English Gobbling" Up Arabian .. x i " . v i ; T ' . " v r ; :.- t. . . si ' : , X ii xx-v . . ' vXl 'wXXV'- V; -K - --'A VX 'OS'JiS v.T . V. ' , 5 .j ,. y 1 XX ! ' X f ; I s f ' - ;::?. : -, $ fa- ., , y i : v- , .V . K . . ". ' -. : : - j . ' -f Tn : I VOk : . t STREET GROUP AT ADEN. (Copyright, 1907, by Prank O. Carpenter.) tableland of Najd Is on th average more UBN, Arabia, Jan. 7. (Special i& I Correspondence of The Bee.) I Have you ever heard . what 3. we man who boasted that the sun never set on John Bull's pos sessions? It was "that the sun did not care to set for fear the old pirate might teal somethln. m." As It Is now th. Ptarii.h wn onuntriM In f nearly every part of the globe. They nave more land in North America than we have. They have recently added to their African colonies, so that they now own more than one-third of that conti nent, and they are slowly and surely gathering In everything else that Ilea loose. One of their latest acquisitions Is Arabia. They now, practically control the whole of it. They have the Slnla peninsula throilffh thai, nnBi.B.lnn Panl ' nA . r they can .control that part of Arabia along the Red sea through the ports which they are building on the opposite coast. They have entered into the closest of relations with the sultan of Oman, and they have two uncrowned kings In the persons of certain of their political resl dei?s 'and consuls general, who control the whole of eastern and southern Arabia. . The first of these Is stationed at Bushlre, in Persia, but he has made treaties with the various tribes along the Arabian side of the Persian gulf, which give the Eng lish the trade of that region; and the same Is true as to the tribes of southern Arabia, who are controlled by the British resident here at Aden. These two consuls ..n.r,i k,. ,oi,ii.v, ..i postal routes through their respective mhu ii. a onlv the malls, but monv matt.r. . well They are working In connection with India. and the moneys used are rupees and president, took with him' to the White annas. If difficulties arise between the House in April, 1841, a large family,, and Arabs and Persians, they are brought to became quickly associated In the public the English resident at Bushlre, and If mind with social events of a varied char between the tribes of southern Arabia, aoter. President Harrison lived but they are brought to Aden for adjustment, month and Tyler was practically president -4 tor Ihe full term. ! Mrs. Tyler died within Arabia to Have Railroads. the' year j'lhT,' tlT" Ul8t T P"hP Presidential campaign was so siderin, the development of the peninsula. fc , C0te,teS. and certainly not one ever They have proposed to build a pilgrimage re,ulted , ar0UBlmJ the enthusiasm of railway from Jeddah. on the Red sea op- party t(J tfc u raache(J posits Port Sudan, to take the great army when lt canai(UU tne famous old her. of Mohammedan worshipers Inland to of Tipp.no,, was trumphant. John Ty- Mecca. This would oonnect with their .f77.,i ,. .n ,,. new rallread which now crosses the Nubian desert from Suakim to the Cape to cairo route, ana wouia open up an Immense passenger traffic from central Africa and upper Egypt during the pil grimage season. If the English are not granted the concession for that road it will probably be built ,by the Mohamme dans themselves, and In any event It will be more or less under British control, and be a fseder for the Egyptian railway sys- Another railroad project Is to run a line from Aden into Temen. The latter prov ince Is one of the richest of Arabia. It has a good rainfall and is noted for Its eoffee and grain and fruits of various kinds. The Idea Is to run the line trim Aden almost directly northward to Sana, . One of the chief cities of Yemen and an' Important commercial center. The road will make that town the capital of western and southern Arabia. , A third and still more ambitious rroJct Is to build a railroad across the northern part of the peninsula, making thereby a short cut to India and Persia and to the rich valley of the Euphrates, at the head of the Porlan gulf. The present plsn Is to start ihe road at Port Said and go eastward across the peninsula to Busra, on the Euphrates. The most of the way will be right through the desert, snd the distance altogether about 1.000 miles. I understand that the route Is a feasible one, and the probability Is that the ef- forts the Germans are now making to reach the Penlan gulf may cause the British to wake up and adopt It. Tne Arabian Penlnsala. As to Arabia Itself, J doubt whether It will ever furnish a large trafflo for rail- Van Ness family. He was known In the J81""'' nd thoroughly Engilh In his roadt. There are certain provinces suoh best circles of New Tork society, was the PPar,tnc an not the best English. Hs as Temen. Oman and the