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| author | nfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org> | 2025-02-05 03:27:48 -0800 |
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| committer | nfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org> | 2025-02-05 03:27:48 -0800 |
| commit | e0fa2de470ea556fdf89804c996f272a3ef7d4d0 (patch) | |
| tree | 073b6ad74ba774c4f6459fe6de0ca0ef117d643e | |
| parent | bf9c676125dc2df38883cd61aff696ec0b832db5 (diff) | |
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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d7b82bc --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +*.txt text eol=lf +*.htm text eol=lf +*.html text eol=lf +*.md text eol=lf diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6312041 --- /dev/null +++ b/LICENSE.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements, +metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be +in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES. + +Procedures for determining public domain status are described in +the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org. + +No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in +jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize +this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright +status under the laws that apply to them. diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c880dec --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for +eBook #50608 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50608) diff --git a/old/50608-0.txt b/old/50608-0.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 1ab759a..0000000 --- a/old/50608-0.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,6509 +0,0 @@ -The Project Gutenberg EBook of Wide World Magazine, by Various - -This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most -other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions -whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of -the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at -www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have -to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. - - - -Title: Wide World Magazine - Volume XXII, January, 1909, Number 130 - -Author: Various - -Release Date: December 4, 2015 [EBook #50608] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: UTF-8 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WIDE WORLD MAGAZINE *** - - - - -Produced by Victorian/Edwardian Pictorial Magazines, -Jonathan Ingram, Wayne Hammond, and the Online Distributed -Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net - - - - - - -[Illustration: “‘CRACK! CRACK! CRACK!’ CAME THE ANSWER FROM CUTLER’S -GUN.” - -(SEE PAGE 319.)] - - - - -THE WIDE WORLD MAGAZINE. - - Vol. XXII. JANUARY, 1909. No. 130. - - - - -The Beulah County “War.” - -BY H. M. VERNON. - - One of the most striking characteristics of the Westerner - is the high regard in which he holds womankind. Even in the - roughest mining camps a woman is absolutely safe, and is - treated with a consideration unknown in many more civilized - centres. This remarkable story illustrates the Westerner’s - innate chivalry in a very striking fashion. Sooner than drag - the name of a young schoolmistress into a quarrel, a resident - of Three Corners, Montana, allowed himself to be made an - outlaw, and for weeks defied the population of a whole county - to arrest him, even when a field gun was brought out to shell - his fastness. How in his extremity the girl he had befriended - came to his rescue and put an end to this extraordinary “war” - is graphically told in the narrative. - - -In the extreme western part of the State of Montana, U.S.A., in the -County of Beulah, lies a little town called Three Corners. At first -only a junction on the Rio Grande Railway, from which point countless -thousands of cattle were shipped to all parts of the world, Three -Corners grew to be a flourishing place. The wooden shanties, gambling -“joints,” and dance halls gave way to brick buildings, several banks, -a school, and other signs of progress, as respectable settlers moved -farther toward the Golden West. Of course, a part of the old town -remained, and with it a few of the characters typical of a Western “cow -town.” Among these was a tall, raw-boned man who had drifted West in -the ‘eighties, settling at Three Corners and opening a gambling-house. -His name was “Jim” Cutler. He was a man of very few words, but with -one great failing--he would shoot first and argue afterwards. Yet this -gambler, who was known and feared far and wide as a “gun-fighter,” -was at heart the mildest of men, beloved by all the children in the -town, to whom he gave coppers galore. Furthermore, Cutler would put up -with all manner of insult from a man under the influence of liquor, -or from “Tenderfeet” who did not know their danger. Cutler’s shooting -propensities were directed solely toward avowed “bad men” or those who -delighted in being known as bullies. In the course of his altercations -with such characters this tall, raw-boned man--who could, and did, -“pull his gun” like a streak of lightning--added to the population of -the local cemetery with a score of six. - -Among the new-comers to Three Corners during the rehabilitation of that -town was a Hebrew named Moses Goldman. This man, a good-looking fellow -of some twenty-eight years, hailed from New York. He opened a shop, -and, with the business ability of his race, soon succeeded in making -it the principal draper’s establishment of the place. Before long, -however, reports began to circulate that the handsome young Hebrew was -not quite so respectful in demeanour towards his lady customers as he -should have been, and, although highly popular with a certain element, -the major portion of Three Corners’ female population gave Goldman’s -shop a wide berth. - -One Monday morning Jim Cutler, who had been up all night looking after -the “game” in his establishment, was just leaving the place when a -young woman, whom he recognised as the schoolmistress, ran up to -him and said: “Oh, Mr. Cutler, would you mind walking as far as the -school-house with me?” - -Cutler, somewhat astonished, did so, and was gratefully thanked for -his trouble. After leaving her he walked slowly back to his rooms, -wondering why he of all men should have been chosen to escort the -pretty “school ma’am.” - -Some days afterwards Cutler, who passed the school on his way to and -from the Gem Saloon (his place), saw the mistress deliberately cross -the street just before reaching Goldman’s shop, and continue on her -way on the other side. He also saw Goldman come to the door and try -to attract the girl’s attention. When he reached Goldman, the latter; -twirling his moustache, remarked, laughingly, “Shy girl, that, eh?” -Cutler looked at the Hebrew for a moment, and then answered quietly, as -he moved away, “She ain’t your kind.” - -Three weeks after this little episode there was a ball at the City -Hotel, and, naturally, almost the entire youth and beauty of Three -Corners “turned out.” The City Hotel was just opposite Cutler’s saloon, -and at about one o’clock the gambler was sitting in a chair outside his -place, listening to the music, when the schoolmistress and her mother -left the hotel on their way home. A moment later a man also quitted the -building and followed them. Presently he stopped the two ladies and -attempted to converse with them. The younger of the women apparently -expostulated with him, and then the two went on, leaving him standing -at the corner. Cutler recognised the solitary figure as that of -Goldman, the draper, and drew his own conclusions. Next morning Cutler -made it his business to leave the Gem Saloon just as the schoolmistress -was passing, and strode up to her. - -“Miss Thurloe,” he said, “you were stopped last night on your way home. -Can I be of any assistance to you? I know you have only your mother to -protect you.” - -The girl gave him a grateful look, and explained that Goldman had -repeatedly forced his attentions on her. She had done her best to send -him about his business, but he continually annoyed her, even going -so far as to enter the school-house, interrupting lessons and making -himself generally obnoxious. - -Cutler smiled grimly during the girl’s hesitating recital, saw her -safely to her destination, and then went home for a sleep. At three -o’clock that afternoon he walked leisurely towards the school-house, -stopped at the fence just by the rear door, and chatted with the boys, -it being the recess hour. Suddenly, approaching from the opposite -direction, he beheld Goldman, who walked straight into the school-house -without having seen the gambler. The latter waited for a few moments, -then he also entered the building. Reaching the schoolroom, at the end -of a short hall, he found the door locked, and promptly threw himself -against it with all his strength. The door gave way with a crash and -Cutler leapt in, to see the schoolmistress struggling in the arms of -Goldman. She was fighting like a tigress, but the Jew’s hand, held -tightly over her mouth, prevented her crying out. Directly Goldman -beheld the saloon-keeper he released his prisoner, who sank back -panting upon a chair, and glared savagely at the new-comer. Cutler, -ignoring him entirely, walked slowly toward the agitated schoolmistress -and stood still, waiting for her to speak. - -Goldman, however, was the first to do so. “Oh, no wonder I’ve no -chance,” he burst out, viciously; “Cutler’s as lucky in love as he -usually is at cards.” - -Cutler flushed at the gibe, but he said not a word, waiting for the -girl to speak. Presently, having in a measure recovered herself, she -rose and approached the gambler. “Mr. Cutler,” she said, unsteadily, -“this man has insulted me repeatedly. Just now he tried to kiss me by -force, and I’m afraid I shall have to give up my position here and -leave Three Corners.” - -In a very gentle voice Cutler asked the girl to leave the room for a -few minutes. After she had gone he turned toward Goldman, who stood -looking at him defiantly, his arms folded across his chest. - -“If you were a man,” he said, sternly, “I’d drop you where you stand, -but I’m going to teach you a lesson that’ll do you a heap of good.” -Then, with a sudden bound, he grasped Goldman by the throat, threw him -across a desk, and, with a three-foot ruler, administered a thrashing -such as might be given to a recalcitrant schoolboy, only with somewhat -greater severity. The punishment over, Cutler picked the man up and, -dragging him across the floor, threw him bodily out of the building. -Now Goldman was himself a powerful man, but Cutler’s action had been so -swift and decisive that the Hebrew had practically no chance to offer -resistance. Once freed from the gambler’s hold, however, he turned -and flew at his adversary with clenched fists, snarling furiously. -Cutler stood quite still, and just as the Hebrew came within the proper -distance his right fist shot out straight from the shoulder. It landed -square on Goldman’s jaw, and he dropped like a log. - -Several of the school-children, attracted by the noise, now crowded -round, vastly excited. Cutler, having informed Miss Thurloe that he -believed she would not be further annoyed, but that he would keep an -eye on “that fool masher,” walked slowly toward the town, leaving the -vanquished draper lying where he had fallen. - -It has been necessary to explain all this in order that readers of THE -WIDE WORLD MAGAZINE unfamiliar with the ways of the Far West may better -understand what follows. I have said that the better element had in a -manner of speaking driven the original settlers at Three Corners to -new fields. These new-comers looked upon Cutler as an “undesirable.” -His reputation as a “man-killer” did not appeal to the emigrants from -the cultured Eastern States, who would gladly have seen him pack up -and leave the town. Goldman was quite aware of this, so, directly he -recovered himself, he asked for and obtained a warrant for Cutler’s -arrest on a charge of assault. The gambler was arraigned before the -local magistrate, where he steadfastly refused to give any reason for -the chastisement he had inflicted upon Goldman. The latter immediately -realized the advantage of Cutler’s chivalrous reluctance to drag -a woman’s name into the affair, and so swore that the assault was -entirely unprovoked and committed out of “pure devilry” on Cutler’s -part. Cutler was fined fifty dollars and severely admonished by the -Court. Everyone wondered why this acknowledged “bad man” did not -promptly wreak vengeance on the Hebrew. The gambler, however, desiring -to protect the name of the school-teacher, said not a word, but paid -the fine and went about his business as though nothing had happened. - -[Illustration: “HE ADMINISTERED A THRASHING SUCH AS MIGHT BE GIVEN TO A -RECALCITRANT SCHOOLBOY.”] - -Some ten days passed, when, one moonlight evening, Cutler came driving -down the road leading into Three Corners, behind a fast-trotting -horse. Just as he reached the end of a long field of corn a report -rang out and his horse dropped, riddled with shot. Cutler jumped from -his buggy, whipped out his revolver, and made for the corn-field, from -which the shot had evidently come. He made a thorough search, but -the tall corn-stalks afforded a secure hiding-place to the would-be -assassin--for Cutler had no doubt whatever that the shot had been meant -for him. Reluctantly giving up his quest, he walked back to his saloon -and sent several men to remove the dead horse and bring in his buggy. -The next morning he again made his way to the corn-field, and there, -just by the fence, he found five discarded cigarette ends of a very -expensive Egyptian brand which he knew to be smoked by only one man -in Three Corners--Goldman, the draper. Evidently the man had lain in -wait for a long time. Cutler next climbed over the fence, and was about -to return when he saw lying in the path a piece of cloth torn from a -jacket, and on it a button. It looked as though the would-be murderer, -in jumping the fence, had caught his coat on the barbed wire; at any -rate, he had left a damning piece of evidence behind him. With the -cigarette ends and the fragment of cloth in his pocket, Cutler walked -leisurely up the road into the town and made direct for the shop of -Moses Goldman. - -The draper was standing on a step-ladder arranging some goods on the -shelves. When the door opened, ringing a small bell, he turned, and -seeing Cutler jumped down from the ladder. The gambler looked the man -straight in the eye. “You miserable cur!” he cried, angrily. “You’d -shoot a man in the dark, would you?” - -Goldman, realizing that Cutler had satisfied himself as to the identity -of his assailant, made as if to draw a revolver. That was the last -movement he ever made, for the next instant he dropped dead, shot clean -through the heart. - -The gambler waited for a moment to see if the report of the pistol had -attracted any attention; then, as no one appeared, he quietly left -the shop, went over to his saloon, placed two revolvers in his belt, -and filled his pockets with ammunition. Then, taking up a Winchester -repeating-rifle, he went to the stable, saddled his horse, and after a -few words with his bartender rode out of Three Corners in a westerly -direction. - -It was not long after his departure before the entire town was in -an uproar. Moses Goldman, the energetic draper, had been found -shot--killed in his own shop by Jim Cutler. The latter had been seen -entering Goldman’s establishment by several persons, and the shot -had been heard by people living above the store, who afterwards saw -Cutler leaving. Sheriff Benson, accompanied by two deputies, promptly -called at the Gem Saloon, but the officer was a trifle late, for Cutler -was by that time some miles distant. Lest it should be thought that -Cutler had made his escape through cowardice it may be best to explain -at once, perhaps, that this was not the case. The man realized that -should he be apprehended the name of Miss Thurloe must necessarily -figure prominently in the matter. Strange as it may seem, this six-foot -gambler, knowing no better, believed that by “making himself scarce” he -was protecting that lady’s good name. This was a mistake, undoubtedly, -but the fact remains that he made it. - -It happened that Rufe Benson, Sheriff of Beulah County, was a sworn -enemy of Cutler’s, for the latter some years before had taken the law -into his own hands and at the point of his gun liberated a prisoner -whom he believed to be innocent, and who was eventually proved to be -so. Benson now formed a posse of some twenty armed men, and there began -a man-hunt which lasted, so far as this particular posse was concerned, -for a fortnight. They were then reinforced by a body of “Rangers,” -some fifty strong, who in turn found it necessary to call to their -assistance a body of militia. All these officers were ably assisted by -the citizens and residents of Beulah County, altogether some thousand -strong, and yet Jim Cutler proved more than their match. Benson’s men -trailed the fugitive to Kerry’s ranch, some six miles out; from here -he had gone north-west toward the Rio Grande. He was mounted on a -thoroughbred--as were all the men, for that matter--but six miles was -a long start in a case like this, and should the hunted man once reach -the mountains--well, there might be some trouble in getting at him. -The telegraph was put into operation, and a circle some ten miles in -circumference drawn around Cutler. When this cordon closed in, however, -they failed to find the gambler amongst them, but they _did_ find two -self-appointed “man-hunters” lying where they had fallen to the deadly -aim of Jim Cutler’s repeating-rifle. - -From every town for miles around amateur detectives joined the hunt, -but no trace could be found of Cutler beyond the Moulin River, a tiny -stream only some twenty feet wide, so the rivulet was dammed and the -water drained off for miles, so as to discover, if possible, whether -Cutler had ridden up or down stream. While one party of men were doing -this, others rode in all directions, searched the ranches, and notified -every town by telegraph to keep a look-out for the slayer of Moses -Goldman. More and more people joined in the hunt, but for some days, -in the slang of the West, “there was nothing doing.” Then, early one -morning, two horsemen came galloping towards Benson’s camp, and one of -the men, dismounting, delivered a message to the effect that Cutler had -been seen at McPherson’s ranch, some eleven miles north-west, where -he had informed Mr. McPherson that he had not the slightest intention -of taking further life unless driven to it, and that, if Benson would -call in all his men, he (Cutler) would promise to give himself up in a -fortnight’s time. (It was afterwards learned that he intended in the -interval to communicate with Miss Thurloe and arrange a story, leaving -her name entirely out of the matter.) Benson, however, was on his -mettle, and so refused to parley with his quarry. - -“If Jim Cutler thinks he can defy the law and officers of this county, -he is mightily mistaken,” he said, “and we’re going to take him, dead -or alive.” This ultimatum duly reached Cutler through “non-combatant” -friends, whereupon he smiled grimly. Being now outlawed, it was -impossible for Cutler’s friends to assist him without making themselves -amenable to the law, so the hunted man demanded and secured everything -he required at the point of the pistol. - -Within fourteen days thereafter nine men who had attempted to interfere -with the escaping gambler paid for their foolhardiness with their -lives, and all the time, little by little, Cutler was getting closer -to the mountains, whose shelter meant so much to him. Sometimes hidden -for hours in a haystack, or lying flat under the rafters of a barn -loft, the fugitive moved on his way. The main body of pursuers often -got within gun-shot of him, but luck favoured the man, and he always -managed to find cover just in time. Finally, completely worn out--he -had ridden two horses to death and abandoned others commandeered for -the time being--Cutler reached the foot of the scrub hills or little -range which lay between him and his goal. Here, for the first time, he -came in contact with a number of the “man-hunters.” “Lon” Masters--a -noted character in Montana, and himself a dead shot--accompanied by -eight cowboys, suddenly appeared over a rise in the ground. Cutler, on -foot, saw them coming. He dropped on one knee and his rifle flew to his -shoulder. The horsemen drew rein, and Masters, making a trumpet of his -hands, shouted, “Don’t be a fool, Jim; you’re sure to be caught sooner -or later. Let me take you, and I’ll promise no harm shall come to you. -You know my word.” - -[Illustration: TABLE ROCK, CUTLER’S STRONGHOLD IN BEULAH COUNTY. _From -a Photograph._] - -“Can’t do it, Lon,” Cutler shouted back. “If they give me ten days -without interference I’ll give myself up--you know _my_ word.” - -“Jim,” responded Masters, “if you don’t drop your gun we shall have to -fire.” - -“Crack! crack! crack!” came the answer from Cutler’s gun, Masters and -two others of the party being hit. The remainder now urged their horses -forward, but, as first one and then another rider was “winged” by the -desperate man in front of them, the remainder decided that they had -urgent business elsewhere, and rode back for reinforcements. - -At last, after a weary night’s climb, Cutler reached the place he had -been making for. He had not slept more than an hour or two for days, -and so, secure for a time at least--for no one could climb these hills -quicker than he had done--the worn-out man dropped in a heap. Cutler’s -hiding place was a barren ledge, some fifty yards in extent, the only -approach thereto being the bridle-path by which he had come. Two, or -at most three, at a time was the only formation in which his pursuers -could get anywhere near him, and with Cutler’s knowledge of the use -of firearms this was a ticklish undertaking, to say the least of it. -Moreover, he could see anyone approaching along the valley for a great -distance. There was plenty of water a little distance down the path, -Cutler had sufficient food with him to last for a week, and he felt he -could “make a get-away” during this time. - -The erstwhile gambler awoke when the sun was high in the heavens; he -felt lame and sore all over. Walking towards the edge of the ledge he -saw, away in the distance, a large party of horsemen spread out over -a great area. Cutler went down the path, bathed his face and arms in -the cool spring water, and took a long drink; then, returning above, -he sat down and leisurely ate from his store of dried beef, biscuits, -and corn bread. At midday the approaching horsemen were in full view, -and Cutler saw that they had come with prairie wagons, containing camp -paraphernalia, evidently prepared for a siege, for they knew as well as -he did himself of the hiding-place where he had taken refuge. Soon the -riders came to a halt and Cutler laughed as he saw others coming from -all directions, evidently anxious to be “in at the death.” It looked -rather a big camp to the solitary figure high in the air, but numbers -meant nothing, only--well, his ammunition would give out sooner or -later. Then, of course, would come capture--but he wouldn’t look that -far ahead. - -During the afternoon several men approached, one of them displaying a -white handkerchief, which he waved to and fro. When the men reached -the bottom of the hill they dismounted and one made his way slowly up, -shouting now and again, “It’s me, Jim--Joe Ludlow.” Cutler made his -way down the path and, suddenly coming upon Ludlow, ordered him to -throw up his hands. The man did so, saying, “Jim, you and I have been -friends for fifteen years; believe me, I’m unarmed; I want to talk to -you--trust me.” Thereupon Cutler lowered his rifle, and the two men -shook hands. Then followed a long confab, during which Ludlow did his -utmost to get Cutler to surrender. He said Sheriff Benson was prepared -to starve Cutler out, or get him at all costs. It would only mean loss -of life and must eventually result in the fugitive’s capture. Ludlow -said that he, with half-a-dozen “pals,” would assure Cutler a safe -return to Three Corners, sending Benson and all the rest on ahead. Then -Cutler could stand his trial, and, with a good lawyer from Butte to -defend him, would no doubt stand a chance of some sort. - -Cutler listened patiently; then he shook his head. - -“I know what’s coming to me, Joe,” he said; “they have been after me -for years in a quiet way. Now they want my life, but they sha’n’t have -it--at least not until I’ve paved the way with a few of them.” - -Ludlow was a very decent sort of fellow, and he tried his utmost to -convince Cutler that his argument was a good one. Cutler then took -the man into his confidence, and, Ludlow promising not to say a word -to those below, he was told the whole story--told of Miss Thurloe’s -complaints, the episode at the school-house, the shooting of Cutler’s -horse, and everything. - -“Well, I’m jiggered!” cried Ludlow, when the tale was finished. “Why -didn’t you let us know this in the first place?” He then informed -the gambler that he would ride back to Three Corners and explain the -situation to the schoolmistress. She had only to tell her story to the -judge, he said, and it was a certainty he would interfere in some way. -Cutler demurred, but Ludlow bluntly told him to “go to h----; he wasn’t -going to see a good man hounded to death.” With that, turning on his -heel, he left without another word. - -Going back to the camp, Ludlow informed Sheriff Benson that under no -circumstances ought he to attempt to take Cutler, and asked him to -await his return from Three Corners. Benson replied, “I want none of -your conversation, Ludlow; Cutler is a downright murderer, and I mean -to have him.” - -Ludlow, disdaining further argument, rode off at full speed toward the -little town where all the trouble had occurred. - -Not knowing just what card Ludlow had up his sleeve, the sheriff -decided to make quick work of Cutler’s capture. He therefore sent a -party of deputies to Malvern, the nearest telegraph station, and in -the name of the law asked the county militia to send him some men with -a mountain gun, the property of private individuals who practised -soldiering as a pastime. Each State in America, it may be said in -passing, possesses several such regiments, which are available in -war-time, although in no way a part of the Government organization, and -having no connection with the State militia. It would have been useless -to attempt to dislodge Cutler as matters stood, but Benson believed -that a few shots from a cannon might have the desired effect. When his -message was received at Malvern it created a sensation. Business was -for the nonce neglected and everybody--men, women, and children--made -their way toward the sheriffs camp at Table Hill. - -Several attempts were made to parley with Cutler, without success, and -so three days went by. On the afternoon of the fourth day the refugee -on the rock was thunderstruck to see a body of soldiers approaching -from the south, with a field gun hauled by four horses. He did not -know whether to laugh or to regard this seriously. Surely the officers -of the law would not resort to bombarding him with a cannon? Soon the -soldiers reached the camp, and about an hour later Cutler saw that the -gun, a howitzer, was being trained on the hill where he lay enjoying a -smoke. There was no chance of his getting away other than by the path -by which he had come. Behind him there was a sheer drop of hundreds of -feet into the gully far below. True, he could descend some distance -down the mountain-side, but if the besiegers really meant business this -would not help him much. Nothing was done that day, but Cutler kept -vigilant watch all through the night. He had regularly built a huge -fire some way down the mountain-side, which was protected by trees to -some extent, but lit up the path for a considerable distance. - -[Illustration: “IF YOU SO MUCH AS WINK YOUR EYE I’LL PUT A HOLE IN -YOU.”] - -The next morning a party numbering a dozen came toward the hill again -bearing a white flag. They stopped some distance off, one man only -continuing--Benson, the Sheriff of Beulah County, himself. Cutler -allowed him to approach much nearer than had Ludlow; then he covered -the advancing sheriff with his rifle. - -“Cutler, if we haven’t rushed this place,” said Benson, “it is only -because I did not want to sacrifice human lives, knowing full well that -sooner or later you must give up. I know you are on the square, so I’ve -come up unarmed, being sure you wouldn’t take advantage of the white -flag. I’m only doing my duty. I give you this chance to come back with -me, otherwise I’m afraid they’ll blow this place up and you with it.” - -“Regular war, isn’t it?” replied Cutler, smilingly. - -“Looks like it,” admitted the sheriff. - -“Well, seeing you are trying that game, I’ll just do a little in the -war line myself,” said Cutler. “You walk up this path towards me, and -if you so much as wink your eye I’ll put a hole in you that a tramcar -could go through!” - -The sheriff could hardly believe his ears. “Don’t be a fool, Cutler,” -he said, angrily. - -“Never mind about my being a fool; you do as you’re told or I’ll drop -you quick.” - -Benson evidently had no doubts about the matter, for, though beside -himself with rage, he promptly did as Cutler ordered. The sheriff -was forced to walk ahead, and no doubt, had his captor been almost -any other man than Jim Cutler, there would have been one big fight -on Table Hill, gun or no gun, but Benson knew that Cutler would do -just as he said he would. Arrived at the top, Benson was forced to -write a note saying that he was a captive, and that perhaps it would -be just as well not to fire the cannon in the direction it was now -trained. Furthermore, one man was to approach the hill with food, -whisky, and tobacco. The note was then secured to a large stone by the -aid of Sheriff Benson’s braces, and while Cutler “stood by” Benson -was ordered to throw this stone toward the deputy in charge of the -waiting horsemen below. This man, or one of those with him, picked up -the stone, and read the message to the others. There was a great laugh -below--plainly heard by the two men on the ledge--and, needless to -say, the merriment of his assistants did not add to Benson’s peace of -mind. Cutler now laid his rifle down, first having drawn a six-shooter. -Then, approaching Benson, he searched him for concealed firearms, but -the sheriff was unarmed. The latter was now told to sit down and make -himself comfortable at the opening which led to the path, Cutler being -thereby able to watch both his prisoner and the approach from below. -Soon a solitary figure came from the camp, carrying the food “ordered.” -It was brought as near as Cutler permitted it to be, and then Benson, -under cover of the rifle, was sent to fetch it. It looked for a moment -as though there might be a fight after all, but Cutler’s business-like -demeanour soon caused his prisoner to change his mind. - -With the food there was a note, reading, “Are we to wait for you or -not?” This did not appeal to the sheriff’s sense of humour, and he tore -the paper into shreds. - -Just at sundown a large cloud of dust was noticed in the distance, -which soon turned out to be a number of mounted men with a wagon, or -“prairie schooner.” The new-comers were presently merged with those in -camp, and not long afterwards two men, escorting a woman, rode slowly -toward Table Hill. Again the white flag was raised, and a voice shouted -from below, “Hi, Jim, it’s me--Ludlow.” - -Cutler permitted his friend to approach, and when he gained the ledge -Ludlow had a hard struggle to restrain his laughter at the unfortunate -sheriff’s predicament. - -“I’ve brought some news for you, Jim,” said Ludlow. “That school-ma’am -is a brick, and no mistake. When I told her how things stood, she came -right to the front, and not only saw Judge Nolan, but drove twenty -miles to see Governor Hill, and here’s the result.” - -Ludlow then handed Sheriff Benson an official communication paroling -Cutler in his own recognizances pending investigation of Miss Thurloe’s -story. Western men are nothing if not intensely chivalrous, and, if -this girl’s story was correct, Cutler, in their estimation, deserved, -not death, but a medal. - -The amazed sheriff scratched his head and Cutler seemed undecided, but -Ludlow grasped his hand eagerly. “Come on, old fellow, down to the -sea-level,” he cried. This broke the tension, and all three men smiled. - -“There is nothing for me to do but obey this, Cutler,” said the -sheriff, slowly; “but I’ll tell you straight I don’t feel like doing -it.” - -Ludlow turned to Benson and informed him that Judge Nolan had made -him a Court officer, the tenure of his office being thirty days, and -that he would brook no interference from Benson or anyone else. That -settled it. The trio walked down the path, where Miss Thurloe, with -tears in her eyes, thanked Cutler for his brave and manly action on her -behalf. She said that she had reason to believe he would be acquitted, -and that, as no warrant had been issued for his arrest until after he -had shot the men who had attempted to stop him, it must be a case of -self-defence. - -Cutler was received with cheers by the crowd in camp--the same men -who were thirsting for his blood an hour before--and soon everybody -was seeking the nearest way home, and the scene of action was -shortly deserted. It is not possible to chronicle that Jim Cutler -was triumphantly acquitted at his trial. His character went strongly -against him--that is to say, the fact that he had previously figured in -“shooting scrapes”--but, nevertheless, his sentence was a comparatively -light one. The State’s attorney (analogous to counsel for the Crown) -laid great stress on the fact of Cutler’s having visited Goldman’s -shop, obviously seeking trouble, when he should have reported the -attempt on his life to the authorities. He was sentenced to five years -in the State prison, but was pardoned at the expiration of eleven -months. He is now living in Butte, the capital of the State of Montana, -where he has opened a saloon. Miss Thurloe left Three Corners, and is -believed to be teaching in Pittsburg, U.S.A. - -The local newspapers poked much fun at the soldiers who took their -cannon miles out to bombard what they jocularly called “a one-man -army”; but all the same they meant business, and had matters not ended -as they did there would have been a change in the landscape just there, -for the top of Table Hill would in all probability have been blown to -pieces, and Jim Cutler with it. - -[Illustration] - - - - -Photographing a Volcano in Eruption. - -BY FRANK DAVEY. - - A vivid description of a photographer’s adventures in securing - pictures of the eruption of Makuaweoweo, in Hawaii. With pen - and camera Mr. Davey depicts the awe inspiring grandeur of - the lake of fire in the crater of Mauna Loa, the pyrotechnic - display afforded by the active cone on the mountain-side, and - the horrors of night amid the lava-wastes, where death menaced - the party on every hand. - - -On Tuesday, July 1, 1899, reports reached Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, -that the volcano of Makuaweoweo, situated at the summit of Mauna Loa, -thirteen thousand six hundred and seventy-five feet high, on the island -of Hawaii, had burst forth with all the fury of years gone by. I was -anxious to get some photographs of the eruption if possible, and so -made all the haste I could to get my paraphernalia together and catch -the steamer _W. H. Hall_, bound for Hawaii. - -[Illustration: “PAHOEHOE” LAVA, WHICH APPEARS AS THOUGH IT HAD COOLED -WHILE FLOWING QUIETLY. - -_From a Photograph._] - -I left with the intention of reaching the scene of action from the -Kau side of the island, but when, upon arriving at Kailua, Kona, I -telegraphed to Mr. N. S. Monsarrat, at Kapapalu, I found that he had a -house full of guests bent on the same journey, and that all his horses -had been engaged. Rather than lose time, therefore, I decided to take -the most difficult route of all--right over the great mountain from the -Kona side. The obstacles to be overcome may perhaps be imagined when I -state that Mauna Loa is a volcanic mountain, nearly fourteen thousand -feet high, and that one has to make one’s way for the entire distance -over every kind of lava formation. - -[Illustration: “A. A.” LAVA, WHICH LOOKS AS THOUGH IT HAD SOLIDIFIED -WHILE TOSSING LIKE A SEA IN A STORM AND THEN BEEN BROKEN UP BY -EARTHQUAKES. [_From a Photograph_.] - -It was with great difficulty that I managed to get horses and mules -from the natives, who knew the condition of the country, for the -animals inevitably get badly knocked about, their legs being terribly -cut by the lava, which is divided into two classes--“Pahoehoe” and -“A. A.” The former term is applied to tracts of comparatively smooth -lava, which appears as though it had cooled while flowing quietly; the -latter is applied to stretches of broken lava which seem to have cooled -when tossing like an ocean in a bad storm, and to have afterwards been -broken up by earthquakes. No words of description can convey an idea -of its roughness and hardness, which may be faintly realized from an -inspection of the above photograph. - -During the time I was hunting for horses a number of gentlemen arrived -and expressed their desire to join me in the expedition. I was only too -pleased to have their company, so five travellers threw in their lot -with me: Professor Ingalls, Colonel McCarthy, and Messrs. Sterns Buck, -J. Ballard, and H. C. Klugel. These, with three guides, completed our -party. - -We were up early the next morning. The first part of the journey was -one of the most delightful rides I ever had. We rode for hours through -magnificent tropical growths. There were giant ferns, some of which -must have been thirty or forty feet high and three feet in diameter, -groves of guavas, coco-nuts, and other fruits, miles of wild mint and -bright-coloured flowers, and orchids of most delicate shapes. - -At dusk we reached the edge of the timber-line, in a drenching rain, -a downpour such as is experienced only in the tropics, where the rain -descends in sheets. We ate our supper and then spent the night huddled -miserably together, trying in vain to keep dry. - -We resumed our journey at daybreak, over the most terrible country that -can be imagined. The sharp edges of the lava cut through our stout -boots like broken glass, and the poor animals suffered greatly. Still, -however, we persevered, and finally reached the summit just as it was -getting dark. Near the centre of the mountain-top an area of about four -square miles sinks to a depth of one thousand feet. This is the great -crater of Makuaweoweo, which we had endured so much to see. - -As I stood there in the cold, in the midst of those cheerless and -God-forsaken wastes, I gazed down with speechless awe upon the -untrammelled frolics of the God of Fire. The tempest-tossed lake of -molten lava below the rim of the great cauldron was a typical workshop -of Vulcan. The face of the lake of liquid fire alternated continually -between black and white, like molten iron in a furnace. Oxidation -and cooling of the fiery fluid would blacken the surface with a pall -that covered it in darkest gloom; then a trembling, caused by further -subterranean outbursts of steam, would break this ice-like oxide into a -fretwork of tens of thousands of incandescent cracks, lighting up the -smoke-charged pit with a fierce glare. Another moment, and in different -parts of the lake geysers of fire of every imaginable colour would rise -like fountains in a public garden. - -[Illustration: THE AUTHOR SURVEYING THE CRATER OF MAKUAWEOWEO FROM A -PINNACLE OF LAVA. - -_From a Photograph._] - -The great forbidding-looking walls of this “home of everlasting fire” -sparkled with the unusual light, and then, as the spouts of flame died -away, the surface would again turn black, leaving the whole mass to all -appearances dead. - -We found that the worst outbreak was about five thousand feet farther -down the mountain-side. Some of our party were seized with such a -sickness of horror at the crater’s edge that they rolled themselves -up in their blankets and refused to look down upon this fiery -maelstrom--and that after two days of arduous effort to reach a point -of view! - -When the time came for sleep, another man and I turned into a -“blowhole” in the lava; it was an immense bubble that had cooled -and left an opening so that we could crawl in. We little thought -that there was another hole at the other end, and the piercing wind -blew through this like a funnel; but we had to stay there, for it is -dangerous to wander about over the rifts and chasms of jagged lava in -the darkness. Here, in this strange bed-chamber, we slept, or tried -to sleep--shivering and shuddering through the chilly solitude of the -night in those desolate mountain wastes. - -[Illustration: THE CRATER OF MAKUAWEOWEO, SHOWING THE AWFUL LAKE OF -LIQUID FIRE. - -_From a Photograph._] - -Walking across the congealed masses of lava next morning, one began to -think that at any moment one was liable to drop through to the very -gates of Hades and be precipitated to the most horrible of deaths. -Underneath one was a bottomless abyss of mud, sulphur, and rock; and -to contemplate being cast into that fearsome-looking lake of fire and -brimstone was not at all comfortable. The Biblical description of hell -does not convey even a faint idea of that terrible lake of fire below -us, which appeared to be fretting and fuming as though anxious to get -loose and destroy everything in its path. The crater of Makuaweoweo at -that time, without doubt, afforded the spectator a more awe-inspiring -display of the forces of Nature than has been granted to man elsewhere -on earth without the sacrifice of life. - -[Illustration: THE AUTHOR AND HIS COMPANIONS AS THEY APPEARED JUST -BEFORE LEAVING THEIR HORSES TO VISIT THE WORST OUTBREAK. - -_From a Photograph._] - -Soon after daylight we prepared for the descent to the point that was -throwing out molten lava at a white heat. It was practically impossible -to take the horses farther, so we tethered them to stones near the -yawning depths of Makuaweoweo, and left one of the guides to look after -them. We were very thirsty, but it was some time before we could find -water, though snow and ice were plentiful. Farther down, however, we -discovered water in a deep crack in the lava, filled the canteens, -and started on our downward journey. I was suffering from mountain -sickness; my head felt as if it would burst and my stomach was upside -down. We stumbled along with difficulty for about two miles, when I had -to get the assistance of Mr. Buck to carry my camera. Two of our party -who had started out in advance gave it up and returned--they could not -stand the strain of the rough travelling. This left but four of us, -with two guides. - -Presently we reached a cone where the lava had piled up to the height -of about one hundred feet, then, bursting out at the side, disappeared -into the ground, to reappear about a quarter of a mile farther down -and repeat its action. These cones averaged two hundred feet in width -at the base and one hundred feet in height, and we passed five “dead” -ones. A sixth was still smoking, but was not active. Two of the party -tried to climb to the top of this cone, but were unable to do so. - -We then pushed on to cone number seven, which was belching forth huge -volumes of steam and sulphur. The fumes, most fortunately, were being -blown away from us. At this stage one of the guides refused to go any -farther; it was too dangerous, he said, so he proceeded to retrace his -steps, while we others continued our journey toward cone number eight. -This was the last and largest, and was, I should estimate, about two -hundred feet high; in fact, a veritable miniature volcano, spouting -red-hot lava a hundred feet in the air with a ripping boom that could -be heard for miles. Boulders that must have weighed a ton were being -hurled high into the air as if shot from a cannon. Others followed -to meet those coming down, and as they met they burst like explosive -shells, scattering molten matter on all sides. This flowed down the -incline in cascades like water, showing red, yellow, blue, and all the -colours of the rainbow. - -[Illustration: TWO OF THE “DEAD” CONES PASSED BY THE PARTY. - -_From a Photograph._] - -It is impossible to describe the grandeur of the effect, and a -knowledge of the force that was causing the display made one feel very -small indeed. Some of the ejected masses were as large as a horse, and -when they were belched forth were at a white heat. They went so high -that they had time to cool and return to the vortex black. - -It was three o’clock in the afternoon when we reached this wonderful -display. It had taken us nine hours to reach the volcano, and we were -thirsty and well-nigh exhausted. We could not approach very near on -account of the heat, but I made some photographic exposures, and then -sat for an hour watching the wonderful sight. As the sun went down the -magnificence of the scene increased. The ground shook at each explosion -to such an extent as to make us sick. We found quantities of what is -known as “Pele’s hair.”