West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 7 Jan 1909, p. 3

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ktamude.. in that " m 1"”! Wu tho 'I'bh-y w hot- in. Nu! ille- of nun," t tie"r le-m, '" Iii-dot. with. Bettie tho p... I family tree, I hy Kongo \\ ""ere-What SCI sin-u? but!“ I. 2,5“ '0 mob-h... l to" pop. Minna... ~lmt an in thin. r PM. Otro .1 him. m 73m. '0. m M any W” 5‘ '17! bi- " her " f". ir_li, 1.: Further muthward, down Turnout, is Keith's “can, costing 8LM0,000. Not [gr "PT Kdth'l is the new million dollar “are Temple. On the corner oppotu"w tho any“ i. the new Hotel Tournine, “up. 01,2505“). In the urns neigh- borbood It. numerolu great an build- up and“! tor commercial purposes which in tho gang-1e repment in " ”an" of my millions of dollars. Ne, "It otel Brunswick “and: the urn (to-hora, pinned for the anluin use oe lurk“, oculisu 5nd phy- - and the 'lmt new structure erect. ed ll All vicinity with . View to creat- " . district hula- about Copley “nhmby'rholluk [by Adjoining the Parker Home on the non“ in tho million dollar Ba can house ot worship, Tumour! Temple, guilt under the dilution of the Rev. George C. Lori- ". Tho front is patterned gamut one! the style of the Don's palace in Valet. Going down Beacon urea towud the Pain Hon-o oorner wo pan. the new “muons! building, may opposite 13. new million dollu huh-v stony Bea. oon Hill bowl. the Bellevue. At the cor- ner of Bacon and 'hemorst, an»: trom the Puke: House, is moth" Ikpcnpet, the TYeertont. Jun scrose Beacon street, Udutg the min entrsme, that u, the Bullfinvh mat, end opposite the Common, stands the Shaw monument, designed tte,! Gender and dedicated on Memo Day, MW, to the memory of Col. Robert Gould like, who, " the heed of his regiment ot eolored troops, the Mitrtourttt Mas. “new Volunteers, fell in the mull. on Fort Wagner. will tto " bu I length of 336 feet. The great- .t width in no In. Thor. are iour stony; the lint helmet white marble And the other. dull y w brick, to com form with the original Bulloch (lcaign. At the out Aldo, by taking tho :1th at th- old Bowen Hill reservoir, some tn,. o0e {on of had In. secured tor tin pur- go ot crating u: Attractive “platinum slope down towunl Myrtle street in: boon buttmood with white liable and a heavy with coping surmount. the Myr- tlo Ind Temple Itmt unto-chew. In this am dand- u marble column nur- mounted by a great Noun rule. the Bulutneh Column, named in ttonor of the cabinet. A "can: roject is to take I block ot land Inst of». sun Home Ind make 3 park of that. Thu, it curried out, will out over $2,000,000, and necessitate the “traction ot an"! historic mansions. The} on Beacon Hill u the new State “as... The State Home. erected in 1798 nod termed the Bullfineh front, trom its ”not, Charles Bulltineh, makes but shout one-lourth the present ltructure. Though the enlargement he. been going on for none you", the completion is by no men:- attained. By the time all deeo. ntiom and equipment: have been made it is expected that the institution will have cont over four and I half millinns. It In certain that in "rtttemttnt of urchi- Mun] outline and adaptability to pub. lie it will he Impound by none in tie Suited Stat“. Putin. up Court street to Pemberton 31mm we we to the new court. home. completed in 1905 at a can of 02,2504“). TN. In u building stately yet staid, u is "rreorruttto the ..trp.diti?!" of Boston. About thin time In erected the Boo- ton Stock Exchange on Mate strut new “by. Near by, and erected between I.“ and 1898, Ire several modest emula- tion. of the Ame. building. Down in Indi- squara, not far distant, in the new Chamber of Commerce building, erected in 1892. Tho menu of tho Anus building stoned to mska definite and to scalar. st. some of tho big building plsns that had been talked ot for years. The big skyscraper hurried on the new Northern Union Railwsy station project, sud with such effect that by 1803 the new mil. wsy haduuters " tho northern edge ot the city. on Osman] strut, had been completed. Boston delighted " the tins In boating of its being tho finest rail. wly station in the union. In spite of s bunt of indignation our the outrage being perpetrated upon the amtu'toeture of an city, by thc autumn of 1890 that. stood It the northwest corner of Court Ind Wuhington um“, the an". of (M bulking district, I nix- tun “may buiIding, costing $700,000. The new on m mntcml lie-ton may be said to in" been inspired by the con- struction of the Amos building in 1390. Th Chic-go sky-crop" wu then novel and mu guru-ting “tuition throughout the country. A great future of the new “,1. of building wu that it mod. I "tt-itieeast advertisement for an nuts or corporation. The trultcu of the Ame. um. let to work to mum Bos. ton Ind to show Chimp and New York an the Hub III to be well represented with I splendid type at the and]. “oped modern omen edifice. - Hm! I In prophenied that within Dish you: ho- this than ulna. slow- going ”one. wonld possess or be build- m. tho moot coupon-elm" park system in Amerie., . "iertitieallrplnntsed water than, on of the best - .yntems, one of tho moat Innuendo electric “not cu ”Items, tho but appointed unuerumund taunt tunnel m the world, tho world, one of the finest public libra- liu in tho world, the lumen grain r..m..,r '" tne world, the only munici- pal printing plant in the country, and “may owe: novel municipal institutions in that madly mtocntic WI], Com. molwnlth Avenue, he would have been "Mod perhaps u I dangerous being to_l_nn " In”. The" cum I time, however, when the city Ind to with!" the prowltlou that more: foe the put must. yield in a mature to 60mm: foe facilitation of cola-crew nterprlu. the guarding of the public mum on! alleviation of 'flllll dittieultUs, and I ulngla print. bulnm “mature, rurionlly enough, proved to be the pivot round whlch the etty to. to "in. from the eonviqtion than the "notation of loud-Inks was par-mount to all other munieipal eon- nidontlonn to o thorough determination to an ghoul ennui-Mn; institution. in non. than. eon-annual. with the re. mural-nu ot a proactive lum- day city. With ha 'might of tndltlou Boston had long “It tho responsibilities of her yodtla. The spirit of "an”. for that which who but.” In no featured by the cold-ltd light of building: which "ood just " they did 100 or 150 mu ago and by the char- of thrcullng tho identical crook. In the Menthol In.- or alloys trod by omN toe.tathers that almost "cry pron-Mon for I nuaicipal im- provement in met by the mount: "A {anon- land-Mk will be destroyed!” Thou who atood for something of the modem Wa in regard to busincu Boston had to but tho opprobrium of being mud iemsoelaats. THE MAKING 0VER IT BDSTONo BoMea.--Aa-. the no» mutual. III-H's] til-(ornam- etteeted in m- ean!!! In that patented by Boston, . tmaaafaemtttioa Bil the not. notewor- thy but. vita-nod in I city tuned “in. eon-anti... for “on. till} this "rueturi, - front and Mb. but l Thin centralizing of Boston's chief in- i stitution. of study in the Back Bay but l been one oi the moat healthful parts of lull her building rovolution. The work lthat is steadily going on of creating l from the bogs and swamps of the Fens I beautiful area of 115 notes of park l scenery has been a loading factor in st- Inning thou educational structurea. Wonderful as have been Boston's com. mercial and private building operations since inspired by the Ames Building of 1890. Mr municipal enterprises surpass them, The original subway from Sulli- van Squire. Chnrlenton, to Dudley street, Roxbury. with on Atlantic avenue loop, was built at a cost of five million. The first of these metropolitan lys- term is that of the purks. More than 810,000,000 has already been expended, And probably $20,000,000 more will be ere the work is concluded. Among the features of the new ven- ture will be ll” Musuchuwtts reservoir, coating $9,000,000 and located a little mun-n ot Clinton. This lake in about, eight mile. long, u - depth of 46 On the reservation " Revere Beach a ”0,000 bath house has been erected ind has been used on hot days by more than 100,000 persons. A splendid driveway has been laid out slang the seashore. The plans being executed by the Met- topoliun Water Board Involve " ex- penditure of at lent 830,000,444 and in I" likelihood '4i5,000,000. This project will provide tor Boston and twenty- eight adjacent (own: the most perfect In“. of drinking VIN! supply in the United States. A tunnel " been run for a mile um der the harbor of the city, thus making trolley our connection direct with East Boston. An important extension of the subway idea in modernizing Boston is the work now being prosecuted of mak- ing s subway under Washington street, the principal business thoroughfare of the city. . The above undertakings have cost mil- lions and millions, but in the scheme which won adopted a few years ngo of erecting n greater or metropolitan Bog. ton district much more is involved. The plan was to unite Boston and a. district comprising some thirty cities and towns within a radius of twenty miles into n single system of parks, water supply and sews-rage The commission bu erected a line of parks and plenum grounds along the Charles River as well u a boulevhd and speedway. These works extend from Craigie Bridge, " the west end, Boston, to Watertown, a distance of twelve miles. Westward the parkway: range through the Newton: to I point beyond Wellesley, nineteen milce. No public en- terprise ever undertaken by any Ameri- eun eoenmonwralth will result in greater good to a greater number than the met- ropolitan parks of stt"eeluyett.s. This venture hurried Along the South. ern Terminal Station project. An avenue 3 mile long was dug through the heat of the city to enable the shifting of tracks froth 'the old Park Square station of the original Boston and Providence Railroad to form an entrance way to the new terminal. On January I, 1899, trains were actually running to and from the new rnilway station. Until the com. pletion of the new Washington station it was the largest in the world, thnt at St. Louie lting third. _ u At Huntington Menu. and Francis street are the marble struetures eonsti. ruling the Medical School of Harvard University. Also to be erected in this re- gion no the Mmeum of Fine Arts, new open house and several