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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 7

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE BOSTON GLOBE FRIDA Y. OCTOBER 11. 1907. since not many visit his realm, he generally gets himself to glean information of the ways of 4 he world from them. Smart New Models HONEYMOON TRIP TO MENELIK'S KINGDOM.

Continnett From the Firat I'nge. pect of leaving the luxuries of a homo 1 I I ,1... The Globe LATEST llBls jjl all This season's Regals for Men are undoubtedly the smartest styles we have ever shown. 43 new models-each different from the othftr each correct in all details. 7:30 O'CLOCK High in Menelik's Favor.

When, in 1902. Edward VII waa crowned king of England. King Mene-lik sent an ambassador to London to witness the coronation. In the person of Ras Makonnen. one of his trusted chiefs.

On this tuna lion Col Harrington, who hnd been stationed at Addis Ababa for some years as British agent, was as-Mgned to attend the Ethiopian envoy as King Edward's representative. This he did very acceptably to the envoy and King Menelik, whose high favor he enjoys. His services In Abyssinia, and on this special duty, "brought him favor also with his government, and, as a reward he was knighted, and on Dec C. he was made minister to the colirt i anu uiuai 1 1 1 i i BU elety of Washington and Manchester, for this far-off country, and the court of I a barbaric king Rut Mtss McMillan Is a strong glr, and her sense of romanoo must tie tiro- nounced, for she is said to bo radiantly happy, and ready to follow husband to be on a honeymoon of more than 7000 miles to the wild interior I of Africa. This journey will take the bridal couple first more than 7000 miles by sea.

then about 000 miles from ihe coast to I the city of Addis Ababa, on the Wild up- THE RYE TO BUY One of our fashion leaders is shown here. Particular attention i ii i QUART has Deen given 10 tne model REX DISTILLING 145 Stanlford Boston. Pint VALDEZ BANK SUSPENSION It Interests People in This City, Offices of Two More Reynolds Companies on State St, ing of the narrow sloping toe, also to the shaping of the rather short vamp and the outside "swing." The Military heel and Pint Ik ssriiSsf iijflf'LlHlifMlilllililtiiii 9 r.m.yn&-"fe KssHI extension sole are ad- ditional effective Nothing Known There of the Bank Failure. features. "Nn.

9l One of 43 cor- rect new $3.50 and $4.00 Cotton gpMtaU, $8 00 .1 hc. HI V4 -Sizes Mail Orders Promptly Filled season, made in a11 leathers- I 0 I Ncw Fa" StyIe nok 8en fir0 on request. cept the Krench ballooulsts and one ot the Germans. Paul Xlcclie! who will NEW QUEEN OF THE OCEANS. Continued From the First I'asce.

parrive here tomorrow on Touralno. i "REASONABLY CERTAIN" OKI the With better weather Luslkanla can do better." For Men and Women Dispatches from Seattle, Wash, in the morning papers, telling of the closing yesterday of the doors of the owned by II. D. Keynolds at Valdez. Alaska, proved of considerable Intermit in financial circles In Boston today, because the bank is owned by a lios.an man, and it Is reported that the Keynolds Aluska development company and the Reynolds Alaska home railway company, the head offices dT which are at J7 State -iv this city, have many investors In Boston and its vicinity.

to the dispatches, Mr Reynolds la now in Seattle, but declines to make any statement tor publication at present concerning the condition of the auk at Valdez or as to tho affairs of the two other companies which bear his name. John O. Bruidy, formerly governor of Alaska, is the secretary and tieasuier of both the Development company and the railway company. He lives in Brookllne, but is said to bo in 'i'ucouia at present. The, offices of tho Reynolds Alaska Development company and the Reynolds Home Railway comuany, both in the same suite, on the lUUi lioor of the building at 27 State st, wore open as usual this forenoon, but information concerning the affairs of the bank, or either Mr Reynolds' two companies, was unobtainable.

A Globe reporter who called at the oflices after in o'clock today was told hy av young woman, who talked with much animation, that no one connected with the ilevcliinnnjiit comDanv or the MEN'S STORES 169 Tremont St. BOSTON 113 Summer St, cor. Bedford St. WOMEN'S STORES 109 Summer St. 169 Summer St.

I i That Mars is Inhabited, Says Prof Todd. The drawing for positions in the race will probably take i lace uiiorrow evening at tho Aero club. Tin' Frnou eom-jnisaiomri Mallett, will draw for hii country. The balloon race will start at o'clock in the afternoon of Oct UI, and the balloonlsts will be sent off at flvu-mlnute intervals. Capt Charles da K.

('handler of the army, will take a corps of 10 men with him. who will assist in inlliiting tin- balloons. Tim men coma from the war dcuartuienl nnd have been recently trained hy Leo Stevens. The new government balloon will alao be taken on tho trip and Capt Chund'er expects to make a night ascension previous to tne race. It was learned today that President Uoosevelt last Week orilere.it Col ft.

