ENGINEERS DAMMING THE NILE. Cairo, Egypt. especial Correspond nee. i- Engiaad in hi lilt-vim? th niifiht- iest engineering feat of lis sort cvei itu-nipitrd in dam mint; the Nik-. There re. two ways of regarding this siu nendous phenomenon. Fn.-t, there is .he British way. The Nile, harnessed irxl made docile, will injure thousands -f British, subjects against famine. well enonnoui-ly Egypt's produce ari l out Isold in B: Rain's coffers. The niiiuls ii the "unprogrossive" natives, mad - to toil for England's eiin. will be fired to quicker intelligent e bv i .miai t wlih me sen r.c- -f ; of modern fii":itl i i:;g. Anl H. monument t.i British skill will be y.t up h re it will rival U:e p.-iamid.- i.i onjcr lm.cf-1 the British point to the a.". - '-sii'iran tuiu' s t-:iiii 's. as in symbol of sovereignty, the figures oi io na.rat men bint inn- n er. river with strong ropes-and sty, "B. !ild the prophecy! The strong m.-n who bind the river are Lord Kitchener, ieiural, and Lord Cromer, engineer." For to these two men is due the dam ming cf the Nile. Tradition lovers, on the other lu;iid lire aid to grow sentimeiii.il in pioti-.-".-'ng against what they consider ieono tlasm. For the mammoth engineering Scheme has doomed, first uf ail, Pnilao, i.he loveliest spot In Egypt. Philae la an island and must be sunk beneath the Hood. The river will over flow the temple of Isis. swamp the tem ple of Mathor, the Koman arch buiit n Diocletian's time and the rock of Konosso, bearing Its sculptured stories carved 4,KH years ago. Palm groves and broad plateaux hav.: had to give way to railroads, mounds of masonry, engineering apparatus and half-demolished rocks. The quiet of the land of th lotus eaters is destroyed by the shrieks of engines and the lotus eaters' descendants are forced to toil for the British six days in the week and give up the seventh to the British tiabbath. But the English engineers insist that their work is one of the greatest of modern marvels, teat dams are hem built at two spots on the Nile Assiout I and Assouan. Ancient canals are 1. -ing restored, ancient slui.-es rebuilt. Water that now runs waste into the I ueuiiei ranean win oe guarucii m tie. i n reservoirs until the surroundint; land'sl shall enjoy a fertility it has not known j in auw year. .... i ie water supply or tnrv Kgvnt wiir he more than doubled in e'llini millions of unused acres a ill in over to cultivation, and in a few givt the British public will bein to see ihi return of the bread it so l.i ishl;' cast on the waters o,f the Nile. It was only last spring that more than $50,0011, tfiO was advanc.-d at three hours' notice, and without recuriiy. to the contractors having this great work in hand. The largest re iervoir is near Ass u an. There is a tremendous cataract here which the British are busily en gaged in subduing. This done they will fill up and divert the torrent and crown their efforts with a granite via duct 70 feet high on a:i average, but in Borne places double thiC elevation. Along the top will be a broad roadway. AH this is not being aeoompiiKrvil without a deal of nemmolion. and the sounds cf locomotives, steam cranes. Talk About Women. Mrs. Karl Strakosch. or.ee famous in the musical world as Clara Louise Kel logg, is now making ht r permanent home in New Hartford, Conn, Both the daught"rs of tfenatoi Mason of Illinois. Miss Ethel, aged ti. and Miss Ruth, aged 21. are students in a Washineton law school. Yonkers, N. Y.. has chosen a woman j much capital invested in such enter as sanitary inspector. he Is Mrs. J. i prises. Van Wagner, a trained nurse, who won : The employes of the Boston & Main from two competitors aftir passing the ! railroad are to receive their pay every civil service examination. The citizens) two weeks. Instead of monthly, as has here that spitting in public convey- ! been the custom for several years. Th atict is now to be Mrcped, it nothing j change was made with the new year, else. A I'ittsburg company is now engaged Miss Anna Klumpke. the legatee of the will of the late Rosa Honheur. will herself become a patron of the arts and h3 decided. to set aside from her in heritance a sum sufficient to maintain an annual prize of $:;oo for the best panning by any artist not yet rewarded ty the French salon. MiM Elizabeth Carnes. teacher of physical culture In the Detroit public schools, wants the teachers to discard the use of corsets and wishes she hod thi authority to make them do so, he is going east. It is said, to consult with Mrs. Richard Harding Davis, who 43 r( ported as being interested in the ante corset movement. Lady Francis Cook, who was Miss Tennic Claflin of Brooklyn and a sister of Victoria Woodhull, contemplates es tablishing an institution where young women may study art. finding at the name time a home with congenial sur roundings and a protection from some of the dangers which usually threaten women art students. Many of the handsomest umbrellas have long mother-of-pearl handles with Bold or silver trimmings. There is a " FRILLS OF FASHION. Hardly anything is too fine in the