J. A. IV V 4 i J ) k i' i Tj How French Government is t i. .. , f v 4 r. ... ts T1IOHN lil'SIIFS FURNISH TUB FOOD FOR THK CAMEI.3. (Cnpyrlght. 1!"'7. hy Frank O Cnrpenfor ) 1ENI OI-NIF. April 11 -(Spe.-lul f I C'orre8iiinilincp of Thp liee.) I ..... .... in.- v. iitir-m HI is ti tho Kriilrst dHrr( on rarth. On all Hldoc of nic Is thn Sh hum Hin t, hill to tlm woKt, south iiti.l past, for Imn.lr.ds of tnll.H. Thp os,.t, kII tol.l. In IniR'T than tho Fnlt.d Stat.s. It Is UK that If you couia lift up Its nan.ly. locky urfarp llkn n quilt and transport It to our country, It would cover pvcry bit of It. and hide n part of Canndn and the Oulf Of Moxlco. It is lnnRrr thnn the Mpdltpr nnPBn urn. and lilifKPr than all Europe. In souip pl'irt s It Is 2,'XK) mllns whip. Whprp I now nm Is inoro than 4v) miles routh of the port of Oran, ntul about l.i'm tnlleii from Timbuktu on tho Nlncr, whpre thp freat fertile belt of Africa bruins. On the Kilp of Morocco. This Is on thB very cdse of tlm French fiahara. Just west of It there are wild rocky mountains aa bare as the asphalt of Pennsylvania avenue, and as Jhlrsty as was Dives when he bcKned Lazarus to cool his parched tongue. Thev mark the bound ary between the possessions of the French and those of thn Moorish sultan; but the desert Koes farther westward, and at the outhweat It does not stop until It reaches the Atlantic ocean. I came hern on the military railroad, built by thn French, to guard their people from the brigands of Morocco. It Is the road which. It Is thought, may Homo day be con tinued clear across the Sahara to Tim buktu, with possibly a branch going off to Iko Chad. Tho road starts at Oran nd carries one through the rich lands of the Tell, u. country as fat us our Missis sippi valley, which has grain llelds and orchards, and vineyards which make mil lions of gallons of wine every year. The cenes there arc like those of the best parts of California. We left Oran in tho even ing, and as tho night fell we were Mill in tho Tell. On the Atlna 1'latraa. Wrapping myself In my blanket, with my camera under my bead as a pillow. I lept fitfully all night and awoke on tho high plateau of the Atlas mountains, be yond which Is the desert. I was passing through a great plain of yellow, sandy null, covered here and there with stones, and spotted every w her with bunches of dry nlfa grass. Only In one direction were there any hills to b seen, and they were bleak, Imrrcn and rocky. The alfa was growing right In the sands. It Is a long, wiry grass, which, gathered by the thousands of tons and uhlptwrt to Europe for the making or paper. It Is cut by tho Arabs and there are companies with ImniensM capital which handle It. It grows to the height of my waist In bunches, some of which are not bigger than one's flst, while others sprout out of mounds which would till a half-bushel measure. It looks tough and dry, but nevertheless large Hocks of white and brown sheep, black goats ami camels feed upon it. I aw such animals scattered over the plains, each flock watched by n shepherd In white gown and turban, who looked like a ghost as he stood among his sheep In the early morn ing. We passed ninny tent villages occupied by such shepherds and their families. The tents are of a course black cloth woven In stripes. They are so stretched out that otie lias to get down upon his knees and crawl In. The cloth Is made of camel's hair and sheep's wool by the wives of the shepherds: it Is ui.l us canvas through out the desert. Down Into the Desert. We soon left the Atlas and came on Into the Sahara Itself. There was still soma vegetation, but It was only in patches, her nd there, or along the banks of dried up streams. Now the land was Mat. Hint now tt rose Into rocky mountains which were Muck in the early morning. As I looked cut over the plains 1 saw the sun rine. There was first a faint streak of yellow way off in the east. This grew until it becume a sheet of light over the horlson. A few minutes later a pale yellow sun could be seen through this veil. As it rose the veil disappeared and a biasing white ball Jumped out into the sky. For a time a thin fleecy mist hovered over the sands, only to bo followed by the clear air cf the desert. As we went on with our Journey the Fahara seemed always changing. We passed for miles over bare rook, almost as smooth as a floor, and then through re gions