C.TY LIGHTS. It'a a sn!r*did, luring city, and its myriad of lights, Show ,i glow upon th? heavens to the country boy o' nights. "Come." they beckon o'tr the valley, "come to wealth aad powei ?nd praise It's for you the world is waiting," and the country boy obeys. Now the lizhts are thick about him. blinking. daring everywhere, T. mng gloomy night the blacker, shedding down a sickly glare On the hunted, haunted r.u.vs. on the folly and the pride, Raising miles of dismal shadow walls where fear and failure hide. Twas a spiendid. luring city when its host of gleaming frights .<* A K ue in anywise uinereui l S?0)T from the rest of the world. Only Aunt Picklebury was different. She had. as it were, a vein of originality running t'irough lier. She liked to .wear her broehe shawl wrong side out. and to tie her ribbons askew, and to put the tiowers on the right hand side of her bonnet, while all the world was gearing theirs ou the left hand side. And she could afford to cultivate as large a crop of peculiarities as she pleased, for Aunt Picklebury had money. It had been part of her peculiarity to emigrate West and buy lands just when all her relatives were located in a. snug little Eastern town. "Are you crazy. Melissa?" her mar tied sister had plaintively demanded. "No," Miss Picklebury l\ad answered, 'but I want breathing rocyn." ! The lands had risen in value with almost fabulous rapidity; the Western settlement had grown' into a young city, and Miss Melissa Picklebury was rich. She sat knitting, with a magazine Open on her lap. one bright October morning, when Harry Hayden came In, the junior member of the firm of Hoyt & Hayden. who transacted Miss Jtfelissa's legal business. "Crying, Miss Picklebury?" he exclaimed, cheerily. "Why, what on earth is the mattar?" jjj 1 "Was I crying?" asked Miss Picklebury. somewhat shamefacedly. "Well, you couldn't help it yourself. Harry, if you had been reading this story. It's by my literary niece?the prettiest little thing you ever saw.'' , "The story, or the niece?" ! "The story, of course. I never s.ity my literary niece, but I dare say she is rawboned and sallow, with holes in the elbows of her frock and grease spots on her apron. But she writes Well; there's no denying that. I read all her papers, and I almost always laugh and cry over them. It's a great talent, Harry." . "So it is," assented the young man, Carelessly. i "I have written East for one of my Bister's girls to come and stay with me," said Aunt Picklebury; "I told them to forward her by express. She'll here this afternoon. I want you to go to the office and meet her." I "The literary niece?" said Harry, laughing. ' "Goodness forbid!" said Aunt Picklebury. with a grimace. "I want no ink spots on my chintz bedroom furniture, and fine frenzies about sunsets and autumn leaves and things. I wrote Polly to send me a homespun, senile girl, that would be a companion Hto me; not a full-fledged fashionable young lady." IT "All right," said Mr. Hayden. Miss Picklebury looked after the young man as he strode away over the ~ c ? ~ i ? i xi. _ L. i Iiieau uiius ui vfi.un leaves UlUl In the road. "A nice young fellow, that," said Bhe to herself, "with no airs and graces about him. I like him. Perhaps"? Miss Picklebury was by no means free from the feminine trait of castle-building?"he will fall in love with my senBible niece. If he does, he shall have my blessing." | The niece by express arrived that night just as Miss Picklebury was :itting down to tea. She was slight and graceful and dark eyed, with a clover pink complexion, and a laughing, dimbled mouth. Aunt Picklebury liked the looks of her. | "What is your name, my dear?" she [ "Clara." said the newcomer. ["You are very pretty," said Miss picklebury. "I think I shall like [ "And I know I shall like you, Aunt fMelly." said Clara with a great hug of (the old lady's plump, cushiony form. I "Let me see," said Miss Picklebury; rthere are three of you?the literary pne, the school teaching one. and the sensible one." I "I hope we are all spnsible, aunt," Bald Clara, coloring a little. I "I hope so, too." said the old lady; I'but I have my doubts on the subject. K am afraid of literary folks, and I won't like schooluia'ams. you "Oh, yes. aunt dear." "Ami darn stockings, and put on icat patches, and mend linens?" "Of course I can.'' "Can 3'ou cook?" "I'll show you to-morrow, Aunt Mely." "Oh," said Miss Picklebury, "I've tn idea that the literary one and the school teaching one are rather inefleient.:' "Indeed, aunt, you