way sf linen and laces for the table now adays. Centerpieces . and individual doylies are made of the finest linen lawn and trimmed with beautiful Brus sels point, point de Venice and point de Bruges. For pretty midwinter gowns for deb utantes afternoon wear are charming models of Scotch blue-bell cloth, re lieved with white vicuna, or finest cam el's hair accessories, finished with lit tle button loops of gold braid and tiny gold buttons. Glace groves, In tan, mouse gray and dark red. In heavy silk stitching, either in black or Its own colors, and of win ter weight, are the preferred street gloves for dally wear. The suede and 'very soft, pliable dressed gants. In 'white, delicate pearl and mauve tints, lead In favor for full-dress uses. A handsome and becoming style of Jresa hat Is In toque shape made of Lyons velvet In pansy color, Russian green or dark ruby red, with a brim of table fur and a steading trimming of real lace and sable tails and a cluster f pink crush roses set at one side , tnd partly falling on the hair. It Is hardly to be believed, but the -Id-fashioned jersey waist Is In again, (t looks very familiar and the styles Utve changed so that It comes In In much the same shape that It went out. !t Is made in a abort, pointed basque, jraided with a standing collar and, of iourse, the same old plain-topped sleeve which it showed when last on view. A heliotrope gown with a plain cloth Iklrt has a double-breasted Jacket of rtlvet to match. There Is a collar and apels of chinchilla to this coat also. Che lapels, however, only reach to the twt line, Isavlns; a pointed vest and Itralght choker Inside. This Is made nry attractive with steel embroidery, trhlch matches the double row of steel rattoM. smiths' forr s nitre--::!vcerlt:e : pl-soons eont.nu" i:nint -. : u-; i. Sev en thou.-and no n ur employ 1 and t; . w-irk is cartl'.d on Light and i!ay. U hfii th-; moon in hi.JJeit it:s ii e u la&?i. by electric light. Tr.o grants wall wii. it Is believed, he high cnouih whet, completed, to be safe above Hie fie re eat Nile flood. Two hundred miles down the river is the subsidiary reservoir, at Assiout, where 11, IV) men are employed. Tin: uoik is only one-fourth do: -, y-:-t con side! ablv mo!" than a million dollars tas been sne-u Th i .m will hold u:, ! more than t-n feet of wan-, f-.-.t l iv. i I h-re bvinsr more than a half mil.- wld Thre will be 111 aicho or -jeiiiius ! .-ach fifteen 1-"t wide, til pi" v: i-l w.th f s:ui: -.-. open to allow tr..- mud Jy ;C. water fne v-r.t. tor vl-r Mond iii,:.. m..;t i.... Hi Irti!.::ifi; pr ,.-liles. Th-re will I). rial, with Kat.-.-, for ti. i xiensive Hade that g x ravi'MOle ta pa.ssjie of the .s u;i ami down the river. Now and then, in s-.it f the tr-m.-ndous Abyssinian sno.v mountains whi' h hel; to swell the volum of the Nile, the overlow of the gnat rive: fails, as happened last rpring. The earliest record of such a tilsap pointment is fi.ijuil : .-ar:i old and la en graved on the walls near the catara.i of Assouan. Again, in the time of Jos 'ph, the overflow failed, as the nible records, and famine followed. . This y-ar, h" catiK of the enitini erln'? already ai cnmplished at Assiout and the strenu ous exertions of the irrl"ation depart ment, th,, hitherto unavoidable seque' of the failure to overflow famine was averted. These two mammoth reservoirs, each with its system of canals, weirs and dams, represent only two-thirds of thr great work whose object Is to fertilize Kgypt. The remaining one-third is the Cairo barrage, the idoneer of ail Nik dams. , The barrare i" rr.oie than a mil' In U ngth. a handsome peved roadway i with emtxitiied walls. Slimes stem th- urrent and hold up at the pro'ier Ke.i o a wall of water twenty to thirty t high. I he manipulation t ties., ices i so dever that a h:'d by vi:.g a lever i an regulate a i!ia.s id 1 support:)'.:? the i,i-f.su!v of thi- Tio- idea cf this barrage is dt.e ft i v, ,. o,.. i.-,.v-., in lTi'ti saw unii pointed on! that where the t ranches of the Nile part to form the n,.ta was the spot to erect a bar rier which should ini 'ate, by ralMHB the h-vel of the river, the low lilll'i.l be tween the arms. Since then one ruler after another ha; tried to carry out Napoleon's Idea. Tin great structure, faultily built, was rap idly suffering luin until in Lord Duffelln advised the work r.ow being carried out. This dam does more to uphold Brit ain in Egypt than ten regiments of red coated soldiers. As it stands the barrage Is the most oisiiiil'-d, useful anil picture!