V With the Boy King: of Uganda in His Royal Palace at Kampala TITE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MARCTI 20, 1008. (Copyright, 19'. by Frank CJ. Carpenter.) AMPALA, Uganda. fpeclal Cor- Kl respondence of The lire.) I have I Just returned from an audience wiin iu royal highness, Daudl C'hau, the boy kins of Uganda. He Is the ruler, under the Eng c.'W lish protectorate, of more than 2,OfO.Ot0 peo ple, and the owner of a country twice aa largo a either Ohio, Virginia or Kentucky. His subjects are the most Intelligent of the native race of central Afrlea. They have a civilization of their own. They wear clothea of their own manufacture made largely of bark, and they consider any ex posure of their persona indecent. They do, not mutilate their bodied by Blushing them' and seating them into welt end Bears, like their near neighbors. They do not wear plugs in their eara nor rings In tlndr noses, and do not file sharp or knock out th.lr front teeth. They have a Innguugo of their, own. They have their own hwoks, and many of the native chiefs keep records of their court and official proceedings in type writing, having secretaries who use ma chines for that purpose. They are rapidly udvanchig In civilization and are to a large fxtent Christians. These people are called, le Usgnmla and their country Is Ugnndn. They have long been the dominant race cf this part of Africa, and they have, time and again, conquered the other peoples about I,nke Victoria In war. Their neighboring tribes have always paid them tribute, and they ore still the most promising of the negro races of the continent. Their little ruler may do much In hastening their advance ment. Descendant of Kings. Thli hoy king has as blue blond as anv monarch who sits on a European throne. The Usgand. are an old nation, and they, have had kings for generations. The!r . first king la said to have sprung from a monster python, whose outline la carved on one of the great rocky hills of this country. His name was Bemba. and he killed thousands of his subjects before he was able to rule. The king thnt we know best was Mutesa, who was reigning when the explorer Speke came Into Uganda and was still on the throne during the expedi tion of Henry M. Stanley. Mutesa waa converted to Christianity by Stanley. He was this boy's grandfather, and his father waa the notorious King Mwanza, one of the bloodiest and wickedest tyrants on earth. Quaint Features of Life Honest, bat Blow. IL.LIAM WEL.LI.NG. stamp clerk s a jrl at the Indianapolis postofflce. I ias found an honest man and wiv v. i.iiuui in c una ul a. inn- tern or even a match. His In formation of the existence of this particular honest man came through a letter from a small town in Iowa. The letter tells the story as follows: . "When you and I were boys I promised to pay you 5 cents for hunting some walnuts for me, and I did ot get it paid at that time, and I became ashamed, and never paid It. "It must be about flfty-fiva years ago. as near as I can guess. The compound Inter est on $1 for fifty-five years is $68.4fi. The compound Interest on 6 cents would be one twentieth of tH.45, which would be $3.46 due you. If I have made no mistake In com puting the Interest. There Is a table in Ray's arithmetic giving the compound In terest on $1 from one year to twenty-five years. I worked by It. If not correct, pleaa correct, and I will forward the amount due you. I will send this to Indi anapolis with a return on It, as I do not know your address. You were in the post office the last I knew of you. Please an swer Immediately." The following Is a postscript: "P. S. I compounded the In terest at 8 per cent." ' Guards Hobby with a. Hum. To protect her relatives from separating her from her husband, who la thirty years her Junior, Mrs. Samuel A. Mallory of Merlden, Conn., a bride of 70, has In trenched herself in her farm house at East Lyne, with a shotgun trained on the ap proach to drive back constables who are seeking to serve papers In a suit for the annulment of her marriage. So far none of them has tempted fate by crossing the line and Mrs. Mallory is In possession of her husband. The annulment suit waa brought by Fred Leeds of Preston, who alleges Mallory be came the fourth husband of his sister, not because he cherished any affection for her, but because he had a covetous eye on the $25,000 fortune she possessed. When It be came known that Mallory and the widow were to marry strong efforts were made to prevent It, but without success. Although the prospective bride was nearly twice as old as her prospective husband, both of them declared the affair was a love match, pure and simple, and that they would brook no Interference with their plans. So they were married and would be living happily were tiul so much of the bride's time oocupied In defending herself against the constables. Phonograph Give Kvldenee. A resident of Portland. Me., tolif of a case that wits tried recently before one of the etvll courts