TIIE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MAY 31, 1908. Punishing: Natives by Flogging on the Shores of Victoria Nyanza i : (Copyright, IDoS, by Frank O. Carpenter.) VANZA, (Special Correspondence of The Bee.) Can the African be controlled without flogging? Thla la a live question out here on the shores of Vlctorlu Nyanta. The British lawn arf strict In regard to thla matter, and the white man who, unauthorized ly the courts. fl"ps a Mack man, la l'ablo to fine mid Im prisonment. It la now .,nly a few months since tlirpe negroes who had lr. suited white wn:nen were publicly flngired by Captain Ornran, the head of the Colonists' aso clatlon. In front of the court houae at Nai robi. This created an outcry In England, and Grogan and thoaw who helped him were punished hy a mild Imprleonment. In both Br'tlsh East Africa and Uganda flosrslng la one of the sentences of the courts. In t'sranda the criminal to ba whipped Is lnld fare downward upon the ground. lla clothes are taken off and orn man alls on' the small of the back r-d nnnt'icr on the tlilchs, the flogging h- nir dole on the f! shy rnrt between to nr-vent permanently Injuring tha man. In German 1'pst Afrlcn I am told that any white than has the rtcilit to clve any, r.o'ro who insults him fifteen lashes, djut that If more piirlchnvnt than thla la de manded the esse must be brought before the police. On the western shores of T.nke. Victoria and down here at Mwanza I find that every officer and soldier carries hla talppopntnmtis-hlde whip with him. Tha Whip Is called the knhuko. It Is a it rip of the thick rkin of the hippopotamus about yard long, trimmed down nt the sides to the d'snieter of one's frrirer and made tapering at one end. Such a whip Is a terrible weapon. It Is heavy and flexible and will cut like a knife. It requires only n light blow to draw blood, and the expert floRgcr brings down the knbuko on the hare flesh with a peculiar twl.t, which saws It Into shreds. The natives will get down on their knees and beq for mercy 1 one even shakes a whip at them.. Can of Dr. Karl Peters. Most of the flTtnnn officials claim that It la Impossible to keep the natives In sub jugation except by the whip. This was the opinion of Dr. Karl Petcra, who was dls m'r.sed from his position as Imperial com missioner of the district about Klllman lo.ro on account of his brutality some time ago. The case waa brought up by a libel u It which Dr. Petera Instituted some, montlia afro nsalnst the Meunchener Post. That paper had called Peters a hangman, a murderer and a coward, and had pub lished the story of his flogging- three fe male servants and the hanging of others. In the trial which followed several Ger man officials who had served In East Africa testified that the nativea could not be ruled without flognlng. One of the wit nesses was General Llebert, a former gov ernor of German East Africa, and others were Ilerr Kuhnert, a well known animal painter, who had recently been here, and Father Acker of the African mission. Gen eral Llebert said that It waa absolutely necessary to be severe with the nativea and that he regretted the mildness of the present officials. Herr Kuhnert averred that It was impossible to treat them with too much severity. He said he had seen one of the negresses when she was flogged by Dr. Peters and the punishment did not aeom cruel to him. Father Acker aald that one could not govern the natives without flogging, and that he himself had often caused men and women to be whipped. During this trial Herr Bcbel, tha so cialistic member of the Reichstag, waa called in. He aald that ha had evidence that Peters had caused a negro to be shot down merely because he had crossed his path, and that when he was on the Emln Pasha expedition he had shot numerous nativea and burned their Tillages. He cited one of Karl Petera' books showing how he had punished a native servant. The servant had stolen a chicken which Peters had ordered to be served for his dinner. Dr. Peters first gave the man an emetlo to get back the chicken and then flogged htm. During my trip about Victoria Nyania I have been accompanied by the famous missionary Archdeacon Walker, who was in Uganda at the time Petera passed IMI fcS2l Commander-in-Chief G. A. R., Department of Nebraska LI ALLEN BARNES, the newly elected commander of tha Grand Army of the Republic, Department of Nebraska, waa born In Cayuga, Chemung county, New York, September "... '3 14, 1W7, his father having been a farmer. Ills grandfather. Abram Barnes, waa a oldler In the war of 1812 and his great grandfather a revolutionary soldier from ' : :'.'