where the rin ks were ragged and cut tip into all sorts of hupes. At times there were boulders and again sniall pebbles of different colors, red brown and black. Here about Henl Ounlf the desert Is largely limestone, while farther south, along the Zousfun.1 rivrr. I passed through rolling dunes and plains covered with boulders. ot Flat He4 of Baud. The old descriptions reprrnented the 6uhara as a dreary waste of barren sand as flat the "f. H va,t wilderness where travelers must perish if they tried to go through it. The real Sahara has vast cx- ancs of sand. It has plains us tug us a KOod-sUcd stats of the union, which are roveied with stones, but u great part of it is rolling. It Is largely a plateau, broken up by lofty mountains and rut up by water courses called wad.lys which are dry the greater part of the year. Its average height above the sea Is about as great as thst of the Ulue Ridge mountains of Vir ginia, and In many places It Is as high as the AJleghentes and higher. The sand dui.es themselves are oir.s tlmes feet high. nd they rise from the Aoaeit, crsot-haiel. the horns of ths M crescent being turned away from the winds. The sand Is rolled up by the wind from tho bottom to the top,' each grain go ing over and over until It falls inside the crescent. As this rolling goe on tho dures Increase In size. They move along slowly and If a railroad should be in their way they would swallow It up. I have seen similar dunes on the great Peruvian desert at the foot of the Andes, and have been told that they were the chief obstacles to railrond building in that region. These dunes grow hard as the wind blows against them. Muring my travels through them here not far from Hon! Ounif. I hive rid den up them on horseback and the sand is almost as solid as that of the seashore. Vegetation of the Desert. There are large regions In the Fahara which have no vegetation whatever, but many other parts have grass during parts of the year. This Is so everywhere along the edges of the desert, and also along the drled-up water courses, the beds of which contain some moisture. In many places there is h slight rainfall during certain months. The least water causes the grass to spring up. and the Arabs drive tlmir flocks to such places to pasture. Where Gossip and Stories Washington's Best Dressed Sinn, T IS generally conceded in Wash ington that Admiral Dewey Is the! best dressed man there with Cjt'fJJpl St"'ator Lodge of Massachusetts I i 'I second. No man ever lived in the capital who devoted more careful at tention to his attire than Admiral Dewey. The veteran's own tailor Insists that his distinguished patron dresses altogether too gayly for a man of his years. He claims that the white flannels, while shoes, white cup, etc., which the udmlral affects In sum mer time are not consistent with the dignity of the hero of Manila bay. Tho Innate refinement of Senator Iodg; crops Out In tasteful dressing, but sometimes his taste Inclines to foreign styles which make his colleagues in the senate sit up and take notice or gather around him trying to In duce him to divulge the name of his tailor. Spooner and the Swede. One of the first important cases Senator Bpooner secured after he had gone from his home in Indiana to practice law at Hudson. Wis., was the defense of a Bwedn Indicted for criminal carelessness, the penalty of which was a term In tha penitentiary. The case was an extremely difficult one, relates the Washington Herald. and the ambitious young limb of tho law accepted it under many misgivings. The senator believes that he has never since had to work as hard on any case, and he Is certain he has never made a more telling plea to a Jury. His client sat through the proceedings uncon cerned, and even when the Jury retired to delllerate on the verdict the stole Swede showed no Dartlcular Interest. When the Jury finally returned and anounced its verdict of acquittal, Mr. 8ooner rushed excitedly to his client. "You have been acquitted," exclaimed the lawyer. "You are now free to go bark home. Don't you understand what I mean? I say you have been acquitted freed cleared und you can walk nut of the court room to your home instead of going back to Jail." The Swede, still unmoved, calmly in quired to his lawyer: "Ef aye bane cleared, don't I get some moneys from the court for my I line In Jail?" A Slnmbllng Block. Professed