In Uganda f v.. &..- - a: THREE) DOLLAR WIFE AND HER BABY. I (Copj rRht. 1903. by Frank O. Crpntpr.) AM PA LA, L'randa. (Special Cor- Kl rcspondence to The Bee.) Do I you want a cheap wife? I V.... . A 1 1 i uu (.-an irei am ntjrv iu t'fiunda for $3 '"per." The actual price la S3.33, and there are thounands now on the market tot Just that much, and no more. The rate haa been fixed by the lukiko, or the natlv royal council, which govern this country under the king, and the man who blda higher will be fined.; At the aame time the parent who demand more are liable to a fine equal to the price of their daughter. So you ace everyone hiia a fair how. I have met crowda of these $3 m alli ens since I came into Uganda, and I am told there are at least 100,000 now ready for marriage. According to the new laws, a girl should be at least 17 before ahe Is wedded, as there are 2,000,000 souls in Uganda a fresh crop comes on every year. Umot the Girls Look. But before I go further let me tell you how these Uganda girls look. The country warms with them and I have taken snap shots of a doaen 'while walking over the hills. They represent girls of all axes from little tots of 8, as naked aa the day they were born, save for a cord about the waist as big aa my thumb, to full grown, well developed maidens of 19, clad" In bark gar ment of a brick-dust hue. All have beau tiful forms. The average young woman la tralghter than the Venus de Medici, and he carries herself like a queen. She la an African queen, however, and that allied to the best negro type. Take for Instance one , whom I Blied up today. I never go travel I lng without a tapcllne lq my pocket, and I can give you her measurements. She was , Just five feet one inch in height, thirty-two Inches across the chest under the arms and thirty-five Including the bark oloth which covered her bust, I did not take the line around her waist, but It was longer by far than that of our average woman of the same age, coming perhaps from the ex traordinary amount of bananas upon which these people feed. This girl was of a rich mahogany brown and her .kin .hone aa though it were oiled. She wa clad in bark cloth from armpit to ankle and her gar- ment consisted of a bark blanket, wrapped tightly about her body under the arm and tied by a cord at the waist. This cord wa of bark, and the extra folds of the blanket were gathered Into it o that they fell over In front. The girl' neck and shoulder were as smooth as though cut out by a culptor, and she had beautiful arms. She had thirty-two teeth, and they were sound, firm and as white aa ivory. I cannot de- crlbe her hair, for her scalp was shaved close to the skin and she had evidently Just left the barber. The shaving made- her little brown ears especially prominent, Other maiden whom I have seen have hair decidedly woolly, and I doubt not thi glrl' is the same when grown out. Through my guide, Eplfras, or sassafras, a I call him, I discovered her age. She 1 Just 17, and, I understand, she la about to be married. Lev 1m Varaada. The girl told us that her prospective husband wa Just to. She elmpeied a ( " 'The pullet,' the magistrate then de little in talking of him and was evidently creed, 'does not belong to Mrs. Jones, nor proud of the fact of her approaching wed- doeo it belong to Mrs. gmlth. The pullet ding. Sassafras says It Is really a love is mine. Junitor, take it round to .the match and that such matches are common house and give it to my cook.' "Rochester in Uganda. These people are the most Herald. ( . civilized of the natives of the central parts of this continent. They are polite The Heat Care, and full of good naure. In many respects Miss Geraldlne Farrar honored with her they remind me of the Japanese. presence a luncheon of debutantes In New Girls and boy go around hand iu hand, York. She told the debutantes that there and there seem to be considerable affec- wa happlnes In work. Work, she said, ,tion between the young men and young would preserve them from ' degeneration women. It used to be that a man could into such a type as Mrs. Rose of Melrose. have as many wives as he pleased. King Mutesa had his hundreds, and until lately every chief had his harem. Afu-r the country was converted to Christianity slavery was practically abolished, and now the rule of one wife prevails, except among the Mohammedan believers, who are each allowed to have four. There Is no seclusion of women In this part of Africa, sod the boys and girls play together. If, two fall In love the girl takes the young man and Introduces htm to n.r aunt, awa in uu. .uu. . presented to her father and mother. They examine him