-oue er.gi lieertnjr work In the wi Id. Kvei means Is offered to travels to ,et in adequate view of this beautiful stiur--une, with its slim towers and embat tled gates, spanning the historic Nile Labor and Industry. Within a year eight beet rugar fac tories have been built In Michigan. The City of I'ittiiburg is to manufac ture Its own patrol wagons, hose car riages, buggies and other equipment. Never in the history of North Caro lina have so many charters for cottor mills been taken out as in IW, nor si in an order for fitting up the palace o! the Mikado in Japan with everything in the bath and sanitary lines. Ship ments have also been made to Austra lia, Fouth America. China and Japan. A recent report by the bureau of sta tistics in New Jersey shows that trior', than $20.0o,MiO of capital Is now Invest ed in the silk industry in that state giving employment to over ati.ooo per sons, who received in wages last yeai tl0.8.'i0.TX8. A Minnesota woman has designed a fire escape apparatus which lowers per sons automatically, having a pair ol breeches suspended on the rope, tht latter being wound on a drum, with a governing device which applies a brake when the drum revolves too fast. Hamburg, Germany's greatest sea port, adopted the American overhead trolley system for street can and tht Improvement is extending throughout Germany. In many cities the horst i car lines aie being converted Into elec trie lines and more than eighty oltiet are now supplied with them The Glass trust will have a hard time to freese out the three po-ojwra tlve factories at Marshall, Ind. Thev are making arrangements, if there It another cut In prices, to reduce theli market money from $20 to $10 a week They declare they will work for market money alone If the trust reduces thf price that low. Costa Rica now Imports merchandise to the extent of over 4,000,000 a yeai and of this amount the percentage from the United States has recently increas ed from 45 to 67. The most important imports from this country are flour machinery, oils, wire fencing. Iron pipe and furniture. The call for cotton prints and drills is increasing. American factories have manufactur ed 2.473 locomotives this year, the largest number they ever turned out In one year and 59H more than 'were made in 1898. More than 25 per cent of the number, or BJ4, were made for rail road companies In other countries Large aa the output was and It was fully equal to the capacity of the works it waa little or no more than sufficient to retrace those that were worn out and discarded. There are about 27,000 locomotives In the United State. If the average life of a locomotive Is flf teen years It would take about 2,506 new locomotives annually to keep the number In use up to the present figure, PERSONAL AND OTHKRWI8K. We are up against another ktckin spell. The geographical board Insists that It should be spelled Puerto Rico. Down In Bt. Louis an industrious burglar threw up his Job and fled at h sight of a newspaper ireporter. Naturally. People who work In the dark have a wholesome fear of a searchlight. A New Jersey patriot Is organising a brigade of 600 cats for service in the Philippines. Notwithstanding sneers to the contrary, New Jersey is keeping step to the music of the administration. miOUT IC T 1 T II I7 l song-e nter is .Mm I.'-jwcrd Payne, lb 1 11UU1 JU 1 J. V II 1,3, writer cf "Home, Sv..-t Home. ' whos I'itl.FiT IS PATIKNX'K. I !: An! Cite. Cai 'i'heie ure .tne ne ,.ly ma le biillii naires out her It, the (outhwest who lis nowadan the talk o feve.-y mi.-.ii.y camp of the tcr-I'I-im- i a.-.u the t acitic coast, land i . e uoi.icventi-nt of riches in the ;ast few ; at? are Illustrations of the ,ii uer.'i.l char.aes thu the whirligig of tofturie 1.1,'igs t- tr.e.t w here tteaJlli is dog from the earth. The recent ex l.ae ii.-j-. .;, rite in tr.e value of cot per s Making half a t,z. n men in Arixona m.iii.i.iui.'es, and twke as many men who v, e: - suuggih. with inurtg.ige diht.i and a Blow On. and f,,r cf.r.nei- at low r.t t " few i agu are gettait, Ir.to the :-"veiu '-hui.J:1. i-thousand-dol-li-r roltunri. r r icMiince, t.f re is Jacob Kliner, wi-.o p a t ,p;-er a r: i g , 1 king of Aii ;. :... i,.i:d j;.ra, ...( x. After twer.iy-f-;ur y a.r.: of aii i.ianner of advert ty, 1 -.ti-.Mit, piadd-.rig h;a;ch for luck Iti pio;;. c:s. a:.d titer a tremendous lot of er.dur. r.: e in hi at and cold, he in enjoying an in o-ue of about $U6; month ar.d owns property that he sen .iiniosi any nay lor about ll.Iijo.v.iij. He was bom in lytiban. l'russia, foity six yfais at-. and came to America with Ji in his pocket. He was employ od in a New York brewery for two years at 7'J c -nts a day. Having a friend at 'fiicsim Anz.. he came west In 1S7S to do anything he could to keep alive. He riaa boon a ho: tier for the Arizona Stage comiany, a c.uard for Wilis, Fargo & Co., and a lailroud brakeman. Aio::g with thousands of other moil Jake Kliner became a mining prospec tor. 1j h- a mining prospector In the nriet ronsf of the words one must have rupr. ni" pat:e:v abnormal hope and conSOm t; urllavging zeal, and a wealth of rnt'iuxiasm. Jake Kliner stuck to prorpi ctlng year in and year was ilr l;nw ni-::' a: for,'- Fa id he r. f vi i y mot;rt!:ir way from Kl i:..i in. X. M yi ai s before I ev-n of rock l hud to loci: Inly. He tramped over n t fie i. rntory, all the as i to Colorado, front l,."S' k to Albu'im i cjuc to Yuma, fioin Mii Juke Kliner mil h; ::!ff were kiittwn all u. d Khmr's pei'.iuilai is .-oon going to stnk. '! n Toi.-.l.-:--t.. n. to : hio; id.