K. Kvans to detail all the soldiers necessary to provide pollco protection for the race. Col Evans will detail pO men about tile grounds, and will assist the aeronauts in every possible way. Muuricv Mallet will be the official starter of the race. Germans Aboard, Taking Notes.

Representatives of the German steamship lines, with a photographer, mitt (he voyage on the Lusltaniu and nind" observations of tho ship's cdnstfwetfon and the workings of her turbines. They would express no opinion on tho Lusl-tanla. Gustav H. Schwab, general manager of the North German I.loyd steamship company here, discussing teh trip or the LusiUufta. said: "The Dusitanla Is undoubtedly a wonderful steamship and has made a splendid record.

I an: going around today to congratulate Vernon H. lirown of the Cupard line and, incidentally, hand him the blue ribbon which the North German I.loyd held held since the mem trip of the Kaiser Wilhelm In June. 1904. "The record for which all other steamships have been striving since was KING MENELIK, Ruler of Abyssinia, Where Sir John Harrington and His Bride Will Live. Has 20 Photographs of Double Canals on Planet.

RQCHEFQRT'S NEW PLACE. French Journalist, at Age of 77, Assumes Editorship of La Patrie and Attacks the Government. PARIS, on 11 Henri Rochefort, ttM well-known French Journalist, today, at o- fif 77, left the Intranslgcant, lie founded In 1880, and assumed i 11 tor ship of the Patrle, making his i. ui characteristic onslaught lands of Ethiopia, which is a vast, almost undeveloped land lying south of the Soudan, to the east of the upper waters of the Nile. There are no railroads to King Menelik's capital as yet, though one t3 been started by the French from the gulf of Arabia, and Is now completed to a point about 1S5 miles inland.

Beyond that point tho American brld 125.000 GOOD PEOPLE. Observers Took More Than 7000 Pictures. Uiiun tin: government. Home Hallway company oHices knew anything about the reported failure of of Menelik, from whom also he has re-ceived an order of nobility, the star of Ethiopia. The British residency at Addis Ababa, which is the home of Sir John Harrington in the capital, was built about 10 years ago, when the Britinn minister was a plain colonel in Uio anry und merely his country's agent at the court of Menelik.

It consists of an extenliive -ciadrangle of round, thatched native hous-a connected with pavilions or Wings Thr walls are made of wovm saplings, tnd covered with mud, or adobe, which In that dry climate soon becomes as naid as brick. The roof is thatch, ni.d there are but few windows. Though extensive, the house is savage in its architecture, and many a fine wig would be required, give it an air of luxury fixed by the Kaiser Wilhelm II. at knots' average hourly steaming for the entire rip across. That record haa itood until today, when the l.usitanla lowered It." of Sir John will be obliged to i ice on a STORY OF MALARIA.

This Disease Has Been Studied by Scientists for More Than Two Thousand Years. Inferring to malurin. in talk before the Koyal Colonial institute of Great Britain, Maj Ronald Ross said that it is the moat Interesting; disease of all medical science. For 2000 years men have been studying It. and only now does success seem in eight.

One of the most remarkable things admitted by physicians now in discussing the disease Is that wo havl nut disproved any of the more important theories of the ancients on the subject, but have only elaborated on them and verified them. Four hundred years before the Christian ert that great Oreek, Hippocrates, wrote learnedly on malaria. Yet, today it Is encountered with dread by physicians. Full of astounding facts is its story. Xp" Between man and nature, has the malarial war been waged.

Perhaps, though, it would be nearer- cor horse, mule or camel if she proceeds co the of her husband at tho Ktiiii-pian metropolis. the hank, except what they had seen in i the morning papers. "The first intimation we had of anv trouble," she said, "was when we saw i the papers this morning. Dr H. K.

I PANAMA, Oct 11-Prof David Todd, who spent four months In Chile with Klstler, the manager of the offices here, i is ovt trying to find out something about it. but he will not be in until this afternoon." Many Days in Saddle. The time taken on her Journey by this means will depend upon her endurance In the saddle. An expedition sent Into the country by the United It was reported on the street today negoti- OVER ST ANTHONY FALLS. that the affulrs of the Reynolds Alaska! in for the miroose of development company, the Reynolds bank of Valdez and the Reynolds home atin a commercial treaty with ith King McD0NALD SURRENDERS.

Alleged Father of Boy Murdered In Providence Denies Eluding Police or Knowledge of Killing. PimviDENCE. Oct 11 Edward Me-Donald, alleged father of the boy found murdered In a suit case on Pros-past hill Tuesday morning, surrendered the puller- today. He denlea that he attfinjiti 4 to elude tho police, and also says he was not Implicated in tho killinK of the child. Chief Inspector Ilorton says It Is now tip to the medical examiner to show that the boy was murdered.

Tho McDonald woman is still In custody, with St husband, as Is also Mabel Brown, the sifter. Hrown, alias Hlgney, the 17-year-ld sister of the two women, has Menelik was 20 days on the march after railway company are all somewhnl cor n- nected with each other in a bifslnei ness Way. 'Incorporated in In state of Not One Case Before the District Court at Maiden Today Police Officers Surprised. MALDEN, Oct 11 There was not a single case before the district court to day, which is a very unusual thing, as the court has jurisdiction In cities and towns with a total population of about 125,000. Court officer Klllion opened the court and at once adjourned It, the Judge not even taking his seat.