carefully, and If they like him consent to the marriage. The price Is then paid and the man gets his girl. The marriages take place In church, and after that the two go to themselves. All marriage, are registered, and any dispute between the two this regis- tralloo entitle thrn to havs It settled fcy the oourt. Divorces are not infre quent and the oommon complaint of a woman In uch affair I that he 1 mak ing goo-goo eyas at some other woman. There la considerable complaint through out the country at the fixed rate for wives.. brents say that It Is not lust that a man should pay as much for an ugly girl aa fer a beautiful on and that the question of age. Intelligence and family ought to be worth considerable. The groom say the same. Thl wa different In th past, and evea sow I believe a ehlef pays mere is an Unlimited Supply of Brides at Three Dollars Each for his wife than a common man and that according to his rank. If he is of the low est order the sum is $o, if of the second grade about 110, and of the hlghe&t of all he Is expected to give a little over $18 and a live cow. -S- The Poor Varaadsv Molher-la-Lsw. Among the queer customs are those re garding mothers-in-law. The wife's mother eem to be even more unpopular here than at home, and she has no rights that her son-in-law Is bound to reBpect. She cannot speak to her daughter's husband unless he first speaks to her, and if she should meet him accidentally she must turn aside and cover her head. In case she has not enough clothes on at that time for the purpose she may alt down by the side of the road and cover her eyes and face with her hands until he passes. The wife's mother dare not enter her daughter'! house without a special loivltaUon, and ahe la not supposed Choice Gleanings from the Story Teller's Gave Himself Away. .HERE 1 a proprietor of a shop T in New Haven, a man of most excitable temperament, who is forever scolding hi clerks for their Indifference In the matter of possible sale. One day, hearing a clerk say to a, cus tomer, "No, we have not had any for a long time," the proprietor, unable to coun tenance such an admission, began to work himself into the usual ' rage. Fixing a glassy eye on hi clerk, he said to the customer: "We have plenty In reserve,, ma'am, plenty downstairs." Whereupon the customer looked daaed; and then, to the amazement' of the pro prietor, burst Into hysterical laughter and quit the (hop. "What did she ay to you?" demanded the Dronrletor nf thn dark. .. w, baven.t had ra,n .. jpe,.', weekly. . 1 of. Bjalae lolomon. dp. James R. ,Day of Syracuse univer- ,lly wa. diBCU,ing nl, recant assertion tnat ome ministers preach In a sensational " manner, usurping the place of the sensa- tional press. "These men," he ald, "Interpret the scripture to their own advantage. They re precisely like a magistrate they used to laugh about in WhltneyvUlo. One of his decisions gained him the title of the -Maine Solomon.' "Two women cam before this magi- trate with a fine fat pullet, each declar- ing that it belonged to herself, 'The magistrate, from his high seat, frowned heavily at the first woman. i -Doe this pullet belong to Mrs. Jones? he asked her. " 'No, Indeed, it don't, lr,' he replied. "Then ha turned to the other woman. " 'Doe this pullet belong to Mrs. Smith?' " It certainly does not,' the second woman replied. "Mrs. Rose's type is too familiar," she said. "To show you the sort she is: "Mr. Rose came home from, business. Mrs. Rose lay on a couch. He sat down by her side and said: " 'What did the doctor say, dear?' " 'He asked me to put out my tongue,' murmured Mrs. Rose. ' " 'Ysr And he looked at it and aald, "Over- worked!" ..jt. Rose heaved a long sigh of relief. - .TheDi wy h 8a,d flrm,yi ou. hav t0 ve u ft Mt j have fuw ln dncto, . .Wl,hhlnn W hem Coakllaa; Posed. When the first suspension brtdgo was thrown AVi-r lnsiira thr m-a a arAt ami tumultuous opening ceremony, such a the Anwlcan, of th. at . . ,, V, honor to the occasion, and among thein waa.Roscoe Conkling. Crinkling was one of the raost brilliant public men whom Aiseritva haa produced; a man of command ing, even beautiful, presence, and of, per- P"i unparalleled vanity. He had been tb an opponent) a human peacock, After the teremonie attending the opening ' th brldk ad been concluded, Conkllug, with manythrs, was at the railway sta- tlon waltlngVo depart; but, though others were there. Of did not mingle with them. V U4 -Ai' to stay long when she comes. If she wants to bob hrr daughter she sneaks up to within fifty feet of the house and waits until the girl happens to come outside. The two then have their talk together, and if the