I ft TIFE OMAIIA SUNDAY BEE: MAY 17, 1908. Congregation Israel and the Beautiful New Temple It Will Occupy NE evening In August, !, ft llt- 1 tie group of eleven of the Jewisn I I I re',lf'"t 'f Ornaha, Impelled by i i a . i i i their forefathers which lias turn a murk of tho Jewish people elncn time Immemorial, met In a private room In tho thriving little city ami formed tho coi-gregatinn Israel. Next Friday the congregation w hich was started 80 unnus piclousiy tlilrty-nlne years bkd will dedh ate a place of worship, the nw Temple Israel, which for architectural beauty Is nuri'MH'd by no other church building In tho city. Tho first lit tin band f eleven was com posed of men who had come west to build their fortunes and tiono of them was pos sessed of largo wealth or means very much beyond what was absolutely necessary to provide his dally bread. Yet without tha advantages of much mi.ity they established tho congregation on a firm foundation and struggling through tho first years of ad versity It has now grown to a membership of 450 and trnno of the wealthiest and most Influential business men of the city are In cluded on Its rolls, Besides being the old est Jewish congregation In Omaha, It also bag the distinction of being the largest. The r.ew temple Is not only a tiling of beauty, It is an Inspiration, eiqieclally to those who have regard for its saeredness, but also to the largo mass of people to whom Its architectural features will appeal a art. An architect after becoming ac quainted with the structure, said on viewing It fr"om tho outside: "To come before the new Temple Israel Is to como before a presence. It Is not oue of multitude, It Is the one only. It is mass ive and yet of spirit. Its dome of the air, airy, jet rooted to the world, a sure refuge. The great spread of nt ps an invitation to coine Into its gates, not heedlessly, but us Dhe ascending to a 'high place.' " neantlful .rn Temple. One who falls to feel tho spirituality of the edifice lacks some element of the soul. The modern French classic style of archi tecture In which It Is built gives it grace and beauty and at tho same time a massive and Impressive appearance. The artistic qualities arc Increased by the buff britk terracotta and Bedford limestone of which Its walls aro inado. The broad steps leading to tha main entranco are Indeed an Invitation to enter, and once Inside the Impression of the exte rior Is Intensified. The vestibule Into which one enters from the front la beautiful with Its tiled floor and arched celling. Tho dec orations of the Interior are quiet and ef fective The walls are light tinted, the win dows of stained glass of the highest class. Two of these will attract Immediate at tention becauso of the artistic picture that ha been stained In the glass. Ono of them depicts Moses descending from Mount Sinai bearing the two tablets of stone and the other represents King David In his youth, with his harp. The main arc across the front Is a handsome piece of work in se lected oak. The pipe organ, which was installed at an expense of H.000, Is a work of beauty and its sound qualities are of the best. It fills a space In the front of the auditorium di rectly over the rostrum. The seating is arranged on an Inclined, balled floor in such a way that every seat commands a clear view of the rostrum. The acoustics of the auditorium are unusu ally good for a high domed room and the steam heating and ventilating system of the best. On the main floor Is seating capacity for 433 people and in the gallery for 100 more, With the Baziba Inhabitants on the Western Shores of Victoria Nyanza (Copyright, l&rifi, by Frank G. Carpenter.) UKOBA, German East Africa. (Special Correspondence of The Hee.) I have Just made a big bargain In clothes. I purchased the wardrobe of a girl of Is and have it packed away In 1-54 my trunk. The sale waa made in the mddst of a crowd and the price for the whole waa equal to Just 18 cents of our money. Tho coinage was In oowry shells. about as big as my thumb nail, and I had to pay 6W of these for the costume. The dresa had all the swish of a silk petticoat. and it rustled aa the young woman walked along with me to the town of Bukobs, where my silver money waa changed into shells. Among the Daslbaa. im,i ,, 1 t, . . Thl maiden was a Ba&ba, and a very good looking type of the people who In nubit this part of Gorman East Africa. I took her out of i. , r,.,v,i i v,i..i. '. stood, and. before