The police officers present remarked that tile people in this section must growing good when there was not ever a single case of drunkenness in such a large district. ON MURDER CHARGE. Loreto Digrario of Lynn, Arraigned in Di Pietro Case in Salem Court, Pleads Not Guilty. 8AI.EM. Oct 11-Before Judge Fes-senden In tho superior court this morning was Loreto Digrario of Lynn, charged with murder by shooting Valentino Di Pietro.

In Lynn. May last. The indictment was read through an Interpreter and 'the prisoner pleaded nof guilty. Lawyer John Ingraham was assigned to defend him, but no dato was et for the trial. The crime with which.

Digrario is Washington. Owns about MM acres of leaving the 'railroad. The raiirttsd Hue having bed1 extended somewKat "Since then, the Journey should not now be so long. The country through which the routo Jlcs is diversified, and after the low and vprv hot plains near the coast aro left. mineral lands and 0000 acres of ennl and oil lands in the Valdez district.

Prince rect to say that It has fought, bx-tween man "and i fS llllam sound, Alaska. About 4W Passed Lightship at 1:17 A M. The great new liner swept by Sandy hook light ship at 1:17 a today, and after a pause off the bar to await daylight, steamed slowly up the harbor to receive tho recognition of her right to the title of queen of the ocean. She passed Sandy hook bar at 7:12 a and was in quarantine at 7:40 a m. Three records were written down In her log book, two of them wrested from the great German rivals of the Cunard and one from the swift Lucanla of her own llne They were the shortest time from any European port to New York; the fastest average speed for any transatlantic voyage, SS.SIK nautical miles an hour, and the longest daily run, 617 nautical miles.

Translated into land miles, her speed averag; for the run was 27.60 miles an hour. Her achievement is a triumph for British shipbuilders and sailors, and may mark the passing of the old-fashioned reciprocating engine and the beginning of the universal installation of the turbine engines, which have made it possible for this fleetest of ships to break all records. The records which slio has broken Were: That held by the Kaiser Wilhelm II of the North German I.loyd line, which acres carries 11 percent copper, with gold values. Property Is now under development and It is expected that shipments will commence durintr present or scientists believe that in this, as other diseases, It is a violation of na- ture's laws, rather than a proclivity of nature herself, that has wrought the trouble. is mountuinous and rolling.

Its hills and vallevs are wonderfully beautiful, though there is not a bridge in the country and scarcely a road better than a trail. In some places the land is cultivated i i. t. in "'inK sat year. Capital stock authorized.

$1,000,000 that she knows nothing of tho mo nears nowadays or lnrerrnruenr. Lad 17 Years Old Only Person Known to Have Shot Rapids and Lived. Anthony Asplnatis, 17-year-old Chicago boy, went over St Anthony falls recently, and lives to tell the tale. His perilous trip was Involuntary. Asplnatis arrived In Minneapolis one Monday morning from Chicago, and at once sought wdrk.

He finally agreed with an employment agency to go to Carrett, Mont, as a teamster. He was not to start until fhe next morning, and so had the rest of the day and evening to see the town. After wandering about for some time he strolled down to the river bank. Near the union station, on the west bank of the river, he saw a pHe of logs touching the bank. He sorambled over these to the outer edge and sat down on two small logs.

Before he noticed it they were floating, and he could not reach those still firmly attached to the shore. The bov realized that he was being percent cumulative preferred and 000,000 common; par -it: no bonds. lever, ana apt io imagine it a mod crhia-'. llpvnnMn and Waving lieius UI grain mo wmmn, uul i iflici and din lup. 11.

I i. pres, hnrles II. Kinnshurc vice pres. CASSIE CHADWICK'S BODY John 0. Hrady sec and treas.

Ulamey gtevens gen manager and Eben Smith. through woods and bush-grown valleys, and over high and sparsely wooded hills. Big game is plenty in the land, though the principal jrame seen by main office. 27 State st. Boston.

The Reynolds Home railway cmnanv travelers on the trail from the coast is is In process of construction, and which are sighted in great antelope" men have been at work on it recently. The railway is rrojected to be a narrow herds. The valleys near Addis Ababa are gage electric line to run from Vl-'ez charged is said to- have been the out come of some labor disputes in Lynn. SCOtTIs LIVING HIGH. to rhe summit of the mountain, in addition to nls other enterprises it is well populated.

The capital Is a great, rambling town of mud huts, peopled by the most paw- that Mr Reynolds had options on sev swept along py a strong current, hut erfu lank race on tne nice ui uic crossed from New York. to Plymouth at an average sped of 23.58 knots, as compared to the Lusltanla's 23.99. eral ship and Interests in various mercantile concerns in Alaska. earth, who, though peaceful when let i did not realize his full peril. He sat straddling the logs, and paddled with Mr lias been secretarv Tind Th.il neidry tne tiamourg-Americnn treasurer of the Alaska development nWP DAVID TODD.