-, I ,:r-:.;,tn ( . !. over A: ,z aa, ai hi a- f tnrit f v..i! II rich le . I! e i u I the ;esi3 ol u.ll:- u: At I I a !:" ICiiier found a copper i i 'ila count y I hat hn.k -i -II. He had rt.t.ui $; that le- had ide he on:::;: d.iy hi!, or in the co; pel ,'ies at I;':!.-;V-e, and, !,et:ling down in j ; i:l vi;h nil his fifthly ps.-es-;t, i -j.i islis.'f of a Iryinif pan, it t! a coffee pot. two blank-is and f , nilum:; teds, he w eiit to work c; ci his eopp- i claim. He worse, i i.;. :i it for eleven u k In I'.'J.!. , when fo-.o..r mi ;,t its louist market vaiu- end ca;otai v:sr a source ariirie hi the ten i I or!' s. Alts r months of vain i' 'k:::g for seme one to conn" and looh t! hi copper ledge K!l!il l" trudged oVe the meuntair.s and alkali desert across the ,-up. istltlon mountains and th" Klta mountains, down into Sonora. M.:o. v. I ere he rot work at day v.'.-ii:.!. in .'t !;...! ::tr.r. He still owntd the cc:.f r p". po t" and had don,- enough w. r. a it lo hi 1.1 the claim for a ye::r. Affr ''ad s-ved t" he went to pio'jutirg again. He tiavebd along wnh his 'ai l a; a some lieu miles alto gether, siefplni', out of doors, r-atinr; vtle iood and wr.tchin ", out for hostile Yaiiulr. And now his luek was due. lie lound two calms hi two months. O'.'u- Wi.os a ha-e ore mire---! eomhipa tion :' tf"l an! stiver -ar.d the other was id or" than ran about $14 to the t n. l e met at Hermosillo, Mex., b man wh i bought the base oro!ei ty for M.(t'). That was Jake Kliner's flist real iu'ltal afi.-r his years of poverty and hr.iiishiTi. V.'lth that sum he be fean the development of his gold mln". and In a year he cot out and shippeu or? that brought him lO.OOu clear profit A week later he sold half the mine for liOoOO. That was In March, isa.1. Kliner's fortune began to grow rap Idly from that time. The Armadtjo mine has paid some $120,000 in profits sinep then, and it Is still yielding fiom 43.00) to 4.000 a monf.i. f our years ago Kilner returned with ample means to his topper mine in Gllu county, Arl- Kor.a. He put in the best machinery he rouid buy, sunk shafts, and drilled and drilled and eronseut into the ledge Copier was not profitable then and many copper mines were Idle. It took much hope and confidence to put li.Oiio into machinery and get out eopier ore thrt had no buyers at living prices. In 1SK7. howvvtr. copper rose from 8 cents to 12 cents. The Kliner mine began to make more money. Extra laborers wer hlr 'd and the mine was deepened and explored the more. In lv.Oi the prl- of cc'p-'f advanced to 14, In and even 17 cents a iound. Last winter it touch ed 19 cents. It has since varied from li to 'S cents. He lives well nowadays, but he clings to his old clothes and his clay pipe 11 smiles when he speaks of the fact that he sleeps In a 10 brass bed now, In stead of a blanket. "STAR SPANGLKD BANNER." "The Star Spangled Banner"was com posed during the war of 1M2 by Francis Scott Key, then a young lawyer of Baltimore. In the latter part of Au gtst, 1X14. Dr. Williams Barnes, an old resident of Maryland, was captured by the British and held as a prisoner In the admiral's flagship, the Surprise. Key went to the Kngllsh fleet in Ches apeake bay to intercede for Dr. Barnes but was detained on board the Surprise, as the British were about to make an attack on Fort Henry. All during that eventful night, the 13th of September, the great guns of the fleet poured a blazing shower of shot snd shell upon the fortress. Key, standing on the deck of the Kngllsh ship, could see at intervals by the glare of the rocket and the flash of the cannon, the American flag waving victoriously. In the stirring enthusi asm of that supreme moment, and at the dawn's early light, when the Stars and Stripes rose above the smoke ol the conflict. Key WTote the song that should be as deathless as the flag it self. BATTLE HYMN OF THE REPUBLIC. It was In December, 1831, that Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, author of the "Bat tle Hymn of the Republic," In com pany with her husband, Governor and Mrs. Andnews, and other friends, visit ed Washington. On their Journey thither the "watch-fires of a hundred circling camps" gleamed In the dark ness, the railroad being patrolled by pickets. To beguile the tedium of their slow progress Mrs. Howe and her friends sang army songs, among others, "John Brown's Body." She slept qui etly that night, but, waking before the dawn, found herself weaving together the lines of a poem, capable of being sung to the "John Brown" tune. Line after line and verse afte verse fell Into place, and Mrs. Howe, fearing that they would fade from her mind, sprang out of bed, and in the gray half-light wrote down her verses, went back to bed and fell asleep again. It may In terest practical people to learn that Mrs. Howe received (5 for her poem, "HOME, SWEET HOME." Perhaps the most revered American checkticl career was fill of sadros but whose S'-iiK brought th's origin publishers a pioiii of Jpi.de'j. and in cured for Miss ?1 Tr. t vbo w as th tirBt person to sing it. a husband and i mansion tilled with pienty. When Jen ny Lind vi.