sh .lelivrr-rt ti, had a photograph made. She stood Just about four feet In height and waa as straight as an arrow. Her dress began at the waist and reached to her ankles Above it she had on only two strings aroung her neck. The dress wus made of the long fibers of tho raphla palm and it looked for ull the world like so much timothy hay tied on by a string. There were so many strands of the fiber that they hid all of tier person below the waist and they awayed this way and that as she walked. I was in company with Archdeacon Walker, the famous Uganda missionary, and it wus through him, as an Interpreter. that she made the trade. When I pointed to her dress and held up the silver coin her eyes brightened and when the arch- deacon told bur that I was willing to pay cash eho gladly assented. She borrowed a piece of red calico about the s:& of a dinner napkin which one of her sisters was wearing aa a shawl, und. loosing this fiber skirt a little at tno waist, ishe slipped In the napkin und wrapped it around her person. It was long emc.mh to fall to tho mlddlo of lur thighs and she fastened it over the left hip With thorn. She then took eff her skirt of long fringe and jiamiru 11 to me. ami we went on together to the Milage to change our money to 7 ,, , . y 1 ' "' &ri'"1";it'(,n talked i with the girl, lie told me she was trembling with excitement and delight at tier oh r is 11 111 anij v cm urea sue had never made as much as 4 cents a duy In her life and probably not over 3. Here she was selling her old skirt for 600 shells, equal in six or tight days of hard work. When I gave her tho shells she trotted off laugh ing and then thanked us again and again for my great generosity. In the whole transaction she displayed not the slightest Immodesty, and at tho close, although almost nude., was not ashamed. ClothlnsT of Crass. These Bazibas are all clad in grass cloth ing. The men have grass or fiber cloaks which they wear around their shoulders. Borne have shirts ot grass fastened to a ring tt.t the top through which the neck goes, and tho unmarried girls have little fringes of grass or raphla fiber, not over eight inches long, which they wear around their waists. Uulside this the girl may have a bracelet or two ai.d some anklets or wire, but otherwise she Is bare. Thls matte, of nudity, however. Is en- tlniy governed by custom. On tho other sldo of Luke Victoria, among the Ka.vl- rondo, I ww thoUfnds who go naked from one yeur's end to the other and who In their manners are Just as decent and quite as nioUefct as our people at home, lM Veiauda, wUcuce I came heie, the y icr NEW not Including the space occupied by the choir. The basement floor contains a Sunday school room 42xSC feet In slzo. Ly rolling partitions it can bo divided Into a number of smaller class rooms. The basement also contains a kitchen, a women's parlor, toilet and tho boiler and store rooms. All the incidental appointments of tho structure are perfect and of the most modern type. The cost of the templo is IfiC.OOo, including tho site, and tho architectural plans were made by John Latenser. I" pa ud Downs of CongrreirHtlon. Tho early history of the congregation of Israel was full of the ups and downs that go with'' the pioneer. As has already been indicated the first members possessed more religious seal and devotion than wealth and even though their meetings were limited to the most Important holidays of the Jewish year, the day of Atonement and New Years, It was a continuous strug gle to keep the organization together. So far as the records disclose there is but one member of that band now living In Omaha. Most of them have passed away and the others have left Omaha. Lewis Brash is one of the faithful and he recalls with the en thusiasm of youth the early struggles he and his companions went through. There were just eleven In the original organization. They were Isaao M. Frank, B. Gladstone, E. Simon, Max Meyer, S. Iifhman, M. llellman. A. Calm, David Davidson, Morris LTgutter, Lewis Brash and M. Goldsmith. Mr. Frank was tho pres ident of the congregation. During the first daya when the congregation met In rooms between Tenth and Eleventh streets on the north aide of Farnam. women are clad from their chests to their feet in robes of bark cloth; and It is liu- polite for a man to lift up his gown above the ndddle of the cult. Nevertheless, the Baganda are said to be much less virtuous than the naked Kavlrondo, and I venture