mother-in-law' wants to greet her son-in-law still Innlde the hut she may yell out in the native lunguage, "How are you?" The man, if he Is In a good humor, may respond with "All light, mamma," but It would be in fra dig for him to look out. Wlom. Sassafras tells me that many of the women I see here who have let their hair grow are widows, and that on this account thiy have hair. The 'average married woman shaves frequently, and the heads of the marriageable girls are usually as clean as a billiard ball. A widow to show her grief Is not supposed to cut her hair until two months after the death of her husband, and If she Is overwhelmed with despair she may let her hair grow for five or six months. I have already written of how the widows of kings are supposed to spend the rest of their lives watching in the tombs of their husbands, and how scores of women are now doing that for some of the passod-away kings of Uganda. As to the children, I see little black ba bies everywhere, and there are numerous boys dressed in dark cloth and little girls almost naked. I am told, however, that this is a land of small families. ' The aver age man and his wife do not have as many but strutted and plumed himself for their benefit, posing that they might get the full effect of all his majesty. One of the station porter "was to im pressed that, stepping up to another who was hurrying by trundling a load of lug gage, he Jerked his thumb in Conkllng's direction and said: , "Who's that feller? Is he the man as built the bridge?" The other studied the great man a mo ment. "Thunder! No, said he. "He" the man as madu the falls." Putnam's ty.gailne. Easily niatlneoUfced. , The Brady used to drive several miles to mass each Sunday In "the little thrap" with "th" ould gray mare." Mickey, "t)ie boy," a being of many summers, whom cus tom and a conservative tradition had, in aplte of his uncertain years, always treated as the possessor of perpetual adolescence, drove. Next him sat Mrs. Brady, decorous In black, whle scattered about the straw In the body of the vehicle wa a large as sortment1 of "the childer" Bradya of all Progressive Kavsl Objections to Wireless. HERE has Just been Installed on 0 g 4 I the new British Adnuraity I buildings ln London, a set of A. I wiPaiauB toioisriinhv annarutUB and the innovation is causing more than a little misgiving among nuval officers afloat. So far aa II will facilitate the Interchange of Information and .the sending of impor tant news, the erection of the station Is welcomed, but there Is a strong fear that advantage will be taken of it to interfere with the Independent action of fleet com manders ln the event of war. Even in the days of sailing ships this Interference was a .puree Of much confusion and lll-feelinui and then, of course, orders from London had to be sent by the slow process of a dispatch vessel. The temptation will be much ereater with a wireloss apparatus close at hand. The danger, too, is espe cially great today, when practically the whole administration of the navy has been put Into the hands of one man, to whom the temptation offered by the Marconi ap puratus to take over the direction of war like operations from an armchair in Whitehall would probably be too strong to be resisted. "The officer who is placed In command of a war fleet for war purposes," Whitehall would probably be too strong to "should be left to execute his commission to 'sink, burn or destroy,' according to his own lights. He must necessarily be belter able to appreciate ail the conditions than a man ln London, who, however great his ability, sinks, from his very position, to the status of an armchair critic. Per sonally it the nation saw fit to entrust me with the command .of its fleet ln war, I should keep my receiver, open to all in formation and closed to all advice and orders. Wireless telegraphy makes the use of Nelson's famous 'blnd eye' of Copenhagen a very simple matter." "The paramount necessity in the next naval war will be rapidity of thought and of execution," says another officer. "It is the same now a It wa a hundred years atroA No British admiral can do wrong if he finds the enemy and fight him, and the only excuse for Interference from London would be the communication of Information whleh would help him to that end." Isuprovlae; Electrical Waves. .A lecture by Mr. Valdemar 'Poulaen on 'Telephoning Without Wlrta" , was deliv ered at the Ixmdun Institution the other afternoon., Mr. Poulsen remarked, u the course of his lecture, which, owing to hi unTamlliaxlty with Kngllsa. wa delivered THE OMAITA SUNDAY BEE: MAY ... At s " V ' -.