are quite niistakm. I?" " Oh, well, never mind ail that." said Hiss Picklebury. til}* I m glad your naumia sent ino the sensible one o:' ;he family." Clara Courtenay plunged into the lomestie details of Miss Pieklebury's iStallli?J)moi?t llto a haa intn o Iiakop ky . "Cast a glow upon the heavens for the country boy o' nisjhts; But its heart is like a cavern, and its face is seared with scars. rAnd its sky so til's with gaslight that ho cannot see the stars. ' I ?Newark (N. J.) News r The Literary Niece. * * tri\ li'V htTi ' * 'i ' ? * rot* UNT riCKLEBURY was an old maid. Not that, old ? l\ O maids need, of necessity to suckle boll. She made preserve5. co:v ' == cocteil cake and reveled in je lies: *h?i cleaned the house after a s'yie that j made Aunt Picklebury opea her eyes > -wp in admiration; she repapeted the best j J room, and was discovered by Harry | Hayden on the top of a step ladder, i with her chestnut braids tied up in i a towel, whitewashing. 1 "Isn't she charming, tlarry?" Aunt i """ Picklebury demanded confidentially. ! ^ ' Delicious!" the young h.wyer au- H swered with niphasis. O And so he came autumn evening*, j while Aunt .Melissa hustled away in I ? the corner and took shrewd a::d not i ,u unsatisfactory note of things ia sen era I. j "Tell me about your sister." he said i 01 one evening. i rar "Which sister?" said Clara, who was 8an< skillfully putting together a marvel- J* ous mathematical silk quilt of her aunt's. flatl "The authoress?" wai "Oh." said Clara. "We!?, she is a cangood deal like me." *? "As young?" "Oh, yes." "As pretty?" "Now. that's nonsense." sa.a Clara, seriously. "Of course, both my sisters . nrri n cnvi f- d:>al better looking tliau 1 i am." i ' I have rend her writings, same of them." said Hurry, "and if I wasn't ! afraid she was spectacled and iuky I should almost be tempted to fall in love with her. Would she love me, j do you think?" Clara colored and bent closer over ; her work. "X?I don't know whether she would . or not." said she. "Well. I shall not try." said Hayden, ; laughing. "To tell you the truth. Clara, I have always had a holy horror of authoresses." "Very complimentary to my sister." j said Clara, pouting a little. And of course Harry had to pacify i her. and just then Bridget called Miss ! Pieklebury into the kitchen, and when j she came back the young' people bail j great news to toll her. They were eu- ! gaged! ' Ah!" said Miss Pickle'oury. rubbing | ber nose with ber knitting needle, "I'm : glad to bear it. I knew my sensible i niece would be appreciated here in tbe West." Mrs. Squire Seaberry came to tbe j office of Hoyt & Ilayden the next 1 morning. "Ob, Mr. Hayden," said she, ''such : ? a star as I hope to secure for my re- j T1 ception to-night! A real, live author- imp ess. And to think that she has been I of i living incognito among us for so long!" | shoi "Whom are you alluding to?" asked j dow tbe puzzled lawyer. ban "Miss Courtenay, of course. Annie ! are ~ .. pjirr uourtenay, uie aumuitrss. I '"Oh, you are mistaken," said our he- ! take ro. "This young lady is Clara Cour- j > tenay." | into ' Annie Clara Couftenay." distinctly five enunciated Mrs. Sea berry, wisely nod- j ^ve ding ter head. "Don't you see? An- flQd nie C. Courtenay?that's her invariable ! evei signature." i se^ Harry Hayden went to the Pickle- j tunl berry mansion as soon as he could decently get rid of Mrs. Squire Sea- < P?*E berry. cra^ "Clara." said he, "what is your first ^ name?" i ^ e Miss Courtenay colorcd scarlet. i ?ort "Annie." she answered. "Why?" "Because," said he, dryly, "I have enn just discovered that Miss Picklel^ury's i caM! sensible niece is also her literary ; niece." ; s"n] hnmr flown hf?r bead. i " ... I u "Harry, are you very angry with ^ me?" ! the "Not a bit. Didn't I tell you I was flaa almost tempted to fall In love with j Kof Annie Courtenay?" | jyjn "You see," pleaded Clara. "Susie has an(^ just commenced a course of German, fgjj( and Marian couldn't leave her school, and?there seemed no one but me to i jun] come. And I thought aunt would for- ; gaw sive me even if I did write stories for ( tim| the papers." j g00( "I'll answer for her pardon." said an Harry Hayden. laughing. I mat Miss Picklebury was a little aston- j woc ished at tirst, but with Clara's arms j imp around hor neck, she could only for- j est ?ive the sly little diplomatist. tain "Who would have suspected you of . will being literary." said she.?Stirling Ob. ; it i server. j Bur a ii! Exchange* Opened by