other import- ant educational and chin edifices, phnny “all and the New England Con. Iervntory of Music. Still further out to. ward Brookline, at Huntington “when Ire Mrs. John L. Gardner's ltalinn pul- thee, Simmons College, designed to pro- vide technical training in practical lines for MEN: Women: the Ilnstnn Norm-v.1 School, 1lirlif Latin School and High School of Commerce. Within the last few years the Bank Bay section in tho vicinity of Huntitt ton Brent" and the Fens has become a centre tor the musical and educational lite of the city. Near the corner of Hunt. ington avenue and MassaehttseUg Me- nue are the Century Building, built my women and the headquarters of a great womnn's club. Horticultural Hall, Sym- phony “all and the New England Con- The library contain... It present nbaut 660,000 volumes. Some 65,000 library and: are held by citizens of Boston, praetieally one to every eight inhabi- mu When I]! h &ute the library will con- tain tome of the most notable produc- tions of art in the country. It I: a fact greatly to be rt-gretted that the new uifding has been found defective in some of the most, vital practicnl teat. ures. It is becoming more and more evi, dent tint the planning of the library in- volved great" effort toward making it I: allow than a working place. The ventilating and liglscuvg systems an; eomplained of. In the main reading room, Batu tull, the air is so Vitiated at times, Ind the light so poor that to many the room is useless. Workmen are comtantly tearing "my partitions in I struggle to meet the demand tor more room. The situntion seems to bear out the prediction recently made by an urch- iteet that two or more storeys will have to be added within three or four yeare. The at: embellishments ot the new Public Library, opened in February, ISM, and coating £2,250.000, Ire by no menu completed. The bronze groups ot three figures each Ire yet to be placed upon the granite blocks at the outrage. The uric: of paintings typify'lng "The Dorn of Christianity," the work of John & Singer”, are but partly completed. and this u true also of the scheme oi mural decontion to be wrought by Kd. win A. Abbey, whose "Quest of the Holy Grail" adorn: the walls of the delivery room, haul-g- Cavity square, the 11m: Iqwo in the city, uni in which no to be found Trinity Church. the most. per- feet specimen in America. d tits pure Gothic 'vrehitecture, the Museum of Pine Arts, new Public Library null (New) “Ll South Church. A building recently com- puted ion hack of Trinity commands iw.. mediate “Minion. This is the Weil- minster tpartmenu, projected by . Citi. cage nun, who meant to erect a twent.s. Itorey cum-em, bug who had name of ttis towering tuspiration' lapped oti by the [usage of u Jaw limiting the height at buildings in mi about the ”mire to 90 feet. Boston was no! going to allow Trinity to be ovuwpped. '1 Ise Weatrnim ster was trutpped at Men-u nun-5's. This bretskir.g in of bushing on Copley Square mu not. the first eucvoar4unent upon the "aural women-e; of Boston. The Ikyncraprr had even made in 't pcarance on Losutnouweaith m‘rnue. At the corner of Berkeley street and Commonwealth avenue stash Madden Hull, A; ten storey atpartment structure. There was a tempest while this Wit' go- ing up and it has not yet abated. for s determined part, of etiarns are bound it shall he cut. off " the height of sur- rounding residence. ad thug not. mar the skyline ot the avenue. new“; tenants hare begun to come in ""“ -- --- c." I 114 he Museum of Fine {Emu uy attd (New) “Ll under mug Manny cqm- of fire nity commands. un- have I this is the Ty.r "70.“! unrated iii a Ihr.. bath": to erect a twent.s. I for toy " had name of his the um lopped oti by the 271.507 ting the lseight of tion. l t the mum” to 90 the yet n going to allow rd mm Henwith the isrrpared to hang on. ".--Nor York Sun. The Venus of Milo rejoiced. "I can do without arm: u long " th_e_ro "tytofkintr_ left,'] the pried. Haggard Customer-My wife tel.- phoned me a while ago that the wanted me to bring home a “Lona Doom." I've inquired at In]! 1 down place- And can’t find it. What sort of (an in it?" Salesman (at sporting goods counter) .-1 don't think it's 3 guns. It sounds to me like the nune of a Scotch drink. Try that place new“ the way, with the screen doors "Even I street car company," moul- ized the smoker on the front plntfom, 'Uoatetimea deserves credit foe palin- nesa. That sign up there, for induce, 'Motormen must not tal kto mayoral is merely a polite way of lowing node. on the pusengen that they must not talk to the motor-." Rev. Mowler--1 haven't seen Ile'. husband at church recently. m. Blygtrs;yyhat isUsts dying? . could lift the 156.pounds to n. 