Valley of Meso- intimate friend of Washington Irving and ,e,med horribly bored by the crowd pass- potamla. which are fairly well populated. Paulding, and knew all the other literary ln round hlm- H na Washington Irv- but the whole peninsula has altogether men of the young nation. Mrs. Cooper was ,n ,r botn 'aklns' to me at Ihe same not more than five millions, and theee are famous for her bright Intellect and Is the Wm?!l' scattered over a territory one-third as Sophy Sparkle of the "Salmagundi." Washington Irving shs said: "I am large as the whole United States. There Mrg. Kobert Tyler as PrisoUla Conner charmed wUh hlm' took m ln to tha are not a wore of town, of any sis. In made her but In New Tks Virginia' V TH "V t0 h'm' nd all Arabia, and you can count th. eitle. t "J 2ZZJ alked to me of mamma all the time, t.ll- on your fingers. Th. most of the country wUh her faUeTfor tTo r"ir. appelrtng T T"40 " f r'n1; tP!i LXTt tL iMJ?Z COBU UPOa C" "Th"' point of Interest. Wash r.?i S 1 ? a ooast line 1 Tml . " ihtor that a large num- ington Irving, and th. lady who presided still Arabia ha. ' ber of pereon. whe had no Interest In the on thus occasion with surpssslng courteous longer than the dl.t.ne. between New 4roml.ur.tlon'. social ,uceM, went to the nes. and grace. Mra Robert Tylr. Irv Tora and San Francisco It Whlt. House to see Mrs. Tyler. And lng. now grown more fat than 'bard be about 1.600 miles rrom north to south and about her at all the social funotlons gath- seem. Is yet still distinguished by that t,!00 miles from east to west. Almost the lrM not only the members ef the cabinet glow of genius and humor ln his eye. and whole of the United States east of the and officials but the distinguished men of smile and utterance, which made him the Mississippi could be erowaed Inside t. the city. She was witty and vivacious, adored of the New Tork world of fanhion. borders and a considerable part of It is weU read and familiar with social usages. "Washington Irving Is at the Executive still unexplored by white men. It is a She was young too. and had ths strength mt-nsion. nbt now aa Washington Irving, mountainous country. It has peaks twloe and eoujrage te fill the position .he held, but as the ambassador to Spain. Who la as b!-a as Mount Washington, and Ue eve to the aslant of spending three hour that lady receiving such honors from ths than a half mil above the sea. South or Meeoa there are mountains over 8,000 feet high and the hills here at Aden are the Blue Ridge In Virginia. Yemen, northeast of Aden, running along the Red sea, has a fairly good raln- fall and climate. o ., .-.. .,,. vr a.osa miM Miiuskioi 1 iiu i u ass twuua. ssma Iss nss i. i v.. .v.. rwMf. Is as fertile as Egypt; but the greater part of the peninsula Is as barren as Sahara, Lull of ,Mcas Coffee. The very best of our Mocha coffee ls shipped from Aden te the United States. It comes here on camels from the prov ince of Yemen. It Is raised there by' the' natives, each family having a few bushes about Its house, and producing only V. 1 . 111.1. . ...J ' - " " . lng. There are' no big plantations and no or the worm, as wen as one or ine greai coffee factories. The berries are gathered est of the British coaling stations. Some when ripe and dried In the sun. After thing like 3,000 steamers and native craft Women Who Once HERB died In Washington re- T cenUr Mrs. Semole. the last surviving child of ex-President Mrs. Tyler . In one of her home letters, ter, and she is welcoming, from her' eleva- ture of languages. At last, after a flour Tyler by- his first wife. Her In speaking of this formidable part of her tlon, in her mother's friend of bygone lshlng speech, squeezing my hand, with a residence for many years had duties in a city of magnificent distances, years, the ambassador newly created by second low bow over it, he departed, fol h.n th Teniae home.' the In- said: "The victim of this sacrifice Is to be her father." lowed by his suite, each first making a stltutlon eatahl lahori hv w. W. Corcoran tor the benefit of aged southern gentle- woman John Tvi, th. t.h nr.Mnt of tho United States, and the first accidental let siciauuu rwrna mviivi, wv ...... w a shock since he was not a Whig, and the knew that m hl, accon the hard won fight feat practically turned into de- And so yhen he returned from Virginia, where he was at the time of the death of the president, brought with him a part of his family, and soon after established all his unmarried daughters and all of his anna In th. manatnn. the nuhlla of Wash- ,nrt0I wu mor, han usually interested. It was known that Mrs. Tyler, who was a grandmother, was averse to publio life, and that the daughter-in-law, the wife of the eldest son, Robert, would be the first lady of the land. Mrs. Tyler, sr., had been the mistress of