of his city and In which a phonograph played the principal part. "It was a little matter of a debt that brought the parties before the Judge," he said, "and the man sued stoutly denied ever having borrowed a cent. It wao al leged by the plaintiff that the transaction took place In his rooms, and that the de fendant had given a verbal promise to pay. Inside a month. "After the defendant had sworn solemnly that the whole thing was a fabrication, the plaintiff's lawyer quietly produced the phonograph, which his client had In his rooms on the duy the debt was claimed, to have been contracted, and sat It in mo tion. "Immediately the conversation in ques tion was repeated, both the defundants snd plaintiff's voices being clearly recog nisable. The defendant had to pay up. "I was In court at the time, and I never saw any man appear so devilishly embar rassed as the accused when he was com pelled to admit that he had deliberately lied." Looks Like th Reeord. For the twenty-seventh time Oscar L. - Darling, a civil engineer and Inventor of AinltyvuU. 1 I., has become a father. Twenty ef his children are living. He la 64 fsars old a&d has twice wedded. - Ills first wife was Hannah Smith of Flushing, L. I., whom be weddeS In U64. She bore htm fifteen' children and died la ISM Ten of the children are living. In Ufiai Mr. Darling married Catherine P. Hamilton of Flushing, who has Just given birth to her twelfth child by him. Two of her children have died. Mrs. Darling la about 40 years of age. The latest arrival la a boy and Is said to bo a "bouncer." Mr. Lsu-Unfa best kntwa invention la a con arises d air tank system of water Mwanza rebelled against the English, about eleven years ego, and was conquered by them. They deposed him and chose this boy, who waa then a baby In arms, as kins In hi stead. Daudl Cliati Is now about 12 years) of age. and In six or seven years mora he will take the reins of government and assume the throne. In the meantime hi kingdom and estates are being adminis tered by a regency of three ministers, aided by the luklko, or Imperial council, consisting of about twenty of the native chiefs of Uganda. In addition to ttw revenue from his own farms the boy has an allowance of $3,000 a year from U Rrltlsh government, and this will be Irv creased to 17,600 a year when he reaches) the age of It. In the meantime the three regents act for him at a salary of $1.00 each. , , t'svnndn's Native Capital.' But first let me give you some Idea of this town of Kampnlu, the native capital of Uganda. It Is twenty-six miles from Kntebbe, where the British government has its offices. Kntebbe Is the chief port on this side of I,ake Victoria, and Kam pla la reached by a wide road, over which one goes in Jinriklshas, or on horseback or on foot. I came here in a, jlnrlklsha hauled by a half dozen Da gsnda clad In bark clothing. Kampala Itself Is one of the largest of the native African settlements-. Its houses, are scattered over six great hills, which rise out of low, swampy lands, each swamp being crossed by roads and bridges. The hills are divided up into little plantations, and each hill has its own cas of people and Its own specialty. The hill upon which the king dwells In known as Mengo; that where the chief stoics are and where the British governor lives Is Kampala proper and the other hills are devoted to missionaries, schools and private residences. All these hills are beautiful and Mengo. Is especially so. It is several hundred feet high and well rounded In shane. It Is covered with banana groves, in which are the thatched houses of the chlofs and officials, and on Its very top Is the royal council house and the great bungalow which forms the king's palace. The hill is cut up by good roads, and I made my way up It In a Jlnrlklsha. Ob the wTyto"" the Kin. My audience with his royal highness works. It Is widely used, having taken the place of the old stand pipe system. Rooster Flahts His Shadow. A big, White Rock rooster, owned by William Spangler of York, Pa., fought its shadow to a finish on the main street of Red Lion, and Is near death as the result. The bird strutted past a basement win dow In the John Shindler building and ac cepted a challenge from Its reflection against the dark-shaded glass. In a few plunges the big fowl smashed the window and, finding another rooster behind the other pane, smashed that one. too. In dis posing of the two shadows the bird was badly cut. Bit Off Ills Own Nose. Adolph Kratxcl, a butcher of Frankfort, Ky., when standing In front of a restaurant recently, waa seized with a sudden dlzzl- fiLuiieu lurwnra 10 m pavement. His false teeth fell out of his mouth, strik ing the gvound, and In falling his body struck In such a position that his nose was caught between the Jaws of the teeth, wholh shut like a steel trap, almost sever ing the organ of smell. Bystanders rushed to his assistance, but found that his head had driven the sharp teenth together, and that his nose was hanging by a thread. Phyaicians fear that they cannot save the member. Aged Woman Honta Robber. Mrs. Elizabeth Lehman of Mount Joy, Pa., is in her one hundred and third year, and her well controlled nerve scared a burglar from her house. She was awak ened by the presence of some one In her room and aaked: "Who la there?"