I 8 THE OMAIIA' DAILY BEE: SATURDAY, JUNE IS, lvrrt. I 'LinmiM mm mii j i i . i .. .... ,,,1 - j .- "TTjiBi mi i idiiiMmMrirtn mmmm- f -l.,J.i mmi, m wr"l ii-ir-iririM- irr " 1 ' ' ' i r SENDING NEWS OF BATTLE Bom of th SifflcmitiM Enotraotrd j Correapoidenti in tht Field. JAPS POLITELY HAMPER PUBLICITY HtviMH' M Have Hard Tim la G.HIK Anything Wtra t'adar the Present R-lavtleaa. (CopyrlgM by New York Hernia Co., Mot) ANTUNO, Manchuria, Majr 10. (From a Start Correspondent of the New Tork Herald-Special to The Bee.) This momini I law a copy of the Herald of Sunday, March 13, In which there waa an article dealing with the expense of the war to the newspa per and the comparatively email results obtained. The writer waa rood enough to say that It waa not the' fault of men In the field that more newi waa not forth coming from them. I have referred In oms of my letter to the restriction and regulation which hedge via around. Here la a sample of what happened at the time of the fight for the TaJu, and against which there la no guarantee for the future. On the morning of April SO headquarter mortd from Shokoda, back of WUu, to a place called Oenkado, a little northeast of WUu and almost on the bank of the Talu. It wa fir mile beyond Its old location. which bad been L lttle more than three mile from the camp of the correspondents, who were assigned to a place In the low alley away from a much as possible of th army movement tn order to keep them from seeing anything that waa going on. When headquarter moved we aaked per mission to move also, but It waa not granted. One result was that 'We had to tide sixteen mile that evening to get our message passed by the censor. Next morning after the fight wa were told by the eupervlslng officer that he waa not aure whether headquarter had moved on again or not, but he Thought It bad. He would go to Oenkado and let us know. Meanwhile w were to go back to our camp and await th coming of his orderly. When at :30 o'clock th orderly bad not arrived with the promised message we saddled our horse and started out to look up head quarter for ourselves. We found the su pervising officer In bis old camp, alone. He said that be had been to Oenkado, but headquarter had gone on and had left no order there ' for him. He had therefor come back to hi old place to wait for orders. , Non had yet arrived. He had Just written us a note te say that under the circumstances the best thing for us to do waa to wait In our camp until be should hear from headquarters. H reconsidered that, however, when we talked with him and said that we might go on In search of headquarters. He would wait a little longer. And If nothing cams for him be would follow us. , He was mounted on a bicycle, hi horse having been taken for some other use. A .Sesureh for Headquarter. The official hour for receiving messages submitted to th censor was between 4 and B in the evening. It waa after 4 when we left the house of the supervising of ficer, with five mile yet to go to the place. ' We had no time to lose, and we lost none. No sign of headquarters was left to Oen kado, nor any man who could give us the least hint of where it waa. The stream of men and horses and carts was all mov ing across the Talu, going over the first channel on two bridges just above Oen kado. We followed. The bridges led to Kurlto Island, and In a few minutes there we were, ' struggling to make speed through, sand that cam up to the fetlocks of th horse. The road, or rathfr the trail,' for there Is 'no road through sand, wa filled with transportation and men as far a w could see, but well ahead we made out the Peking cart'and some of the Chinese Interpreters who had been attached to headquarters below Wlju. It was a, steady, hard jush to get through the sand across Kurlto. The of ficial hour for ' receiving messages had gone by when we came to the second channol at the far side of the island. It was th main stream' of tit Yalu. wide, deep and swift Th pontoon bridge was crowded with th men and animals of the army, and tnere wa no chance for the man who would no. push for himself. W jammed our way Into the string and got on the bridge. On the far side the and continued, softer and deeper, if pos sible, than before. No man knew where headquarter had gone, W asked them by the dozen. , . We had carefully learned the Japanese words, but now w discovered that there was a great flaw In our knowledge; we could never understand what the other fellow replied to our question. They talked enough when we questioned . them to have answered us many times over, but as we could not understand a word we were Just as badly