thev will not rank hliiher than thaaa B-rass- dud Bazlbas, 3, Death for Infidelity, Indeed of all the Inhabitants around Lake victoria these people ere about the most rl(fld w rt.Bard to luch matters, and of- tenaeB UBalnst tha marr,aBa Uo are pim- ,Hhcd severeiy. Tho Bazba man and woman who attenipt llve together without being niarrlLd take thelr ,lve, , thclr hujlu. They are liable to be tied, hand and foot, and thrown into the lake; and if they dwell far off In the country they are car- , . . ,.. , .. rted to tho nearest swamp and burled alive under tha flags. Marriages take place on a1"1 lie same conditions u in other parts of Africa, the girls being sold by their Pftrent- JU8t now th U8Ual Prlce for a brlJe " 10'000 cowry Bnells or a UtUo 0ver Th,g ,s 'or a 'at- eool looklnS maiden 01 10 0T BO- lnB l'r,t9 "ola l"t, IB"" according to age, and a full grown woman or widow often brings loss than 1'.75. In German Eut Africa, But before I go farther let me tell you bout this land of the Bazlbas, where I now am. It lies In German East Africa JUBt below Uganda, on the western side of Lake Victoria. It is bounded on the east by the lake and it Includes a part of tha Kugera river, which many believe to ba tho source of the Nile. That river rises in tho highlands not far from Lake Tan- ganytka and flows In a winding way through German East Africa, emptying Into Lake Victoria almost on the boundary between the two countries. Commissioner Tompkins of Entebbe tells me that the river Is qulto wide at Its mouth and that tt can be navigated for about seventy miles. I passed this river on my way to Hukoba. Va i,.ft Entebbe, the British capital of Uganda, at 4 a. m. and were ull dav long .tenminir off th western shore nf T.,W Victoria. Our first course was through the Sesse islands, about the largest archipelago m tnu luke. Tlu.v arft r,eailtKuily wood, d on the shores, with grass lands higher up. Tlu:y wre frmt.,,y well populated, but ttuv aro ow lllmost rtm, aocoim ut nt ot the sleeping sickness caused by the bite of the tsetze fly, which infests their shores. After traveling through these Islands we went westward along a country which looks very much like southern Ireland and wljlcb. would compare with Staten Island If the latter had no houses upon It. We passed a little rocky islet known as the "Island of the Dead" and then came into t It j beauti ful harbor of Bukoba and anchored well out in tho buy. DuUuba Bukoba Is the northernmost station In German East Africa. It Is beautifully sit uated, lying on a moon-shaoed bav backed by low bills. At the south are grass-grown Uuttt ending In rallsades of gianlte. wh.ch rlM straight up from the water to a height of j,M U(.L n(gnt un,i(r ,ilwie bluffs is the landing place, and It was a little outside them that the steamship Wlnnifred cayte to anchor. We Were carried to shore la na- tlve canots of wonderful workmanship, Each boat was about thirty feet long, three fv,t wide and two feet deep. It had a keel made of tt e trunk of a tree and the Kides were of hewn boards atiout a fourth of an inch thick and one foot In width, running almost the full length of the boat. The boaids were sewa together and fusieued f I IKMl'I.E OF THE CONOREGATION ISRAEL Unable to secure the services of a rabbi, they assembled to celebrate by themselves the important feasts and holiday. At first these meetings came rot oftener than twice or three times a year, but later they be came more frequent. $ m. Burial Ground Association. About the tame time the congregation of Israel waa formed another society known as the Burial Ground association was or ganized, the membership of tha two feeing almost identical. The two societies flour ished side by side for a year or . two and the Burial Ground association bad pur chased and laid out Pleasant Hill cemetery. Here provision was made for the Interment of the members of the congregation In a Jewish cemetery. But the burden of maintaining the' two societies separate was considered too great for the struggling little group of devotees and In a year or two the two were com bined. The Burial Ground association deeded Its ground to the congregation mem bers, reserving only the right to their ceme tery lots. In the uncertain daya of the early or ganization the meeting place was changed. From the hall on lower Farnam it was moved to Max Meyer's hall at Thirteenth and Farnam, occupied by the Masonlo order. This was used for the few meetings