- The answer waa that she should be quiet, or her head would be blown off. This threat did not scare her. for she calmly ordered the Intruder to leave, and when he did not do so she blew a whistle for help. This frightened the robber, and he ran from the house without securing any plun der. . x Largest Woman In w York. " The funeral of I.ucinia Miller, believed to be the largest woman in the state of New York, her weight being 620 pounds, was held at her home in Poughkeepsie March 18. On account of the casket's size It was nec essary for bIx porters to move It through a lurge front window. Mrs. Miller's twin sister died several years ago. She weighed 530 pounds. Jiving so largo, it was Impossible for Mrs. Miller to sleep in a b-d. The fat had grown around her heart to such an extent that when she attempted to lie down the chcu lutlon of blood was affected seriously. So for many years she had sat up, leaning over with her head in her hands and thus slept. Spent Fortune for Spite. That a man bin tit every cent he had and a little more than Sl.OOO, the savlngB of a lifetime, so that he might swear in the poor debtors' court that he had not $J0 In his possession and could thereby escape laying what he considered an exorbitant duiitist's bill, was the unprecedented charge maiie in court In Boston. Harris Friedman, a dentist, was suing Michael J. Deyle. Friedman swore that after he had threatened to sue him for a tlu duntiit bill Doyle gambled and drank and gave away money to questionable, char acter with the deliberate purpose of spend ing every cent ho had. lie got rid of it in a week, Friedman swore, before he could get Judgment. Doyle was found guilty of fraud and sentenced to three months' Im prisonment. Old MlnernPro'ituul. Annual proposals of marriage are made by Bohemia Sharpe, an old miner, to th. stenographer of Oregon's governor, who ever she may be. Sharpe has Just made his yearly visit to the state rapitol, and Incidently called at the executive offlca and made' a formal offer of his heartand hand to Governor Chamberlain'r stenographer. As has teen the case many times In the past, the offer was refused, but It Is expected that the bardy old mountaineer will return next spring to renew his overtures. Sharpe Is" now over 70 years of age, but Is still an active prospector. He has a claim and a cabin in the mountains of the Bohe mia district, twenty-five miles from Cottage Grove. It Is said that he is quite wealthy, but his riches do not help to dlapel the loneliness of his Isolated home. Just why his fancy has settled on wedding a stenog rapher of the state's chief executive is not known, I..- .. t . t v.. a. I . . J a m m , 4 - 3 1 " v i .u.. HI8 ROTAT, IHUHNUSS. DANUI CIIAU, AND MR. CAiV-PENTEK. was arranged through the British offi- clals, to whom I brought letters of Intro- ductlon, and I was accompanied thers by native policemen In uniforms and by Mr. Paske-Smlth, the assistant collector of revenues. My sbn, Jack, was la a Jinrlklttha behind me. Ws' crossed the swamps on a corduroy highway, our eight black human horses singing and grunFlng in chorus as they pushed and pulled us along up the bill. We went to the resl- dence of the native prime minister, a thatched hut as big as the largest hay- rick, and then drove on between the high rences or matting which surround the homes and estates of the native officials. After several miles of such travel we reached the grounds belonging to his royal ntgnness, the kabaka or king. These are guarded by a wall at. least fifteen feet high, made of a sort of cane which grows wild In Uganda and which is known as elephant grass. Each stalk 1. about a. thick as a fishing rod and almost a. long, The canes of the fence around the. king', 80 -ven together that on. feet protection against the ordinary na- tlve. The wall is two miles In length, ex- tending clear around his majesty's grounds. j kJ We skirted this tVall for some distance and then came to a great cane !. It which two bLk . ervants we TheV hal apparently been notified of our approach, for they threw open the doors ...... i k. as we came nn Entering w. found or.e,.. ... . """ Women BW YORK, March 2S. To carve N a sixteenth ccn'tuVic chair, a mantleplece. In an intricate and beautiful Norse design, a cab inet in Celtic style or, as one New York woman. Miss Emily Blade las done, to copy In her Vermont country home a staircase In the Cluny Museum In Paris Is the aim of many a woman who has Joined the number of those that have taken up the craft of wood carv ing. It can never become a fad, say its devotes, one reason being that women who have not a real love for it are wholly un- willing to expend the time and