Queens. j p^j;] When Queen Victoria opened the : q, Itoyal Exchange, in 1844, it was uot j the first time that a Queen had per- J ] formed this office, says the London j gr'e: Chronicle. Queen Elizabeth opened ; m3i the first exchange, founded by Gres- | t^al , ham in 1570; and very quaint in com- j (jier parisou with any modern account of J ge the Victorian ceremony is Stow's old j scei description: '"The Queen's Majesty, i fror j attended with her nobility," he writes, nor "came from her house at the Strand ext< called Somerset House * * * to Sir one Thomas Gresham's house in Bishops- is b gate street, where she dined. After i ten< dinner. Her Majesty entered the burse j one on the south side, and after that she j ma: had viewed every part thereof above < easi the ground, especially the pawu * * j she caused the same burse, by a her- j aid and trumpet, to be proclaimed from J thenceforth, and not otherwise." The 10* word ''pawn," of course, is the German co "bahn," the Dutch "baau," meaning "pathway." "Burse." of course, is the j ^ ' French ' Bourse" and German "Borse." V* ________________________________ tree AVhrtt Golil Centers Chd Uo. j Gold beaters, by hammering, can re- i duce gold leaves so thin that 232,000 j must be laid upon each other to pro- j duce the thickness of an inch; yet j each leaf is so perfect and free from | holes that one of them laid upon any | surface, as in gilding, gives the ap pearauce of solid gold, ihey are so lltin tliat if formed iuto a book loO'J | woitfd only occupy the space of a single leaf of common paper, and an octavo volume of an inch thick would have as many pages as the books of ti well stocked library of 1D00 voIuimw with 200 pages each. Dinner After tlifi JfMitj*. Some one complained to Pinero, the ! London dramatist, that in the case of his latest success the curtain rose too early for those who dine at the usual fashionable hour. "Then postpone dinner until after tin* play." said Pinero. "Sit down ro a square meal about 11. What dreams may come will be dreams of the play, and even nightmare may prove an advertisement for urn.'' - ... - _ S : THE 'ALU RIVER kiri. * BY CYRUS C. /DAMS. IIE hostile armies have first TW confronted oue another O along the shores of Korea j K Bay. Much history has! row been written 011 those coast j is between ring Yang and the Yaiu er. and other chapters are to be ed. t>serv west uanii or lue nvei, c taken them across iu junks and joats, and marched them southd on Korean soil to thwart, if they a Japanese invasion of Manchuria. | \-y, :: Russi le lower Yaiu is likely to be very ortant in the war. A photograph t in time of peace would probably v a number of tog rafts floating n the wide stream; for along its lis are the forests whose products carried southward by the Yaiu ent to the sea-going junks which i them to market. ?ar its mouth the Yaiu broadens a lake-like expanse, about twentymiles in length and from four to miles wide. The heavy tides raise lower its level by several feet at y flow and ebb. Steamers have om ruffled these waters above An?, but sea-going junks ply up and n for thirty miles, beyond which it the river is navigable by smailer t for about 130 miles. ni-rt ?>/"? norf rAO/ie /*fACCin7 Viv/w.^i??0 V-V r where it narrows toward the h, but paths here and there come n to the banks. Most of the rive territory is little developed, bese it is the domain of almost imitrable forests through which the light scarcely reaches the waters he river. lese Korean forests helped to fan quarrel between the Japanese and. Russians, which finally burst into le. Several years ago the King of ea conceded the part of the forests g along the river to the Russians; their Manchurian woodsmen have ?d a large quantity of the finest s and floated the logs down to the is that have carried them to the mills of Southern Manchuria. The >er is mostly pine, and nearly as 1 as our white pine. There is also abundance of -walnut, beech, oak, >le and other varieties, making the id trade of the Yalu River very ortant in Eastern Asia. This forconcession helped to assure the certy of war, but the wooded region not figure iu the conflict, because 1 s no place for marching armies, opeans who have visited it say that ilf dozen yards on each side of the is are the limits of vision. nly the narrow river lands along Yalu are settled, and that sparsebut the ilver has for ages been the it water highway between upper icburia and the southern end of t country, where the Russian sol's have been massing. (tting foot in Korea, a very "different ie is spread before the Russians n that of the dense forests to the tb. They are looking over a plain ?nding far south, very fertile, and of the be3t firming regions. It roken by mountain spurs, which exIs to or nearly to the sea, but it is of the few parts of Korea that 7 be traversed with comparative Collier's Weekly. The World's Coffee Pot. I Cafetal, a coffee trade publicai, declares that the quantity of ee yearly bought and sold In the Id's trade Is worth $255,000,000, ich probably corresponds to a net d from over 1,800,000 full-bearing is. . ' v! ' '' ' : f' | (>i=u r^asa^wsi?