then held by consei.t of the Masons and afterward the place was chunged to Six teenth and Capitol avenue when the Ma sonlo temple was moved there. Moving; for a leriunnen t Home, With the passing of years the little con gregation was added to gradually until in to the keel by threads of fiber or bark, and the wholo was made water tight. There are also larger boats, some even fifty feet long, which are used for navigating the lake. They are made the same way. Wo stepped out on the shore under the bluffs and walked perhaps three-quarters of a mile through the banana groves about the bay to the opposite end of the harbor. Here Is the headquarters of the German government, consisting of a fort, a barracks, and the home of the com mander. The fort Is made of brick, plas tered on the outside and roofed. Native soldiers guarded the gates, but we were able to pass through lr.to the large lnciosure which contains the barracks and other buildings. The grounds comprise several acres. They are covered with green grass and have also beds of red flowers surrounded by hedges. As we went in we saw chain gangs ot blacks bringing dirt to make the flower beds. Each gang consisted of about twenty men chained aiui padlocked. Every man had a steel collar about his neck and there was a chain which tan from man to man by being attached to these collars, so that the gang made a great girjgling as it walked along. Each had a sheet of corrugated Iron on hla head, and upon this, about a bushel or so of black earth from the swamps outside the fort. The men were guarded at the front aijd rear by soldiers, with guns. Call Upon theVommsndut, The soldiers at the gates were not es pecially friendly, and it seemed to me that the officers within did not want to meet strangers. Archdeacon Walker was with me, and through Ids knowledge of the na ..V ',s, t - " ':- y 'V - " - ' 1 V V " ' . ' LRtil UK. CAJU'ENTLii TKIEO TO BUt. , V - b 187S tt bad irrown to the site that the mem ber! considered it could take on all the dignities of a permanent corporation. The articles of Incorporation setting forth briefly the objects of the corporation were filed with the county clerk November 26, 1S73. At that time A. 8. Brawn waa clerk and Morris Elgutter, B. Gladstone, Max Meyer, Jacob Newman and William Kaw ltzer were trustees. It waa ten years later before the congre gation felt Itself able to build a permanent temple. An example of thrift had been set by the trustees several years before the temple became an established fact. Invest ing a small amount of money in real estate, which at the time it waa Intended should be used as a site for the prospective temple, the congregation found itself the possessor of a comparatively valuable property, and it sold out, purchasing another site and moving a vacant building on it to provide an income. In the course of time this site was also sold at a profit sufficient to buy the site of the old temple on Harney street and leave a little balance to go into the temple fund. Rabbi Stern the First. During the last years of this formative period the congregation had found itself able to support a rabbi. Rabbi Stern was the first to be called, but after a Bhort period of service he was called to a larger congregation, and for some time there was a vacancy. Then Rabbi 11. Zaft was chosen and he served until hla resignation left the congregation without a head. The vacancy was not filled until the temple waa com pleted in ISM. During these a ears before the building of tive language we were able to talk with the guards and make our way. The first soldiers we met told us that the command ant was asleep and that we could not see him until he had finished his after-dinner nap. We then started away, but were called back by another soldier, who told us that his highness had Just awakened and would probably be out presently. This man did not ask us into the house, so we stood there and waited until the governor might appear. In the course of fifteen minutes he did so, and after that we were very well treated. The name of the gover nor is Baron Captain von Stuman. He Is a short, fat, little man with a blond beard. He was dressed in white duck, but neverthe less looked exceedingly warm. He took us Into the house and we chatted together for some time about his country and people. He told me that the trade about Lake Vic toria la rapidly growing, and that a large part of the goatskins and hides, which form one of