w x Gun-Kiinim Persian WOMAN SELLS III ! Strange and Profitable Occupa tion of an English Girl. AGROWWMENA.CETO THEPEACE OFINDIA ii"v"HNHiiaaMHiivHiHnnHnMi WKKSSTTWBtmmmmmmm THE PEACE OF INDIA wmmmammmtmssszamMi Mfttiji;a i nam Hiliifffi' :siriiwiraF. rakish Sglf.1 fi(ttfc Bsircm If JTJZJiSJKr rn !ti'r'NlW' HWJMV Tf r fz,r o tinftth a, fty1 't A Ej I n2 VI 0 A. ililf 5- H12 feeling Is growing throughout the Indian army and liulinn gov ornuiont circles thiit Ilrltnln Is appi inching a bli;goi campaign on tho northwest frontier than has been soon In recent years Not only are largo sections of the tribesmen like the Mali' mid Wnzirls anil others exhibiting signs or Increasing turbulence, but the frontier territories from one end to the other nro already full of modern arniB and ammunition, while more la .pouring Into them every day by every secluded track lending through Ilalu chlstan and the Afghan hills In addition to this, the present Ameer, abandoning his father's policy, has allowed thousands of modern ri fles manufactured In the arsenal at Kabul to reach tho hands of his own tribesmen, nnd the probable co-opera-itlon of tho latter In a frontier war ngnlnst the Indian Uaj may easily In volve the Urltlsh government with Af ghanistan as well. All this, as every Indian officer lenows, Is involved In the continuance of tho persistent gun-running which Is marking tho growing war fever on tho Indian northwest frontier through the Persian gulf. It Is not too much to say that the peace nnd safety of India depend upon the suppression of this trnde, and yet, owing uhlelly to the paucity of Hrltlsh naval resources there, sho can do little or nothing Muscat, at tho entrance of tho gulf, is the chief center of this nefarious traffic, which Is carried on by Euro- m Of 0MiN mm Jji. -Atfr f fI rf ewOr?' -A NTRAINIMQ CHMBLS TO couNrezacr gun-running pcans nnd, unhappily, by IlrltUh merchants. Tho nultan, who Is under Hrltlsh protection, derives a large revenue from It, but although negotiations with him for Us prohibition might roqulro diplo matic handling owing to his treaty obligations with at least one other power, It is tho only effec tive means of avoiding tho outpouring of blood nnd treasure on tho Indian forntlor. At present tho efforts of the Hrltlsh navy are handlcnpped by tho fact that tho hydrographleal conditions of Muscat, as Indeed of the whole lit toral of tho gulf, do not allow preventlvo ships to go very close to tho coast. It Is this fact which enables tho gun-running dhows to escape tho vlgl lanco of Hrltlsh cruisers. Thus tho dhows which put out from Muscat with their contraband cargoes adopt tho simple plan of hugging tho coast within the shallow-water limits. If they are making for Kowelt, which Is tho center of tho gun trndo for Mesopotamia and western Persia, they can proceed nil tho way in comparative safety, otherwise they sail just far enough to bo in a position to mako a dash for .Task or porno other port on the Mnkran coast, where their cargoes nro recolved for conveyance by caravan cla Haluchlstan to Afghanistan and the northwest frontlor Khnta, Tho two most active firms engaged In this trndo aro owned by a Haluchl and u Frenchman. There aro nlso In Muscnt numerous small shops engaged In tho trado, and numbors of tho agents mo "banlaB" from India. Mysterious cargoes aro also dropped overboard In tho dead of night Into Bwlft-snlllng dhowB and got away to obscure places along tho eastern coast. It will ho impos sible to check this growing peril to England's poaco In India without a large number of small' draught patrol boats and an efllclont coastguard on tho Makran coast. "No craft," says Mr. H. Warrington Smyth, In "Mast nnd Sail in Europo and Asia," iiaB played a greator part in tho world's history than tho dhow. Tho latoon yard Is as much tho emblem of tho Faith as is tho Croscont. Tho truo baggara, bagala, or Arab dhow, tho probable parent of all tho lateen-rigged offspring, Is now mostly to be mot with In tho Red sen and enstward to tho Per sian gulf, Karachi, Hombay, along tho Malabar coast, and down the coast of Africa to Zanzibar, making Its voyocea with tho lair wind of Uw nion- k ISHffiraSSssflRllHB I Wk sIHIHIBHIHBhHBIIHE The Mid'hti lt hhows the tenl tory iliiough which lite eontraliaud riiim aro run In the foreground are the bare rocky hllN Hiirrouiidlng MiiMcat, the cap ital of Oman, while to the right Is tho oiiuall bare coast of Makran. from which gun-running mutes lend Inland to Afghan istan. Oman Is an Independent sultan- ate occiipjlng the southcaMcrn end of the peninsula of Arabia. It reaches along the Persian gulf, the gulf of Oman and the Arabian sea from El Hasa to tho Hadramaut region. The area Is about so.nno s i a r o miles. The region along the coast Is very mountainous, rlr.lng in Its high est peaks prob ably to about 10. 