Tln Amlierat College Aafronnmer. Who Ws 'lit io Chile by I'rof l'erclral Lowell of Ilonton. cr pany and the Home railway com pany since last year, when he nulmd lis governor of Alaska and came to livo on ndcoci st, urookiine. Dr Kistler's Statement. Dr M.

E. Klstler was found fn the Removed from Prison and Given to Her Son No Statement Made by Her Before Death. COL.VMBV8, Oct 11 Tho body of Mrs disale Chadwlek. who died In tho pcnltinti.iry last evening, was removed tu i In .1 undertaking establishment snrl prewired for burial. It will be taken away by her son, Kmll Hoover.

Wis ('had wick embraced the Roman Cattmlii faith and was baptized in it a few days before her death. Yesterday morning she received extreme unction. is frequently reported that Mrn ds'livlek had made a statement her lliianeial Irani-actions, and it expected that If uch state-tttnt had been made It would lie glvon to the public after her death. ii on officials declined last night that title had never made such a statement to them, 'and T. K.

I'owell. tier attorney here, also denied the rumor. EMI Hoover arranged today to have tip body Of his mother taken to Wood-ttock, Canada, for burial. It was early in the day that enough i ml, not In to bury her, that she would bo buried In tho potter's iii Id lu re, but Mr Hoover Anally toatit arrangements for the WALT HAM. The case against Joseph T.

Shaw, ftiarged with drunkenness and reckless driving ui automobile, which was ern term. Only In phraseology is It so. The ancients knew of Intermittent fever. About 400 the Romans and Greeks had decided that malarial levers were not continuous In type, and divided them Into three classes those occurring every day, every other day, and every third day. And that classification, In Its essentials, stands today.

Again, those ancients had discovered a direct connection between the disease and swampy or mat shy places, and even suggested that It was disseminated to man by a germ. All of which, with BOOM elaboration. Is now known to bo true A long time afterward a villager of Malar otes, in Ecuador, discovered Chat Peruvian bark would alleviate malaria fever. In 1G40 Europe learned of it. and Louis XIV hud his agues- helped bv It.

Then, in JV20, the French chemists separated quinine from the bark, and felt that they had made a progressive top in the treatment of malaria. And so they had, for today quinine remains the accepted specific against malaria. About the middle of the last ci ntury came another Importur.t diaoovi ry; it was found thanks to the microacupQ that tiif 'malarial pigment'' granules in the blood are the waste matter thrown of! by little pttraaM.es which, living in the blood, cause the disease. Than, at a later period, Pasteur, Koch, Utter and others were discovering tint bacteria were the cause of anthrax, tuberculosis, cholera, typhoid and leprosy. 'I ha difference Is that the malaria germs are the lowest form of animal life, wnlle tho bacteria causing those other diseases are the lowest form of vegetable life.

A rather extraordinary discovery is that children In the tropics carry about myriad of malaria germs in their systems all the time, and, if they live to maturity which very many of them do not they become Immune. combined offices of the Reynolds Alaska development company and the Alaska home railway company shortly after noon today, and he said at that time that he hnd received ho hews from his hands and feet against the current, but to no advantage. The logs were swept into the center of the stream and over the falls. When Anthony saw that he was going over the great falls he leaned forward and grasped the logs firmly in his arms. Over the apron he shot, head foremost, and down the steep incline into the turbulent rapids below.

He clung desperately to the logs, but kept, his head, and watched alertly for a chance to save himself. In the center of the stream, between the falls and a bridge. Is a small, rocky bit of land known as Spirit island. The boy saw it. and decided to swim for it.

He attempted to remove his coat, but while trying to do so was thrown by the boiling rapids from the logs to which he had clung, and was unable to recover them. Pedestrians on the bridge had seen him going through the rapids, although none saw him shoot the falls. Tlie police were at once notified, and hastened to his rescue in the police bo.it. Aspinatls is believed to be the only person who has shot St Anthony falls and lived. St Paul Pioneer Press.

Man Charged With Deserting from Revenue Cutter Gresham Closely Guarded on Customhouse Tug. Otto Scott, the deserter from the revenue cutter Oresham, who was arrested upon Information furnished by one of his "friends." is still a prisoner on hoard the custom house tug Winnl-simrrret, and is constantly guarded by members of Ifhe crew of that vessel. Kentt twice broke his shackles and nearly escaped. was overcome and placed under restraint only after a desperate fight with the cretv of the Wlnnlsimmet. Capt Daniels, the commander of the 1 customhouse boat, has reported the I mutter to the treasury department, but as yet has received no Instructions.

