Murcti 3, 1001. What the British Think of Dewet Ik i 1 (Copyright, 1901, by .lames llarnos.) It wan uarly In the month of May, lt0. that Christian Dowel first began to Impress tho force of his ehnraeter upon the Knglisli ijillltary minds, writes James Harnes, spe cial correspondent In South Afrlcu of the London Dally Mall. The great army under Lord Uober.B was In full sweep of Its north, ward pilgrimage. Along the lino of the railway (hero was little opposition, hut to tho eastward the dogged and determined Uoer lighter wns hanging on the rear of Oenerat Hamilton's division, engaging him In nlmost dally actions, harassing trans P"rt and rear guard. Somehow he had rllppcd through from tho front, and had adopted tho very tactics hest suited to the coun try, and hitherto dis dained by tho rest of tho lloer generals. Uotha and his army were lleelng for the Tnuil, leaving u trail of dynamite, llro and de struction behind him. Ou Thursday, tho LMth, which was tho queen's birthday, 1 dined with a young captain in the mounted Infantry at Vmlefort road, nations of rum were issued on mis day, and at o o'clock tho bugles of the vurluus divisions were ordered to sound the keynote of D, and, be ginning at the right, 'Ood Savo the Queen swept down the sixteen miles of front, sung by nearly Cu.uou Urltlsh throats. Cheers rolled upon cheers; tho Hroii blazed until long after tho usual hour for "taps." Tho Australians held a smoking concert that, lasted until nearly midnight. "When Johiui) Comes Marching Home" was one of tho choruses. "That's all very well," observed Cnptaln Col vlllo to mo, "but I wish we did not have that chap Dewet In our rear. I'll bo down hero some day chivvying him about tho country with a lot of sick horses. You mark my words." Ills prophecy was true. Ho Is down thero Ht this present moment, but ho Is n captain no longer, nnd has more than a thousand men at his back. Gradually D e w o t ' s name and his exploits ceased to cause aston ishment. Ho became so serious that he was joked about. A soldier scrlbbled on tho side of a railway carriage leav ing Pretoria an nddeuda to the sign "For Cape Town," reading: "By permission of C. Dowet trallle manager," and no ono got angry. They nil laughed appre ciatively, which showed that it was no light Jest Photo by Townsend. THE ILLUSTRATED 1U3.IS. down upon a heavily guarded pass. Then another small party of Uoers hail crossed ' nquattcd about a lire near by. fryin tho nolso would chango again, ns If tho tho main lino heading north, and the post ' ''' beef In a skillet, direction of march had been altered. Tho at Natal Spruit had been captured at da- III Matt Included In lin Italian. Doers nppeared to be confused nnd It wns break and tho bridge blown up. Willi u Uns Ceneral Dewet's headquarters whispered about that they had lost their which party was General Dewet It would mi.8i, ull,i uno of the Kngllshuion at onco way nnd might stumble upon thu outposts bo heard to state. 1 think myself he was w,,nl ovor ,i MHked tho general If he at any minute. The ndvanco lines stood with the one to tho eastward, for tho simple would not come over and lunch with them with their rifles cocked. Kveryone was reason that he had led the Kngllsh to be- At first ho declined, but. upon his staff being ready for a midnight nttack and supposed Uuvo ho was with the one to tho west. Included In the Invitation he accepted and at least that tho action would begin at the WhBM 1)uwL,t caIurC(, a of 10 HUlJ,,uL.s Joined them. crack of dawn. lU)(l t))o nUBo lUmtllg ()( nmniunlllon and Strange to say. the conversation wns nut I)im-i llml KmoihxmI. clothing at Vredefort Weg, ho said to his about war. but i f farming and tho possl Uut when the sun rose, what did they prisoners; "Now wo havo got more than bllltles of Irrigation. Utter, however, he llml 7 About forty empty wagons, draggod wo want turn to and help yourselves." expressed some of his views to ono of his by a few played-out oxen, had been driven And soon Dutch nnd British were busy prisoners, lie cnld that he knew the lloeis nnd thumped nround In a circle all night! looting Indiscriminately, taking everything had no chance of being victorious, but ho wheels were making. I have heard this A score of black boys and a half-dozen white thoy could get. A burgher and n "Tommy intended to do Ills best "to make It the tale denied, but I tell It as It was told to men were nil tho prisoners tnken. Dowel nlmost enmu to blows ovor the pos.