-v -a COUNTRY HUT IN UGANDA. children as among the rich of Europe and the United States. The woman who bears several children Is the exception rather than the rule, and many of the families have' none. Indeed, the birth of a second on is always an occasion for prida and rejoicing. The fact Is announced with drums, and the drumming may be kept up for a month outside the hut. This is a lgn that there is Joy within and that the couple's friends should come in and drink some banana beer to the health of the new arrival. The mother who haa a second son is entitled to a new dress for having brought this honor to the family. This dress Is of . terra cotta bark cloth, and its ordinary cost is about St cents. I like the looks of these babies. They are bright little brown things, good-natured and full of smiles. The mothers fasten them to their bare backs inside their bark cloth gowns while working in the fields and the little ones bob up and down as mamma wields the hoe. Sometimes they are tied Inside goat skins and thus car ried. The men often go along with their babies astride their hips and I occasionally see one with a pickaninny riding on his shoulders. They seem fond of their chil dren and proud of them. Uganda House. These Uganda people live happily. They are always laughing and smiling and the men and women go along hand in hand. They have comfortable homes from an ages, sexes and tsea, bare-legged and otherwise each exuberant and articulate. It remains to this day a disputed point among the Bradys as to What memory of earlier and more frisky days Induced "tli' ould gray mare" to behave aa she did on this particular Sunday. Rounding a corner she swerved into the ditch, and before Micky, the boy, could cope with the situation a pile 6f Bradys, vertical and horizontal, had been dumped into the ditch, with the little trap turned over and resting on top of the struggling heap. Then, high above the babel of cries came Mr. Brady's voice: "Pull me out, Micky, for the love o' hlvln! The black legs is mlnel" Poor George, Miss Iva de Chlpenham, a lecturer of New York, holds that beautiful thoughts make beautiful face and figures and that ugly thoughts deform, even aa unwhole some work does, says an exchange. "By taking thought," said Miss de Chlp enham, "you cannot, perhaps, add a cubit Events in the Field by Mr. Nevll Maskelyne, that some thirteen months ago be ahd demonstrated In London his method of providing electric waves of an improved character for the purpose of wlreleas telegraphy, and at the conclusion of his address had pointed to the Im portance of continuous undamped wave, such a. he obtained In relation to the possibility of wireless telephony. What were then possibilities were now actualities, pnd wireless telephony had now a real and practical existence. He proceeded to com pare the continuous train of waves pro duced by his method with the wave, pro duced by spark methods and pointed out some of the disadvantages that followed from the momentary character of the latter, and asserted that ln spite of the advances that had been made In spark telegraphy, wireless telegraphy became really efficient only when undamped waves became avail able. After briefly explaining how he "pro duced such waves by the employment of a modified and developed form of Duddull's musical arc, be said that they enabled a ooiibtant frequency or "bther note" to be maintained, and as there was a wide rarg't of pitches available for these notes, great number of telegram, each with It own "note," could be sent simultaneously In the same area without interfering with each other. Then, again, the undamped waves suffered less weakening In travernlng a dis tance, and their absolute intensity need be only comparatively small, a potential of 2,000 or g.OOo volts In th antennae being sufficient. One of their most Important ap plications was to the problem of wireless telephony, which, he said, could only be solved by the aid of continous undamped oscillations of high frequency. The appa ratus which he had employed for this pur pose was characterized by simplicity, but by Its aid he had buen able to transmit music over a distance of 4G0 kilometres, and had talked over 170 kilometres, the enuncia tion being clear and distinct and the vo'.a of the speakar 'easily recognized, ln con clusion he claimed that his undamped waves had had two result, they had raJlrally Im proved radio-telegraphy, and they had made wireless telephony a reality, and he thought their action might he described In thit clas sic, al phraae, "suaviler iu modo, former in re." Mr, Maskelyne then gave a brier de scription of the Poulben 'apparatus and a deiuonktration of the high