-v ; ' - ... fvVtf:i.y- : A'fV v.vv;M'',.;. . ELI BARNES, through here. He tella me that the learned German doctor boasted to him that he had killed twenty-eoven blacka while he wa In the country and that he evidently thought nothing of shooting a native down In cold blood. Germans Failed to Acqalra Uganda. It waa from Archdeacon Walker that I learned huw near the Germans came to getting possession of the rich province of Uganda and thereby the control of the whole of Lake Victoria. Whether this waa attempted by Prince Bismarck and the Ger man government I do not know, but the movement was engineered by this same Dr. Karl Peters. The Incident occurred about 190. when the relations between King Mwanga and the British government were exceedingly strained. Mwanga, who Waa then king of Uganda, had said that If the , English would furnish troops to support htm In his troubles with his subjects ha waa ready to make a treaty with them and thereby bring his country unJer their protection. Archdeacon Walker wrote a letter to this effect for the king an 1 sent It to Mr. Jack.on, the commisf-loner of British East Africa. The man who to k the letter waa captured on the way and It fell Into the hands of Dr. Karl Peters, who waa then traveling through the coun try aa a soldier of fortune and diplomat combined. As the story goes, Dr. Peters tore the letter up and then by forced marches reached Uganda before lis loss became known. In consequence of the de lay he was able to make treaties with King Mwanga whereby Uganda should come under the protection of the Germans. In the meantime, however, the officials of Germany and England hnd come to gether and had held a conference, over African matters, during which th y mails an agreement aa to the boundary b 'tween, the German and the English possession By this agreement all of the country lying aouth of a lino which goes about midway through Lake Victoria was given to tha kaiser and all north of that to Queen Vic toria, then reigning; the British ceding to the Germans the little Island of Heligo land as a consideration therefor. The Germans, as I understand It, had as yet received no news of what Petera had iono In Uganda, and when It did become known this treaty made his work of no avail. Blamarrk'a Dad Bargain, Heligoland, the country which they thus got In exchange for one of tho best regions of the African continent, comprising d territory larger than the whole German empire and far richer and Including a pop ulation of 4,000.000 of the best of the Choice Gleanings from the Story Teller's Collection A Case at Identity. T'S A great help to be able to size up the maa you came in contact with," said a business man to his son; "but it's more import ant atill that you should first know yourself. "For Instance. A noisy bunch tacked out of their club late one night, and up tha street. They stopped In front of an. im posing residence. After considerable dis cussion one of them advanced and pounded on the door. A woman stuck her head out of a seoond-story window and demanded, none too sweetly, 'What do you want? " 'Iah thla the residence of Mr. Smith?' inquired tha man on the steps, with an elaborate bow. " 'It la. What do you wantr " 'Iah it possible I have tha honor shpeakln' to Mlsshus BhmlthT " 'Tee. What do you wantr " 'Dear Mlsshua Shmlth! Good Mlsshus Bhmlth! Will you hlo come down an' pick out Mr. BhmlthT The resh of us want to go home.' "Everybody's Magazine. Everything; Has Its Cans. "Everything haa its cause. If we can but find It," say J. McKee Borden, secretary of the department of charities, at a ban quet In New York. "Once, in a miserable slum, I heard two little girl beggars talk ing. 'Why la It,' said the first, 'that tha poor ia allua more wlllln' to help us than Connecticut Mr. Barnes' mother was a daughter of General Peter Smartwood. an 1S13 soldier. On both sides of the genealog ical tree the anceators were pioneers of thj "Nutmeg State." Ell A. Barnea obtained a good knowledge of the "world of books" in the common schools near his home, and in Ithaca academy, Ithaca, N. Y., and after completing his education was enganed for Some tlm In yielding the ferule, although Mi GRAND 1 3 LAN IX IMkl WO H r A WITCH DOCTOR. African natives, was a little island In tha North sea covering less than 110 acres and populated only by fishermen to the num ber of something like 2,000. Moreover, that Island la faat being eaten up by tha sea. A few centuries ago It waa five times Its present size, and It grows less every year. On the other hand, Uganda la now setting out cotton plantations. There are road all through It, and tha people claim that you can go over them for a distance of 600 miles In an auto the rich?' The second answered promptly and bitterly: "Them wot don't mind glvhV is the ones wot stays poor.' " Reconcile Helta-Ions Too Lata. "The late Bishop Fowler," said a Buffalo Methodist, "was a broad minded man. Big otry he abhorred. Creed, ha claimed, should never hedge one good Christian from another. Sincere creeds, no matter how diverge, should on the contrary bind Christians UiRether. "Bishop Fowler used to tell about a ymmg Detroit c'cuple, John Bmlth and Han nali Jones. "John Smith was a Presbyterian. Han nah Jones was a Baptist. They hesitated about marrying because they feared that in later life, when the little onea came, religious disputes mlghti arise. Thus the year passed. Neither