000 feet. Hehlnd the in o u n t a I a chains tho coun try gradually passes Into the great desert of Arabia The most favorable part of the country Is In tho central val leys, which aro characterized by a temperate climate nnd rich vegeta tion. Tho chief products are dates, which constitute tho main article of export, and oth er fruits. Pearls soon, nnd unite capable of holding Its own In tho hard weather often to be met with In the Indlnn ocean. Not withstanding local differences of de tail these vessels vary very little as a class; they aro genorally grab-built, having a long overhung forward. There Is great beam and rise of lloor and a very raking transom stern. There is generally a high poop and fo'csle deck, tho rest of tho vessel being practical ly open. Tho rig consists generally of main nnd f$z&8&! M'J'tfi 1 VT !', fiStf't TrPClL PNOW IN THe j?siin gulp- mlzzen lateens. Tho tnnln- mnBt Is a big Bpar stepped amidships, with a great rake forward." A correspondent from India writes that tho Hrltlsh gunbonts in tho Persian gulf havo been very active in suppressing tho traffic In rifleB and ammunition. The arms were being landed on tho Makran const and thenco were carried by cara rans for sale to tho tribesmen on tho northwest ern frontier of India, to bo used against tho Hrlt Ish troops when tho next troublo comos. Tho nnvy men aro reported to hnvo been very sue cessful, and made several good hauls or rifles and nimnunltion. To rcduco still further tho gun-runners' chances of profit, four compnnles of tho Fourteenth Sikhs wore sent from Ouotta to Inter cept enravans In the neighborhood of Hobat. One of our Illustrations depicts the entraining of some of tho transport camels at .facobabad In Slnd, on routo to Nushkl, whence tho column marched to Hobat. As a rule, when camels nro entrained they aro loaded on open trucks, but on this occasion It was thought advisable to make use of closed cars. The "oouts" strongly objected to being loaded, but with a rope behind the hocks and a steady, par suaslvo strain on the nose rope they were event ually hauled or pushed In. Once In tho car the camels were made to kneel down in tho sand which hnd been spread on tho floor, their knees woro then tied so thnt It was Impossible for them to straighten out their forelegs. Tho cars woro each londed with six cnmels, three in ench end, facing Inward. Tho space In tho nilddlo was utilized for saddles nnd fodder for the Journey. Two cumolmen also traveled in each car. It may bo remarked that Hrahuls differ from most peoplo fn that they do not notice that tho camol has a particularly offcnslvo odor. Tho cnmels bubbled and protested whilo being load ed, but they soon sottlcd down and began to oat tho foddor provided for them. It took flvo hours to load tho llrst train of 120 camels. Only one camol that had an unusually largo hump could not bo pushed through the door, nnd ho wns trussed like a chicken and carried bodily In by about 15 tuon. nnd mother-of pearl and fish are alBo of some com mercial Importance. Tho chief port is Muscat. It Is situated between two hills and looks out to sea, ns shown In tho view of the Persian gulf accom panying this article Tho population of Oman Is estlmntcd at 1,500, 000, and consists of several tribes of Arab origin, partly nomadic. The negro, element Is very nu merous. Muscat was taken by tho Portuguese In 1G08 and remained In their hnndB until the middle of the sovonteenth century, when the Arabs of tho Interior secured possession of It. The imams or sultans of Muscat afterwards mndo extonslvo con quests In eastern Africa. Including Zanzibar, Mom has and