frequency or "Tula" effects which could be readily realised by lis aid. H was unable to ar rsag for the erection of a uiephonio send- 10, 1903. V " v ; . : V ' O- A H ' i A 1 . , African standpoint. They live in village scattered os-r the country, but each vlliage covers a great territory and every hut has 11 garden about It, in which grow bananas, sweet' potatoes and other vegetables. As a rule the banana trees shade the huts, and one often walks quite a distance through a banana plantation before he gets to the house. The houses are of different sice. Some, such as those of the chiefs, are of great extent and are roost elaborately made. Out in the country they are more like huts and they look much like little haystacks, about twelve feet in diameter and twelve feet in height, except that each ha a sort of brtm, which extend out and shade the door. The hut are made of reed with thatched roof, the latter being upheld by pole. Every hut ha several room, which are divided by wall of matting and bark cloth. Even the - poorest house has two apartments, one at the front and the other In the rear. In the rear apartment are bunks around the wall, upon whloh tha people sleep. Such huts have but little fur niture; two or three stools, a half dozen earthenware pot and some wicker or grass basins constitute an outfit for beginning married life, and if in addition a woman can have a hoe or so and a scythe she is full ready to assume her part of the con tract. A to food, the chief staple lu the banana. There are many varieties of these In Uganda, and they are more Important to to your stature, but you can eradicate round shoulders and sponge wrinkles away. "Otlr thoughts mold our faces, form our expression. Thus they give us away. They give us away aa much as the spoken thought of a Chicago girl once gave her away. "This girl sat in a dimly lit parlor on a winter evening with a young man. A fire of oak logs blazed in the grate, and, looking into the pink and gold heart of the flame, the girl, who wa very pretty, murmured: " 'How divine, my dearest Hilary' " Hilary? he aald. 'You mean George, don't you, ' pet?" 'The girl flushed and bit her lip. " 'Oh, dear,' she said, 'how silly of me. I thought this was Saturday night. ' New York Times. Why BUI Was Saved. George Barnes, a noted evangelist, tell an amusing story of the attempted conver sion of a hard fisted old mountaineer in Kentucky, who had resisted all mission, ary effort directed toward him. "Bill" of Electricity lng station outslds the building, but the member of the audience had th oppor tunity of listening to a phonograph, the sounds of which were transmitted by wire less telephony. Stray Correot Regulations. Th question of stray currents from tram ways and electric railways is in France, as ln most other countries on the continent, at the present time engaging' much atten tion. It may be of advantage to Indicate the official regulations on this- suhjoct which have recently been promulgated by the French minister of public works: 1. The conductance of the track must be maintained ln the most efficient manner possible, notubly la respect " to the rail Joints, the resistance of which roust In no case exceed that of ten metres of normal rail. The concessionaire or owner is bound to te;t the conductance periodically and to enter the results obtained ln a register, which shall at all times on demand be pre sented for Inspection to the official charges with the supervision of the under taking. 2. The drop of pressure in the track. mtaured over a length of one kilometer, selected arbitrarily on any port of tiio line of rail, must not. on an average, exceed one volt during the effective Inlerva'l be tween the normal passage of the cars or Vehicles. 3. Tile feeders connected with the track must be effectively insulated. 4. At those points ln the track where swltclms aro In use, or where the track la severed, special arrangements must be made to Insure the conductivity. 5. Where the track pusses over a metallic structure It muxt, as far as possible, bo electrically Insulated from the metal work during such crossing. 