would renounce his church. John Buiith grew bald and Han nah Jones developed lines about her mouth and eyes. It waa a complete deadlock, the world said. "Then John waa sent abroad for a year by his firm to buy fancy goods. He and Hannah corresponded regularly. Toward the year's end, by a remarkable coin cidence, each received from the other a letter, the two letter crossing In the mails. They said: " 'Friend John: The obstacles that stood in tho way of our marriage have at last been removed. This day I waa received In his early occupation had been that of farm ing. October 1, ls60, found him located on a farm in Illinois, De Kalb county, and there he rumained until the breaking out of the civil war. Mr. Barnes' older brother had preceded him In enlistment. Mr. Barnes remained at home and In the eurly summer of 1862 attended to the harvesting upon the farm. On the evening of the day that the last grain waa In the shock and laid by,. Mr. Barnea, at the supper table, told his mother that he, too, would enlist. The country was needing more nicn. The mother left It to him. "If you think jou ought to go, if you think the country needs you, then go." The Barnes farm was two and a half miles from De Kalb. Thither Mr. Barnes went the next day to enlist. But 'he en listing officer asked him to go home for two weeks, he Juxt at that time not being prepared to send more men. "But I am ready and "want to go now," replied Mr. Barnes. "I cannot Bend you at once," was the response. That was enough. But Mr. Barnes even then insisted on "Keulng there, Ell," and went to the new recruiting sta tion and Immediately Joined Company G, Ninth Iowa cavalry, and enlisted at Cedar Falls. He made out his own enlistment papers and was made orderly sergeant. He served until the latter part of fX, whtn he was honorably dischaiged. During his service he' waa thrown from his horse in the gumbo mud of Arkansas and dislo cated his hipi the effect of which Injury has been a permanent one. He was married In l8t to Miss Nancy E. Crego, a native of Chenango county, New York. In 1S72 Mr. Barnes located In Hall county, Nebraska, on a soldier's home stead, the place being now marked by one of the largest ranches In Nebraska that Of Robert Taylor Abbott. He was elected a member of the State Board of Agricul ture In 1S76, held membership on the same for many years and was president In f0i and ltf6 and a member till W He la one of the oldest members of all the Masonic bodies of Grand Island and In this part of the state. Ha haa served two years as councilman In this city. He has been a member of the Lyon post. Grand Army of the Republic, thla city, fo twenty-eltht years, being mustered In by Commander Paul Vandervoort and Captain Wood, asBistant adjutant general. He has been post commander, was Judge advocate of the Department of Nebraska for two years, senior vice commander for one year and a member of the council of adminis tration for one year. Gilbert L. Barnes post, at Kingston, De Kalb county, Illinois, is named after a brother of the subject of this brief sketch. He was second lieuten ant of Company M, Forty-second regiment, Illinois volunteer infantry. Lieutenant Glbert L. Barnes died In the campaign In southern M!i sou rl. Hla body was brousAit home and he waa buried December 2s, UU, c r: mobile. The land is rich In rubber and other reaources, and it also controls the ouroe of the Nllo. Verily the British had tha best of that bargain. Bastnees in Gerraaa East Africa. Tha German officials' seem to be well satisfied with their colony. They say It la richer than British East Africa, and In support of their statement point to' the fact that it already has a larger native population. British Eaat Africa has some full membership in the. Presbyterian church. "HANNAH.' " 'Dearest Hannah: We have no longer any ground for delaying our union fur ther. I united myself thla day with the Baptist church. . 'JOHN.' " Buffalo Enquirer. Fair LlterarV Gems. Clyde Fitch, at a dinner, produced one of his famous acrapbooks. "In this scrapbook," said Mr. Fitch, "I have gathered passages from the year's 'best sellers.' The passages will give you soma idea of the style that goes." Then he read: " 'The worthy pastor appeared at the manao door, his hands thrust deep In the pockets of hla loose Jacket, while he turned the leaver of his prayer book thoughtfully vnd wiped hla glasses with distraught air.' " 'After tha door was closed, a stealthy foot slipped into the room, and with cau tious hand extinguished the light.' " 'Fltzglbbon lingered over his final lem- nade, when a gentle voice tapped him on the shoulder, and, turning, he beheld his old friend once again.' " 'The chariot of revolution Is rolling on ward, gnashing- Its teeth as it rolls.' " Philadelphia Record. Conkllnsr aa a Spectacle. Roscoe Conkllng- was very fond of spec tacular effects, relates a writer in Mun sey'a. On the night before the nominating speeches were to be made In the republican convention In Chicago In 1880 he let a