I Gossip and Story About the Wild Men of Borneo I) YAK WO.MKN WEAR CORSETS. (Copyright, 1901, by Frank (!. Carpenter.) . 1NHAI'()UH, Dee.. 17. (Special I Correspondence of The Hue.) M Tim n tw4tt nra nf fl liiriri' tuirt (it our Filipinos riirno from llnrnco. n,,r Mnliiiiiiiiii itnii Moros arc first cousins to tho Dynks, and llicro nru today thousands of Sulu lslaiiilr living along tin) Uorneo const. Until within t!i present gciicrntbn tho (iuU.ni tf Su.tt owned a vast part of North 1Iiiuj. HI pooplo claim kinship with tho peoplo there ami tlicy l.no ninny things In common. Vo hnvo tribes In Mlmlanao who drcsi llku tho hill tribes of Saruwuk. The (lad (1.UKH of Luzon hunt hends Juat aa tho DjakB do, and wcro It not for tho restraint which liaa been exercised tlrst by Spain and then by tho United Stntcs. tho moro aavngo Inhabitants of theso lilnnds would probably bo going head hunting together. In order to understand the snvnges of tho Philippines wo need to know something of their IJornco ancestors nnd relatives. Thero n.'n a iraet number of wild men In our Islands. Somo of them arc prnctlcally unknown. It Is tho same with norneo, wheso natives aro an savage ns any peoplo on tho facu of tho globe. 1 have heard much about them down horu on tho edgo of tho equator. Tho Dutch send out rog ular expeditions from Uatavln, and they have collccUd a gloat deal of Information about their partH of tho Island. Tho Eng llsh posBCBtlons aro to n certain oxtent aiii.nnitiiniK in slncatioro. and you fro- .juontly meet travelers hero who have como on tho steamers which ply between this port and Sandnknn. 1 got Bomo Informa tion nbout tho DyakB nt Jolo from our jillltary and naval ofllccrs, who havo ro jently taken short runs to North Hornoo. Jolo Is only a hundred miles from Sanda kan, and liongnn nnd Tawl-Tawl aro about forty miles away. Aiikiiik the II nut IIiuitcrN. Thero is no doubt that head hunting, ns followed by somo of our Filipino savages, comes from Uorneo. Tho practice Is com mon throughout tho wholo Island. Among many of tho Dyak tribes a man la not con sidered ready for marrlngs until ho has killed several peoplo nnd cut off their bends, and men frequently cut off n head to celebrate a funeral. Tho wnrrlors havo regular baskets to rarry tho heads home In and ovory house of any Iniportanco has several heads hung ns trophies upon tho wall. Different tribes havo their own ways of cutting off humnn hends and curing thorn. In Mindanao tho Moros uso a kulfo called tho cnmpllnn for their public execu tions. It probably originated in Hornoo. It Is a long, straight Bword aB sharp as a razor, with which you enn sllco oft a head at cno Btrokc. Tho sea Dynks havo ono something llku It. They sever the hend at thu neck, bolng particular to keep the Jaws perfect. Thoy take out tho brains through tho nostrils and hang tho head up over tho (lro to smoke and dry. Thoy uso a net for UiIb purposo nnd aro caroful In dressing tho honds for tho tiro. Thoy un derstand so well how to euro heads that their heads will last for ages, and o hond once taken Is considered a holrloom of tho family. It Is willed to tho children, and tho latter nro very prom! f such pos sessions. When a young sen Dyak has a light with ono of hla fellows ho frequently tauntingly tells htm that ho docs not amount to much, and rnikB him how many heads his father or his grandfather took. Among somo tribes It Is a mntter of honor to gather tho heads of men only, nnd thoy prize theso Ink n In battle moro thun thoso captured on tho sly. Kill Women hikI Children. Others of tho Homeo Dynks nro not so particular In their hend hunting. All heads aro heads that como Into their net. Thoy llo In wnlt for tho Chlneso worklug on tho plantations and kill them If they enn catch them nlono or In snmll parties. They even capture women nnd children to butcher ill-m for their heads, and sometimes buy slaves that thoy mny cut their heads oft. Indeul, It U said that a slave condemned to death by tho DyakB will bring mow at auction, because ho can bo executed by tins mnn who buys him, nnd his head bo there by added to tho family treasures. Somo yenra ago thero was n famine In tho Sulu lslnuda. Tho peoplo died In largo uumbera. He9 A VILLAGE OF INTEHIOIt I1OHNE0. IIOHNEO HEAD HUNTER IN FULL REOALIA. nnd nt ono time nbout 1,000 wcro carried to Uorneo to be sold ns slaves. It Is Bald that tho chief purptHo of tho purchasers was to ncqulro the heada of tho Stilus, whom they killed on this account. No ono