6. In those cases where no heavy masse of metal work exist ln proximity to the track a loss of tension in excess of that permitted in paragraph two may be sanc tioned, on the condition that no inconven ience Is thereby caused, more particularly a respects telegraphic or telephonic com munications Or railway signaling. It should be added that these protective niear,ure8 fit a m mm ary character arc slated tj be put f r.vurU by way of an Indica tion of what is necessary, and that th ministerial decree enforces upon the au thorities who may convey electric currents through Iron rails the strict obligation to protect from the injurious action of cur rents derived from, surb sources all rail way lines, telegraphic and telephone wires, aa also water and gas msiasv r- j , - ' M '! v - X . . '. r , 1 . ' ' ' I . M V. i H i 'a 5 . : ' f 4 ; f HOW TUB MJBN CARRY T that country than wheat and corn are to our. The banana, which serves as the chief food. Is much longer than any that comes into our market. It 1 a sort of plalntaln. It is eaten green, the fruit being first peeled and then cooked with a little water In an earthenware pot- A it steam away the flesh softens and soon become a solid mass of mush. When done it Is taken off the fire and turned out upon some fresh banana leaves. These serve as a tablecloth. The family now gather around and gets ready for the meal. Each first washes hi hands and gives them a shake to get off the superfluous water. The father then takes a knife and divide the pile of banana pulp into a many divi sions as there are member at the, board. In the meantime ft howl of oup br fish gravy haa been placed inside the ring. This is used in common. Each person takes up a handful of banana mush and knead it into a ball Just big enough for one bite. Collection wa extremely stubborn, and, In addition, possessed varlou other unlovely qualltle that caused hi neighbor much concern. A final attempt wa made by a leading citi zen to restore "Bill" to th faith of his childhood. " 'Bill, " said the well meaning roan, "do you mean to tell me that you ain't teched by the story of the Savior that died to save your lns?" Whereupon "Bill" demanded aggressively: "Do you try to tell me that Jesus ChrUt died to save men when he never seed me and he never knowed me" " "Bill,' " responded the neighbor ln dis gust, "It wuz a durned sight easier fur the Lord to die fur you because he never seed you than if he knowed you a well aa we all do." Rochester Herald. Well Blanketed. One day ln th spring 74, Cap Smith's freight outfit pulled into Helena, Mont After unloading the freight, the "mule-skinners," to a man, repaired to the Combination Gambling house and proceeded to load themselves. Late in the afternoon, Zeb White, Smith' oldet eklnner, having exchanged all of his hard coin for liquid refreshment, slgzagged Into the corral, crawled under a wagon, and went to sleep.. After supper, Smith, making his nightly rounds, happened on the sleeping Zeb, "Kinder chilly, ain't it?" he asked, after, earnestly prodding Zeb with a convenient stick. "I reckon 'tis," Zeb drowsily mumbled. "Ain't fer frald ye'll freeze?" " 'Tls cold, ain't It? Say, Cap, Jest throw on another wagon, will yer?" Everybody's Magazine. Joke Was on tb Judge. , Judge Williams of the Juvenile court on day last week was "stung" by a Joke with which he Intended to regale himself and some women probation officers. A small boy was before the court for com ; mltment to a home. His mother was there, too. Her appearance Indicated that If she didn't drink more than was good for her own good her face grosaly misrepresented conditions. Assuming an expression of severity, he leaned over the bar and demanded: "Where Is that bottle, Mary?" It was almost time for every one that was In the Joke to laugh. .The woman craned hur neck to bring her mouth within close range of Judge Wil liams' ear and ln a hoarse whisper replied: "I forgot It, ycr honor, but I'll bring ye one tomorrow." St. Louis Post-Dispatch. A TitTt led" Bird. Jacob Hope, the head of Philadelphia's famous phonograph school for parrots, said the otner dav: "Trere are worse things than a swearing parrot, and one wa brought over on a German boat last month. Ills owner, a sailor, swore that this traveled bird knew no profanity, and a woman bought him. "But she had to bring him to me. The parrot, though he didn't swear, had evi dently spent most of his time on shipboard In the women's saloon, for what he would do was this: "For hours at time he would choke and gasp and hiccough as If he'd never stop, and then he'd sing out feebly: 'Stewart shucket." Washington Star. To Tern or the Wind. A mot of Dr. Weir Mitchell, the famous poet and nevellst, is going th rounds of the Franklin Inn, a literary club of Philadel phia. On a particularly bhistery Murch momliiT. the story goes, Ir. Mitchell walked round City Hall square with a young editor. As the two men held onto their huts and leaned against the blunt, Dr. Mitchell said; 'I think a shorn lamb should be kept tethered here, don't you? 