'height of thirteen inches, or 217 pounds to a height of six inches. other men 6 feet 3 inches high and weighing 188 pounds Could lift 150 pounds to a height of six- teen inches, or 217 pounds to a. height of nine tinches. By a great variety of ex- periments it was shown that the average human strength is H‘uivuient to raising thirty pounds through n distance of two and one-half feet in one secnnd. Limit of Hum Strength. Experiments upon a number of men have shown that a man five feet high and weighing PM pounds will lift on an average 156 pounds through a. vertical distance of eight inches, or 217 pounds through a height of 1.2 inches. Others 6.1 fe.hislh aty1weighiysr _183 tou/tf? harm-k ig adally need in every hounhold and I: sold by all drugxlsts Ind more: " flfte cant: I box. Batu. humful and (Inn- serous sub-unne- sanctions "pushed" u be- m: “Just in good." ZIm-Buk when In " perfect manner th. problem ot than having hind: u homo or at one‘l work an ever-ready And numb]. firm-am for cuts. burns. scam. brulm. Mention. much”. etc. lam-Built with- out noun] for eczema. ulcers. pllel, bad log, ringworm. meal-p mm. lute/ring was. sprung. alumna. poisoned wound. ot all lam. he. norm. mating. chapped buds. cold norm. frost-ttttr, acre feet, din-Jed ankles. and all new“. Irritation And Inflam- mutton. Zum-Buk has an attialty for an bum“: “in such In no ordinary otnlmont or "ttgt- munt an pomlbly mess. Bald“ Booth- In: pain and “laying Irritation. it WI unique traumatic and Imicldnl qualmcl whh-h virtually chase disease arms out of their hidiutt places In the lit“: III-nu; u the “an time lt purines the pore. ud ia- vlgomte- the natural function- of tho skin In A way that no other -rulots can. H The reason- tor thll triumph of alum. u. “mole and low. Tum; a. lawn xr-om tho “than. the proprietors ot Zulu-But rim or all when! deemed that. tho Meal bum must. be purely hex-bu And contain not the num- on trace of “mold animal tau t,ug"ltly, mlnevcls. Thus mun-mm ls m . 301011 trom rich aad pure enemas obtained from com“: rare medicinal lu-rbs. Then Jule“ Ind extram- ue propu'ed and round by luminous .cmumc procemea and than no skilfully blended that 1 unique. etteetiee. no Yttt vorteclly natuml "mutation tor db- nclllna "tti-dl-u" u recured. The rt<tiseoverr ot I secret that Ian 13in hidden In the dual of 20 comm-lo- In N: ovum mu at (winning mute-st. and the no” ot Zulu-Huh. the warld-huned "mum 1nd akin- cm-e will always anus: onentlon. tun-But In the “mud dg-ndeutt of thou wondcl’ul And mrrt.riour berm bum. by tho an of which the manly unilat- of Ant-lent 0m and the lllX’INt. gladiator- ot Homo uncured the hulthlnm and ready-hull“ or their akin. Many are the uncanny“ that were and. to moduco 1 perfect. balm tor an skin, but only In Zun-Bnk nu the Ideal been ruined. Since its discovery tun-Bu]: In. been wel- comed In mum: and calm and tho peo- plo or two hemlwhoru rallied um any have been phced in Mon of In uno- lutoly unique euro tor IUD compmnu. The Secret of A SCIENTIFIC WONDER. Boston wu the second city in the Union to Idopt the electric uyatem of street vars, and when about 1888 this mu being inwtalled the development of the suburban ruidence dunk! began. The lines were extended And kept on ex- truding until now one can go by elee. trim to Nashua, ninety-two miles on the north, And to Newport, sixty-eight miles to the south. Along wi,"n the recent band works in and about Boston have been prosecuted improvoments upon her harbor, the. neo- ond in the United Slaw» in commercial importance. More than a million dollars has been expended in pier building. Contontmont of the Foam lam. "ii. -B1oges-m's ddu? six months, OTHERWISE ENGAGED. Under Dlffieultus. To Bet Sure. a Famous Healing- lunged. During Cret hath house r.ed the ingtitw is the first all L I will not deny that a dunk is Izldc to jump. I have seen sharks jumpingl fire feet and nix feet high, but run: only when they were hunting sum- vivtim.' The "at acumen: of a shark when A. tfih t"a'l','t out of the water makes the fo lowing movement: The fish “niches his buck and bends him- self in the form of n crescent by bring. ing hi. head and tail closer together. At the moment. he want. to jump he straightens his back spin and hits the water with the tail end of his body. This force produces the power which on- ables him to Jump in certain height. A: nbove stated the shark, when fired " wu bragging for the meat and lying either on " side or back. In this posi. tion be In: not able to jump out ofthe can. Bis movements in this prawn were limited to thus he could either nmvc ahcndtlidewayja or downw'lrl._ - We that have been at sea. all know that there in one kind of shark which he to lay on it: back to do no. The construction of their mouths compels them to take these nttitudea. A. n con- sequence, the slink in question Wu cider er lying_on his luck or on Irish side. Doubts of a Sailor Who Says He Known Something About the Big Fish. You published in your puper on Sat- urday a very curious story about a shark jumping fifty feet high in the air, writes a correspondent of the South China Post. The writer or nuthur of this story tt captain of a British nailing vessel,bound for London, any. that he tired a rifle that st a shark and badly wounded rt. The shark in question jumped so high out of the water that he cleared the maimil with the can of a seagull. Soak over night two cups of white or pink beans. In the morning boil with 9. pinch of nod. 15 minutes and drain. Pry one Inge diced onion with a. piece or. pork or bncon. Add these to the beans, also a cup of canned tomato, two shred. ded chili pepper',. salt and sufficient hot water to cover well. Boil briskly for ten minutes on the stove before putting in the cooker. Leave in for five hours. Now, dear sir, thin in rather I. trifle strong. The captain states that they threw me meat overboard to get the shark: closer to the ship. At the moment that the shark made a grab for the meat the captain fired hit-hot, which that made the shark jump fifty feet out of the water. Spaghetti a L'Italienne.