[1] It is caused by the wind blowing the liquid -lava through the air, forming fine threads like human hair. - -[Footnote 1: Pele, according to the native legends, is the goddess of -the volcano, and dwells in the crater.] - -As we approached cone number seven on our return journey the wind -changed, and to our consternation we saw a cloud of sulphur blowing -right across our path. These masses of vapour are so impregnated with -sulphur and poisonous gases that it is impossible for any living thing -to exist among them, and to get caught in their midst means death. -Alarmed, we started to go around the other side, but found the lava was -too hot; the surface was cool, but there was living fire beneath, and -we dared not proceed. We kept on until the lava began to move under our -feet, and then beat a retreat to face the sulphur again, for it was -better to be smothered to death than slowly roasted. - -[Illustration: CONE “NUMBER SEVEN”--IT WAS ABOUT TWO HUNDRED FEET HIGH, -A MINIATURE VOLCANO, SPOUTING RED-HOT LAVA AND GIANT BOULDERS WITH A -ROAR THAT COULD BE HEARD FOR MILES. _From a Photograph._] - -We made a number of attempts to pass that deadly barrier of vapour, but -were forced to return each time, nearly suffocated. It looked as though -we should soon be choked to death--the fire at the back of us, the -sulphur in front. Professor Ingalls remarked that we had better make -the best of our time by taking notes, and then prepare for the worst. -Just at this critical moment I happened to turn round and saw an arch, -as it were, in the sulphur smoke, where the wind was blowing it up from -the ground. - -“Look! look!” I shouted, in great excitement. “Run for it!” And how -we ran! Providence gave us the chance and fear lent us strength, for -under ordinary circumstances we could never have run as we did, owing -to the condition of our feet. The danger, however, made us forget the -pain, and we ran for dear life. We had scarcely got through that arch -of clear air when down came the cloud again, as though lowered by some -great power. The only guide who had stayed with us fell exhausted at -the edge of the vapour-mass. How I managed to drag him along I do not -know; I hardly realized what I was doing, but I managed to save him. - -Once past the danger-point we crawled along at our best pace, for at -any moment the wind might turn in our direction, when we should be -again overtaken by that terrible death-cloud. I had left my camera -behind in our wild flight, but fortunately I saved several plates. - -It was now night, and the only light we had was the lurid glare from -the volcano. Suddenly, as we stumbled painfully along, we came upon -a man sitting by the side of a dead cone; it was the guide who had -returned. He said he did not expect to see us alive again, for he had -seen the deadly smoke blow across the mountain. - -If it had not been for the light from the volcano we should undoubtedly -have perished of cold and thirst, as we should have been compelled to -stop walking. As it was, we dared not halt for any length of time, or -we should not have had warmth enough to keep the blood circulating. -All that night we crawled over that terrible lava. We fell down at -intervals of about twenty feet, often breaking through the black crust, -sometimes up to our waists, cutting ourselves on the sharp projections -until our hands and legs were woefully lacerated. Almost as soon as -we fell we dropped asleep; then, as we got colder, we would wake up -and force ourselves on again for a few dozen yards or so, only to fall -asleep, wake, and struggle up once more. The agony of the situation and -the pain of our wounds were enough to make a man go insane. - -At last it began to get light, but still we had come across no water, -and that in our canteens had long since been exhausted. Very few -people, fortunately, know what it means to have their throats and lips -so swollen and cracked that they are bleeding for want of water. I -could scarcely speak. We hunted the depths and crevices of the lava, -sometimes going down ten or fifteen feet, looking for water, only to be -disappointed again and again. At last I got so weak that Mr. Buck had -to take my package of plates off my back, where I had tied them. - -Suddenly I saw a break in the lava nearly full of beautiful water. I -pulled Mr. Buck’s arm, pointing to it, and mumbled, “Water.” Slowly he -pulled off his coat and started to climb down the crack. It was about -eight feet wide, narrowing to three. I leaned over the side, holding -the canteen for Mr. Buck to fill. He went down a few feet, and then -stopped. I motioned to him to fill the bottle, croaking, “Water.” He -did not look around, but mumbled, “I see no water,” as if in a dream. -Picking up a piece of lava, I tossed it down and cried hoarsely, -“_There_ is the water.” But to my astonishment the pebble went down, -down, down, out of sight, with no sound of a splash, into a fathomless -abyss. The crevice was so deep that we could not see the bottom, and -the shock of the discovery made me faint. How Sterns Buck managed to -return he does not remember; it is a wonder he did not fall, to be -mangled upon the sharp corners of lava. - -I came to my senses dazed and almost bewildered, and Buck and I sat -motionless for some time staring at each other. After a time we -scrambled on again until we came upon the guide sitting upon the edge -of a high crack, eating frozen snow, and tearing at it with his teeth -like a hungry dog. We followed his example, not without pain, but the -snow tasted good. - -Some of the party who had previously returned met us near the summit -with coffee. When they saw us coming they got things ready so as to -make us as comfortable as possible. After washing our lacerated hands -and feet we took a good sleep, and awoke much refreshed. The journey -home was, comparatively speaking, easy, but the memory of that night -amidst the lava will last me to my dying day. - - - - -[Illustration: Our Leopard Hunt.] - -BY THOMAS B. MARSHALL. - - An exciting story told by a former official of the Gold Coast - Government. With a friend and some natives he went out to shoot - a marauding leopard. They accomplished their mission, but - before the day was over one and all of the party had received a - good deal more than they bargained for. - - -In 1899, while in the service of the Gold Coast Government, and -stationed at Kumasi, I received orders “per bearer, who will accompany -you,” to proceed to a point on Volta not far south of where it -debouches from among the Saraga Hills. “The bearer,” a nice young -fellow called Strange, was newly arrived in the colony, and his -pleasant home gossip was not less welcome to me than my information -about the country we were in was to him. Our rough forest journey, -then, passed as pleasantly as such journeys can, and by the time we -arrived at our destination we were the best of friends. - -Akroful, a town of about seven hundred inhabitants, was the nearest -place of any size to the spot where we pitched our camp, and we were -soon on good terms with its headman, Otibu Daku, and his son, Dansani, -both of whom put us in the way of some good shooting. - -We had been in this place about a fortnight, when we began to be -annoyed by the depredations of a marauding leopard, who took to -visiting our live-stock pens, and at last we decided to lie in wait -for him. I took the first watch until a snake crawled over my legs; -then I went to bed. It was a harmless one, but it reminded me of the -need of precaution, so next night found our lair surrounded by a very -uninviting floor of cactus leaves. - -The fourth night after our vigil commenced Strange succeeded in -wounding our sell-invited guest, and we determined to track him down -as soon as it was light. Otibu Daku and his son willingly agreed to -help us; and I took, in addition, two of my own men who would, I -knew, “stand fire”--Ashong Tawiah, an Accra man, and Nyato, my chief -steward-boy, a Krooman. - -The two Ashantis led the way, Otibu Daku carrying a “long Dane” gun; -his son, a machete. Tawiah and Nyato also carried machetes, and the -former, on leaving camp, had picked up a broad-bladed Hausa spear. -Strange and I each had a repeating rifle and a revolver, for, as Nyato -told me, “Dem headman, ’e say, plenty tiger lib dem part.” - -The trail was easy to follow. There was not much blood, but the -ground was soft from recent rain. It was rough going, however, and -the machetes were constantly at work clearing a way. Up and down -small watersheds, squelching through marshy bottoms, crossing streams -on fallen trees, we frequently lost the track, but by some sort of -instinct our guides always found it again. - -At last, after descending a more than usually steep incline, we found -ourselves in a valley of some size. The bush here was very thin, and we -progressed without difficulty until we came in sight of the inevitable -stream, the opposite bank of which, rising steeply, evidently formed -the commencement of the next divide. I was about a dozen yards to -Strange’s right; the ground was clear of bush between us and the -stream; and on the nearer bank, his head overhanging the water, lay -our quarry, clearly dying. But he was not alone. Stretched by his -side, licking the wound that was letting out his life, lay a fine -female leopard, evidently his consort. On seeing us she rose to her -feet, snarling; she abandoned her ministrations and became militant--a -defender-avenger. Strange fired hastily on sight, and a convulsive -heave of the prostrate body showed where the bullet struck. With a -light leap the leopardess cleared her mate, and with long, low springs -raced down towards my friend. He fired again at thirty yards, wounding -her, and she swerved slightly and came in my direction. We both fired -together, whereupon she stopped suddenly, reared straight up, pawing -the air--then fell backward, stone-dead. - -[Illustration: “SHE REARED STRAIGHT UP PAWING THE AIR--THEN FELL -BACKWARD, STONE-DEAD.”] - -Hardly had the double report died away when our attention was attracted -to a movement on the other side of the stream. Tawiah pointed. - -“Oolah! tiger him piccin!” (“Master, the leopard’s cubs”), he cried. -Slinking away downstream, with long, stealthy strides, their muzzles to -the ground and tails trailing low, were two half-grown leopards, the -head of one level with the other’s haunch. - -“Tally-ho!” cried Strange, and let fly at them. His one fault as a -sportsman was a too great eagerness to get the first shot in. The white -splinters flew from the buttress of a great cotton-wood, and the nearer -cub, startled as never before, leapt a man’s height from the ground, -and, coming down, raced away downstream after its companion. - -“Come on! We’ll bag the whole family,” said Strange, jumping into the -stream. Otibu Daku was already across and I was about to follow, when -I noticed, fluttering up the farther slope, one of those beautiful -insects called the “dead leaf” butterfly. You will see one fluttering -along like a fugitive piece of rainbow--then suddenly it will alight on -a withered branch or heap of dead herbage and disappear, the underside -of the wings being in shape, colour, and even veining an exact -imitation of a withered leaf. - -I was an enthusiastic collector, and never went out without a folding -net that could be fixed to any fairly straight stick. Bidding Tawiah -remain with me, then, I let the others go on after the cubs, and in a -couple of minutes was in pursuit of my own particular quarry. The slope -was nearly bare of bush, and I did not have much difficulty in making -the capture. Placing it in a flat box containing some poison-wax, I -took my rifle from Tawiah and went on up the hill, leaving him tying up -a scratch on his leg. - -I was not quite easy in my mind. We had been too hasty in concluding -that the cubs we had seen belonged to the leopards we had shot. They -had been driven away too easily, and most likely were heading straight -for their own den, where, at that time of day, the old ones would -certainly be at home. - -I hurried on in the hope of getting some indication of my friend’s -whereabouts. At the top of the ascent a soft breeze met me, it was -pleasant and refreshing, but it brought that with it that made me drop -flat behind a bush and throw my rifle forward. There is no mistaking -the odour given off by the larger carnivora, and the strength of the -smell that assailed my nostrils was such as to convince me that my -first hasty thought--that I had headed off the cubs--was wrong. Such an -effluvium could come only from a den, and an occupied one at that. - -There were three possibilities. It might be the home of the dead -leopards, of the strange cubs we had seen, or the lair of yet a third -family. I looked back. Tawiah was not in sight, but I knew he would -follow. In front, for a hundred yards, the level crest of the ridge -was covered by a sparse, wand-like growth that was no impediment to -the view. Beyond the ground fell away again, and just on the edge, and -rather to my right, stood two enormous cotton-woods, the space between -them being a labyrinth of roots standing thigh-high from the ground. - -To this point, with what speed and silence I could command, I made my -way. Midway I stopped abruptly to listen. A deep snarling, worrying -sound filled the air, coming from straight ahead. Reaching the nearest -root, I looked over. The rapidly falling ground beyond was hidden by a -far-sweeping buttress from the tree on my left, which, running parallel -with the one I stood against, made a passage about four feet wide and -two high. Stealing away to the left, where the nearer root sank below -the surface, I entered the passage, and, on all fours, reached a point -midway between the two trees. The noise I had before heard was now very -distinct, and, blending with it, yet dominating it, came a continuous -buzzing sound like the far-away roll of a drum. I knew it for the -purring of a full-grown leopard. - -Looking back, I was glad enough to see Tawiah reaching the level. I -raised a warning hand, and, waiting only to see that he observed me, -turned, and very cautiously looked over the root in front. From where I -crouched the ground fell away very steeply and was bare and stony. Then -began a gentler slope covered with a low scrub and running down into a -valley similar to, but larger than, the one we had just left. Down the -centre flowed a stream, the same on whose banks, higher up, we had left -the dead leopards. I was on a kind of spur, round which the stream made -a bend away to my right. To my left it lost itself in an expanse of -shallow water covered with great water-lilies, which merged in its turn -into the stream of the Volta, half a mile away. - -Just where the change of slope began was a great outcrop of rock. About -a foot above the base, and facing me, was a ragged opening, and in -this, with both paws hanging over the edge, lounged a fine she-leopard. -The air hummed with her complacent purr, as, with blinking eyes, she -watched the rough play of two well-grown cubs. Presently she rolled -over on her back, and, with downward-hanging head, struck idly with -a mighty paw at a white butterfly flitting above her. She was the -personification of soft and sinuous strength. - -Suddenly, away to the right, a shot rang out. The purring ceased, -and instantly the great cat was couched, rigid as a bronze casting. -Except for the tip of her tail, not a muscle moved. Presently the -tense expression relaxed, and with a guttural sort of sigh her head -dropped on to her paws. But only for an instant. The stealthy rustling -of something approaching reached her ears, and she resumed her alert -attitude. Then her eyes half closed again, and she seemed to go smooth -all over. A suave, fawning expression came into her face; her purring -redoubled; she rolled softly on to her side and gazed intently in the -direction of the sound. The noise came nearer, and presently, as I -expected, her mate appeared. He paused for an instant to look back, -and at that moment Strange’s rifle spoke again, and the leopard sank -down, biting savagely at his hind-quarters. With one movement as it -seemed, and with a sort of deep-throated cough, his consort was by his -side, and then began an awful duet of snarls and growls, rumblings and -snufflings, with the cubs for chorus. - -It was high time for me to take action; a wounded leopard and a -leopardess with young can make themselves pretty awkward. I aimed at -the female as being the more dangerous, and was about to pull the -trigger, when a movement in the valley attracted my attention. One of -the cubs we had first seen was tearing across the open, making for the -stream. Some distance behind followed the other, evidently wounded. -Close upon him ran Dansani, machete in hand. As I looked the cub turned -and Dansani struck. Nyato was close behind, and level with him, but -farther out, Otibu Daku stole swiftly with long, bent-kneed strides, -his “long Dane” gun held across his body. Strange was not in sight. - -The foremost cub was nearly at the stream when he raised a howl of -fear or of warning, I do not know which. On the instant, from a clump -of bushes on the farther side, there leapt two greyish-white forms. -Clearing the stream, they charged straight down on the young Ashanti. - -All this was photographed on my brain while my finger was on the -trigger. The scene was blotted out as I fired, and from that moment I -had enough on my hands to occupy my undivided attention. The leopardess -was killed outright. The next instant I fired at the male, but one of -the cubs gave a jump and received the bullet meant for his sire. How -the brute did it I do not know--for he had a broken thigh-bone--but -next moment the old leopard was tearing up the slope towards me, and -very business-like he looked. I fired again and clipped his ear; then -his claws were hooked on to the root in front of me, and all I could -do was to smash the butt, pile-driver fashion, down upon his head. He -seized it in his jaws, and the hard wood cracked like pitch-pine, while -the wrench nearly tore the weapon from my grasp. He gave me no time to -reverse it for another shot, or to draw my revolver. Four times did he -struggle to draw himself up, and but for his broken leg I could not -have prevented him. Four times, luckily for me, he allowed his fury to -vent itself on the rifle-butt. The struggle only lasted seconds, but it -seemed hours, and already the fury of it made my breath come short. - -And then the cub decided to take a hand! It had been pacing to and fro, -snuffing the blood and growling; it then suddenly turned, and dashed -straight to the scene of combat. A leopard cub by itself is not more -than a man can manage, but as a reinforcement to an infuriated parent -it is a serious matter. I heard Tawiah behind me. - -“Take the piccin,” I yelled, and put all my strength into an effort to -thrust my foe back. Instinctively he tried to use his injured leg, and -this time he lost grip altogether, and his claws scraped down the root, -making great furrows in the wood. I let him have the gun, and seized my -revolver in time to plant a couple of bullets in his head as he came up -again. - -Meanwhile Tawiah had accounted for the cub, but he was badly clawed -down the leg. To my surprise--for I did not remember the brute using -his claws at all except to hold on by--my coat was ripped, and I had -several nasty, but not severe, scratches down chest and arms. - -Our attention was now diverted to the scene below, and what we saw sent -us both down the slope as fast as we could race--Tawiah ahead. One cub -lay dead--Dansani’s victim--and a few paces from it stood the young -Ashanti, preparing to dodge the foremost of the parent leopards I had -seen break cover. He sprang aside as it reached him, but the brute -wheeled as if on a pivot and reared. Then came the crashing report -of the “long Dane,” a fearful yell, and Dansani reeled away with his -hands to his head, and fell. The leopard, roaring horribly, rolled over -and over, apparently broken in two. Its mate, swerving at the report, -turned and raced straight for Tawiah, who had just reached the level -ground. I shouted to him to come back to me, thinking that revolver and -spear together would match the furious brute, but apparently he did -not understand, for, waving me to follow, he tore off to where, midway -between him and the advancing leopard, stood a small Dequa palm. His -object, I learnt afterwards, was to hold the leopard at bay there till -help arrived. It was a mad idea, for the savage brute was covering -three yards to one of his. - -Just at that moment I caught sight of Strange--hobbling along, -supported by his rifle, five hundred yards away; there was no help to -be expected from him. Nyato was rushing on to settle with the remaining -cub, that, screaming, was alternately dashing towards its wounded dam -and back to the stream. Otibu Daku was carrying Dansani to the water, -and the female leopard, her hind quarters straddling like those of a -frog, with the small of her back blown away and reared on her front -legs, was rending the air with the most awful yells. - -The male passed the tree, and only about forty yards separated him from -my faithful follower. I ran on. Trusting to luck, I fired two chambers, -but without success. The distance between them decreased rapidly, and -Tawiah, seeing the hopelessness of his position, grounded his spear, -and, gripping it by the middle, backed up the butt with his knee in -the hope that the brute would impale himself. Then I saw that Strange -was kneeling, taking aim. He could never hit a running leopard at that -range, I told myself; it would appear no bigger than a cat to him. - -I was twenty yards behind Tawiah, and barely ten separated him from -the leopard, when a ball of smoke floated away from Strange’s rifle. -I dared not hope, and Tawiah remained like a rock. Then, suddenly, the -leopard halted, and--for all the world like a kitten chasing its own -tail--spun round and round till we could hardly tell one end from the -other. I sent two bullets as near the centre as I could, and Tawiah, -charging in, drove his spear in at one side and out at the other. The -battle was over. - -[Illustration: “DANSANI REELED AWAY WITH HIS HANDS TO HIS HEAD, AND -FELL.”] - -We found that Strange’s bullet had pierced the skin of the neck just -where it joins the head, and had half stunned the animal. But what a -glorious shot! I paced the distance to him; it was four hundred and -sixty odd yards! He had made just a little too much allowance for -speed, but what of that? - -Strange, it appeared, had stepped on a loose stone and strained his -ankle badly. Poor Dansani was horribly mauled. The beast had clawed him -from the crown of his head to the knee in one awful sweep. Half the -scalp overhung his face, one eye was destroyed, the muscle of the upper -arm was in ribbons, and the stroke, glancing from the elbow, had laid -open his thigh to the knee. A revolver-shot finished his assailant. We -did what we could for Dansani on the spot, and Nyato and his father -carried him home on a hastily-constructed litter. Later he recovered, -but was terribly disfigured. - -Tawiah and I took it in turns to help Strange along, and when we -reached the spot where our first victims lay we found their young ones -mewling over them. They slunk away, and we did not molest them. The -cub Nyato had chased allowed self-preservation to triumph over filial -affection, and got away also. My rifle was utterly ruined. And so ended -our leopard hunt. - - - - -TURTLE-FARMING. - -BY H. J. SHEPSTONE. - - An interesting description of the way in which turtles are - “farmed” in various parts of the world. The most up-to-date and - scientifically-conducted of these curious establishments is - that of Mr. Hattori, in Japan, where the snapping-turtle, the - most vicious of his species, is bred and reared. - - -That strange creature, the turtle, is now receiving the attention of -the farmer, and is being scientifically bred and reared in various -parts of the world. Indeed, turtle-farming on a large scale is now -carried on both in Japan and in America, while the great palisade -enclosures on the shores in the West Indies, where turtles are confined -until wanted for the London market, may well come under the same -designation. - -Curiously enough, the species of turtle favoured respectively by the -Japanese, Americans, and by English people are totally different. For -instance, the Japanese farmer gives his attention to the propagation of -the snapping-turtle and American to the diamond-backed terrapin, while -the turtle soup so much prized by the wealthy and sought after by the -sick in this country is made from the green turtle of the West Indies. - -[Illustration: A GROUP OF YOUNG TURTLES JUST HATCHED. - -_From a Photograph._] - -The terrapin is quite a small creature, rather flat-backed and rounded -in outline, its scales being marked by independent black patterns -composed of many geometric figures placed one within another. At one -time it was found in large quantities in the shallow bays and salt -marshes along the Atlantic coast from Massachusetts to Texas. The -discovery that its flesh made a delicious stew and an ideal soup, -however, resulted in the creature being hunted so vigorously that -to-day it is exceedingly scarce. Indeed, whereas a terrapin, seven -inches in length, could be picked up a few years ago for a few cents, -it would be difficult to secure one to-day for a five-pound note. It -was this scarcity of the terrapin, and the big demand for it among the -hotels and restaurants, that have led not a few enterprising men to -establish farms, where these much-sought-after creatures are bred and -reared for the market in large numbers. - -The terrapin being small, perfectly harmless, and requiring but a -little pond of salt water to dwell in, there is nothing particularly -exciting in farming it. Indeed, a terrapin “farm” consists merely of -a number of small ponds or basins in which the creatures are confined -according to their age and size. Thus, in the smaller ponds, we -discover those just hatched from the eggs--curious little things not -much bigger than a billiard ball. As they breed well, and it is not -necessary to keep the creature long before it is ready for the _chef_, -terrapin farming may be described as a fairly remunerative business. - -[Illustration: GENERAL VIEW OF MR. HATTORI’S TURTLE-FARM NEAR TOKIO, -JAPAN. - -_From a Photograph._] - -[Illustration: THE EMBANKMENT OF A “PARENTS’ POND”--EACH OF THE WIRE -CIRCLETS HERE SHOWN COVERS A DEPOSIT OF EGGS. - -_From a Photo. by M. Ichikawa, Japan._] - -Decidedly more up-to-date are the snapping-turtle farms of Mr. Hattori, -situated just outside Tokio, the capital of Japan. The Japanese people -will proudly tell you that they are the only turtle farms in the world, -but, as I have already shown, this is hardly correct. These farms -were established some few years ago now, and are, without question, -a great success. On an average, Mr. Hattori supplies to the hotels -and restaurants of Japan over sixteen thousand turtles a year, while -another five thousand are shipped to China. So far as the farm itself -is concerned, it consists of a number of rectangular ponds, large and -small, the larger ones having an area of fifteen to twenty thousand -square feet. - -[Illustration: YOUNG SNAPPING-TURTLES A FEW DAYS OLD--THEY ARE KEPT IN -A SEPARATE ENCLOSURE IN ORDER THAT THEIR CANNIBALISTIC ELDERS MAY NOT -DEVOUR THEM. - -_From a Photo. by M. Ichikawa, Japan._] - -One or more of the ponds is always reserved for large breeding -individuals, or “parents,” as they are called, and one of the -assistants visits this pond twice a day to look out for new deposits -of eggs. Over these he places a wire basket, with the date marked upon -it. In one of our photographs a number of these wire baskets may be -seen, though unfortunately the eggs are not shown, being covered with -a slight layer of sand, this work being done by the turtle itself. -The covering serves a twofold purpose--the obvious one of marking the -place, and, in addition, that of keeping other females from digging in -the same spot. When hundreds, or even thousands, of these baskets are -seen along the bank of a “parents’ pond,” the sight is one to gladden -the heart of an embryologist, to say nothing of the proprietor. - -The hatching of the eggs occupies, on an average, sixty days. The -time, however, may be considerably shortened or lengthened, according -to whether the summer is hot and the sun pours down its strong rays -day after day, or whether there is much rain and the heat not great. -As the turtles lay sixty eggs to the nest at two sittings, it will be -seen that in a single season many thousands are added to this unique -establishment, but at least five years must elapse before they are -large enough for the _chef_. - -[Illustration: CHOPPING UP FOOD FOR THE BABY TURTLES. - -_From a Photograph._] - -One would imagine, remembering the quantities of eggs laid by turtles, -that they would be very plentiful, but there are few creatures that -have more enemies. All that the mother turtle does is to deposit her -eggs on the sand of some island and there leave them to be hatched -out by the sun. Before this process is accomplished they are often -destroyed by rats and birds, while very few of those that are hatched -survive very long. The moment the young turtle emerges from its shell -it seeks the water, and there crabs and various kinds of fish are ever -ready to devour it. The young just hatched at the farm under notice are -put in a pond or ponds by themselves and given finely-chopped meat of a -fish like the pilchard, while the bigger ones are fed largely on live -eels. This feeding continues to the end of September. In October the -snapping-turtle ceases to take food, and finally burrows in the muddy -bottom of the pond to hibernate, coming out only in April or May. - -Snapping-turtle farming is much more exciting than raising the -American terrapin. The former is a vicious creature and will snap -at anything--hence its name. Indeed, in disposition it is the very -opposite of its American brother. It believes most thoroughly in the -survival of the fittest, and to it the fittest is number one. It is a -chronic fighter, and inasmuch as its jaws are very strong and, like a -bulldog, it never knows when to let go, it is a reptile to be either -mastered or avoided. Indeed, the men at Mr. Hattori’s farm can tell -many exciting little stories concerning the voracity of this strange -creature. One farm hand, for instance, is minus a finger, the result of -not using sufficient care when transferring one of the larger reptiles -to a new pond. - -[Illustration: FEEDING THE EELS WHICH IN TURN PROVIDE FOOD FOR THE -LARGER TURTLES. - -_From a Photo. by M. Ichikawa, Japan._] - -Many naturalists have visited this unique farm and, after a close study -of the turtle and its habits, have confirmed all the bad qualities that -have been recorded concerning it. In securing its food it shows that -it possesses no mean intelligence. At one time it crawls slowly and -silently along with neck outstretched towards an unsuspecting fish, -springs upon it by a powerful thrust of its hind legs, and snaps it -up; at another time it drives the fish around the basin and terrifies -it until it falls an unresisting victim. Again, the reptile may be -observed buried in the sandy soil of its prison with only its bill and -eyes protruding. On the approach of a fish the head and long neck dart -forth from the sand with lightning speed and the prey is caught and -instantly killed by a savage bite. - -In its wild state the snapping-turtle is distinctly a nocturnal animal, -and does its hunting after sunset, when it emerges from its muddy home -to look for food. In the presence of danger it becomes bold, defiant, -and even desperate. When driven to bay it retracts its neck, head, and -widely-gaping jaws into its shell, awaiting a favourable opportunity -to thrust them forth slyly and bite savagely. Anything which it has -seized in its jaws it holds with wonderful tenacity, at the same time -vigorously scratching the earth with its sharp claws. There is only one -way to catch the snapping-turtle, and that is to secure it by the tail. -Some of the men at Mr. Hattori’s farm are very dexterous in seizing -their victims in this fashion. - -A little time ago a Russian officer visited the establishment and -listened, with some incredulity, to the stories of the voracity of -the reptiles in the ponds before him. He carried in his hand a stout -cane, and was told to place it near one of the bigger animals. He did -so, and was surprised to find that in a few minutes it was bitten -clean through. Before now the snapping-turtle has been known to bite -through the flat of an oar. Not only will this turtle catch all kinds -of fish and frogs and devour them greedily, but it is not averse to -hunting waterfowl. Mr. Hattori declares that, in addition to raising -turtles, he could rear ducks and geese as well, but dare not, as the -reptiles would only kill them. When a snapping-turtle detects a duck it -cunningly makes its way towards the creature, seizes it by its legs, -pulls it down under water, and then drags it to the bottom of the pond. -Here it tears the duck to pieces with the aid of the long claws of its -fore paws and devours it. - -It is this snapping propensity which makes it desirable to keep the -reptiles in ponds according to their ages; it would not do to put -those just hatched in the same basin as the bigger ones, as they would -quickly be eaten. Until they reach their sixth year they are never -“mixed.” When they reach this age, however, they are capable of taking -care of themselves and are allowed access to the bigger ponds. By this -time the turtle has reached maturity and may begin to deposit eggs, -though it is not at its prime till two or three years later. - -[Illustration: WEST INDIAN TURTLES ON BOARD A MAIL STEAMER BOUND FOR -LONDON--IN SPITE OF EVERY CARE, THE MORTALITY AMONG THEM IS VERY HEAVY. -[_From a Photograph._]] - -What the Japanese epicure prefers are turtles not more than five years -of age, when the flesh is soft and in desirable condition for the -making of stews and soups. At this age the snapping-turtle weighs from -sixty to eighty pounds. Those that are destined for the table are kept -in a pond to themselves, and taken as required in nets or pulled out of -the water by their tails. They are then placed in tin boxes or cases -with air-holes, and sent by train to their destination. - -The turtle that is consumed in this country is the green species, from -the West Indies. The creatures are imported by Mr. T. K. Bellis, who -will not hesitate to tell you that of edible turtles the green variety -is the best. Mr. Bellis imports some three thousand turtles a year. -They arrive in batches of one hundred or more every fortnight by the -Royal Mail steamers from Kingston, Jamaica, and are obtained from the -coral reefs lying to the north of the island of Jamaica. Twelve to -fifteen small schooners are employed in the trade, and upwards of a -hundred and twenty men. - -[Illustration: A CONSIGNMENT OF TURTLES AT A LONDON TERMINUS. [_From a -Photograph._]] - -These fishers of strange “fish” (the turtle’s technical name) stretch -nets of twine from rock to rock, and the moment the turtle feels itself -entangled it clings tenaciously to the meshes, and is then hauled to -the surface. The schooners in due time return to Kingston with from -eighty to a hundred and fifty of these remarkable creatures, which -are promptly deposited in palisaded enclosures, flooded at every tide -by the sea. Here they are fed upon a certain kind of herbage known as -“turtle grass,” and taken as required. The bringing of these creatures -overseas is a very delicate business, and frequently sixty out of a -hundred perish _en route_, in spite of the most elaborate precautions, -such as the constant spraying of salt water daily on board the mail -steamer, and the use of foot warmers for the turtles in the railway -vans from Southampton to Waterloo. Before now, Mr. Bellis has lost -eighty-eight turtles out of a shipment of a hundred. - -This susceptibility to travel is one of the most remarkable things -about the turtle. If you are anxious to transport him alive it is a -hundred to one he perishes of cold, but if you do succeed in getting -him home the difficulty then is to kill him. The vitality of this -strange sea creature after decapitation is almost beyond belief. Mr. -Bellis once sent a large turtle to an hotel in Newcastle. The _chef_ -cut the turtle’s head off and hung the body upside down to bleed. -Twenty-four hours after that turtle knocked down a man cook with one -blow of its fin! The green turtle is not a vicious creature to handle, -like its snapping Japanese brother, but its fins are very strong, and -one blow from them is quite sufficient to break a man’s arm. - -Mr. Frank T. Bullen gives a remarkable instance of the tenacious hold -of the turtle upon life. “On one occasion,” he records, “our men cut -all the flesh and entrails of a turtle away, leaving only the head -and tail attached to the shell. Some time had elapsed since the meat -had been scooped out of the carapace, and no one imagined that any -life remained in the extremities. But a young Dane, noticing that the -down-hanging head had its mouth wide open, very foolishly inserted two -fingers between those horny mandibles. It closed, and our shipmate -was two fingers short, the edges of the turtle’s jaws had taken them -clean off, with only the muscular power remaining in the head. Then -another man tried to cut the horny tail off, but as soon as his keen -blade touched it on the underside it curled up and gripped his knife so -firmly that it was nearly an hour before the blade could be withdrawn.” -Signor Redi, the great zoologist, records how he once cut a turtle’s -head off and noted that it lived for twenty-three days without a head, -and another whose brains he removed lived for six months. - -The green turtle, the species favoured in this country, is not a -carnivorous creature, like the snapping-turtle, its food being a -particular kind of sea grass found on the coral reefs in the West -Indies. Some time ago Mr. Bellis brought a large quantity of this grass -to London, with the idea of feeding the creatures in captivity, but -they refused to take it. In his cellars in the City one can see any -day a number of these turtles. Here they are kept until a telegram -arrives from a distant hotel, when away goes the turtle to be turned -into soup for the forthcoming banquet. Those hotels which do not care -about the trouble of killing the creature can procure the soup in tins -and bottles direct from the importer, and it is not surprising to learn -that large quantities are sold. It requires eight pounds of the best -turtle-flesh to make one quart of soup. - -The green turtle grows to an immense size, but it has been found -that specimens weighing more than a hundred and fifty pounds are not -desirable, the flesh becoming coarse as the animal increases in weight. -The shell of this variety is practically valueless, but the hawksbill -turtle yields what is popularly known as “tortoiseshell,” and the -armour covering of a good specimen may be worth eight pounds. Its -flesh, however, is too coarse for consumption, though here it should -be added that it is doubtful whether those who occasionally partake -of green-turtle soup would relish that made from the flesh of the -snapping-turtle. - -It is a notorious fact that turtles grow very slowly and attain a great -age. Curiously enough, neither Mr. Hattori nor Mr. Bellis can tell to -what age a snapping or green turtle will live. Mr. Hattori has quite a -number of turtles that are known to be from thirty to fifty years of -age, while some of the bigger specimens that arrive at Waterloo for the -Bellis cellars are, it is believed, twelve to fifteen years old. - -[Illustration: TURTLES IN MR. BELLIS’S CELLARS IN THE CITY OF LONDON. - -_From a Photo. by Conolly & Goatam._] - - - - -[Illustration: SHORT STORIES.] - - -THE AMBASSADOR’S TRUNK. - -BY E. A. MORPHY, LATE EDITOR OF THE “STRAITS TIMES,” SINGAPORE. - -The circumstances of this little smuggling incident, though known to -several persons in the Far East, have hitherto been hidden, so to -speak, under a bushel. In bringing them to the light it should be -stated that--for obvious reasons--fictitious names have been given to -the individuals chiefly concerned, but the facts are just as stated. - -Far and away the most distinguished passenger on the big German liner -was the homeward bound Japanese Ambassador. He did not look the part, -however. He was a squat, unobtrusive little man whose trousers fitted -him badly, and whose carriage, when he was hampered by European -clothes, suggested an insignificance that was only partially belied by -the intelligence of his homely countenance. His appearance reflected no -radiant blaze of glory, yet he was returning to his native land crowned -with some of the finest diplomatic achievements of the century. - -This statement is due to his Excellency, but it practically dismisses -him from the story, which mainly concerns his trunk--his trunk No. 23, -to be precise, for the Ambassador’s trunks were all numbered. There -must have been half a hundred of them at least; all the same typical -German steel trunks, but distinguished from other less important trunks -of the same make insomuch that each one was adorned with two broad -painted bands of scarlet, which showed out bravely and effectually -prevented their being mixed up with any ordinary baggage. Apart -from all other considerations, the wisdom of the Ambassador in thus -distinctively marking his own trunks lay in the fact that the process -insured their instant recognition by the Japanese Customs officials, by -whom they were immune from examination. - -This last fact was the one which counted for most with Fritz Vogel, -steward and trombonist of the liner, as he daily contemplated the -mountain of luggage and calculated how many Manila cigars one of those -great red-striped trunks would hold. - -[Illustration: “HE DAILY CONTEMPLATED THE MOUNTAIN OF LUGGAGE AND -CALCULATED HOW MANY MANILA CIGARS ONE OF THOSE GREAT RED-STRIPED TRUNKS -WOULD HOLD.”] - -Carefully packed, he figured it, one might crowd ten thousand cigars -into each trunk. Ten thousand cigars, at eighty Mexican dollars a -thousand, meant eighty pounds. Duty at one hundred and fifty per -cent. _ad valorem_ on eighty pounds would mean a hundred and twenty -pounds, or, as Fritz Vogel calculated, two thousand four hundred -marks. Therefore, as the meditative trombonist further worked out -the possibilities, his Excellency could, by simply loading up a few -dozen more trunks with cigars at Hong-Kong and getting them passed -free through the Customs at Yokohama--or at Nagasaki or Kobe for that -matter--make more in a week than he could hope to earn in a month of -Sundays by sticking to the thorny paths of diplomacy. - -Born west of the Suez, the fertile idea germinated in Vogel’s brain -all through the dreary wastes of the Canal, and sprouted up green and -vigorous, despite the withering blasts that pursued the liner down the -Red Sea and across the Indian Ocean to Colombo. At Singapore it had -become an obsession. When steaming through the Narrows into the latter -port, however, on the way to the German mail wharf, Vogel observed -a red-funnelled Jardine liner at the Messageries wharf, with the -blue-peter flying. - -An hour later the _Laisang_ left for China, carrying a hastily-written -letter from Fritz Vogel to his friend Max Krebs at Hong-Kong. It -contained a fair statement of the salient facts in the case, and a -crude but lucid sketch of one of the pieces of baggage, together with a -description of the scarlet bands and full measurements. It also stated -what has not been set forth above--that each of his Excellency’s trunks -was numbered in large white figures at each end and on the top, and it -suggested that in the case of any person desiring to have access to -those trunks whilst they were still on board the liner, Nos. 23, 24, -27, 32, etc., were the easiest to reach. - -Mr. Krebs was a “runner” for a native compradoring firm. He went out -to the ships to “drum up” business for his employers, who supplied -anything and everything that a ship could require, from cigarettes to -engine-oil. In the old days before the Russian War Mr. Vogel had done -a good deal of trade with Mr. Krebs on the short run between Yokohama -and Hong-Kong. But the stringent Customs regulations that had ensued -upon the increased tariffs imposed after the war had practically -killed the business, save so far as concerned a paltry bit of trading -with passengers in faked curios, and the occasional disposal of a few -imitation gems to homeward-bound tourists when the vessel was west of -Colombo. - -Opportunities like the return of an Ambassador to Japan did not occur -once in a blue moon. - -The liner tarried a day and a half over cargo at Singapore, and the -_Laisang_ got into Hong-Kong nearly twenty-four hours ahead of her. Mr. -Vogel learned the fact the moment the German liner arrived at the big -China port, and his heart was filled with sickening apprehension. He -had been dreaming of trunks full of cigars--German steel trunks with -red bands, and numbered with big white characters--ever since he left -Singapore. He had marked off the state-room wherein, until the proper -psychological moment, the extra trunks--if any--could be stored safely. -He had mentally arranged every other detail in his projected bid for -fortune, and had even marked down those of his comrades who should be -selected as his accomplices. He had counted over, time and time again, -the round thousand marks that would be his personal profit out of every -trunk full of cigars he could pass through the Yokohama Customs as -the baggage of the returning Ambassador. He did all this while still -faithfully, if mechanically, discharging his onerous duties as steward -and master of the trombone. - -[Illustration: “A NOTE WAS HANDED TO HIM BY A CHINESE MESSENGER.”] - -It was not until a few hours after the arrival of the steamer in -Hong-Kong--hours that felt like ages--that Vogel heard from Krebs. A -note was handed to him by a Chinese messenger boy, and Vogel opened it -with feverish impatience. Mr. Krebs wrote with that laconic brevity -of diction which indicates the resourceful mind. “Will send you one -trunk.