off at the end a at the beginning. And, for a wonder, we found no officer of all the lot we passed who could apeak English, German or French. It was the first time I had ever een so many Japanese officer without finding on with whom I could talk. Hard Hiding;. ' , Now w struck a new kind of mean road. Th sand changed Into stone, rang ing In else from Uttle pebbles to cobbles as big a a man' two fists. This waa even more dlffloult going than th sand, for It hurt the feet of the horses. They suffered so evidently In going over the tone that It waa Impossible to hurry them, and th sun kept dropping - lower and lower, with still no sign of headquar ter. At last, we'll after th closing of the hour for Inspection, we came near the astern baa of Tiger Hill, and then wJ learned that during the day General Kurokl had had hi headquarter In the field near the big rock. We struggled on with renewed hope. There was a chance that he not moved on, although the cer tainty that he had scored a great vic tory practically convinced us all that he must have gone on to Chullang Cheng. The faint hope that - we should And the commander-in-chief at Tiger Hill wa soon dispelled. We crossed another bridge, over the small channel of the Al river that separates Tiger Hill from Oseklto biland, rounded th base of the big rock and found there only some of the batteries that had helped to play havoc with the Rus sians In the morning. Nor could any man of those we saw tell us where the general had gone. lielow us, across a wide strip of sand, covered here and there with atche of water, lay the village of Chang ftClang Dal, where the Chines custom house wa. This w- ysti'aslans had held and which we called fnlng Ping, for lack of an official nam. We headed there, for Japanese officer could be distinguished walking about. It waa after o'clock now, and we began to be doubtful of getting our messages passed even If we could come up with tieaduarters. Here we met a soldier for v whom there ie great hope. When we called ' out the old question as to the lo cation of Del Ichl Oun Bhlrelbu (first army headquarters) he understood what we wanted. More, he knew that we would not understand his reply If he answered In Japanese. So he turned In his saddle and simply pointed toward Chu Liang Cheng. That man shall have my vote for member of Parliament t when I be com a Japanese subject. The going waa very slow, and once we fell Into quicksand and two of the horses lerer nearly mired. One man got through n? n n en Big Cut Price Sale of Ladies Waists on Our Second Floor. For One Day r Only, Saturday. TWO hundred doen beautiful White Walrts, made of fine PEH8IAK UWN8 OR GANDIES AND BATISTES, handsomely trimmed with lac and embrolderv some are very prettily tucked, some are evn hand embroidered el J g full bishop sleeves-all mane up stylish-Waists to suit everyone the values in this lot run as high as ROttwe divide them Into JaA two lots Saturday ILtS and Manufacturer s Clean-Up Handkerchiefs 25c We have purchased about one hundred dnsen embroidered, hemstitched and lace trimmed Cambrlo and linen Handkerchief goods that ell In the regular way from S6o to 76c we put them on sal Satur day at each 10 dozen pieces Fancy Neckwear, all colors and styles, some slightly soiled from being handled and shown goods that sold as high C as ?1.50 Saturday -.n7lv And $1.00 in Green Trading Stamps, Lace Gloves and Mitts big lot extra, fine lace 811k Glove and ta.ee 811k Mitts In wrist and -elbow l.anrtha white, cream and black worth up te two dollar a pair Saturday at a Pair ,a..J.... ... .a....., ........,..... . .....a.. .... ... ., 75c CyAHA Texpentiri TbariJjj: knlcoa, 80: ilnlmua, 60. Sitordij ti upect tlioitrs ind cooler Hither. Bsaa..............s.saBBaiBsaBaBBSBSBsaaaaaaaBaaBBasBSBBSS Photo Supplies Photo Supplies Everything you need for the camera and the art of pho tography all kinds of Kodaks, from the tricky little Pocket Ko dak to the superb Camera. Everything for picture taking and picture making. All kinds of Photography Plates, Solutions, Films, Film Packs, Mounts, Albums. All at cut prices. Photo Supply Section, Main Floor Jewelry! Jewelry! Misses' and children's Wrist Bags, with chain, in colors, values 50c and 75c,' choice, with $2.00 in Green Trading )tt Stamps , .... eaaejL Wide Crush Wash Belts in white duck very pretty and stylish choice, with 50c t(ir in Green Trading Stamps.1 lUi Center Aisle Counter, Jewelry Section. Silverware Section A magnificent assortment of wedding gilts, us help you select. . , sj.'apB"ia j mm bp Let About Those Premiums Everybody a knows, or ought to know, that S. A H. Green