physical strength It takes to become modorately proficient. Trousseau chests are other favorite arti cles wnicn women carve. English oak with its rich coloring and handsome grain is frequently used, though mahogany is perhaps the best liked. Curiously enough, pine, while generally supposed to bo the asiest wood to work because it Is soft, re quires Bharper tools and more skill for that very reason. Wood boxes for the country home are ' very popular. Tables, chuirs, cabinets and even wainscoting, and dadoes, wootien friezes and doors, arc being-executed by women who probably never before did anything more difficult with their hands than to wield the mashle and racquet. "Not every woman can be a success at wood carving," Prof. Karl von Rydings vard asserts, "und for that reason I am very glad, for if they could rush Into the work as they did into pyrography then the country would be flooded with a lot of inferior work that holds no parlcular value either artistically or practically. Invariably tho first thins a woman asks me is 'How long will it take me to learn?' It : ' ' " -"- eKW.Wswni.WiWiwti 'n ... u ii in uirtrr 1 In two lessons.' For It ts quite possible to decide In that time whether a woman has the gift for It or not simply by the way she handles th. tools. "If she plt ks up the tool in a dainty way and goj at the work s though doing em broidery the chances are she Will never make a good craftswoumn. But it she at To this I Invariably reply. I will Ull you tacks the wood energetically and with an 1 i w ' . - I . v .".-v-- seemed a vast banana grove. The tall plants were to be seen on all sides, their big brown blossoms standing out on the ends of the long bunches of green fruit, and their green, wide leaves waving in the breeze. We rode through this grove for awhile and then came out Into the king's recreation grounds, a smooth, open grass plot of several acres. At the end of this I observed a pair of parallel bars upon which the boy king goes through his dally gymnastics. Here he plays foot ball every afternoon with the sons of his chiefs. Mr. Paske-Smith , says his royal highness la fond of the game and that he does not scruple to push and knock the other boys about as he roots around over the field. Klaar's Tator. Before seeing his majesty we stopped at the house of his tutor, who was to In- troduoe us. This man Is English He Is a graduate of one of the famous school. 'of Great Britain. nd was sent out her. upon the advice of the British government to train the boy king. HI. name is J..C. considerable ability. He lives In an Iron bungalow surrounded by a beautiful rose arden, within almost a stone's throw of th. roval council hnnu ' wa t,iM there and tbn nt am (n..th.. . . i king's hous. H. tii. Z. , i . , I , v , ! ' hl" hlhne" ll.L . : "na 'Pner. ne is being taught the history of Uganda and something about Uganda laws. He Is . . , . V??!!? fJ-"1" "toning mm me Bible and the Taking: Up the Art Innate sense of the proper position of the tool, then I have hopes of her. "Women who are working with me are by no means spending their time on Insig nificant trifles, but are putting their time Into really substantial pieces of construc tion for their own homes, which not only satisfy a passing whim, but have enduring qualities. "Take this cassone or bridal chest, which Is the work of Miss Josephine Taber, who is making it for a wedding present. It shows a virile masculine touch far from dainty handling we associate with women s work in wood. Here is a quaint box or chest done In Gothic style by a 4 'J r r- . 4 "r- woman. It is fully five feet long, and. as you will see, the carving Is very ieil ate, with its garlands C fljwers K.-lojneJ about the sides. "By far th. largest pl.ee of work done by a woman is that which Miss Emily SlaJe. a sister of William Gerry SUdc. did for her country home in Vermont. Hhe copied in tier own handiwork the winding stairs which are preserved at the Cluny miuttuio Bill I at t a a mm v.u.-v- , ;;. ,;,:, y. ..i"Lt.-k..t- KING'S OTJ5EST DRUMMER, WFTO IOfT TfTfl KAR3 BE CAUSE A PRINCESS SAW HIM IN BWTMMINO. foundation principles of the Christian re- llgion. ' ,- ,Be Klagf'a Baasiolow. After passing the royal council house ana tn thatched huts of the king's re- talners, we cams to the king's bungalow, the band playing a welcome as we went in. king's favorite drummer stood at one "lde and pounded on a great barrel-like drum which reached to his waist. Ho used nly his hands, and made a great din, 'which was added to by that of a score of othr musicians, who kept time with him on thelr various Instruments. The tutor told us that his majesty would receive us on the porch, and that we should afterward go into the house proper. There was a chair on the porch, 1 f T. ' .? skin 8 W walted the "ervant" bought ?t f0r our"elve"' and P,acpd .T tLt ulTJt "V,"', t1ndt"SK1attht.ht" WU' ,,n lh' ""iut.L stoo. . J tEt n t" T "L Enter the King-. As we waited the tutor went out, and .... . . r0yaI