Scott may be. tried by a board convened for that purpose by ('apt Daniels. The maximum sentence for deserting from tiie revenue mart hp service Is two years' Imprisonment in some federa! prison, and the expiration of the term dishonorable discharge from the service, Capt Daniel requested that the man i be transferred to the revenue cutter rtationed at Portland, or the one at New Bedford, as the facilities for car liner Deutschland of 5 days lib 54m. from Cherbourg to New York, at an average speed, the swiftest westward bound up to the present, of 3.15 knots. That held by the Cunard liner Lu-cania, which crossed from Queenstown to New York In 3 days Th The I.ueltanla'3 superb performance takes from theGerman ships supremacy which they have held for several years, and which was only menaced by tie-swift Lucanla.

Beside, the Lusltanla has broken her own record of 5 days, "i4 minutes', madJ on her maiden trip from Queenstown. The Eusitanin's dally runs exeeeded on' two days the ecord of C01 knots, previously held by the Deutschland. First Four-Day Boat. The Lusitania's runs, counting the days from noon to noon, were an follows; Sunday 41, Monday 590, Tuesday 608, Wednesday 617, Thursday 600, and from noon Thursday to 1:17 a Friday 324 miles. The rew Cunarder is thus the first so-called "four-day boat" to enter Now York harbor, having completed the passage In less than five days, shortening Alaska concerning the reported failure of the Valdez bank, and he thought It likely he might have heard if the re tlio expedition sent from the United States to observe Mars, has arrived here on his way home.

In the observations more than photographs were taken. Including 20 ot the dodble ca-M Is on Mars. In eonimetitmg on his observations. Prof Todd said: "It Is reasonably certain that Mars nns been inhabited in the past, and It is reasonably certain that It is Inhabited now." BUNKER HiLLTpTsfRICT. The news of the death and burial of George E.

Qulnn from the home of his mother, 13 Woodcllff st, Roxbury, caused much sorrow to his mnny, friends in tills district where he was. popularly known. Mr Quinn was ah excellent piano player and on many occasions appeared at public entertainments and at benefits for persons In port had been true. Dr Kistler said that he received a dispatch from Valdez this morning, and that no reference whatever was made as to there beinir any troubl In tho bank. He said the dispatch was sent from Valdez at 3 o'clock yesterday afternoon, and said nothing of any trouble there.

J.lr Jlstler was asked bv th rUAtua the time Irom port to port, which had ing tor tile man ot: one or tne larger been held by the Lucanla, by more than boats are much better than on Ids ves reporter as to just what his official conned inn with the development company and the Alaska Home railway company is. He said that he is the chairman of the executive committee of the Reynolds Alaska Development company and the agent of the Alaska Home railway company. Dr Klstler said the printed reports to the effect that tho Reynolds Alaska Development ei.mpany fs involved ib sel. In the mean time. Scott Is living Only about 10 years ugo was it dis continued until today, was again post- pi ne if fur a week.

This further con- I was the result a confer-1 nee between the counsel for tho town W.st ei and Mr Shaw. Shaw was rlvm the car, which collided with tre. in stun Sept 2i, thereby I teimlng tin death of John Allen, agent Asahet mills of Mnnard, at the' waltham hospital, three days later. The sheds of the Standard charcoal Wfnpany on River st were partially alone, are strong enough io imve mir.istered the greatest defeat that fcu-ropean troops ever received- at the hands of black men when, in 18, they practically wiped out an Italian army of more than 16.000 men which tried to invade their country. Addis Ababa stands in the midst of a vast, treeless plateau, in tho very center of the kingdom of Ethiopia.

Brilliant Escort. When the American expedition mentioned, headed by Robert P. Skinner, vice consul at Marseilles, approached Addis Ababa, King Menelik sent out an escort to meet It, consisting of fullv 3000 men. "Whose saddles and bridles were decorated with gold and silver fringe." Bucklers of burnished gold were carried by tho soldiers, and from their shoulders fell mantles of leopard and lion skins, and silk, satin and velvet. They were picked men, riding "Only the bright r'ffe barrels marked the difference between these Kthlopians and the army of their forbears, who followed the queen of Sheba when she went down into Judea," says Mr Skin-ncr Yet these men were excections in Menelik's army, for the army with which he cut up tlfe Italians and slew their legions was composed largely of men barefooted and bareheaded, scantily clothed, and carr Ing only a rifle and cartridge belt, and a goatskin full of meal for provender.

The only buildings in Menelik's capital having pretentions to architectural form are the larger pavilions of the royal ralace. in which the American bride of the British minister will lie received by the emperor on her arrival. This palace stands on a hill and dominates the entire city It is really a village of detached buildings, surrounded by a stone wall covered with thatch. Here Mr Skinner, the American envoy had his first audience with the emperor. The audience hall was through a number of courtyards, and across a sort of campus, where a battalion of artillery stood by the guns captured from the Italians.

The hall was wide and half ctiurch-ltke, its roof supported by pillars and timber bridge work." "At the farther end sat the emperor, on his divan or throne. It was placed upon a platform extending entirely across the hall, and under a canopy supported by four gilded columns, the gift of the French The room was crowded. Menelik shook hands very cordially. "He sa In oriental fashion, with his legs crossed and his arms supported on two cushions. He wore a red velvet mantle, barely disclosing the snow-white under-garments.