knows whence head hunting came. Tho custom hna been common In Uorneo for ages and tho natlvca cannot glvo any In formation ns to Its origin. It Is lnrgely connected with religious superstition. Somo of tho tribes say that tho persons whoso hends thoy take will becomo their slaves In tho next world nnd others that tho ac cession of a fresh human head means pros perity to tho family by which it wbb taken. On Its nccount tho soil will produco better, tho game will bo moro plentiful, tho streams will havo moro fish and tho women moro children. Tho Dyak women especially ndmlro a mnn who has a number of heads In hla collection, and among tho cousins of our Moros n young man cannot expect to marry tho daughter of a warrior unless ho has a head or two to adorn his hut during tho honeymoon. HnviiKe Who Wear Cornet". Our soldiers nnvo recently discovered tribes In lntorlor Mlndnnao who wear cor Bots of rattan bands about their waists and breasts. This custom comes from Bornoo. Tho Dynk women wear corsets nnd havo immi wn.irinir t limn from tlmo Immemorial. They string rings of brass or lead on strips of bamboo enno or rattan ana tnon winu them about their bodlos from tho armpits to bolow tho thighs. A woman fixed up this way looks very much llko n barrel walking off on legs, with a head and arms sticking out of tho top of tho barrel. Somo tlmes tho corBot Is smaller, consisting only of n Bcoro of rings about tho waist; some times It Is very hoavy, tho whole weighing as much ns fifteen pounds. Tho brass rings nro often highly polished, bo that tho girl walks about In n coat of bright mall. Tho corsets often lit tightly and nro so difficult to put off nnd on thnt thoy aro worn a long tlmo. When food Is plenty tho ownor has great troublo In removing her corsot. Ono method of doing this Is for tho subject to hang by her arms to tho limb of a troo whllo hor friends having given hor body a coat of oil, pull tho corsot up Inch by Inch until it is nnnuy squoczeu ofT ovor tho nrmB. Uolow this corset tho women wear skirts. Among somo tribes thoy nro almost nnkod. Many of tho Uorneo mon dress as lightly ns our snvnges of tho Philippines. Thoy wenr practically nothing but a brooch cloth. Others wear padded fighting Jackets. Tho costumes of thoso living along tho coast of tho northorn part of tho Island nre not unllko thoso of tho Moros. KnrrliiKN '' Knr I havo described tho enormous earrings and oar plugs worn by tho wild men I mot In Mlnd'nnno. It Is probnblo that they got this custom from their Uorneo ancestors. Mnnv nf ihi Hnvnees of Homeo have enor mous holes In tholr cars. The lobes nro stretched so thnt tho holes In thorn nro as big around as a napkin ring. Women often carry cigars In their onrs. and you fre quently see enr holes through which you could thrust your four fingers. Ono Uorneo traveler says ho measured n woman's enr which hnd a holo In tho lobo seven Inches long. Tho mnklng of such holes Is begun In Infancy. Tho enr Is pierced nt C months of ngo. Only n smnll holo Is mado at first, but this Is Increased by Insortlng larger and larger plugs, so that when tho child la full grown It has n loop In Its ear from ono to four Inches long. I should bo Inclined to doubt such statements had I not soon slml Inr holes In tho ears of tho women of India and Hurmnh. In tho latter country tho woman nil wear enr plugs, nnd tho holes of somo cars nro enctrmous. Our Moros blacken their teeth nnd file them. Tho snmo custom provnlls among their ccuslns of Uorneo. Iloth sexes there chew tho betel and both consider blnck teuth tho most foshlonnblo article of tho kind. They laugh at tho long teeth of foreigner nnd compnro our white teeth to dog teeth. They tllo tholr teeth among some tribes nlmost to tho gums nnd shape them In dif ferent ways. In somo tribes thu favorite tooth fashion is thnt nf n saw. In others tho pooplo tllo their teeth oft square, whllo In other tribes tho most npprov d method la to hollow them out nt tho frcnt, mnklng them look llko a hollow-ground razor. This is n fnvorlto fashion among the Moros. Iloth Moros nnd DyakB blacken the teeth Tho teeth nnturnlly becomo black from chowlng tho betel, but In order to glvo them tho huo of black varnish the people rub them with burnt cocoanut shell mixed with oil. Sometimes they scour off the enamel that tho teeth may take tho block dyo bet tor and hold It longer. Sometimes holes aro bored Into tho teeth and brass pivots Inserted which aro considered a matter of ornament. Tho filing of