Trading Etamp pre miums are characteristic. Characteristic of sound workmanship, durability, hand someness and beauty. Th whole fabric of the Green Trading Btamp system Is built upon the Quality of Oreen Trading Stamp premiums. Th business Is too vast, too world-embracing-, to admit of any laxity or any 'letting up" In PRE MIUM QUALITIES. It U the determina tion of the 8. at H. Oreen Trading Stamp people (in the turning out of millions of dolar worth of premiums) to go ONE BETTER every time. Come and sea these premiums on our second floor and know of a truth that the premium you have in mind- at start is yours at finish. How's Your Stamp Book Coming! aBaBaaBaaBaaBaaaaaaaaBaaHMaaoiaHB-aatsBSBSasBB-a-a-e Souvenir Collection of Popular Music Played by Innes and His Band Containing four complete pieces of music. "Prince Charming," by Innes; "A Whispered Thought," "Southern Smiles'; and "Venezuela Dance". And $2.00 worth GREEN TRADING STAMPS Saturday only. 25c Hll sea ssi s-t swtta"" Your Eyes Your Eyes Right Treatment Right Advice Riht Fitting GROCERY Best Ctraeerta far the Least Mesey at BEXHBTTI Graaery. H.TO worth Oreen Trading; Btamp with three pxgs. Uneada Cp Biscuits IOVi in it; 1100 worth Oreen Trading Stamps with two lb, lergeoregon 25C 80o worth Oreen Trading - juu-j-y oiajTips wiu aaon etui Hawkey Cream 10c; Stamps with each caa;B".TlT Diamond S. Ijjriffi: - rrinr i 60c worth Oreen Trading wampi wun each can Wax 0 Beans 11.00 worth Oreen Trading ffifV ."l Btamps with pound can ; t 'j JtV J Bennett" Capitol t.iAAV'J Baking OAhtWiii Powder. $1.00 worth Oreen Trading H' Biamos wun eacn two- ,.. E!?.:.e-.....18clt!it OASDT DEPT. Toasted Marstamallowa Special. These are simply delicious, just re recelved from T". J. O'Brien Co.' factory FRESH AND Ofr OOOD pound The above otter Saturday only. A GREAT FRENCH BRI.tll PIPE SALE. For one week, commencing June 18th. All pipes up from 2Sc call for $2.00 In Oreen Trading Stamps. If you are going out camping or fishing, don't forget a small box of Cigars. "f(igars 50C "to?!?. 25c Meats and Provisions Some Saturday Prleos. Strictly Fresh Dressed Chickens all hens at, per pound 110 Fresh Dressed Young Roosters limited stock as long as they - will last per pound 9o Pork Butts per pound 6H Spare Ribs per pound . So' Boiling Beef per pound 2o No. 1 sugar cured reerular Hams, Rex or Winchester brands, lb., llo Morrell's Iowa Wapello Bacon per pound 14o Best Boneless or Cottage Ham per pound lOo LARD. LARD. LARD. ' 16 pounds Leaf Lard $1.00 6 lb pails of Silver Leaf or Rex brand lard 460 20-lb palls of Silver Leaf or Rex Lard $1.66 t-lb. palls of White Ribbon Lard Z3o 10-lb. palls of White Ribbon Lard 76o Kaufman's Orchestra Select Players Saturday Evening, 7:30 to 10:00 i ' .11. inn " ....u.-XJ-a--1ir.- , ikJJiJM-'J-Lrj aaasaaJa PBaaaaewrsaaawj ?3..:jxm-J.--L-L z- -Mj--iasaaiMJja Big Hammock Sale Saturday finishes a great Hammock Sal that has held swinging away for a week. Two-thirds of our glgantlo stock has been closed out and IMME DIATELY RENEWED. W hav a larger and handsomer line than before. If you haven't yet bought your ham mock. GET IT NOW. See the choice lot of Mexican hammock with spread- ap In nlnJn and colored jV designs $1.36 QQr each, and OW Our OREEN TRADING "STAMP 'proposition holds good Saturday. $5.00 worth Oreen Trad ing Stamps with every hammock sold. Rep iiv-a. 5JhlV Mm Croquet . Sets " $2.00 In Little Oreen Stickers with every Croquet Set sold Saturday. L VW...41 If You Are Going Away You Will Need Some Personal or Busi ness Cards. 100 oC our finest cards, printed with your name In the lntost styles of type worth yQA 1.50-Saturday only TC STATIONERY DEPT. Wall Paper ARTISTIC DESIGNS, QUAINTNES9 IN THfl ANTIQUE. WALL PAPER OF QUALITY. BARGAIN PRICES. Cafe VISIT TUB CAFE EVERYTHING APPETTTZINGLT ATTRACTIVE, COOL, CLEAN, IDEAL. POPULAR PRICES. Aft Unequalled Clothing Offer Saturday closes one of the most suc cessful sales of merfs and youths' clothing ever attempted by a reliable retail concern. For this event we have selected just 300 suits, ranging in price from $10 to $1? each, and have placed them C (ff on sale at This date-rSaturday, June 18 will positively close this extraordinary offer avail yourself of this opportunity. 