Around his bend a white handkerchief was tightly bound. He wore several rings on both hands. covered -although some such things hud been suspected for centuries that when mosquitoes of a certain species suck the blood of an affected person, animal, or the failure of the Reynolds bank of Valaes, If that hank has failed, is ridlc- bird, they draw in the parasite's of ma laria and impart thentl to the next vie- ulotis. It has been printed in Boston that tho development eompapny m(ght bite. -Philadelphia North upon the bst the market affords.

1 he Chinese steward on the Winnisimmet, a noted cook, serves the man with the same dishes prepared for the officers. Scott seems to be contented and says that he never fared so well In his life. The Gresham is no in Newfoundland and will nut return for several weeks. Capt Daniels will keep the man Ironed in the forecastle of his vessel until the denartment decides what disposition t'. make of him.

The Informant who caused the arrest of Scott Immediately for the reward of $15 which is paid for information leading to the arrest of deserters from the revenue cutter service. tim they American need. He was a member of the old Prescotts and the Moondyne clubs of this district. He was buried at Calvary cemetery. He leaves a widow and.

son. Division 3 ladies' auxiliary, A. O. held a special meeting last evening In Hibernian hall, when iirrnufccmeuia were made to assist the -tubers of dl-ytsloa 27. A.

O. In making ti coming bazaar to be held tinder their atis- pi( i a gigantic sili ess. Tie p-c eeds are to be used to assist in defraying tho expense of the clubhouse purchase. Ths basaar will open next Thursday evening and It Is expected Mayor John P. Fitzgerald will open the exercises with an address.

A parade will be held In the district In which tho Bunker Illil guards will have tho right of line. In the parade will be divisions 1, 5, 37 and the Ernmet literary and benevolent society. The following well-known people of the district will sail for Ireland on 8S Ivernla next Tuesday: Mrs Patrick tne at 1 this morning. filled with charcoal. A felKhi ear loaded with the same stuff "an destroyed.

The damage will mount to J1000. J. J. McCarthy ot wnervllle Is the owner. WAKEFIELD.

Edward H. Walton, one of the oldest native residents of the town, attended the fitilh annual banquet of the Richardson light guard, Co 6th infantry, Wednesday evening He is Ihe oldest charter member of the company and appears to be rugged enough to live to be a centennarlan. He Is atlll actively engaged In the shoe business tmd walks as erect and as spry as many men of 50. Th- members of the T. O.

club Bishop of London in New York. 'NEW YOKK, Oct 11-Rlshop Ingram Loudon, who came to this country alt. mi the Protestant Kplscopal con-wntiiin at aichmond, Va, Is in town JjUihiitf the local clergy anil their I will sail for home next ui umuivcu ii, i xiriii 01 90UU.UW. Dr Klstler Id: "The Reynolds Alaska Development Co has nothing to do with the Reynolds Valdez bank, i don't know anything of the bank's reported failure except what I read in the morning papers. "I am the spent of the Aiawka.

Home railway company and I do business with the Eliot nation tl bank of Ro-tbn. It may be that we have some money in the Vald -z bank, merely as a depositor, for the purpose of paying off the workmen engaged in building the line, but we ere not otherwise concerned In any trouble the Valdez bank may be in. "We have i mites of roadbed graded and the ties; laid, and workmen are now putting down the rails. Th. work of construction Is rotas torwurd without any Interruption." Dr Klstler said that both Pres Reynolds and Ex-Gov Brady, who Is tho tie isurer and si.cr larv of the develon- Rutsia Booms Siberia Colonization She Went to Church.

The fcreat Wellington was always precise about religious observances. One Saturday evening a lady, one of his guests at Strathfleldsaye. Wellington's country seat, apologized for not forming one of the party to church the following morning. She was Roman Catholic, and there was not a Catholic church within a distance of 20 or 30 mites. "That." said his grace, "need be no difficulty.

My carriage and horses are M. Lyons. Miss Mary J. Klynn and John Flynn. The Gattiolie lltorary union will hold Its tirst ladies' night of tha season evening, Oct 18.

This Is lljst I of a series of events which will Include i lectures, debates, gentlemen's nights, tournaments In the clubhouse nnd out WOBURN. The democrats of the 5oth Middlesex representative district met at the" Central house la3t evening and nominated John Em Randolph of Woburn and George Flint of Heading. The former is an employe of the Boston Maine railroad and lives at UI Montvale av. He Is a native of Boston and has been a resident for two years. Mr Flint Is chairman St the municipal light board of Heading, and has held many public officers in that town with credit.

He wns born In North Iteading. The ladies' industrial society of the Baptist ehurcn entertained 150 guests at supper last evening. The affair was managed by a committee: Mrs G. H. Newcomb, chairmi 0, Mrs Charlie A.

Jones, Mrs W. Gilbert. Mrs T. L. Loonier, Mrs Mary C.

Hamilton, Mrs Frank Gray, Mrs W. R. Moore, Mrs A. K. Gage, Mrs G.