-lted tr.e t 'lilted rHates I; she, loo, sang Home, twee Home." It was the great National Ila 11 of Ho City of Washington, where the ro distinguished audience that had eve. been seen in the capital of the repua lie was as.--emb.ed. The matchless sing er entrained the vi.st throng with lie, most ex,uiiie melodies "Casta I'iva.' the "Flute ! ng." the "Hird Song," am "Greeting to America." Hut the grea feature of the oce-.sion re med to be at act of hispliation. The sictr-r sudden ly turned her fai " to the pi.rt of tie audituiiu.n w here l'ayn was sittlnt and sang "Home, i-.'.e.-t Home" Mil! such pathos and power that a whirl wind of excitement and enthusiasm sw,.pt through the vast, audi -nee. Han i. I Webster himself almo't hu-t his self- !(o-.tr... and one might readily imag- "jine that Payne thrilled with rapture at this umxpocted and magnificent renui Hon of his own immortal lyric. "1'AXKIiK DOODLR." The tune of "yankee Doodle" wa brought to this country In ITrvr., when the British were engaged In a war with the French and Indians. The story goes that the militia which were called to aid the British army were strangely clad In many colors, some wearing long coats, some short ones, and many hav ing none of any kind to wear. In th British army was one Iir. Richard .Shaekburg, who was somewhat of a musician. One day he thought to play a Joke upon the mllitta because of their grotesque figure and awkward manner, and with much mock solemnity he pre sented them the words and music of "Yankee Doodle." 'Hie Joke greatly pleased th" well dressed British olfic rs. but as a Joke It roved a stupendous failure, for th tune soon became the brittle march of the Revolution. "MY Cfil'NTHY, 'TIS OF THKK Dr. S-'iinoie! Francis Hmlth. the author of "America" "My Country. 'Tis of Thee" was graduated fiou Harvard In the s-.nie class with Dr. (d.ver Wen doll Holmes and other c-:e!n-f.tei tnen. Dr. Hohiie i said of him a tie rt time ho. fore h.s Oe iih: "Now. I li i e's f-'ioilh !li norm- uill be h nored 1 ; every school cMld in the land w h :i ' havi I.. -on forgot t. n a hut'rt 1 yoi--s. Hi wrote 'My Coiintty. 'To if Thee." II h" had said 'Our CoiintrV the hyt'oi would not have le-eu Imrnort.il. but that 'My' was masieroi ' e. Kvery one who siogs the hymn at once feels a ji-rsor,;il owner s-ip in Ins native land. Tile hymn will la.u as long as the eoiin trv." In U7.2 Wllliatn ". Woodhridge, fliend of It. Smith':, who had le-en vo-iting C-errniiny and the tJerinan chuils, l.-rought home with him a lot of 'lerman music books. "Turning th" leaves of the rooks one gloomy day In February, ls.'ii," said Dr. Smith, many yearn afterward, "! crime across Ihe air, lod Save the King.' 1 llled !h- music. I ghinced at the Ocrrom woids Ot th.- foot of th i pftfti- I ndi r the Inspiration of the mo ment 1 to n-.-k and In la If n; hour 'Amende Tu1.. the result." SMOKING WOMF.N IN LONDON. Mrs.'f 'orriMlus Robinson of New York has erg.'igi-d in a crusade against tin practice of smoking by women In Don don society. She instances what sh" siw at tin Pioneer club as- proof that British wo men are inveterate smokers. Bui this is not the cose at the nth": women's clubs. Amont the smart set smoking, like biking, is demode. Tliro two years ago all society 'iwt smoked. Just as all society women bikec I'.attersea of In Hyde l'aik. For the same reason llttl" smoking b now indulged In 'at the Knioress club for Instance, one of the smartest ami most crowded dubs In London, or a' the equally smart yet quieter Grosvi ism Crescent club. Says Mrs. Robinson: When it be comes the custom for American wo men to smoke I shall call It a retro grade movement. In atlons not yet risen to our civilization It Is usual foi women to-smoke. English women hsv nd ' yet advanced beyond the habit thnt Is all. ... . Thi'.yutJ) is, that not one Knglisl woman In' ten. not one In a hundred even among professional smokers, hai acquired the habit with any degree o proficiency. To blow little whiffs o: smoke out of your mouth Is not smok ing. The other evening at the Berkeley 1 watched a pretty English girl pretend ing with a elf-arelte after dinner, mu had the smiling, happy air of a womar w ho feels she is doing something shock ing. You may observe most English wo men do this! for tobacco gives them s Utile, . si-nviation tbat they require ooulm ftvultuice to . convince themselves they are. snioliing. Well, our pretty youni; la4y at the Berkeley, holding her cigar elUt . delicately between her fingers look a little whiff and blew It out again between her pretty lips. Then she fell Into animated conver sation and presently discovered thai the cigarette had gone out. It was re lichteil. this time all on one side, when knocking off the ashes with more de termination than skill, she put It out aaain. For a third and fourth lighting she got two tiny puffs, perhaps. Then she talked for so long while she rorgot thJ enemy between her fingers, that she suddenly gave a little scream and droimed It onto the tablecloth. We had an opportunity of contrasting this Kngllsh woman s method or smog lnr with the g'-nutne