the principal exports, goes to the United States. He says there is an in creasing demand for American cotton goods and advises our country to push them. He also gave the opinion that German East Africa waa beginning to prosper and that it would eventually be a well paying colony. Business Among tha Daslbaa. Shortly after this we left the governor and strolled out into the town of Bukoba to look at the stores and the market. These are right near the fort, the village proper being some distance away. The chief busi ness street consists of a dozen or more lit tle booths, each occupied by a Hindoo mer chant, who sits or stands in It, surrounded by hla goods. The black, grass-clad custo mers remain outside the store and make . hi- INTERIOR OF the temple the congregation had prospered both materially and spiritually. Its mem bership roll had Increased to between fifty and sixty, and the members had enjoyed their share of the prosperity which visited Omaha and the west about that time. The temple was planned on a scale considered ample in those days, and when completed was a pride to tho congregation and to the city. It proved to be sufficient In size for the congregation for over twenty years. But, naturally enough, tho membership roll continued to Increase at a rapid rate. In re cent years the structure lias been found Inadequate to tho noeds of the congrega tion, both In size and in Its appointments. The new temple, which will bo dedicated next Friday, will meet tho requirements of the organization for years to come. Progression In Creed. Tho Congregation Israel has been of the modern, progressive cult of Judaism. Tho reformed ritual is used In worship. It has been very fortunate In the rabbis who have been called to minister to the needs of tho flock. Among them are some who have at tained national prominence In Judaism. The uniform growth of the congregation Is on evlderce of tho high quality of the talent that ha been In the lead. The first rabbi called after the new temi1e was ready for occupancy was Rabbi Hart f eld, who served for about a year. At hU resignation Rabbi Benson was called, remaining for three yearn. Then Rabbi William Rosqnuu wuk se lected in 1RS9, remaining until lbi. When he left Omaha he was called to one of tho prominent congregations in Baltimore, where he has elneo become their purchases by means of cowry shells. The chief things sold are colored and un colored cottons, the favorites, as I have said, belhg American sheetings. Auother popular article of merchandise Is wire, of copper, iron and brass. This Is used by the natives as Jewelry, and It Is almost us valuable aa e;old and silver are In our country. The wire Is brought here In great kegs, and colls of It are hung up In front of the stores. It is of all thicknesses, from the size of a human hair to the diameter of one's little finger. The thicker wire Is hammered out into armlets, anklets and collars, and the finer Is woven and plaited into similar ornaments. Some of the wire Jewelry Is heavy, and a very common ank let worn by the women looks as though It might have been torn from our woven wire fences and twisted together. In the market square, near these stores, I saw many black peddlers. They squat ted on tho ground, with their wares piled about them. Hero a woman sold sweet po tatoes, there one offered little piles of the entrails of sheep or gouts, and farther over were others selling peanuts and white ants. The white ants had been roasted. They were displayed upon bits of banana leaves and were sold at so many shells per pile. Shells Used' na Money, The cowry shell Is the chief currency of this part of Africa, and I understand It is in common throughout the regions about Lake Tanganyika and the Congo valley. The shells are brought here from the coast Of India and are exchanged for rupees ut the rate of 1.U00 to the rupee. A rupee Is worth about 33 cents, and as the shells are put up in strings of 100 each, a string of alieUf la worth Just about S ceuU of uur 77;.- ihf"f".y.'