D TTTE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JITA Trip Across Matabeleland and a Visit to the Grave of Cecil Rhodes (Copyright ly. by rrnnk O. Carpenter.) LYING for alxty miles over F Matabeleland In an automobile. I Racing at twerty-flve mile an nour ever m reidt on roa.lt so rruiJJjr that the whwli often spin around with catchlrat. Pashm through streams where th. naur splashes hlh Into tha aJr. and crossing ditches where th. machine goea up ami down with a Jump. Now honkltxg by awnmps. frightening tha gnit black and white heron which lira there; now raring with antelope over the plains, and rxw rushing by Matabel kraal where the natives come out and naze at ua in their half-naked wonder. Those are aome of the Incident of ride I took yesterday from here to tha Matopos hills to vlalt the grave of Cecil Rhodes. 1 )U J .' .- LI". ul " ' " :" mt; W V-.! " - 'e.. ... j - , VI ( t 4 ft Armas Matabeleland. The (treat African statesman lies burled in low mountains far off from amy human r-! t nt. Ho selected as his tomh a fcr-ratinn fitted for the (crave of a Rod, r : the way to It takes one for thirty ti Ihronli a fertile valley, tho most of i is comprised in a -r.-.it estate which ittio.l'-s owned and whici Is still held ! i name. !: an up this valley v wont on our way to the tomh. Tho couMry Is but 1': ! illff. rent from what It was when Do. 1,1 Livingston, the great African Ft pin r. first announced Its existence to wl- men. It consists of a vddt which s r-u hes on and on ss far as the eye cam ran. h. The moat of It Is covered with gra.-s. aa Kroen as that which borders VI'T.irla Nynnia, spotted here and thcr with a scanty growth or thorny brush. Thorp are many native villages along tho ronfl to the tomb, and all tha way out on the veldt are patches of cultivated lands. These am the farms of tho natives. Some are not aa big aa a bed Quilt and tha largest contains only four or five acres. They are planted to millet and Indian corn. They have no fences around them and they stand right out In tha wilds. Cecil Rhodes gave directions that the natives should have free, any of his un used lands, and they ara charged no more now than when the whole country be longed to them. astoag tk Msiaktlti. I ahall WTlta mora of tha Mat&belet In the future. I had a, good ohanca to aee them during this iK). Their kraals ara scattered over th country and hi nearly every corn patch tha woman war work ing. The hard labor of these people Is done by the women. Wo saw many girls who were hoeing corn. They were naked to the waist and tha white sweat drops stood out Ilka pearl on their brown skins aa they bent low and chopped out the weeds. Ia soma of tha fields then were men. hut they were mostly smoking and watchln tha woman to keep them up to their work. A few of these lords of crea tion were clad In cast off European clo thier, but soma war absolutely nude, save far a little skin apron tied around the waist. The aprons ara not much blgrar than a ladles' handkerchief. They ara mad of deer or calfskin with the hair on, and ara quite ornamental. My chauffeur told m that the woman wwr tha wive of the watchers, and tha latter wera out In tha fields to sea that thara ladles dld not loaf on the Job. Many of the Matabeles have two or three wives, and there are soma "trust magnates" who have twenty or so. Women bar are a sign of wealth, and the more a man owns the richer ha la. 1 sb native tuwaisw We stopped now and then to visit soma ci me native villages, many or wtucn are iuuna nor rar irom me roadway. They are fair typee of the thousands which are acattered over this country. Lt me de- scribe one. It consist of a dosen or so huts, surrounded by a wall made of limb of trees tied together and looking not tin- like one of the stump fences of northern New York. Inside thla wall tiier l an- .1 k V. ... 1 1 m. I. . . . . . . . '"" Buuiuiin vi. a ayau in wrucn ui) sheep and goats ax kept at night and out- side the latter are tha home of the people. Tha. a ara ,.L.a m,A v... .... k 7 7. . 1 v, -Z . .T . V about five feet hisfe and thafnhaA r. - - -. - ' -- . . " , 1 Z . . Z Each hut ha a dooa ai tha front ui4 thia , .. , . . la tha nlll ara InfA Ik. a- 1 w Ta ... 7,. 7 . cedent 1 !? JZZ JZ. cement mad. of rUW nod. It la a smooth a. ai school boy elate, except at the center, -where a hole a big as a peck measure ha. been cut out for the fire. The ',. ' L2?ZJTZ i . 