ths executive mansion at Richmond, during her husband's term of office and had been the hospitable host ess of Greenway, his county seat In Vir ginia, but the laraer field Into which she was now thrown as the president's wife had no attractions for her. and she was rarely seen by visitors. There were several married daughters, one of them being Mrs. Bemple, but they were never more than occassional guests at the executive man- slon, and the only lady of the White House, In the strict sense of the term, until the second marriage of the president, was Mrs. Robert Tyler, the wife of the eld- est son. She was much more than a social figurehead, and she Is distinguished as be- lng the only actress who ever presided as hostess of the White House. Mrs. Tyler was the daughter of the famous English tragedian. Cooper, who was known and admired all over the United States. Ceoper had married Mary Falriee, the , ""' Bo, not at a11 romantic look daughter ef Major Falriee of New Tork. ratner thickset; his face, of course, an officer of the Revolutionary army and mo,t lntelllt and bright, but his dress of Uie Governor TaUs. LtviPtone n y- ; V ';- ' -.V-v-V- O.Vi ' f ' . ? f ..' 'V . .. , , this they are put up In bales and carried on camelback over the hills to this place. They are hulled between millstones turned by hand, and are' then winnowed and sorted for shipment The latter work Is done by the women, who look after each grain carefully and take out the' bad ones. Labor Is cheap, but the coffee has to go through many bands. It pays toll to the chiefs of the tribes who own the country through which it Is carried, and as a result it must be sold at high prices. For this reason we have imita tions ' of Mocha coffee from all parts of the world. During my stay on the plan tations of Brasil I have seen them label buns as Mocha; and Guatemala and other coffees are sold under the same name. Just now they are bringing coffees from Ceylon and Java to Aden and transship ping them here. They lie In the ware- nouses ror a lew weeKs, ana men go lorjn - - , . . . m . remamea, ana pernaps AraWn Mocha. Ensrllsh at Aden. This port of Aden has belonged to John Bull for something like sixty-eight years. He took possession of it in 1830, and later on gobbled, up the Island of Perim In the Strait of Bab-el-Mandeb. That Island Is about a hundred miles from here, and the two places practically control the entrance to the Red sea and the Sues canal. As fi r Aden, It Is the Gibraltar or this part a day, three days In every week, making calls. adorned In a white chip bonnet, trimmed with moss rosebuds from Lowson's In New Tork. I could spend my time here charm- 'ng'y It were not for the duties of my Position. Among her friends were Mr. Webster Mr. Calhoun of the cabinet, and many ot her letters contain affectionate mention of the former, who, though "so over- whelmlngly sensible, could talk the most agreeable nonsense possible." He advised her In regard to her social duties, No on reception during Tyler's time was rnurh discussed as the one held In March, 1842, at which were present Charles Dlckfns end Washington Irving. The ob- erving hostess wrote of the former's ,eVB. the public leatherings were called ,n that day, and said: . ; e r ratner too mucn XXx P X;---;v J 'X x' ' m9m Wmur m 11111 WK-' ' ' 1 : X TTTE OMAIIA ST7NDAT BEEt JANUARY 12, 1903. Peninsula RA.CIXO CAMELS WHICH OO A HUNDRED MILES call at It every year. The harbor la ex- cellent, and the outer entrance Is more than three miles wide. The Inner waters have been so dredged that steamers of twenty-slz feet can go everywhere, and there Is room enough for all the vessels that pass through the canal to anchor at one time. Aden Is strongly fortified. The town stands on a volcanlo Isthmus, and It Is guarded by a broad ditch, which has been cut out of the solid rock. It has a garrison of 8,000 or 4,000 men, guns of the latest pat- tern, and no one knows how many subier- ranean and submarine mines. - -4 Like Desert City. I wish I could show you the town as it lies before me. It Is the sorriest city I have ever seen. -There Is nothing to com- pare with it, except Iquiqul, on the nitrate coast of South America, and Iquiqul is a paradise to it. Imagine a great harbor of sea green water, the shores of which rise almost abruptly into ragged mountains of brown rock and white sand. There Is not a blade of grass to be Seen, there are no trees, and even the cactus and sage brush of our American desert are absent. The town Is without vegetation. It is as bare as the bones of the dead camels In the A.ort hAhinrt It and Ita trnnlcal sun twata down out of a cloudless African sky. Everything Is gray and dazsllng white. The houses on the sides of the hills are white,. the rocks throw bsck the rays of the sun, and the huts