(#^w- v; THE WA1 Photograpt - - ? y* ==3Baaa^ | The jz? I 15 Largest i Cantilever Bridge in the I United States | 3AIN Pittsburg comes to the front in the engineerO Zl O i"g world. This time it is ^ ^ the completion of the larg"VOW est cantilever suspension bridge in the United States, and the second largest in the world, the largest being over the Firth of Forth, in Scotland. The American bridge i3 ^ vi/ ans on the Yalu f tbat of the Wabasii Railroad, which spans the Monongahela River at Pittsburg. After two corps of engineers bad figured out tbe measurements of the centre span with only the difference of lo-O-ith of an ingh, work was at once begun upon the two large stone piers located on either side of the river. In order to provide for the great force to be placed upon the shore piers, two anchors, strong enough to support the centre span, were placed under ground at a depth of sixty feet, the arms being conected by solid steel frame. On top of each pier is a huge tower. Extending from the top of the towers is the top chord, which has a rounded appearance, while the lower chord extends in a straight line from pier to pier. The struts, batter posts, eye beams, uprights, braces and the other structural steel shapes are connected with these, the top chord holding the bridge up. The work was performed simultaneously from both piers, thirty-foot sections being built at a time. So carefully had the shore linonaa Koon nlaror! thnf it W!1S n sim pie matter for the shore piers to hold the immense weight of the steel frames. When sufficient steel shapes had been placed in position, travelers, higher than the towers, - were erected at either end of the bridge. These travelers performed the same work as a derrick, the dozens of ropes suspending from them being kept busy lifting the steel frames from barges in the river to their proper places on the structure. Sometimes it would be necessary to hold one of these frames iu position for several days until the proper bolts or connections could be made. This, of course, made it necessary to have a jib upon the top of the travelers, thus facilitating the handling of the frames beyond those being held in place. It was the breaking of one of these travelers that caused the death of eight workers, the crane, bridge iron and men being precipitated into the water beneath. Day by day this work continued, the travelers being advanced with tiie progress of the bridge until the last span was raised in place and found to tit exactly. It was a wonderful sight to witness these two long outstretched aruis bavins practically notmiig 10 hold tbem up. The centre span is 812 f^.et long and contains 7000 tons of steel, the total cost when completed being $1,000,000. There is about 15.000 tons of steel in the entire bridge. Although the Firth of Forth of Scotland contains two channel spans 700 feet long, and two anchors GSo feet each, and is the largest bridge in the world, that of the Wabash is regarded as one of the finest specimens of its kind in the world. FlAliinu Down Stream. The fish always lie with their noses up-stream and their eyes looking for what the water brings down. Therefore be natural and send the lure down, as the real fly would come.?Outing. SASH BRIDGE AT P i Copyright 1D04, by Chautauqua Photo. C - SUBMARINE PLEASURE BOAT. Craft Designed For the Entertainment of Pleasure Seekers. m Feeling that there is a craving on the part of the general public for the sensation to be experienced in a trip under the water, an inventor has designed to gratify this desire by building a perfectly safe craft in which the most timid may trust himself without fear. The vessel is to be furnished with the needed supply of air by means of a unique arrangement which will serve a dual purpose, as will be explained. The boat is not intended to make extensive trips, but merely to carry its passengers beneath the