7a lnyX: TZlVt as In the past, most of the cooking la done - - In rude Jar. of clay. mad. by th. native. In one hut ut that I entered I .aw green ng and In another a half-naked ira roasun. looasta vhu. h-r corn boll! woman wa roasting looasta, troll, her family squatted about and smacked their Hps, awaiting the feast Very few of the huts are more than ten feet In diameter and some ar. much lesa Oont Jaahn aad Cecil J. Rhode. On of th village, w. visited was that of a famous native chief who led in tha rebellion whloh resulted in the loss of Matabeleland to the naUvea Thla wa Oom Jaahn. lie I now an old man, but still ha a great respect for the roan who conquered him. Indaed. h U afraid of Cecil Rhodes' ghost that he will not go to Ms grave for fear his spirit may be hoeiing about It Not long ago the mao aker of tlte Rhode estate here told Oom ja:.u mat n wouia giv mm a nore ana a new .addle and bridl If h would Uavel ..... ... , .. . over " . ........ w-wvm -J WIU the Matopes lulls and look at th Rhode monument The man replied that he did nul want Cecil Rhode to haunt him for the rtst of lil life and that h believed it wai best to let dead men lie. Nevertheless Oom Jaahn was a famous warrior and dur ing his prime was much feared. He fought kill. 1 , , . . , ". e graauajiy came to reaped parts or the country, and wa himself In tho English soldiers who Conquered him. receipt of an Income of tlOO.000 a year A abort time ago he. was akej what be The other day he was declared a bank thought of Cecil J. Uhod-s and his troopa rupt He did not care for run-down, or 11 replied: ha-bens; h selected "reduced gentUnven -Thi-.o m. n . re men." by which I mean men who had been prom'i- a moment and pro- Cecdi J . "Tin..-.' nn u wt re men of men, Ani," he coi.cluii :. "their lathers were men te Iji j ll, i.i ' t rill llbodea' Ilia- Farm. About scvep'een miles from Bulawayo we fjund ouiaelvea In the he-irc of a big farm establuhcd by Cecil J. Rhodes. He bought up nearly all th laud between Bulatveyo and the Matopos hills. Including a strip twenty or thirty mile long, em- Li-.-li. a number of rteh vajlava ir - . ,-. --. tatiier. deproasion In th hllla II butt a uiu holding UiuO.uM gallon of water U irricaie a t-ri oi mu iraci ana so ar- of this ranged th land about thla that they form on of th paying part of hi eatat. Thar I a tauant la ehaxg of them who kp 709 acr In crop of various kinds, nd I andarataad that h U now railing two crop of corn a year, in addition there are Una of thousand of acre of pasture and a part of this 1 now drotd to ostrtch. a Dart La oattla uul othsr u7 mlJ TJLTZ 1-r Ta WtJl paru k . nr. a J- . trlohes on the property, but, by Rhodes' ducrecs. no shooting can be done upon It. How He. odes Lived. This farm was one of the favorite homes of the great whit African king, and during my trip I had a chance to see the palace which formed his home upon It. The word palace Is ironical. Cecil J. Rhodes. althcuKh he was worth millions, waa more fond of the simple Ufa than 'Wagner himself. One of his residence waa the government house at Bulawayo, which had every comfort that money could buy, but his favorite home was a native hut Ha had such a hut outsld the government house, and often left the latter to sleep under the thatch. Out here on the farm he had three huts. Stories and Quaint Flaatlaar Hal on Bald Head. IIY should a man worrv about w Ms hair or the lack of it? Nearly every day. ..y. the New York Pres., I receive 3JSfi leiuirs rrom men or women ask- lng for a dandruff cure and a hair restorer. The beat dandruff cure Is a bald head. The beat hair restorer Is a ?Tof tnClmbd,?tth,eC0n,l0rthlfd fall Of tha HhlfFM rival l. an awl .. . a mallet and soma soloe cum. After punching a hole In the scalp he Inserts a hair, which la plastered around with the gum and gently cultivated until it takes firm root ills custom la to plant three hairs a day. To plant more would throw the hairless one Into convulsions. I knew a man Who WAS fhlrtaan Vaara DOln. . new planting of hair, rim Wonatam MUalasr Tea Years. poas oapturad a wild woman In the tnlckets of Grr c.mlntv lntv Tavna Ch. Mr. Jrtha WHk.a ,.r. wdUappeared .in. o... v.... had been Identified as wlf of a young farmer from bar home In Bablne oounty ten year ago and haa never been heard of ainoe. She was then K years of age. Tha woman waa mourned a dead, and tha husband, after spending ail h had In trytn; to find hsr, dead or ailve, left Texaa, Bhe is a strange looking Creature. ... ...... wim wree-incD linger naua, and skin browned and tough aa leather. n-Ml only In a short woolen garment, ah carried a ,, . . . " ol uut- woe, ana roota. She la ttnnri i.m..ii i - m., uiviuory a 7 ".iwumuwiuwiixmiu ta raatraln haw. . . . WWawr When it oome. to th. unique in tha way of plmlca. on. near Berwick. N. J., atands out brightly. Announced a the second Annual pionio of the widow. U Berwick, . 