--O. K.,” it read. - -Mr. Vogel pondered for a moment whether “O. K.” meant Oscar Krebs or -“All correct” (American fashion); then he heaved a great sigh of relief -as he realized that it was all the same. - -That evening Mr. Krebs came on board unostentatiously, and a big -trunk wrapped in rough sacking came with him, and was temporarily -stowed away by Mr. Vogel in one of the state-rooms which held some of -the Ambassador’s spare boxes. Thence it was subsequently carried to -another cabin, where there were some spare things of Mr. Vogel’s. Had -a hypercritical observer subsequently studied all the trunks in the -Ambassador’s collection he might have noticed that one of them appeared -to be the least trifle newer than the rest, but it would have taken -a Sherlock Holmes to detect the circumstance off-hand. The trunk in -question was numbered “23.” - -In due time the liner arrived at Yokohama, but the mails that had -been forwarded overland from Nagasaki reached there a day before her. -Thus it came about that when the Ambassador’s baggage was franked -through the Custom House and sent up to the Imperial Hotel at Tokio, -two friends of Messrs. Krebs and Vogel were installed as guests at the -last-named establishment. Thus also it came about that, thanks to ten -yen well spent on a porter, the Ambassador’s trunk, No. 23, was whisked -away to the nether cellars of the hotel the moment it arrived there, -and--as the Ambassador himself did at an earlier stage--it virtually -passes out of this story. That is to say, what must have been the ghost -of the Ambassador’s trunk vanishes from mortal view; but not so the -real article. When the diplomat’s baggage was supposed to be all in, -and a count was taken, trunk No. 23 was found to be missing. - -The row that ensued was something awful. Telegraphs and telephones were -called into requisition, and imperative, not to say drastic, orders -were dispatched to the Customs authorities at Yokohama, to the railway -authorities at Shimbashi, and to all other authorities everywhere, -commanding them to instantly produce his Excellency’s missing trunk. - -[Illustration: “THEY HAD PASSED IT AND FORWARDED IT, AND GOT A RECEIPT -FOR IT.”] - -The Customs authorities declared they had not got the trunk; they had -passed it and forwarded it, and got a receipt for it. There could be no -doubt, from their point of view, that the Ambassador had taken delivery -of his trunk No. 23. The railway authorities were equally agreed on -the same point. The baggage was all in special carriages; not a pin -could have been lost between Yokohama and the Shimbashi station at the -capital, whence it had been handed over to his Excellency’s servants -for removal to the hotel. The police authorities were equally certain -that there had been no hanky-panky business of any kind. It would have -been impossible for one of the Ambassador’s trunks to go astray or be -stolen, either in the streets of the seaport or in the capital itself. -The steamship authorities had a receipt for every article. They knew -the Ambassador’s trunks, and especial care had been taken of them -throughout the voyage. Nevertheless, they would again investigate. - -Then, Banzai! there came a telegram from the chief purser of the -liner:-- - -“_Ambassador’s trunk No. 23 found on board. Must have been left behind -inadvertently. Forwarding to Tokio at once._” - -The little Custom House inspectors looked at the newly-found trunk in -utter stupefaction. - -“Truly,” said they, “we passed this identical trunk not three hours -ago.” - -“_Hayako!_” (Hurry, there!) shouted the head inspector, as they dallied -over the mystery. “His Excellency waits!” - -[Illustration: “THE LITTLE CUSTOM HOUSE INSPECTORS LOOKED AT THE -NEWLY-FOUND TRUNK IN UTTER STUPEFACTION.”] - -The trunk was expressed up to the Imperial Hotel by special train. - -Ten minutes later the Director of His Imperial Majesty’s Customs -at Yokohama ordered a Commission of Inquiry into the matter of the -registering as received and delivered of one Ambassador’s trunk, No. -23, when the same had never either been received from the liner or -delivered to the railway or to any other authorities by His Imperial -Majesty’s Customs. The matter was also taken in hand by the Imperial -Railway and by the Tokio and Kanagawa police authorities. - -Though a couple of years have passed since these investigations were -inaugurated, no definite finding in the matter has yet been officially -published. In certain quarters, however, there is a consensus of -opinion that such a trunk did really pass through the Yokohama Customs, -but that it was a phantom one. - -Mr. Vogel took away two thousand two hundred yen (two hundred and -twenty pounds) from Yokohama that trip. At Hong-Kong, nine days later, -he settled up with Mr. Krebs. - -The cigars and trunk had cost nine hundred dollars, while the expenses -and “commissions” in Japan amounted to a trifle less than three hundred -dollars. There was a balance of a thousand dollars to divide, and they -duly divided it. - - -HALF AN HOUR IN A BLAZING FURNACE. - -BY GEORGE S. GUY. - -One of the most remarkable and appalling experiences possible to -conceive recently befell a young man named Robert Perry, at Apedale, -in Staffordshire. Tramping about the country in search of work, he -arrived one night, utterly tired out, at an ironworks, and unwittingly -took shelter in an “air furnace,” used for the purpose of reducing -very large pieces of iron, too large to be dealt with in the ordinary -way. As it happened, the fire-bars of this particular furnace had been -taken out, and Perry had no difficulty in creeping through the opening -and thus making his way inside. Here he had to mount a wall five feet -in height, and eventually reached the melting chamber, which at the -time contained about five tons of iron waiting to be smelted. Arrived -at this point, in blissful ignorance of the dangerous character of the -place he had selected to sleep in, and appreciating only its dryness -and seclusion, he lay down to rest. Exactly why he should have selected -such a strange bedchamber it is impossible to say, but tramps have -been known to choose even stranger quarters--such as lime-kilns and -brick-kilns. Anyhow, the fact remains that he went into the furnace -to sleep. What happened afterwards is told below, from information -gathered partly from the man himself and partly from other persons who -figured in his terrible adventure. - -After a long walk in the broiling sun Perry arrived at Apedale quite -exhausted, and set about looking for a snug, dry place where he could -lie down and have a sleep. During his weary tramp he had been no -stranger to curious resting-places, and he had spent the previous night -under a railway arch. Presently he came across the smelting works of -the Midland Coal, Coke, and Iron Company, and, seeing a furnace which -he took to be unused, examined it intently. The wide, open front of -the contrivance looked tempting, and he decided to make its interior -his abode for the night. Crawling into the opening for some little -distance, he discovered that he had a wall five feet in height to climb -over, but scaled it without much trouble. Beyond he found himself in -pitch-darkness, but clambered cautiously onwards, trying to find a -comfortable place to lie down. Proceeding up a slope, he reached a sort -of chamber beyond, where a number of great pieces of iron were lying -about. Here the weary man lay down, and, being very tired, it did not -take him long to fall asleep. Let him tell the manner of his awakening -in his own words. - - * * * * * - -[Illustration: FIRE-GRATE WHERE PERRY CRAWLED IN. - -_From a Photograph._] - -I do not exactly know what awoke me, but upon trying to raise myself -a frightful choking feeling came over me, and I became conscious of -great heat. Then, like a flash, I realized what a dreadful mistake I -had made, and what a terrible situation I was in. The furnace was _not_ -disused, and now the workmen had lit it, and I was a prisoner inside! -For a moment I felt sick with horror, but it did not take me long to -pull myself together and try to find a way out. - -[Illustration: PLAN OF THE FURNACE--THE CROSS DENOTES WHERE PERRY -SLEPT.] - -The whole place was in total darkness. Although I could hear a dull -roaring somewhere, and feel the waves of heated air and fumes passing -over me, I could not see the slightest sign of any light. Tremblingly -I felt up and down the sides of my prison to see if I could find a -door, but nothing of the kind could I discover. I tried to retreat -farther into the furnace to get away from that awful heat, but had -to return and face it again. Now, with a sickening heart, I saw that -flames were approaching my position. Thinking my end was near at hand, -I decided at all costs to go down the slope. This meant that I must -face the fire, which was now licking up towards me, sucked inwards -by the tremendous draught. Shivering with horror I made the attempt, -but the heat and flames were unendurable, and beat me back. Then, -crouching down, I worked myself along the side, thinking this my best -plan. At last--Heaven alone knows how--I reached the foot of the wall. -In a half-dazed, choking condition, I tried to climb up, but was met -by a veritable hurricane of fierce flames, which knocked me down and -burnt all the hair off my head. Half-blinded, scorched, and with my -brain benumbed from the effects of the fumes, I still did not quite -lose heart: something seemed to force me on to make a struggle for -life. Suddenly, as I lay there gasping in that inferno of heat and -flame, I heard voices outside, but I could not understand what was -said. I wondered dully whether, if I called out, the men I could hear -speaking would hear me, so, in my agony of physical suffering and -mental distress, I shouted, “O Lord, save me! O Lord, save me!” The -murmur of voices still went on, but presently one man evidently heard -my cries, and called out to a “Mr. Phillips” that he thought he heard -a shout for help. This, however, Mr. Phillips--who seemed to be the -foreman--ridiculed, and they went on working as before. - -I was now on the verge of giving up; my strength seemed to be failing -me, but I decided to make one final attempt to get on the wall. I am -glad to say that it was not in vain, and after a desperate struggle I -succeeded in reaching the top. This seemed to renew my energy, and I -braced myself for what I knew was my last hope. I gave one horrified -glance at the furnace below, the flames roaring and leaping madly, and -then, with all the strength of my fire-scorched lungs, I shrieked out -once more, “O Lord, save me!” - -The men outside stopped work at once. - -“Did you hear that?” cried one, excitedly; “I heard it quite distinctly -that time; someone is shouting out ‘Lord, save me’!” This time Mr. -Phillips admitted that he _did_ think he heard a noise as if someone -was calling out, but where could it come from? It was impossible for -anyone to be in the furnace alive, for the fire had been going for some -time. Then someone else said, “Open the fire-door and see if you can -see anything.” - -The fire-door! Where was it, I wondered--far away or near at hand? -Then, to my great joy, I heard them releasing a bolt just a few feet -from where I was. At last it opened--a place about a foot square--and -I saw daylight streaming in and then a man’s face. He peered in -anxiously, but evidently he could not see me, for I was now as black as -the furnace itself. Then he seemed to half-close the door and I nearly -swooned away, for this was my last chance. - -Desperately I strove to shout, but the heat, flames, and smoke -prevented my uttering a sound save a choking gasp. Fortunately for -myself, however, I moved, and the watcher happened to catch sight of -something about me--probably the whites of my eyes shining in the -reflected light. “Good God!” he cried. “There’s a man in the furnace! -Pull the bars out as quickly as you can.” - -[Illustration: “I FOUND MYSELF FALLING--RIGHT ON TO THE HUGE FIRE.”] - -I did not trouble to think what or where the bars were; I knew only -that the men had seen me and would do everything in their power to get -me out. I heard them pulling the bars out in frantic haste, and saw Mr. -Phillips trying to squeeze himself through the small fire-door. - -With my flesh scorching and my breath rapidly failing me in that awful -whirlwind of heat and flame, I put my arms down for him to catch hold -of. He seized me by the elbows and told me to jump, but this I could -not do, for I felt too far gone. With that he gave me a jerk, and I -found myself falling--right on to the huge fire! The bars were out, and -the fire was keeping itself together by the pressure of one block of -coal on another; but when my weight came upon it, it collapsed, sending -up a rush of flames all around me. To my intense horror, I felt the -skin on my arms giving way, but the courageous Mr. Phillips did not -release his hold. His hands were now on my wrists, and, exerting all -his strength, he pulled me up towards the door. - -The pain of my burns was simply fearful, and I could have shrieked with -agony, but somehow, except for a few moans, I kept quiet. - -[Illustration: ROBERT PERRY AS HE APPEARED AFTER HIS DISCHARGE FROM THE -INFIRMARY. - -[_From a Photograph._]] - -Presently the foreman succeeded in pulling me out of the small door, -but I felt as if dead, and as though I was shrivelling up and growing -smaller. As I lay on the ground, in agonizing pain, I appealed to the -men to strangle me. Again and again, in semi-delirium, I repeated the -request: “I’m done for! Strangle me! strangle me!” My whole body seemed -to be on fire, but my rescuers lost no time. Procuring some oil, they -saturated me with it, thus, in a measure, soothing the pain. Then they -got me on to an ambulance and rushed me off to the Chell Infirmary, -where I received every care and attention. - -Never, so long as I live, shall I forget the terrible time I endured -in the furnace, and my unspeakable joy when I saw Mr. Phillips at the -fire-door. - - * * * * * - -I am indebted to Mr. Hill, the general manager of the above-mentioned -company, for a plan of the furnace. It may be interesting to add that, -even had Perry contrived to shelter himself from the flames at the -foot of the wall he mentions, he would very soon have met with a death -too awful to contemplate, as the molten iron would have flowed down -and overwhelmed him. The authorities inform me that Perry’s adventure -is altogether unprecedented in the whole of their experience. At the -moment when his first cry was heard the furnace had been alight for -some considerable time, having been started with a large quantity of -wood and many barrow-loads of hot coal in order to raise the heat -quickly! - -[Illustration: MR. PHILLIPS STANDING BY THE FIRE-DOOR THROUGH WHICH -PERRY WAS DRAGGED. - -[_From a Photograph._]] - - -THE HEADLESS WOMAN. - -BY CHARLES NEEDHAM. - -I had just recovered from a troublesome throat affection, and under -the doctor’s orders had moved out of town for a spell of fresh air -and quieter surroundings, selecting the little village of Canewdon, -in South-East Essex, as my retreat. I had always had an eye on the -village, first making its acquaintance whilst yachting off the coast -and in the River Crouch, where my boat had its permanent berth. - -Canewdon is actually little more than a straggling hamlet four miles -by road to the north of Rochford, and about nine from Southend-on-Sea. -It required only a very short residence there for me to find that the -secluded little place considered it had its own corner in history, and -a very pretty turn in folk-lore and superstition as well. To begin -with, Canewdon claims King Canute as one of its founders, and its -domestic romances and tragedies would make a presentable volume in the -hands of a scribbling antiquary. It had, however, something more than -mere history, and far less to my liking, for me to feed my imagination -upon, as I was soon to discover. - -[Illustration: THE OLD COTTAGE AT CANEWDON IN WHICH THE AUTHOR RESIDED. - -_From a Photograph._] - -After a good look round I settled upon a comfortable old cottage, with -a small garden traversed by a brook, only a very short distance from -the ancient, square-towered church. Into this, having taken it at a -very moderate rental, I moved a small amount of furniture, my books, -and other paraphernalia, and prepared to settle down to the life of -a hermit for a time. The woman who came from close by to “do” for me -looked upon me, I fancy, as something of a curiosity, but, for some -reason I had not then discovered, she seemed a little uneasy at my -solitary existence. She would remark that I must be lonely, or that it -was unlikely that I should stop in the place very long. I put all this -down to a friendly disposition, coupled with a desire to draw me out as -to my place in the larger world I had dropped from so suddenly. - -For the first day or two matters went smoothly enough, and I began to -feel that my choice of locality had been a lucky and inexpensive one. -Then something occurred which startled me sufficiently to make me alter -my opinion. - -I always used the little kitchen at meal-times for convenience’ sake, -and one night I remained there reading until very late, the kitchen -being lit only by one small lamp at my back. I had just closed my -book--it was about one o’clock--and was summoning the effort required -to take me bedwards, when I noticed a very slight movement of the iron -latch upon the door leading into the back garden. My thoughts naturally -flew to burglars. The locality was lonely, and no doubt my coming had -been duly talked over in the village with all the exaggeration and -surmise an out-of-the-way place is capable of. - -I was, of course, considerably startled, and sat watching the latch -slowly rise, evidently actuated by a very delicate and even pressure -from without. The door itself was bolted at both top and bottom, and -when the latch had risen clear of the hasp I fully expected to hear the -bolts rattle as the person outside put his weight against the door to -try it. But nothing of the sort happened; the latch, after remaining -suspended for a moment, fell back again into place as slowly and evenly -as it had risen. - -Startled and puzzled as I was, I still held to my belief that this -must be a timid attempt at robbery, and that, finding the back door -locked, the intruder would try the front one also. Nor was I wrong, -for I had scarcely slipped quietly into the sitting-room and taken up -my position when the latch there began to rise in precisely the same -manner. This door possessed only one bolt, and that at the bottom, so -that the door, an old and ill-fitting one, would show the slightest -pressure at once. But none was placed upon it, and the latch fell into -place as evenly and noiselessly as before. By this time I must confess -to being slightly scared, and when a chair banged heavily on the floor -and a loud shout of “Who’s that?” brought no sound of a retreating -shuffle on the cobble-stones outside, I had to summon all my remaining -courage to unbar and fling open the door. Not a soul or a sound met me -as I stepped outside. The night was a light one in early September, so -that a retreating figure could have been followed by the eye for twenty -or thirty yards. After a careful look round the garden I went to bed -nonplussed at the weirdness of the whole affair. - -The following day brought another intruder--a material one this time. -I found that during the morning a travelling caravan had taken a pitch -just outside my hedge; and its owner turned out to be an Oxford man, -who, with his wife, was leading a vagabond life about the shires. He -was an extremely well-read man, and we soon got on the best of terms, -exchanging books and opinions, till he inspanned for pastures new a -week later. The night before he left I was treated to another queer -happening. - -We had been talking and reading in my tiny sitting-room till about -eleven o’clock, when my vagabond friend bade me a sleepy “Good night” -and opened the front door. He had, however, only just put his foot on -the cobbles when he stepped backwards with a sharp exclamation, and a -scared look on his face. - -“What’s up?” I asked. - -“It’s awfully queer,” he replied; “I could have sworn I saw a face -looking straight at me close to that bush”--he pointed to the privet -hedge at the left of the door--“but there didn’t seem to be any body to -it. I’m certainly not drunk, but I may have been dreaming.” - -After my recent experience, which I had not thought it worth while -to mention to such a hard-headed soul as my chance companion, I felt -anything but comfortable. We were both rather ashamed of our brief -lapse from common sense, and laughed the incident off as best we might. - -The following day found me in all the doubtful glory of my solitude -once more, and I must confess to having been thankful when an -invitation reached me that same evening, from friends at Fambridge, for -a few days’ fishing. - -I have never suffered from that popular present-day malady known as -“nerves,” possibly because of an open-air existence with plenty of -exercise, but, though I had only been there a short time, the cottage -and the locality now seemed to have become almost uncanny to me. Had -I mixed more with the inhabitants, I should have discovered, as I did -later, that this strange feeling was not without some foundation. - -The few days I spent in Fambridge put all thought of the two queer -incidents out of my mind, which will show that the subsequent events -were not the outcome of an overtaxed imagination or a course of long -brooding upon disquieting phenomena. - -It must have been about nine o’clock in the evening that my Fambridge -friend put a little Welsh pony into his governess-car to drive me back -the four odd miles to my cottage. The night was fine, but there were -clouds about and no moon, so that objects outside the radius of the -lamps were hard to distinguish. The pony had already had a fairly hard -day of it along the coast, but he was a sturdy little beast and pulled -like a steam-engine, rattling us down to the outskirts of Canewdon in -excellent time. - -We had been bowling along, talking about the day’s sport, and were -now rapidly nearing a stile leading to a footpath upon the left of -the road, which takes one by a short cut across a field, over another -stile, into the churchyard, and so into the village High Street. We -had barely reached the stile when the pony pulled up short, reared, -and refused to go another step in that direction. The pony, always a -strong and willing little chap, had never done such a thing in his life -before, and my friend was not only puzzled but annoyed. A sound beating -had no more effect than words of encouragement; there the little beggar -stuck, his four legs splayed out, the picture of all that was most -stubborn in nature, whilst we two sat in the car trying to devise some -plan by which to budge him. - -My friend was at last obliged to ask me to take the short cut I have -just spoken of instead of being driven round by the road the remaining -mile and a half to my cottage. I was, of course, willing enough. The -short cut would take me barely ten minutes, and I had very little -to carry; so, bidding him “Good night,” I jumped out. As I came from -behind the trap I noticed a tiny flickering light a few yards ahead, -upon the left-hand side of the road, but it was very dim and did not -arrest my attention sufficiently to make any impression on the mind. I -was able to lead the pony round without any difficulty, and when his -head faced Fambridge he seemed to recover his spirits at once, and the -red points behind the lamps receded at a rattling pace up the road. -When these had disappeared I turned again to climb the stile, but -became at once uneasily conscious of something unusual a little way -ahead of me. - -The spot the pony had refused at was a good deal shadowed by large -elms, and these, together with the cloudy sky, made the road still -more obscure. The small light, which I had taken little notice of at -first--thinking it probably one of the village lights showing through -the trees--was still ahead; only, instead of being upon the left of -the road, it was now upon the right. For a few seconds I stood looking -at it, feeling very much like turning tail and bolting down the road. -The flame, for it was no other, showed greeny--white against the black -background and shivered in a strange, eerie way. - -The most extraordinary part of the business was that it seemed to come -from nothing visible, but to appear, as it were, burning in space three -or four feet above the road. - -[Illustration: “THIS MYSTERIOUS SOMETHING TOOK THREE RAPID STRIDES -ACROSS THE ROAD AND DISAPPEARED.”] - -I had, of course, read ghost stories in which “corpse candles” and -ghostly lights of one sort and another figured largely, but I had never -expected to come across one, and this could be translated in no other -way.[2] The close proximity of the churchyard, with the square tower of -the church itself showing through the trees, added too much colour to -the scene to my liking; but, scared though I was, a certain fascination -took hold of me, and I advanced a step or two in order to examine the -phenomenon at closer range. I had scarcely taken two paces, however, -when the clouds parted a little, giving a better light beneath the -trees, and at the same moment the weird flame flickered wildly and -went out. - -[Footnote 2: The light somewhat resembled the _ignis fatuus_, or -will-o’-the-wisp, but was larger and greener in colour. Moreover, there -was no pond or marshy ground anywhere near the road.] - -But this was not to be the end of my ghostly experience. The stronger -light brought many roadside objects into prominence, and the moment -the flame disappeared I became conscious of an indistinct black blotch -against the lighter background of the hedge. It was, of course, too -dark for me to be certain of its exact shape, even had I been in a calm -enough state of mind to take in details; but in any case I was allowed -only a momentary glimpse, for whilst I stood with the breath caught in -my throat, this mysterious something took three rapid strides across -the road and disappeared without a sound into the thick hawthorn hedge -opposite. - -At this stage I must confess to having lost all control of myself. -Without another look I took to my heels and ran, as though all the -powers of darkness were behind me. - -The scare I had got made me quite oblivious of my direction, but I -suppose natural instinct guided me, for I found myself at last, almost -pumped out, trotting into the little High Street of Canewdon by the -road along which I should have driven, and no doubt in far better time. -I had no relish, in my then state of mind, for another lonely night in -the cottage, although it stood only fifty yards away, so I made my way -to the Chequers, the only inn the village possessed, and asked for a -bed. - -My recent arrival in the place had given me little time to become -acquainted with the village notables, but I fancy the landlady knew me -by sight, and no doubt thought the request strange. In any case her -“Certainly, sir,” was followed by a close scrutiny. “You’re looking -very queer, sir,” she added; “has anything happened?” - -Surrounded by more human elements, I began to feel thoroughly ashamed -of myself, and rather doubted the wisdom of giving the narrative away; -but the thought that, perhaps, being a resident, she might be able to -throw some light upon my weird experience finally decided me to make a -clean breast of the whole affair; and I promptly did so in the little -inn-parlour. - -I had barely got half-way through the incident upon the road when she -sat back in her chair, and said in a quiet, almost matter-of-fact -tone:-- - -“You’ve seen the headless woman, sir.” - -“The headless woman?” I asked, startled. “Who’s she?” - -“I may as well tell you,” she replied, “though we don’t talk of it much -here. Have you noticed a wooden house painted white, and standing alone -about a hundred yards this way from the stile on the Fambridge road?” - -I said that I had, and thought it was a farmhouse. - -“Well, so it was till the murder happened,” replied the woman. “The -story goes that somewhere about forty years ago a farmer there took to -drink, went mad, and murdered his wife. He didn’t stop at that, either, -for he cut off her head and buried it, and it wasn’t found till some -time after the body had had decent burial.” - -“So she’s supposed to haunt the place?” I asked. - -“There’s no suppose about it, sir,” she replied, very quietly; “a tidy -few people here have seen her, much the same as you did. My husband -has, too, by the stile leading into the churchyard. It took him a week -in bed to get over it. Sometimes it’s just a face, and sometimes just -a black bundle like a body without a head; but always near one of them -two stiles, and round about harvest time. Heaven send I never see the -sight!” she concluded, devoutly. - -“I’m not particularly anxious to renew the acquaintance myself,” I -replied, “but how do you account for the lifting of my latch?” - -“Well, I can’t say for certain, sir, but, if my memory serves me, there -was a gaffer living in your cottage--he’s dead now many a year--who -used to work at the White House and was there when the murder happened. -He saw her pretty often in his garden, I’m told, but couldn’t be got to -speak of it. It may be she walks there too.” - -I spent a very mixed kind of night at the inn, and on the following -day returned to Fambridge and less ghostly company. From here I made -arrangements for a change of quarters, and from that day to this I have -not set eyes upon Canewdon, nor have I any inclination to do so. - -This strange happening is perhaps too strange for everybody’s -belief. My “spirituous” state at the time is an opinion largely -held by chaffing friends; but I ask that three points be taken into -consideration. I am practically a teetotaller; my imagination is no -more abnormal than that of most of my fellows; and, lastly, no whisper -of ghostly visitations in the village had reached my ears prior to the -narrative as told by the landlady. - -The whole affair would make an interesting little piece of -investigation for the Psychical Research Society. - - - - -[Illustration: SOME SAVAGE PASTIMES.] - -BY E. WAY ELKINGTON, F.R.G.S. - - Savages, big and little, play games like other folk, and some - of their methods of amusing themselves are very curious indeed. - Mr. Elkington has made a collection of the least-known and most - peculiar pastimes, and here describes and illustrates them. - - -Throughout the world there is a peculiar similarity in the games of -the human race, and undoubtedly they all spring from the same sources, -being the result of imitation, by children, of the duties and pleasures -of the elder generation. In the savage races, however, we find them -in their most primitive and interesting state, and in this article I -propose to describe a few of the least known and most peculiar--some -which I have myself witnessed, and others that I have collected from -well-known travellers. - -As with ourselves, it is not only the children who play, and the -pastimes of their grown-up brothers are equally interesting. Naturally -the games of the elders require more skill, and in some cases -considerably more endurance and fortitude. For instance, the whip game, -played by the red-men of British Guiana, is one that calls forth the -most enduring qualities of these sturdy natives, and is an ordeal in -which few Englishmen would care to take part. The origin of it is not -known; some say that it was originally an act in a burial scene, but -more probably it is a festival game. - -For all functions in Guiana a copious supply of drink is prepared, the -local name of which is “paiwarie.” This is a native-made fermented -liquor, which has the desired effect, in its preliminary stages, of -putting the drinkers into a good humour. After a certain quantity of -“paiwarie” has been handed round, the players of the whip game, men and -boys, line up in two rows facing one another; each is provided with a -whip ornamented with fibre tassels, those of the two end players having -whistles attached. When all is ready a gentle stamping is commenced, -which gradually grows louder and louder till the earth begins to throb -and the players show signs of getting worked up. Then shouts of “Yau, -au!” are heard, and the now excited players wave their whips and sway -gently backwards and forwards as they stamp their feet. Presently the -two end men with the whistles attached to their whips pass down the -centre of the row, whilst those lined up move slowly in an opposite -direction. Now the stamping increases and the whistlers whistle at each -other in wild excitement. Then they begin waving their whips at one -other, feigning to strike with tremendous force, but finally they come -down on their opponents’ calves with only a mere touch. After this has -gone on for some time the two leaders run back to their original places -at the head of the row, and others go out and do as they have done. - -When all the players have gone through this exhibition the real -business begins; so far it has only been play. - -The women now come on to the scene bearing calabashes of wine, which is -greedily swallowed, and then two of the players challenge each other to -a real whipping competition. - -Silence soon prevails, and the onlookers take up their places ready to -watch this extraordinary ordeal. - -As soon as the challenge has been accepted the two men step out in -front of the audience and stand facing each other. As a rule they are -splendidly-built fellows, and as they wear practically no clothing for -this ceremony, their physical development is very noticeable. - -Cautiously they judge their distance, letting the lash of the whip -just touch their adversary’s calf. When they have thoroughly satisfied -themselves that they can get a perfect swing, one of them stands -firmly, half turned away from the other, who immediately swings his -whip with tremendous force and brings it down on his opponent’s calf -with a crack like the report of a gun. - -[Illustration: THE EXTRAORDINARY “WHIP GAME” OF BRITISH GUIANA--THE -COMPETITORS SLASH AT ONE ANOTHER’S BARE LEGS IN TURN, OFTEN CUTTING -DEEP INTO THE FLESH. [_From a Photograph._]] - -The man who has received this blow, though it has in all probability -cut right into his calf, does not flinch, but joins the whipper in a -wild sort of dance, accompanied by loud shouts of “Yau, au!” Again the -same man presents his calf to be cut at, again the lash descends, and -more dancing follows, until it is time for the other man to go through -the same ordeal. When he has had his share the two adjourn to the hut -and indulge freely in “paiwarie,” and other players take their places, -until all the grown-ups have tasted of the delights of the game. The -younger fry then step forth and challenge each other. Women, of course, -do not take any active part in this weird performance beyond handing -round the drinks. - -Though this is rather a strenuous game, there are many less painful -ones with which the children amuse themselves. One of these, called -the “Jaguar Game,” is similar to our own “Fox and Geese.” A long -procession of boys line up and grip each other by the shoulders, and -sway backwards and forwards crying out, “There is no jaguar to-day!” -Whilst they are singing this merrily, a youngster bears down upon them -from his hiding-place amongst the onlookers. He comes running along -on his hands and one leg, the other leg being raised in the air to -represent the tail of the jaguar. On his appearance the whole line of -boys is thrown into confusion; they grow wildly excited and swerve and -sway, and dodge round, always keeping in a long, snake-like line, with -the foremost boy facing their adversary, the jaguar. It is the jaguar’s -duty to catch the last one in the row and bear him off to his lair. - -Sometimes this game is varied by the jaguar having two young cubs with -her, who also run on “all threes”; they add greatly to the excitement -of the sport by snapping, snarling, and generally behaving as young -cubs should. The game goes on till all the row has been captured. - -In the “Monkey Game” laughter reaches its highest point, for this is -one of the wildest they play; and not only the children indulge in it, -but the grown-up men sometimes take it into their heads to play it, -when it assumes a very different aspect. With the children it is pure -fun, with little or no danger attaching to it. - -A crowd of youngsters line up and move about like monkeys who are -merely enjoying themselves. Suddenly one of them stops and gives vent -to a shriek of fear; the others take up the cry and immediately break -their line and run wildly all over the place, chattering excitedly. -When the simulated panic is at its height the smaller boys spring on to -the backs of the bigger ones, and are raced about all over the place -till fatigue puts an end to the fun. When their elders play the “Monkey -Game,” however, they often become so worked up that they really behave -like a crowd of monkeys gone stark, staring mad. - -Sir Everard F. im Thurn, K.C.M.G., at present Governor of Fiji, to whom -I am indebted for the photographs of these Guiana games, relates a most -trying experience he went through during one of these mad frolics. He -says that the players suddenly burst in amongst the huts, swarmed up -the roofs, tearing great mouthfuls of thatch away in their flight, -and then dashed into the rooms, upsetting everything they came across -and destroying food and furniture. “The old man of the settlement and -his wife, in real anxiety for their goods, tried to protect what they -could, tearing it even from out of the ’monkeys’’ hands or throwing -food to them to distract their attention from more valuable property. -At last, with the help of two bystanders, the old man secured the more -violent of the players, and, despite some too genuine scratchings -and bitings, managed to fasten them by ropes round their loins, -monkey-wise, to the posts of houses. At last five had been so caught -and tied in one house; and then, if there had been uproar before, there -was pandemonium now. The captives screamed and shrieked and yelled; -they rolled as far as their cords would allow, and tore with their -teeth everything that came in their way: food, clothes, hammocks, pans, -and calabashes.... The whole mighty uproar only ceased when all were -literally too tired to do more.” - -This quaint instance of a game running away with its players seems -strange to us, but probably if a savage saw some of our football -matches he, too, might think the players had suddenly gone mad. - -[Illustration: THE “SHIELD GAME,” IN WHICH THE COMPETITORS ENDEAVOUR TO -PUSH ONE ANOTHER OVER--TRIBAL DISPUTES ARE OCCASIONALLY SETTLED WITHOUT -BLOODSHED BY CHOSEN TEAMS. [_From a Photograph._]] - -The “Shield Game” is another pastime of the grown-up natives. In this -each man is provided with a strong shield made of palm-leaf stalks. -Armed with this he faces his opponent. After much preliminary stamping -and feigning they close and a mighty struggle commences, in which each -man endeavours to push his adversary back. It is a kind of tug-of-war -reversed. Besides being a game, it is often used as a means to settle -disputes, in which, of course, the strongest man wins. The accompanying -photograph gives an excellent idea of the pastime. Occasionally when -tribes fall out a whole line of experts are chosen from each side, and -the dispute is settled without bloodshed by the success of either side. -It will be gleaned from this that the quality of “pushfulness” has an -added value in British Guiana. - -To go back to the games of children and also to jump a few thousand -miles to the west, we find some interesting and curious pastimes among -the aboriginals of Australia, where the young idea copies the ways of -its fathers and makes games of their serious ceremonies. Amongst other -things they play at marriage, taking some of the romantic details prior -to the ceremony to make their game. In some parts of Australia an -aboriginal has first to catch his wife before he can marry her, and -the youngsters have probably heard from their mothers that this was not -always the easiest thing to do, for there may have been others anxious -to wed her--provided always that she was a good worker, looks being -of small account. So the children have taken all these things into -consideration and made their game from them. - -As these aborigines have no proper villages, but live in shelters -thrown together in the most primitive fashion, the children choose a -spot in the bush where Nature has made a sort of covering; they then -congregate and imitate grown-up people, chattering about nothing in -particular, whilst the young man hovers round in the bush. Suddenly -he bears down on the players and attempts to abduct one of the girls. -This arouses the others, who all try to stop him, and one of the young -gallants attacks the would-be abductor and a mock fight ensues, the -winner bearing the maiden off in triumph to the bush. - -[Illustration: AN AUSTRALIAN ABORIGINAL CORROBOREE - -_From a Photo. by permission of the Queensland Government._] - -Amongst the men there are few real games; they all seem to take life -rather seriously, and as soon as they are grown up they devote their -whole time to obtaining food and taking part in the numerous religious -ceremonies, some of which are most elaborate and trying functions. To -us these may appear very like games, but to the aborigines they are -particularly sacred. Of late years, however, they have turned one or -two of these ceremonies into dances or corroborees, but probably this -has been done to amuse the whites and extract money from them--like the -Maoris, who now dance the “Haka” as if it were a spectacular dance for -the benefit of the Pakeha. With the coming of civilization and peace -some phases of its serious import have gone. The photograph given above -shows Australian aborigines performing the kangaroo dance, which is -a modified exhibition of one of their ancient ceremonies. It is not -an exciting affair, nor beautiful, as these savages are not adepts at -dancing. All they do is to crawl about, stamping and gesticulating, -whilst the man dressed as a kangaroo goes backwards and forwards and up -and down the line with a sort of high-stepping action. This kangaroo -dance at one time had a significant meaning, and was probably danced in -connection with an old-time legend, but, like many similar ceremonies, -it is now carried on simply because the ancestors of the present -generation taught it. This in itself would be quite sufficient to keep -the most absurd custom alive, for ancestors are held in great reverence -amongst savages. - -One of the most amusing games I have ever witnessed in savage lands was -in New Zealand, where I saw a crowd of children dancing an imitation -“Haka.” The “Haka,” when danced seriously by grown-ups, is a most -awe-inspiring and thrilling exhibition which stirs every nerve in your -body; but when children dance it, it becomes a grotesque and laughable -affair. The Maoris, men, women, and children, have a well-developed -sense of humour, which is more than most savages have, and the word -“savage” hardly applies to them, for more civilized and Christian -beings would be hard to find. When white men first came in contact with -them they found them anything but civilized except in their ideas of -justice, in which they were able to give us lessons; in hospitality -even now they can put a white man to shame. However, for the purpose of -this article I will call them savages. - -The children from their earliest days begin to laugh. I do not remember -ever seeing one cry--and they seem to spend the rest of their days with -a smile hovering somewhere near their faces, ready at the slightest -provocation to come out. As the “Haka” is composed of a series of body -movements, in which facial expression plays a prominent part, the -children have plenty of scope to caricature the whole performance, -which they turn into a merry pantomime, stamping and shouting, rolling -their eyes, and hanging out their tongues in curious imitation of the -real performers. The girls, too, have their dances, and these are -really both pretty and interesting, for they are handsome creatures who -know they are good looking, and enjoy showing themselves off to the -best advantage, as one can see by the pretty and fascinating movements -of the various dances they practise. The only thing that mars them is -their anxiety to make grotesque faces every now and then, but perhaps -this too is done by way of contrast. The men have the same failing, and -though their expressions are more savage they do not add to the charm -of the dances. To perform a dance of welcome in front of a visiting -tribe, and pull horrible faces at them the while, is hardly likely to -make the visitors feel at home, but the Maoris understand it, and so do -not get cross, as you and I might. - -[Illustration: MAORI BOYS PERFORMING THE “HAKA.” - -_From a Photo. by permission of the New Zealand Government Tourist -Department._] - -In the Solomon Islands, British New Guinea, and the New Hebrides the -children are also of a