water, and in a comparatively sbort passage give j them all the sensations of speeding along at an immense rate. Though the boat is to be drawn by a cable on a railway laid at the bottom of a lake or pond, a propellor revolving ' ' V ' V Liver. ?From Collier's Weekly. at a high rate of speed and an enormous column of bubbles blowu into tbe tjo-(irop fmm tlm n ir chnmhw will pause the passengers looking through the " ; THE SUBMARINE PLEASURE CHAFT. little glass-covered portholes to imagine that they are making a record run. Radium For Kent. The Londou Truth vouches for this: When one reads of the considerable use that is already being made medicinally of radium it seems hardly credible that so much cau have been made of so little. I see the Pharmaceutical ! ~~ sr Journal estimates that the amount procurable in London to-day is considerably less than a grain. Consequently, as only- a limited number of medical men can have an opportunity of utilizing this weird chemical, the Journal suggests that its readers, who, of course, are mostly chemists, should follow the example of one of their number, who has obtained a small tube containing live milligrammes of radium bromide, and hires it out at half a crown an hour. This is surely the | very strangest development of modern j pharmacy. Autoiuobilo Stagre Line. A joint stock company has just been j formed to carry on an automobile service between Ilochheim. a village of' 1473 inhabitants, and the city of Erfurt, which is a short distance away. At first efforts were made to induce the Erfurt Electric Street Railway j Company to extend its tracks to Hoch | heim, but, the company refusing, it j lifts Doeil aeciueu lo I'siaunnu iuis a mobile service.?Report ol' Consul Warner from Leinsie. Each Clty'H Odor. A European writer lias discovered that eacli city has its own peculiar 1 odor. Paris is pervaded by a faint j odor of charcoal. London smells ol j i soot. The aroma of garlic greets the ' new arrival at Calais. Moscow has & perfume of its own. cranberries of pe culiar pungency. St. Petersburg sug gests old leather boots. ITTSBURG. lo.i P'ttsl)urg. ? HPS CAPTURE KINCHAU Russians Fall Back From Their Defenses Under Heavy Fire. FINAL SIEGE OF PORT ARTHUR Japanese Take the Hills East and West, i Driving the Enemy to the Neck of l'ort Arthur Under a Sharp Bombard* ment? Big Losses on Both Sides From the Artillery Fire. TrtL-in ?Tf ics e+f Narcisse Senecal, were drowned in the big pond at Globe Village, fifty yards from the southern shore and opposite Sandy Bottom. Blanche Senecal. aged eighteen, a sister of the drowned girls; Albert Proulx, aged twenty-one, son of Henry Proulx, and wife and Isaac Mathiux, Jr., and the two who were drowned went for a pleasure trip in a large, flat bottomed boat. Proulx got up to change seats with Mathiux, who was rowing, and capsized the boat Rescuers were too late to save the drowning girls. Big Production of Eggs. Rfcoent Government reports place lhe average output of eggs in the United States at 00.000,000,000 a year, and the average value between eleveu and twelve cents a dozen, or about $7,000,OUO.OOO for the total value. Iowa leads as an egg-proiluciug State with au output of 101,000,000 dozen a year. Packing Combine to Dissolve. The big fruit-packing and shipping combine at Los Angeles will dissolve in September. Personal Mention. Prince Ouktomsky says Russia "'will I 1 f\ I WASHINGTON" ITEMS. It was d?cid?d .it a Cabinet meeting that no mors appeals from applicants for admission to the Naval Academy from the decision 01' the medical examining board will be entertained. Aaron Stern, a messengir in the Record and Pension Bureau, shot and killed himself in the War Department. All the films taken in Washington showinff a fictitious President Roosevelt aiding au injured negro were de- '"'M stroyeil. i The names decided upon for the warships authorized at the last session of Congress were announced at the Navy Department. "J OUR ADOPTED INLANDS. Ricarte. the former Filipino leader, has hm>n rvint-nrrvt hv the ponstahnlnrv> of Manila and sent to Guam in exile. A midnight massacre by Moros of families of Filipinos in Government employ is reported from Mindanao. In the last two years the United States has obtained only 23.7 per cenU of the Philippine trade. The Philippine Constabulary has captured at Cavite. Ciriaco Contrezas, y-js formerly a notorious P?ulacan outlaw. The Insular Legislature of Porto Rico adjourned, but immediately reopened for the first day of the extra; ordinary