Yacht Racing at Lake Manawa Pictures from Photos Mado by a Bee Staff Artist a- J 1' yrS:yi Ay. 71 ft. ; X MKSSHS. STERNS. WESTON. M'ALLIOTEU AND COOIJIY, TUB CUKW OP TUli! AltOO. V ifpu .. ? vA- l . ..J V. IT'. ' "1 MKSSlta NORTHWOOD, KOBBINS, U)NO AND JOIIKSON, TUB CUKW OB Tl IK LOl'US. A i i : " H A ''A i f V gaMiiMMM , a ., ...torr-- - TUB AROO. WITH THE WIND ON ITS QUARTER. Yl water Bounds ratherqueer, doesn't I If? Anil vt WA HavA Inst hiifl tho opportunity of witnessing ono of tho prettiest little contests ever pulled oft on water. To be mire. It wns not on the scale of the America's cup races, but it Involved the possession of a eup that 1b quite as Important b-eally as the bit of silver for tho defense of which so much moniy has been expended by yaehtrmen of tho enft. One of the natural Impulses of the Anglo-Saxon Is toward the water. This Is merely the recurrence of tho restlessness that led his forebears to that eminence on the sea that has never been shaken. Wherever ho can find a pond big enough or a srtrenm wide enough, he Indulges his penchant for aquatic spo'ts. Bo It has come thut from the Independent efforts of Individuals who could not with stand the desire to row and sail on tho waters of Manawa that the Manawa Yacht club has developed, and along the Mis souri Valley similar organisations hnvo sprung up. It would be Impossible to have two yacht clubs within reaching distance and not have a difference of opinion as to the sailing qualities of the boats and the men. This leads to races as naturally as water runs down hill. Out of this condi tion has grown tha existence of tho Manawa challenge cup, and the ability of 1 Manawa V'acht club to defend it. Three years ago St. Joseph sent a boat to Manawa to compete and said boat wns beaten. Two years ago another boat came up, and again tho local boat finished flret Iinst year the cup races mere established and again the supremacy of the Manawa Jacht was maintained. t,ast week another effort was made to lift the Manawa cup, tho I,otus Yacht club of St. Joseph again being the challenger. After a competitive test of seven races the Argo was chosen to denfend the cup, whllo THE LOTUS, CLOSE) HAULED ON STARBOARD TACK. the Ixtus was sent to win It. Three out of five races was to win, and, as tho Argo won three In succession, little doubt is left as to tho merits of tho boats. The races were sailed under fine conditions, all the wind that either cared for being sfforded on fach day but one, when the race was called oft because of lack of time. In the first race the Ijotus suffered from an accident, a por tion of its rigging giving way. As it was practically beaten when tho accident oc curred, it had no real effect on the result. One of the Incidents of the competition was the effort of tho St. Joseph crew to take the Manawa, the yacht that com peted against the Argo for the honor of dev fending the cup, and undertake to beat that Argo with the Manawa's crew on board. Tho effort was a failure, but the race was given a tinge of excitement when ths Argo's crew took the Lotus and sailed it very close to a winner against both tha Manawa und the Argo. It Uncle Sam's Jap-Like Soldiers (Copyright. 19C4. by T. C. McClure.) III.-M AmonTin BOA fnr the first time the detachments of the phll- ulary now In thi country tho Initial comment Is usually "Why, how like the Japs they look," and the second. "They seem to drill every bit as Well as the regulars." The Filipino soldier, as Uncle Sam has made lilm In the laut few years, la strik ingly like the Jap lighting man In many more ways than features and stature. II Is also diametrically opposed to the regular In almost as many respects; and In the opinion of his superiors the equal of any soldier in the world. According to American officers In com mand of Filipinos the little brown men Of the archipelago display as astonishing military precocity as that credited to the Japanese. To prove their statements, they declare that many a scout, wearing at enlistment little more than a breach clout skilled only In the use of the crudest weapons, has become an Al soldier In from thrco to six months. Once a uniform is sl ipped on a Filipino recruit's back, und his stomach comfort ably tilled with food, he throws himself enthusiastically into the taak uf doing to tho letter what Ills superiors com mand hi in to do. Here again he betrays a strong likeness to the Jap. "In fact," said a captain of scouts, "we've got to watch out thut the boys don't work them selves to dcuth. Even men who have been enlisted for u year or more are not content to ill 111 merely at the regular hours. It is customary all through the camp for squads to form voluntarily in the company streets of an evening and, under the eye of one of their number, to go through the manual of arms for half un hour at a stretch. I've been In the urmy about nf teen years und I've novur seen American soldleis pa the time away In any cuch fruition." The Filipino recruit Is taught the manual at sxins by iuuUtiuu. Of course, when he enlists he does not understand English, and the officer has little or no knowledge, of VLsayan, Tagulogan, or whatever dialect the "greenle" may speak, and he wouldn't use it If he hud. The Instructor, rifle in hand, places himself in front of the re cruit, gives a command In the usual way, and at the same time brings his weapon to the position ordered. The Filipino at once imitates and within a week he has associated tho words of the various com mands ujid their corresponding movements eo well thut he goes through the manual with almost the precision of a veteran. In much the same fashion he is taught to stand at attention, what "fours right" means, the proper thing to 90 when ho heats the command "Right forward fours right, march!" and in equally short time he is giving the officers very little worry at drill. Nor docs he cause them concern in other directions. For one thing, he scarcely ever gets drunk. Captain Ira Keithley, In com- fPontinued on Page Tlunceo-l v. j-?vf fit v- w ' 1, ,..' i .. - . bv--Vrl ... .... .1 PRIVATE IN TUB PIUHTPLNlil COfi STABULARY.