playful disposition and have many games which -resemble ours, such as leap-frog and pick-a-back, whilst the elder -generation have musical instruments resembling the jews’ harp, the -fiddle, and the Pandean pipes. - -[Illustration: A YOUNG NICOBARESE ISLANDER PLAYING A FLAGEOLET WITH HIS -NOSE. - -_From a Photo. by E. H. Man._] - -Certain musical instruments are more or less common all over the world, -but often the method of playing them differs, as the accompanying -photograph will show. It represents a young Nicobarese playing a reed -flageolet with his nose! Lots of people in the most civilized lands -sing through their noses, but playing through them is, I believe, -only practised in savage lands. In these same islands the natives -have a sounding-board which I suppose they would call a musical -instrument, for it takes the place of the well-known tom-tom used in -other countries. Here it is beaten to keep time for dancers. It is a -curiously constructed instrument, resembling a native shield; in fact, -some travellers have mistaken it for one. Scooped out of the trunk of -a tree in the same way that ordinary dug-out canoes are made, it is -about five feet long and two or three feet broad; like a shield, it is -concave in shape. One of the ends is pointed, and when in use this is -stuck in the ground diagonally; a stone is placed under the other end -to raise it. To play it the native plants one foot firmly on the buried -end whilst he strikes the board with his disengaged foot. - -“Musical” entertainments are popular in the Nicobar Islands, and the -young men vie with each other in composing ditties which they hope will -become popular and thus make them famous. So far none of these songs -have been pirated in England, but this does not say that in the islands -they are not “all the go.” Such tunes are composed to be sung to the -accompaniment of the sounding-board and dances. These, among the women, -resemble more than anything else the antics of timid ladies bathing at -the seaside. The dancing of the men is not much help to the musician -either, as it consists of a few movements rather like dumb-bell -exercises for chest development, so that it can be understood that the -young Nicobarese has no light task before him when he seeks fame in -composition. - -[Illustration: A CURIOUS DANCE POPULAR IN THE NICOBAR ISLANDS. - -_From a Photo. by E. H. Man._] - -On the West Coast of Africa there is a remarkably interesting dance -in which the movements of the dancer supply the “music.” For the -particulars of this dance and for the photograph of the performers I -have to thank Mr. T. J. Alldridge, some time District Commissioner. -The native dancing girls wear most fantastic garments. Their bodies -are covered with a net made of native cotton, from which hang great -bunches of palm-leaf fibre. Tufts of the same material decorate their -wrists and waists, and some wear curious knicker-bockers. To these -latter garments are attached small pieces of hollow iron, from which -rings are hung, and when the dancer gets in full swing these make a -curious jingling noise. An accompaniment is also played by other women -on another quaint instrument called a _sehgura_, which is made out of a -hollow gourd covered with a net, on which are fixed a number of seeds. -To produce the sound the ends of the net are held in the two hands and -tightened and slackened alternately, while rhythmic shaking is now and -then indulged in to vary the accompaniment. - -In this part of the world there are several interesting games of -chance, for natives are inveterate gamblers and will stake all they -possess--huts, wearing apparel, and even their wives. One of their -favourite pastimes is played with a concave board, which is put on the -ground facing the players, who stand or squat a little way off. They -then spin a sort of top into and across it until one of them fails to -send it with sufficient force to carry it to the far end; it is then -the business of the next man to spin his top with sufficient force to -drive his opponent’s out, and so beat him. - -Gambling seems to be common in all parts of the world; the Eskimo have -many interesting games where chance and skill are combined. One called -“nuglutang” is very popular and is played by several men at a time. -From the centre of the room (generally from the roof) is slung a plate -of ivory having a hole in its centre. The Eskimos stand away from it, -and each in turn endeavours to throw a stick through the orifice. -In one of their games, called “saketan,” they have a curious way of -“staking.” The game is a sort of roulette; a board is placed on the -ground, and a small cup with rounded bottom and a lip is spun on to it. -The man in front of whom the lip stops is the winner, but, unlike most -winners, he is actually a loser, for he has to go and fetch something -to pay in as a stake, which the next “winner” takes, but he in turn -pays in another forfeit in its place for the man who follows. So the -game goes on until the last man wins, and he appropriates the stakes -out and out, making himself the only real winner, whereas the first -player to whom the cup pointed is the only loser in a game which causes -the wildest excitement whilst the issue is in doubt. - -[Illustration: WEST AFRICAN DANCING GIRLS. - -_From a Photograph._] - -It is a peculiar thing that string games, like some others already -mentioned, are popular all over the world amongst the coloured races, -and what is perhaps far more extraordinary is the fact, recently -discovered, that some of these string figures are made in exactly the -same way, and are of the same design in places as widely apart as -America, the South Sea Islands, and Japan. The last photograph, taken -by Mr. William A. Cunnington, shows a very interesting string figure -from Central Africa called “Sumbo” (a fishing net), which is by no -means a simple one. - -For the description of this figure and permission to reproduce the -photograph I have to thank the Secretary of the Anthropological -Institute. - -Besides having tricks of this sort in which the hands only are -employed, there are many now known which are made with hands and feet, -and others again are worked round the neck and the hands. - -Dr. Haddon has made a particular study of the subject, and has, in -collaboration with Dr. Rivers, published particulars of many of the -string tricks performed in various parts of the world. - -[Illustration: STRING GAMES ARE POPULAR ALL OVER THE WORLD--HERE IS AN -INTERESTING FIGURE FROM CENTRAL AFRICA. - -_From a Photograph._] - - - - -_The Marriage of Lulu._ - -BY THE REV. A. FORDER, OF JERUSALEM. - - The author is a missionary who has travelled extensively in the - East, and is thoroughly familiar with the wild tribes of the - desert. In the subjoined narrative he relates the love-story of - a young Arab girl--a real life romance with the conventional - happy ending of fiction. - - -It was that time of the day which Orientals call _asr_, between -four o’clock and sunset--just the time when the Arab chief likes to -be on hand so that he may receive and welcome any who may seek the -hospitality and shelter afforded by his simple home, and see for -himself that sufficient food for man and beast is provided, so that -both may sup and be satisfied. - -On a certain afternoon Sheikh Khaleel sat at his tent door watching the -sun slowly sink toward the west, wondering, as he pulled at the dying -embers in his pipe, if it would be his lot to entertain any guest that -night. - -As his sharp eyes looked out from under his shaggy eyebrows he saw -in the distance a rider mounted on a camel, whose head was directed -straight for the camp under the chief’s control. - -It was not long before both camel and rider stood at the door of the -guest-tent, and the chief, having tethered the ship of the desert to -one of the tent-pegs, invited his guest to enter, and at once set about -preparing the coffee according to Arab custom. - -The new arrival, whose name was Abd-el-Thullam (the servant of cruelty) -was well known to the Arabs for scores of miles round, and a visit from -him always meant something unusual and of importance, hence the wonder -of the host and his neighbours at the coming of one with so uninviting -a name, which was obtained by deeds that gave subject for conversation -around many a camp-fire after supper. Speculations as to the coming of -this well-known chief were many, and although not audibly expressed -filled the minds of all present, and of none more so than the women, -who were separated from the menfolk only by the coarse goats’-hair -curtain that divided the tent. Little did the host’s only daughter -think that she was the cause of this unexpected visitor coming among -them, or how much his presence meant to her and others. - -Arab etiquette forbids any direct asking of questions or quizzing -into the affairs of a guest, so both before and after supper the -conversation was upon subjects far away from the one that had brought -Abd-el-Thullam into the camp of Sheikh Khaleel, and the simple folk of -the wilderness closed their eyes in sleep without having the faintest -idea of the object of Abd-el-Thullam’s visit. - -With the morning light the camp was astir, both men and women going -about their daily callings, each one wondering what the day would -reveal. After the matutinal cup of coffee the guest made known the -object of his coming, doing so in such forceful and measured language -as to impress upon the little company of listeners the fact that his -wishes must be complied with. - -Condensed into a few words, the rather lengthy speech of the “servant -of cruelty” was somewhat as follows: “Sheikh Khaleel, may Allah grant -you a long life and build your house (grant you sons to perpetuate your -name and family). To the women of my household I desire to add another, -for has not our Prophet given us permission to have four wives? Already -I have three. Now I have come to ask for your daughter, and am ready -to give the price that you may ask for her. As I am to join a raiding -party in a few days the matter must be settled at once. May Allah give -you patience and wisdom.” - -The statement was so unexpected that no one could make reply for a -minute or so. At last the silence was broken by Khaleel saying, “The -will of Allah be done! What is decreed must come to pass.” - -Now, the business of a betrothal and marriage is not usually hurried -among Arabs, for much talking is necessary to settle the price of the -bride, and time is needed in which to pay the amount agreed upon, and -to arrange and comply with the wedding festivities and customs. Hence -Sheikh Khaleel and his neighbours were surprised in a two-fold way, -first by the boldness of the request, and secondly by the desire to -hasten the matter. So, reminding the impatient suitor that “God was -with the patient ones,” Khaleel bade him wait a while. - -But the man desirous of many wives pressed his claim and asked the -price of the girl, again saying that he was ready to give whatever was -asked. - -All the while Khaleel had been wondering if this was not his chance to -make a good bargain, although for two reasons he was loath to part with -his daughter, whose name was Lulu (the pearl). Was she not his only -daughter--in fact, the only child Allah had spared to him? Moreover, -although there had been no formal or public betrothal, he knew well -enough that Lulu’s heart and affections had already been won by a young -man of his own camp and community. But here was the opportunity to -drive a good and hard bargain. And what did it matter, after all? It -was only about a girl, who might any day be taken ill and die; also, he -might have to get her off at a small return later on if he allowed this -chance to slip by. - -At last Khaleel spoke, making known the terms on which his daughter -could become the fourth wife of the unwelcome guest. They were as -follows: a mare, one hundred goats, fifty sheep, and two hundred silver -medjidiehs (each worth three and fourpence), all to be paid within -three days, with the stipulation that, should Lulu die before the time -for taking her to her new home, viz., seven days of feasting, the above -payment should become the sole property of Chief Khaleel, her father. -In addition to the above the new son-in-law was to give for five -successive years one hundred measures of new wheat and fifty of barley. - -The terms were received in silence, and anyone glancing at the faces -of those assembled could gather that each thought the price high, but -all knew that the visiting chief was rich and well able to pay the fee -demanded, if he chose to do so. - -Nearly the whole day was spent in arguing, persuasion, and calculation, -but Sheikh Khaleel was immovable, the more so as he saw a chance of -getting his terms. - -Finding that talking was of no avail, Abd-el-Thullam finally consented -to the terms on condition that, as soon as the purchase price was paid, -the seven days of wedding festivities should commence. To this Khaleel -gave his consent, and, although the day was far spent, the prospective -bridegroom mounted a horse which had been brought for him and rode -away, leaving the camel on which he had arrived as an earnest of his -return. For three days the camel was tied before the guest-tent, and -was only redeemed just in time to save it from being forfeited. - -We must now leave the guest-tent and for a time consider some other -people who were keenly interested in the happenings just related. - -First, a word about Lulu. As already stated, she was the only child of -her father, and, such being the case, she was naturally better cared -for and more thought of than if there had been rivals in the shape -of brothers. Her father spared her in many ways the indignities so -commonly imposed upon females in the East, one distinction between her -and other girls of the tribe being that her face had not been tattooed. - -At the time of our story her age was about fourteen. The bloom of -youth on her cheek, with the uprightness of figure so common among -Arab girls, made her queenly in appearance in spite of her oft-patched -flowing robes. - -Among her own kith and kin she reigned supreme, for, having lost her -mother soon after her birth, she had claimed the nursing and attention -of most of the women in the camp; hence she was ruled by none and -spoiled by all. - -[Illustration: “FOR THREE DAYS THE CAMEL WAS TIED BEFORE THE -GUEST-TENT.” - -_From a Photograph._] - -Some of the youths, too, had paid her attention, and, having grown up -side by side with her, were more than mere friends. One, whose name was -Abd-Salaam (the servant of peace), had even found it in his heart to -love her, which aspiration he knew was not in vain, for on more than -one occasion Lulu had assured him that when the time came for her to -become a wife none but the “servant of peace” would suffice. - -Now it so happened that all that had passed and been settled in the -guest-tent between father and visitor was unknown to either Lulu or -her lover, for the former had been away all day gathering fuel on the -hill-sides in company with another girl, while Abd-Salaam had gone with -others to a distant town in charge of some sheep, the day he left the -camp being the one on which the wife-seeker arrived. - -It is customary among the Arabs for the girl who is to be betrothed not -to be consulted as to any likes or dislikes on her part, and she knows -nothing about her being traded off to some stranger until informed by -having the large outer garment of the suitor thrown around her, and -hearing the announcement that she belongs to him. - -The surprise of Lulu, therefore, on her return to the camp may be -imagined when the scribe of the community approached her and, all -unawares, covered her with a large camel-hair _abba_, saying, “The name -of God be with thee, O Lulu. None shall have thee but Abd-el-Thullam.” - -Surprised as she was, she threw off the cloak and entered the tent, -inwardly vowing that none should have her but the constant companion of -her girlhood. With the liberty allowed her as the chief’s daughter she -went into the guest-tent, and, with hands clenched and determination -written on her face, informed her father that her home and lot should -not be among strangers, and that the hated “servant of cruelty” should -be no husband of hers. In this way warfare was declared, and the -probability of trouble in the near future announced. - -That night she was sprinkled with sheep’s blood, as a sign that her -life belonged to another. Next day she was accompanied by the women to -a spring, and, according to custom, thoroughly washed and purified, -while on the day following busy fingers worked incessantly making -a wedding-robe for the supposed bride. Lulu tolerated all these -formalities in silence, but inwardly decided that, do what they would -and act as they might, she would never be the bride of the one who was -to supplant the choice of long ago. - -The afternoon of the third day came round, but no suitor with the -price of the bride had appeared, and it looked as though Lulu would -be released from her probable marriage, and her father become the -possessor of a camel for little trouble. Just an hour before sunset, -however, a cloud of dust in the distance told of the coming of flocks, -and ere the golden orb disappeared altogether Abd-el-Thullam had -handed over what was demanded in return for his prospective bride. The -bleating of the sheep and the clinking of the silver pieces only made -Lulu vow afresh that no tent of a stranger should shelter her. - -The price having been paid in the presence of witnesses, the wedding -festivities commenced. The firing of old flint-lock guns was the signal -that announced holiday-keeping for a week. Sheep were killed, bread -baked in abundance, and coffee-drinking went on continuously. This is a -time much appreciated by the dwellers of the wilderness, for then they -are able to satisfy the cravings of hunger and for once in a season eat -until satisfied. - -Whilst the men raced on their horses or fought imaginary battles, the -women whiled away the hours in dancing, singing, or sipping coffee -between puffs at their long pipes. So the days passed, and the end of -the marriage feast approached. - -Only Lulu took no part or interest in all that was going on, and as the -men or women chanted in turn the virtues, praises, and good fortune -of both bride and bridegroom, it all fell like water on a duck’s back -so far as the girl-bride was concerned. Inwardly she longed for the -return of her boy lover, so that he might in some way intervene to stop -the proceedings, and so win her for himself according to their mutual -pledge. - -But the “servant of peace” did not come, for the demand in the town for -sheep was poor, and he had to wait many days ere the flock was disposed -of and he free to return to his goats’-hair home. As time and tide -wait for no man, neither did the last day of the wedding festivities -tarry, and all too soon for the greatly-distressed Lulu the seventh day -dawned, and with it no visible escape from what seemed her inevitable -fate. - -With the constant attention of the women, escape by flight was -well-nigh impossible, but before noon a probable way of deliverance -presented itself which Lulu was not slow to grasp. A small company of -gipsies arrived at the camp, one of whom--an old woman--professed a -knowledge of drugs, and verified her statements by producing a small -box of mysterious-looking compounds in powder. - -The arrival of the party drew away attention from Lulu, but she engaged -the attention of the vender of drugs, and elicited from her the fact -that among her wares was poison. It was only the work of a few minutes -to exchange cash for a mysterious powder, directions for the use of -which were imparted to Lulu in an undertone. - -As evening drew on preparations were made for the sending away after -supper of bride and bridegroom. The camel that was to carry Lulu to her -new home was decorated and made ready, and the torches and tom-toms -seen to and handed out to those who were to accompany the procession on -its way to the camp of Abd-el-Thullam. It seemed that nothing remained -to be done save to partake of supper and start. - -[Illustration: “IT WAS ONLY THE WORK OF A FEW MINUTES TO EXCHANGE CASH -FOR A MYSTERIOUS POWDER.”] - -During the serving of the unusually large meal, which occupied the -attention of the women for a time, Lulu slipped out backwards under -the rear curtain of the tent and disappeared. Few missed her for a -time, for all were busy, but when the call was given, “Bring out the -bride and let her husband claim her,” great was the astonishment, for -no bride was on hand. One abused the other, and the angry bridegroom -accused his host of treachery and would have shot him but for the -interference of others, who reminded him again that Allah was with the -patient ones. - -All denied that the girl was dead, for had they not seen her alive only -a short time before? She would return soon, they said, and put an end -to the confusion and mystery. - -Meanwhile scouts were sent out around the camp, only to return later -without tidings of the fugitive. All that night watch was kept, but -morning dawned without the mystery being solved, and as the day wore -on speculations were indulged in as to whom the purchase price of -Lulu belonged, for, although she had now disappeared, she on her part -had not done anything within the seven days of the feast to cause her -intended master to claim the price paid for her. The sun set again -without any light being shed on the disappearance or whereabouts of the -girl-bride, and Abd-el-Thullam was furious at being balked of his prey, -swearing by every oath available that he would lose neither wife nor -purchase price, even if the regaining of one or the other made lifelong -enmity between the two tribes. - -[Illustration: “AN OLD TOMB HEWN IN THE SIDE OF THE CISTERN.” - -[_From a Photograph._]] - -We must now leave the puzzled company in the guest-tent and see what -had become of Lulu. After slipping under the tent-cloth, she commenced -to run as fast as her bare feet would permit her. In her excitement and -joy at being free she cared little in which direction she fled, and -although the night was unusually dark, by reason of heavy storm-clouds, -she sped on over hill and valley until thoroughly tired and exhausted. -As she rested her weary little frame on the soft herbage of the -wilderness the solitude and stillness made her nervous and afraid. -Her trepidation was not lessened by a sudden movement near her--made, -probably, by a jackal more alarmed than herself. - -The fright made her rise quickly and again take to flight, but after -running a few hundred yards misfortune overtook her, for, without -warning, she tripped and fell headlong into an old unused cistern quite -twenty-five feet deep. The fall made her unconscious, and as the pit -was far from the camp she was safe for that night, while a tangle of -creepers and thorns over the mouth of the cavity made her fairly secure -by day. - -Here, bruised and unconscious, the poor little bride-to-be lay until -daybreak, when, with the rising sun, her senses returned to her. Having -considered her surroundings, she decided to secure herself further by -creeping into an old tomb hewn in the side of the cistern, where at -least she could die in peace rather than be the slave of one utterly -distasteful to her. So, with one last fond thought for her absent -lover, she swallowed the gipsy’s potion and crawled into the small -aperture. Here she soon fell into a stupor, caused partly by weariness, -but mainly by the powder bought from the old drug-vender. - -But what had become of the boy-lover all these days that he had not -returned to the camp and become conversant with all that had happened -to his little companion? - -As already stated, he was delayed by a slack market; but after some -days he was free to return, and, in charge of two camels, he set out -for his wilderness home. On the day after Lulu’s escape he was crossing -the great plain, happy at the prospect of reaching camp before evening. -Being somewhat religiously inclined, he halted at noonday to pray, and -soon after remounting was warned to seek shelter from a storm that -was announced by a sharp crack of thunder. Looking about him he saw a -cavity in the ground wide and high enough to allow his camels to enter. -By dint of pulling, coaxing, and beating he forced the beasts in, and -at last all three found themselves in the same pit into which Lulu had -fallen the night before. - -[Illustration: “HE HALTED AT NOONDAY TO PRAY.” - -_From a Photograph._] - -[Illustration: “SUDDENLY HE WAS SEEN TO FALL HEAVILY.”] - -The heavy rain dripping through the opening above made the youth seek -better shelter, so he presently crept into the old tomb, and, to his -amazement, found that it was already occupied by someone apparently -deep in slumber. - -Curiosity made him try to rouse the sleeper, but it was of no use. -Crawling farther in, it was not long before the amazed camel-boy -discovered that the insensible girl was his dearly-loved Lulu. Assuring -himself that she was not dead, and, of course, ignorant of the -circumstances that had brought her to the cavern, he left her, and, -taking the best of the two camels, rode off post-haste to carry the -news of Lulu’s condition to the camp and get help. - -The announcement caused a good deal of talk, stir, and excitement, -which was suddenly put a stop to by Abd-el-Thullam jumping on his mare -and making off at full speed toward the cavern, hoping to be the first -to secure his dearly-bought bride. - -Others joined in the race, but it seemed as if no one would overtake -the eager chief, when suddenly he was seen to fall heavily, having been -thrown to the ground by his mare putting her foot into a hole. - -He did not move, and when the others reached him they discovered to -their consternation that he had broken his neck and was quite dead. -Instead of a reluctant bride being escorted to the distant camp, -therefore, the corpse of the unfortunate chief was carried thither. - -On reaching the cavern the men found Lulu still deep in the -drug-induced slumber, and, making a rough litter out of their roomy -outer garments, they carried her to their camp and laid her on her rude -bed of heather and dry grass. - -Fortunately, the old gipsy-woman had not left the camp, and now, taking -in the situation, she administered a dose of some concoction that soon -had the effect of rousing the sleeper and making her able to explain -her presence in the rock-hewn tomb. - -Slowly but surely Lulu regained vigour, and the old youthful spirit -came again, much to the joy of Abd-Salaam and her father. After a few -weeks another marriage feast was kept, for there was now no obstacle to -the wedding of the lovers, the price of the bride having been paid by -the ill-fated “servant of cruelty.” The affair was hurried this time, -for the feast was to have a happy ending; love, instead of custom, had -won the day. - - - - -[Illustration: THE BREAKER OF RECORDS.] - -BY HERBERT G. PONTING, F.R.G.S - - The amusing story of an American who set out to eclipse the - round-the-world record. The author, himself a globe-trotter of - many years’ standing, describes him as “the most extraordinary - man I ever met,” and after reading the narrative we fancy the - reader will be inclined to agree with him. - - -I met him at Dalny, in August, 1903--the year before war broke out -between Japan and Russia. - -I had been travelling in Manchuria, and had come down from Mukden only -just in time to catch, by the skin of my teeth, the weekly steamer to -Japan. The train was more than an hour late, and the drosky that I -hired at the station--with my luggage piled in anyhow by the Chinese -porters--had been driven by the dishevelled moujik in charge at a pace -that laughed at speed limits and scorned such trifling obstacles as -ruts and holes nearly a foot in depth. - -As we tore up to the steamer’s berth at the great wharf, that was later -to prove of such inestimable value to the Japanese, the driver shouting -and lashing his three horses into foam, the gangway was on the point of -being lowered, and I had horrible visions of having to spend a week in -that most dead of dead-alive towns, in which I already seemed to know -every house. - -With commendable courtesy, however, the officials permitted me to get -myself and effects on board, and a moment later we were steaming out -into the fine harbour. - -The steamer was the _Mongolia_, which had the misfortune six months -later to be the first Russian vessel captured by the Japanese. - -I was leaning over the rail, watching the hills receding from view, -when I suddenly felt a tap on my shoulder, and on looking round was -confronted by a rather sallow-faced, wiry-looking individual of medium -height, with steel-grey eyes that seemed to pierce through mine clean -into my brain. - -[Illustration: “THE DRIVER SHOUTING AND LASHING HIS THREE HORSES INTO -FOAM.”] - -“Say, d’you speak English?” he asked me. - -I admitted that, being an Englishman, I had a moderate command of the -language. - -“Well, I ain’t English, I’m Amur’can,” he replied. - -“So I see.” - -“Well, say now, how’d you know I was Amur’can?” - -“By your accent; one would scarcely make the mistake of taking you for -anything else.” - -“Well, say, you’re smart enough to be an Amur’can, too, at that rate. -Anyhow, I’m mighty glad to see you, for since I parted with my friend, -who went to Port Arthur, I ain’t had a chance of hearin’ a language -that anyone could understand. I’m out to beat the record round the -world for the _New York_ ----, and if I only make it in Japan I’ll beat -the previous best by exactly twelve days.” - -He then related to me how he had left New York and travelled -_viâ_ Liverpool, London, Dover, Ostend, Berlin, Moscow, and the -Trans-Siberian Railway to Dalny; and here he was, bound for Nagasaki, -Japan, where he would take the train for Yokohama, and thence travel by -the _Empress of India_ to Vancouver, by the Canadian Pacific Railway to -Quebec, and from there back to New York. - -“I’m going to publish a book on the trip, and I’ve got about enough -information to fill it already. Say, though, my wife’ll be glad to see -me back again in New York. She’s a beautiful woman, my wife. She’s -tall and dark, and has a straight-front figure--a woman can’t be -fashionable without a straight-front figure--and when she walks she -leans forward like a kangaroo and does the glide. Ever seen it? I tell -you, sir, there’s nuthin’ like it; and it takes a New York girl to do -it properly, and there ain’t many girls in New York as can lick my wife -at walkin’. I’ll introduce you to her sometime if I ever see you in New -York, an’ if you don’t say she’s about the slickest thing you ever saw -in skirts, well, you ain’t much of a judge o’ weather. - -“Say, now that I come to look at you, I’ve seen you before, I guess,” -he rattled on. “Wasn’t you the chap that come rushin’ on to the -platform at Mukden just as our train was movin’ out of the station?” - -I acknowledged that I was. Owing to the impossibility of obtaining any -reliable information in the town, several miles away, as to the time -of departure of the trains, I had reached the station, to my great -chagrin, just in time to see the _train de luxe_ move away from the -platform. I had thus been compelled to take a slow and very dirty train -three hours later, and hence the reason of my nearly missing the boat -at Dalny. - -“Looks as if cuttin’ things fine was rather in your line, eh? Say, -though, you couldn’t take risks like that if you was doin’ a record -round the world. You nearly missed this boat. I was watchin’ you, and -if you’d been on my job you’d have perspired like a pig as you was -drivin’ up to the wharf, with that woolly-faced pirate yellin’ and -thrashin’ them horses to soapsuds, and the steamer whistle blowin’ and -the whole durned push hollerin’ and monkeyin’ with the ropes of the -gangway. You’d have had your heart in your boots, young feller, if -you’d been on my lay-out and seen how near you came to botchin’ up the -whole job. - -“And talkin’ of botchin’ jobs, if this steamer doesn’t arrive in -Nagasaki in time to catch the eight o’clock train on Thursday, I’m -done. That train’ll just give me time to catch the _Empress_ at -Yokohama. If I miss it there ain’t another boat until the _Gaelic_ for -San Francisco, nine days later, and as that’s a slower route I’ll be -fourteen days longer than if I catch the _Empress_. Gee whiz, though, -it’ll break my wife’s heart if I don’t clip that twelve days off the -record. She and I figured this whole thing out together months before I -started. - -“Now, this boat’s due to arrive at Nagasaki at eleven o’clock, and -if she does no better’n that there’s no power on earth can help me; -the game’s lost. Guess I’ll have to try and square the captain to get -her into harbour by seven o’clock. If I can’t do that my wife’ll be -heartbroken; she’s set her heart on this. You ought to see her; she’s -the finest girl in New York--tall and slender, with dark eyes and hair, -and she’s got a straight-front figure. But, say, I guess I’ll have to -try and square the captain; I ain’t a nervous man, but I’m gettin’ -nervous about this.” - -With that he took me on one side, where there was no possibility of any -eavesdropping, and, drawing his watch from his pocket, said, “You see -that watch? How much do you suppose it’s worth?” - -I looked at it closely. It appeared to be a handsome gold-cased, -centre-seconds hunter, but, after the American fashion, the gold was -not hallmarked. I confessed that I could form no idea of its value, but -it appeared to me to be an expensive one. - -“It’s a most difficult thing for anyone but an expert to tell the value -of a watch, and you aren’t the only one to think this is somethin’ -choice,” said my new acquaintance. “Now you’ve got a whole lot to -learn, and I’m goin’ to put you up to a tip that’ll save you a pile of -money. There’s not many experts on watches to be met with travellin’, -and most people would think this worth fifty dollars at least. That’s -where they’re wrong. I buy these watches by the dozen, and they only -cost me one dollar and twenty cents each that way. They’re gold-washed, -but they look like solid gold. I always have one on my chain; it’s no -good havin’ it anywhere else. It must be on the chain you’re wearin’, -and when the time comes for business you’ve got to tenderly draw it out -of your pocket as if it was somethin’ you valued more than your life. - -“Now, when I started out from Moscow I bought a second-class ticket, -and I got into the best unoccupied first-class compartment I saw on the -train. After a while the conductor comes along to examine the tickets. -I handed him mine. He couldn’t speak a word of English, but he gave me -to understand by pretty good actin’ that I’d have to clear out into the -other end of the train. - -“Not bein’ a bad hand at actin’ myself, I was right _in_ it. I gently -pulled my watch from my pocket--it was one like this I now have on -me--and showed him clearly that I intended to give it to him when we -reached Irkutsk if he let me stay where I was. I repeated the word -Irkutsk several times, each time touchin’ his pocket. - -“Well, sirree, you ought to have been there to see his face when he -caught sight of that watch! His eyes bulged out of his head so you -could hang your hat on ’em, and to show what he felt like in his heart -he took hold of my hand and shook it. - -“After that he was like a mother to me all the way. Other compartments -were filled up, but I had mine to myself always. Every time I passed -him I gave him a wink and tapped my watch-pocket, and he switched on -the nicest smile he kept in stock. - -“Gee whiz, though, comin’ across Siberia the inside of that train was -hotter’n the gates of Hades, and every day that feller would come to my -room two or three times to see if he couldn’t do something to make me -more comfortable. - -“At Irkutsk I handed over the watch, and either his joy at receivin’ it -or his sorrow at partin’ with me was so great that he tried to kiss me. - -“Irkutsk is where they change trains, and I met an Englishman on the -platform who lived in Port Arthur; he was goin’ back there by way of -Dalny. He had been on a holiday to England, and was comin’ back on -third-class trains, as he had spent about all his money, and had only -just enough to skin through third-class. When I found he knew the -country and could talk Russian, I invited him to come along with me; I -told him I’d fix things up all right. - -“Well, by and by the conductor comes along, same as the other had done. -There we were, both in a first-class compartment, one with a second -and the other with a third-class ticket. I didn’t have need to do any -dumb show this time, for my friend, who spoke the lingo, did all the -gassin’, and told him there was a nice present waitin’ for him when -Dalny was reached if we could stay where we were, and when I tenderly -took another watch out of my pocket and looked at it as though it was -the only thing I’d ever loved on earth, he was as much overcome with -joy as number one had been. - -“Well, that watch fixed it just as I knew it would. We both stayed -where we were, and when, at Dalny, I handed it over to the conductor, -I calculated those two watches, worth two dollars and forty cents, had -saved me about one hundred and twenty-five dollars. - -“That Englishman was as chock-full of knowledge about Manchuria as an -egg is full of meat, and I got enough information out of him to write -up the whole trip across Russia and Siberia. - -“Now you see the point I’m gettin’ at. There’s more of them watches in -my bag, besides this one on my chain, and I’d like to see the captain -of this ship richer by one of ’em, provided he does somethin’ to earn -such a valuable present as he’ll consider it, until he gets to pryin’ -into the works and askin’ experts’ opinions about it; but by that time -I’ll be a long way off and it ’ain’t likely as I’ll ever see him again. -There’s one disadvantage about this game that’s worth remarkin’--you -can’t play it on the same man twice. - -“As soon as I came aboard this ship and found out from the steward -the time she gets to Nagasaki, I saw another watch would have to go, -and that the captain o’ the ship would be the fortunate possessor. -There’s a difficulty in the way, as he can’t speak English; and I can’t -approach him through the steward, as that would give the captain away, -but I’ve discovered there’s a Russian lady in the saloon, whom the -captain’s already gettin’ on with like a house on fire. - -“She speaks English with the prettiest accent you ever heard, and I was -talkin’ to her for half an hour in the harbour before you showed up. -I’ve already told her what I’m doin’, and got her quite worked up about -it, an’ I’ve decided she’s the one to work the captain for me. There -she is now, comin’ out on deck. Excuse me; there’s no time to be lost; -I’ll get hold of her before the captain sees her.” - -As they walked up and down the deck talking animatedly together, I -could see my new acquaintance was making a deeper impression every -minute. Once a few sentences reached me, and I chuckled inwardly. - -“She’ll be broken-hearted if I fail to make it.... I’ll introduce -you to her if you come to New York. She’ll like you and you’ll like -her. She’s tall and dark, with big black eyes, and she’s got a -straight-front figure and a----” I had to make a guess at the rest, for -they had turned the corner by the wheel-house before the sentence was -finished. - -I never doubted what the result of his interview would be. Already I -felt that the arrival of the _Mongolia_ at Nagasaki by seven o’clock -on Thursday morning was the only thing at present to live for. I was -completely dominated with enthusiasm for the success of this man’s -undertaking, and felt certain he would as surely win the Russian lady’s -sympathy and co-operation in his project as he had already secured mine. - -After half an hour he came back to me. - -“That little woman’s all right. She’s made o’ good enough clay to be -Amur’can, an’ says she’ll do everythin’ she can to help me. She’s gone -to call the captain now.” - -Soon she appeared with the captain, talking in the most animated manner -to him and punctuating every sentence with most expressive gestures. - -Then they came together towards us and she said, “I haf ze captain told -what you say off your great journey, and he tell me it iss impossible -we come to Nagasaki so early unless he burn extra fifty tons of coal. -Ze captain say if you pay ze coal he can do it, but if you not pay ze -coal it iss impossible, but ze captain he like verry much to help you.” - -To this my travelling companion made reply, “Madam, will you please -tell the captain that the cost of the extra fifty tons of coal is but a -trifle, and I’ll do a good deal more than pay for that. I am so anxious -to catch that train that if the captain will bring the ship into the -harbour by seven o’clock I’ll make him a present of my watch.” - -The lady interpreted this. The captain shrugged his shoulders, then -he looked up at the funnel, from which great rolling convolutions of -thick black smoke were belching, and he let his eye run along the line -of reek floating lazily in the cobalt astern for many miles--almost, -it seemed, to where the yellow, sun-baked Manchurian hills were -disappearing below the horizon--his brows knitted in thought. - -Before he had finished his cogitations the would-be breaker of records -put his hand into the left pocket of his waistcoat and drew out his -watch. He carefully removed the chamois skin bag, soiled sufficiently -to show it had long protected the treasure it covered, and holding the -watch, which looked a perfect beauty as it caught the sun, in the palm -of his hand, he addressed himself straight to the captain. - -“Captain, I _must_ catch that train, and if you’ll help me to do it, -sir, my watch shall be yours before I leave the ship. Ain’t it a -beauty?” and he held it out for admiration. - -All this he said in a manner that carried conviction with it. The lady -interpreted again, but even that seemed unnecessary. The captain had -capitulated, and from that moment the result lay in little doubt. The -success or failure of this man’s trip had hung in the balance, and the -issue was decided by a five-shilling watch glittering in the sun on the -deck of a Russian steamer in the Yellow Sea. - -Being in the secret, I could feel only admiration at the -record-breaker’s sang-froid and the clever and dramatic manner in which -he played his part. - -The captain smiled and made a gesture of deprecation, but his eyes told -us that he meant that watch should be his, and presently he went below -to give directions to the chief engineer. From that moment the black -smoke rolled out of the funnel thicker than before, hanging over the -steamer’s wake clear to the horizon. - -The record-breaker contemplated it and the unrippled seas with joy. - -We went up into the fo’c’s’le, and as we leaned over the bow and saw -the speed at which the sharp prow was cleaving the glassy water, -sending thin feathers of spray high up along the steamer’s trim and -tapering sides, his enthusiasm knew no bounds, and his praises of -“God’s country” and his wife became almost dithyrambic. - -All next day, as we steamed past the archipelago of rocks and barren -islands that fringes the coast of Korea, the sea remained calm as a -pond, and when at half-past six o’clock on Thursday morning we dropped -anchor off the quarantine station at Nagasaki all doubt seemed to -be at an end. There was some delay, however, as, though the doctors -quickly came on board, made their examinations, and gave us a clean -bill of health, it takes time to get under way again, enter the -harbour, and take up a berth amongst the shipping this bustling port -always contains. We anchored at seven-twenty. The record-breaker knew -nothing about the place, and it is a long way to the station. I knew -it well, however, and, as I felt as keen on his catching that train as -he did himself, I chartered a _sampan_ and had all our luggage lowered -into it, whilst he went up on to the bridge to express his thanks and -present the watch to the captain. I saw him take it from his pocket -and make a little speech as he handed it over, and I saw the captain -bow his thanks. Then he shook hands, and in another moment he was -beside me and we were being rapidly pulled to the landing-place, or -_hatoba_. - -[Illustration: “’AIN’T IT A BEAUTY?’ AND HE HELD IT OUT FOR -ADMIRATION.”] - -There was not a moment to lose. It was past seven-thirty, and a good -twenty minutes to the station. Hastily bidding the _sampan_ to wait -with my luggage, I engaged rickshaws and we were off at full speed. We -reached the station at seven-fifty-five. Having Japanese money on me I -paid the rickshaws, whilst he bought his ticket with money he had got -exchanged by the steamer’s purser. - -He hastily shook hands, thanked me, and got into the train just one -moment before it left. - -The watch had _really_ done it, but by actually less than a minute, and -if I had not been there to help him he would have failed after all. He -promised to write me from Yokohama, but this he never did. The last I -saw of him he was waving his hat out of the window to me till the train -was out of sight. - -The last I heard of him was a few weeks later, when I read in an -American Press telegram that he had won his spurs and had beaten the -previous best round the world by exactly twelve days. - - - - -[Illustration: A White Woman in Cannibal-Land.] - -BY ANNIE KER. - - Some incidents of a lady’s life in the wilds of New - Guinea. Miss Ker went out to Papua--as the country is now - called--attached to a mission, and describes the many strange, - amusing, and exciting experiences she encountered during her - seven years’ sojourn among the natives, who, not so very long - ago, were always fighting and much addicted to cannibalism--a - practice which still prevails among the wild tribes of the - unexplored interior. - - -III. - -Towards the end of my stay in Papua my special work was translation, -chiefly of the Scriptures, and there was a big pile of manuscript -awaiting revision. This was generally done by one of the mission clergy -and myself, assisted by intelligent natives who possessed a quick ear -for mistakes. The little boy seen in the first photograph was known -as “the Pundit,” because, although only fourteen years old, he gave -us great assistance in the difficult work of translation. He had a -wonderful memory, and was very discriminating in his choice of words. -He would sometimes volunteer opinions as to the style of the sacred -writers, and considered the Prophet Jeremiah, on the whole, “easier” -than Isaiah--in which I agree with him, so far as concerns rendering -the books into a native dialect. Perhaps it was for this reason that -our youthful “Pundit,” when he was baptised and formally discarded his -heathen name of Bonagadona, chose that of “Jeremiah,” by which imposing -cognomen he is now known. - -Before long the revision work came to a standstill, however, for my -fellow-reviser had gone far north to a pioneer station called Ambasi. -It was finally decided that, accompanied by our mission nurse, I should -take the MSS. to Ambasi and finish the revision there. So we set out on -our long journey up the coast in the little fourteen-foot schooner. I -am not a good sailor, and I found the journey very uncomfortable; I was -only able to admire Nature when we anchored. - -[Illustration: “THE PUNDIT”--THIS LITTLE LAD, THOUGH ONLY FOURTEEN -YEARS OLD, RENDERED THE AUTHORESS GREAT ASSISTANCE IN THE DIFFICULT -WORK OF TRANSLATING THE SCRIPTURES. - -_From a Photograph._] - -We spent a very interesting time in Collingwood Bay, where only two -white women had ever been seen, and that within the year. The women -here wore strips of tappa cloth from waist to knee, instead of the -grass skirts of the more eastern tribes, and the houses were of a finer -and larger type. - -The villagers, after they had got over their surprise at seeing us, -gave us almost too hearty a welcome. We were implored to pull down our -hair, and great was the astonishment expressed at the sight when we did -so. They also failed entirely to understand our hairpins, hats, and, -above all, our long noses and small waists! The Papuans’ methods of -hairdressing, however, would certainly cause almost equal astonishment -in civilization. Look, for instance, at the following photograph, which -depicts the coiffure of a man belonging to the dreaded Doriri tribe, -a people living inland from Uiaku, whose warlike instincts have not -yet been subdued. It will be noticed that the hair is allowed to grow -long, divided into plaits, and elaborately braided until it looks like -a collection of rope-ends. - -[Illustration: A NATIVE OF THE DREADED DORIRI TRIBE--THE HAIR IS -DIVIDED INTO PLAITS AND BRAIDED, UNTIL IT LOOKS LIKE A COLLECTION OF -ROPE-ENDS. - -_From a Photograph._] - -At Wanigera, a few miles away, where a mission station had been in -existence longer than at Uiaku, we met with a quieter reception, -though one old woman, after a long look at me, asked a child if I were -_really_ a woman. I wondered what strange creature she imagined I was, -for surely, in a white muslin frock, she could hardly have taken me for -a man! - -During our stay at Wanigera a great hunt took place, and some of the -warriors called on us before setting out. Their ornaments were very -striking, and the colours almost dazzling. Altogether they looked a -very fine set of men, and would, no doubt, prove enemies much to be -dreaded in the day of battle. On this occasion, however, they only -waged war with the brute creation, and they told us at the close of the -day that the bag was a very good one. - -The interior of the great church on Sunday was a fine sight, being -filled with from two to three hundred natives, all decked out in -feathers, shell ornaments, gay tappa cloth, and vivid flowers. Not -less striking was the almost military precision with which each row -of worshippers left the building in turn at the close of the service. -If these natives went in for such amenities of civilization as church -parades, the spectacle would be a striking one indeed. - -In a neighbouring village to Wanigera there is a remarkable tree house, -prepared by the tribesmen as a place of refuge from marauding enemies. -From the heights of this arboreal retreat they were able to hurl down -stones upon the attacking party. - -[Illustration: PAPUAN WOMEN DECORATED FOR A DEATH-DANCE. - -[_From a Photograph._]] - -A fine specimen of Papuan womanhood may be seen in the middle figure -of the next photograph reproduced. These women are natives of Nonof, -a village not far from Wanigera. They were profusely ornamented in -order that they might take part in a dance held after the death of a -chief. It is almost an unheard-of occurrence for women to don such -decorations, which are regarded as the exclusive property of the men, -and it looks as though the ladies were beginning to agitate for equal -privileges in the way of finery with their lords and masters. A native, -on being shown my collection of curios, which included some ornaments, -remarked that I was _me oroto_, or “like a man,” because of my many -possessions. - -[Illustration: PREPARING LIME FOR USE IN BETEL-CHEWING. - -[_From a Photograph._]] - -The natives of Papua are very much addicted to betel-chewing. Areca -palms are plentiful up the coast, but pepper-leaf and lime are required -as well. The lime--which in some districts is prepared from coal--is -obtained in Collingwood Bay by burning shells. The above photograph -well illustrates the primitive process in use for slaking the lime -after the burning of the shells. The lime is then stored, and ladled -out from a calabash when required. - -[Illustration: A HUT IN THE FOREST--OBSERVE THE REMARKABLE ROOF. - -[_From a Photograph._]] - -Our stay at Wanigera having come to an end, we embarked once more on -the little schooner and set off again. We anchored each night, for the -native captain was not very certain of his bearings, and reefs were -plentiful. On the third day after leaving Wanigera, however, he was -either influenced by the crew or had a sudden impulse of recklessness, -for after the sun had set he tried, in the uncertain light, to bring -the boat into harbour on a particularly reef-bound part of the coast. -There was a strong wind blowing, and the waves were slapping angrily -against the sides of the vessel, when suddenly, without a moment’s -warning, there was a grating shock, and we realized that we had struck -a reef. It was almost dark by now, and the lights of the settlement -could be seen two or three miles away. - -The captain let go the anchor at once, but the boat began to roll so -violently that we felt doubtful as to whether the cable would stand -the strain. Meanwhile the boys scrambled into the dinghy and rowed -around to investigate our position. Strange though it may seem, no -harm appeared to have been done to the boat, but we were so surrounded -by reefs that we did not dare to move from where we were anchored. So -there we pitched and rolled about all night, though the strength of -the wind abated later on. What with one thing and another, I felt like -a very frightened tennis-ball, and I was extremely thankful when, at -sunrise, we were able to make for the shore, where we spent the day and -night at the house of a friendly magistrate. - -[Illustration: A FISHERMAN’S HOUSE AND CANOE. - -[_From a Photograph._]] - -We were now only thirty or forty miles from our destination, and the -next afternoon arrived at Ambasi. No white women had ever been there -before, and for many days we were visited by parties of natives, all -eager to see the strange white ladies. Women carrying their babies -astride on their shoulders, old men leading little boys, and married -couples, with or without their families, would pay us long visits, -wanting to know what a sewing-machine was, to look at our bedrooms, -and, above all, to taste our food. The nurse had her hands full soon -after she arrived, for the people had great faith in her remedies, and -patients presented themselves in shoals for treatment. Her pet patients -appeared to be old men, who became frightfully jealous of one another -if she appeared to devote more attention to one than another. They -would glare fiercely at the patient who was being rubbed or otherwise -treated, and were only partly mollified when their own turn came. - -During our stay at Ambasi we dispensed with such luxuries as mirrors -and sheets, and rolled ourselves in blankets, to sleep contentedly -in hammocks slung on the veranda. We could not, however, do without -mosquito nets, for without them rest would have been quite impossible. -At night we were surrounded by the pale sparks of fireflies, and far -below, on the beach, the natives’ flaring torches would flicker for -hours as they fished, standing patiently in the sea. In the early -morning the sweet notes of a bird would wake us from some lofty tree at -the edge of the thick forest close by, behind which rose in majesty the -great Owen Stanley range, standing out distinctly in the clear morning -air. The highest peak, Mount Albert Edward, over thirteen thousand -feet high, had not long before been ascended for the first time by a -magistrate and one of the mission staff. - -We could not always keep dry under our roof, which allowed the rain to -penetrate it in many places. One memorable night I piled nearly all my -belongings in a heap covered by a mat, and at last sought shelter from -the prevailing showers under the table, which was, I am glad to say, -rainproof. But it would not have done to be without rain, for it was -our only water supply, the spring on the beach being too brackish to -drink. - -The Ope, a small river, was only three miles distant, within easy -reach of the station by boat or beach. I visited it one Sunday morning, -taking with me a village boy who knew a little broken English. It was -a glorious walk on the hard yellow sand, for the tide was out, but the -return journey was most fatiguing, for the waves had covered the firm -portion, and at each step I sank ankle-deep in the yielding sand. - -When we reached the Ope no canoes were to be seen, except on the -farther bank. We called and beckoned, and after a time a small boy -brought one over to us, on which we embarked. There were no paddles, -a very slender stick being our only means of propelling it, and we -naturally made poor progress. Our little ferry-man, however, was not -disconcerted. Kneeling down and putting his right leg overboard he -obligingly paddled with that, and most successfully. - -It was at the place to which I was going that the launch had once been -wrecked, and where, some years before, the Bishop of New Guinea and -one of his laymen had spent the night in peril of their lives, after -escaping from drowning and from a shark. It was with some anxiety, -therefore, that I looked forward to our arrival. - -I am bound to say, however, that no one could now accuse the villagers -of evil designs on us, for I was presented with a young coconut to -drink, and saw nothing amiss in the behaviour of the natives, unless a -request to take down my hair can be regarded as such. - -A chief had died the week before, and the dead man seemed to have been -related to the majority of the people, for many were daubed with light -yellow clay, which is their form of mourning. The widow herself was -seated on her husband’s grave, which was situated _inside_ the house. -There, according to tribal etiquette, she must remain until she had -finished making her mourning jacket of netted string trimmed with -“Job’s tears.” I was glad the poor thing had something to occupy her -mind, for the horror of the situation was increased by the presence of -two old crones who, one on each side of her, wailed incessantly. - -Burial in the house in more settled parts of Papua has been forbidden -by the Government, and where the missions are located graveyards have -been set aside and fenced in. - -When my work at Ambasi was over the little schooner arrived once more -to take us back. It was now the calm season, and our progress was -decidedly slow. The little cabin below, where the nurse and I slept, -was stuffy in the extreme, and it was delightful to get on deck in the -early morning, though I was seldom able to do more than lie there with -a bit of sail or a blanket stretched above to keep off the rays of the -sun. Then it would become unbearably hot, and I would retreat to the -airless cabin once more until the cool of the evening approached. All -day long the sails flapped aimlessly and the blocks thudded loudly on -the deck, for the breeze was usually too light to help us. Towards -evening a wind sprang up, but too late to enable us to make for an -anchorage among the reefs in the treacherous half-light. Matters -improved as we got farther down the coast, however, and though on the -last day we saw a waterspout in the distance we met with no mishaps, -and finally reached our journey’s end in safety. - -Though there are marked differences in the Papuans themselves, as well -as in their dwellings and languages, the time will come, no doubt, -when, under the influence of the white man, they will abandon their -primitive Stone Age ways for twentieth-century ones. Then, probably, -much of their charm will vanish. They may reap many benefits, but, as -with so many other savage races, it is more than likely that the change -will not be altogether to their advantage. At any rate, I am glad that -I have lived with them and known them at home, while they are still -unspoiled children of Nature. - -[Illustration] - - - - -[Illustration: My Experiences in Algeria.] - -BY THE BARONESS DE BOERIO. - - The Baroness’s husband, an officer in the French army, was - ordered to Algeria, and took his wife and children with him. - There, located at a tiny post far from civilization, in the - midst of fierce and unruly tribes, the authoress met with some - very strange adventures, which she here sets forth in a chatty - and amusing fashion. - - -II. - -Some time after my arrival at Teniet-el-Haad my husband and I, together -with our first lieutenant and his wife, were invited to a “diffa” given -in our honour by a Caid named Si Benrajah. - -[Illustration: THE FRINGE OF THE DESERT. - -_From a Photograph._] - -He most politely sent his wagonette to fetch us and was at the door -of his house to receive us. He was a tall, good-looking man, and -his costume was exquisite. His _serronal_, or wide trousers, were -of pale-grey satin cloth, the large pockets on each side richly -embroidered in silk braid of the same shade. Silver lace covered his -short bolero, which opened over a shirt which was a mass of green and -red silk, gold and silver embroidery. Over that again he wore a lovely -white silk “haik,” which, covering his head-dress and kept in place -by the “camel cords,” fell round his shoulders, and was then caught -up in front from the knee to the gold waistbelt by a cerise coloured -silk handkerchief. Over his shoulders hung his burnous, the outer one -of fine grey cloth to match the costume, handsomely embroidered at the -corners and round the hood, the under one of fine white flannel. - -He led us majestically into his “drawing-room”--which, alas! bore -unmistakable traces of the Caid’s various journeys to Paris. There was -nothing Arab but the lovely carpets and the smell. - -A rickety Louis XV. _canapé_, with chairs to match, stood stiffly -against the walls; their coverings of chintz badly wanted washing. -An oval table, a walnutwood wardrobe, a washing-stand without the -accessories, and two big mirrors, whose frames had once been gilded, -completed the furniture. We here partook of refreshments in the -unromantic shape of absinthe and lemonade, accompanied by Huntley -and Palmer’s biscuits and wafers. I was much disappointed, for I had -hoped to see something more Arab and to eat and drink according to -the customs of the land. I supposed this was “progress” in Benrajah’s -idea; at any rate, he looked most satisfied with himself and his -surroundings. He introduced another Caid to us--the Caid of Biskra, I -think, who was passing through--a fine, handsome man, whose photograph -is here reproduced. - -[Illustration: THE CAID OF BISKRA. - -[_From a Photograph._]] - -We breakfasted in a large tent, as Benrajah said it was still too warm -in the house. Remembering the close, “camelly” sort of smell, I quite -agreed with him. - -As we entered the tent Mme. G----, the lieutenant’s wife, whispered to -me, “Now, mind you don’t refuse a single dish the Caid offers you. If -you do you will mortally offend him, especially as it is the first time -you break bread under his roof, and the ‘diffa’ is in your honour.” - -“All right,” I answered, cheerily. - -“Bon! bon! bon!” she cried. “Don’t forget, you _must_ eat everything he -offers you.” She skipped off roaring with laughter, which, at the time, -I thought very silly of her. - -I was again very disappointed by the civilized, European way in which -we ate. Instead of squatting cross-legged on the ground, eating -with brotherly love out of the same dish with a wooden spoon or our -fingers, we sat round a well-laid table, with knives and forks, and -dinner-napkins embroidered with the Caid’s initials. Everyone and -everything is getting so horribly civilized nowadays, I reflected, -sadly. - -The repast began with a red-hot liquid in which vermicelli floated. -It burnt my unaccustomed mouth and I did not fall in love with it, -but as I had never tasted anything like it before I did not even want -to refuse when the Caid offered me a second helping. After the soup -came some boiled chicken, on which the red liquid had been poured. He -helped me largely--twice. The third course was mutton, with prunes; the -fourth mutton, with red liquid; the fifth a French _ragoût_, with an -Arab taste; the sixth was chicken without the red liquid; the seventh -an Irish stew gone wrong; the eighth--well, perhaps my readers are -beginning to feel as tired as I did after having partaken twice of all -these dishes. Indeed, I was beginning to feel very serious, and longed -ardently for the end of this Gargantuan repast. - -After about the twelfth course an Arab in waiting cleared a space on -the table before the Caid. My hopes were raised to the heights, but, -alas! only to fall to the lowest depths in a very short space of time. -Suddenly something knocked my hat on one side, and everyone yelled -at me. Dazed, I looked round and rubbed my nose into a sheep’s leg. -Starting back, I met the convulsed and, as I imagined, reproachful -eye of an enormous sheep lying in a contorted attitude on a big brass -platter. Si Benrajah turned to me with a gracious smile. “I am much -honoured, madam,” he said, in perfect French, “in being the first to -offer you a ‘meshui’ on your arrival in Algeria.” - -[Illustration: A TYPICAL ARAB HUT. - -[_From a Photograph._]] - -A “meshui,” I learnt, is a royal dish, and is only offered to those -the Arabs delight (or are compelled) to honour. It is simply a whole -sheep roasted over wood embers, and served uncut on a brass or silver -platter. It should not be cut with a knife, but torn off with the -fingers and eaten. If you wish to be particularly polite to a friend -who is present, you wrench off a piece of flesh and present it with -your greasy fingers, and he receives it much flattered, returning -the compliment with _his_ greasy fingers. This style of eating was -certainly not over-civilized, so I ought to have been better pleased -than I was. As a matter of fact I felt very bad, and hoped against hope -that the Caid would forget me. - -“You are not yet accustomed to our habits,” he said, kindly. “Take a -knife and fork and cut off the meat.” - -So I cut off a few small bits in a dilatory way, secretly wondering if -I could not surreptitiously throw them to some lean, hungry dogs who -were peering into the tent door. - -“What silly little bits!” cried Benrajah, laughingly. Then, after well -licking his brown, henna-stained fingers, he tore off a huge piece and -offered it to me! A cold perspiration broke out on my forehead, and I -almost longed for death. - -“Eat! eat!” he cried, gaily; and, choking down my despair, I ate. - -How could I dare to do otherwise after Mme. G----’s warning? Are not -the laws of hospitality sacred and to be observed throughout the world? -But it was terrible tribute to pay to foreign customs, and I felt a -lesser desire for originality. - -“It is good?” inquired the Caid. - -“Delicious! delicious!” I answered, with a ghastly green smile. - -“Ah! Here is a _comme il faut Roumia_!” he cried, enchanted--and -promptly tore me off a beautiful brown piece of meat, weighing, I -should think, about three pounds! My cup of anguish was full, and I -prayed--yes, actually prayed--to be delivered from that three pounds of -meat. - -And I was. - -Crash! The table-cloth was half dragged off, and, amid a rain of knives -and forks, plates and glasses, my little girl rolled on to the ground. -I did not lose my presence of mind, but, seizing my pounds of meat, -all unseen in the commotion I threw them to the lean dogs, who made -very short work of them. Then my motherly feelings came to the fore, -and I went to the rescue of my child. It was soon apparent what had -happened--the poor mite had been given too much wine by the thoughtless -Mme. G----, and was very seedy for some days afterwards. - -It would be reasonable to suppose that the “meshui” was the last of the -courses, but it disappeared only to give place to the Arab national -dish, the “couscous.” At sight of the snowy pile of rolled semolina, -surmounted by more mutton, a feeling of revolt took possession of me. -I felt I could dare Lucifer himself; and so I refused the couscous, -although in a cowardly way, by pretending that fresh air was necessary -for my poor little Renée. Perhaps it was, but if it had not been I -should have said the same. - -I do not think I ever quite forgave Mme. G---- her two practical jokes, -for practical jokes they were. When I described my sufferings at having -to eat all the Caid gave me, she laughed herself ill and said, “What -a ‘blue’ you are!” Which is the French military way of calling you a -greenhorn. - -[Illustration: “I LOOKED ROUND JUST IN TIME TO SEE AN ARAB LOWERING HIS -GUN.”] - -One of my husband’s great amusements in this out-of-the-way garrison -was to construct a hiding-place, in front of which he fixed the -carcass of some dead animal, and there, gun in hand, to await the wild -beasts such as hyenas, jackals, lynxes, and golden foxes, who scented -from afar the goodly supper awaiting them. On these occasions they -generally found too much pepper, and often suffered from a mortal -indigestion. I sometimes accompanied my husband on such expeditions, -and greatly enjoyed crouching silently in some hidden corner, listening -to the wailing of an approaching hyena, or the querulous squabbling -and howling of the shrieking jackals. And then, when the dry sticks -cracked and the dead leaves rustled quite close to me under their -stealthy pads, my heart would leap into my mouth for fear they should -mistake _me_ for their supper. One night whilst thus listening to some -approaching creature my husband, crouching about twenty yards from me, -suddenly rose up and called out in Arabic, “Who goes there?” I looked -round just in time to see an Arab huntsman lowering his gun, which was -pointed full at _me_. He thought I was a hyena! - -During the winter, when the snow lay thick on the ground, I preferred -staying at home to keep up a huge fire and fabricate hot drinks in -readiness for the frozen huntsman’s return; it seemed to me more a -wife’s duty! - -Another short incident of my life in Teniet-el-Haad may not be -uninteresting. My husband had gone to the manœuvres with his Spahis, -and our _bordj_ was only guarded by about thirty “Tirailleurs -Algerians.” Then, one day, a terrific storm burst over the land. The -air was so thick with fine sand that I could not distinguish the trees -before my windows, and the sun hung in the sky like a lurid orange -ball, seemingly about to drop. The heat was stifling; one gasped for -breath, and, although every door and window was hermetically closed, -the rooms were full of sand. - -Presently a terrible clamour arose from the village--shouts, cries, -screams, gun-shots. Then from the _bordj_ courtyard I heard sharp -orders given, the clanking of weapons, and finally the sound of a body -of infantry running. The wind howled and shrieked, the sand-storm grew -denser and denser, and still the clamour continued in the village. -I sat in the drawing-room with my little ones around me, wondering -if it were a serious revolt, and what would happen to us if it were. -For the district of Teniet-el-Haad was a large one, containing thirty -thousand Arabs, and we were far from any important garrison, while our -protectors, all Arab, consisted of thirty “tirailleurs,” and ten Spahis -belonging to the “Commune Mixte.” Pensively I placed my revolver close -to my hand, and waited anxiously. - -After a few hours the sirocco cleared somewhat, the noise ceased, and -the tirailleurs returned. The whole affair, they told me, had been got -up by the mountain Arabs against the Jews, who had been “doing” them. -So the Arabs had taken the law into their own hands and administered -justice by repaying themselves a hundred-fold and making off with their -booty up the mountains, well hidden by the sand-storm. In the scuffle -a boy and two men were killed, all Jews--so it did not matter, so the -folks said. - -My husband was second captain at Teniet-el-Haad, having given up his -rank as first captain in the Hussars in order to facilitate his return -to a regiment. He was therefore the oldest in grade in the 1st Spahis, -and the earliest vacancy as first captain fell to him. We had been at -Teniet about ten months when he received orders to take command of the -Laghouat squadron. It was the beginning of February; snow lay thick and -deep on the ground up in this high altitude, and the great question -arose how we were to get to Laghouat. Should we take the short cut by -carriage across the mountains to Boghar, where the regimental brake -would meet us and take us on, or go down to Affreville by the rickety -diligence, train to Medeah, and continue by carriage? - -Going by train was a difficulty and an extra expense on account of our -dogs. We had four--three fox-terriers and a shooting dog. I do not -know what he called himself, but he had a double-barrelled nose and an -over-frank and exuberant nature. He and Charleston, the old fox, could -not bear each other. It was quite impossible to put them together in -the dog-box, and to pack them separately would have cost as much as -four times as many children. So, in consideration of their feelings -and our purse, we decided--oh, irony!--to take the short cut if the -snow and slush would allow of a carriage travelling along the narrow -mountain tracks. - -We consulted the different French and native authorities, and finally -decided, if the snow and slush would allow, to take the short cut over -the mountains. We started off one fine morning at five, in a small -brake lent by a Caid, who also promised to send us four strong mules -to an inn some twenty miles off. The first twenty miles were soon -done, and at half-past seven we were enjoying some good hot coffee, -whilst our Spahi was unharnessing his team and making inquiries as to -the whereabouts of the new relay and coachman. Ten minutes after he -appeared, with a very concerned face. “Mon capitaine, Sidi Belgacun has -sent two mules no bigger than donkeys, and the boy who drives them is a -mere baby!” - -This sounded cheerful, and with one accord we went out to inspect. -The Spahi’s account was unfortunately but slightly exaggerated, and -we stood staring at our tiny steeds with dismay. We had still fifty -kilometres before us, and the roads for at least twenty-five were -nothing but cross-country paths. Should we turn back, or try to find -other horses and go on? I voted emphatically for going on. Aided by the -Spahi, my husband finally unearthed a man and two horses, and at eight -o’clock we set off once more. - -Everything again went well for ten kilometres; then our misfortunes -really began. When going up a hill the ground grew soft and the wheels -of the brake sank in. - -“The snow is melting farther on,” remarked the coachman, laconically; -“the underground springs are overflowing.” - -On we went laboriously, our Jehu yelling at the struggling horses, -whilst the carriage wobbled to and fro in a most alarming fashion. -“Don’t you think it would do us good to walk a bit?” I suggested. “It -would make things easier for the horses.” - -“It would be safer,” said my husband, who was looking anxious. - -So out we got--and two minutes later the whole concern toppled over, -our boxes, portmanteaux, and packets flying all over the place. The -horses were plunging and kicking; the coachman, an Italian, and the -Arab boy were yelling and swearing in their respective languages, -whilst my husband _exclaimed_ in French (he doesn’t swear, but I am -sure he would have liked to on this occasion). The scene was so -unutterably comic that I could not help myself; I laughed until the -tears rolled down my cheeks. I draw a curtain over the face my better -half turned on me--scowling was not in it--and although I assured him I -was really quite as upset as the carriage he has not recovered from my -frivolity to this day. - -The men picked up the carriage and the baggage and put all in order -and we thought we should get on again, but, alas! the wheels refused -to move an inch; the more we tried the deeper they sank. After two -hours of vain endeavour, Peppino, the coachman, suggested sending Ali -to have a look round the country to see if he could find a village and -get men with spades to come and dig us out. The boy set off, returning -later with five stalwart men, who comparatively soon dug us out and -accompanied us for a few kilometres on our way, pushing and yelling -when necessary. Then they left us, saying the road was good right up to -Boghar. It was now past two o’clock, and our lunch loomed very dimly in -the far distance, having been ordered for twelve o’clock at Boghar. - -About three o’clock we saw snow on the side of the road, which again -grew slushy and soft. My husband and Peppino were obliged to run -behind, pushing at the wheels at the difficult places, whilst the Arab -boy cheered on his mules and Peppino’s horses. - -The snow got deeper and deeper. Presently we passed a carriage -abandoned on the side of the road, farther on a dead horse, and again a -form, which looked terribly human, covered by a white pall. - -After a while we came to a wider part. On the right was a sloping -mountain-side half covered with snow, half with golden narcissus, -and showing a dry watercourse, dotted about with huge stones. On the -left was a smooth field of snow, across which wheel marks could be -distinguished. “We must cross here,” said Peppino, “as someone has -before us; the snow is doubtless hard, and by whipping up the horses I -will get you over. The road is impossible.” - -My husband was not of the same opinion. He considered the watercourse -a better road than a snow-field, and the presence of stones made him -surmise that the bottom was hard. - -The matter was hotly discussed, but finally my husband gave in, seeing -that Peppino knew the road and he did not. - -Away we galloped--bump, bump, bump. Then, without warning, there came -a tremendous crack, and, lo and behold! there we were, sitting in our -carriage, whilst the horses and Peppino continued with the wheels! It -was, of course, a terrible dilemma, but again I had to laugh; it was -really too funny. - -My husband and Peppino carried me and the children and perched each of -us on a stone, where I stood on one leg and cawed like a crow. “One -should always take misfortunes gaily,” I said. That was the last straw; -my better half had to laugh, but the smile was rather sickly. Then we -held a council of war. - -Peppino, good man, saved the situation. “I will go back with the horses -and fetch the carriage we saw abandoned at the side of the road,” he -said. “I know the owner, and will take the responsibility for borrowing -it on my own shoulders.” - -So off he went, whilst we cawed to one another from stone to stone and -ate snow, there being nothing else to do. Before long Peppino returned -triumphantly with the borrowed carriage, the luggage was transferred, -and we started off again, leaving our first equipage standing -disconsolately in the snow. - -All went well until eight o’clock, although my husband and Peppino had -constantly to push at the wheels. They both looked ten years older than -at the start, so lined and weary were their faces. At about eight we -came to a narrow track, a real road winding round the mountain above a -fathomless precipice. On each side the snow lay in drifts of five and -six feet deep, and the centre track showed no sign of previous passage. - -We had not gone fifty yards along this road when the horses stopped and -the wheels disappeared in a drift. Yelling, pushing, and pulling had no -effect whatever. The horses were then harnessed to the splash-board, -but their strenuous efforts only resulted in tearing it from the body -of the carriage. - -All this time I was sitting in the snow trying to keep the little -one warm, and hopefully encouraging the two elder ones, Charlie and -Renée. From the mountain top came the discordant howling and barking of -jackals; from the blackness below arose the sad wailing of a hyena. I -very nearly became tearful. - -Peppino again offered his services, and proposed riding off to fetch -help at a sheikh’s some ten miles away. - -“Get into the carriage, wrap yourselves up warmly with everything -available, and wait,” he said. “In five or six hours I will bring -assistance.” - -There was nothing else to be done, so we made the best of a bad job, -packed ourselves up, and tried to sleep. The children, of course, -succeeded at once, as did my husband, worn out with the efforts of the -day, but I could not. My hunger was great, and I do not think I have -ever before or since imagined such cold. Talk of African heat; African -_cold_ has the first place in my memory. - -[Illustration: “I KICKED VIGOROUSLY, SHOUTING ‘HENRI!’ AND ‘PEPPINO!’”] - -The night was pitch-dark, and it was far from amusing to sit there -listening to the animals prowling round. A hyena or so came very near -to our mules, who shivered and snorted for a long time after. - -Numbed with cold, I suppose I at last fell asleep. Suddenly I was -awakened by a great commotion. Then came yelling, the sound of -horses plunging, and I heard the children shrieking “Mother!” I rose -precipitately, a light flashed in my face, baby was seized from me, and -I myself was borne off like an infant by a man who appeared to be a -giant. He hurried away up the mountain-side without a word, which did -not at all seem to me the right behaviour of rescuers. Why thus seize -us and bear us off into the mountains? - -We must have been attacked by brigands, and my husband knifed as he -slept! I kicked vigorously, shouting “Henri!” and “Peppino!” but -received no answer, and my heart sank. Then I called “Charlie!” -“Renée!” and to my great joy their voices answered quite close behind -me. I therefore left off kicking--which, indeed, had no effect on -my burly captor--and consoled myself with the thought that, though -apparently a widow, I was not left childless. - -After five minutes or so my giant began to shout. Other voices -answered; then suddenly I was planted on my feet in the inky darkness, -but almost at once a dozen matches were struck and held to a huge heap -of dry brushwood. In two seconds we had a royal bonfire, which not only -warmed us but lit up the country all round. - -Brigands or no brigands, I thought, these Arabs were very thoughtful -fellows. - -I asked several times, “Where is my husband?” but they all raised their -hands and shoulders in vague denial of any knowledge of his existence. -I was beginning to be really alarmed when his welcome form loomed in -view astride a mule. I do not think we have ever quite understood how -he came to miss us in the confusion caused by the headlong arrival of -our rescuers. He had galloped after us along a road where we had not -been at all; but, not finding us, had come back, and had been guided by -the firelight. - -After a good warming at the fire we started for the sheikh’s house, -ten miles off, the children being carried by Arabs on horseback, and I -astride a mule on a “barda.” On our arrival we found couscous and sour -milk awaiting us, and--what was far better--some good mattresses spread -on the ground in a big, white-washed room. At ten next morning we left, -the kindly sheikh having lent us his wagonette. Peppino had gone back -with some Arabs to dig out and bring along Carriage Number Two. - -[Illustration: THE BARONESS DE BOERIO, WHO HERE DESCRIBES HER -ADVENTURES IN ALGERIA. - -[_From a Photograph._]] - -About half-way to Boghar we met the regimental brake coming spanking -along. The soldier driving told us that at eight o’clock an Arab had -come to him saying that he was to harness up at once and drive for -eight miles along the Teniet road, when he would find the Spahis’ -captain, who was stranded with his family at Sheikh ben Shinan’s. - -This experience of Arab telegraphy rather astonished us, for we were -still greenhorns in this respect. Since then nothing of the kind -surprises us; I have often learnt of distant happenings from the Arabs -long before our own civilized methods brought me the news. Arabs travel -a great deal by night, passing on the tidings from one to another--they -are terrible gossips--so that it is the case of the hare and the -tortoise. Their signalling is done by movements of the burnous by day -and fires by night. In each district certain heights are especially -used for this purpose. Whilst travelling by road on one occasion I -remember hearing a long hoot-like call, and on looking in the direction -of the sound I saw an Arab on a hill, evidently signalling with his -burnous, for he was making regular up-and-down and to-and-fro movements -with it. Half an hour after we saw another Arab with a huge flock -of sheep. In the evening, when we arrived at the place we meant to -camp at, we found ourselves expected by the sheikh, and a hospitable -couscous prepared. He bade us welcome, saying we were later than he had -thought. When we inquired how it was he expected us at all, he only -vouchsafed to say, with half-closed eyes, that he had known we were on -the road some hours before, and had supposed we would stop the night -there. Thereupon we remembered the white-robed Arab on the hill and the -shepherd far away, and began to understand. - - -(_To be concluded._) - - - - -[Illustration: “Shot-Gun Jim.”] - -BY EDWARD FRANKLIN CAMPBELL. - - It is safe to say that few commercial travellers meet with such - exciting experiences as befell the three “drummers” who figure - in this narrative. A business trip into the wilds of Arizona - landed them into as fierce a skirmish with Indian outlaws as - could well be imagined. - - -Take a young fellow just raw from city life, throw him into the wilds -of Arizona, and arrange for him to tumble head-first, so to speak, into -a brisk skirmish with Indians, and he will have something to remember. -Such was the experience which befell me about 1890. - -For some years I had been travelling through California, visiting the -largest cities and towns, introducing a “line” of goods for a large -San Francisco importing concern. Such had been my success that nothing -would suit my firm but to add Arizona to my territory, a proposition I -made no objection to. - -Of late years Arizona has vastly improved, and trouble with the Indians -has become almost unknown, especially since that notorious warrior, -Geronimo, was deported to the State of Florida, but up to the ‘nineties -there was still an occasional flare-up. - -Both Geronimo and the villainous “Apache Kid,” a bloodthirsty red-skin -brigand, figure in this story, the first indirectly and the second very -prominently. - -[Illustration: THE AUTHOR, MR. EDWARD FRANKLIN CAMPBELL. - -_From a Photograph._] - -Having reached the town of Wilson, in the southern part of the -territory, I fell in with two fellow-commercial salesmen--Levy, -representing a large dry-goods concern, and Bates, handling a line of -boots for a St. Louis house. - -Levy imparted the fact that he was going to visit a large mining camp, -called World City, located some hundred and sixty miles to the north -and as many miles distant from the railway. Bates said he would join -Levy provided I would make one of the party. - -Although my route did not include this side-trip, I became convinced -that it would pay me well to visit World City. By sharing expenses with -Levy and Bates, the trip could be made most reasonably, so I wired my -house accordingly, and Levy hastened to make arrangements with a local -celebrity, a Scotchman named McGill, for transportation. - -An agreement having been made with McGill, the balance of the day was -consumed in making preparations for our departure on the following -morning. There were blankets to buy, for one is never safe without -them. No matter how hot and burning the day may be, the nights are -always crisp and chill on the Arizona plains, and one never knows while -making such a trip when he will land at his destination. Nine chances -out of ten he will be hours late. Our journey was no exception to the -rule. - -On the following morning I was aroused by McGill. On the wagon, which -was a heavy four-wheel affair, he had loaded three shoe-sample trunks, -the property of Bates, and two immense square trunks carried by Levy. -Beside this there were sundry boxes and bundles of blankets, as well -as our heavy overcoats and small personal luggage. - -After a hasty breakfast of ham and eggs--I generally ordered ham and -eggs in Arizona because other meats were far from tender in those -days--we took our places on the wagon. Levy occupied the front seat -with McGill, while Bates and I sat on top of a huge trunk, slippery and -uncertain. - -Although the animals seemed good and hardy, they were small, and I do -not think we realized the great weight of the combined load. At the -wheels we had a pair of small and nimble mules, and as leaders a pair -of small bay horses, whose looks did not recommend them. - -The first day out all went well, and we reached the little town of -Bonita, a most desolate-looking place. We had travelled less than -thirty miles. - -We drove up to the door of a little adobe building with a thatched -roof. On the front a crude sign informed the public that it was -a “General Store.” Another placard indicated that it was also a -public-house, or “saloon,” as they are called in America. - -On entering we found ourselves in a small room with a rough counter -running down one side, behind which was the smiling face of the -proprietor, who lived with his wife and two beautiful daughters in the -one adjoining room--these two rooms constituting the entire building. - -We spent the night on the floor of the store, in front of the counter, -and next morning resumed our journey, hoping to reach the little group -of buildings known as Standard before night. In my own mind--and I -think the others believed the same--I did not really expect to reach -Standard that night, for it was nearly fifty miles distant and our -animals were far from fresh. - -I think it was about ten o’clock in the morning that we saw a cloud of -dust several miles ahead. In time it proved to be a company of negro -soldiers, marching to a neighbouring military post. - -As they came alongside we could see a number of rifles sticking out of -the canvas of the great covered wagons which accompanied them. They -halted, and an officer, whom McGill said was a colonel, came over. He -saluted us pleasantly and asked laughingly:-- - -“Are you not afraid to travel in this direction?” - -McGill inquired why, whereupon the officer explained that “Apache Kid” -was out with a small band of warriors, that Geronimo had disappeared -from the Indian Reservation, and that serious trouble was brewing. -The troops, he added, were being moved for the purpose of heading off -“Apache Kid” and his crowd. - -The smiling face of the colonel rather misled me. He did not seem -really serious, and, as I sized up the situation, I believed it quite -possible that he recognised our party as “tenderfeet,” and desired to -frighten us. - -After the soldiers had become a mere blur in the distance we resumed -our journey. We had gone but a few miles farther, however, when an -accident occurred to our wagon. Something gave way--I don’t remember -what--and it became impossible to proceed. Levy took a look at the -wagon and declared it was “no good, anyway”; Bates joined in the -abuse, and McGill lost his temper. Finally, I acted as peacemaker, and -suggested that something would have to be done as the afternoon was -advancing. Either we must return to Bonita on foot, abandoning the -wagon and contents, or McGill would have to take the team back and -secure another conveyance. - -The last alternative being accepted, we drew lots, and it fell to Levy -to return to Bonita with McGill, while Bates and I remained to look -after the property. - -McGill insisted that with the load off he would be able to haul the -wagon back