upon their sides are of the same gray color as themrelves. Ruled Washington Social Life new ambassador? She is the player's daughter, but she Is the president's daugh- Mrs. Tyler's mother, years before, had written in 'one of her numerous letters to Irving about her daughter, In which she had assured hlra that Prlscllla, then but XA V, . rM m 14. was a genius. "She Is all talent." shs wrote, "that Is ln regard to spriRhtllness of mind, clearness ln writing and fun and drollery In everything, but so Incapable of application that she has not of what might technically be called accomplishments one single one. She edits a family newspaier that Is In great demand wherever It has been seen. She would he the delight of your heart. I am sure." One of Mrs. Robert Tyler's wittiest de scriptions Is of visits to the White House ln 1MJ by BertraisS, Napoleon's marshal, who came to Washington acconiunied by a gay suit and had an exaggerated Idea of Importance of the position of lady of the executive mansion. She tells of the en trance Into the Blue Room of this marshal of France and continues: "He bowed to the very ground and I oourtesled quite low. -I cannot convey to you any Idea of how charmingly I received hlml The hour he remathed he spent In complimenting sue In s'renoh and Kngllsh and Planning Its Development A DAT. The city looks thirsty and dry. It Is dry. There is only a well or so In the place, and these, I am told, the English bought of their owners for something like $l,(ioo,0uo. Almost all of the water used Is condensed from the sea, and fresh water always brings Its price. There are no streams any where within miles. The town Is situated In the crater of an extinct volcano, and there Is one great depression nearby in which some famous stone tanks were made 1,000 or so years ago. These tanks are so big that If they were cleaned out they might hold 80,000.000 gallons of water. As It Is, they have now a capacity of only 8,000,000 gallons. Tha water Is caught when it rains, and is sometimes auctioned out to the highest bidder. The reeelpts go to the English government, and a good rain may bring In 115,000 or 120,000 or more. . . $ People of Aden. This Is my second visit to Aden. My first was sixteen yesrs ago, when I stopped here on my way around the world. I do not see that the town has changed, and I doubt whether It l'ss any more people than It had then. The population Is sbout ),0P0, and It Is made ui of all the nations and tribes common to the Indian ocean. It contains Arabs, Africans, Jews, Portuguese and East Indians. There are about 4.000 Europeans, and In this number sre the merchants, of- flelals and soldiers. The majority of the n.nni. ir.h. mnA tha ni-oi-a ii in.r ,Ain, is black. There are tall, lean, skinny, black Bedouins from Interior Arabia, who believe In Mahomet, and go through their rather Jumbled together, while I returned his compliments in the same eccentric mix- profound obeisance. I could not resist the impulse, and as the last mustachioed Frenchman left the room I turned a pirouette upon one foot on the rug. and then dropping a low courtesy saia, i peg tne csoinei s paruun. TKZ&r0G or TMZ WHTITHOVJE Her husband, who stood near and whom She was given to calling the Prince Connort, rebuked her, but the cabinet ministers, who doubtless had been bored by the visit, heartily enjoyed It. For nearly four years Mrs. Tyler re- malned hostess of the White House. She sccompanled the president ln February, 1844, to Boston, where he went to attend the celebration of the laying of the corner stone of Bunker Hill monument. And In ths following April she chaperoned the presidential party on board the Ill-fated Princeton, when, by an explosion of Its largest gun, the secretary of state and the secretsry of the navy were klllsd. Another victim wss Colonel Oardlner of mw Tork. whose two daughters wer. In tha nartv. The Dresldent Invited the latter to be his gussts and they accompanied Mrs. Tyler to tne w nite Mouse, wnere me funerals of the two secretaries and of their father were later held. Miss Julia. the eider 01 tnese young women, wh frequent visitor ln Washington. The attention paia ner oy me presiaeni II v n..rrH r nnt wuDiioc, .Hf displeasing to her. although she ws. but Just out of her teens and he aa St. the father of nine children and father of several Mrs. Robert Tyler noted the growth of her father-in-laws Inter- est in the young lady. Bhs Imparted her knowledge to her hue- band and the two decided to remove from the White House before the end of the admlnlstration, and did so. Mr. Tyler be- coming a number of the bar in Phlladel- phis. Thus ended In May. 1844. the career of Mrs. Robert Tyler in the White House eight monrhs-hffore the retirement of President Tyler and two months before his second marriage. I-ong