method when call ing next day upon the beautiful "poster irlrl" now settled in London. I found her at her easel with a cigarette be tween her teeth. "You don't think it Injurious1?" I ask ed her, while she rolled me a clgaretu with expert fingers. "Beneficial, on the contrary. It clear the brain and stimulates the powen of work." How many do you smoke a day?" Any number from ten to fifty, but mv usual amount is iwenty-nve or inir. ty. My doctor tells me mat up to nny ther cannot nun me, out. ne auvie me not to smoke more." She took In a breatnrui or smnge anc drank a cup of tea which she had lust poured out A minute later she blew the smoke from her mouth again 1r thick and perfect rings, passing th second and the succeedlngs rings thro the first one with amazing dexterity. The briar pipe Is not made of briar wood at all. The word "briar" Is s corruption of the French word "bruy ere." meaning "heath," fine he work used Is really that of the hesth-r. Wher these pipes were liitrodueeii into thli country the tradesmen fourd that thi French word was rather tvy dime.".'.' for the ordinary smoker to get hold of and they soon twisted It lnti the fa miliar briar. The supply of fhls woor from Franre Is now almost cthausted and Is only found In any quan'lty in th' Alpes Maritime. WAYS OF THE TRAMPS. Some of Them Are Afflicted with Fatal Bushfulness. It Is a popular notion that tramps have a mysterious sign language, in which they communicate secrets to one another in regard to professional mat ters. It is thought, fi r Instance, ttiat they make familiar chalk and pencil marks on fences ana horse blocks. In dlcating to the brotherhod such things as whether a certain house is "good' or not, where a ferocious dog Is kept, at what time the police are least likely, or most likely, to put in an appearance how late In the mornicn a barn may be occupied before the farmer will be up, and about where a convenient chicken coop li located. Elaborate ac count have been written in newspa tiers about the amount of information they give to one another In this t.y, and many persons believe that tramps rely on a sign language In their beg ging. It is well to state at the outset that this is a false concrptlon of their meth ods. They all have Jargons and lin goes of their own choosing; and mak ing, and they converse in them when among themselves, but the reported puzzling signs and marks which are s u posed to obviate all verbcl speech are a fabrication, s far as the majority of roadsters are one rned. Among the "Banket Stifs." in the far west, and among the "Kindle Men," "Mush Fa kirs" and "Tumpikers" of the middle west, the east and Canada, thre exists a crude system of marking "good" houses, but these vagrants do not be long to the rank and file of the tramp army, and are comparatively few In numbers. It Is, furthermore, to be said that the marking referred to Is occasional rath er than usual. Probably one of the main reasons why the public has Imagined that tramps use hieroglyphics In their profession is thnt, when charity Is shown to one of them, the given Is fre quently plagued with a visitation from a raft of beggars. This phenomenon, however. Is easily explained without recourse to the sign language theory, uutside of marly ail townt of 10.000 In habitants and more the te;mips have little camps or "hang-outs," where they ttirike their headquarters w hile "work-j !ng" the community. Naturally they! compare nob s nt. meal time, nnd If one j l-e, gir has. discovered what he oonsid- is a "cneroiis house he tells his pa!" about it. ro that they may also get the b.-nt fit of Its hosoitality. Th- finder of i he house ceniiot viMt it himself ngrun until his :ice has been fotgot- ten; at sm- r. hi -Idolll does visit it more tl-i.-n once dining a wck's stay in the town, but his companions can, so he tells them where It is and what kind cf a story they must tell. CLASHES IN TRAMP I.IKE. Although li'e- hol oes do not make use of the marks and signs with which the po; ular f.incv has credited them, they l i'Ve a number of Interesting th". oij.-s nbout begg.ng and a large varie ty rf clever ruses to deceive people. Not all tramps are eliner clever or suc cessful, the "road" Is traveled by a great many mere amateurs than pro fessionals, hut It Is the earnest endea- or of all i" bast to make a living, r.d C"ore ;ir- thousands who make irneiM: c r,eid,M. Roughly estimated. Ihrte ..re fr ir.i i).m t "i.Ooo tramps tie Vi'ltid .''tntes, and probably a fftii of i.'l me be classed as flrst- I 'Kr fair's. There are a second and third clis, .".ml even h fourth, but it l ti e A Nib. 1 men. us they call thern- Ivr-s, vho are the most Interi st Ing. 1 i.e rain distinction between these ramps and the b-ss successful mem i.'r of the craft 1.4 that they have com- jl 'leiy corcuered the arnateu nqueam- shnefs about begging. It seer is com parative!" eas" to fro to a bac k door ind iifI: for something to eat. and the mere wording of the tequist Is easy, all loo tasv, but the hard part of the Irar.saetion Is to screw up courage "oegh to o;en the front