50c Boys' and Children's Sailor Straw Hats, 5Q for Saturday's sale. eJ'aC One dollar and a half men's Shirts for Satur- !JO day's sale 7..... ..0rC One dollar and a quarter men's Shirts for Sat-' f Q urday's sale U.C President and Rough Eider f CI Suspenders 1C headquarters had gone on, how far the of ficer who e-ave the Information did not know, probably to Chu Liang Cheng. We were now about fifteen mile from our camp and Chu Liang Cheng waa still an other fjve miles distant, with the unbrldged main atream of the At river between u and It,. But we had seen the men cross It In two place that morning, and ther must be a way for u, q we pushed on. At the river bank. Just eastward from Chu Liang Cheng we could plainly see two tent of tho hospital corps that marked a field station. " The lon lines of men and carts kept hurrying forward and we fell in with some of them. Soon we oame to the ground over which the Infantry had advanced In the morning, and preaently had evidence of the character ,of the work the Russian had done In the body of a dead soldier lying on the sand. It wa not covered and a curious group of men stood around It. They had examined the contents of the pockets and wer ohatterlng about a photograph which they had found. A little beyond this body lay another, similarly surrounded by curi ous soldier. Dtfflealt Fordlaa;. , Then came the river. As we approached It we saw the kind of crossing we were to have from the preparation the men were making. They were stripping off their trousers and rolling up their shirts, getting ready for a wade through deep water. The telegraph had been taken over already and the poles marked the line of the ford. The river was several hundred yards wide, and crowds of men were going and coming with loaded pack Bfllinal and oarts. There was much shouting and laughing, as if It were all a good Joke and the water was not cold enough to chill a man to the marrow. In we plunged, along with a mixed lot of officers, men, carts, pack ponies, Corean and Chinese coolies. It was . a narrow ford, that necessitated close watching to .keep on the shallow trip. ' Half way over two pack ponies got below the ripple that marked the ford. Half a doien men sprang to their assist ance In an Instant, and for a few minute there wa a lively soramble to aave the ponies, which floundered and struggled about In th water and refused to be helped It they could prevent It. The men won at lost, and the ponies were dragged out into shallow water again, with their packs soaked. A short strip of sand border th north bank of the Al, where we crossed. Just beyond it, on th firm ground, we found the field hospital we had seen with all the surgeons very busy. Now, too, we got new of headquarter that wa definite, for Colonel Hagino, chief of th Intelli gence section, was at th hospital. He speaks Russian, and was busy talking to some of the wounded officer and men of the enemy, who bad been brought in for treatment. Several of the surgeons spoke Overman, and they (topped long enough in their work to tell us something of the results of the battle from their point of view. Tbey had dressed at that station already more than too wounded men of their own side, and were now beginning to treat the Rusaluns who had been hit Wttk tka Waaaded. There was on poor Russian on the op erating table as wa came up.. He was a lieutenant of the Twenty-second East 81. berlan regluient who had been wounded three tiroes, one in th right hand, one in the right leg, by a rifle bullet, and In the left le by a piece of shrapnel. He was vary pale, and his tips were firmly set to keep back any sign of pain, but it was evl dotit from the whole expression of bis fac that he waa suffering greatly. Yet h con trolled himself wall enough to convex a little with one of the men who spoke French, and to express the belief that he waa not so badly hit but that he should b around again before vary long. He had been in the Russian trench above Conical Rock, where the men had mad th most desperate fight of the day in spite of the terrible pounding they received from the Japanea guns. Lying in th two tents were a few Jepa naae offlcar who had bean hit Th wounded xoaa vera aa atr ohars blanket on the ground across th road from the tents. They lay in four or five long rows, and ome of them were already smoking cigarettes and making the best of their condition. They bore tholr wounds and pain with amazing stoicism, but no more stoutly than did their wounded enemies. Thera was a Russian offlcar lying on a hoard near one of the tents. He had been hit through the body and it waa plain to anyone that his wound was mortal. He knew It, too, and the look in his eyes as he turned them upon the little group 1 of correspondents was one ' not easily, to be forgotten. He seemed to wonder at first what we were doing there, as if he thought we might be fighting for Japan. Then he understood and the hard look left bis face. One of the men spoke to him and offered him a drink of water. When we