H. Hutchings, Mrs Emma de Loriea, Mrs Thomas A. Mc-Lasn. The Jog-a-Long club held Its first semiannual dance in Mechanics hall last evening. Forty couples attended.

Matrons Were Mrs John M. Portal. Mrs Charles G. Lund. Party officers, K.

Eugeno Place floor director, Charles E. Trull asslta-H floor director, Rorebt T. Portui. Charles G. Lund Jr.

Kenneth C. Parke, Donald A. Fowle. Olflcers-elect of Alierjona colony, U. O.

P. v.tie installed last evening under direction of Mrs Mary A. Strat-ton of Cambridge, district deputy, by the colonial degree staff of the Pilgrim association of Boston. Guests numbered VSi. An addres wad made by Supreme Governor Edwin O.

Foster of saiem. Solos were sung by Joseph Breslin, Miss Elizabeth Calnan accompanist. The rumor that the Lexington Boston street railway company had asked the selectmen of Lexington tor the right to remove the tracks connecting the town with Woburn grew out of a local question of street repairs. The selectmen decided regrade Woburn st, and notified the railway company of necessary changes in track grade. To this the company replied that the line was a no.ipaying one.

and sooner than resrade, the tracks the company preferred to abandon the line. At a town meeting last evening the selectmen were given discretionary power, and authorized to compel the road to 8T I "i i i in ii' ill he entertained next Tuesday after-B I I i (r, Oct 11 The eoun- i iii it ir i in iiumu in i.iiiuui i ministers today "i fur colonisation appropriated purposes in Rowland, when the members will make inaiions for the hom for aired women on Bennett st. side organizations, and the anrfual bill, which will take place the latter part of January. The Wokc'l-h; historical society re your disposal. Hreakfasf shall he ceived an Ihv'tatlon to be present aft Hie ro-wtv 111 11 A before ilayiueaK, and thrt Bos- I nient and the railway companies, are thing can easilv in- dime I hrouqn uarocrvice on Longwood Av, exercises or the hirst chtircti in os ton at the formal transfer of the mo iw i'i iar si, and that its not.

had a word from either of them concerning any trouble in the bank. statue of Itev John Cotton. The tranufer was made vesterday uftirnoon when several members of the society WCtS Commencing tomorrow though car elety In the Country House," adds, I service will be run from Allston via "And she had to go. Brookllne vlllago to Park-st subway. "Imagine," be exclaimed, "the Impos- vla Harvard st.

Brookllne av arid slbllity of living up to such a father:" Lonsrwood nv. The transfer car on al tended. 11 "HIS. Had the Lu3anita's arrival been timed so that she would reach New Tcrk hi the daylight hours, her pasrengers might have been lauded at thu docit within five days after passing Daunt' i Rock, off Queenstown. As It was.

sin-was compelled to anchor off Sandy Hook bar after she had sweet in oast the lightship, and wait for a safer passage up the new Ambrose channel from the bar to the narrows. She remained at anchor until 7:12 a m. when she crossed the bar and moved slowly and carefully un the new channel and came to anchor off the quarantine station on Staten island. Her arrival was greeted with the hoarse salute of every steam craft then in that vicinity. For an hour the giant s'ujp swung idly at her anchor, while the port phy-islclan made his hasty examination to determine if any contagious diseases were hidden among her many hundreds oi passengei-s.

This completed she took up her run to the dock, moving slowly and majestically up the harbor, amid the salutes of many steam craft, to which she responded with the hoarse roar of her steam whistle. "MRS BRITANNIA PROUD." Performance of the Lusitania Hailed With Delight Throughout the King- dom Expact 24.5 Knots Soon. LONDON, Oct 11 The performance of the Cunard line steamship Eusltanfa Is hailed with delight throughout Great Britain, this being, as one writer puts It, "a proud day for Mrs All the evening papers comment with satisfaction on Great Britain's regaining the mercantile marfno supremacy, which was lost to Germany decade HgQ. To make the victory complete, they ask that the Lusitania repeat on her lmineward journey what she accomplished on her outward passage. Experts express tha opinion that she is able still further to cut the time between Daunt's rock and Sandy Honk llKhtahlp, saying that she will not have anv difficulty in averaging the knots required to gain the full government subsidy.

MORE BALLOONISTS HERE. Brewer and Brabazon, the English Contestants, Arrived in New York on the Lusitania. When ll, Lusitania arrived In New York this morning a committee of members of the Aero club of America greeted Griffith Brewer and Claud Ilrabazon. the two English contestants in the International balloon race which Is to be held In at Louis Oct 21. The two men will probably leave for St Louis tonight or Sunday.

With their arrival all of the foreign contestants are nere ex- When in Doubt follow expert advice. The greatest authorities in medicine, den-tefry pharmacy and hygiene rccommend the use of The Wakefield high school baseball AM ESBURY. Tho annual harvest supper of the women of the St James Kplscopal team di feateil Reading high on the pujrk -Youth's Companion. Longwood av will be discontinued. iesterday uftnrnmm, to 0.