1 7. . Wn nnslnt ta age. "J, - . bettor to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all." Bo great was the auooea. of the Mcalo that U wa decided to hold U alnext year at tha ,i,. year at the same and pi. Mo widower ar invited. 1 trr later Axw Xatenkrlana. Mr. Ansa K. Bolton, aged lOi, of Alex- audita, ln&, vlgocou fa nund and body. will go to vlU her on. Utrajrv imim J aCoaomo. After Uie iCokomo trip ahe will to unattended to Ford. k-.n tn w.i. v,. aistor, Mra Ulsa Wilson. u yar oid. Th family la noted f or lu longevity, Mr. Bolton being- one of a pair of twin, the other, Jame Co of Quincy, III., la .till living. Another alster. lln. NuioT Riria. nour of' Brownsburg, is mill alive at lut year. Mra Bolton's memory of thing fa be- yond the Hfe of tha ... aula to thm but tradition, la clear. She talks 0f tncldenu of the war of lsli a familllar aa Ilia av.ni,. . . ,. ... "UJ avcava OI Ul Bpanua war. . ' 1 '" . f , ? tt'"- .. K.cn mo uisuianc Deaoiar Nanr York ever had wa Archie Ilalne of the r.qultable. Haines, as general agent, made the fortunes of thousands of men In all rent In social life, but had lost everything .... ..v.u.. a, wuuiu pica up a relic, or a derelict with oodles of acquaintance, hut no money, and offer enormous com missions, rebates, etc., for noo.Ono policies. One cf thes curiosities of the past, who had gone down to his last dollar and wa virtually beggar, was taken up by Halne t the age of TO. and In thre days had sold a many policies of r.on.nno each. His commissions amounted to I15.0OO. Oa Rlrd tieealr. Blm. a. l ... - ""' cum par, i-nicsgo, Is ex- cited ovr th execution of little English sparrow Ti e highest point of a tall tree v.,:,mri, Buen park. Chicago. Is in rront of the home of WIllarA ir Steama. nraaMtait if K. t . r. . . . 1urlla rH rK Ln.:fns ss.o cmtion. was chosen as the place of execu tion. Big eparrows escorted a seventh to the top of the tree and there hanged the oira. ine victim waa feet suspended by It " waa mi mom nmarli.h . V. I ever saw,- declared Mr. fit.. . ...... . n..i . "te u TZW' WO,U"d m","n ab th u thair oondmnd fallow. Tha vi condemned -tow. Th vm- .. " X RHODES' XTVTN'O ROOM." srf In these he pent weeks and months at a time. One hut was his bed room and another his kitchen, and the third might be called his drawing or living room. They ere all still standing. His living room Is open on all aides, and , consists of merely a thatched roof up held by posts covering a space about forty feet square. Its walls conaist of screens of matting which may be rolled up and down to shut out the wind. When Ce cil Rhodes was here, they wer usually up; and, a the huts stand upon a hill he had a magnificent view on all sides. He could look over the rich valley In one J...H.U,., mna away on ai me otner see these mighty hills among which he loved to wander and where he directed his rest- lng place should be. Right under the tlm waa then forced from the branch and h. Tf 4 .k.. . k .v.. bird. At first the bird struggled to escape. but tha cord held and lu flutter, grew weaker until they finally lded In dafh Graadfather at 31. Married when 15, a father at 18, and a ""-'. Wayne cntT PennavTvan.l ...... ' ceieDnaied their fiftieth wedding uini. versary recently, They are one of the youngest couples In the country who have ever done so. Lord Is a farmer and genera storekeeper, and the family Is one of the oldest In that part of the country. Rooster Mothers Nine Chicks. A bantam rooster which Philip Stack- 7hriT'h.h ' 'Vr "J?! " in jyju T , T T", 'I' P ' roo,t'.r " n..n.a uinu tui ouu inn owner or Btackpole discovered that the rooster ap- peered Jealou. of the hen'a ability to ef Finally th. little bird took to a Intelligence of Anta inuou irora rag vrae.j . Jaws. Two smaller anU that were with ........ mem were unaouDtedly the two that had earned home the Urrlble news, for they ....... ' iu me way aown the tree and over to a P" rrom wnicji u army behind them could view th. great beast This following of big ant. must taava bHn the military of th. colony, for after looking th. field over they debouched and came to the ground In a .trateglo poaltlon In th. rear of th. toad, who .at there all humped up. have been fifty or more of rnoaa r I . .M. mnA . v. w M.uw.a , . -w-, luaiviwu in a mui against th. toad. Before he waa aware of their presence thy had climbed all over vZ "TT"" "V"raDM aU 0ver nd trom the way h to hop I knew tho. great Jawa of their' Were getttnw getting their work" in on him well. The first hop took him into the thick of the nasturtium bed, but If h. had awakened to what had "truc a,n "d expected to wipe those ant oft of nlm by contact with th thick grow- n plants he wa adly mistaken. The ant nuDg 00 aai nlppad, and not until they had nagged him clear over to th dtre of tha yarQ. where he tumbled among some thick T0"rth of young lllao bushes, did the ant consider that they had auffVcIently tri- umah1- Then on by one they dropped off nd " br came straggling back through the grass, or tho of them that had not fallen in th fight and sought thlr Lrrack 111 th old tree' depth. "Of oomra. attar that .mnhuia ... - i a " wv.m- P'te bounce the anU had given him, I dldn't "P to ee that toad around ,hata . u . I n ... T . . ...... . . . " "aa, un a IHUI SUrpriSCI! when I went out next day to w hat wa ao'ng on around th tree o eome face to tk Mr. Toad th very flrat thing. And wh.n T k bow he had fixed himself couldn't help but My right out: -.. expectation at and about that spot and didn't intend to c taken by aurprise, and hustled away from there again, not If he knew It He had scooped out for himself a lltti hollow in th ground and th spongy wood of th tr and had backed Into it with )ut th front of hi head out o that he could see what wa going on ouUlde and could act accordingly, with his rear entirely protected, lis wa discovered during tha day by scouting ant, fortu nately for them, at a safe distance, and they must have carried the new borne, for some of the big anu came down after while and reconnolured Mm. They doubtless reported that the toad's poaltlon was a little too strona; for the ant army to attempt to carry, and the toad remains In his retreat to this day when hot out forag- lng elsewhere about the yard. And no ant of that colony ha pasaed within aU Inches . a. m. root or tne tre. since the toad made It and located there, The toad ha don a good buslneas. how- ver. In strange or try anU that hav 'STh, X? Ordinarily there wa nothing- beside, th. working of th. anu and th. passing nn a r ,. a ... " mmw maim ox in colony M-fd apparently on marly routfn. hurt- ns ta -,ai .tt.i. . . . to .CUaot atUntlc. tn tham av hill there Is an orchard of peaches, pon.M, applea and apricots, now In bearing, which was set out under Mr. Rhodes' direction, and looking over the valley one now sees the rich fields of corn which bis Im agination planned. Lover of Solltade. I am told that Cec il Rhodes liked to be alone. While at the government house he was overrun with callers. When he came here to the farm thoae who wished to aee him had to drive eighteen miles out and then eighteen miles back before they reached a hotel. If they wanted to stay they had to sleep In the open, for the huts were only large enough for Mr. Rhodes himself. Later on he built a hotel about three miles distant In order that he Features nest ret..rr,i. ti. -v . " ..w ,v . Ht ,f ytt W'nt t0 M,d t" lnVJ rooster. Only once a day. when he souaht food and water, did the rooster leave the eTg, and then only for a brief period. Dead Wagon at Wedding. To step from Hymen's altar and find two undertakers awaiting them with ambu lances was the serio-comic experience of Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Stitt of Butler, Pa." While the Rev. J. W. Pontius was per forming the marriage ceremony at tha home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Kllngen smlth, parent of the bride. Miss Emma E. Kllngensmith, some Joker called the M. A. Berklmer and the George W. Am v un. "il'?0r? tu buv rcaiuenco uouoie quica. ine amouiance men drove at hrMlmnrv ' ujuvo ai ureannecK 10 th "rriv'ng about the same 5,'m wAlted t.,e word to romove the dead and dying. Instead, they were Intro- duced to a blushing bride and a Mnm. inev wer intrA. groom. Anffort to force th. couo.e tn . , . but one day about the middle of June as " appie xree suddenly rrom the main nmnlh. t ,- wn - - -. . various omer exit which I tben fni- the. rirt i. . T ulrau Sxcitement In what iam.,i . 