years after- ward she wrote a letter In which she said V XAviiil. ' r, v HINDOOS prayers five timss a dsy. There are black Mohammedans from Bomaliland and black Christians from Abyssinia. In addition there are Parsees, Hindoos and Indian Mo- hammedans of various shades of yellow and brown. A few of tho Africans are wooly-headed, but more of them have wavy hair, and the hair of the women hanKg doWn in corkscrew curls on both sides of their fsces. Of these people, neither sex wears much clothing. The men have a rag around the waist and women wear only skirts which reach to the feet. The East Indians are everywhere. They do the most of the retail business and trading, and they are found peddling on everv street comer. They dress according to their caste and religion. The Parsees, who are flre-worshlpers, wear black proarhrr-like coats and tall hats of the style of an Inverted coal scuttle. The In- 'Aian MnhimniAilari wear turbans and the Hindoos wrap themselves up In great sheets of white cotton. In addition there are many Greeks and Italians, and not that both she and her husband knew of " iiiooiunii. " Oardlner and of the engagement, which was made by correspondence. Mrs. Letltla Tyler Bemple was Invited by her father to be the mistress of the presl- dent's house for the Interval, and she spent two months there, receiving the bride at the end of June, and then departed for her sister's home In Virginia. The eiect)on of President Polk In Novem- ber, 1844, dimmed the Interest of the gen- Hew God Made the Onsnel. eral public, but not the Washington pub- Have you ever heard how the camel was lie, in the family of President Tyler. His created? Here Is Its origin, as told by the bride was the center of attraction at all Arab They say that God first formed the receptions and the president himself re- horse by taking up a handful ef the swift newed his youth. He was a delightful south wind and blowing upon It. Tha horse, man socially and had the southerner's idea however, was not satisfied with his mak of hospitality. Mrs. Setnple greeted the lng. He complained to God that his neck bridal couple when they reached the White was too short for easy gracing and that House and was described by the bride In lts hoofs were so hard that they sank In one of her letters as remarkably fine look- the "and. Moreover, he said there was no lng and Intelligent. She closes the letter hump on his back to steady the saddle, by saying: "She has left and I have com- Thereupon Ito satisfy the horse. God menced my auspicious reign and am In created the camel, making Mm according quiet position of the presidential man- to tne auln'M uggeetlons. And when the sion." horBe Baw hl" lde' 'n flesh and blood he The family of President Tyler all left the Jllf'LlZ a?"th ,U u,,ne" White House, with the exception of the second son, John Tyler, Jr., who was the president's private secretary. He accom- panled hi. father to New Tork and was present at ma weauing on June a, jmi. No publicity atended this wedding, which took place in th. Church of the Ascension in Fifth avenue, and was attended by but twelve persons. But after the ceremony the presidential salute was fired from the several forts In the bay and by the United States vessels In port. Mrs. Tyler enjoyed the attention shs at- traded whureever she was recognised on the train or at the hotels of Philadelphia and Baltimore. She tells her mother in her first letter that "such time as we have had since I first plsced my foot In the railroad cars defies the power of any pen to describe. Wherever we stopped, where- ever we went, crowds of people overtrlpp- lng one another came to gate at the presl- dent's bride. Never was there such a gen- eral expression of Interest' Besides a night at Philadelphia we stayed five hours at Baltimore, and then dropped Into Wash- ngt0n almost accidentally, for the city was totally taken by surprise, we bringing tne firat information ourselves. Tna gecrecy of the sffulr Is on the tongue nd admiration of everyone. Everyone says It was the best managed thing they ever heard of. TI'O president says I am the best of diplomatists. I confess, from what I have heard since my arrival here, think his part has bum quite ns well per- formed, for our carriage dro- e . through the avenue from the cars t the White House without a single one of his ac qualntances In Washington a servant in Ha hnuaa nVainlna- of ita o intern. An instant afterward the news flaw like wlM. fire over the city." Mra Tylt,r eoe on to d,cribe the atten Uon, pa)j n( an(1 ,h, 69eT that evt.rytiilng has been very brilliant "brll- uant to my heart's content: as much so aa If I was actually to be presldentress for four more years to come. Crowds fol- . . .... luweu ino wnuner I wem. my nign estate h been thu. far altogeth9r , to