politicians who have reduced public office to an exact sclenre find the Independent voter a sad stumbling block a fact which Is amusingly disclosed by a story found In the recent life of the late George Munro Grant, the eminent Canadian educator and clergyman. Toward the end of Sir John MaclMinald's life he and Principal Grant, then the head of (Jtieen s college, met at dinner at the house of th premier s hrother-ln-la w. Prof. Williamson. "How I wish." the premier said to the principal, "that you would be a steady friend of n ine." "My dear Sir John." the principal replied. "I have always supported you when you were right." The premier's eyes twlnkln l and he laid hi hand urn the shoulder of the principal. "My dear man." said be. ' I have no use for that species of friendship:" Remembers Whom He Meets. Congressman Charles Curtis of Kansas, who was elected to suece'd Ju"ph I. Rurton In the United States senate, l as had a career out of the ordinary Not 'h least interesting thing alut hint Is that be has Indian blood In his veins. When 14 he held his first office- prose cuting attorney of Shawm e county. In 190, ten years after his ihIuiImIoii to the bar. he was candidate fur congress, and lost. Two years later he tried ut'aln. and won. It is said he shook hands with n"1 ') men lu that campaign, and remembers to this day the name of each. He has served fourteen years in the lower house "Yes. I know most of my constituents." Curtis bus said, "and I have ulwlays mads It a point to do so. One dav I was In ths home town of a senator In the Fourth dis trict Br. a he took me around to Introduce me to some of the men In the town It's a fact that he'd forgotten the names of some of the men hs'd lived near for twenty years, and I had to tell him who they ere. lis enjoyed it, and so did his friends. mil . 1 11 .7 -. v--7 TKNT VILLAGE the grass will not grow there are some times thorn bushes which furnish food for the camelu, and nearly every caravan stops from time to time upon march for such food. Along the railroad from here to the Atlas mountains there is In places a thin growth of tough grass, and I have seen thousands of animals feeding upon it. Tlu! flocks are usually composed of both sheep and goats, and strange to say they are fat, although it would seem that most of them are "grazing upon the bare stones. As to the oases, I saw many on my way here. They are chiefly date palms with mud villages inside or nearby. I have vis ited a number of them, and will make a special letter about them In the future. Ilniv French Control Sahara. As I have said, the road here was built for military purposes. It Is an absolute ne cessity to tho French control of the Sa hara. The stations nlong it are all forti fied, and the country for miles about here is one great camp. Every town has Its barracks, there are soldiers at every sta tion, and troops on horseback and on cam els are moving about everywhere. Renl Ounif has a garrison of 7i). A few hours' ride to the northward Is Aln Sefra, where "When I meet a man I put him and some particular Instance together. The next time J lay eyes on him I can cull his name and tell the circumstances of tho meeting. I don't forget faces or names." Tip from the Kaiser. Kaiser Wllhelm occasionally shows that he has his own shure of the milk of human kindness. One day he was walking In tho Thlergarten, Rerlln, when he saw a soldier of his own regimen, striding- along ahead. The soldier met Ills sweetheart, who pro ceeded to take her young man's arm after the manner common to engaged couples in all northern countries. The soldier, know ing that It was the time of day at which the emperor generally Indulged in a. con stitutional along the very path where they were, was afraid that so loverlike an atti tude might be regarded as a disrespect to the Imperial uniform or some equally terri ble military offense and be punished ac cordingly. In a shamo-faied manner he explained this to the young woman, who rather hutlily withdrew her arm. The How a iwEW YORK, April 13.