rumor circulate to the effect that he had changed from Grant to some other candi date. This he did to heighten the effuct ot hiu performance on the following day. When the roll was called and when Conk ling's chance arrived, every one was tense with suppressed excltinent to see Just what the New York leader waa about to do. What he did was very characterise of the man. Instead of going quletlji to tho platform, he swaggered down the aisle, and then suddenly leaped upon the table assigned to newspaper correspondents, up setting their Ink bottles and scattering their "copy" over the floor. They cursed him loudly, but their voices were drowned in the shouting. Then Conkling wheeled about and, facing the convention, declaimed dramatically a hit of doggerel by Charles Graham Iiulplne better known as "Miles O'Rollly" which he had picked up from some one on the evening before: When asked what state he halls from, Our sole reply shall be: "He comes from Appomotox And Its famous apple tree!" Some have said that ho did not quote this verse; but the present writer makes the statement on the uuthor.ty of Senator Hoar, who presided over Hint convention, and of Mr. Conkllng's own nephew and biographer. The Other Side. Mrs. Tom L. Johnsua of Cleveland, In a discussion of the Cleveland school of house hold science a school to fit young g rls f or any position In domestic science tiial she Is helping Jo found, said: "This school, alien It is established, will du away with that sickening ulupp liiitaicnt Grand Secretary Knights Zion I 1 K Chicago. ' v v W"v V- ! '3 i a r - MR. CARPENTER AND ONBJ OF THE) SOLDIERS. thing like 4,000,000, and thla country has 7,000,000 or 8,000,000. Tha most of the colony if high and healthy. It haa ex tensive grass lands, and many of tha na tives are more than ordinarily thrifty. Take, for instance, tha lands along the Kagera river, which flows Into the lake on the edge of Uganda. I met two offi cers here who have been stationed In that country. They tell me that the aoll is fer tile and that it is covered with a thick od of flne.rich gTass. Much of tha coun- that so often seizes us when, having en gaged a person reputed to be a good cook, we sit down to her first souffle or her mayonnaise. "It la a dreadful disappointment that seizes us with that first mouthful. It Is a disappointment like that of a British soldier who, out walking with his son, saw an old blind beggar with the inscription on his chest: 1 I FOUGHT AT WATERLOO. "The soldiers said, with deep feeling: "'Give, me something. He helped to save your country.' "The child dropped some silver Into the beggar's oap, and the old man gratefull re plied: " 'Merci bien, monsieur!' " Tho Silent Witness. A good story has recently been told in the fle.et of an Incident which happened when Admiral Evans waa In command of the Indiana. An old time blue Jacket waa at the maat before Captain Evans, charged with getting food out of a mess chest, outside of meal hours. Thla getting of food for night watches la a common and strong desire on the part of most men aboard ship. Captain Evans asked the man what he had to say, and the man, sizing up tho delicate situation, said: "Captain, I didn't take no food outer that chest. Why, captain, there weren't no food in that chest! I looked in that chest, and, captain, I met a cockroach coming out of that chest with tears In hla eyes." Philadelphia Record. Dangerous Gronnd. "Bless me, Marihy!" exclaimed Uncle Cyrus, looking up from his magazine. "We're getting a navy that- don't need to tako a back seat for any o' them European nations." Aunt Martha continued placidly measuring out the ingredients of "moun tain" cake, and manifestly was not unduly excited over naval affairs. "Just listen to this: Some fellow has been making estimates. Any half-dozen of our big cruisers have engine strength equal to the pulling power of all the horses in tha Russian cuvalry! "The engines of our big battleship Lou Islany are strong enough if they could be fastened somwhere to pull the hull United States cavalry Into the sea, an "Mercy sakos!" cried Aunt Martha, with arrested spoon for the first time impressed with thtse Interesting statlBtics, "I hope to goodness our cavalry'U keep away from the shore!" Youth's Companion. Hardly a Compliment. In Dr. Edward Everett Hole's younger days he was about to leave a parish, and a good old woman was bewailing the fact and Insisting that the church would be ruined thereby. Dr. Hule. flattered by her words and manner, and wishing to connoli her, said: "But, sister, the man who will succeed me Is a fine preacher anJ a aplendid fel low. You'll soon nee thai ever thing Is all rlBl t and get used to It." "No, no; I won't!" she answered tear fully. "I don't get used to this changing. I've seen tlx changes In preachers now, and It's hot worse and worse all the time." Judge. Tho Girl "for HI in. A Scotchman, wishing to know his fate at once, telegraphed, a proposal of marriage to the woman of his choice. After spend ing the entire