Qullon. Oman was at tho climax of Its power nnd commercial prosperity in tho first half of tho nineteenth century, when tho authority of the Imnnis or sultans extended ovor tho Persian territories of l.arlstan and Moglstnn, tho Islands of Honder Abbas, pnrt of tho coast of Haluchlstan, and tho long strip of African coastland Including Zan zibar, Mombasa nnd Qullon, together with tho Island of Socotra. Tho present ruling family origi nated In Yemen and was first established In tho Imnmato in the person of Ahmed Ibn Said In 1711. The rise of tho Wahnbl power In Nedjed resulted In considerable loss of territory. In 1850, on tho death of Sultnn Said, his possessions woro dlvldod between his two bons, one receiving tho African territories and tho other Muscat, with tho Persian possessions. These last were lost In 1875. Sultan Thuwany, who succeeded In Muscnt, was assassi nated In 1SG0 by his son Sellm, who reigned hut a short time, and wnB driven out by his undo, Soyyld Folsal Ibn Turkl. The power of tho Imam is exer cised very llttlo beyond tho capital, Muscnt, tho namo of which Is therefore probably bettor known In popular imago than that of tho whole stato. Would Cause Much Writing. Uncoil I see It Is said that all tho Russian rail way stations keep complnlnt books, whero passen gers may enter various protests." Egbort If tlmt plnn were adopted In this coun try, I fear writer's cramp would be far more com mon than It is now. Yonkora Statesman. Gets $2,500 a Year From Clients Who Regulate Their Clocks by Time She Obtains at Earth's Lati tudinal Center. lmdon When Halley'n comet sc. nil Europe gazing skyward, no society beauty was more eagerly courted by enterprising photographers tlmti wns the comet by the patient astronomers of (Sreeiiwlch, whoso photographic tele scopes were kept searching the heavens, to note the anlval of the periodic xlsltor on the sensitive plate of the camera Nor was tho vigilance unrew.irdeu More than one distinct Impression of the brilliant object Is now on view at tho Royal observatory, (iieenwlch. Tills success ban revived Interest In this historic Institution bv the Thames, but few nutiddo sclentllle circles know much ut the history and details of the almost conventional gioup of buildings on That fair hill whom hoary sage'i boast To name the st.irs and count the heavenly host. Yet probably no hill In the world has had mi strangely varied a history or plaed so Important a part In the nffalrs of men. The granite line across the footpath on its summit Is the merl dlau fiom which the longitude on every Hrltlsh map and chnrt .s cnleu lated. All England sots Its time by tho mean-solar clock; and in addition to the dally and nightly observations of the heavens, elaborate records are kept of diurnal changes In the tern pernture and humidity, the direction and force of the wind, the amount of TERRIQLE CASE OF GRAVEL jgilgSgMJateK The Tower of Greenwich. sunshine nnd rainfall, tho earth's mag netism nnd n host of meteorological matters forming a science of dally Inci easing Importance and interest. There is a largo galvano-mngnotlc clock, fixed on tho outside wall of tho observatory, and divided Into 21 hours. Thoro nro still many who bellovo this olock Is kept going by tho sun. They do not know that tho fixed stars aro tho real timekeepers, from which Hrlt Ishcrs cheek their llally progress. Tho Sidereal clock, kept within ono of tho buildings of the observatory, Is cor rected, by observation of tho Btars i Woman Selling the Time. every clear night, and overy morning before ton o'clock tho moan solar clock Is checked from It. Tho lattor Is housed bolow the tlmeball on tho towor which dominates tho hill and Is In magnetic connection with tho clock In the boundary wall, which has fur nished tho correct tltno to countless visitors to tho hill since It was placed thero In 1852. To this galvano-mngnotlc clock In tho wnll comes overy Mondny a wom an who makes $2,500 a year out of tho nueorcst occupation In England. Sho Bells the time to Iondon watchmakers. Her namo Is Miss Dollovillo of Mnldenhend. Eighty years ago tho thon nstronomer royal suggested to her father that If ho took tho correct ed time on a cortlfled chronometer every week ho could no doubt find nu