-l.ong Island I I truck farmers and others cov- 11 clous of a straight road to Man hattan have reason tn feel pretty good over what tiny can see by squinting across at lil.u kwcll's Isiand these :uys. The long delayed bridge that Is eventually to link Itavcnsw mil, L. I., with Fifty-ninth street is now so fur along that tho sprouting green strip f island Is com pletely spanned hy It. And cantilever arms are nosing both ways as las; as truss can be riveted to truss. The engineers say they're hoping to have the Rlack well's Island bridge finished by the middle of but strikes have been and may he again, and fire lift ions are srHrce It looks, anyway, as if Ravenswood woul l be connected with the island before Man hattan Is. The tip of the complei,! section projects 5J feet vei 'he. 8 .-anch the Eu. it, f . V MfcTlIUD OF UUii - s - .... -i v f , .a.v r.. .tN-v.Vi---..---rv.T-.;.,: : Big 1't THE OMAHA SUNDAY REE: ArRTL Guarding i..)-., OCCITIED BY SHEniBUDS AND THEIR FAMILIES. General Lyote, the commander of the French army of the Sahara, is located, and there are other troops farther south at Colomb Hechar, at the end of the road. The depots are all of stone, with port holes for ritles on all sides. Right here Is one of the most Important military locations. P.eni Ounif is within almost a stone's throw of the Moroccan boundary, and at the gate to a pass through tho mountains which separate the dominions of the Moor ish sultan from African Fran. e. The French have subdued lung since the brig ands of their own parts of the Sahara, h it the brigands of tin; Moroccan desert make raids upon the French oases, and tin y hIm attack travelers and caravans going to and fro over the desert. The base of such ex peditions is the oasis of Tutilot, in Mo rocco, not far from here, where are some of the worst scoundrels of this rart of tho world. 'Those expeditions are known as Harkas. They are often composed of hun dreds and even thousands of camels and men. One which came through here a few years ago had about 4.(XiO men mounted on camels and a Harka of Son camels Is not uncommon. At this writing reports have come here that the governor of Tatilot has declared a holy war and that an army on Abouf People of Prominence kaiser wag nearer than they thought. Ho had overheard their conversation nnd, catching them up, said J.iklngly : "Don't be a fool, Fritz. If you won't take her arm I shall feel Inclined to offer mine." Then he passed on and carefully refrained from looking back. A Thrifty oimrcssman. William T. Tyndall, who ended a brief career as a member of congress with the session Just closed ns the representative of the Fourteenth Missouri district, prob ably holds the record for thrift In the Fifty ninth congress, reports the Washington Herald. Men who have been in his confi dence declare th.it Tyndall has acknowl edged to them that he has saved Jll.'ieil out of his salary and emoluments for the two ypHrs that he has been a member of con gress. Tyndall looked upon his situation philosophically, lie said lie did not expert to come bark to conrci os ; that his riooiio'i was somewhat of an accident, ami that while a man could get into politics easily, ho could tet out as easily, but " he could Cantilever Bridge Grows river, whila the progress from HlacKwoll'a Island toward New York proper lias been but 2f0 feet. The Long Island and Man hattan shores are 3.7-'u feet apart at this IHiint. Thirteen hundred and eighty feet of the bridge Is done so far as the mere trusses are cor.cei m d. and of the Jo.'piO ions of s:ei 1 that will be required i'O.Otf has already been used. The gap once bridged, there will still remain the long sloping approaches and the laying of trucks and roadways. The contract for the Manhattan approach Is not lit yet. The Idea of a Llackwell's Island bridge was hatched a long lime ug . A company was chartered to put it through as far I a k as lv". The Lorn? Islaad et.d was to bit the earth two miles Inland, at.d there was to be ,i branch to Brooklyn. In Manhattan two approaches were proji-ctc I. ice- Mir' ing th- vJrand Central static)!, the other :-. ' v J ) . - 7 Sir "v - iia - . .. : - DiNt - J Tlifci iiLACK W i.UL'3 ISLAND CANT1LKVKK URIDGE. 14. lf)o;. the World's Greatest Desert j. ri.. x ,' ' 1 camels will soon march across Into the Algerian Sahara and attack the French out posts. Itnttle of Honlar. It was a Harka like this that brought about the battle of Figulg. named after nn oasis about eight miles f.