The ake- church was given at the parish rooms fi' ld boys made hits off Roger Chase who last defeated the Wake- last night. he tables were under the field town team, when only five flts I management of Mrs Eugene F. Tltcomb, Wert made off him. Harrington pitched Mrs William M. (iowen, Mrs A.

it. a tin" Kaiin for a kelield, striking out YVhclpley. Miss ry Sargent, Miss If, batsmen and allowed only two hits. Hattle Gunnison, Miss Charlotte Par-Charles A. Dean is the democratic i ry, Mrs George Maclean, Miss Flossie candidate for representative for he Cage ami Mrs Alice Merrill.

They had ninth term. He will be opposed to I-Mcti i as assistants Mrs Verna Barry, Miss Menelik is Supreme. King Menelik directs the affairs of his kingdom as an absolute sovereign, having power of life and death over all nls subjects, regardless of rank. JJeslde him King Edward VII of Great Britain is a niero figurehead. Menelik is the law and the gospel, the supreme court, the Church and the state in Ethiopia.

Yet in spite of his great power and bis black skin, this Ethiopmn king is said to be religious, wise and humane. Noyes. Miss Josle Gage. Mrs K. fiowssr, the republican candidate.

MrHowser has been a selec man. served several years on the school board and I Is now chairman of flu- Be VST commit III OI llie Mewfl 1011111113 K.mm of the wisdom may come, in a sioii. The contest test Pond, Miss Montie Horton and Miss Flossie Gandy. The supper was under the supervision of Miss Kmma Wool-fenden. At a meeting of the Unlversallst women's circle yesterday arrangements were made for the annual harvest supper ahd Hallowe'en party for the evening of promises to be A in active canvas Is felnjr of each.

The rather attenuaieo lie- conform to the proposed Improvements, ancester. King Solomon for he claims tl' l.u here In lively one and a made by the supporters uppoi ei i recard to the retention of the line of to be a descenuani oi mi wise man and the queen of Sheba. a. i a hn mnor communication between the two localities. Mrs Susan Bulflnch Buckman, widow of Alvah Buckman, died this morning town lias a republican majority or more than but Mr Dear has always secured enough republican votes to make him a winner.

He was defeated but once. Ort SI. A supper is under the direction al.iV mS I He wears gorgeous apparel and a dia fa OXYGEN Tooth Powder I the scientific linking of the Oxygen in Calox that distinguishes this superb dentifrice horn all others in point of effi-tiency as a mouth cleanser. "WE OXYGEN DOES IT" at the home oi ner son, t44 Main st, i aged S4. She was bom In Lynn Oct 1'.

1823, daughter of Amos Breed and Hannah Coombs Bulflnch, and had been a resident year. She left two children, Smeath. Mrs George H. Swett. Mrs William Stevens, Mrs Charles Scott and Mrs P.

A. Sanborn. The aid society of the Methodist churrh met at the vestry yesterday afternoon. After a supper there was a stocking social and entertainment In the evening. The Best Scouring Soap Madte mond is his left ear, aimig wuu raieiu leather dancing pumps from Germany, striped socks fiom ranee, and a cotton tunic from America.

He requires foreigners to appear before him in dress clothes, even at 9 In the morning, having a clear Ideu that this kind of rig represents formulity In Europe, but being a bit hasy as to what time of day argent letnan accustomed to wearing it shall put It on. Menelik speaks no language but that of his ofn provlncs, the Amharlc tongue. In whlcl are traces of the Arabic; but the Uplomatlc language of his court Is "rench. all his Interpreter Frithjof Survivor is Exhausted. CHHISTIANIA, Norway, Oct 11 The Arctic steamship Frithjof, which, as announced from Copenhagen yesterday was lost off cape I.anganes, Iceland, Oct was returning from Iceland for repairs when she was wrecked and her caplain and 16 of Uer crew were drownt'ti The only survivor of the crew was the engine r.

Kllas Samuels, v. ho i mug to a blank and drifted aslmrit and who. scoordlng to the last report. A Scouring Soap A Metal Polish A Glass Cleaner A. tnicKinan ann Mr ii.

(. longhand a Mrs John M. Merrill of Lynn. The democrats have named as the representative district committee: P. H.

Aulev, John Kogan, C. J. Qulgley, John J. Magulre, James Corrlgan, C. L.

O'Nell, Edward Madden, Woburn; James E. KelU-v, Wilmington; Owen McKennev, Heading; Walter Campbell, North Reading; Hugh L. McCafferty, Burlington. Cannon Indorsed for President. OWOSSO, Mich, Oct 11 An Indorsement of Speaker Joseph O.

Cannon for the republican nomination for President was adopted here yesterday at the republican convention of th 8th con-Krossional district afUr animated defeat. 2 Of all druggists, 25 cents Simple and booklet on request tr, undtr JFoed n4 Drup Act r(t0N 4 RABBINS. MM fata BD-akhiir that lanauase, as lyuig ai a liuxiiuuav near cap Um la oar dial toward sir, mm.

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