-osslon most expensive war Knglnnd ever nt- mo (I got It from a lloer source), and from hnd escaped and had managed to take most f n camera that was being sent to nn tempted." He has pretty well fullllled his what 1 have myself observed of tho callous- of his light carts with him along the top olllccr through tho post. The mall pnueliiN threat by this time. ness of the Urltlsh olllcers at times to their of the Hanking rldgo and had actually were all ripped open, nnd tho veldt for Dewet put little restrictions upon his Immediate surroundings. I dare vouch for rounded the end of the Urltlsh Hue nnd was miles mound wns covered with letters and prisoners, knowing that their unfamlllarliy Its probability The campn were sur some twenty tulles nwny, retracing his steps newspapers Somo of these were after- with the enuntry and the feni of getting lllMt U'ltM Hill lriMI t (Ml 5even iNcorasua governors approach the camp after dark, following the main road, and he drove his wagons straight through the nun l Ho was hailed, but Inquired for some dotu'iiincnt of the Diitlsh that was farther on, ami was al lowed to pass. The only objection that was made to his progress was one made by a group of olllcers dining near the road way, who did not like the dust his wagdi 3 M W mm mm re Wllllnin A. Poynter. Ixrenzo Crounse. Charles Dietrich. John M. Thayer. Silas A. llolcomb, James 10 lloyd, Itobort W Furnas safeguard against i 1 1 attempt to escape. If they hud been cotonlals the case would havo been very different, but as It was, they marched along like lambs until they were turned loose on the Natal border, to Hnd their way after weary suffering miles to the Urltlsh lines. All those are reasons for Dowel's popularity among his enemies, and 'hey llml It hard. I dare say, to bellovo the stories that are now circulated about his treatment of the peace eiivovs. Desperation must have changed his "hararier to cause liltn to act In such n cruel and reckless fashion, forfaiting If the reports are true, all claims to consideration U u t brigand, guerrilla, out law, patriot, or what you wish to call hint, ho Is now the backbone nf tho nrmed resistance to the Urltlsh efforts to establish peace. He Is tho one great stumbling block In tho way of fliinl settlement. Al though tho Irrcconcll nblcs may consider him a greator leader than Nnpoleon or Washing ton there nre thou sands of his country men who cnuiplaln Hint his nnn-acceptanco of tho Innvllablo Is eniiR Ing needless suffering nnd useless ruin. Some of thorn, to my cortnln knowledge, have offered their services toward running him to enrth. hut so far they havo been declined. Woo be tide nny of these men, for ir they should fall Into Dewol's hands they would get short shrift It Is said that ho has prepared a blacklist, and on It nre some of his own rela tions and nn undo or Louis Unthn. tho nom inal head of tho Uoer , tnrces In the Held. I wonder how ho would ' treat tho Uoer ladles who havo contributed m) much to tho soclnl Ull life In conquered towns Many Fish, Few Mermaids New York Sun: The colonel oucnsioually luoke forth In language not exactly suited to the drawing room. Tho colonel was well on In the fiOs and hail not married. Not Hint ho couldn't, ho wns wont to explain, but because so few women struck his fancy. One uveuing the colonel attended a little "at home," nnd taking the hostess, a very at all Dowet became a public personage. I rc- rounded at night by llounderlug transport toward tho Vaal. At least, that Is what wards authored up und reached thu proper member seeing In an English comic papor wagons, lost and Inquiring their way to ho wns actually doing at the time, but tho authorities. Strange to sny, among thcui a cartoon representing tho eluslvo Doer various divisions, and apparently no one Kngllsh did not 11 nd It out quickly enough was ono of my own, which was lied up general ns a will-o'-the-wisp, and that Is ablo to put them on tho right road. to pursue him. Ho