gate. The rxrlnner In tramp life goes to a dozen nt rate before he can brace him self for the interview at the back dor, and there are men to whom a vagrant life Is attractive who never overcome the tenderfoot's hashfulness. It was once my lot to have a rathur successful professional burglar for a rornnanlon on a sKort tramp trip In th" middle west. Vp had come to gether In the haphazard sort of way that all tramp acquaintanceships 'are formed. v'e met at a railroad water ing tank. The man's sojourn In tramp dom. however, was only temporary; it was a good hiding place until the de tectives should give up the hunt for him. He had "planted" his money else where, and meantime he had to take his chances with th" "hoes." He was not a man who would ordinarily arouse mi'ch pity, but a tramp could not have he d having sympathy for him at mev times. At every interview he had at back doors he was seized with the tenderfoot's bashfulness, and during the ten days that our companionship lasted he got but one square meal, ills profession of robber nave 1:1m no as sist anre. "I can steal," he said, "go Into hotisis at night, and take my chances In a rhoctln' scrape, but I'll be hanged If I can beg. 'Taln't lik swlpln'. When ye swipe ye don't ask no questions, .in' ye don't answer none. In this business ye got to cough up yer whole soul Jus' to fit a lump (handout.) I'd rathei sw!-." This Is the testimony of practically all bglnners In the beggar's business; at the start thieving seems to them a much easier task. As the weeks and months pass by, however, they become hardened, and discover that their nerv needs onl" to lie developed to assert Itselfand the time conies when nothing Is so valuable that they do not feel themselves Justified In asking for it. They then definitely Identify them selves with the profession, and build up reputations as first-class tramps. EXPERIENCE IS THEIR TEACHER. Each man's experience suggests to him how this reputation can best be ac quired. One man, for example, finds that he does best with a "graft" pe culiarly his own, and another discovers that It Is only at a certain time of the year, or In a particular part of the country, that he comes out winner. The tramp has to experiment In all kinds of ways before he understands himself or his public, and he makes mistakes even after an apprenticeship extending ever years. In every country where he lives, how ever, there is a common fund ot ex perience and fact by which he regu lates his conduct in the majority of cases. It Is the collective testimony of generations and generations of tramps who have lived before him, and he acts upon It In about the same way that human beings In general act upon ordi nary human experience. Emergencies arise when his own Ingenuity alone avails, and the average finding Is of no use to him, and on such occasions he makes a note on the case and reports about It at the next hang-out conclave,. If he has Invented something of real value, a good begging story, for In stance, and It Is generally accepted as good, It Is labeled ss Shorty's gng, or Hlim's, as the man's name may be, and i becomes his contribution to the general collection of gags. It Is the man who collection of gags. It Is the man wholchecklng It and 11... rtwn ol has memorised the greatest number of of a new reformation! " tho gags or ghost stories, ss they are alss called, and on nhandie them deftly, ai circumstances suggest, that Is th mosi successful beggar. There are other re quirements to be observed, but unless man has a good st'tk of stories will w hich to fool people, he cannot expeci to gain a foothold amng the "blwea ir the glass stiffs." He must also kee( continually working over his l'iC" Ghost storie are like bonnets; tno that were fashionable last year are this vear out of date, and they must Df changed to suit new tastes and conai lions, or be supplanted by new ones Frequently a fresh version of the oia story has to be Improvised on the spoi The following personal experience il lustrates under what circumstance! ..,r. M r.-nle,l It BlSO ShoWS n even the professionals forget thomselvei and their pose on occasions, cme mm ing. about eight years ago, I arrived r, il small town in the Mohawk valley in company with a tramp called Indianap olis Red. V'e had ridden an mm" a box car In the hope of reaching i York by morning, but the freight nao been delayed on account or a wreia, and we were so hungry when we mu ed the town in question that we simply had to get off and look for something to eat. It was not a place, as we well knew, where tramps were welcome, but the train would not stop again at a town of r.ny size until lonu aftei deci.led to take oui chances. We had an hour at our dis posal until the next freight was our. The great ouestlon was, what story boiiid t,.'ii and we both rummaged through our coUectlotis for a good one. Finally, after each of us had suggested number of different stories nu e.fiieti ihem in turn, on tne grouuu that they were too old for such a hos tile place. Red suggested tnai we hj it... .n,.. fiom' eatr." There are several gags of this description, and I asked him which one he meant. THE DEAF-AND-IH'MB LAY. Let's work it this way." and he be- rran to Imnrovise. "I m your ueer o dum' brother, see? An' we're on our way to New York, where I'm going to get a. Job. I'm a clerk, and you're see in' me down to the city so's't nothln" II happen to tne. Our money's given out. an' we've slrnplv got to ask fer assist ance. We're ter bly hungry, a.n' you want to know if the lady of the hv'is- II be good enoHsh to help 'T br ther along. See?" I saw right enough, and accepted th" proposition, but the dd. seemed arainst us h-cause the town was one of lb- most unfriendly along the line. e picked out a house, near the fork. As n rule, rui h hous-.