nlKnneM bFB,de hlm- brought him up to us. and as each of us waa pre- th "in offered his hand in a timid way, motioning us at the same time to thi our chilrs. He then gave directions that hi. .J 1 . J J . "t'wi no iiiubiuiuii biiuuiq come out and play for us. This man is a fam- ous blind negro, who formed part The work of Miss Blade Is In a measure superior to that at Cluny, for the reason that while visiting Paris last summer I discovered that In many places the orna ment waa applied, while Miss Blade had carved the entire design out of solid wood. "It Is looked upon not only by her friends, but also by other, as a noteworthy piece of work and people come from far and near to see It. It I. done In ma hogany and will last for centuries. "Curiously enough, between the sort of thing sought by New York women and by thoie in the smaller districts, there Is a vast difference. Here women won't tolerate 1 I ' . .?T-':;: V iS " V " -: I 5 ..'. .. f.i ia .. : . iH '' 7! V , '' of the court band during the times of Mutesa and Mwanza. He was gray-haired and old. and was bare almost to the . waist. He sat down cross-legged on the ground outside the leopard skin and played beautifully tioii a native guitar. During an Interval In the audience I asked the king's tutor how the man be came blind. He replied that It wns owing to a caprice of King Mwansa. One day that king thought he played badly, and as a punishment he thereupon ordered that his eyes be put out. This was Im mediately done. But to return to the king. During the playing he sat In a chair y my side and as the music went on I had a good chance to study him. He Is a slender, delicately formed boy of 10 or 12 years of age. He looks like a mulatto, but. his features are almost Caucasian. His skin Is light brown, his forehead high and his lips are thin. His head was covered with a high red fes cap, much like those used by the soldiers of Egypt. His body was clad In a long white gown, which was fastened tightly at the neck and fell to his feet. Over this he had on a gray sack coat and a vest, across the breast of which was a heavy gold chain. Message to All American Boys. The little king has an Intelligent look, but he is very modest and rather diffident. II. speaks broken English, and he talked a little with me in reply to my questions. At the close of our audience he brought out his visitor's book and asked me to write my name In it. I did so, and at the same time handed his highness a sheet of paper and asked him If he would not send by me a line In his language to the boys of the United States. I told him that we had no kings In our country, but every boy there considered himself an American prince and as big as any king upon earth. I said that there were some millions of boys of his size In our country and that I knew they would be Interested In learning about him, and especially so If he would send them a word of greeting. This seemed to tickle the king. He laughed and said he would gladly comply with my request. He then and there sat down and wrote out this message, of which I give a facsimile. It reads: "Noanyuse nyo okulamusa, abalenxl bona abomu United States. Nze. DAUDI CWA, Kabaka. Translated, this Is as follows: I am glad to salute all the boys who are In the United States. I am, DAUDI CHAU. The King. Writing this letter put his royal highness In an excellent humor, and I asked him to step outside In the sun and have his photograph taken. He gladly complied, and Jack photographed the little king and myself, standing together. Concert by thi Royal Bans!. Shortly after this we again shook hands and then said farewell. As we were leav ing the king asked us if we would not like to listen to his royal band, and upon our saying yes he sent forth 'directions that the court musicians were to give us a concert on our way out. Leaving the palace, we then went to the drumhouses and other thatched huts which form the quarters of the musicians. The drumhouse looks like a great Inverted basket. It Is abeut forty feet In diameter and perhaps twenty feet high at the cone. It Is made of thousands of reeds, so tied to one another that they go up to one cen ter, forming a straw tent, with round rolls of reeds running about It like ribs from bottom to top. The roof Is made of split canes, each a. fine as a darning needle. In this house a half dozen men sat on the of Wood freaky things, but they do want something uncommon but good of Its kind. "In tne smaller districts they don't mind if their next door neighbors have some thing precisely like what they themselves have. So we must have all sorts of models to suit all temperaments." )' It Is toward the models of ancient Nor way and Sweden that Mr. von Rydingsvard leans. His own work revels in eccentric sea monsters, Viking ships and Norse sallormen, for the artist Is from Chris tlanla and true to the land of his birth his taste follows the traditions of his country. One New York woman Is carving for her country bum. a mantelpiece the