1. . . . " wuuiu ciose on a ui&CK ant tnua tnnt- an mm . ! 1 . v. . . ...... vll . . --. "'" round- At fl' thouht tho "readed toad had worked his deIth of th nollow an a laanln; out thIn" there, but glancing f05?, 1 "w Uiat h ""lng atolldiy hU ho18- Ttuit lanc d 'houtrh. J.. a.w- , i .. . . - - c . ... . j . m.. a.i va ui another kind were swarming. Th mti were not one-tenth the slae of h. ., ., of th. wood anU and they Jmo' transparent In th, wr pink and J"oi trans parent in the midst of the wa"n was a group of their kind, but with wlnKS, and around these the other seemed to me to be maintaining a Strict guard. 11 waa the presence of these ants, and they murt have come up out of the ground, their appearance had been so sudd. n. that nad created the panlo In thut wood ant colony. Th big black ants would rush in ana uPn Httle red ones, only in nln case out of Un to be Instantly seized by no,t of red ones and torn to pieces. tor th rd a"t. small ss they were, were tigers. The big black ants wore B0 mtoli at all for the Httle red ones. It "med to m aa If the object of the black ants was to get at and capture the group of winged red ants that wer kent In tha . - - center of the swarm, and that It was to prevent this that th guarding red ants fought so fiercely. At any rate after a savage fight of ten minutes or more. In which the field was strewn with dead and wounded on both sides, the blafks retired and made their way back up tha tree, scores of them burdened with red ar.ts which had fastened on their legs a id f elei and other parts of their bodies, where they hung like leeches, the pain making the big ants frantic. 8Core ut "'-m burdened with red ar.ts Lrr w n"c' A r1 an' that had Seised hold of a big black -oldier ant s fore leg, out of rtach of ,h ant a jaw, had u turn been i"1 by another black soldier ant, and uu on" succeeded in tugging both off the field. Ail of Us tug.lng, however, "J 'raring at th red ant would rn nida.e the tenacious Hill aiu to r.lea.e th black oldier ant and so the other bia aut. hold- lng to the red ant and the red ant holding to the leg of Uie soldier aut, dragged them both to the tree and labored with tne bur- den up the tree trunk three freet or wore-, neu. ne aiaapprarrd in tha h.,ll,.w ii. vi aoiaier am nanslng rrom the Jaws of the red ant limp and dead, but tn red ant UU alive and resisting the effort to nake it release Us hold. "After tha battle an ih , black ant army the surviving host of r.-d ant and their winged charge disappeared under the ground as suddenly at they had appeared. What puxzled me and pui.le. me yet Is by what mysterious telegraphy th. black ant. in th. depth. of that old appl. tree knew of the coming of that army of red anta on th. around .. . ' aouna at th foot I that it ha ' -a waa arniuw UU Ml IIlSlni a , . 'ut?ael oo- - um. Ukuu iai weea, might havo a rln'"e to entertain such guests as he chose. This hotel Is now used by tho visitors as a lunching place On their way to the tomb. I am told that Mr. Rhodes would go off and spend days by himself In the Ma topos hills. He would take hooks along and camp out. At one time he wandered up to the place where his remains now He and got lost. It was some time bo fore a native appeared and showed him tho way out. In describing the place to the Matabeles he was told that the hill on which he was lost was known a.mong them as the "mountain of the friendly spirit." Rhodes Zoologrloal rark. Leaving the farm, we passed through of Every .... .... . w ra lawa. me joKer will be asked to pay for the ambulance service. Gravestonea of Glass. A glass company of Pittsburg announces that It has received several orders and will begin at once to manufacture headstones of glass to mark graves. A unique feature of the new tombstones will be that there can be blown In the glass a photograph of the deceased person. Sara-eon Gets Bl Fee. After receiving what he. considered a prohibitive fee of JO.OOO, Dr. George W. hZ' wUinr..M af f Muhlenber hospital Plalnfleld. N. J., and recognired aa the foremost surgeon In New Jersey, consented to sail for Europe for a consulta tion with Dr. August Bier of Berlin, to be ate.t surgeon in'that country. A young J , (Lminy