got almost twenty-four carefully and forwarded several weeks later exactly what ho was, and Is now. Tho It was tho easiest thing in tho world to hours' start! with tho following remarks: "Found on tho Kngllsh Intelligence department which, so ride In and out of an Kngllsh cump after Two nights after, a watchninn on guard veldt anil forwarded to destination." far ns I could see, was not so Intelligent darkness without attempting nny secrecy, at a rallwuy crossing, about twelve miles , . as to threaten tho peace of the world and I havo dono It a score of times. When west of Johannesburg, on the Krugersdorp '"liorn mm inpiiveH i.ui.k .uikc never knew whero ho was. Sometimes ho onco Inside the lines, one could wander at line, wus surprised by tho appearance, of u When tho lloeis marched away It was was reported south of tho Vaal, somotlmos will, and nover havo a question asked as trooper In a holmot and tho uniform of u hard to loll captors from cuptlves, for thoy north of It; ho wns to tho west of tho rail- to one's business. A shred of khaki, an mounted Infantryman, who asked his way all woro brand now winter suits of Itliakl way, ho was to tho cast of It. Ho wns here air of assurance, and an appearance of to tho Florida station. The sentry turned sorgo and n sort of poajaoket of yellowish dear friend of his, aside, poured Into hor our consulting with General notha; he was being Kngllsh were all that were required, to point down tho Hue, when ho was con- dun cloth called "Urltlsh warms." In tho the story of his rejection by a charming down south, threatening to punish his The Uoers wero Informed of everything fronted by a cocked revolver. mcuntlmo, IL',000 troops ut Pretoria shlv- young woman whom ho had asked to bo his elder brother, Plot, If ho did not do better that went on, and, I Hrmly bollove, of every "Keep quiet," said tho supposed Tommy, ercd In tho cold, for what he and his prls- wife. The hostess thought tho colonel needed nghtlng, Occasionally somebody got on his anticipated movement. "and you will not bo touched." With that onors loft bohlnd Dowet had burned. It sympathy and, beckoning a charming dinner ho relieved tho astonished man of Ills rlllo, was at Vredefort Weg, by thu way, mat companion to her, said: and, In truo story-paper fashion, gave threo the station master opened a bottlo of "Colonel - has been tolling me that ho low whistles. Immediately somo men up- chainpngno when tho troops arrived on their has not been fortunate In winning thu hand tonburg road west of Pretoria, he was peurcd from bohlnd a nearby shed, and a nortliom innrcli, nnd no anil His daughters of Miss . Now, I think tho colonel headed off nbout eighteen miles north at fow minutes lator tho head of a column drnnk with tho olllcers n toast to the queen ought to remember the old adago: 'Thero tho Warm naths. I do not suppose that of mounted men, followed by a long train and to hopes of a speedy conclusion of the nro Just as good fish In tho sea as over ho was ovor so near bolng captured bo- of Capo carts and led horses, camo down war. were cniight.' " foro, and, except for his wonderful dash tho road and crossed tho railway. It took Captain Corbolls, who was In charge of "Yes, madam, lots of flhh, but thero are for llborty In December, I do not think that them almost half an hour to go by. The tho big transport trnln which was captured so few . mermaids," Interrupted tho ho ovor mndo so remarkable nn escape sentry Judged they must havo been In the enrouto to tho relief of tho Highland colonel. Tho ovenlng before, tho army was Jubl- neighborhood of 2,000, with at least elghtv brigade under General MacDonald, told mo lant, for It wns supposed that thoy had tho carts, When all had passed, tho watch- something of Dowet's personality. Ac- wily Uoer on tho hip. Thoy had effectually man's guardian said to him pleasantly: provonted him Joining forces with Uothn. M(.HNI,K(. (P (, rl IhIi Cnniiniiiiiler. Thoy hnd, so thoy supposed, cut off his escopo southward, and thero was nothing track. It was rumored that tho scouts had caught sight of htm, but, as they had has tened back with tho nows, thoy had lost tho place, and when tho army moved after hi m ho wns somcwhero else. SiieecNH