m9. Th,. morning I attended church. I did not turn to th. right or left, but th. pre.,. dent said in th. carriage: Hid you not se. all the people In the church stand still as you passed out?' " , u was the custom In the early days of the re,,ubllc for the president's house to oe open the year round; and on the Fourth 0f July the president and Ms bride had a throng of callers, and tha happy lady tells of her pleasure In being the center of at- traction. Mrs. Tyler's was the first -portrait of a lady of the White House to be placed In the White House. In 1S she was In Washington and visited the White House. D .1 !i i t r S AT ADEN. few Persians. The English dress In white and wear big helmets to keep off the sun. I camels mm A Caravans. This is the land of the camel. Caravans "re coming ln and going out of the city every day. They bring bags of Mocha coffeswand gums and take out European Koa Rnd other supplies to the rartous There Is a considerable trade with Temwn ana '0 w,t tha tribes of south eastern Araoia. inere are always camels l'ln Jn the market place, and one see them blubbering and crying as they are 'oaed and unloaded. They are the most alcontented beasts upon earth, and are a mean as they look. One bit at me this oon " 1 P"11 ra 1 m told that they never become reconciled to their masters. Nevertheless, they are the freight animals of this part of the world, and t,ie desert could not get along without them- Tney 'ish the greater part Of the ml'K 'or the various Arab settlements, the people make their tents of camel's hair, ana mey are, in fact, the cows of the desert They are of many different breeds, and they vary as much in character as horses. There are some breeds that cor respond to the percheron, and the best among them can carry half a ton at a load. There are others fitted only for riding and passenger travel. The ordinary freight camel makes only about three miles Bn nour, ana eighteen miles Is a good day's work. The best racing camels will travel twenty hours at a stretch, and will cover 100 miles In a day. 'Seventy-five miles " ten nours is not an uncommon Journey Ior J1 Arabian racer, and much better speed has been made. Am to price a, an ordinary freight camel brings about ISO. but Bod riding camel costs $100 and upward. . . . " " nn mere is no horse that U not scared when It first sees a camel. This story makes me think of the Arab tr.nton , how""" buffslo, which, as you know Is about the UEllest 5,,.-. Ih" ' aBM1t the .na'..".:1 Zl IrVT. beautlfu, cow. When He had flnT.hV it th aev, hapwnea that J" " ,aw it he laughed at the Job and sneered out thnt h. eoulA make a wt(r bft(Mt his eyes shut. Thereupon the Lord gave him 10ml mntsrial such as He had put Into the cow aqd told him to go to work, The devil wrought all day and all night, and the result was the water buffalo, , The Arablam Horse), T have made Inquiries here and else- where as to the Arabian horse. He Is a comparatively scarce animal and he does riot run wild In the desert, as some people suppose. Indeed, comparatively few of the Arabian tribes have horses, and the best are fcfPt on the plateau of Najd, ln the "nter of the peninsula. They belong to ,h 'Anazah tribe, which Is one of the olfIe't of nil. and which claims to date ba,, to the flood. It Is a wealthy tribe, and 14 hss been breeding horses for many generations. The best stock has pedigrees "' DatK l time of Mahomet,, and th8 very choicest come from five maree w,"rh were owned by the prophet and blessed by him. These horses seldom go out -of Arabla- They are owned by the enler"' an'' are nt sold, except In times of th d,rMt necessity. Now and then a 'ew et ,nt0 EVPt and other parts ef Nortn Africa, and the sultan of Turkey ' abIe to buy some for his stables. during my stay In Algeria I saw ISO stal- Hons In ths great army stables at BUdah. Perhaps one-third of them were Arabian, and they were kept to breed horses tor the French army. The Khedive of Egypt has some Arsblan thoroughbreds, and there are a few ln Morocco and Abyssinia. It Is only occasionally that a pure-bred "'"' ur 1 Arabian goes to Europe or the United ..,.. Two of the beat atalllnna wa vr XZZr.ViZ brought from Constantinople Thl. was ng hi. tour around tul w,lH Turkey h, Rn . ,u)tan v,lll(4 ,ha roy., .Wr. together. As they looked over th. horses ths aultnn told Grnt to pick out the one he liked best, n(J 9 designated a dapple pray called The Leopard. "It Is yours." Slid the sul- tan. "and this also," pointing to a 4-year- old colt called Linden Tree In due time these two horses arrived In the United glate, and Wero put on General B Beala's farm near Washington. They were used for bredlng, and they produced altogether about fifty fine colts. i ..... . .. , a ; . s i - - t 1 'X-Xv';1 , i v - I "i . , : . "'""'. FRANK Q. CARPENTER,