private hospl oolson In th. A young American woman studying art recently entered Dr. Bier's spltal in Berlin for treatment for nMonn in . . i . , . . rr.v - l" ."","7, ' , Z. . . . Vm T. ma pauoni mat Z.:Xt7""thoot- r,u Uu touiili H me opera- with the same results. Each time after the worker anta of the vvt .m e..i . . came aown and carried the dead and ... v-.i. . . ... "u""cui piaca ana rea, up tne tree me nonow. ivow and then a wounded ... ., . .. "aai. m never tetcing up would ng that ant to the condition of those that It had come down to carry off "eld- And a strange thing during all this excitement hi the colony and the fierce battles was that there would be never a brealc In the regularity of that procession the ants that w.re carrying the refuse -- iruiu ma nuiiB ana MKnntf i r n ha rtumn Those anrts were evidently seeing their au,y 41111 It, regardless of war or rumor r war- wur". naving oeen punned with re"r Increased force of anta during the Iast few day" cf ceased about July 1, and I presume the ant home waa then finished. Ants of all kind In th. colony having alnce then been busy carrying in and storing supplies. I suppose for the winter. If that old apple tree trunk should be cut In twain what wonderful thing. W9 undoubtedly would see In the home and home "f of tnat colony of great anta" Union Pacific Shops (Continued from Page Two.) material as locomotives, cars, rails, bridge material, etc., the chenilBt and engineer of tests is assisted by a chief Inspector, who lias general su:cr islon over the work of the Individual Inspectors, under the direc tion of the chemist in.l encineer of tests. Ill adidt'on to the chief Inspector the com pany has at present twenty-seven lnspec tors coi.tlnuall) traveling In different part. l"K r-"-,rr '""" ' l "or or in- r:;r..'.,'r,r; jus and Is responsible for the quality and cor- rectness of all materials purchased under contract by the Harriman lines. Last yesr when considerable work waa being done U over the west this department inspected material to the value of t'.S.Ooo.CMX l abor Ravlna- Uevlaes, The Union Pacific for years has been the pioneer in the Invention anil trial of labor-saving devices and special prlvll.-tri are afforded to a man with an Inventive 'urn of mind who might possibly Invent some contrivance which will save time and labor. Mr. Harrlms.n l.,olt blnitlv upon i'".o "in hyp money ana per- mlts of any expenditure which will In tne on onus returns uy saving labor. Just as the Union Pacific railroad waa the pio neer wtat of the Missouri in the uae of dining cars, vcsiibuled cars, steam heal, Pintsch light, buffet amokir.g and libiary cars and tourists cars, so 11, e Union Pa cific shops has U-eti tl pioneer In the uae of hL.ndr.-ds of labor-saving devices. Coniprtrsaed air wa first extensively used at the Union Paclflo ahops.' which at one time were recognized all over the country .a the leadlug "rneumatlc" ahou of ih. anllra wr.rM T II J .f.. II , , ., ... nw.(s.. v . . u ....Cll a.l U j. 21. Manning wer. th leader, of thla form of work. Mr. McConnell first used oom- TOMB OP CKCIL JOHN RHODES. the great psrk and gardens which Mr. Rhodes l.-ft In his will aa a resort for the people of Rulawayo. They lie be tween the farm and the hills and com prise a part of the latter. The park covers 1S.O0O acrep, and there are fifteen miles of roads throuuli It, all trees. More than SO,) specimens of plants are cul tivated here; and there Is lalso a large nursery devoted to the development of the forest The zoological garden Is inside a fnce four miles long. It Includes every kind of animal that will live in Africa, with the exception of the beasts of prey, such as Hons and leopards. There are giraffes, antelopes, elands and sebras everywhere to be seen. The animals are not afriid, for do shooting Is allowed In the vicinity, Day Life tion until Dr. Bndlcott rave his consent The Ilalnfleld physic-lew ha never heard Of the woman, and was reluctant to make the trip to Europe when urged to do so by her New York attorney. He asked Tor a fee, with expenses, which he considered would not be met, but got his certified check and sailed on La Lorraln. Chanted Ills Mind. President Roosevelt's remark that he' had "a perfectly corking time" In the White House, relates the New York Tri bune, recalls an equally characteristic state. man maAt K.. kiM . . lng. while he was governor, he occupied