr Hamnr Ureetiwmal and Mrs llamar Greetiennd Admiral Mr Reginald and Ledy Hetiderwon Mir Currie and ldi Dalton Mi Itxir Law I the Earl and CVuatero of Carnwath Mir Fram IS and Lady Hopwood and Mu Frederick and Lady Bofton Afterwards the reception was hell by Ledy Ounlifle nt her rieideme art ingtiti-f ar-den and later Dr and Mrs It Ironside Uft for their eevmoon who they are to pend on the East (hail HARVEY THOMPSON The marriage nf Mr Thomas Edward Harvey for llt Leeds eldest son of Mr and Mrs William llarvev of The Grove Roundhiy Ivooda and Mia Alice Irene Thompson youngest daughter ol Protestor and Mrs Nclcanui Thompson of Morlnnd Hampstead took plate at the Friends' Meeting (louse HI Martin's lane WO The hr ale wore a simile drees of soft white satin trimmed with old laie and carried bouquet of white roses while her four bndee-maxie the Mimr Helen and Itorothea Thompson (her sisters) Mia Wlnifrrede Thompson liter constnl snd Mia Hrlen Harvey (sister nf the bridegroom) wore dtesstw of pale heliotrope muslin with white hits trimmed with white tulle end heliotrope flower Air Gurney Halter acted aa best man After the rerep tlon at the insuleme of Professor and Mrs Hilvanu Thompson the hrtde and blxlMrunm left far Yorkshire wher they Will spend their honeymoon Kalydor ItlmkM rk Pass HsSs ts SIS gSss tl 11 Irrirsiwo Ml lasssi IRONSIDE CUNLIFEI Dr Reginald William Ironside of 5 Glad-hoe gardens sou of Dr end Mrs Ironside of OampWU House Hampstead ami Mi Phyllis I (Sinliffo aarond daughter of Mir Klim snd lade Cunhffe of Harrington garden ft tdi place at Mart Abbot's Kensing-hn the Re PrebemUry I'vnwefather and the Rev Heeibtulge Bell officiating The brtde nho ee give sway by hee fsther wore a dram of Ivory satin ami imoimeltn embroidered With design of rw snd leave ever an omlershiet hue1-' net white her Court tram us tummed with uhl poiat de goes laws Lillie Me Repetew Laming Use WOROLtBB DRAMATIC SPECTACLE Hert tlnmperdim the rompuaer of Hansel and (hotel has igtrol a contract at IWrreuth tu write the Wntdc for tbe wnHIesa dramatti pert le whbh Profeaaor Mag It mbardt will prrol a at Olympie la iHcmtmr An erslxetra of IB) a cathedral organ amt a Vdr ef fW will hs rarylsyel in the inter piwtelMW vf llumpvrdint AKTIClK Mill HU Mr Job district no sks Hill he hfflsd and kss I 1 Hartley well knew farmer and nedlttr Was eyeltng down Hred ear Itavsnglaas (Sint bet land when etc hooider and waa instantly II is Very steep and dangerous ro the seen of swvsrsl ms ideal Las rife tit.

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About Evening Standard Archive

Pages Available:
2,377,260
Years Available:
1897-2023