'Providence, then, might toe Induced to temper the wind.' " Philadelphia Reoord. HE CHILDREN IN UGANDA. He then dips the ball into the soup, and with a wonderful sleight of hand conveys It to his mouth without dropping a bit of the grease. By the time the banana mush Is all eaten th soup bowl la empty. These people also have Indian corn,, peas, beans and sweet potatoes. They raise chickens, sheep and goats, and occasionally have meat. They do not seem fond of eggs, and the women are not allowed to eat them after they are married. They are not per mitted to eat chicken or mutton, such viands being reserved for the men of the family. They may. however, eat beef or veaL The B agenda have fish from Lake Vic toria and from their numerous streams. They eat locusts and are especially fond of white ants. The ant are caught by smok ing their hill about nightfall and trapping them a they come out. They are eaten both raw and cooked. I see them for sale ln the markets. On can buy a handful or so for i cents, and a great lot for a rupee. The ants are wrapped up in banana leave when taken away. These people are now making sugar from cane. They are trowing tomatoes and twenty different kind of pea and beans. They use many roots as food, and also a green vegetable much Ilk spinach. I see little fields of tooacoo here and there. The soil Is as red as that of Cuba and the plaorta grow without much cultivation. Tha tobacco Is used for smoking; and Is con sumed by both men and women. They gather coffee from th wild tree and chew the pulp, but so far have not learned to use It as a drink. A New Market tn Africa. Since the British have taken possession of Uganda they have introduced many kinds of food which are becoming popular, and they are generally creating a market here for European goods, Soma of the natives are now using tea, and Jams and biscuits are gradually coming Into demand. This is, of course, among th wealthier people, and especially among the chiefs, who buy these things to serve at their teas or dinner parties. Another article which is becoming common Is th umbrella. Both women, and men us It, and I often eo a crowd of a dozen or so well-to-do native going along with umbrella in their hands. Within the last few years th mission aries have taught many of th Bagando to write and a demand for writing paper haa been created. The people want cotton good and, as I have said before, they especially like our American sheeting. Lit tie stores are now springing up in th mors thickly populated centers, and there are a acora or so of such establishment her and at Entebbe. A NeTv-rcfvlllktio. Indeed, th British are gradually making a new nation of the Baganda. Only a few years ago these people were warring with their neighbors and enslaving th tribes about. Muteaa had a large army and hi predecessors bad many wars. Jus tice was then practically unknown and human life was of no account. Th people had no Incentive to work. They lived upon the bananas which they grew Id their gar dens, they made their clothe from th bark of the fig tree and their houses cam from the cane of th swamps nearby. To a large extent such conditions pre vail today, but th people want bigger houses and better houses. They ar be ginning to use kerosene, and the hots of the chiefs are lighted by lampa Soma now have little patche of carpet and not a few are buying furniture. Our shoe and stocking ar beginning to be worn, and the desire for all foreign things la becom ing an Incentive to work. So far this movement Is slow, and the low wag, amounting to only 4 or I cent a day at the best, are not very stimulating. As time goes on this will change and there will some day b a good working population, tn thl rich and fertile country. , , Pew Concessions Give. Bo tar It has been the governmsafa policy to grant but few concession for th exploitation of Uganda. Th .land are held by the natives and also by the English government. Borne of tha ehlaf own large tracts. The natlv prims min ister. ior insianoe. naa about 100 squar miles of land; he own 1.000 head of cattle and his Income Is over f5,0"0 a year. Other chiefs have smaller tracts, and th king himself ha a considerable property. All forests over two mile squar ar supposed to belong to the English crown. Th tim ber Is especially valuable and th rubber io.lbllit;s ar great. At present the Brit ish government la planting rubber tree along th principal road. Ther ar euoh aU the way from Kampala to Entebb. a dlntanc of twenty-three miles. Th tree are carefully eot out and are guarded by fencee of wicker or cane. Those who work the roads cultivate these tree and they re now growing luxuriantly. - They will probably yield a considerable revenue to the government within a few ear t coma, rRAJNKaCARMEXJBR.