a chalr next t0 a mcmber of the Trlmjna etafT on a train going from New York to Albany. The next republican convention waa the subject of discussion and the Tri bune man said: "Well, governor, you wtll probably be the candidate for vice presi dent" "Not If I can help It." said Mr Roosevelt; "I like my Job and I'm getting a good run for my money." The newspaper - - - 1 man u-lt-' that he would change his mind. and when they met again the gov- knew what was meant when hi. rail- road companion said. "I told you so." pressed air on a lltti. r,r.. ,.... . , Mllo Wlieel by hand. "Bllm Jim" Learned was then running nun running switch engine around the yards OeCaUSe ' rheumatism he had difficulty in ruverslng . reversing nis engine a enmr...,....! i. . was put on the locomotive whereby he could move the big lever by simply turning an air valve. Air wa then used to operate drill Instead of a water motor. By its own force the compressed air worked Its ay to the fore until for year. It was gen- """y in use on all sort. f device, to save h- now; however, been trans- Tno t air spread all over the country - - - winuivu uy c ecLrunv. ,n1 no lunger Is trouble experienced In making the air work, but It Is rather an exact science. Air waa used on the trans fer turn table In the machine shop to transfer an engine from one stall to another. It did the work which formerly required twenty nun, when. a one could operate the air machine. Air bus given way at the Cnlon Paclflo ehors to elec tricity, which is supplied from tne central "'wer ln "d now Insteud of opening me air vaiv a button In turnn.l nJ th. chained lightning will do the work. Air Is not entirely discarded, for many devices ure still In ue In which compressed air I the means of transmitting the power. The Union Pacific was ihe ploii. r in the us. cf a sandpapering machine, the firs', machine of that kind l.avlrg b e;i made In the Omaha "hops. It was Invent... by George C. Brown, the pres nt general foreman of the machine shops. It Is still in us-i and liesldes saving an Immense amount of labor It does a better Job than could be done by hand. The air spray for paint ing cars and buildings ami for whitewash ing bulldinps was alo an Invention turned out at the Union Pacific shops and still In general use there. It is esp.tl.lly useful for painting st-ei cars and fur aandblatlng freight cars. ome Wondrrs Achieved. Th entire plant of the Union Paclflo hops is on labyrinth of device for ac celerating work and for saving men and time. A visitor will se work done In a way ha never before dreamed of and which if told about would not believe waa possible. One of tl. greatest helps In th machine snop as the discovery that by more highly tempering the cutting tools th. y eould Le made into what Is known as hl.h pied at. el which leunlts these to.. Is to worn over live times us faai as tw.nty-flv jeurs ago. An in.tance lu point 1. that It formerly took ten hojr to tin n off :he roi.ith surface on a na!r of drivim u, ..i. h le tutr t ie same wheel, aith , r .n . i . th... san-.e machine have been cut down at at the rate of eleven pair in ten hours anj fif;ren minutes, thus working Just elev. u times us fast. K. IT. Harriman lias taken a personal In terest 'n the shops at On, aha and on eeril oi casl. ns has stopped I. is special train In Its fl glit across the continent h.ng enojh to pay a visit to the shops He takes a personal Interest In the work there and ea p tally In having up-te-date ahops second to none In the country. On 1.1s last visit a was particularly pleased alth the grass pU.ts and trees and chlded a man who tack d Lis autometiil. upon on. of tn. ga. ploa i '.,-f 'v-:vi..r; ".Si 1 and they are premltted to live aa far 4 possible in a state of nature. Matopos Hill. I wish I could describe for you thes mighty hills which Cecil Rhodes cho as his last resting place. They aro noth ing like any range I havo aeon else where. They rlsA up out of tho African veldt in the shape of great masses of granite, ground smooth by the glaciers of a million odd years ago. They are sixty miles long and from ten to twenty mtloa wide, and they wind their way in and out over the plain, looking aa though they might have been thrown up by volcanoes. In some places they remind me of the Saxon Switzerland, and In others of tha "Garden of the Gods" on the edge of the Rockies In Colorado. Upon many of them aro boulders