came away be turned hi head and looked after us, a mute appeal to race sympathy, an appeal that will not be denied. ' It was S o'clock when we rode away from the hospital and nearly dark. The staff colonel ad told us we could have a message over the field wire that evening In oonformlty with the regulation, which said we could send twenty words' on the occasion of a great battle, and that we could send it from ChuHajig Cheng. We hurried now, and were not long in getting into the town, for there was hope of send ing off that twenty words. Almost at the outer edge of the town we met a gendarme, who asked If wa were foreign correspond ents. To our affirmative reply be responded that there waa a building assigned to us already. Evidently there had been a mis take, and it had been expected that we would move over to Chullang Cheng that afternoon.' But no word had come to us, and the only prospect was a night ride back over the twenty-one miles to our camp. . t Haadqaarters Found. Headquarter was in a large, comfortable Chinese building, almost of the dignity of a magisterial yarnen. The compound waa already beginning to be piled with the spoil of th victory, rifle and ammunition and a few swords. Th general wa walking in th yard with some of hi staff, includ ing Major General Fujll, th chief of staff, and Prince Kurd, who Is a first lieutenant and adjutant on th atafl. Several Russian prisoner had already been brought in and th new wa that mora wer eomlng. Tbr was great bustle about th court yard, with officer and orderlies coming and going, and prisoner being constantly brought in, most of them wounded. Search ing parties were out going over all the field, and as fast a wounded men were found they were brought in. The Japa nese wer doing everything in their power to make the wounded of th enemy as com fortable a possible. Dr. Tamura, the headquarters surgeon, personally attended several of those brought in while we were there. General Kurokl . came up to th little group of correspondent and w wer In troduced to him. We had been with head quarter for ten day, but this wa the first opportunity we had had to meet the general. He said he had waited for this day to meet the correspondents, because up to that time he had been too much oo cupled with the work of preparing for the battle which we had seen. He turned to Oenaral Fujll and the chief of staff an nounced that there had been captured by the Japanese twenty-eight Russian guns, twenty officer and a great many men, the exact number of whom waa not yet known. Neither wa the number of Japan casu alties, but tbey wer several hundred. Oeneral Kurokl spoke again, and this time we got the good news that we were to be permitted to send forty words each over the military wire and would not be held to the common message for those correspondent who represented paper in the am town, as the regulation contem plated. Then the general said that the Russian had displayed very great gal lantry in th tenacity with which they had held their position. They had road a fin fight, and he was glad to express hi admiration of them a soldier. When he had finished. Oeneral Fujll gsva us a few more detail at th fighting and th result, and then w scattered i about to get our telegrams ready. Wa had all written long telegrams to be sent down by courier to Ping 'Yang, and each man had a twenty word message ready for the field wire, which he now .had to re write to get In the additional fact and to use' up the forty wards allowed. It was quit i dark in ).the . compound and there were no candle, but some soldier built a fire and by the light of that we got through our work. It wa not so easy to get through with the censor. Back to the Censor. The two officers attached to headquar ters who speak English were not yet up. One was our supervising officer, who was back ' somewhere near his old camp, and his associate had not been heard from. Besides, every officer of the staff was as busy as he could be with the work of the army, and a dozen times or more Colonel Hagino, the chief censor, was obliged to lay down a telegram half read and rush off to see about this or that or talk to some Russian who' had Just been brought in. Then it was announced that It would be Impossible for our field messages to be sent from Chu Liang Cheng, because no operators had come up who oould handle English. So we should have to go back to the office at th old headquarter at Shoko-do to 01 them. ' It would be an ugly rid back. In the face of all those miles of transportation moving our way, and our horses had had nothing to eat Neither had we, but that did not count much