women's teeth Is usually begun when they reach marrlngc nt.in ncro A nnw mine must bo repeated evory ten years In order to havo tho mouth prcservo tho favorite fashionable cut. Why Hie Moron Have No llenrilN. It Is raro to find n Moro with n board. That samo condition prevails among tho Uorneo snvnges. Tho peoplo hnve nnturnlly i, uttin iinlr nn their fnces. but what they havo thoy pull out with nippers or tweezers, I met Moros In tho Stilus win carried silver nippers w.th them nnd plucked out every stray hair ns soon as It appeared. Among somo norneo tribes tho eyebrows nro shnved and tho eyolnshes plucked out. Others of tho Bavages rub quick llmo Into tho skin to destroy tho vitality of tho follicles. Tho eyebrows and eyolnshes aro plucked cut at tho ago of 15 and tho lnck of hair Is tho sign of manhood or womanhood. Thero Is a greui slmllnrlty between tho homes of tho Sea Dynks and tho Mcros, ant tho hill tribes of llornco nnvo nomes mucn llko thoBO of tho hill tribes of Mlndnnno. Tho towns along the shores cf North norne3 nro llko thoso of the Sulu IslnmK Thov nro mndo up of huts of bamboo thntched with nlpn palm and erected on piles. Many of tho towns nro built out In tho wntcr, tho houses being reaction ny unmoso walks nnd hnvlng bamboo plntforms bo tween tho huts. Mnlbun, tho cnpltal of tho sultan of Jolo, Is of. this nnturj and so Is litis Bus, on tho other side of tho Island. Urunel Is built upon piles, ns aro also Handjormnssln nnd other towns In Uorneo. Even In tho lntorlor tho Dynks build their houses In tho strenms or near them. Thov often havo watch towers nnd drums to alarm tho villagers nt tho approach of a stranger. I mot soldiers at Davao, In tho southern part of tho Philippines, who found similar villages In that region. Tho Uorneo villages are cften wnlled with bam boo hcdgcB nnd some hnvo in outs about them, the farming lnnds of tho villngo lying outside. dunk Into ii .Moro Hoime. It docs not cost much to build a house olther In Mindanao or In Uorneo. Hero Is n description of a Moro house, which I nmda whllo sitting boforo It In tho vlllnge of Datto Mandl, In Mlndnnao: Tho house Is a bamboo hut, which looks for all tho world like a straw stnek about twenty feet squnro, ralacd upon poles as high as my waist. Its walls are of bnmboo poles and tho roof la of nlpn palm leaves, Tho lenvts aro wldo and fan-like. They are woven In sheets nnd Inld on so that they overlap ono nnother llko the shingles of n house. They nro porfectly wntorproof nnd withstand tho floods of tho rainy season. The wnlls nro mndo much the samo wav, tho leaves being laid on tho poles, over lapping ono nnother llko weather boarding. The floor is of split bamboo poles, laid upon bamboo studding nnd tied thero with rattan strips. Tho roof Is sowed tosethcr with rattan nnd tho wnlls nro tied on with rnttan. Thero Is not a nnll In tho house nnd every thing Is done by eewlng nnd tying. The house has thousands of stitches In It, but It can bo mado so rapidly that It could bo built by threo men In ono week. I asked ns to tho ccst nnd nm told thnt It was about $20 In silver, or about $10 In gold. Tho door to this house is a holo large enough for a mnn to Btnnd erect within It. It Is closed by a framework of bamboo nnd la reached by a ladder of bamboo poles a yard wide. The ladder has four rungs, each 03 big around as your wrist, and on the mlddlo rung threo bright-eyed, half-naked llttlo Moro children aro sitting. Their oyeo laugh and their teeth snmo as i write. I rise and go to tho door holo and look In. Tho house conslstB of ono largo room and It has no furniture, but somo boxes and mats. From tho rnfters hang the clothes of tho family. Tho peoplo sleep on the floor, men, women nnd children lying together. At tho back of tho houso Is a ledgo or plat form with somo earth upon It. That Is the kitchen, and the earth Is used to keep the flro from burning tho floor. The owner of tho houso has Beveral slaves nnd severnl wives, one of whom enmo from a hill trlbo In tho Interior. Where Moron (Set Their Wlven. Many of tho Moros get their wives from tho hill tribes. They aro Mohammedans and somo of them hnvo moro than ono wife. In tho past their warriors have captured Vlsayan, Tagalo and oven Spanish women, and In Mlndnnao thoy havo taken tholr wives from tho savages of tho Interior. Aa to slaves, thoy get them from tho samo source, and they treat tholr slaves Just nbout tho samo as tho llornco snvnges iln ihntrs. In norneo tho slnvcs usually llvo