--Cook the un- broken epnghetti in salted boiling water until tender, then drain and transfer to a hot dish. Make a nuce of a. cup of tomato liquor, thickened with two table- upoonfule of butter, and when smooth Ind thick stir in a touponful of sugar, onion juice and celery salt to taste, pep- per and tour tablespoonfule of Penna-an cheese. Pottr this over the spaghetti and serve. Marshmallow Ctsmiy.---Threer cups of light brown sugar and oneohulf cup of milk. Boil slowly, but do not stir. Boil until it forms a. soft ball in cold wuer. Remove from the fire and beat in one- hall pound of marshmallows and one cup of cotu'ttely-chopped English wal‘ nuts. Bent until thick and creamy, spread in a buttered tin and mark in square. before cold. Almond Ice Cretun.---Two quuts of cream, six tablespoonNU of mg". one- quarter of 1 pound of blanched nlmonds. Stir almonds Ind sugar in pun over the fire until the lug" in n enamel brown, let cool, then pound to a powder. Sweden cream, add to nuts, put in freer er and freeze. Fried I'artmipa.--Watrh them carefully and tempo. Boil until tender. Cut into lengthwise strips. Dip these into molas- ses, drain well, drop into hot butter and fry brown on each side. Sea Foam Fudge-Two up. of light- brown tug-r, one cup of wnter, the white of one egg. fltworing to taste. Boil the - and water until it will mold. but not until it ll brittle and yet not as soft " for ordinary fudge. Have the white of an egg beaten stiff Ind pour in the lyrup uluwly, beating constantly with n patent egg beater. Flavor. then beat again until stiff. Drop on pan- from the point of n Ipoon, giving I pointed appenrance to the top of each of the undies. Evenly Drowned Toaat.--.In tanking tout or [mailing men" over a. griddle hole in an ordinary ”use. cover with 1 tin cover. instead of letting the grid- dle on the touter to keep in the heat. This will not “squeeze" the toast not blacker: it. and I Lunch of sweet herbs. Boil until done, add a quart of soup stock; take two tubieopooufull butter nnd one of “an, beat. to I cram: pepper ttnd unit to taste; add I spoonful any“. Serve with fried bread chips. Cheese 'root.-..in slice- of white bread spread . mixture of butter into which in mixed as much gated cheese u it will take, seasoned with salt and red pepper; brown in oven and nerve - Leftover Codfih--Add to on. cnyful of creamed codfish one tnblupoonful of chopped grew QTL' one oupful of crisp tout cram , on. tablupoonful of melted butter. on. cuplul of milk nad one but“: egg. Season with I heaping 'uutT.oontlt.'t, of mt and I “pinch" of papnkn. Fill into buttered and crumbod patty plus, put a "pen" of butter on each and brown in a brink o"w--Adapt- ed from Good Housekeeping. Vegetable suur.--mrite ations, three Natalia. tour carrots, one mull head of _cn tpre, otp pint yt I'utttr_bettnt, Candied k'ruit.--8euet any" firm, reth- " underripe fruit, pine-”lee, (rupee, pouches, small peers. plume, ohern'ee. aprioU, eto Hoke e lyrup of two cups of water end two cape of enu- lated auger Cook the fruit plows in this until it cm be pierced with eetnw. Lay fruit in e eieve to drain, e lingle layer at a time. Dip very quickly into hot water to remove my gun) which may adhere to them. Then drain end lay on a cloth before the fire to dry. When dried sift over them finely-powdered loaf sugar while fruit is still warm, end lay the fruit on dishes in a moderate oven. 'lurn them and drain all moisture from them. The fruit mint not get cold until perfectly dry. _ _ Test Eggs-Tu test eggs. put them in a pan with nulficient cold ,raue to we” cover them. The good on: will ll. nu their aside: on the bottom, the light- weight ones will “and on the and. while the bad ones will float on top. Sponge Pudding-Mis {our abh- spoonfuls of constant}: with a little cold “star. then stir it into I pint of boil. ing “tar. Add I cup " in." and the rind Ind juice of two lemons. Boil one minute, pour while hot over well beste- nhitea of egg-. Mix thoroughly Ind pour iau, a mold. Some with custard white very cold. HIGH J UMPIN G SHARKS. Mrs. Newed--1mstend of giving me pin money, my husband puts it in the say_'nga 'Ank for, me. Mrs: oldwed-6rrt of safety-pin money, " it were. The Frenehmatt-0ui, mantel"; he nuke too violent gesture',--Y1rtteee' Shauna. ' "What would be the use? Any jury would acquit you'."