if only the horse got something. The accusation has since been made that thera were men that night who took the nose bags 'off horse standing in the yard to get a feed for their own animals, but surely 'no Dal Ich) Iohi (71rstJ Army), correspondent would do that. It would not be. in conformity with the reg ulations. The moon was due to rise about 10 o'clock, and we decided to wait for It in order to have a little light In fording the Al river. No one exactly relished, that part of the homeward Journey, for it waa a tricky ford, and following a tipple ia not easy under the cloud-obscured meon. Mora Wounded. As we stood in th compound waiting for the moon to com up we saw several more Russian brought in. Two cam together, both weunded. On bad been shot through the body and wa on a stretcher, Th other -waa weunded in th arm and could walk. As th Utter bearer laid down their stretcher the man on it opened his eyes and stared at the group of strange faces about him. Then he began to pray in Ger man, and never waa a more fervant "unser vater; uttered by a man than that mum bled by this poor fellow In his desperate need. The Japanese crowding around did not understand and only stared at the for eigner standing bareheaded until the sim ple prayer was ended. His petition finished be began to call on his captain for water. None of th Japanese near him compre hended, but one of the correspondent, who happened to know the Japanese word for water, told a soldier. The man ran away and returned immediately with a big cup brimming full. The poor fellow on th litter gulped it down with eager swallow and sank back on th stretcher. Away went th soldier again and brought another cupful, and th wounded man drank that too, with a look' of such dumb gratitude In his eyes as on sees In a stricken animal that finds unexpected help. Meantime the other man was still stand ing beside the litter of his comrade Now one of the Japanea undertook to show him that he waa free to sit down. With different signs and gestures he strove to mak th Russian know what he meant, but In vain. At last he moved the Rus sian a little to on side to get room, and himself sat down beside the stretcher! Then the Russian understood and clumsily tried to alt down. H was stiff and hurt and cam near falling,, but two" or thraa of the Japanese soldier caught Mm and helped him down. Than Genera) Fujll cam up and gave him a cigarette, 'which th poor devil took, as if it war a draught of th elixir of life, Thera waa an officer brought In about this tlma who had bee ahot through the body from side to side. It was a desperate wound, and the surgeon who examined It knew that the man could not live, but he did what he could to make him as com fortable as possible. ' The wounded officer bore the pain of the examination and dressing without a murmur, .but when he saw the face ot the correspondents about him there came a gleam Into his eyes that made It hard not to be able to speak freely with him. J Thee had been slackening of the busy occupation of all at headquarters when we started away, a little after 10 o'clock. The streets of Chullang Cheng were full of men passing to and fro, transportation comirig In and men busy about camp fires getting their belated supper. We had a lantern from headquarters that bore the inscrip tion, "Grand Army Headquarters," for a passport on the road, and they said that if we would wait a little longer they would give us an escort, but It was late enough already for a twent-mlle ride to the tele graph office and we started without the escort Crossing; the Al. Just before we got to the Al we met some artillery coming In and one of the officer told us that we could get across directly below WUu, and thus save, the long ride around Tiger Hill and baok by Genkado. Some of the men objeoted that the shortest way home was often the long est way around, but the majority voted to try the short cut, and so we kept together. At the place where we struck the Al it Is much narrower than where we bad forded in the evening, and we knew It must be considerably deeper. There waa a little fire on each bank, with some foen sitting beside the one on our side. We started in with one of the biggest horses in the lead and a small Corean pony following. It was too dark to see the ripple very well, and a little more than half way over the man ahead lost it. Two men searched about for it and the rest of us waiting to see the, result It came very quickly when both horses sud denly dropped almost out of sight and their riders called out to us to go back. They had slipped off the edge of the bank they had been following