to Bonita for repairs, so we set to work and, after a -struggle with the trunks, got the vehicle in shape to be drawn. - -It was with great misgivings that I saw my companions depart. It was -not to my liking to remain as a guardian of that mass of luggage. Bates -did not seem to mind it. He simply offered me his last cigar, then -lighted it himself and sat down on the bare ground. - -I think we could see in every direction for twenty miles and more, -except toward the mountains, which were to the east, some five miles -distant. - -“Well, Bates,” I said, “what are we going to do? It’s getting mighty -cold. The wind sweeps down from that mountain as if we might get a -little of the storm brewing up there.” - -“That’s no mistake, my boy, and if I am not in error we are going to -get snow inside of two hours. Most extraordinary for Arizona.” - -“Don’t you think we could arrange some shelter with these trunks and -roll of canvas?” - -“Just the thing, my boy. Glad you suggested it.” - -So we set to work and built our house, forming our walls by arranging -the trunks in a square, leaving a small opening to be used as a door. -On this we spread the great piece of canvas which had been brought -along to cover the wagon in case of storm, thus making a roof. That -it might not be carried away by the wind, which was now howling like -a hurricane, we weighted it with small boulders. With other rocks -we built a small fireplace and chimney, without and facing our door. -With the limited supply of wood, which was very scarce--sagebrush and -gnarled mesquite--we built a small fire in our fireplace, much to our -joy, for we were now actually blue with the cold. - -The sky was now thoroughly overcast with snow-clouds and the snow was -beginning to fall, settling in miniature drifts beneath the sage bushes. - -In removing the trunks from the wagon our labours had been heavy, and -we realized, as Bates expressed it, “we were twenty miles from nowhere, -and not a drop of water nearer than Bonita.” - -Bates rummaged through the kit for a drink of any kind, but was only -able to produce a diminutive flask with about one swallow of whisky in -it. After offering this to me he took it down with a cheering “Here’s -to you!” - -“Don’t throw away that flask, Bates,” I called to him as I saw him -taking aim at a near-by sage bush. “I may be able to collect a drink -with that.” - -I filled the little flask as full as I could pack it with snow which -I collected under the bushes, then held it carefully over the fire, -reducing the snow to water. This barely gave us enough to moisten our -lips, and I gave it up. - -Then we wrapped ourselves up in our blankets and reclined inside our -improvised house and discussed matters. - -“I say, Bates, what did you think of the colonel’s story about Apaches -being out?” I asked. - -“Can’t say. I know if I were an Apache and had a warm wigwam to -crawl into, the warpath could go to perdition. I’m sure I wouldn’t -bother with it this kind of weather. You won’t have the pleasure of -meeting Geronimo, ’Apache Kid,’ nor any other human--and, I might add, -inhuman--being till the weather lets up.” - -“What have you got for protection in case we do run across them?” I -asked. - -“Well, the only protection I have is a pair of boots made by the Sun -Shoe Company, which I represent. With these on, and a fair start, I -might outrun them. That’s all I’ve got for protection. What have you -got?” - -“Well,” I said, rather apologetically, “I have a revolver here, but it -isn’t much good. It might do to fire salutes with, but I’m afraid it -would not do much execution. The fact is, I’ve not fired the thing for -some years.” - -“Now, look here, my boy. If you should ever shoot me with that thing, -and I should find it out, I should be quite put out about it,” said -Bates, with a laugh. “We might as well quit worrying. If the wild and -woolly Apaches get us, it’s fate. They’ll get us, that’s all. I’m going -to sleep.” - -[Illustration: LOOKING OUT OF BRICK DUST CANYON. - -[_From a Photograph._]] - -Suiting the action to the word, he rolled over and left me to my dreary -thoughts. I tried to sleep and did drop into a light slumber, from -which I was suddenly awakened by a startled exclamation from Bates. - -As I opened my eyes he was just going through the doorway on all fours. - -“Bring that revolver here,” he called to me. - -As quickly as possible I was out after him. He was gazing towards the -mountains in the distance. - -“What has happened?” I asked, in some alarm at the sudden call to arms. - -He explained that something had come to the door of our house. He could -hear it, but only caught a slight glimpse of it as he raised his head, -for it dashed out of sight immediately. It was evidently an animal of -some sort, for we found the marks of its feet and claws in the soft -earth. Whatever it was we never caught sight of it. - -We were now thoroughly awake. The weather had cleared, the sun was -shining warmly and my spirits were beginning to rise. - -Far off, down the incline of the plain, we could see the spot known as -Bonita. Between us and the town all was open, save for some sage bushes -here and there dotting the view. - -Surely McGill should now be on his way back, but not a sign of him -could we see. - -We recalled the fact that we were hungry. Bates rummaged in the -kit. The net results were a small paper of biscuits and a tin of -beef--nothing else. - -We ate all the biscuits and half of the beef, collected more firewood, -and, at about six o’clock, discovered the team slowly wending its way -from Bonita. It was more than an hour before it arrived at our camp. - -Another serious matter now confronted us. Either we must stay with our -improvised camp or, as McGill suggested, make for Brick Dust Canyon, in -the mountain, where lived a frontiersman named James W. Smith, who had -a little farm situated on an oasis of productive earth in the midst of -this vast wilderness of alkali and sand. - -Eventually we decided upon the latter alternative, and succeeded in -loading up and making a start. - -For a long time we crept upward, no one riding except McGill, in order -to relieve the tired animals. - -Reaching the summit of the ascent at last, McGill stopped, for we had -now to descend into a deep canyon. - -Daylight had by this time given way to deepest night, and ahead all -looked black and forbidding. Our driver could not even see the road, -which was, moreover, obscured by a growth of trees in the canyon. - -“Gentlemen,” said McGill, “this rig has no brake to hold it. There is a -big down-grade here and a sharp turn at the bottom. From there to Jim’s -house is about a mile. We must manage to stop one of the hind wheels, -for these mules will never be able to hold the load in check; besides, -I can’t see the road, and must let the animals take their course.” - -We tied the right rear wheel with a stout bit of rope and started -again, but with this difference--Levy, Bates, and I each lighted -cigars, which Levy had brought from Bonita, and, puffing vigorously at -these, walked ahead of the load, endeavouring to pilot McGill by the -glow of the lighted “stogies.” - -There were times when the mules and the locked wheel were insufficient -to check the wagon to any great extent, on account of the steepness -of the grade, but at first all went well. It was not long before we -reached the sharp turn at the bottom. We were greatly in advance of -McGill now, and, indeed, we could hear nothing of him, so Levy went -back to investigate and to warn him of the danger ahead. He found -the wagon halted at a fairly level spot to recuperate the exhausted -animals. Levy told the Scotsman that he was about to plunge down the -last and most precipitous piece of road, and urged him to give it up. - -McGill was headstrong, however, and insisted upon going ahead, so we -took up our stand with our cigars, to mark the turn at the bottom, and -the big vehicle started. - -We could hear it gaining speed every moment. Mingled with the rumbling -of the wagon and the clatter of the animals’ hoofs we heard the shouts -of McGill, who had now lost all control over his team. - -On they came with a rush and a roar, and we, who were lighting the way, -discovered we were in some danger. At the last moment we sprang back -into the rocks and brush at the side as the team swept irresistibly on. - -The leaders took the turn all right, but the next instant there was a -crash and a yell from McGill. The wagon had left the road and plunged -into a tree, the harness gave way, and Bedlam broke loose. - -The Scotsman saved his skin by jumping fairly into a bush, while we -sprang to the animals’ heads to check them. They showed, however, no -disposition on their part to run away; they knew when they had had -enough. - -Away down in the distance we could see a light, which McGill said was -at Jim’s house. He would leave us with the animals and seek assistance -from the house, he told us. - -“I shall go across-lots,” he shouted back to us, “by a trail which will -save a lot of walking.” - -For hours Bates, Levy, and I awaited his return in vain. We exhausted -every topic of conversation we could think of, and at last, tired, -disgusted, and feeling thoroughly out of sorts, we set off down the -road, taking the animals with us. - -Although we could still see the light, we walked for a long time before -we actually arrived before a small adobe house, which was surrounded by -a thick wall some eight feet high. The road led us to a pair of huge -solid gates, which, being closed, prevented us seeing within. We called -out, and in a few seconds a voice answered us, and we were conscious of -someone approaching the gates with a lantern. - -This proved to be Jim Smith himself. He seemed to be in a very merry -mood, for, although we were total strangers, he almost laughed in our -faces. He had a story to tell, it soon appeared, of a misfortune which -had befallen our friend McGill. - -It seemed that in attempting to take his short cut “across-lots,” the -Scotsman had struck a cattle trail, which led to a watering-trough set -beside a newly-dug well, the existence of which he knew nothing of. - -By a curious accident, he walked straight into this well and plunged -into eight feet of water. - -It happened that Smith was at that moment bringing some young cattle -into his walled enclosure, and, hearing the muffled cries of McGill in -the well, believed they proceeded from a cow in difficulties. - -Lantern in hand, he made his way to the well and called out. Judge of -his surprise when he heard a voice, as from the tomb, growl:-- - -“I’ve lost my bloomin’ pipe!” - -Looking into the well, he discovered McGill clinging to the sides as -best he could with fingers and nails. It was but a moment’s work to -throw him a line and bring him out, as sorry and dejected-looking a -scarecrow as one could imagine. Strange to relate, it was all that Jim -could do to keep McGill from going back into the well for his cherished -briar, the loss of which seemed to worry him greatly. - -We found the Scotsman in a very bad temper, complaining bitterly of the -loss of his pipe, which he told us he was smoking at the time of his -misfortune. - -We received a hearty welcome from Jim and his wife. The latter was -busy soothing their ten-months-old baby to sleep. There they lived, in -that little one-room house, eating, sleeping, and cooking in the same -apartment. - -[Illustration: “SHOT-GUN JIM.” - -_From a Photograph._] - -I began to speculate as to where we tired travellers would find a place -to lay our heads. The house was a solid adobe, without windows. In the -doorway hung a frame, on which was fastened a strip of canvas in lieu -of a door. - -A hearty meal was prepared by Mrs. Smith, after which we were invited -to go out and bring in our beds. - -On our return we found that Mrs. Smith and the babe were already in -the huge bed in the corner. Jim was preparing to follow, and we were -invited to spread our blankets on the floor, which, like the Bonita -store, was mother earth. - -Our sleep was far more restful than on the previous night. At an -early hour we were awakened by Smith, who seemed to be worried about -something. I followed him to the door of the house and discovered that -he was holding a whispered conversation with a stranger, a young fellow -of about eighteen years. As soon as I approached they stopped speaking -and I was introduced to the young man, whose name was given as “Hank.” - -Suddenly Smith spoke:-- - -“We might as well tell ’em about it, Hank,” he said. “They’ve got to -know it sooner or later. Tain’t safe to get out of this place now. -Besides, your horse is used up.” - -I glanced in the direction indicated, and saw a horse covered in -lather, with drooping head and general dejected appearance. I knew he -must have had fearful riding to be in this condition. - -“Well, you tell ’em, Jim,” replied Hank. “I reckon we’re here, all of -us, to stay awhile.” - -“I can’t afford to remain, Mr. Smith,” I said, thinking that the -wrecked wagon might be the reason for the conversation. “If the outfit -will hold together I think we had better go on as soon as possible.” - -Smith looked at me with pitying eyes. - -“You may never leave this place at all,” he returned, gravely. “This -young man is the only survivor of a massacre, about ten miles from -here. ‘Apache Kid’ and his band are, perhaps, at this very moment close -to our gates.” - -Instinctively I glanced at the gates, and noticed for the first time -that heavy timbers were propped against them. - -“Not only that, but McGill has disappeared,” continued Smith. “I think -he may have gone in search of his pipe. We dare not risk going outside -the enclosure, and he must get back as best he can.” - -Just then the others of our party and Mrs. Smith, with the babe in her -arms, joined us, having begun to realize that something was amiss. - -Then Jim began to organize his forces. First he took an inventory of -the available arms and ammunition, calling on our party to exhibit such -weapons as we had about us. - -Next Jim brought out a number of guns. There were three excellent -repeating rifles, with several hundred rounds of ammunition, and an -old shot-gun, which proved of no value. Next came Jim’s own pet--a -beautiful double-barrelled shot-gun. With these were several boxes -of ammunition. Last came a motley array of “six-shooters,” a part of -which were serviceable and for which there was a limited amount of -ammunition. Two hand-axes and a small affair for chopping firewood were -counted as weapons for close quarters. - -The whole lot was delivered into the care of Mrs. Smith, who was -instructed to load the guns and arrange the ammunition conveniently on -a table brought from the house. - -At odd moments the good woman was assembling quantities of food, so -that, in case of an attack, prolonged or otherwise, we might have her -services at the ammunition. - -Meanwhile Hank had been sent to the top of the house, which had a -low, flat roof, where he was keeping close watch with a pair of -field-glasses. He called to Jim that he believed he had discovered -McGill in the topmost branches of a tree, a long distance up the -canyon. It appeared that he was making signals, for we soon discovered -that he occasionally waved a white handkerchief, and he appeared to be -trying to draw our attention to something to the south. - -Presently Hank reported that McGill was climbing down the tree, and in -a moment he was running down the road towards the house as fast as his -long legs would carry him. Jim prepared to open one of the gates. - -Just then a shot rang out, followed by others. We could hear McGill -coming full tilt. Jim opened the gate a little way and reported that a -band of Indians were in close pursuit of the Scotsman. - -A moment later, breathless and exhausted, McGill flung himself through -the open gate, which was speedily secured behind him. - -As quickly as possible Jim ran a rough wagon out of a shed and placed -it alongside of the wall. It was evident now why this latter had been -built high and strong; the reason for placing the wagon beside it, -however, was not yet evident to us. - -Soon we heard the rush of a score of Indian horses, the whoops and -yells of their savage riders, and the crack of their rifles. - -Their shots did no damage, however, but were sufficiently accurate to -cause Hank to dodge behind the stone chimney, whence he dropped over -the edge to the ground. - -There was a savage onslaught upon the immense heavy gates, but they -held firm, being well braced by the timbers. So far not a sound had -escaped us, and it was evident that the Indians were chagrined that -they had not made a greater impression. - -For a few moments we could hear them in consultation before the gates, -and presently a voice called out in broken English. - -To this no reply was made, nor was any evidence of life vouchsafed from -our side. - -“Now, boys,” whispered Jim, “get ready. They’re going to show their -heads in a minute--just over there, near the wagon. That is the easiest -place for them to look over, and I have tried to make it look more -inviting. So look alive and each pick his game. Don’t miss, or there’ll -be trouble.” - -Next moment five ugly Apache heads bobbed up over the wall -simultaneously. They were evidently so sure that the place was -unprotected that four of them, in their enthusiasm, clambered half-way -on top of the wall before they became aware of the reception that had -been planned for them. - -The volley that followed their appearance was almost like one shot, -and the four most daring red-skins received the bullets intended for -them. Two were killed instantly, and partly hung over the wall as they -doubled up; two others, mortally wounded, slid off the wall and were -dragged away by their companions. The less venturesome got away with a -whole skin. - -With our volley pandemonium seemed to break loose; the red-skins let -out a yell that fairly chilled us to the bone. Jim called us to seek -shelter at the rear of the house. - -We were none too soon, for a terrific fire was poured into the -enclosure by the Indians, who were taking haphazard shots towards us, -without putting their heads into jeopardy. - -[Illustration: “THE VOLLEY FOLLOWING THEIR APPEARANCE WAS ALMOST LIKE -ONE SHOT.”] - -Presently we discovered that one lot of the savages were trying to -burrow under the gates, and were indeed making some headway. Jim seemed -to be everywhere at once, using his shot-gun as his sole means of -defence. The moment a hand was seen in the growing excavation under -the gate he let drive with his shot-gun, and another Indian was out of -commission. - -I remember I kept a sort of mental tally of the fallen. Hank had told -me that there were about twenty-three in the band, so I calculated: -“Four dead on the first attack on the wall; one shot through the hand, -under the gate. Balance to their credit--eighteen.” - -Just then we received an unexpected shock. We saw a curl of smoke -rising above the gates; the savages were piling brush against them, to -which they had already set fire. This was a serious matter, which even -Jim had not calculated upon. He ordered us to lie low while he took a -look round. - -I was so interested to know what he would do that I could not resist -the temptation to put my head around the corner of the house, and this -is what I saw. - -Jim crept on hands and knees towards the wagon which we had placed -against the wall. In a moment he had reached it, shot-gun in hand, and -silently and slowly raised himself into it, gradually straightening out -with his head and arms just above the wall. Then, quick as a flash, he -took aim. There was a crash--or rather a double crash, for he had fired -both barrels--an awful yell from the Indians, and he was speeding back -to safety. - -[Illustration: “I FELT MYSELF BEING DRAGGED OVER.”] - -One savage, braver than the rest, took a quick shot at him. The bullet -did no harm to Jim, but came near being fatal to me, for I had been -so intent on watching him that I now found that I had unconsciously -stepped into the open. - -Instead of bolting for shelter, I had but one thing in mind--to check -up the account and see how many “good” Indians there were and how many -bad ones. - -Consequently, in a moment--foolhardy as it may seem--I was on the -wagon, peering over the wall, taking account of the dead and wounded at -the gates. - -Although Jim’s shot-gun had done fearful execution, there were but two -who appeared to be actually dead. - -Just then something struck me in the face, a hand grasped me from -over the wall, and I felt myself being dragged over, into the arms of -the “Apache Kid” himself! Several other savages were running to his -assistance. All that I can recall is that I thought my last hour had -come, and struck out blindly with my fists, clinging, as best I could, -to the wall with my legs. - -I am not an experienced boxer, but I had the advantage over my -assailant, for I was uppermost. - -Things seemed to be going badly with me, however, for I felt my hold on -the wall gradually weakening. - -Just at that instant I heard a rush behind me. I was so done up that I -could only think of more Indians, but in reality it was Levy, Hank, and -Jim coming to the rescue. - -I was grasped from behind and felt that I should be pulled to pieces. -I let out with my fists with renewed vigour, and landed such a fierce -tattoo on the face of my captor that he involuntarily sought to protect -his face with his hands, whereupon Levy, Hank, Jim, and I fell into a -confused heap over the side of the wagon. - -It was a few minutes before they restored me to my senses, and I found -myself with clothing half torn off, covered with dust, and generally -bruised. - -My first words were:-- - -“Two killed, three wounded badly; net balance thirteen. That number is -unlucky. We’ll win!” - -“What in the name of common sense are you talking about?” asked Bates, -who was bending over me. - -“Well, there were twenty-three Indians when we started; we killed four -at first shot, three at the second, and two at the third, besides -wounding three beyond present help. That leaves thirteen, doesn’t it?” - -We were recalled to a sense of our peril by the sound of breaking -timbers. The gates were being forced! - -Through the chinks we could see the Indians working industriously with -a battering-ram, improvised from the trunk of a tree. At any moment the -gates might fall, and we knew there would be little hope for us once -the red-skins gained an entrance. - -Jim now sent his wife inside the house for better protection. The -little babe had, up to this time, been peacefully sleeping on the -bed, which must now be used to barricade the door of the house. -Consequently, the little fellow was disturbed as his mother moved the -huge affair against the opening, and he, too, added to the din of the -engagement. - -“Now, gentlemen,” said Jim, “we’ve got to make a last stand. The gates -will be down in a minute; they have been greatly weakened by the fire. -Every one of you to the roof!” - -Up to the roof we climbed as a last resort. I think we all realized the -gravity of the situation. - -We stretched ourselves flat, weapons in hand, and waited. It seemed -ages. We could hear the cries of the infant mingled with the sobs of -the distracted mother. Bates, who had an abominable voice, tried to -sing a hymn. Smith told him to be quiet--the situation was trying -enough without his music. - -Presently there came a crash--the gates were down. In rushed the -red-skins, a fearless crowd. There were just thirteen; I counted them. - -“Now, gentlemen, let ’em have it,” called Jim, in a low tone. - -Well, we did let them have it; there was no mistake about that. There -was a blaze from the rifles, Jim’s shot-gun, and the revolvers, and we -all pumped lead as fast as we could. - -When the smoke cleared a little we looked below. There were eight -red-skins as dead as ever they could be. Three more were crawling away -on all fours, seriously wounded. - -This left two on my record unaccounted for. We soon spied them making -off over the little hills towards Brick Dust Canyon as fast as their -legs could carry them. - -One of them was “Apache Kid,” the leader. He got off with a whole skin, -but I’ll wager that he had some marks about his face. - -When we got down from the roof we could no longer hear Mrs. Smith or -the babe, and feared they had been killed by stray bullets. Repeated -calls failed to bring response. - -When we forced an entrance we found her in a dead faint, lying on the -bed beside the infant, who was chewing his fist and chuckling as if in -great glee. - -Woman-like, Mrs. Smith deferred her swoon till all danger was past. - -To the delight of McGill, his miserable briar was recovered that day by -Jim, who said he did not want the well spoiled, otherwise he would have -left it there. - -“Shot-gun Jim”--for that is how he is always known now, on account of -his fearful execution with his shot-gun, for it was he who really saved -the day--has never been troubled by Apaches since. He still insists -on living in that forsaken spot, forgetful of the terrible scenes of -carnage and danger he has passed through, working at a copper mine -which he discovered up beyond Brick Dust Canyon. - - - - -[Illustration: A Perilous Mission.] - -BY S. F. MARTIN, LATE OF THE ROYAL NIGER COMPANY’S SERVICE. - - The modestly-told story of a daring deed. At a time of - great anxiety, when England and France were on the verge of - conflict in Africa and the powerful Mohammedan native States - were watching for an opportunity of throwing off the yoke of - both countries, Mr. Martin was District Agent of the Royal - Niger Company at Borgu. He was instructed to secure reliable - information as to what was happening in the turbulent robber - kingdom of Kontogora, and he obtained it by the hazardous - expedient of disguising himself as a Haussa and, taking his - life in his hands, penetrating right into the enemy’s capital. - His adventures during this journey are set forth below, though - the narrative contains barely a hint of the strain of the - ordeal or the awful fate that would have befallen the author - had his real identity been suspected. - - -Towards the latter end of 1898, before the conquest of Nigeria, I was -placed in charge of the interests of the Royal Niger Company, Chartered -and Limited, in the Borgu district of the Niger Territories. My -instructions, amongst other things, were to watch events, political and -otherwise, and to report the same to head-quarters. - -It was a time of great stress and no little peril to our West African -Empire, for not only were the various races of the Territories in a -state of unrest and hostility to the white man’s domination, but at -that period we were also at loggerheads with the French, whose troops -were encroaching on our frontiers from all sides, necessitating a -special field force being formed, under Colonel (later General Sir -Frederick) Lugard, to deal with the situation. The native Mohammedan -States, seeing this, thought to take advantage of the crisis to the -detriment of both nations. - -The most turbulent of all these native States was Kontogora, a town -lying to the eastward of the Niger River. At the time of which I write -there were British troops at Jebba, Leabba, Boussa, Roffia, Gomba, -Lafagon, and Illa, as well as smaller garrisons scattered about, all on -the Niger. There was a strong force also at Zaria, a large town away to -the east, some distance south of Kano. The French were prowling about -in between. - -It being reported that Kontogora was preparing to take up arms, I -determined to find out the facts of the case for myself, as, if this -State seriously intended causing trouble and gained any successes -against us, the whole Mohammedan Empire was sure to rise to a man, -and it would be difficult for us to hold our own, to say nothing of -expelling the French. My orders were to remain in Boussa, but, having -weighed the pros and cons very carefully, and decided that it would be -well within the spirit, if not exactly the letter, of my instructions -to take the action I intended, I determined to find out in person how -far this rumour was true and how great the danger really was to our -Imperial interests. I had mastered the Haussa tongue, the prevailing -language of those regions, and could hold my own easily with the -Haussas themselves, my natural aptitude for picking up tongues standing -me in good stead. Consequently, without informing anyone where I was -going, beyond leaving word that I was off on a shooting trip, on the -night of the 17th of November, 1898, I dyed myself from head to foot -a deep brown, arrayed myself in very shabby Haussa clothes, and set -off, with my guide, Mama, for Kontogora. I took the name of “Abdu -Maidowda”--Abdu the dirty. All carriers in Haussaland take nicknames, -given them by their masters or companions. It is seldom that a white -man ever knows the real names of his servants. - -We tramped all that night, and next morning stopped at a small village -in the midst of farmlands in the N’gaski Kingdom. The whole country -hereabouts was bitterly hostile to the white man’s _régime_. The state -of unrest was manifest everywhere; people went armed to their work in -the fields, as raids from neighbouring towns seemed to be of frequent -occurrence. Although the various native kingdoms were quite at one with -regard to their hatred of the white man, yet amongst themselves they -were always warring and raiding for slaves--the big towns bullying the -smaller villages. The main cause of this was the heavy slave tribute -levied by the Sultan of Sokoto--the great head of the Moslem Church in -the Sudan--on all his vassal States. - -Having rested for a few hours, we set out again about midday. It -was fiercely hot as we trudged through the guinea-corn fields that -stretched for miles all around us, and the heat, striking down from -the fiery sun, that hung directly overhead, made me dizzy. I staggered -along at times in a kind of hot, sweltering day-dream--seeing things -that did not exist, and thinking the most absurd thoughts. Once I -called a halt at a well of very dirty water, flung myself down on my -hands and knees, and bathed my head and neck for several minutes, Mama -looking on amused. The people in the fields were gathering in the corn -in feverish haste, but every now and then they paused long enough to -question us as to our destination and whence we came. We invariably -told the same tale--we were travelling to Kontogora from Illorin. - -[Illustration: THE AUTHOR, MR. S. F. MARTIN, IN HAUSSA DRESS. - -_From a Photograph._] - -It must have been about 4 p.m., judging by the sun, when, on that -second day out, we topped a rise of rocky ground and came face to -face with the head of a caravan of some thirty people, with a large -number of goats, coming from the westward. There were several women -on donkeys, ten armed men on horseback, and the balance consisted of -carriers. As we stood watching them the caravan halted and one of the -horsemen came prancing up to us with a great flourishing of his spear. -He asked us, very roughly, whence we came and whither we were bound. -Mama answered that we were from Illorin, whither we had taken loads for -a rich merchant from Kano, and were now bound for Kontogora, where we -hoped to obtain work, as we understood that the Emir was preparing for -war on the white man. He then asked our questioner if we might not join -his caravan, and if he would let us carry a load each in return for our -food. At this we were taken before the head of the party, who proved -to be an enormously fat woman. With a wave of the hand she gave her -consent, and we were forthwith enlisted in the line of coolies. - -We pushed on that afternoon to some farmhouses, where we halted for -the night. The fat lady took up her abode in the headman’s hut, and -we carriers wandered about to find quarters for ourselves. For the -most part we slept in the open, beneath a great tree growing outside -the entrance to the headman’s compound. Mama and I had no intention -of losing sight of our companions, as we did not wish to let slip -this excellent chance of getting in to Kontogora, which was also the -destination of the caravan, without danger of possible discovery. -The farm people were good enough to give us food and drink, and also -supplied us with plenty of firewood. - -After sitting around the fire for a short time, we coolies one by one -curled up on our mats (each carried a small grass mat) and, with our -feet to the fire, slept the dreamless sleep of the utterly weary. - -Next morning I was awakened by Mama shaking me by the shoulder. My -clothes were wet with dew, and I commenced to shiver with cold, cursing -myself in my sleepy condition for being so foolish as to put myself in -such a perilous predicament. - -As I arose and stretched myself I beheld silent forms passing to -and fro, and signs that the world was awakening became increasingly -evident. Then fires were lit and breakfast cooked; but not before we -had washed our eyes, mouth, and hands, uttering a few words from the -Koran the while. After partaking of boiled guinea-corn and soup, we -espied the fat lady preparing to mount her donkey, and, securing our -loads, took our place in the column that began to form up. Soon we were -once again trudging through the open country on our way to Kontogora. - -[Illustration: “ONE OF THE HORSEMEN CAME PRANCING UP TO US WITH A GREAT -FLOURISHING OF HIS SPEAR.”] - -All along the route I was struck with the apparent haste with which -the people were gathering in the corn. Our companions told us that the -Seriki (King) of Kontogora was preparing to wage war on the white man, -and had ordered his people to get in all their corn at once. - -The day before we entered Kontogora we were overtaken by a raiding -party, who were returning to that place with their spoil--about twenty -young girls and women, as well as several little children--all tied -together, each having one wrist made fast to the neck, across the chest. - -Their captors were Fulehs and Haussas, on horseback, armed with swords -and spears, and one or two with guns. Some of the poor captives looked -terribly emaciated, and could hardly get along. I saw one woman get a -slash of a hippo hide whip across the face, that sent her reeling to -the ground, with a great gash on her forehead. The incident stopped -the whole column for a few minutes, as the woman was fastened to her -fellow-prisoners by the neck, and, when she fell, prevented them from -advancing. The whip was then applied freely in all directions. The -chief of the band ordered the wounded woman’s squirming comrades to -pick her up and carry her, but they were unable to do so, being too -utterly worn out, I could see. They were coated in dust from head -to foot, and the perspiration trickling down their naked skins and -mingling with the dust made the poor things appear a sorry sight. The -band had, apparently, captured them at some far-distant spot, and must -have brought them along at a great pace, judging by the rate they were -going when they overtook us. - -Furious at their inability to pick the woman up, the ruffian in command -raised his spear and plunged it three times into the body of the -prostrate woman. He followed this up by actually trampling her under -his horse’s feet, while I groaned in an agony of horror and impotent -rage at the ghastly spectacle. - -The brute, having satisfied himself that his victim was dead, cut the -grass rope that bound her to her fellows with a slash of his sword, -and ordered the party to proceed. They left us at a quick walk--some -of the poor captives even running in their terror--and were soon out -of sight over a rise in the ground. Our party followed at a slower -pace in dead silence, leaving the poor mangled thing by the roadside -to provide a meal for the vultures and hyenas that would soon be on -the scene. I for one, however, realized then that no wild beast of the -desert could compare for utter brutality and lust for blood with the -human satyrs who overran that land at the time of which I write. For -miles around, between Kontogora and the Niger, and farther afield to -the north, south, and east, the smoking ruins of raided villages told -the ever-repeated tale of death and violence, robbery and rapine, and -I knew full well what would happen to me should my disguise, by any -mischance, be penetrated. - -About five miles outside Kontogora our caravan was stopped by some -horsemen who came galloping towards us and drew up across our path. -They had a long parley with our chiefs before allowing us to proceed, -and only did so on payment of a toll. These men were scouts, and I -found out later that the whole country for five miles around the city -was effectually patrolled, no one being allowed to enter or leave -without permission. When we finally arrived outside the walls of -Kontogora it was night, and in the moonlight the scene was beautiful -and striking. The high castellated ramparts, with watch-towers over the -gates, looked strange and fantastic in the soft, mysterious light. - -As we approached the gate we mingled with the members of another -caravan. Mama and I were at the tail of the line, about five or six -from the end. We chose this position to minimize the possibility of -trouble, although there really seemed little chance of that in such a -deceptive light. Still, there was just the chance, as we soon found out -when the head of the caravan reached the gate. Here it was abruptly -ordered to halt, and the guards held quite a long palaver before it -was allowed to proceed. At the same time a little incident occurred -that made my blood run cold for a few minutes. There was a cry of -“Abokai! Abokai! Kai!” (“Friends! Friends! Halloa, there!”) from the -gate, and the whole column was soon calling “Aboki! Aboki!” (“Friend! -Friend!”)--the Haussa manner of hailing anybody. They were shouting, -it soon appeared, for myself and Mama, and we were speedily hustled -forward by our companions. When we reached the gate our employer, -the fat lady merchant who had engaged us, indicated us to the guards -with a haughty wave of the hand. We could see a crowd of mounted and -unmounted men in the darkness of the gateway, and one among these, who -seemed gigantic in the moonlight as he rode forward on a horse equally -gigantic, curveted up to us. Striking my turban from off my head with -the tip of his spear, he loudly asked for our names. I answered that we -were two poor travellers from Illorin, come to offer our services to -the Emir. He asked us where our belongings were and the money that our -master had paid us at Illorin. I told him that the white man had met -us on the road and taken everything, as we were friends of Kontogora. -At this the captain of the gate gave vent to some extremely sulphurous -language. Then, with a slight movement of the reins, he caused his -horse to rear up on his hind legs and, with pawing fore-feet, to burst -furiously through the crowd of coolies round about us, trampling one -or two badly. Finally, the caravan was allowed to move on under the -gate into the town. As we entered, the _mallams_ (priests) were calling -to prayer, and the long-drawn cry, like an appeal for mercy, floated -through the night, striking on the air with that strange, indefinable -sense of mysticism that belongs to the East alone. - -We wound in and out, out and in, through the moonlit streets with their -black shadows, their mud walls, and conical, thatch-roofed houses. Then -we emerged into the market-place, near which our employer resided. -Entering her compound, we put down our loads, and, seating ourselves, -awaited our wages. Mama and I were the first to be paid. We were handed -one string apiece of cowrie shells--equivalent to one shilling each, -at that time and place. We haggled over this like true-born carriers -for fully half an hour, and, as the fat lady’s head slave refused to -budge, accepted what we got with a blessing--and promptly received -another five hundred cowries for our good nature. The Haussa will often -do this, for, as much as he fears a curse, by so much does he value -a blessing. A great many rogues take advantage of this trait in the -native character. - -Having been paid off, Mama and I left the compound rejoicing. Here we -were, in the very heart of Kontogora--scatheless! We wandered into the -market-place, where some people were still loitering, and decided to -sleep in one of the stalls and begin our investigations in the morning. - -It was many hours before I got to sleep, as my feet ached fearfully and -were badly torn and blistered. During the march I had alternately gone -barefoot and in sandals to rest them, and at times I got badly knocked -about when carrying the leathers in my hand. Several times during the -night bands of young Haussas passed through the market-place, shouting -and laughing, boasting what they were going to do to the Turawa (white -man). - -Four batches of labourers passed through also, between the time we -retired and dawn, dragging dead horses out of the town. Tom-toms -were going all the night; at times the whole air quivered with the -rhythmical sounds. The quaint tinkling of the Haussa guitar rose -and fell at intervals, and from time to time the weird notes of the -“ghoghie,” or native fiddle, could be heard from the compounds. A -spirit of excitement and revel seemed to pervade the whole town. - -Next morning we loitered about until the market began to fill, when we -bought some food. We then repaired to the Galadima’s residence, and -enlisted in the army of labourers that were employed in repairing the -walls of the town. Many of these labourers were slaves, sent by the -various chiefs and big men; others belonged to the Emir himself. About -four hundred of us were dispatched to the north wall. Here some made -bricks out of the soft clay; others, including myself, stood on the -wall and laid them, and yet others passed those already dried up to us -on the wall. - -While working in this way I gathered a lot of information. Raiding -parties had been out all the week, I learned, and spies and runners -from Zaria brought in news every day concerning the movements of the -white men in that city. Bands of armed men were continually bringing -in slaves from the ruined villages in the surrounding country. It was -said that N’gaski and Kontogora would join forces, attack the whites in -Zaria, and drive them out. Dandugnsu and Ridjion, neighbouring towns, -had promised their support in the campaign. I also learnt that orders -had come in from the Sultan of Sokoto that the Emir was not to commence -a war against the white man, but to remain on the defensive. The Emir -of Kontogora had replied that he was quite prepared to meet all comers, -from whatever direction--a pretty broad hint to Sokoto, I thought. -One fellow laying bricks told Mama that the man who killed Lieutenant -Thomson at Bida, in the late Niger Sudan campaign undertaken by the -Chartered Company against the Fulehs of Bida and Illorin, was now in -the town and was considered a very great hero. - -About midday an order came for some twenty men to repair to the Emir’s -compound. I was chosen as one of the gang, together with Mama. So -off we marched. When we arrived we found that a horse and a cow had -died, and were to be dragged out of the town and thrown into the moat -under the walls. Tying up the hind legs with grass rope, we hauled the -carcasses through the streets and out by one of the gates and dumped -them into the ditch. Having finished our unpleasant task, we trudged -back to the north wall and recommenced laying bricks. - -One swaggering youngster had annoyed me very much all the morning. He -was an overseer amongst the men, and apparently one of the wealthy -young bloods of the town. Shortly after my return from removing the -dead horse this youth strutted up to me and started cursing me roundly -in Haussa, saying that I was more like a woman than a man and that -my work was no good. Finally, raising his hand, he struck me in the -mouth. Forgetting myself completely for the moment, I stepped up to the -fellow, who promptly drew his sword. Without any trouble I disarmed -him; then, catching him by the neck, I shook him like a rat and dropped -him into the ditch on the far side of the wall. - -For a moment there was dead silence; next a chorus of applause and -laughter broke out. But Mama plucked me by the sleeve. “Go,” he said, -in a low tone; “I will meet you to-night, an hour after sundown, at the -place we slept in last night.” - -[Illustration: “I SHOOK HIM LIKE A RAT AND DROPPED HIM INTO THE DITCH.”] - -Divining my danger, I slipped away and mingled with the crowd, nobody -venturing to interfere. I passed down some side streets that zigzagged -about confusingly, wandered in the outskirts of the town for an hour or -more, and then made my way to the market-place, which I found swarming -with people. - -Buying some boiled guinea-corn, I sat down outside a stall and munched -my lunch. The woman who sold me the food was a garrulous old person, -but perfectly good-natured. She asked me all about myself, and I -told her that I had come from Zaria, where I had fled through fear -of the white men. She informed me that I had nothing to fear from -them; were it not for their guns they would be quite harmless. Then -I asked her when it was that Kontogora intended setting out to drive -the Turawa from Zaria. “Go round the blacksmiths’ shops and inquire at -the smithies,” was all the answer I could get. I thought the idea a -good one, and, bidding my new friend “Good day,” I sauntered through -the crowded market-place, stopping at various booths. In one of these -some blacksmiths were hard at work, making arrow and spear heads from -bits of iron and tin. As I stood looking at them I gathered, from -the conversation that was going on around, that some of