--.)'" Wat. tee. Violent Convorsation. The Amerietur--You say your brother dislocated his arm hiking through the telephone? Perhaps the late Sir Henry Stanley came near to finding the trek. In con. versation with the present writer he ttaid that when leading the Emin Pasha ex. pedition to the count and when skirting west of the Mountains ct the Moon he wn informed by several distinct parties of Arabs that to the southwest of Lake Albert Edward Nyanm was a large lake several days' march in circumference, called Late Oz". The lake, which is un- known to geographers. in about three marches in from the fringe of the great forest, and near it are the descendants of white men leading a pastoral lite. It is possible that an attempt to dis. cover the settlement reported by the Arabs will soon be made; and should the people turn out to be the descendants ot the Dutch families that went out into the unknown to get as far as possible from the British flag, one of the myt teries of the Dark Continent will be cleared up. "H I were to kiss you now, would you hue me "rated t" Mr. Rhodes took a very considerable interest in this mystery of the vehlt, end one of the ambitions of his life was to have the missing families traced, and, if they were willing to return, restored to their friends in the Trtrttsvattl. To this end in 1899 he fitted out an expedition to be led by Adrian Hof- meyor, the pro-British clergyman, who had been removed front the Dutch Church in Cape Town for political rea. sons. Owing to the unrest that preceded the war, the expedition only reached the neighborhood of Crocodile Pool, and thus ended the only attempt. ever made to find the lost families. The inteiftion of the Emigrants win to make for the lakes, Tanganyika being rnughly {bout two months' trek awny, and it is probable that they got into the rountry of the Masai, since the natives about the Nynnzas, like the Matabele, speak of a. caravan having journeyed through their region in the day-i oi their fathers. "Then I began to nu Dodd's Kidney Pills, and M‘oer the (in: few dose. I be, gun to improve. I med tour bozo. ln all and now I 1m working every day on the farm a well man. I owe my wonderful era to Dodd's Kidney Pills um] nothing e sw." The trek, consisting of A large number of families. went north, taking in course that would bring them through the pre- sent Rhodesia. The older natives there spank oi white people having journeyed through their country many years ago; but tlwro is no record of the Boers Inv- ing been opposed during their pause. Expedition to Discover the Lost Boer Trek. In South Attic: today is being discuss- ed the advisability ot an expedition to discover the lost Boer trek whieh mart!» ed out into the unknown and was swal- loyal up half . Senturt ago. What occurred to the vast caravan from the time it started on its journey i! one of the mysteries ol the Dark Cott- tinl-nt, and the numerous Dutch Boers connected with the voyageura “in spec- ulate upon their fate. "I wu n helplo- mm in July, "07. For four yeah I hid endured the [rent- est torture from was», Rheumatilm, Stiffneu of the Jointa um! Pain. in tin Louis. 1 had Mk eireles under my eye. my head whed and I m ofton din]. t was “tended by tive dado", but not one of them muld help me. There ls no out or kind of Kidney Disease that Dodd's Kidney ring will not cure. em with 3.ch minimum, trtigt. neu of a. Joint. and Flinn in the Iadns, and was; no relief from tie. doctor. whom he called in Mr. Antoine P. mama, n well-known farmer living mu um, in my the good new. Hut he in Ig",',?:,") a we" nun, and this he owe. his cure to Dodd'n Kidney Pills, Speaking ot No wonderful out Mr. Richard up: I think the both “min no that of the an. ulna concerning truthful- I heard once of an old sailor tellittg an 'muaitttarteo of a dark which, when caught and cut. open had moths M inside; this dunk cut open, produced All- other trUrk; and the lut shark had in his dumb I. can". In; with twenty- fire sovereign. Wonderlul Cure of A. F. Rtehard, Who Was Tortured by Rheum.. tiom and Kindred Pains, “to Kent County Tglking. Bt. Ignites, Kent Gr., N. B., Doc. M.--. (Bpmsinl.)--After being tortund for four wounded in to dire downward inw the element which in his natural mink, rad not to go and make an uinhip TIMOY- maxim around the nut. of a an”; Tis. lo . ATTENDED BY ' _ FIVE DOCTORS But do! No Relief Until Ho Used Dodd's Kidney Pills. SAFETY-PIN MON EY. VANISHED FARMERS. Pardonable Crime. TORONTO Nothing an long be conceded from the ma who can. out with proper u- pintiom. Like an prudent nun, J. Matt. ton settled tttee thing; before p.31“ his all. Be had nude the -puintanea of O young lay-who looked and hiked tie. an bdrm, but he didn't [repose to pm- we the nitu'r and dhoover that It: would be short of and! to pay for the The judge pat on the wound-1h in we depths of an arm chit and was but 'tsleep,and hi: daughter rested [nodul- ly in I. Ummoeit under our of the oak (ma, [nily radix a book. Armed with Miss Noliy Hyper. end, It did not take J. Suntan Wuwick my days nnd night- to ascertain where “Ruven’l Rest" wu shunted, and to discover that the Judge Wu . rich old widower, who would be gathered to his father. won md leave all his lelll- etc bond. to hit only (mild. When rec-onsbly nudist! on um PM, he started for "Raven’s Ban." Ho iked the mmo. He had hope. that it might ska prove I. not for him. Gut in the country, even in war houses, the lines are not no "eiettr drawn u in the city. That u. 1 parlor maid