day at the telegraph office he waa finally rewards J late In the evening by an affirmative answer. "If I were you." suggested the operator when he delivered, the message, "I'd think twice before I'd marry a girl that kept me waiting all day for my answer." "N'a, no," retorted be Scot. "The lass who waits for the night rates is the laes for me." Everybody's Magazine. . Guessed 1! Got It. This story Is told on Oscar Hammersteln: Recently he was going downtown on a Broadway cr, the strert car conductor, on of the kind who act like stockholders, stood over the opera manager and bawled: "Did I get your .'are?'" Hammersteln was in deep thought, and, without raising his head, qulerly replied: "I guess you did: I didn't see you ring It up for the company." The conductor foui-d buslneaa on the rear platform and the pa?engers enjoyed hearty laugh. New York Times. try l a mil above tha sea and la well suited to be the rexldence of white Turn. These officers tell me that when railway communication ran be made German col onists will come In, and tho country will be developed as an agricultural and stock raising region. At present It Is thickly populated by natives, who rear many cat tle, sheep and goats. Kaarera River. The Kagera river rises not far from Lake Tanganyika, and the lower portion of It can be made navigable for steamers. It flowa not far from tho line of the Cupe to Cairo road, and it may form an Im portant link in the chain of rail nnd water which l.i to go north and south through thla continent. It will connect that road with Victoria Nyanza. I am told that If the bar at Its mouth la dredged out boats of considerable draft can steam so near to Lake Tanganyika that the building of fifty miles or so of railroad will practically connect the two lakes. As It Is now. It Is the: Intention of tho railroad builders to use Lake Tangan yika, which is 400 miles long, and Lake Albert Edward and Albert Nyanzn. both quite extensive, as a part of the Care to Cairo ayotem. They are all deep and easily navigable. Indeed, the richest part of that route will be through the Nile and Its waterways. The road la now within about 4 00 miles from tho southern end of Lake Tanganyika, and it will need oniy a short strip to Join this chain of lake, and another short strip from the end of Albert Nyanza to Gondokoro, where there is steam navigation for 1,000 miles down the Nile to Khartum, the end of the Egypt and Soudan railway aystcm. Bismarck In Africa. The Germans have erected a monument to Prince Bismarck out here on the south ern shores of Victoria Nyanza. It stands with its back to the lake and Its face towards the town of Mwanza. It conslbts of a bronze medallion aa big around as the head of a flour barrel, bearing the bust of tho great chancellor. This medal lion la cemented to a pyramid or obelisk, which stands In a beautiful grove. Just back of it there is a great rock 100 foet high, and all about are trees and banana plants. I understand there are other mon uments to Bismarck in some of the Uer man towns along the coast of the Indian ocean and that a fine statue of him haa been erected at Dar e Balaam. The Germans are organizing a native army out here, which shows the effect of their system of military training. They already have 2,500 native soldiers, offi cered by about 800 Germans. The men are put through the same exercises aa the soldiers at home. They are big fellows, well set up and very muscular, many be ing over six feet in helgth and large in proportion. The most of them have bru tal faces and they look as though they might be butchers In battle. I have gone about through the villages with some of these troops during my stay. Each man carries a hippopotamus whip with him and so uses It that he has no trouble In making himself respected by the or dinary native. , In tha Baaultnma, Towns. The people here are not aa wealthy aa those of Uganda. They wear less clothing and their houses are poorer. The average Uganda hut looks picturesque. It is made of cane, bent and woven together and thatched with straw, the roof often ex tending down to the ground. The huts of the Baaukumaa have walls of sticks set upright In the earth and laced with vines running in and out through them. After this the walla are chinked with mud and a cone-ahaped roof la put on. Tha doora are so low that one has to stoop to enter them, and it requires some en gineering to go In and out, aa the door may swing either way. Sometimes it Is hung at the top and sometimes at the bot tom, or It may be lifted in and out at will. The huts are seldom more than ton or fifteen feet In diamter, and each la divided Into room for sleeping and cook ing. The cooking is done in the center of tha hut on a fire built over stones, which rest on the ground. The cooking utensils are usually clay pots and the chief food is a porridge made of stewed millet The people, also have corn and peanuts In addition to millet, and they grind all three by pounding them in a mortar and rubbing them between stones. In one ln closure I saw a girl of IS pounding pea nuts in a mo. tar with a wooden pefrtlo, and In another a woman knelt down and ground millet by rubbing the grains be tween stones. Tha stones looked as though they might have been picked up President State Medical Association ' 1 ' ' '"''"' ' " ' ' - L - .v .. . "H ' i '.",."'