-om here, where It b'ok place. Flguig is one of the richest settlements of western Morocco. It has about n million date trees and Its people have always been noted for their prosperity and trade. They are also famous us haters of Christians, and until lately It wis death to pilch to ent.'r (heir oases. About three years ago. when the r.iilroud hud not' yet reached this point, the governor general of Algeria made nn expedition from the end of the ror.d at Dnverler to Henl Ounlf. and started thence on an expedition to Figulg. He wus accompanied by a detnehment of Ppahls, the bravest of those African sol diers, and three companies of the foreign legion, under the command of General O'Connor. It was then well known that any Christian who went into Figulg did mi at the risk of his life, and one of the Arab ofllclals of the town warned the. governor general that ho had better keep out. He did not heed the warning, and the result get out of money easier, and ho did not propose being out of politics and money nt the same time. Accordingly, he said, he saw no sonso In spending money foolishly while here and ho started In to lay up his per dle,m for a rainy clay. Now, It is said, he goes bnck to Missouri to rtart a bank and become Its president. A Remarkable Memory. AltiBworth R. Spofford, librarian of con gress from 1SSI to 1W. has a wonderful memory. Until the new system of cata loguing was Introduced he had practically the whole library catalogue In his mind a r.d It- would astonish visitors when they asked for a book which might not be very well known to have him say to an usslstant, "Go to s irh a stark and on such a shelf Icing me the book (naming Its number) from the end.'' lie rarely. If ever, made a mistake and he can give reference offhand on almost any subject. It was due to Mr. Spofford's persistent efforts that the con gressional library remains open on Sunday further north. Prof. W. P. Trowbridge is on record as having suggested the can tilever scheme In IS'ii. Ground was broken in 1V1. Plans missed fire, though, until January 27. 1!1, when a contract for piers for the bridge was let. Steel wirk'-rs weie on the job by November- I'll. Hoi! Almost at the take oCf strikes began. The worst ot.e, that of the Housesiuith' and lit i'tg. mi n s nn'.' n, kept things at a stand still between January 1 and the mi MIe of May last year. The mil n lost and the bridge is now "open slcp." Six hundred men i-re at wotk, not counting tho great force employed In g. ttlng out the stcd In (he shops of the Pennsylvania Steel com pany. t'omlln? approaches, the Rlack well's l.-Wml leidg' Is g. ing to be tho fourth .;i-i b'lugn in the world. Its 8 13) feet will be beaten by the Tay bridge which -2 '. ' : ;- - ii.. .A-a.. ,M.fc444a , V i'V- -- e 5. . '''J, - J '"j-..i-,5:. ."j'--rv f it ' -. J THE CAMEL rOMCK ARE NATIVES MOUNTED ON CAMELS. wna a fight which lasted live hours, after which the French retreated. . This battle was entirely with rifles on both sides, and the Moors thought they were enual to anything the French could bring forth. A day or s later the foreign legion and three squadrons of cavalry ap peared, their force altogether mmi'ii-ring 4.o. They brought with them a number of mountain guns and other cannon, and pla cing thoso more than a milo away they opened Are upon the oasis, and Its village with melinite shells. The result astonished the natives. Their mud brick houses worn blown to atoms, rind the minarets of their mosque cut In two. The Moors had never heard or seen any thing like this, and they soon enme almost on their knees to beg the French to desist. Since then the railroad has been extended to Renl Ounif, and within two years a thriving settlement bus grown np hire, right at the gate of the pans'. Flguig Is now safe for a traveler, If he Is accom panied by French soldiers, and the French sre even building a wagon road to that place. The French Subara nlone Is altogether more than half as large as the whole United States. It extends from the Libyan desert nnd In the evening for the convenience of thoso scholars and lay readers who ore unable to visit it on secular days and In office hours. Mark Twain' Advice, "It pays to advertise," said Mark Twain at an advertisement writers' banquet. "When I was editing the Virginia City Knterprlse, writing copy one, day and min ing the next, tried to force this truth homo In many ways. "A superstitious subscriber once wrote, and said he had found a spider in his paper. Was this good or bad luck? I replied to him in our answers to correspondents' col umn ns follows: " 'Old Subscriber: Tho finding of a spider In your