the Emir’s -sons were expected to arrive in Kontogora that day, and that they were -bringing some of the white men’s guns with them that were taken at -Hella, when Lieutenant Keating’s party was massacred. Here was a bit -of news worth having! The conversation turning on matters that did not -interest me, I strolled on until I arrived at the head blacksmith’s -shop, near the Emir’s compound, where I watched the hammers pounding -the red-hot metal. I could see that the whole town was busy making -arms, which boded ill for the whites. - -Suddenly I heard a shout of “Gashi! Gashi!” (“There he is! There -he is!”). Then there was a rush of feet, and a flash of swords in -upraised arms. Evidently my pursuers had found me out. I backed -into the blacksmith’s shop, followed by a yelling crowd, and caught -a momentary glimpse of my tormentor of the morning. Then, without -warning, something was thrown over my head, and I was dragged violently -backwards, flung to the ground, and stunned by a succession of heavy -blows. - -When I came to my senses I found myself being hauled unceremoniously to -my feet, my arms bound firmly. In this ignominious state I was dragged -amid curses and cuffs through the town, a yelling crowd of bloodthirsty -ruffians surrounding me. They hauled me through a doorway into a -compound surrounded with high walls, on into a big building, through -many rooms and passages, and ultimately down some rough steps into -a filthy, stinking dungeon, reeking of mould and damp. Here, with a -violent push, I was flung headlong to the bottom, where I lay helpless -in absolute darkness. - -The air was damp and chill, and the place was infested with all manner -of loathsome crawling things; I could hear them tick-ticking and -scuffling along the floor and walls. Shortly after my entry some filthy -thing touched my fingers, and I shook it off with a yell. It was a -dread place, and drove all hope of saving my life clean out of me. - -How long I lay there I do not know; it was long enough, at any rate, -for a sharp attack of fever to seize me and run its course. It racked -my bones; I tossed and turned on the slimy floor, groaning aloud -in my discomfort. The hot fever-blood throbbed in my head; my eyes -and face burned, and my body became parched and dry. I moaned for -water--oh, for one drop of cool water! At one time I thought I saw -the door open and Mama enter and loose my bonds, but it was only a -vision of my disordered brain. Finally I sank into unconsciousness. I -awoke--drenched in a profuse perspiration--with men’s voices sounding -round about me. A figure was standing over me holding a lamp--an -earthenware, ewer-shaped vessel with a cotton dip--which gave a -wavering yellow radiance and cast grim dancing shadows on the walls. I -could see that the door was ajar, and a pale light was stealing into -the horrible place from outside. Roughly I was dragged to my feet. I -staggered a bit, but soon steadied myself, and--pushed, cursed, and -beaten--I accompanied my captors up the steps and out into the light of -day again, or, rather, of evening. One glorious breath of the upper air -repaid me for all that I had suffered in that black hole of Kontogora. -I did not care now if they were leading me out to kill me; I was not -going to die like a rat in that horrible pit. - -As we emerged from the compound we were joined by a chattering, -mocking, hostile crowd of men, women, and children. Every now and then -one of the latter would strike me with a stick, my guards making no -effort to protect me. At last we entered the Emir’s compound and I was -taken into his presence. He was seated on a dais covered with mats and -a leopard skin, and was talking in a low monotone to some men lying -round about him on the floor of the chamber. - -The young blood that I had flung over the wall, and who was the cause -of all my troubles, stepped out and told the King what I had done, -asking leave to kill me then and there. Next, to my astonishment, Mama -stepped out of the crowd and told the Emir plainly that he and I had -come all the way from Illorin to serve him, and had intended craving -his permission that morning had not my tormentor interfered and sought -a quarrel with me, in which he had got thrown over the wall for his -pains. Subsequently, through treachery, continued my faithful guide, -my enemy had had me taken and flung into prison without the Emir’s -knowledge. - -The Emir, who seemed a decent sort of old man, listened patiently -to his two petitioners. Then, advising my enemy to calm himself, he -told one of his retainers to question me. I thanked Heaven that the -simpleness of my disguise and my grip of the Haussa tongue precluded -any very great possibility of detection. The Emir, before my questioner -started, informed the assembled crowd that, were I proved to be a rebel -and a traitor, he would hand me over to my enemy to do what he wished -with. - -My inquisitor was a type of the grovelling bully. He tried to put -one or two posers to me, but got more than he expected in return; -and I actually got a smile out of the Emir, which elicited the loud -and flattering applause of the retainers, when I suggested that my -questioner was behaving very like a traitor himself in trying to cast -a slur on the character of one of the Emir’s most faithful subjects. -I told that monarch that I had come all the way from Illorin to serve -him, and this was the way I was being treated--dragged, beaten and -bleeding, before him from a dungeon, and bound like a common slave. -Suddenly the Emir asked me how many white men there were in Borgu; -I told him about one hundred thousand, and more to come. He seemed -greatly impressed, as well he might be. I then craved permission to -enter his service, and he inquired if I could ride. I told him to try -me. This he agreed to do. If I could ride and prove myself worthy of -entering his service he said he would pardon my imprudence of yesterday -and make me a member of his bodyguard. - -My bonds were cut, and as these fell from me the pain of the blood -returning to my swollen, half-numbed hands was excruciating. I managed, -however, to keep a brave face. We retired from the Emir’s presence -and waited outside under a great shady tree, where, eventually, a -fiercely-pawing stallion was brought up, and I was ordered to mount. -This I did, the brute biting, kicking, and plunging all the time. I -had to get into one of those horrible native saddles that box you -up completely, fore and aft. Once mounted, I let the horse do as he -pleased, and he led me a terrible dance, rearing and plunging about, -dashing first to one side and then another. As he was in the midst -of his attempts to buck me off, the Emir appeared and stood watching -the tussle with interest. As a matter of fact, the horse had not much -chance when once I was on his back, for I had had a great deal of -experience of the Haussa beast, and knew his ways. He soon grew tired, -and within half an hour was quite submissive. I used no stick, but just -sat quietly in the saddle. To my surprise and delight the Emir told -me that the horse was mine, and that I was to come to see him on the -morrow, about noon. I thanked him gratefully and rode off, Mama walking -by my stirrup. - -After a consultation we agreed that it would be dangerous to remain -in the town any longer, as our enemies were bound to try to get the -better of us, sooner or later. We therefore arranged that Mama should -leave the town at once, and make for Boussa as best he could, on foot; -I would leave that night. We then parted, and I was left alone in the -midst of the enemy. - -At sundown I rode through the south gate, but was immediately stopped -by the guard. I told them that I came by order of the Emir, but they -demanded proof. This was distinctly awkward, for, of course, I had no -proof to give. I therefore resolved upon a bold stroke. I requested -the chief to ride with me, telling him I would give him in confidence -all the proof he would require. Unsuspectingly he rode up alongside. -Leaning over towards him, I suddenly gripped him by the throat with -both hands, at the same time ramming my heels into my horse’s sides. -The startled animal leapt forward, wrenching my opponent from the -saddle with a jerk, and I swung him across my horse’s withers, where I -held him--my right hand on his throat, my left gripping his left knee, -bending him backwards like a bow. In this fashion we flew along the -path by which two days before I had entered the robber city on foot. - -A howl of execration and a clatter of hoofs followed us, and a shower -of arrows and spears fell harmlessly on either side of me. When we had -gone about a quarter of a mile I slid my hapless prisoner off on to his -head, intending to stun him. My horse, feeling the relief, went away at -renewed speed, and I had no difficulty in outdistancing my pursuers, -especially as they stopped to see to their unconscious chief. I met one -party of traders coming into the town, but they stood aside to let me -thunder past, not doubting that I was an emissary of the Emir on some -urgent business. The moon was just rising as I topped a low ridge, and -all the world was soon bathed in a soft and silvery veil of light. -Kontogora was far behind in the plain, the thousand conical roofs away -in the distance looking strangely unreal. - -As I drew near the five mile radius I began to wonder how I was going -to get through the line of scouts. Capture now would mean death in -some horrible form or other; at all costs I must not be taken alive. -Suddenly I heard a shout far away on my right, and in the dim light -saw a body of horsemen coming my way. Touching my mount with my -heels I again gave him his head, and he flew like the wind, with -ever-increasing speed. The pace was terrific and absolutely foolhardy -in that light, although the road was fairly good. I expected every -moment to be pitched head foremost to the ground, but the surefooted -beast kept on without a stumble. The shouts and thunder of hoofs behind -grew fainter and fainter, until at last, to my infinite relief, they -entirely died away. Still, however, I kept on. Here and there, when -the road passed through a village or beside a farm, frightened figures -would slink away into the shadows and a startled cur would burst into -a violent fit of barking, as I clattered by on my panting steed, now -reeking and white with sweat. - -[Illustration: “IN THIS FASHION WE FLEW ALONG THE PATH.”] - -I rode fast all through the night, my horse showing splendid spirit -and pluck, and at sunrise halted on the banks of a river. Leaving my -hard-ridden beast to cool a little first, I then watered him and, -cutting some guinea-corn stalks from a patch near by, gave him a good -feed, munching some myself at the same time and quenching my thirst at -the river. Then, after about two hours’ rest, I proceeded, but at a -lesser speed. - -I rode all that day and well into the night, finally resting by the -pool where I had cooled my heated brow on the way to Kontogora. After -some hours’ halt I pushed on again, obtaining food at farmhouses -on the way, and next evening, utterly weary, arrived at the Niger -opposite Boussa. My journey was over; I was safe at last! Arriving at -my quarters in the Niger Company’s compound, I flung myself down on my -camp bed just as I was and slept for sixteen hours. - -The faithful Mama turned up four days later. He went to Yauri, a -friendly State, coming down river by canoe. For his services I -presented him with the Emir of Kontogora’s horse. - -During all the years that have gone by since my secret trip to -Kontogora and my subsequent escape I have never regretted having run -the double risk of disobeying orders on the one hand and risking my -life on the other. I had been instructed to get news and I got it--not -the idle tales of paid spies, but a record of sights seen and things -heard with my own eyes and ears. - -[Illustration] - - - - -_A Voyage on an Ice-Floe._ - -BY DR. WILFRED T. GRENFELL, C.M.G. - - - Dr. Grenfell may be described as the “Good Angel of Labrador,” - having for years devoted himself to ministering to the hardy - toilers who live in that grim land of snow, ice, and fog. In - this enthralling story he describes how, while on an errand of - mercy, he and his dog-team got adrift in the open sea on a tiny - cake of ice; how he killed three of the dogs to provide himself - with warm clothing; how he made a flagstaff out of their bones; - and how he was finally rescued when hope was well-nigh dead. - - -It was Easter Sunday, but still winter with us, and everything was -covered with snow and ice. Immediately after morning service word -came from our hospital to say that messengers with a large team of -dogs had come from sixty miles to the southward to get a doctor for a -very urgent case--that of a young man on whom we had operated about a -fortnight before for an acute bone disease in the thigh. - -[Illustration: THE AUTHOR, DR. WILFRED T. GRENFELL, C.M.G. - -_From a Photo. by De Youngs, New York._] - -There was obviously no time to be lost, so, having packed up the -necessary instruments, dressings, and drugs, and fitted out the sleigh -with my best dogs, I left at once, the messengers following me with -their own team. - -Late in April there is always a risk of getting wet through on the ice, -so that I was prepared with a spare outfit, which included, besides a -change of garments, snow-shoes, rifle, compass, an axe, and oilskin -over clothes. - -My dogs, being a powerful team, would not be held back, and though I -managed to wait twice for the other sleigh I had reached a village -about twenty miles on the journey before nightfall, had fed the dogs, -and was gathering one or two people for prayers, when they caught me up. - -During the night the wind shifted to the north-east. This brought in -fog and rain, softened the snow, and made travelling very bad, besides -sending a heavy sea into the bay. Our drive next morning would be -somewhat over forty miles--the first ten miles across a wide arm of the -sea, on salt-water ice. - -In order not to be separated too long from my friends, I sent them -ahead two hours before me, appointing a rendezvous at a log shanty we -had built in the woods for a half-way house. There is no one living -along all that lengthy coast-line, and so, in case of accident, we keep -dry clothes, food, and drugs at the hut. - -The first rain of the year was falling when I left, and I was obliged -to keep on what we call the “ballicaters,” or ice barricades, much -farther up the bay than I had expected. The sea of the night before had -smashed up the ponderous covering of ice right to the land-wash, and -great gaping chasms between the enormous blocks, which we call “pans,” -made it impossible to get off. As soon as I topped the first hill -outside the village I could see that half a mile out it was all clear -water. - -An island which lies off about three miles in the bay had preserved a -bridge of ice, however, and by crossing a few cracks I managed to reach -this island. The arm of the bay beyond this point is only about four -miles straight across. This would bring me to a rocky promontory and -would save some miles on the round. As far as the eye could see the ice -seemed good, though it was very rough. Obviously it had been smashed up -by the sea, and packed in again by the strong wind from the north-east, -but I judged it had frozen solid together again. - -I set off to cross this stretch, and all went well till I was about a -quarter of a mile from the landing-point. Then the wind suddenly fell, -and I noticed I was travelling over loose “sish” ice, almost of the -consistency of porridge; by stabbing down, I could drive my whip-handle -clean through it. This “sish” ice consists of the tiny fragments made -by large pans pounding together on the heaving sea. - -So strongly did the breeze now come off-shore, and so quickly did -the packed mass, relieved of the wind pressure, begin to scatter, -that already I could not see one floe larger than ten feet square. I -realized at once that retreat was absolutely impossible; the only thing -to be done was to make a dash for it and try to reach the shore. - -There was not a moment to lose, so I tore off my oilskins, threw myself -out on my hands and knees by the side of the _komatik_ to give a larger -base to hold, and shouted to the dogs to go ahead. - -Before we had gone twenty yards, the animals, divining their peril, -hesitated for a moment, and the _komatik_ instantly sank into the -slush. It then became necessary for the dogs to pull, and they promptly -began to sink in also. Earlier in the season the father of the very man -I was going to operate on had been drowned by his dogs tangling their -traces around him in the “slob.” This unpleasant fact now flashed into -my mind, and I managed to loosen my sheath-knife, scramble forward, -find the traces in the water, and cut them, meanwhile taking a turn -with the leader’s trace around my wrist. - -There was a pan of ice some twenty-five yards away, about the size of a -dining-table, and on to this the leader very shortly climbed. The other -dogs, however, were hopelessly bogged in the slushy ice and water. - -[Illustration: “ONE OF THE DOGS GOT ON TO MY SHOULDERS, PUSHING ME -FARTHER DOWN IN THE ICE.”] - -Gradually I hauled myself along the leader’s line towards the pan, -till he suddenly turned round and slipped out of his harness. It was -impossible to make any progress through the “sish” ice by swimming, so -I lay there helplessly, thinking it would soon be over, and wondering -if anyone would ever know how the tragedy happened. Suddenly I saw the -trace of another big dog, who had himself fallen through just before -he reached the pan. Along this I hauled myself, using the animal as a -bow anchor, but much bothered by the other dogs, one of which, in his -struggle for life, got on to my shoulders, pushing me farther down in -the ice. Presently, however, I passed my living anchor, and soon, with -my dogs around me, I lay on the little piece of ice. I had to help the -dogs on to it, though they were able to work their way to me through -the lane of water that I had made. - -We were safe for the moment, yet it was obvious that we must be drowned -before long if we remained on this little fragment, so, taking off my -moccasins, coat, gloves, and cap, and everything that I could spare, I -tied my knife and moccasins separately on to the backs of the dogs. My -only hope of life seemed to be to get ashore at once. Had I been able -to divine the long drift before me, I might have saved, in the same way -as I saved my knife, a small bag of food. The moccasins, made of tanned -sealskin, came right up to my thigh, and, as they were filled with -water, I thought they accounted for my being able to make no progress. - -Taking the long traces from all the dogs but the two lightest, I gave -them the full length of the lines, tied the near ends around my own -wrists, and tried to make the animals go ahead. Nothing would induce -them to move, however, and though I threw them off the pan two or -three times, they always struggled back on to it. Fortunately, I had -with me a small black spaniel, a featherweight, with large furry paws, -something like snow-shoes, who will retrieve for me. I threw a piece -of ice for him, and he managed to get over the “slob” after it, on to -another pan about twenty yards away. The other dogs followed him and -after much painful struggling all of them got on but one. - -Taking all the run I could get on my little pan, I made a rush, -slithering with the impetus along the surface till once more I sank -through. After a tough fight I was able to haul myself by the long -traces on to this new pan. I had taken care this time to tie the -harnesses, to which I was holding, under the dogs’ bellies, so that -they could not slip them off. But the pan I was now on was still not -enough to bear us, and so this exhausting process had to be repeated -immediately to avoid sinking with it. - -I now realized, much to my dismay, that though we had been working -towards the land we had been losing ground all the time, for the -off-shore wind had now driven us a hundred yards farther out. The -widening gap was full of pounded ice, which rose to the surface as the -pressure lessened. Through this no man could possibly make his way. - -I was now resting on a floe about ten feet by twenty, which, when I -came to examine it, was not ice at all, but simply snow-covered “slob,” -frozen into a mass, and which I feared would very soon break up in the -general turmoil and the heavy sea, which was continually increasing as -the ice drove offshore before the wind. - -At first we drifted in the direction of a rocky point on which a heavy -surf was breaking, and I made up my mind, if there was clear water in -the surf, to try to swim for the land. But suddenly we struck a rock, -a large piece broke off the already small pan, and what was left swung -around in the backwash and went right off to sea. I saw then that my -pan was about a foot thick. - -There was nothing now for it but to hope for rescue. Alas! there was no -possibility of being seen by human eyes. As I have already mentioned, -no one lives round this big bay. It was just possible, however, that -the people on the other _komatik_, knowing I was alone and had failed -to keep my tryst, would, perhaps, come back to look for me. This, -however, they did not do. - -Meanwhile the westerly wind--our coldest wind at this time of the -year--was rising rapidly. It was very tantalizing, as I stood there -with next to nothing on, the wind going through me, and every stitch -soaked in ice-water, to see my _komatik_ some fifty yards away. It was -still above water, packed with food, hot tea in a Thermos bottle, dry -clothing, matches, wood, and everything for making a fire to attract -attention, if I should drive out far enough for someone to see me--and -yet it was quite beyond my reach. - -It is easy to see a black object on the ice in the day-time, for its -gorgeous whiteness shows off the least thing. But, alas! the tops of -bushes and large pieces of kelp have so often deceived those looking -out that the watcher hesitates a long time before he takes action. -Moreover, within our memory no man has ever been thus adrift on the bay -ice. The chances were one in a thousand that I would be seen at all, -and, even if I were, I should probably be mistaken for a fragment of -driftwood or kelp. - -To keep from freezing I took my long moccasins, strung out some line, -split the legs, and made a kind of jacket, which preserved my back from -the wind down as far as the waist. - -I had not drifted more than half a mile before I saw my poor _komatik_ -disappear through the ice, which was every minute loosening up into -small pans. The loss of the sledge seemed like that of a friend, and -one more tie with home and safety lost. - -By midday I had passed the island and was moving out into the -ever-widening bay. It was scarcely safe to stir on the pan for fear of -breaking it, and yet I saw I must have the skins of some of my dogs--of -which there were eight on the pan--if I was to live the night out. -There was now from three to five miles of ice between me and the north -side of the bay, so I could plainly see there was no hope of being -picked up that day, even if seen, for no boat could get out. - -Unwinding the sealskin traces from my waist, around which I had them -coiled to keep the dogs from eating them, I made a slip-knot and passed -it over the first dog’s head, tied it round my foot close to its neck, -threw him on his back, and stabbed him to the heart. Poor beast! I -loved him like a friend, but we could not all hope to live. In fact, at -that time I had no hope that any of us would, but it seemed better to -die fighting. - -In the same way I sacrificed two more large dogs, receiving a couple of -bites in the process, though I fully expected that the pan would break -up in the struggle. A short shrift seemed to me better than a long -one, and I envied the dead dogs, whose troubles were over so quickly. -Indeed, I began to debate in my mind whether, if once I passed into -the open sea, it would not be better by far to use my faithful knife -on myself than to die by inches. There seemed no horror whatever in -the thought; I seemed fully to sympathize with the Japanese view of -_hara-kiri_. Working, however, saved me from dangerous philosophizing. -By the time I had skinned the dogs and strung the skins together with -some rope unravelled from the harnesses I was ten miles on my way and -it was already getting dark. - -Away to the northward I could now see a single light in the little -village where I had slept the night before. One could not help -picturing them sitting down to tea, little thinking that there was -anyone watching them, for I had told them not to expect me back for -four days. I could also see the peaceful little school-house on the -hill, where many times I had gathered the people for prayer. - -[Illustration: THE AUTHOR’S DOG TEAM. - -_From a Photograph._] - -I had now frayed out some rope into oakum and mixed it with some fat -from the intestines of my dogs, with the idea of making a flare. But -I discovered that my match-box, which was always chained to me, had -leaked, and my precious matches were in pulp. Had I been able to make -a light, it would have looked so unearthly out there on the ice that I -felt sure they would have seen me. However, I kept the matches, hoping -that I might be able to dry them if I lived through the night. While -working at the dead dogs, about every five minutes I would stand up and -wave my hands towards the land. I had no flag and I could not spare my -shirt, for, wet as it was, it was better than nothing in that freezing -wind, and, anyhow, it was nearly dark. - -Unfortunately, the coves in among the cliffs are so placed that only -for a very narrow space can the people in any house see the sea. -Indeed, most of them cannot see the sea at all, so that whether it was -possible for anyone to see me I could not tell, even supposing it had -been daylight. - -Not daring to take any snow from the surface of my pan to break the -wind with, I piled up the carcasses of the dogs. Moreover, I could now -sit down on the skin rug without finding myself in a pool of water, -thawed out by my own heat. During these hours I had continually taken -off all my things, wrung them out, swung them in the wind, and put on -first one and then the other inside, hoping that what heat there was -in my body would thus serve to dry them. In this I had been fairly -successful. - -My feet were the most trouble, for they immediately got wet again on -account of my thin moccasins being easily soaked through on the snow. I -suddenly thought of the way in which the Lapps, who tend our reindeer, -manage to dry socks. They carry grass with them, which they ravel up -and put into the shoe. Into this they put their feet, and then pack the -rest with more grass, tying up the top with a binder. The ropes of the -harness for our dogs are carefully “served” all over with two layers -of flannel, in order to make them soft against the animal’s sides. So, -as soon as I could sit down, I started with my trusty knife to rip up -the flannel. Though my fingers were more or less frozen, I was able to -ravel out the rope, put it into my shoes, and use my wet socks inside -my knicker-bockers, where, though damp, they served to break the wind. -Then, tying the narrow strips of flannel together, I bound up the tops -of the moccasins, Lapp fashion, and carried the bandage on up over my -knee, making a ragged though most excellent puttee. - -In order to run easily and fast with our dogs in the spring of the -year, when the weather is usually warm, we wear very light clothing; -thus we do not perspire at midday and freeze at night. It chanced -that I had recently opened a box of football garments which I had not -seen for twenty years. I had found my old Oxford University running -“shorts,” and a pair of Richmond Football Club stockings of red, -yellow, and black, exactly as I wore them twenty years ago. These, -with a flannel shirt and sweater, were all I now had left. Coat, hat, -gloves, oilskins--everything else--were gone, and I stood there in -that odd costume exactly as I stood in the old days on a football -field. These garments, being very light, dried all the quicker until -afternoon; then nothing would dry any more, everything freezing stiff. - -My occupation till what seemed like midnight was unravelling rope, and -with this I padded out my knickers inside and my shirt as well, though -it was a clumsy job, for I could not see what I was doing. Now, getting -my largest dog, as big as a wolf and weighing ninety-two pounds, I made -him lie down in order that I could cuddle around him. I then piled the -three skins so that I could lie on one edge, while the other came just -over my shoulders and head. - -My own breath, collecting inside the newly-flayed skin, must have had -a soporific effect, for I was soon fast asleep. One hand I had plunged -down inside the curled-up dog, but the other hand, being gloveless, had -frozen, and I suddenly woke, shivering enough, I thought, to break my -pan. What I took to be the sun was just rising, but I soon found it was -the moon, and then I knew it was about half past twelve. The dog was -having an excellent time; he had not been cuddled up so warmly all the -winter. He resented my moving with low growls, till he found it wasn’t -another dog. - -The wind was steadily driving me now towards the open sea, where, short -of a miracle, I could expect nothing but death. - -Still I had only this hope--that my pan would probably be opposite -another village, called Goose Cove, at daylight, and might possibly -be seen from there. I knew that the _komatiks_ would be starting at -daybreak over the hills for a parade of Orangemen about twenty miles -away. I might, therefore, be seen as they climbed the hills, though the -cove does not open seaward. So I lay down and went to sleep again. - -I woke some time later with a sudden thought in my mind that I must -have a flag to signal with. So I set to work at once in the dark to -disarticulate the legs of my dead dogs, which were now frozen stiff, -and seemed to offer the only chance of forming a pole to carry a flag. - -Cold as it was, I determined to sacrifice my shirt for that purpose -with the first streak of daylight. It took a long time in the dark to -get the legs off, and when I had patiently marled them together with -old harness rope they formed the heaviest and crookedest flag-post it -has ever been my lot to see. Still it had the advantage of not being so -cold to hold, because the skin on the paws made it unnecessary to hold -the frozen meat with my bare hands. - -What had awakened me this time, I found, was that the pan had swung -around and the shelter made by my dogs’ bodies was on the wrong side, -for, though there was a very light air, the evaporation it caused -from my wet clothes made quite a difference. I had had no food since -six o’clock the morning before, when I had porridge and bread and -butter. I had, however, a rubber band on instead of one of my garters, -and I chewed that for twenty-four hours. It saved me from thirst and -hunger, oddly enough. I did not drink from the ice of my pan, for it -was salt-water snow and ice. Moreover, in the night the salt water had -lapped up over the edges, for the pan was on a level with the sea. From -time to time I heard the cracking and grinding of the newly formed -“slob,” and it seemed that my little floe must inevitably soon go to -pieces. - -At last the sun really did rise, and the time came for the sacrifice -of my shirt. I stripped, and, much to my surprise and pleasure, did -not find it was half so cold as I had anticipated. I now reformed my -dog-skins, with the raw side out, so that they made a kind of coat, -quite rivalling Joseph’s. But with the rising of the sun the frost -came out of the joints of my dogs’ legs, and the friction--caused, I -suppose, by waving it--made my flag-pole almost tie itself in knots. -Still, I could raise it three or four feet above my head, which seemed -very important. - -Now, however, I found that, instead of having drifted as far as I had -reckoned, I was only off some cliffs called Ireland Head, near which -there is a little village looking seaward, whence I should certainly -have been seen had the time been summer. But as I had myself, earlier -in the season, been night-bound at the place, I had learnt there was -not a single soul living there in the winter. The people had all, as -usual, migrated to their winter houses up the bay, where they get -together for schooling and social purposes. - -It was impossible to wave so heavy a flag as mine all the time, and -yet I dared not sit down, for that might be the exact moment someone -would be in a position to see me from the hills. The only thing in my -mind was how long I could stand up, and how long go on waving that pole -at the cliffs. Once or twice I thought I saw men against their snowy -faces, which I judged were about five or six miles from me. In reality, -however, all the time I knew in my heart of hearts that the black -specks were only trees. Once, also, I thought I saw a boat approaching. -A glittering object kept appearing and disappearing on the water, but -it was merely a small piece of ice sparkling in the sun as it rose on -the surface. - -Physically I felt as well as ever I did in my life, and with the hope -of a long sunny day I felt sure I was good to last another twenty-four -hours if my ice-raft would only hold out. I determined to kill a big -Eskimo dog I had at midday and drink his blood (only a few days before -I had been reading an account of the sustaining properties of dogs’ -blood in Dr. Nansen’s book) if I survived the battle with him. - -I could not help feeling, even then, my ludicrous position, and I -thought if I ever got ashore again I would have to laugh at myself -standing hour after hour waving my shirt at those lofty cliffs, which -seemed to assume a kind of sardonic grin, so that I could almost -imagine they were laughing at me. I thought of the good breakfast my -colleagues were enjoying just at the back of those same cliffs, and of -the snug fire and comfortable room which we call our study. - -I can honestly say that from first to last not a single sensation -of fear entered my mind, even when struggling in the “slob” ice. It -all seemed so natural; I had been through the ice half-a-dozen times -before. Now I merely felt sleepy, and the idea was very strong in my -mind that I should soon reach the solution of the mysteries that I had -been preaching about for so many years. - -It was a perfect morning, a cobalt sky and an ultramarine sea, a golden -sun, and an almost wasteful extravagance of crimson pouring over hills -of purest snow, which caught and reflected its glories from every peak -and crag. Between me and their feet lay miles of rough ice, bordered -with the black “slob” formed during the night. Lastly, there was my -poor little pan in the fore-ground, bobbing up and down on the edge -of the open sea, stained with blood, and littered with carcasses and -_débris_. It was smaller than last night; the edges, beating against -the new ice around, had heaped themselves up in fragments that, owing -to its diminutive size, it could ill spare. I also noticed that the new -ice from the water melted under the dogs’ bodies had also been formed -at the expense of its thickness. Five dogs and myself in a coloured -football costume and a blood-smeared dog-skin cloak, with a grey -flannel shirt on a pole of frozen dogs’ legs, completed the picture. - -The sun was almost hot by now, and I was conscious of a surplus of heat -in my skin cloak. I began to look longingly at one of my remaining -dogs, for an appetite will rise even on an ice pan. The idea of eating -made me think of fire, so once again I inspected my matches. Alas! the -heads had entirely soaked off them all, except three or four blue-top -wax matches which were in a paste. These I now laid out to dry, and -I searched around on my snow pan to see if I could get a bit of -transparent ice with which to make a burning-glass, for I was pretty -sure that, with all the unravelled tow stuffed into my nether garments -and the fat of the dead dogs, I could make smoke enough to be seen if I -could only get a light. - -I had found a piece which it seemed might answer the purpose, and -had gone back to wave my flag, which I did every two minutes, when -suddenly, for the second time, I thought I saw the glitter of an oar. -It did not seem possible, however, for it must be remembered that it -was not water that lay between me and the land, but “slob” ice, which, -a mile or two inshore of me, was very heavy. Even if people had seen -me, I did not think they could get through, though I knew all of them -would be trying. Moreover, there was no smoke rising on the land to -give me hope that I had been seen. There had been no gun flashes in the -night, and I felt sure that, had anyone seen me, there would have been -a bonfire on every hill to encourage me to keep going. So I gave it up -and went on with my work. But the next time I went back to my flag it -seemed very distinct, and though it kept disappearing as we rose and -fell on the surface, my readers can well imagine I kept my eyes in that -direction. Through my dark spectacles having been lost, however, I was -already partly snow-blind. - -I waved the flag as high as I could raise it in a direction to be -broadside towards those places where I thought people might have gone -out around the ice after ducks, which is their main occupation a little -later in the year. I hoped that they might then see my flag and come -straight on for me. At last, beside the glitter of a white oar, I made -out the black speck of a hull. I knew then if the pan held out for -another hour that I should be all right. - -With that strange perversity of the human intellect, the first thing I -thought of when I realized that a rescue boat was under way was what -trophies I could carry with my luggage from the pan! I pictured the -dog-bone flagstaff adorning my study--the dogs intervened, however, and -ate it later on--and I thought of preserving my ragged puttees in my -museum. - -I could see that my rescuers were frantically waving, and when they -came within shouting distance I heard someone shout, “Don’t get -excited; keep on the pan, where you are.” As a matter of fact, they -were infinitely more excited than I. Already it seemed just as natural -to me now to be saved as half an hour before it seemed inevitable that -I should be lost. Had my rescuers only known, as I did, the sensations -of a bath in the ice when you cannot dry yourself afterwards, they need -not have expected me to throw myself into the water. - -At last the boat came up, crashing into my pan with such violence -that I was glad enough to catch hold of the bow, being more or less -acquainted by now with the frail constitution of my floe, and being -well aware it was not adapted for collisions. Moreover, I felt for the -pan, for it had been a good and faithful friend to me. - -A hearty handshake all round and a warm cup of tea--thoughtfully packed -in a kettle--inside, and we hoisted in my remaining dogs and instantly -started back, for even then a change of wind might have penned the boat -with ice, which would have cost us dearly. Indeed, the men thought we -could not return, and we started for an island, in which direction the -way was all open. - -[Illustration: “I COULD SEE THAT MY RESCUERS WERE FRANTICALLY WAVING.”] - -There were not only five Newfoundland fishermen at the oars, but five -men with Newfoundland muscles in their backs and arms and five as brave -hearts as ever beat in the bodies of human beings. So we presently -changed our course and forced our way through to the shore. - -To my intense astonishment they told me that the night before four -men had been out on a point of land, from which the bay is visible, -cutting some dead harp seals out from a store. The ice had been -extraordinarily hard, and it had taken them till seven o’clock at night -to cut out twenty-four seals. Just at the very moment before they left -for home, my pan of ice had drifted out clear of the island called -Hare Island, and one of them, with his keen fisherman’s eyes, had seen -something unusual. They at once returned to their village, saying there -was a man on a pan, but they had been discredited, for the people there -thought it could only be the top of some tree. - -All the time I had been driving along I knew well that there was one -man on the coast who had a good spy-glass, and that he had twelve -children, among them some of the hardiest young men on the coast. Many -times my thoughts had wandered to him, for his sons are everywhere, -hunting seals and everything else. It was his sons, and another man -with them, who saw me, and were now with him in the boat. The owner -of the spy-glass told me he got up instantly in the middle of tea on -hearing the news, and hurried over the cliff to the look-out with his -glass. Immediately, dark as it was, he made out that there really was -a man out on the ice. Indeed, he saw me wave my hands every now and -again towards the shore. By a process of reasoning very easy on so -unfrequented a shore, they immediately knew who it was, but tried to -argue themselves out of their conviction. They went down at once to -try and launch a boat, but found it absolutely impossible. Miles of -ice lay between them and me, the heavy sea was hurling great blocks on -the land-wash, and night was already falling, with the wind blowing -hard on shore. These brave fellows, however, did not sit down idly. -The whole village was aroused, messengers dispatched at once along the -coast, and look-outs told off to all the favourable points, so that -while I considered myself a laughing-stock, waving my flag at those -irresponsive cliffs, there were really men’s eyes watching from them -all the time. - -Every soul in the village was on the beach as we neared the shore, -and everybody wanted to shake hands when I landed. Even with the grip -that one after another gave me, some no longer trying to keep back -the tears, I did not find out that my hands were frost-bitten--a fact -I have not been slow to appreciate since. A weird sight I must have -looked as I stepped ashore--tied up in rags stuffed out with oakum, -wrapped in the blood-stained skins of dogs, with no hat, coat, or -gloves, and only a short pair of knickers on! It must have seemed to -some of them as if the Old Man of the Sea had landed. - -No time was wasted before a pot of tea was exactly where I wanted it to -be, and some hot stew was locating itself where I had intended an hour -before that the blood of one of my remaining dogs should have gone. - -Rigged out in the warm garments that fishermen wear, I started with a -large team as hard as I could race for hospital, for I had learnt that -the news had gone over that I was lost. It was soon painfully impressed -upon me that I could not much enjoy the ride; I had to be hauled like a -log up the hills, my feet being frost-bitten so that I could not walk. -Had I guessed this before I might have avoided much trouble. - -We all love life, and I was glad to be back once more with a new -lease of it before me. My colleague soon had me “fixed up,” and I was -presently enjoying a really refreshing sleep. - -[Illustration: THE AUTHOR AS HE APPEARED AFTER HIS TERRIBLE EXPERIENCE -ON THE ICE FLOE, SHOWING THE FLAG-STAFF MADE OF DOGS’ BONES. - -_From a Photograph._] - -(Copyright, 1908, by Fleming H. Revell Company.) - - - - -THE WIDE WORLD: In Other Magazines. - - -UNIQUE POST-OFFICE IN NEBRASKA. - -[Illustration] - -Some years ago, a traveller recounting his experiences of the early -days of the city of Nebraska, U.S.A., says that on arriving at the odd -collection of shanties that then represented the beginnings of the -city, he inquired for the post-office, and was referred to an old chap -sitting on a log. Of this man he further inquired where he could find -the post-office, as he expected a letter. The old chap removed his -sombrero, and, fumbling inside it, produced the expected letter. Since -then Nebraska has grown into considerable importance as the capital of -the State of Nebraska.--“THE CAPTAIN.” - - -CURIOUS FISHING SUPERSTITIONS. - -In British Columbia the Indians ceremoniously go out to meet the -first salmon, and in flattering voices try to win their favour by -calling them all chiefs. Every spring in California the Karaks used -to dance for salmon. Meanwhile one of their number secluded himself -in the mountains and fasted for ten days. Upon his return he solemnly -approached the river, took the first salmon of the catch, ate some -of it, and with the remainder lighted a sacrificial fire. The same -Indians laboriously climbed to the mountain-top after the poles for -the spearing-booth, being convinced that if they were gathered where -the salmon were watching no fish would be caught. In Japan, among -the primitive race of the Ainos, even the women left at home are not -allowed to talk, lest the fish may hear and disapprove, while the first -fish is always brought in through a window instead of a door, so that -other fish may not see.--“TIT-BITS.” - - -FLEMISH FISHERWOMEN. - -On the coasts of Holland, Belgium, and Northern France fisherwomen -are a familiar sight, with their great hand-nets and quaint costumes. -Many of the towns have distinctive costumes by which their women -can be recognised anywhere. Those of Maria-Kirke, near Ostend, wear -trousers and loose blouses, while their heads and shoulders are covered -by shawls. They carry their nets into the sea, and scoop up vast -quantities of shrimps and prawns, with an occasional crab or lobster -and many small fish. They often wade out till the water is up to their -necks, and they remain for hours at a time in water above their knees, -rarely returning until their baskets are full.