with their masters and havo about as much consideration as tho rest of tho fam ily. Slaves thero aro acquired by war, by purchaso nnd by the non-payment of debts. They havo fixed rights and thoso of tho samo master may marry among themselves. Tho practlco of slave-owning Is discouraged iiv hn Dutch In tho contrnl and southern parts of tho Island nnd nlso by tho EngllBh In tho northern pnrt. In tho Spanish tlmo tho Sulu Islands were slave markets for Uorneo, nnd today Blaves aro taken from tho Sulus to Uorneo. I henr everywhere Btorles of the big game to bo hnd In norneo. Tho North Uorneo compnny Is encouraging hunting. It tins recently Issued lnws which regulnto tho senson for shooting big gnmo, but nt tho propor tlmo tho plnnters nro ready to got up a hunt for any Btranger who comes properly Introduced. Somo of our soldiers hnvo been over to Snndakan, nnd thero nro others who aro planning to go to shoot tho elephants and rhinoceroses which can be found thero. Thero nro also wild buffaloes, wild pigs, deer and bear, as well as plenty cf crocodiles. I'ne for Monkey". Tho best crocodile hunting la with a dead monkoy for bait. A toilgh stick, to tho center of which n rattan ropo Is fastened, la concealed In the body of the monkoy, tho other end of tho ropo being tied to n lloa. The crocodile swnllowa tho monkey nnd nt tho samo tlmo tho stick, which goes down easily, but which onco Insldo the crocodile, tho monkoy IIcbIi being digested, turns crosswise of the throat. Tho stick has sharp points nnd the moro tho reptile tries to get rid of It tho more firmly It becomos fastened in his flesh. Ho Jorks tho float thla wny and that, and tho hunters, who are watching, catch hold of It and drng him to the shoro, whero ho Is decapitated with an ax. Among other things shot are monkeys, of which there nro many kinds, Including tha orang-otltnng. Tho crang-oulnng Is cften v.ry dnngcrcus nnd when ntigry It will not hesltnto to at tack man. The orang-outang of Uorneo Is exceeded In size only by tho gorilla. It Is as largo ns a man and has nrms of cnormoui length. It enn Jump from limb to limb, cntchlng held cf the branches hv Its hnnds. It has strong teeth, with which It tears the Mesh of Kb victim. The orntig-outar.g Is tho ;icxt step to Djr win's connecting link and thero nro tradi tions thnt tho real connecting link ex'sts In Uorneo. Indeed, I have henrd storUs of men with tails In many of tho Islands of tho Pacific, but so far havo failed to find any entitled to much credence. Ono of tho most remarkable Is the statement of Carl Hock, a commissioner of tho Dutch government. nock met nn officer of tho sultnn of Kotol, who claimed that he per sonally had seen men with tnlls. Ho told where the men wcro to bo found nnd de scribed them ns having white hair and white eyes. He said their tails wcro from threo to four Inches long nnd that they usually cut holea In tho floors of their huts to bold their tnlls In order thnt they might sit down In comfort. Uock made an agree ment with this man to pay him $200 If ho would bring him a pair of theso tailed peo plo and ho started out with tho man to And tholr vlllnge. Ho was taken sick bo foro ho reached It and tho result Is that tho trlbo with tails has not yet been found. FUANK O. CARPENTER. Ski Patrol lurs (Continued from Third Pnge.) with his rlflo nnd then hnvu made his way out of tho country hnd he not been so Intent on his nefarious work ns not to notice their approach. Tho streaniH In many portions of the park nro fed by hot water from geysers, boiling springs nnd hot pools, ami on these the Ico never forms. Often In winter trips it becomes necessary to cross such streams, and In the absence of bridges onaj must ford. So off must come skis, shoes nnd socks, nnd, with his equipment on his shoulders, the hardy soldier slips from tho bank of snow nnd Ico Into the water, wndci ncross nnd makes a shivering toilet on the othor side. Tho gnlly colored poster designed to nttrnct recruits wns In the mind of n pntrlot who hnd Just mndo such n crossing. Turning to tho officer with him ho called out: "Say, lieutenant, this wasn't In tho picture." CAPTAIN A. O. URADLEY, U. S. A. Snff i Van Mn tnV vaii. Iiiil nesa ii3 soft ua n gluvo nnd as tough aawlrn by ualngEIIItEKAIInr. noni Oil. You cuti lengthen lis liCo-mako It List in lro ai jnng us It EUREKA Harness Oil nmlcps a poor looking hnr. 1mn itUn now ..9 pectn'lly prepared to wltn atAUU (ho weather. Bold everywhere In cans all ilzea. Madi tj STANDARD OIL CO.