copy of the Enterprise was neither good luck nor bad. The spider was merely looking over our pages to liml. out w hat merchant wag not advertising, so that It could spin Its web across his door, and lead a free and undisturbed existence for ever after." " holds the remrd of 10,780 feet and tho Forth bridge, both In Scotland, and by tho bridge which spans tho Ohio river at Cairo, 111. The gauzy affair at Poughkcepsle, always played as a headlimr among cantilevers, can boast of n more than 6.7i7 feet. For purposes of rm)arison let It be noted that the entire length of the lliooklyn bridge, suspension, from Park Row to Sands street, is G,0.l feet, which makes that esteemed stiuclure compute with tho bridge) ut Hlackwell Island about as bush leaguers do with the Glunts. Have for tho bridges at Poughkeepsie and Niagara, this will be tho only cantilever bridge of consequence In this part of the country. It will be much wider than the Poughkeepsie bridge, with room for a 61-foot roadway and four trolley car tracks on thn lower floor and four ele vated tracks and two ll-foot sidewalks above. Tho roadways are to be paved with wo .d blocks, like those of the Wllllainshurgh bridge. Pedestrians will walk on cement. The cantilev.T Idea Is pretty well under stood, although it has he-cu of practical use only since the midd'e 'X'S. Starling from two shore piers, the builders anchor their first trusses ti the shore in the man ner of a springboard and begin working out over the water from buth tides until ti.e ends me-et. Tho old way, exemplified at Poughkeepslo and elsewhere, ' to off. t a junction by in.- rting a sort of little suspension biidge hit gesi to the parent stricture. Camel hack, the style has been iluVihid. Fr feesthetlc r'.-asons L.idge. Commis sioi.e r Linde nth.il and Consulting Architect Hen-y Hr mbostle cut out this feature in planning the Rlackwell's Island bridge. A I inexl rocker 1 as bee n found u answer tl.e haioe j urise; wl.iel, was to provido r mm for r.fttural contra t;on and exjr.iu sltvi. Inning a year there Is a vuri itlon of on Inch In t ve ry hundred feet of bridge steel. A plaza approach to the Manhattan end is to be secured by wle i lnx Second uvenue on the westerly side and razing the whole bl.u k bounded by Second and Third bwium and Fifty-ninth and Sixtieth streets N'.i Imdy knows for sure yet what elcva'o l or surface lines v.lil connect with the bridge, e-lil.er here or ovu across. In lucveoswood the bridge will ternditute in the triangle at the junction of J.o ks.ni avenue, J;u.e street and Slillman av- The bridge wi not help the R.a k well's Islanders much, lor It will bo a hundred fiet above them, with no way of their getting up. As it is. the gl.lliis have a hard enough time In ke pu g pris mors iti the various penal liistltutlons from break ing away. The lower roadway will bu lii'i fet and the highest point e,f tie; bridge & feet above mean high w.iter. In mom y it Is expc. tol that the Plack well's Isiand btldge wiil cost HJ.ejcio.iXiO. In lives it has already o t eleven. to Morocco and ns far south ns the Soudan. The French have made this whole region peace lul. and now It Is possible to travel almost anywhere through It. They havn troops stationed at every large oasis and have cumol soldiers scouring the country and hellographing the least sign of disturb ance. Those camel police are natives mounted on meliarls -beasts which can go 1(0 mile's day after day without tiring. Many of tho camel police are Tnaregs, who) Unci It pays better to be employed by tha French than to rob tho caravan them selves, as they did In the past: others are Targhis, from n warlike tribe In the east ern part of thn Algerian Sahara. Thosn troops palrol tho country nil tho way from Tripoli to Morocco. They net as scouts for the Fri'iieli ollicers. and are rendy to fight bravely lu time of trouble. A largo number of them are now watching the pass here. They go about at wide distances apart nfl bring l:i reports of tho conditions existing all along the desert frontier. Tho French have established a sort of mall service for tho Sahara. Tho Arab postmen curry mall bugs on these fast me baris. Kvery military station Is thus served and In some places, such as e'nlomb Rechar nail Adrnr, thern are ostomi es, where, money orders are Issued nnd a regular mall service Is given. Among the Important sta tions are those of