session. DOMESTIC. A tornado wiped out the town of New Liberty, 111. An armed man robbed the money tray of the Placer County Bank, Auburn. Cal., of ali the gold it contained nnH /acpn narl Representatives of fifty New York ! trust companies organized a State association and elected officers. The blast furnace at Emaus, Pa., fa shipping large quantities of pig-iron to Scotland. The Government has decided to own and operate all wireless telegraph stations established for oversea service. Alabama Democrats elected twenty two delegates to St. Louis favorable to Parker. Both Alabama and Ohio adopted the unit rule. * ;.t| One hundred and forty-nine Angora goats, valued at $40,000. were brought ? to New York from South Africa in the steamship Susquehar ir. Under sentence of death for wife murder, Verona Fleenor killed himself at Morgantown, Ivy. The extreme penalty?twenty years ?was given J. F. Callahan at Montgomery. Ala., for safe-blowing. Fire has destroyed the Los Ahgeled, Cal.. branch packing house of the Cudahy Packing Company, near the Los Angeles River bottoms. James A. Condron, fifteen years old, who shot and killed his father, who . was _beating Ms mother, was discharged by Judge Kellogg, in the Westfield (Mass.) Court. ' < Robert H. Patton, of Springfield, was nominated for Governor by the , = Illinois State Prohibition Convention. An unknown negro was lynched at Vance. Miss., for the murder of Robert Logan, a sawmill owner . Thousauds of acres of growing crops in Weste- x^ansas were ruined by a heavy hf..u>torm, followed by a drenching rain. Sylvester Schonmaker, and his eighteen-year-old son, Ralph, of Alligerville, N. Y., were killed by light Ding. The Now Haven Railroad has bought ail the Boston property of the Boston and Providence road. \ Mrs. Herman Leroy .Tones again left , > : her home in New York, but was followed by servants and soon returned. Daniel J. Sully, "the cotton king," of New York, turned the tables on his creditors ny demanding that they deliver to him 190,000 bajles ol! May cotton. FOREIGN. The Venezuelan Government has published a decree reopeninjj the Orinoco Ri\v?r to foreign trade. The President of France is to receive * a gold medallion in honor of his recent visit to Italy. A French sculptress, Marcella Laacelot-Groce, is the artist chosen. rn, T-? *?- I /^Annnll V. o? X110 ITHfJlie Jiuiliuipui v/uuuhi una prohibited the trailing of dresses in public squares, places and streets, under penalty of a heavy fine. The British Royal Commission vir tually recommends conscription as the only means of providing a home defense army. Measures are being taken by the German Government to exploit the now dormant water powers of the country on a large scale. Great irritation in Vienna. Austria, hnu Iioaii nnnspri hv tfli? obstructions placed in the way of repatriation of Macedonian fugitives. The authorities are turning back numbers who have applied for the reinvestment of citizen rights. The Norwegian Adelstbing has passed a bill prohibiting the sale or export abroad of ancient national relics. such as old Norse coins, arms, runic inscriptions, remaius of Viking ships, etc. The treaty by which Chinese labor is allowed to be imported into South Africa went into actual operation and the steamer Tweedale sailed for the Transvaal with 1GOO Jhinese aboard. The German negotiations for a commercial treaty are approaching a close, Russia accepting the minimum scale of cereal duties proposed by Germany. A deputation from the Jewish Board of Deputies visited the British Home Office, at London. England, to offer objection to some of tiie clauses in the Alien Immigration bill, which many .Tews believe had its origin in antiSemitism. I The Swedish Government bill extending suffrage an.I ordering a redistribution of seats in the Chamber was rejected in the Lower House, at Stockholm. France made the recall of her Ambassador from tb? Vatican absolute and will withdraw her Minister too. Senor Quievru. the Venezuelan ViceConsul. was asphyxiated as the result of an explosion iy his apartment in the Rue Ville-.Tust, Paris. i 111* niCVMUIl X.\* lil JJtTi l/l V.UIS JlrtJIJ ceived the new British Ambassador, Sir Charles Hardinge. A committee has been formed in Dublin tor the purpose of erecting a monument to the po*t Thomas Moore. The German Government lias undertaken to extend H e T'sumbara railway. in East Africa, to Mount Kilmanjero. rrince Jauiestjee Tata, a widely known i'arsee merchant, of Bombay^ died at. Bad XunUelm, Germany. ' Ur _ ._.-j