- NATIVES IN FULL LKESA TEMPLE ISRAEL, 6HOWINCJ THE GREAT ORGAN one of the influential men In the min istry of the Jewish church. When Rabbi Rosenau left here ho wag succeeded by Rabbi George M. Franklin, who remained six years, leaving here to go to Detroit, where he has attained un usual prominence. Ho was succeeded in 1S9S by Rabbi Abram Slinon, a wpeukor of force and a man of unusual learning. Rabbi Simon Went to Washington to a prominent congregation. In 1904, fol lowing Rabbi Simon's resignation, Rabbi Frederick Colin was called by the con gregation. Ho baa been tho minister since then and has been very successful in his work for the congregation. His profound learning and eloquence has made him unusually Influential both in tho organization and among the people of other religions and in the affairs of tho city. Oilleers ot the Conirrescntlon. The membership roll at the present tlmo contains the names of men 'of influence and prominence in social and civic af fairs. The officers now are: Sumucl Katz, president; Samson Frank, viae president; C L. Elgutter, secretary; 1L Rosenatock, treasurer; Isidor Summer, Mortis Levy, Harry May, Leopold Heller and Henry Rosenthal, trustees. The committee which had charge of the building of the new templo consists of Samuel Katz, Nathan Splesberger, Emll Brandeis, Ferdinand Adler, Louis Kirsch baum, Herman Colin, C. S. Elgutter und Rabbi Frederick Cohn. The history of the congregation of Israel Is the history of many a religious organization in the growing west. It re money. Among my recent purchases are two spears at l.ioO shells each, a carved milk bowl at 2,(i00 shells and a native chop, ping knife which cost 1,000 shells. Theso shells are very small, but when used by the thousand they are clumsy to handle. In deed 20.0U) of them weigh seventy pounds, and that Is all that ono man can carry. When I go through the country I shall have to have at least fifteen porters to carry every hundred dollars I take with me. Seven dollars' worth Is a good load for a man, and 10 cents' worth would weigh about as much as sixteen of our sil ver dollars. This makes commerce diffi cult, and the Germans are trying to intro duce a new coinage based on the Indian rupee. Tho chief trouble Is to make tho coin small enough. The present Issuo in cludes coins known as hellers, of which 100 go to a rupee, so that one heller is worth one-third of a cent of our money. In a Ilasiba Yillaice. Leaving the market, I visited the village near the fort and then went across the country to see other towns In the interior. The houses are very much like those of the Baganda. At a distance they look like hay stacks or straw tents. They are made of poles fastened together at the top, making a framework the shape of a cone. This is lined with reeds which run from the bottom to the top and are fastened together by bands of reeds which go round and round inside the hut from floor to roof. The out side Is thatched, and the thatch conies clear to the ground. The roof is upheld by many poles, 'which are so arranged that they divide the interior into rooms. One of the huts which I entered had two apart ments about throe feet wide und Bix feet long, which were used for sleeping. In the center of the hut was a fire, upon which, In an earthern pot, some food was steaming away. There was neither stove nor chim ney and tho smoke filled the hut. It had already turned the walls and roof a deep brown color, so that the whole louked gloomy. I understund that the fire U kept up day and night, as the weather is often damp, und also as new fires are bifid to kindle. In many parts of this country matches are comparatively unknown, and fire Is gotten by twisting one stick In a hole made in a block of wood until the fric tion brings a light. Tho floor of this hut was well pounded down and the wall inside wus plastered with clay to the height of my waist. There was no grass or huy on the floor, us Is common in Uganda, amL the eiitrunce, which ws very low, wus by no means so beautifully made. In my trip over the count ry nearby I Prattle of the When fr-yeur-old Margie was taken to see the new twine she exclaimed: "Oh, mamma, you have been to another bargain sale, haven't you? Small Elsie Graudinaa, Is your teeth go..d? Oranilma No. dear; I haven't any. Small Elsie Then I'll let you buld my candy 'till I come back. Mamma Here conns your fuher. See how cross you ve made him. Now, go and tell him you're sorry. Tommy .Say 1'op. 1 m sorry you're so blamed cross. The boy having found a fulminate cap immediately secured a hammer. "1 11 sue What that Is." he remarked. Inula auffurer Cauue out ot tha Ofreisy IB; V. flects as few organizations can the up and downs of life In a developing coun try. The early existence of the organ ization was similar in Us struggles to the history of all movements battling to gain a foothold In a community where