and were swim ming their horse. Th current wa very swift and the Corean pony bad a sharp truggl for It Ufa, but. In a minute or tw both had struck tk bank again and climbed out Into the shallow water. Then w all filed back to th fire, where the men were. A w went w passed by four dead men lying on the sand, with nothing to mark their presence, and not even a blanket to cover them. We got back to the fire Just in time to see a pontoon ferry come In with an am munition wagon on It The men In charge said we could send our horses over on the ferry, five at a time, and as there were more ammunition wagons to come over to our side there would be opportunity for the two trip it would require to take us all over. Th Japanese bora Is a wild beast. He kick and fight with any other ani mal that come near him, and It wa close quarter for five of them on th ferry, which waa mad by lashing two pontoons together with their section of roadway as when In .use in a brlo.se. We got the first five ever safely, but half a dosen time thy mad suoh a row that It seemed soma of them must surely go overboard. Th ferry went back, and in half an hour or so th other flv got across, after a narrow squeak from losing on or two of th horse. When we had forded th Ai in th evening we had approached It from a strip of land that runs down from Tiger Hill, but now we had crossed to Chlng Ping Island, and there was no way to get oft it except by ferrying. W rod acros the Island to the main stream of the Yalu, which Is more than GOO yards wide, deep and very swift. There wa another ferry, but thl time no one wanted to com our way. Thera was a part of a train of pack ponies on our side when we cam up, but they were In charge of a non-commt-toned officer, wh would give u no help. At th Ferry. Plenty of th ferryboat were lying along th bask, but there was no on te work them. Ve had caught up with one wise man Just before we got to the Al In the afternoon who had his interpreter with him.' The rest of us, all thinking we were going out for only a short ride, had left our interpreters behind. ' Nor had a man of us brought even a water bottle, much less anything to eat. There was water a-plenty in the Al rlVer, but no one would touch It for fear of the results, and there wa not a drop of boiled water In the out fit Only the hope of getting back to camp In an hour or two kept us all from taking a full drink of th Al water, and we were thirsty enough to have drunk from almost any kind of water. The interpreter tried his best to Induce some of the soldiers to work the ferry for us, and we offered them anything in the way of pay that they wanted, but it was useless. There wa not an Officer to be found and we could do . nothing with the men. We were at the village of, Chang Klang Dal, but no one had much enthusi asm for exploring It now. It was well after midnight and the camp was still miles away. Those who had voted against the short cut made sarcastic remarks about the wisdom of going by the known road, but the short cut men held their tongues and prevented Internecine strife. At last, after an hour or more of useless waiting, there came a hail from the other id. Soma on there wanted to com' to our aide, but bad no boat We wer be ginning to discuss the advisability of going back and trying to jget up to Tiger Hill so as to go around that way, but now th interpreter announced that he oould handle one of the ferryboats, if aom of us would help by pulling the bow oars. Th thing are propelled by hug sweeps from the stern, after the manner of sampans, but oarlock are also fitted In th bows. Thar were volunteer for, this position very quickly, and the soldiers making no ob jection, now that there were men on th other side who needed a ferry, we got one of the boats up to the landing, pushed and hauled five horses aboard and shoved off. Working; One's Passage. That was a pull worth the money. Two of us at the bow oars labored as hard aa we could, and the interpreter struggled with the big sweep at th stern. Th cur rent of mldocean swept us far down below th landing on the other aide, but once we gotMnshore near enough we got out the pole and punted the boat along up to tho landing. A crowd ot hospital corps men, going out after wounded, were waiting for the boat, and It waa essy to get back for the remaining five horses. It was the trip where we worked .the ferry that counted. With only two men to hold five kicking, struggling, fear-maddened brutes, whllo the others strove with the oars and sweep, It was quite aside from a Joke. But we did It at last, and wer ashore on Klntetto Island, from which we knew a bridge