may be asked to “M the win. dow- of the parlor without intent to humllhu- her proud spirit. On this particular Ittomoon Min Maggie Sent! had been Mind 1') Wm three certain windows and “as hard at it when I hack drove up from the rat'., road nation I Illa “my. It mad, he truly laid that aha mur- aged the pursuit, but when ahe arrived " the depot and a passenger'a poodle do; barked at her and J. Stanton stepped tor. ward and kickul the canine and saved her life. she had to bestow a glance of gratitude upon him. That ghuwe Wu the opening wedge. He raised his hat and introduced himself and presented his. This hd to a nonver- ution, and when the parlor maid board- ed her train aha felt that ahe ought to give her card in return. Having none of her own, ahe gave him one of Min Nelly Harper's. _ bridal tour A parlor maid, working tor .17 I month and board. in n mansion nine miles from the city, and having only every other Thu-day attornoon out, cannot go chtodng um . deneemunt ot the Engliah nobility, no nutter what her window. He must come chain; " ter her. She depended on hia doing BO. Ho might have seen difficultia in the wuy if she had stopped to reflect, but at ugh-luau. He must come chain; " next. tron. [any rat“ a book. It in I penal day. The been drained and the lanbk'u-s tricked, “I no Charle, Henry. ma we shall continue to call him fur a minute more. Wu trying to be the man than: town, um! Muggia I'll dusting parlors in the rumor house of Judge Harper when she In ulna lo run tt to “we city one afternoon on tn "In: for Min Nelly Harper. daugbtor of the judge. . The parlor maid Wu followed to the Grand Central Depot, An the took a street car and stood and hung to a “up the teat wu only enough. J." Suntan murmured something shout his dmire to all on her and be assured that the poodle ttadn't bitten her, 1nd the: the train moved out, the couldn't remember whether she had cemented or not. These two wore nine miles spurt. at the beginning, but tate one day brought them boggthfr. -- _ .. Soma'uFds Ind been ordered from a autumn-r and had not 'trrived what pro- mired, Maggier wag to ilullgire_ (or tlrttt. Dre-ed in her bet and with “pin- tiona bubbling u in her you! the parlor maid mslled " (t. “on. The card: had jot been finished and were handed to her. Al the left the plane the Wu Been and followed by J. Mutton Warwick. His idea of finding heiress wu to walk up tlt, down the streets until he discovered t em. She knew that she was being followed and " she cut. furtive have. at J, Stanton, she realized that in opportun- ity had come. Fate had done her put, and now it Wu for J. Shawn Warwick und Maggie Scott to do theirs. On the death of her patenta Ibo had to take a. place in a family in the coun- try n . parlor maid, but that didn't throttle her upintiorn. On the country the considered this “mutant" u I stepping Moms and went ahead to hope and to damn. Nothing knurerin this life thin that where then in 1 Charles Jane: and u Maggie Soon, both with nopirntiom. they are sooner or Inter bound to meet. She had been told that due Wu both Ihnpely and cum Sh. but been told um n An utm- ahe would he a howl. ing lumen. Time who told her that had added tint also In fit to gum the put Ian of a millionaire, whether he Ind mule bis money in pork or lumber. The father went into bankruptcy and he and hi wife took It so much to heart tut they got in the wuy of . lo- comotivo and won killed. it Wu then that Mt begun to In" upintiom. Sh. no money. but the ma told "rtlterhee-acm.aatsartieu In I ".uei.e when tut it w the “at thing in world for I duties. ‘uhhod looking you. I" with . du. tinguiahed um. nad A um. gall, to bury an Amie-n him "hftlyL the head bookkeeper caught W Scott. In. tho daughter of a Winn-kn. Sh. grow up to the :30 of " without any purticulu- upinuom. It wu About settled bemoan father and mother that the should may a brick. maker Ind than hep a brickyud in the 802“. family, when thing! Wed. _ Sb. hid no money, but she was told that u u when she would be I howl. for the Ink. of their owning eye. or Ibnpely hand. or feet, or because they had I cut. wny with them. Also at nbout tho an. the, on. of the nppnntieo boys in tho Ion-dry who wanted to barrow a. quarter told Clark. Henry that h- had a. ',et'gettd, he. Ind must. have the blood 0 us English nobhunn in his veins. and. Henry "Itritte with " - _taabetPtsaet?tiougtrtGumt-rtmt- tg2,igtrtet2,tP2te,tect,'ot of em in (Khan-god him on tho spot. Ptmn that bout my Mr. Jones be. to ham upintiou. Mo went to u !iiii'i tailor foe cloth“. Ire Ind m rein , bearing the nun. of "J. Bun- ton Warwick." He curled . an. and ho talked loudly About, “his club,” and he began looking for u: heiress. Ha who each dull find. CIA-r10. “any Jones, an of Con- tracwr Jones, lunar ton of Widow Jon... had no particular upimiou and! In arrived " the up ot 20. He had put in the hat um you" no usiotuut bookkeeper in an iron loud- dry " 312 a week, and his “job" and " ourmundiug: wore m We“! to - pintiom. Then his with“ mother died nod left him 31,000. TWO OF A KIND "No." interrupted Mia “he. “and she’s not even a good rayon". I didn't II] I ‘I'u.’ but ‘Irould be."'