resources are still rather meager and of a more or less temporary and uncertain nature. The early pioneers of the congregation may ba considered in tho light of tho martyrs who worked hard and sacrificed much in order that tho faith which their ancestors had lived and died by for thousands of years might become to them and their children a source of inspiration ami spiritual uplift. In supporting the simple liltlo congregation of toi or a dozen In lsi(9 the members had to sacrifice much and that with small pros pect of gaining In their time the earthly reward that goes with the knowledge of a concrete end accomplished. In the latter '70s, when tho more or less temporary organization took on a perma nent form and became a body corporate it also reflected that period In the growth of the city when business and social con ditions began to assume a fixed and certain form. Still later, when the congregation built Its first temporal abode and estab lished a permanent place of worship, it re flected tho period in tho Ufa of the city when permanence and stability waa the dominant idea. In its later and more prosperous days it has again reflected the advancing ideals of the city when freed from the necessity of holding itself down to absolute necessi ties of existence It gives to the city a struc ture that adds both the architectural beauy of Its buildings and to Its spiritual life. stopped at a large native town made up of the hones of the chiefs and their re tainers. These ere occupied by native rulers who live sumo distance away, but who are required by the Germans to spend a part of each year at llukoba. They might be called tho court residences of these men, for they come here to have conferences with the Germans as to how to govern their subjects, to pay their taxes und to tee that the right amount of gov ernment work la supplied by their people. The town is mudo up of lnclosures, sur rounded by high fences of upright poles lightly sewed together by vines. Inside each fence is the establishment of an African nabob and his numerous wives. In going through the village I wound my way about lnciosure after lnclosuro, through one walled valley Into another, , and In and out among buildings of polea and mud until my sense of direction was lost and I seemed to be In Rosamond's bower. One of the chiefs was putting up a new establishment and I had a chance to see how the buildings were constructed. They are made of poles, mud and elephant grass, and one man may have a large number, including separate apartments for each of his wives. There were not many women about, but such as I saw were clad In grass strings reaching from their waists to their feet, and a few bad on grass capes of similar strings. Tho men were mostly young. They were straight. Well developed and tine looking, but nearly every one of them was more or less drunk. A feast was evidently going on, and each man had a long calabash filled with banana beer which he was sucking at through two straws made for the purpose. In front of one of the huts a dozen musi cians were dancing to muxlo made upon severul great drums by men drummers. I was anxious to buy one of these drums, and I tried to purchase one from a chief. The Instrument I picked out reuched above my waist as It stood upon the ground. It wus ns blrf around at the top as a flour barrel, narrowing to the size ot a nail keg at the bottom. It had ben hollowed out of a log, and the top and bottom were covered with goat skin, which was laced on with cords of gut. It had evidently been used mrny yeurs, und Its sound wus most resonant. 1 offered the chief 10,000 shells for it, but ho politely refused, say ing thiU himself and his ancestors bad had that drum a long time, and that he did not know whether he could get another aa good. He told me that If he owned an other he would g1vo 1110 this! But alas, alas, he had only one. FRANK G. CARPENTER. Youngsters tlon well, nnd when the err.-cts of the chloroform had passed off signaled tila mother to upproach. She stooped over him tenderly. "Mamma," lie said faintly, "what wax it?" Si nday Pel. ool Teacher The wisest man tl at ever lived sa .1: There's Iwlnlng new unili r t lie srri.' oiimu j up.1 oi'in 1 11. ey ncter iiave a baby ut bis house? j "Is y.ur cistcr at home. Tommy," a-sked Mr. Tlmmld. "I don t know." replied Tommy. "I heaid her teilin' Ma she expected a pro posal tonight und if you ain't Ua fuller I gius aha ain't at liuta." V,