led to th mainland below Wlju. The camp' was almost in sight and we wer about to strike out for it as a good pace when w wer held up by two sentries with rifles In their hilnds, who wanted to know who and what we were prowling about Kinteito at such aa hour. , It was nearly 1 o'clock, and ther wa some reason for their demand. They belonged to on of th batterle that had been In servlc on th Island during the day. Th Inter preter explained at length, and the sentries said they would show us the way aoros t th bridge. Ihey did. We had never been in Kinteito before, and had only seen it from th hill back of Wlju, but ach of us had the direction of th camp pretty well fixed In hi mind. We were tor start ing straight across the Island, but the sen tries took us down stream a long distance before striking across: , They wanted to prevent us .from getting near their battery, and they said we would b In danger of being shot if w ap proached too close. The two men who had got wet In th effort to ford had crossed In th first boat and gone on. They es caped th sentries, aa we afterward found out, and made a be Una acros Kinteito, doing it in fifteen minute. Th sentries managed to lose us, so that wa had to go up to th battery finally and get a mnn Who did know th way to go along and how. it to us. It took more than an hour before we reached the blessed bridge. Tha floor of it had been covered with matting to prevent tha Russians from hearing the rumble of wheels or the noise of hoofs on the planks when the artillery was token across the night: before. From the bridge it waa plain sailing, with only a detour ot thleo mile to th telegraph office at Shokodo. It was i o'clock when I got back to camp and day wa breaking. The courier who had been waiting to go to Ping Yang with the long message was touted out and started off and we turned In, to be awakened two hours later with the information that the canip was to be broken un aa nnn n th. fhunJ derstorm then raging had stopped, foe tHe move u unanang Cheng, aa headquarters waa likely to go on at once. Two Disappointments. That wa what wa did to get out a forty word message about tha fight for tha Yalu. Today we got the Joker, ft came in two ways. First was a copy of a Tokio newspaper, printed in Japanese; It wa dated May t, th morning on which we ended our forty mile ride to get forty words. It contained one solid page of description of the battle, made from th official report received in Toklc on th night of May 1 and given out to. th newspaper men ther at once. Ua-: doubtedly It wa cabled to our papers at great length, and those messages got In ahead of our poor Uttle forty wordera. - The second cheerful bit of Information came In th chap of messages from tha forwarding agents In Ping Yang, who wrote that the telegraph office thera had been closed for th transmission of mat, ter not military for twelve days, and that not on of our messages had been ac cepted, In spite of the fact that all of them bore the stamp of the censor at headquarters here. They bad been sent on by runner to Seoul, whence they may have been cabled home after another foyr days' delay, and after the official report had grown so old a to be forgotten. Not even mall matter was delivered in Ping Yang. All the correspondents send their dis patcher In duplicate, on copy by runner and the other by the military post, the first to arrive to be forwarded. The Japanese prevented any of those In the post from arriving by forbidding the delivery of malls. They prevented any of those by courier from going by closing the telegraphs. When men work all day and ride all night risking their lives to got out forty words, they are doing about all they can. Th only thing left la to wait ' ; ' On the Bowery they, call that sort it treatment the double cross. OSCAR KINO DAVIS. 7 fO.BO Chicago to Detroit and Hetaru account Baptist Young People's Union, Selling dates July , 7, s t Limit July 12th. Extension can be obtained by deposit of ticket and payment of fee of M cent until August 16th. Special side trip fares from Detroit wiy be granted to holder of Grand Trunk ticket. T For f Jrther particular communicate with Advertising Department, Grand Trunk Railway System, 1M Adam St., Chicago, Geo. W. Vaux. A. G. P. & T. A. --v Inrs Pure,Soft, White SUa ;' X Beaatiful Ceoipltiien,. suliiUir sod P.riuao.utir 7, r.mo... muiiMui, ' , (puts ! T.. Ui wktb ? . L. .... I. L... m. hi. . .kin 1- i an rut. . wii wj - ' - m ' , ' Hanu-S...! ai km. ktil. aanraas a aid. awn-Maya , B , ay snalU Back In MM n lUf. ass-rea mUV k-na Daraan-lie-raJa Oo CtaataaaSl. j SCHUFER'S CUT PRICE DBUS STOIEf s