motif for which Is hi pies, blohsotns and foliage, the combination covering the entire breast of the mantel.' Mrs. H. Durant Cheever has executed a fine piece of Scandinavian cabinet work in a lare table, elaborately carved on IcKS and sides, the whole i!ccr liewn from timber und mortised together without metal nails or screws In a large arm chair Mrs. it J ' .'Jl: I754WZ GKVIO .wvrtiii 4ABt ground and played upon pipes. Another half dozen poundid on the greai drum with their hands, and at the buck others were dancing. After the concert Inside was ended, I aaked the muslclnna to bring their Instru ments Into the open, that I might make a photograph. They did so, and at the same time tho klnR's dancers caino out and cavorted around, hopping higher and higher and swinging their legs this way and that to the pounding of tho drum. The chief music for the dancing was made by the head drummer, an old negro, who was perfectly bald and whose ars had been cut off close, so that nothing but the holes could be seen. Remembering the re mark of tho tutor as to how tho blind musi cian lost his eyes because King Mwanza did not like his playing, I nskel How the head drummer cama to lose his ears. The reply was that they were cut off by orders of this boy's grandfather. King 'Mutesa. It was a hot day, and the drummer wns tak ing a bath In the king's lake, when one oj the princesses saw him and reported that ahe had seen a naked , man. Whether Mutesa was angry because the man bathed In his special pond, or whether he thought It disgraceful that thp princess should see him In the water, I do not know. At any rate, he was angry, and he ordered his exe cutioners to cut off the man's ears as a punishment. Such things are not common since the British took hold, and at present the young king, even If he wished, would not be per mitted to kill or maim his subjects, with out cause. I understand thnt the Kababa, as the king is called. Is fond of his bands. Ha al ways hss a large retinue with him when he goes outside his palace grounls. and the drummers march In front, yelling and pounding, while the peoplo come for miles to look at the sight. The drummers play very well. They use the hollow trunks of a resonant tree with skins over the ends, The drums are all shaped like barrels or kettles, snd are of different helgnts and sizes. Each has its own note or pitch; and the musicians sound the different rotes, using a number of drums, as our people do with the keys of a piano. Some of tha king, dntms are 150 years old. They are considered Invaluable. Only a her After 'All. I am told that this little king, notwith standing the care with which he Is watchedl and the respect with which his people re gard him, Is a good deal of a boy after all. He is fond of sports, and especially foot ball. He Is a good bicycle rider, and has a wheel which was made for him In England. One of bis greatest Joys Is a little white pony, which he considers the finest animal In the couptry. When he goes out upon It he puts on riding trousers and leggings, and cuts a gay figure as he dashes over the roads and about the ant hills. His royal highness Is seldom allowed to go far from home. He has been to Entebbe, and has seen the steamers which ply upon Iska Victoria. As It Is now, Daudl Chau nas but little to do with the government, and, as I have said, this will be the case until he Is eighteen years of age. He will then taka his place upon the throne as the real ruler of the Baganda, and In connection with his royal advisers will govern the country. Re win, however, always be sub ject to the English officials, who are tha real governors and who will rule the na tives through him. This Is the policy of the British as regards this colony. They are trying to control It through the na tives; and although they will fix the taxes, it will be the king who will snd out their edicts and he and his chiefs will make th collections. . FRANK O. CARPENTER. Carving Cheever Is Introducing the design repre sented In a piece of old Gobelin tapestry be longing to her mother. Mrs. 3. H. Brlggs of Scaradale Is doing a cassone or trouuseau box. These are In great favor among women, being not only beautiful, but also convenient receptacles for things of value. Mrs. Brlggs' cassone Is in Icelandic design, which Is closely re lated to the Celtic, the motif being Inter lacing forms of serpents, animals and Vik ing ships. Being done In low relief, the ef fect depends largely upon the lines rather than the modeling. Roman, Byzantine and Renaissance de- '.'i-ii signs are uf.ed extensively, although th. Norse ornament Is perhaps the most popu lar. Miss lletia Waid has very Ingcul oualy adapted Babylonian designs to m cassone which she is caivlng. Aside from the artistic attraction of this work, many women have taken It up dur lug the lasl year In order to earn money. The demand for fine hand-carved articles always rema'ns the same, and there Ls nsvsr any difficulty in dispoataa than, U i -.. -Jj