merous clients. So ho bought a fa mous watch mndo for tho duko of Es box, ono of the boiis of Oeorgo III., and soon worked up a business with It. When ho died his widow sold tho tlmo till sho reached tho ago of olghty-ono, nnd thon sho hnnded tho business ovor to her dnughtor. When Miss Hollo vlllo visits Croon wlch ot tho beginning of every week her chronometer Is corrected mid she Is given nn official certificate. Prom thnt her 50 customers correct tholi watches nnd clocks. Baker City, Ore., Man Suffered 25 Years. Charloa Kurz, 1C1S Center St., Hakor City, Oro, says: "For 25 years I suf fered ngony from grnvol. So Intense wns the pnln when tho stones wore pnsslng, thnt I had to llo on my back nnd brnco my feet, ofton being forced to Bcrentn. On ono oc casion two BtonoB be emtio lodged nnd I could not pass the urine for two days. I Hpent hundreds of dol lars without relief. At last I began taking Donn'it Kidney Pills. They am the only remedy that wards off thoso attacks " Remember the nnnio Donn's. For sale by nil dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster Mllburn Co., Huffalo, N. Y. Sign of Recovery. "If when the devil Is sick a monk he will be," said Rose Stuhl Bagoly, "then tho devil gets well In double ipilck time. Witness that young Mlvll with the ladles,' my kid cousin. Last winter he was III, so HI ho didn't havo any sense of humor loft nor any sense either. 1 was staying at the namo ho tel, and when I went In to look nftor him he virtuously remarked that bin loom was no place for a 'Chorus Lady' and promptly shooed mo out. (A few years ago I spanked that kid.) Thon ho got Kcarcil mid sent for a doctor and the doctor sent for a trained nurse. For sovernl dnys I got bulle tins of Ills progress from the cham bermaid. Tho fourth morning sho sot my mind completely at rest. " "Sure, ma'am,' said Maggie, 'an' I think he do bo gettln along very woll. The nurse was slttlu' on hla lap thin nornln'!' " Where Millions Are Entombed. The catacombs at Homo wero tho burial places of the early Christians. They aro about 530 miles in extent and pro said to have contained 0,000,000 bodies. During the persecutions of tho Christians under Nero and other Ro man emperors the catacomba woro used for hiding places. Under Diode t lun the catacombs wero crowded with thoso for whom thero was no safety In tho face of tho day. Tho art ot tho catacombs Is unique nnd most inter estlng. Simple designs nro etched In the slabs which seal tho tombs. Now and then aro small chapels whoso paintings are to bo found. All aro Hiblo Illustrations, so that tho cata combs may bo said to bo a pictorial Hlble In effccL Tho Christian Herald. He Had No Eye for Color. Thero camo to tho homo of a negro In TcunoBBoo nu addition to tho fam ily In tho shapo of triplets. Tho proud father hailed the first man who camo along tho road and asked him In to bcc them. The man, who wns an Irish man, seemed greatly Interested In tho Infants as ho looked them over, lying In n row before him. "What does yo' think?" asked tho parent. "Waul" pointing to tho ono In tho middle "I think I'd savo that ono." Everybody's Magazine. Bores Barred. A reporter asked Mr. Roosovolt at the Outlook office how ho got through so much work, mid at tho snmo time saw bo ninny people. "I shun horos," wns tho reply. "I don't wasto n inln utg of my tlmo on bores. Do you per cctvo that I havo only Just ono chair In this room? You see, my hunting experiences havo shown mo that great bores uro always of small caliber." . To harbor fretful and discontented thoughts Ib to do yourself moro injury than it Is In tho power of your groat est enemy to do you. Mason. Woman's inhumanity to man mnko.i countieBs divorce lnwyora happy. r Cut Out Breakfast Cooking Easy to start the day cool and comfortable if Post -Toasties are i in the v pantry "ready to serve , right from the package No cooking required; just add some cream and a little. sugar.' Especially pleasing these summer I mornings with berries, or. fresh! fruit. One can "'feel cool Tin t hot wcatherion proper! food. ii The Memory Lingers"' POSTUM CKllUAT, CO., LtJ. Battle Creek. MlcU. w w- i vw - """-"; pri -Hr-T-rTTrTrrnrrr gjggggjjggggggg - jfs jjh9vi iiuui mm vjf---n ") ---- lf "C1" "I1