MiiUch Mini Popular. Now, with the Urltlsh, who aro a sport ing peoplo, success nt nny sort of gamo makes a man popular. I heard ono of tho wealthiest men In Knglnud, nnd Its young est duke, mako tho following romark: "Well," exclaimed ho, slapping his thigh, "Dowot Is n soldier nnd n gentleman, 1 would bo proud to bo shot by Dowot." If I havo heard ono Kngllsh ofllcor, I havo heard a scoro oxpress tho hope that Chris- Wonderful DiinIi for I.lliertr. When General Dowet had mado that re markable march of his and crossed tho Hus- Not What it Was tian Dowet would cotno out of tho war for him but to stand and Hght or to break "Your rollof will como to you In about an hour, cording to tho cnptaln, ho was most kindly and Just. Ho hnd his men well In hnnd nnd they respected nnd feared him. Tho olllcers, liu una r.Mol,,ir ...111, II, ., Ili-lllul, ...., ,, . , . . ... ' ...... v...., .......... t.ii mi- iii man .iiuij, If you stir from whero you aro until Ilfl.H(,HIIP1, , ,.' u.,lnl wna ,., Detroit Journal: Illtterly tho farmer communed with himself, In the darkness, thero. "Coming to Now York," he oxoluliuc.i In fair dialect, "is not what It was! 1 havo this day tried to post a lotter In n llro alarm nox, una havo not called out tho department! 1 havo given my ho did It." "You would hnvo to got Hold ueniy to nrms, nnu tnoy sioou in rnnR p,,,:Hnn nn.,,t nnil nrmv nnHmi iv "(""1(;l(,H not. uown on tno ration list. ab watcu to a uarit swinger to Keep, only of him first," laughed anothor oHlcor. "Ho until daybreak. "r' ; , " mlHHeu "y tho Hoors woro examining their 'capture, to find that he was a detective In plain seoms to hnvo a delicacy about leaving his From tho direction of Dowet's laager t. which was somo fifty or sixty wagons, they clothes! Now I have blown nut tho gas, J n... ..t,i i, ,,,i ,,,, .luin,. Tho man. whoso rlflo was taken from h in. on,,,.. ,, n,i ,.i..i.i ... ., i.,,. ,.i v lllllircbu. lliu ui-iii nimuiin ii iwuwi n.iiiuih ' . 9 i 111 ... wi.n utio ittiuiiiiiu ii i.v , iiiil ujltill uui 1 uuillltJl mi'Ui; ft "1 -i And now for tho stories of him that I nnd movement, tho continual rattlo cf ueciures mui uoruy uoioro mo umo nu learning that It bolonged to tho olllcors nnd 1 havo hoard from Uoer Bources: wheels nnd tho Bhouts of tho Kaffir drivers, the- rollof camo, ho heard a man gallop wns their prlvato possession, General Do- Between Natal Spruit and Standerton, Do- Something wns up; what It wns no ono could awftV from tno 8,10,1 nearby. Upon that, ho WPt put n guard ovor It and not n thing was wet, whllo endeavoring to movo north- toll. At ono tlmo It nppeared as If Dowot walkod Into tho camp, distant about a mllo, touched. That vory day, ns tho officers ! ward, found his transport headed by a largo must be trying to come boldly out along "n(1 Kavo 1,10 nlnrm. woro lunching on Jum and pickles nnd pate 2 body of nrltlsh troops; what did ho do but ono of tho mnln roads; at anothor to move Tho same ovenlng It wns roported that do fols graB, they obsorvod ono or two mm wunui nuuiu tumu uui in um mi .. ..- " i ... . lmfnrn Hint tlmn vnu nro a ' .......... ..n !!., 1 T 1 .1 l 1 .!. If InlA a,nll nnrllna nn.l ,llo. 11 0 11111111108 IJOlOrO 11101 UIUO, yOU nTO II .. i,,,!,, ,.. , ,., l, ., U11VU, illlll 1 llftll .1 U UIIUIIUI BU VUilt II ' ...... ......... u ...... ..... , , . ,, ...Ill, .. ...... . ..t.,.... ... i,Mi-,,,MLi, i. . ii... i. i, in- - i., n. i,ai, ai .ni.inii,i ''Pn'l r thero Is a suro sunt with a , ,,, , i , lit- lltlll lliu upimi lllllll III) HIIIIIU lllu lu .viM.i-.ii in... iikj ...ion ....... ..v ...... .. k ... .,,n((,llt.. vm. -. it. , rnrnnP nf llw, !"'' .....ji.ih o..i..u U nu,un it glvo him a big dinner nnd nsk him "how nil of tho Kngllsh troops wero called slid- "" wn'CI , , nr ninLl . u, """''rcl pounds, and usually laden with 01 ho did It." "You would havo to got hold denly to nrms, and thoy Btood In rnnks Xristlan nowot nnd l is nrmv nnssoil t v ,1(,"(,,,C;I(,H not down on tho ration IJst. Ab w And iib ho rose from his restless cniiih nnd went forth to pace tho deserted streets of the metropolis ho quoted Goethe: "Gib melne Jiigend nilr zureiiek!" Which Is to say, bolng Interpreted, tlii ie'.s no fool lllii) nn old fool. 1