-s have been begged lout. hut. we reasoned thnt If nr mry I would go at all It would go there, and j itotddes the house was convenient for I I i.tching the next freight train. As we j approached the back door 1 was care !lul to talk to Red on my fingers, thlnk iing that somebody might be watching us. A nioiheriv out niuy answeteu knock. 1 told her Bed's story In my best manner, filling It out with convinc ing details. She heard me out and then scrutinized Red in the way that we all look at rreatures who are peculiar or abnormal. Then she smiled and Invited us into the dlnlng-nsim. where the rest of the family were nt breakfast. It mined out to be 11 Fret; Methodist clergyman's household. v had places at the tabl . and at as rapidly as we could, or. rather. Red did; I was con tinually being Interrupted by the fam ily asking me questions about my un fortunate brother. "Was he born that way?" they asked In hushed voices. "How did he learn tc write? Can he ever get well?" and oth er like questions which I had to an swer In turn. By the lime I had fin ished my meal, however, I saw by a .O. .O. .1... .. ..II V.n, A ho Art..,. I lot IV on tne nan toat e ,, ,,.. ir- r.uies to catch our train and gavt Led a nudge under the table as a hlnl that we ouk'ht to be going. V'e weru about to get up and thank our nosiest for her kindness when the man of the h..use, the clergyman, suggested that we stay to family prayers. "Glad to have you," he said, "if you can remain. You may get good out ol it." 1 told him frankly that we wanted to catch a train and had only a few minutes to spare, but he assured me that he would not be long and asked me to explain the situation to Red. I did so with my fingers and I explained to the put'on that Red's wiggling of his mtant that he would be delighted to stay, but a wink of his left eye. meant fo- nve alone, said plainly enough lo let the prayers go. We stood committed, however, and thite whs nothing to do but o!n th family In the sitting room, where I re el tved a bible from which to read two verses, one for Red and one for mys-lf. This part of the progress flnlshedi, the parson began to pray. All went well until he came to that part of his prayer where he referred to the "unfortunate brother in our midst." and asked that Red's speech and hearing be restored, and we were both ashamed. Just then Red heard the whistle ol our freight. He forgot everything, all that 1 had said, and all that he hail tried to act out. and with a wild whnon whoops ; back r rat-. I -' follow he sprang for the door, shouting back to me as r.e went out: "Hustle, Cigarette, there's our tier.' There was nothin? to do but follow after him as fast as my lugs would i u car. ry me, and I did so In my liveliest man. ner. I have never been In the town since this experience, and It Is to be hoped that the parson's family have forgiven and forgotten both Red and THE SIRDAR. Kitchener's wonderful Industry, hit un"t puled patience, his noble perse. . v ranee, are qualities too valuable fot a man to enjoy In this Imperfect world without complementary defects. Th general, who never spared himself, car. ed little for others. He treated all men like mat nines from the private soldlei whose salute Tie disdained, to the su perior officers he rigidly controlled Th comrade who had served with him and under him for many years In peace and peril was flung aside Incontinently at soon as he ceased to be of use The Slrf-sr only looked to the soldiers who could march and fight. The wounded Egyptian, and latterly the wounded British soldier, did not excite his In. teiest, and of all the department, "t his army the one neglected was that fXrerdn'1 with the care of the sick and The stern and unpltylng spirit of the oemmander was communicated to nil roops. snd the victories which taarked Ihe progress of the River war weni a rompanted by acts of barbarity, not air way. Justified by the harsh custom, o , savage conflict, or the fierce treacherous nature of the dervish From "The River War " by WintZ Churchill. ' Wlnstos The Emancipation from r, .. movement spreads apace and her. power In eastern Europe, proportions which make serious concern at the Vatican iTt- ' extended to 323 lo, all.le, iTn nj, Lower Austria, Bohemia HlvrU via, Corlnthla and Balibur. Ua Ut verts are numbered by th!u-.C0' far the church h.. t!L2!un-