Tunt, which Is a Inrge series of oases several hundred miles south of hero. There nre soldiers also at Tldl kelt, at Igeli and at many other places. The I-'orclftn Legion. Horn at Renl Ounlf Is a branch of th foreign legion, madn up of nermann, Swiss, Italians and Americans. There ore also several companies of military criminals who havo Jieen deported from Franco and sent down from other parts of Algeria for pun ishment. ThoBO men nre put to making roads, brielges and all kinds of hard labor. I met one lust night In a Moorish cafe who told mn he wus an American. Kin com plexion was that of a mulatto, but he woro thn red trousers, blao Jacket and tall red rap of the spohl, and I took him for an Arab. I w;:s dt inking coffee at fine of tho tables when ho sat down beside mo and be gun to speak Knglish. He told me that ho came from Han Francisco, that ho had served as a marine In the Franrh navy and had finally drifted Into thn army. Ha said that tli" food and treatment wero so bad that he could not stand it, nnd that he deserted and succeeded In getting to thn Mediterranean, where hn bad hidden himself away in the hold of a Oermon steamer. Just as thn ship was raising anchor tho military police came on board and discovered blm, through a Hindoo cabin boy, who pointed out his hiding place. He was then put lu prison ot the port Of N.tinoujs. where tho sheriff set him to cleaning his horses. One day he took tho bi'st horse In the stable and rode across Into Morocco to Melilla. There ho again tried to get off, tills time on a Spanish ship. He was again caught, however, and shipped clown hern into the heart of tho Sahara. Ho Is expecting to be sent on Into tiie desert far from tho railroad. Tn ireas Police. I understand that the Tuaregs are doing the best work of ull thn Arabs employed by thn French. Tin y have bee n cjrgunlzed into con, panics and have been given good modern guns. They havo plai llcully given up In iKurnbtgc, and they now sweep over thn desert mounted on camels, aiding tho French In keeping the natives in order. The French captain who Is chief of tho Arab bureau hern tells me that they uro by no means a bad people, anil that their bloodthirstluuss is largely a matter of imagination. Jt Is true they have been rolibeis in the past, but now thut they uro employed by thn government they mako splendid soldiers. They aro tald from twenty to twenty-four dollars a month, anil this is a foi tune to them. K icli man owns his own camel and tukes caie of It and himself; but as tho food for both man and beast costs practically nothing he con siders himself rich. Mulders Who Wear Veil. These Tuaiegs aie descendants of tho Iierber or white raco of the Atlas moun tains, who havo been crowded off Into tho dcseit. Tin y have long been noted as tho brigands of the Sahara. They are especially distinguished by the fact that they wear veils night and day. Their ve ils are black; and they wind them about their heads Ilk a luth.in and then puss them over thn noso and loouth arid across tho forehead, so that oniy the eyes can b seen, li Is said to it the veil wu.s originally adopted tc kOep out the iln.-t, but that It Is now a mark of fashion ii.d modesty. Another story told me H that tin Tuareg men lirst put on veils as a, matter of cowardlci and shame. Tin y we n- s ii prised by then enemies and were so Irlghleiied that they iluew down their in ins ami i an, leaving their families. 'Hereupon tiie women picked up the swoins, si jis nnd daggiis. and defeated the enemy. I'ioiii tlmt day until now tho ti.e n. to slew their udmliaiion for the con duct if llali hi.', have adopted the veil. aiii the limriit women tit 1 1 1 gij with bat f:u i s. Mtny if tl.e Tcki'Ka live lii tent vll- lag-s, moving ulemt from place tu duce. They l..c-.c c,i:ic is an I she, p, mid somo of them bavH g.ird.ns. As a general thing they u;e: miserably poor, and the money they iicelve from the French Is far muio ti.ni most if tl.eiu n.i'ie when their solo p.. fi ssion was robbing tho travelers whllo cio.-sir.g tl.e desert. FRANK Q. CARPENTER. ItlOl OLD ha a t enlp .tho wss in a Cold to Tho ear, I so font Ies the tho jne, i of ho kes fors I it tho ked Uta, ot rir oth nor d. itno In : iier loh nt lew h tu for ras by In an a ne irs, lt by ed I on K. 1 1 0 : ' 0 ; o , 0 ' 0 0 p. 0 0 ; 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 -6 in Ik 'y : f. 0.