. - . '' : j - U X. 6UAW. M. from the wayside. The lower one rested) cn the edge of a basket, and as tl.e flour was ground It fell dow n into' tho basket. I find but little furniture In any of tha houses. The people sleep on the ground and they squat about on the floor at 1 1ft lr nirais. Tiny have no tables and no chalra. a few houses contain stools rlj-.ht or ten Inches high, and In on or two I saw low frameworks of poles covered with sklna which were evidently tised as beds. The Hasukurnas are akllled In making basket and they manufacture all kinds and all size, Including enormous grain b.tskcta of fine straw. The latter are, used In nearly every hut for storing millet and corn and other such things. I saw one which nicaaured five feet in height and at least eight feet In diameter. It would, I venture, hold a good-sized cow and leava room to aparo. With the Witch Doctors. In one of the yards I entered this morn ing I found a group of men on their knees about a woman, seated on a low tool. The Woman waa of an ebony black ness, but her eyes were rlnftcd with white paint, nnd across her cheeks were streaks of the same material. She hud white feathers In her hair and other adornments, which made her look hideous. She was a witch doctor, nnd had been brought In to cure a man who had tho colic. Going onward, I saw many evidences of other superstitions. In one yard were a lot of straw pons, which I thought might be made to hold little chickens, until my guide, Sassafras, told me they were put up to ward off tho devil. Sassafras firmly believes In witches. He suys all trouble conies from them, and that If one kills a chicken and examines Its entrails, the way they lie In the chicken will tell him whether the man or woman he suspects of be witching him is guilty or not. I under stand that such oracles are often the test of witchcraft, and that if a man unex pectedly dies his friends suppose he haa been hoodooed. Nearly all deaths are sup posed to be caused by witches; the witch doctors are always called tn at such times to find who haa made the special charm which haa caused tha calamity. Sickness Is thought to be the Vork of an enemy or perhaps of an ancestral spirit. If alt Is an enemy the medicine man or woman gives the victim a charm or tells him to wear a leopard skin or something of that kind. If this falls, an attempt la mads to smell out the witch, and in thla case th person pointed out la liable to ba beaten to death. Professional Rainmakers. ' Prof. Willis Moore of our weather bureau ought to come out to Lake Victoria and learn something of the real science ot the weather. The lands south of the lake are frequently troubled with drouth, and it la on this account that the witches and rain makers flourish. I am told that some of the chiefs and sultans are supposed to ba able to make rain, and that they are liable, to lose their Jobs at the first long dry spell. Ancestors are sacrificed, too, in order to bring rain, and there are certain unfailing signs which Indicate that the drouth Is coming. On of these is the advent of twins. This la tha greatest ill luck any community can have, and the woman who brings it upon a village is sometimes ban ished. There are certain kinds of babies who are Just the reverse of mascots. They are called bad-luck children, and when on la born trouble Is sure to follow. One of these is a baby born with sore eyes, and another one that gets its upper teeth first. If th teeth sprout out in th upper Jaw before they do In the lower jaw, that Is a sure Blgn of dry weather, and th child Is supposed to bring It. Indeed, this belief I so strong that such children have been killed on account of th suffering which th drouth, brought by them, has entailed. This belief In evil spirits Is common in all the countries lying south of Lake Vic toria, and It was largely so in Uganda, north of the lake, until that country waa converted to Christianity. Indeed, many of the Baganda people still believe more or less In a legion of spirits. They have thirty-five different devils, one of whom presides over war, another over earth quakes and another over the plague. There is supposed to be a devil In every leopard, anr It waa to appeac them that when tho old kings built their palaces hundred of men were slaughtered. Sacrifice were made to Kltlnda, tha man-eating demon, and also to the snake-demon and other. The Baganda had their god of plenty, their gods of the rain and the rainbow, and their demons of thunder and the fall ing star. In short, the whole world of Africa Is supposed to be Infested by spirit, and devils of all kinds are everywhere present, FRANK O. CARPENTER. D, OflCBOILA, JCJ3L ( I i J'i r T