piled one upon another. And auch boulders. You will find nothing like them In any other part of tho world. You have seen pebbles so worn by the water that they are a round as marbles and a smooth. On these Matopos hills there ar boulders as big as a haystack lying on these granite rocks which are as smooth as the pebble. The rock upon which they Ha are smooth. In places they made me think that thoy might be great wen on the bald head of old Mother Earth, which Is here pushing Itself toward the sky. Great Glacial Gardea. Indeed, the wholo range Is one mighty glacial garden. The hills, where I vis ited them, are about eleven mllos wide. Bn1 a11 are crtrred and worn, with these mightV bnilhlora Ivlnv har. anrl . V "P th-m. In some places the rock, are plied up like a fortification, being as evenly lalrl as though the gods had been the nlaBon ard hud here worked at their trade. Borne of the rocks are beautifully colored, and their huea change as the sun moves over them. Some contain cavea, and In these caves the natives of gen- "rations KO have painted pictures which are now the wonder of the archeologlats. The hills contain beautiful valleys. Cas cades flow down them and springs here and there gush forth, reminding one of the living water whloh spouted when Mosea smote the rock. Cecil Rhodes' Toms. We drove th automobile right Into th. hills and wound our way among boulder, to the foot of the rocky mass which tha ereat African hero ehnse. as hla lJ!t raatlno- ni&ea. It la tnnra than a mil. In Wk n . - - - ., " i w .u .vua.B auu If H... a. It.. ...11... 1 ..... ...o .uiicj iui uuuurmi Ul feet Like all the hills. It Is composed of red granite and Is ground aa smooth a a floor. With staff In hand I climbed up, bending half double In places and setting my feet Tat for fear I might slip. The view broadened at every step, until at lat on the top I was far above the Matopos hills, which extended up and down the country as far as my eyes could reach. On the summit the rock Is smooth, form ing a level apace, which covers perhaps a quarter of an acre. About this space He a score of the mighty boulders I have de scribed, so placed by nature that they seem to guard It. Right In the center of this space, on the very summit. Is the tomb of Rhodes. It Is the rock Itself. The grave was gouged out by mallet and chisel and the graulte was so hard that It required the masons ten days to do the work. There was no blasting for fear that Is might crack the rock, but the square hole waa dug out bit by bit until It was dp enough to hold the coffin. This was then covered with cement and a granite slab placed over It the whole being hermntlrally sealed. Upon the top of the slab there Is riow a bronss plate three feet wide and five feet long, and upon It are engraved the simple word which Mr. Rhodes ordered for th monu ment. They are: "Here IJo the Remains of Cecil John Rhodes." There Is no date of birth or death, nor any Inscription mentioning the wonderful work that Rhodes did for Bouth Africa and Great Britain. The very simplicity of the monument adds to Us prandeur, and the fact that It lies out here In the open, In the wilds of the vast country which he ha riven to the r7nIIah crown, seemed to me monument enough It was Impressive and as I looked at It I Involuntarily took off my hat, for I seemed to be upon holy ground. Gaarded by the Matabeles. I climbed up the rocks and walked As '"re and there about the grave I was fol lowed by two Matahele boys. They mad no noi.e as they slipped In their bare feet round the mltrhty boulders which guard the tomb, and It waa onlv whan T .v, my course that I was able to ae them. They were, I am told, two cf the guards which Oom Jaahn, the chief of whom J hHve written, keeps always here to guar Rhodes' tomb. They are replaced by other, from day to day. so that aoiu. ar. ever prek.rit These guards say nothing to visitors, but nnv m.n who mi.ild dare to cut his name upon the rocks or rmitilate the place would at on, he reported t i tha authorities at Ilulaaavo and punished. At first Oom Jaahn furnUl ed the boys fre of charge aa a tribute to the memory of Rhodes, after a custom that the Matabeles have of guard li.g their n .ted dead After a while, how ever, the Rhodes estate recognised their valu as a protection axalnst Iconoclast nd sine then a certain amount ha been regularly paid to the ebony watcher. FAAMC O. CAJCPaaNTXR.