-A1BtV SW at Thu “One objection to you pom.” all tho odttor, (huh; thrmttth the "and”. “in that Whittier one. wrote ur onhodyin‘ cub-Wu tho a. ." "Do you w to lay, air," thundered the six-foot calla, "that Ir----" " “Bu Bnak, hold that “or, of Widow Jonen' an Eh ain't died yd." 'y,'atu,"grtgt,tt,nel'ttl", "Well, . r. am her death at any minute not." "Gosh, that old widow IJ'I’I wu the naturist you» in nan-ville," muttered the term. a: he tlt' moral line. lifting a. typo from o form.--- little mm VII “ti" may heartily. Ono of tho hulk, was” ’ stte was “an; be nut-l, "il..' "Renew ' her, Katie, than k padt'zfor “can." "Yea, I know," r-rkod main. to!» Widow Wu contrary. The dim of the Baum. anh- duhod wildly mo the composing room tad pud- u an Ion-n: . From tho Jun. "-7932 Ed Gil-m on an, my deer lit," - law-pound the oditor, "you In" Inmnd on the. tumour "I wouldn't make a eortfilattle at May," aid the eoateeitrd MIMI, with a ”unwind l-irk. “She told I: yo. said you wore «my to “any MP. ot (mum, "" no friend ot-----" tf'." "ttir, I know," r-irkod Kuhn-in. ur inuoly; “I‘m thing room in my not for tut." __ - Only on. "unbaio gamma" M lr LAXA‘HVI BROIO QUININI. Moi tor the dawn“ of B. W. OBOVI. - 00 World oTiriinstitt.9sLt.SrrD". Io. out city And but. but“ out." in Wales, imporud new “no. in the past, but they In“ now peaetirotV ceased to import than and the "and" for high grade- have been wandered. A Chicago piano retailing " no “at . sale oatusionnllr, but only tho up," middle clan and the gentry go beyond that price, and such orders tr: mun] filled in London. “The prevailing sound of all“; in the ‘hire-purchne' ”can. In buyer can secure a piano and '" to! It in twelve, twenty-four or thietroix loath- ly laymen“ or on ”at! “In. sve- more accommodating. Ulla M lye- tem an .80 phno to“: tho - ”(I And proportioetlt on tt Mal of the dealers in Quit“. . II I. the lug- “They him an institution mod the Eisteddfod, devoted to competition- in music " well no liter-mire and the “a, turl unnunI union- ne held in cub neighborhood um I union] union ot rm: days at some important tomt in thc prineipality, Human. bum North;nd Saudi Pt: Until th& ecl- mry t o veny of t a m mt- ed them {gm buying the not. expo-Iv. musk-u! instruments, but tho grant ex- pamion of the 'pet lulu", in build- ing up ropidly . we .to.do upper clan of miners, Ihopperl. "than and pro- fessional men. PWMVO no in the Int-named clu- hvo m into great premiums In). the "(not ob security. This induct-id W“ is Optninjf the way for a growing aa in musk-u instrumenta, Ind My there is a good market tor the - - at piunos lad organ evo- n-ou the lumen. Good Silage" Road Them In: Aasetq (In Lahore". The Welsh for more than men centur- in have been noted tor their tom of mvelr, and no people in the val-Id can now bout of u u I proportion of good since" anon. 3cm, including the laborers. V Concerning tha trade in muted h- atrumenh, Consul D. W. Wink-l, ot Cardiff, Trltear _ _ _ _ __ J. Stanton Wch tum-d may. He did not flee. Bo limped. He II. I wrecked young Inn. Mimic Scott, who “I ttn,',',",',': one of tbe ma... windows, - u go and did not sigh. Rey Ind .qtired-- they Ind peb-ftet hull-rad. _ _ Tho Judge MM for bi. hulking, but, when the “copy gain-l showed up " lm there - no one for him to bite. -11.”... Miller in the Boston Globe. “Nelly, if that h l tun-p a" that tell him we have noun. tor Nu!” enli- ed _tl_ne near-sighted judge [mm the er~ "And the My u on a hat with I pink father." “she did." "ml you surely hue nude a mu take. It I'll my - maid you met. She m" in town alter my card. and Ae ttave you one. " all: In recovered trom her fail I will am you." The prior mid In the (in: to one" dgbt of the changer. HI- “Hymn! J. Stu-ton Warwick on the ill-tum. All - upinuom were torgonv-u II I Im- -t. “he an wanted to do mu m Stt.out of sight. Wuhan and and. M1. Sully s" u; so MM‘ly that the Mamet unru- on' u hand he: out just as the des. cam: of Imbimy m 1...!th baton "But-but," protected the desperate yum man, "you an me this and of yours with your own hands. , on surely ttattnot have fomottmt'." “Jun what day m it?" van asked. "Ott My Int." one had the lent wow-ion that a tori-I of dull thud. were It land. the in out“! on the "and“: win. dow sill, and in her but: and “Duluth“! all. loll backward to the (round mm “and Wm! uni-"u actor. an tdeheu my“ up and :hd. he! aor1edtttathuhoputse “luau hr to" “to: tree clone-ll " the had: cl u and dog. and J. Bento- but in netted lover the girl would null have been imam ht he had arrived jun " the Wu Gum out like n bag of and. Mus an“ up with burning cheek: and (In-hing eye-,1“ when - um that it van a manger. Ike My demaoaed; "r-a, you know, met you the other day In mt," summer“! the muler. in BA t for his uni, and. without sad 1 Idols“ him." "You In Mn. Mr. J. Stanton Wcrwick. I - aw Imr hand ot you Inlay. In my life." “Who nr/rois, in. and Han do you mt but" Mid“ thet the VI. midtown in the WELSH HOST “SEAL PEOPLE. "You um not no in the depot. air!" 53999199“. ya ghoul to bite you Plenty a! I'm Lon. ruekt lynx-Hog ttte judge into M Mun“!

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