--“WOMAN’S LIFE.” - - -CANADA FOR THE SPORTSMAN. - -Canada is an ideal country for the sportsman. Notwithstanding its rapid -commercial development, it still has thousands of miles of wild and -unexplored land, where man has seldom or never trodden. Even in the -Eastern provinces, within a very short distance of civilization, wild -animals of many kinds--moose, caribou, elk, deer, and even bears--still -abound. From the Atlantic coast to the Pacific slope, from the -international boundary line north to the Arctic circle, Canada offers -magnificent opportunities to the sportsman, whatever his tastes may -be; big and small game-shooting, fishing, camping, canoeing.--“FRY’S -MAGAZINE.” - - -THE GEESE OF NIEDER-MÖRLEN. - -In the little Hessean village of Nieder-Mörlen, between Giessen and -Frankfort, a strange scene may be witnessed every evening at half-past -five. Some two thousand geese, which have spent the day on the river’s -bank below the village, at a given signal from their leaders make their -way homewards with much pomp and circumstance and raucous noise. The -strangest part of the proceeding is seen when they reach the village -street and, without any guidance or driving, waddle each into its -own yard for the night. Like so many squads they break off in their -dozens from the main body, knowing instinctively their owners’ door, -and with solemn gait enter in as though conscious of their own innate -cleverness.--Mr. A.H. Ross, in “THE STRAND MAGAZINE.” - -[Illustration] - - - - -Odds and Ends. - -A Wonderful Balanced Rock--What a Lightning Flash Did--The Sea -Captain’s House, etc. - - -Near Dome Rock, Colorado, thirty-two miles up Platte Canyon from -Denver, is situated one of the most wonderful balanced rocks in the -world. This rock, as will be seen from the illustration, is poised -with very little of its surface touching the ground. The most peculiar -feature about the boulder is the fact that it does not rest on a flat -surface of soft earth, but is perched out on an incline with a very -steep angle. The slope on which it stands, moreover, is of smooth, -solid rock, too slippery for anyone to walk up, and how the boulder -maintains its position is a mystery. - -[Illustration: A WONDERFUL BALANCED ROCK--IT IS PERCHED ON A STEEP -SLOPE OF SMOOTH, SLIPPERY ROCK, AND HOW IT MAINTAINS ITS POSITION IS A -MYSTERY. - -_From a Photo. by J. R. Bauer._] - -Church bells and church plate, as related in a recent WIDE WORLD -article, are not the only kinds of buried treasure of which there are -traditions in Worcestershire. Mr. J.W. Willis Bund, in his “Civil War -in Worcestershire,” says: “There is hardly a family who possessed a -landed estate at the time of the Civil War that has not some legend -of concealed treasure. For instance, the Berkeleys, of Spetchley, -say their butler, to save the family plate, hid it under one of the -elms in the avenue. The butler was wounded, and tried with his last -breath to confide his secret to a member of the family, but could get -no further than ’plate,’ ‘elm,’ ‘avenue,’ and died; so that the plate -remains hidden to this day.” The occasion upon which the Berkeley -plate was hidden was the sack and burning of their family mansion -at Spetchley, upon the eve of the Battle of Worcester, by the Scots -troops who accompanied Charles II. from the North. Sir Robert Berkeley -was a devoted Royalist and had suffered much for the King, and members -of his family were serving in the Royal army; but the Scots, who had -fought upon both sides, were not careful to distinguish between friend -and foe. The only portion of Spetchley which escaped the flames was -the stabling. Here Cromwell made his head-quarters, and after the war -Judge Berkeley converted the building into a house and lived there -for many years. The elm avenue in Spetchley Park, where the plate was -buried, still exists, and is one of the finest in Worcestershire. For -the photograph given above we are indebted to the courtesy of Mr. T. -Duckworth, of the Worcester Victoria Institute. - -[Illustration: THE ELM AVENUE IN SPETCHLEY PARK, WORCESTERSHIRE--A -FAITHFUL BUTLER, AT THE TIME OF THE CIVIL WAR, BURIED THE FAMILY PLATE -UNDER ONE OF THE TREES TO SAVE IT FROM THE ENEMY, BUT DIED BEFORE HE -COULD REVEAL THE SECRET OF THE HIDING-PLACE. - -_From a Photograph._] - -The curious little building seen in the next photograph stands at the -end of a private walk on the shores of the River Orwell, in Suffolk. -It is known as the “Cat House,” for the reason that, in the “good old -times,” a white cat used to be exhibited at a window visible from the -river as a signal to smugglers, who flourished in the locality. When -the animal was shown, the “Free-Traders,” as the contrabandists were -euphemistically called, knew that the coast was clear, and promptly -sailed up and landed their cargo, secure from the attentions of the -“preventives.” Near “Cat House” is Downham Reach, which was the scene -of some of Margaret Catchpole’s most exciting adventures. - -[Illustration: THE “CAT HOUSE,” NEAR IPSWICH, SO CALLED BECAUSE A WHITE -CAT WAS EXHIBITED AT THE WINDOW AS A SIGNAL TO SMUGGLERS. - -_From a Photo. by Frith & Co._] - -[Illustration: THIS TERRIFIC OIL FIRE, STARTED BY A LIGHTNING FLASH, -DID A HUNDRED AND FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS’ WORTH OF DAMAGE. - -_From a Photograph._] - -The accompanying photograph depicts a terrific oil fire, which -occurred on the night of June 23rd, 1908, at Warren, Pennsylvania. -The conflagration started through a tank being struck by lightning, -and in a very short time twenty-five oil-holders, large and small, -together with the wax-house, were destroyed. The fire burned for nearly -twenty-four hours, and its fierceness is almost impossible to conceive. -The total loss incurred was something like one hundred and fifty -thousand dollars. - -The extraordinary-looking dwelling seen in the next picture was -built to exactly resemble a steamship’s bridge, with chart-room and -other appurtenances all complete. This curious erection is situated -at Algorta, near Bilbao, in the North of Spain, and is called -“Casa-Barco,” or “house-boat.” It was probably built by a retired -sea-captain, who felt like a fish out of water until he had provided -for himself the same environment to which he had been used during -his active career at sea. One can imagine the old gentleman taking -his evening walk to and fro along the lofty bridge, scanning the -surrounding country with a sailor’s eye, and half inclined now and then -to ring for “more speed,” or to send an order down the tube to the -steersman. - -[Illustration: A HOUSE BUILT TO RESEMBLE A STEAMSHIP’S BRIDGE. - -_From a Photograph._] - -The cat seen in the next photograph was the pet of the crew of the -ill-fated whaler _Windward_, which was wrecked in Baffin’s Bay last -season. After the disaster pussy had a long, cold voyage in the open -boats in which the ship-wrecked men pulled--amidst ice-bergs, snow, -and tossing seas--for over five hundred miles, encountering dangers -and adventures galore, till after three weeks of fearful exposure and -hardship they were picked up by the whaler _Morning_, in which the -correspondent who sent us the picture was a passenger. “Pussy then -made up for her sufferings by making her home in my bunk,” he writes. -“During the cold nights of the Arctic autumn I found her a very good -substitute for a hot-water bottle.” - -[Illustration: A CAT WHICH MADE A FIVE-HUNDRED-MILE VOYAGE IN AN OPEN -BOAT IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN. - -_From a Photograph._] - -[Illustration: ANOTHER REMARKABLE ROCK--IT IS AN ALMOST PERFECT GLOBE, -AND THOUGH IT PROBABLY WEIGHS TWENTY TONS FOUR STRONG MEN CAN SET IT -SPINNING ON ITS BASE. - -_From a Photograph._] - -On the foreshore of the Mata Beach, Mangapai, New Zealand, stands the -remarkable rock shown above. It is an almost perfect sphere of hard -blue rock, shot with white quartz, of an entirely different formation -from any other known rocks in the district. The mystery is, of course, -to know how it reached its present position on the soft sandstone of -the beach. Popular opinion is that in distant ages it was shot from a -volcano, since extinct. The rock, which probably weighs twenty tons, -rests in a cup like depression in the sandstone formation on which it -stands, and is so nicely poised that four strong men, encircling it -with their arms and all pushing one way, can set it spinning on its -base. - -[Illustration: THE BULL-THROWER SEIZING THE ANIMAL BY THE TAIL. - -_From a Photograph._] - -[Illustration: OVER! THE BULL GOES CRASHING TO EARTH AMID A CLOUD OF -DUST. - -_From a Photograph_] - -The two snapshots reproduced above illustrate striking phases of an -exciting Mexican pastime--that of flooring bulls with the hand from -horseback! The rider, galloping after the bull, seizes it by the tail -and, passing his leg over the tail for the sake of leverage, pulls the -poor beast round sideways until it trips and goes crashing to earth -amidst a cloud of dust. Needless to say, the bull-thrower needs a -strong hand and steady nerves, or he may find himself in trouble. - -[Illustration: THE MAP-CONTENTS OF “THE WIDE WORLD MAGAZINE,” WHICH -SHOWS AT A GLANCE THE LOCALITY OF EACH ARTICLE AND NARRATIVE OF -ADVENTURE IN THIS NUMBER.] - - -[Transcriber’s Note: - -Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation are as in the original.] - - - - - -End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Wide World Magazine, by Various - -*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WIDE WORLD MAGAZINE *** - -***** This file should be named 50608-0.txt or 50608-0.zip ***** -This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: - http://www.gutenberg.org/5/0/6/0/50608/ - -Produced by Victorian/Edwardian Pictorial Magazines, -Jonathan Ingram, Wayne Hammond, and the Online Distributed -Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net - - -Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will -be renamed. - -Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright -law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, -so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United -States without permission and without paying copyright -royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of -the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at -www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have -to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. - - - -Title: Wide World Magazine - Volume XXII, January, 1909, Number 130 - -Author: Various - -Release Date: December 4, 2015 [EBook #50608] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: UTF-8 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WIDE WORLD MAGAZINE *** - - - - -Produced by Victorian/Edwardian Pictorial Magazines, -Jonathan Ingram, Wayne Hammond, and the Online Distributed -Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net - - - - - - -</pre> - - -<div class="figcenter"> -<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" -alt="" /> -<p class="copy">The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p> -</div> - -<hr class="chap" /> - -<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. --> - -<h2>Table of Contents</h2> - -<table> - <tr> - <th class="tdr" colspan="2">Page</th> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><a href="#The_Wide_World_Magazine">The Wide World Magazine.</a></td> - <td class="tdr">315</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><a href="#The_Beulah_County_War">The Beulah County “War.”</a></td> - <td class="tdr">315</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><a href="#Photographing_a_Volcano_in_Eruption">Photographing a Volcano in Eruption.</a></td> - <td class="tdr">323</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><a href="#Our_Leopard_Hunt">Our Leopard Hunt.</a></td> - <td class="tdr">331</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><a href="#TURTLE-FARMING">Turtle-farming.</a></td> - <td class="tdr">336</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><a href="#SHORT">Short Stories.</a></td> - <td class="tdr">343</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><a href="#SOME_SAVAGE_PASTIMES">Some Savage Pastimes.</a></td> - <td class="tdr">354</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><a href="#The_Marriage_of_Lulu">The Marriage of Lulu.</a></td> - <td class="tdr">361</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><a href="#THE_BREAKER">The Breaker of Records.</a></td> - <td class="tdr">367</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><a href="#A_White_Woman_in">A White Woman in Cannibal-Land.</a></td> - <td class="tdr">372</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><a href="#My_Experiences">My Experiences in Algeria.</a></td> - <td class="tdr">377</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><a href="#Shot-Gun_Jim">“Shot-Gun Jim.”</a></td> - <td class="tdr">385</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><a href="#A_Perilous_Mission">A Perilous Mission.</a></td> - <td class="tdr">394</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><a href="#A_Voyage_on_an_Ice-Floe">A Voyage on an Ice-Floe.</a></td> - <td class="tdr">403</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><a href="#THE_WIDE_WORLD_In_Other_Magazines">The Wide World: In Other Magazines.</a></td> - <td class="tdr">411</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><a href="#Odds_and_Ends">Odds and Ends.</a></td> - <td class="tdr">412</td> - </tr> -</table> - -<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. --> - -<hr class="chap" /> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i001.jpg"> -<img src="images/i001.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“‘CRACK! CRACK! CRACK!’ CAME THE ANSWER FROM CUTLER’S GUN.”</p> -<p class="center">(<a href="#Page_319">SEE PAGE 319.</a>) -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">315</span></p> -</div> - -<h1 id="The_Wide_World_Magazine"><span class="smcap">The Wide World Magazine.</span></h1> - -<p class="table w100"> -<span class="tcell tdl">Vol. XXII.</span> -<span class="tcell tdc">JANUARY, 1909.</span> -<span class="tcell tdr">No. 130.</span> -</p> - -<hr class="chap" /> -<h2 id="The_Beulah_County_War">The Beulah County “War.”<br /> - -<span class="smcap medium">By H. M. Vernon.</span></h2> - -<blockquote> - -<p>One of the most striking characteristics of the Westerner is the high regard in which he holds -womankind. Even in the roughest mining camps a woman is absolutely safe, and is treated with a -consideration unknown in many more civilized centres. This remarkable story illustrates the -Westerner’s innate chivalry in a very striking fashion. Sooner than drag the name of a young -schoolmistress into a quarrel, a resident of Three Corners, Montana, allowed himself to be made an -outlaw, and for weeks defied the population of a whole county to arrest him, even when a field gun -was brought out to shell his fastness. How in his extremity the girl he had befriended came to his -rescue and put an end to this extraordinary “war” is graphically told in the narrative.</p></blockquote> - -<div> -<img class="drop-cap" src="images/i.jpg" alt="I" /> -</div> - -<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">In</span> the extreme western part of the -State of Montana, U.S.A., in the -County of Beulah, lies a little town -called Three Corners. At first only -a junction on the Rio Grande Railway, -from which point countless thousands of -cattle were shipped to all parts of the world, -Three Corners grew to be a flourishing place. -The wooden shanties, gambling “joints,” and -dance halls gave way to brick buildings, several -banks, a school, and other signs of progress, as -respectable settlers moved farther toward the -Golden West. Of course, a part of the old town -remained, and with it a few of the characters -typical of a Western “cow town.” Among -these was a tall, raw-boned man who had drifted -West in the ‘eighties, settling at Three Corners -and opening a gambling-house. His name was -“Jim” Cutler. He was a man of very few -words, but with one great failing—he would -shoot first and argue afterwards. Yet this gambler, -who was known and feared far and wide as a -“gun-fighter,” was at heart the mildest of men, -beloved by all the children in the town, to whom -he gave coppers galore. Furthermore, Cutler -would put up with all manner of insult from a -man under the influence of liquor, or from -“Tenderfeet” who did not know their danger. -Cutler’s shooting propensities were directed -solely toward avowed “bad men” or those who -delighted in being known as bullies. In the -course of his altercations with such characters -this tall, raw-boned man—who could, and did, -“pull his gun” like a streak of lightning—added -to the population of the local cemetery with a -score of six.</p> - -<p>Among the new-comers to Three Corners -during the rehabilitation of that town was a -Hebrew named Moses Goldman. This man, a -good-looking fellow of some twenty-eight years, -hailed from New York. He opened a shop, and, -with the business ability of his race, soon succeeded -in making it the principal draper’s establishment -of the place. Before long, however, -reports began to circulate that the handsome -young Hebrew was not quite so respectful in -demeanour towards his lady customers as he -should have been, and, although highly popular -with a certain element, the major portion of -Three Corners’ female population gave Goldman’s -shop a wide berth.</p> - -<p>One Monday morning Jim Cutler, who had -been up all night looking after the “game” in -his establishment, was just leaving the place -when a young woman, whom he recognised as -the schoolmistress, ran up to him and said: -“Oh, Mr. Cutler, would you mind walking as -far as the school-house with me?”</p> - -<p>Cutler, somewhat astonished, did so, and was -gratefully thanked for his trouble. After leaving -her he walked slowly back to his rooms, wondering -why he of all men should have been -chosen to escort the pretty “school ma’am.”</p> - -<p>Some days afterwards Cutler, who passed the -school on his way to and from the Gem Saloon -(his place), saw the mistress deliberately cross -the street just before reaching Goldman’s shop, -and continue on her way on the other side. He -also saw Goldman come to the door and try to -attract the girl’s attention. When he reached -Goldman, the latter; twirling his moustache, -remarked, laughingly, “Shy girl, that, eh?” -Cutler looked at the Hebrew for a moment, and -then answered quietly, as he moved away, “She -ain’t your kind.”</p> - -<p>Three weeks after this little episode there was -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">316</span> -a ball at the City Hotel, and, naturally, almost -the entire youth and beauty of Three Corners -“turned out.” The City Hotel was just opposite -Cutler’s saloon, and at about one o’clock the -gambler was sitting in a chair outside his place, -listening to the music, when the schoolmistress -and her mother left the hotel on their way home. -A moment later a man also quitted the building -and followed them. Presently he stopped the -two ladies and attempted to converse with them. -The younger of the women apparently expostulated -with him, and then the two went on, -leaving him standing at the corner. Cutler -recognised the solitary figure as that of -Goldman, the draper, and drew his own conclusions. -Next morning Cutler made it his -business to leave the Gem Saloon just as the -schoolmistress was passing, and strode up to -her.</p> - -<p>“Miss Thurloe,” he said, “you were stopped -last night on your way home. Can I be of any -assistance to you? I know you have only your -mother to protect you.”</p> - -<p>The girl gave him a grateful look, and -explained that Goldman had repeatedly forced -his attentions on her. She had done her best -to send him about his business, but he continually -annoyed her, even going so far as to -enter the school-house, interrupting lessons and -making himself generally obnoxious.</p> - -<p>Cutler smiled grimly during the girl’s hesitating -recital, saw her safely to her destination, and -then went home for a sleep. At three o’clock -that afternoon he walked leisurely towards the -school-house, stopped at the fence just by the -rear door, and chatted with the boys, it being -the recess hour. Suddenly, approaching from -the opposite direction, he beheld Goldman, who -walked straight into the school-house without -having seen the gambler. The latter waited for -a few moments, then he also entered the building. -Reaching the schoolroom, at the end of -a short hall, he found the door locked, and -promptly threw himself against it with all his -strength. The door gave way with a crash and -Cutler leapt in, to see the schoolmistress -struggling in the arms of Goldman. She was -fighting like a tigress, but the Jew’s hand, held -tightly over her mouth, prevented her crying -out. Directly Goldman beheld the saloon-keeper -he released his prisoner, who sank back -panting upon a chair, and glared savagely at -the new-comer. Cutler, ignoring him entirely, -walked slowly toward the agitated schoolmistress -and stood still, waiting for her to speak.</p> - -<p>Goldman, however, was the first to do so. -“Oh, no wonder I’ve no chance,” he burst out, -viciously; “Cutler’s as lucky in love as he -usually is at cards.”</p> - -<p>Cutler flushed at the gibe, but he said not a -word, waiting for the girl to speak. Presently, -having in a measure recovered herself, she rose -and approached the gambler. “Mr. Cutler,” -she said, unsteadily, “this man has insulted me -repeatedly. Just now he tried to kiss me by -force, and I’m afraid I shall have to give up my -position here and leave Three Corners.”</p> - -<p>In a very gentle voice Cutler asked the girl -to leave the room for a few minutes. After she -had gone he turned toward Goldman, who -stood looking at him defiantly, his arms folded -across his chest.</p> - -<p>“If you were a man,” he said, sternly, “I’d -drop you where you stand, but I’m going to -teach you a lesson that’ll do you a heap of -good.” Then, with a sudden bound, he grasped -Goldman by the throat, threw him across a -desk, and, with a three-foot ruler, administered a -thrashing such as might be given to a recalcitrant -schoolboy, only with somewhat greater severity. -The punishment over, Cutler picked the man -up and, dragging him across the floor, threw -him bodily out of the building. Now Goldman -was himself a powerful man, but Cutler’s action -had been so swift and decisive that the Hebrew -had practically no chance to offer resistance. -Once freed from the gambler’s hold, however, -he turned and flew at his adversary with -clenched fists, snarling furiously. Cutler stood -quite still, and just as the Hebrew came within -the proper distance his right fist shot out -straight from the shoulder. It landed square on -Goldman’s jaw, and he dropped like a log.</p> - -<p>Several of the school-children, attracted by -the noise, now crowded round, vastly excited. -Cutler, having informed Miss Thurloe that he -believed she would not be further annoyed, -but that he would keep an eye on “that fool -masher,” walked slowly toward the town, leaving -the vanquished draper lying where he had fallen.</p> - -<p>It has been necessary to explain all this in -order that readers of <span class="smcap">The Wide World -Magazine</span> unfamiliar with the ways of the -Far West may better understand what follows. -I have said that the better element had in a -manner of speaking driven the original settlers -at Three Corners to new fields. These new-comers -looked upon Cutler as an “undesirable.” -His reputation as a “man-killer” did not appeal -to the emigrants from the cultured Eastern -States, who would gladly have seen him pack up -and leave the town. Goldman was quite aware -of this, so, directly he recovered himself, he -asked for and obtained a warrant for Cutler’s -arrest on a charge of assault. The gambler was -arraigned before the local magistrate, where he -steadfastly refused to give any reason for the -chastisement he had inflicted upon Goldman. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">317</span> -The latter immediately realized the advantage -of Cutler’s chivalrous reluctance to drag a -woman’s name into the affair, and so swore -that the assault was entirely unprovoked and -committed out of “pure devilry” on Cutler’s -part. Cutler was fined fifty dollars -and severely admonished by the -Court. Everyone wondered why -this acknowledged “bad man” did -not promptly wreak vengeance on -the Hebrew. The gambler, however, -desiring to protect the name -of the school-teacher, said not a word, but paid -the fine and went about his business as though -nothing had happened.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i004.jpg"> -<img src="images/i004.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“HE ADMINISTERED A THRASHING SUCH AS MIGHT BE GIVEN TO A RECALCITRANT SCHOOLBOY.”</p> -</div> - -<p>Some ten days passed, when, one moonlight -evening, Cutler came driving down the road -leading into Three Corners, behind a fast-trotting -horse. Just as he reached the end of a long -field of corn a report rang out and his horse -dropped, riddled with shot. Cutler jumped -from his buggy, whipped out his revolver, -and made for the corn-field, from which the -shot had evidently come. He made a thorough -search, but the tall corn-stalks afforded a secure -hiding-place to the would-be assassin—for Cutler -had no doubt whatever that the shot had been -meant for him. Reluctantly giving up his quest, -he walked back to his saloon and sent several -men to remove the dead horse and bring in his -buggy. The next morning he again made his -way to the corn-field, and there, just by the -fence, he found five discarded cigarette ends of -a very expensive Egyptian brand which he knew -to be smoked by only one man in Three -Corners—Goldman, the draper. Evidently the -man had lain in wait for a long time. Cutler -next climbed over the fence, and was about to -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">318</span> -return when he saw lying in the path a piece of -cloth torn from a jacket, and on it a button. It -looked as though the would-be murderer, in -jumping the fence, had caught his coat on the -barbed wire; at any rate, he had left a damning -piece of evidence behind him. With the -cigarette ends and the fragment of cloth in his -pocket, Cutler walked leisurely up the road into -the town and made direct for the shop of Moses -Goldman.</p> - -<p>The draper was standing on a step-ladder -arranging some goods on the shelves. When -the door opened, ringing a small bell, he turned, -and seeing Cutler jumped down from the ladder. -The gambler looked the man straight in the eye. -“You miserable cur!” he cried, angrily. “You’d -shoot a man in the dark, would you?”</p> - -<p>Goldman, realizing that Cutler had satisfied -himself as to the identity of his assailant, made -as if to draw a revolver. That was the last -movement he ever made, for the next instant he -dropped dead, shot clean through the heart.</p> - -<p>The gambler waited for a moment to see if -the report of the pistol had attracted any attention; -then, as no one appeared, he quietly left -the shop, went over to his saloon, placed two -revolvers in his belt, and filled his pockets with -ammunition. Then, taking up a Winchester -repeating-rifle, he went to the stable, saddled -his horse, and after a few words with his bartender -rode out of Three Corners in a westerly -direction.</p> - -<p>It was not long after his departure before -the entire town was in an uproar. Moses -Goldman, the energetic draper, had been -found shot—killed in his own shop by Jim -Cutler. The latter had been seen entering -Goldman’s establishment by several persons, -and the shot had been heard by people living -above the store, who afterwards saw Cutler -leaving. Sheriff Benson, accompanied by two -deputies, promptly called at the Gem Saloon, -but the officer was a trifle late, for Cutler was by -that time some miles distant. Lest it should be -thought that Cutler had made his escape through -cowardice it may be best to explain at once, -perhaps, that this was not the case. The man -realized that should he be apprehended the -name of Miss Thurloe must necessarily figure -prominently in the matter. Strange as it may -seem, this six-foot gambler, knowing no better, -believed that by “making himself scarce” he -was protecting that lady’s good name. This was -a mistake, undoubtedly, but the fact remains -that he made it.</p> - -<p>It happened that Rufe Benson, Sheriff of -Beulah County, was a sworn enemy of Cutler’s, -for the latter some years before had taken the law -into his own hands and at the point of his gun -liberated a prisoner whom he believed to be -innocent, and who was eventually proved to be -so. Benson now formed a posse of some twenty -armed men, and there began a man-hunt which -lasted, so far as this particular posse was concerned, -for a fortnight. They were then reinforced -by a body of “Rangers,” some fifty -strong, who in turn found it necessary to call to -their assistance a body of militia. All these -officers were ably assisted by the citizens and -residents of Beulah County, altogether some -thousand strong, and yet Jim Cutler proved -more than their match. Benson’s men trailed -the fugitive to Kerry’s ranch, some six miles -out; from here he had gone north-west toward -the Rio Grande. He was mounted on a thoroughbred—as -were all the men, for that matter—but -six miles was a long start in a case like this, and -should the hunted man once reach the mountains—well, -there might be some trouble in -getting at him. The telegraph was put into -operation, and a circle some ten miles in circumference -drawn around Cutler. When this cordon -closed in, however, they failed to find the -gambler amongst them, but they <i>did</i> find two -self-appointed “man-hunters” lying where they -had fallen to the deadly aim of Jim Cutler’s -repeating-rifle.</p> - -<p>From every town for miles around amateur -detectives joined the hunt, but no trace could -be found of Cutler beyond the Moulin River, -a tiny stream only some twenty feet wide, so the -rivulet was dammed and the water drained off -for miles, so as to discover, if possible, whether -Cutler had ridden up or down stream. While -one party of men were doing this, others rode -in all directions, searched the ranches, and -notified every town by telegraph to keep a look-out -for the slayer of Moses Goldman. More -and more people joined in the hunt, but for -some days, in the slang of the West, “there was -nothing doing.” Then, early one morning, two -horsemen came galloping towards Benson’s camp, -and one of the men, dismounting, delivered a -message to the effect that Cutler had been seen -at McPherson’s ranch, some eleven miles north-west, -where he had informed Mr. McPherson -that he had not the slightest intention of taking -further life unless driven to it, and that, if -Benson would call in all his men, he (Cutler) -would promise to give himself up in a fortnight’s -time. (It was afterwards learned that he -intended in the interval to communicate with -Miss Thurloe and arrange a story, leaving her -name entirely out of the matter.) Benson, -however, was on his mettle, and so refused -to parley with his quarry.</p> - -<p>“If Jim Cutler thinks he can defy the law -and officers of this county, he is mightily -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">319</span> -mistaken,” he said, “and we’re going to take -him, dead or alive.” This ultimatum duly -reached Cutler through “non-combatant” -friends, whereupon he smiled grimly. Being -now outlawed, it was impossible for Cutler’s -friends to assist him without making themselves -amenable to the law, so the hunted man -demanded and secured everything he required -at the point of the pistol.</p> - -<p>Within fourteen days thereafter nine men who -had attempted to interfere with the escaping -gambler paid for their foolhardiness with their -lives, and all the time, little by little, Cutler was -getting closer to the mountains, whose shelter -meant so much to him. Sometimes hidden for -hours in a haystack, or lying flat under the -rafters of a barn loft, the fugitive moved on his -way. The main body of pursuers often got -within gun-shot of him, but luck favoured the -man, and he always managed to find cover just -in time. Finally, completely worn out—he had -ridden two horses to death and abandoned -others commandeered for the time being—Cutler -reached the foot of the scrub hills or -little range which lay between him and his goal. -Here, for the first time, he came in contact -with a number of the “man-hunters.” “Lon” -Masters—a noted character in Montana, and -himself a dead shot—accompanied by eight -cowboys, suddenly appeared over a rise in the -ground. Cutler, on foot, saw them coming. -He dropped on one knee and his rifle flew to -his shoulder. The horsemen drew rein, and -Masters, making a trumpet of his hands, -shouted, “Don’t be a fool, Jim; you’re sure to -be caught sooner or later. Let me take you, and -I’ll promise no harm shall come to you. You -know my word.”</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i006.jpg"> -<img src="images/i006.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">TABLE ROCK, CUTLER’S STRONGHOLD IN BEULAH COUNTY.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>“Can’t do it, Lon,” Cutler shouted back. “If -they give me ten days without interference I’ll -give myself up—you know <i>my</i> word.”</p> - -<p>“Jim,” responded Masters, “if you don’t -drop your gun we shall have to fire.”</p> - -<p>“Crack! crack! crack!” came the answer -from Cutler’s gun, Masters and two others of -the party being hit. The remainder now urged -their horses forward, but, as first one and then -another rider was “winged” by the desperate -man in front of them, the remainder decided -that they had urgent business elsewhere, and -rode back for reinforcements.</p> - -<p>At last, after a weary night’s climb, Cutler -reached the place he had been making for. He -had not slept more than an hour or two for -days, and so, secure for a time at least—for no -one could climb these hills quicker than he had -done—the worn-out man dropped in a heap. -Cutler’s hiding place was a barren ledge, some -fifty yards in extent, the only approach thereto -being the bridle-path by which he had come. -Two, or at most three, at a time was the only -formation in which his pursuers could get anywhere -near him, and with Cutler’s knowledge -of the use of firearms this was a ticklish undertaking, -to say the least of it. Moreover, he -could see anyone approaching along the valley -for a great distance. There was plenty of water -a little distance down the path, Cutler had -sufficient food with him to last for a week, and -he felt he could “make a get-away” during -this time.</p> - -<p>The erstwhile gambler awoke when the sun -was high in the heavens; he felt lame and sore -all over. Walking towards the edge of the -ledge he saw, away in the distance, a large -party of horsemen spread out over a great area. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">320</span> -Cutler went down the path, bathed his face and -arms in the cool spring water, and took a long -drink; then, returning above, he sat down and -leisurely ate from his store of dried beef, -biscuits, and corn bread. At midday the -approaching horsemen were in full view, and -Cutler saw that they had come with prairie -wagons, containing camp paraphernalia, -evidently prepared for a siege, for they knew as -well as he did himself of the hiding-place where -he had taken refuge. Soon the riders came to a -halt and Cutler laughed as he saw others coming -from all directions, evidently anxious to be -“in at the death.” It looked rather a big camp -to the solitary figure high in the air, but -numbers meant nothing, only—well, his ammunition -would give out sooner or later. Then, -of course, would come capture—but he wouldn’t -look that far ahead.</p> - -<p>During the afternoon several men approached, -one of them displaying a white handkerchief, -which he waved to and fro. When the men -reached the bottom of the hill they dismounted -and one made his way slowly up, shouting now -and again, “It’s me, Jim—Joe Ludlow.” Cutler -made his way down the path and, suddenly -coming upon Ludlow, ordered him to throw up -his hands. The man did so, saying, “Jim, you -and I have been friends for fifteen years; believe -me, I’m unarmed; I want to talk to you—trust -me.” Thereupon Cutler lowered his rifle, and -the two men shook hands. Then followed a -long confab, during which Ludlow did his -utmost to get Cutler to surrender. He said -Sheriff Benson was prepared to starve Cutler -out, or get him at all costs. It would only -mean loss of life and must eventually result in -the fugitive’s capture. Ludlow said that he, with -half-a-dozen “pals,” would assure Cutler a safe -return to Three Corners, sending Benson and -all the rest on ahead. Then Cutler could stand -his trial, and, with a good lawyer from Butte to -defend him, would no doubt stand a chance of -some sort.</p> - -<p>Cutler listened patiently; then he shook his -head.</p> - -<p>“I know what’s coming to me, Joe,” he said; -“they have been after me for years in a quiet -way. Now they want my life, but they sha’n’t -have it—at least not until I’ve paved the way -with a few of them.”</p> - -<p>Ludlow was a very decent sort of fellow, and -he tried his utmost to convince Cutler that his -argument was a good one. Cutler then took -the man into his confidence, and, Ludlow -promising not to say a word to those below, he -was told the whole story—told of Miss Thurloe’s -complaints, the episode at the school-house, the -shooting of Cutler’s horse, and everything.</p> - -<p>“Well, I’m jiggered!” cried Ludlow, when -the tale was finished. “Why didn’t you let us -know this in the first place?” He then informed -the gambler that he would ride back to -Three Corners and explain the situation to the -schoolmistress. She had only to tell her story -to the judge, he said, and it was a certainty he -would interfere in some way. Cutler demurred, -but Ludlow bluntly told him to “go to h——; -he wasn’t going to see a good man hounded to -death.” With that, turning on his heel, he left -without another word.</p> - -<p>Going back to the camp, Ludlow informed -Sheriff Benson that under no circumstances -ought he to attempt to take Cutler, and asked -him to await his return from Three Corners. -Benson replied, “I want none of your conversation, -Ludlow; Cutler is a downright murderer, -and I mean to have him.”</p> - -<p>Ludlow, disdaining further argument, rode off -at full speed toward the little town where all the -trouble had occurred.</p> - -<p>Not knowing just what card Ludlow had up -his sleeve, the sheriff decided to make quick -work of Cutler’s capture. He therefore sent a -party of deputies to Malvern, the nearest telegraph -station, and in the name of the law asked -the county militia to send him some men with -a mountain gun, the property of private -individuals who practised soldiering as a pastime. -Each State in America, it may be said in -passing, possesses several such regiments, which -are available in war-time, although in no way -a part of the Government organization, and -having no connection with the State militia. It -would have been useless to attempt to dislodge -Cutler as matters stood, but Benson believed -that a few shots from a cannon might have the -desired effect. When his message was received -at Malvern it created a sensation. Business was -for the nonce neglected and everybody—men, -women, and children—made their way toward -the sheriffs camp at Table Hill.</p> - -<p>Several attempts were made to parley with -Cutler, without success, and so three days went -by. On the afternoon of the fourth day the -refugee on the rock was thunderstruck to see a -body of soldiers approaching from the south, -with a field gun hauled by four horses. He did -not know whether to laugh or to regard this -seriously. Surely the officers of the law would -not resort to bombarding him with a cannon? -Soon the soldiers reached the camp, and about -an hour later Cutler saw that the gun, a howitzer, -was being trained on the hill where he lay -enjoying a smoke. There was no chance of his -getting away other than by the path by which he -had come. Behind him there was a sheer drop -of hundreds of feet into the gully far below. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">321</span> -True, he could descend some distance down the -mountain-side, but if the besiegers really meant -business this would not help him much. -Nothing was done that day, but Cutler kept -vigilant watch all through the night. He had -regularly built a huge fire some way down the -mountain-side, which was protected by trees to -some extent, but -lit up the path -for a considerable -distance.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i008.jpg"> -<img src="images/i008.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“IF YOU SO MUCH AS WINK YOUR EYE I’LL PUT A HOLE IN YOU.”</p> -</div> - -<p>The next -morning a party -numbering a -dozen came toward -the hill -again bearing a -white flag. They -stopped some -distance off, one -man only continuing—Benson, -the Sheriff of -Beulah County, -himself. Cutler -allowed him to -approach much -nearer than had -Ludlow; then -he covered the -advancing sheriff -with his rifle.</p> - -<p>“Cutler, if we -haven’t rushed -this place,” said -Benson, “it is -only because I -did not want to -sacrifice human -lives, knowing -full well that -sooner or later -you must give -up. I know you -are on the -square, so I’ve -come up unarmed, -being -sure you wouldn’t -take advantage of -the white flag. I’m only doing my duty. I give -you this chance to come back with me, otherwise -I’m afraid they’ll blow this place up and -you with it.”</p> - -<p>“Regular war, isn’t it?” replied Cutler, -smilingly.</p> - -<p>“Looks like it,” admitted the sheriff.</p> - -<p>“Well, seeing you are trying that game, I’ll -just do a little in the war line myself,” said -Cutler. “You walk up this path towards me, -and if you so much as wink your eye I’ll put a -hole in you that a tramcar could go through!”</p> - -<p>The sheriff could hardly believe his ears. -“Don’t be a fool, Cutler,” he said, angrily.</p> - -<p>“Never mind about my being a fool; you -do as you’re told or I’ll drop you quick.”</p> - -<p>Benson evidently -had no -doubts about -the matter, for, -though beside -himself with -rage, he promptly -did as Cutler -ordered. The -sheriff was forced -to walk ahead, -and no doubt, -had his captor -been almost any -other man than -Jim Cutler, there -would have been -one big fight on -Table Hill, gun -or no gun, but -Benson knew -that Cutler would -do just as he -said he would. -Arrived at the -top, Benson was -forced to write a -note saying that -he was a captive, -and that perhaps -it would be just -as well not to fire -the cannon in -the direction it -was now trained. -Furthermore, one -man was to -approach the -hill with food, -whisky, and tobacco. -The note -was then secured -to a large stone by -the aid of Sheriff Benson’s braces, and while -Cutler “stood by” Benson was ordered to throw -this stone toward the deputy in charge of the waiting -horsemen below. This man, or one of those -with him, picked up the stone, and read the -message to the others. There was a great laugh -below—plainly heard by the two men on the -ledge—and, needless to say, the merriment of -his assistants did not add to Benson’s peace of -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">322</span> -mind. Cutler now laid his rifle down, first -having drawn a six-shooter. Then, approaching -Benson, he searched him for concealed firearms, -but the sheriff was unarmed. The latter -was now told to sit down and make himself -comfortable at the opening which led to the -path, Cutler being thereby able to watch -both his prisoner and the approach from -below. Soon a solitary figure came from -the camp, carrying the food “ordered.” It -was brought as near as Cutler permitted it to -be, and then Benson, under cover of the rifle, -was sent to fetch it. It looked for a moment as -though there might be a fight after all, but -Cutler’s business-like demeanour soon caused -his prisoner to change his mind.</p> - -<p>With the food there was a note, reading, -“Are we to wait for you or not?” This did -not appeal to the sheriff’s sense of humour, and -he tore the paper into shreds.</p> - -<p>Just at sundown a large cloud of dust was -noticed in the distance, which soon turned out -to be a number of mounted men with a wagon, -or “prairie schooner.” The new-comers were -presently merged with those in camp, and not -long afterwards two men, escorting a woman, -rode slowly toward Table Hill. Again the -white flag was raised, and a voice shouted from -below, “Hi, Jim, it’s me—Ludlow.”</p> - -<p>Cutler permitted his friend to approach, and -when he gained the ledge Ludlow had a hard -struggle to restrain his laughter at the unfortunate -sheriff’s predicament.</p> - -<p>“I’ve brought some news for you, Jim,” said -Ludlow. “That school-ma’am is a brick, and -no mistake. When I told her how things stood, -she came right to the front, and not only saw -Judge Nolan, but drove twenty miles to see -Governor Hill, and here’s the result.”</p> - -<p>Ludlow then handed Sheriff Benson an -official communication paroling Cutler in his -own recognizances pending investigation of -Miss Thurloe’s story. Western men are -nothing if not intensely chivalrous, and, if this -girl’s story was correct, Cutler, in their estimation, -deserved, not death, but a medal.</p> - -<p>The amazed sheriff scratched his head and -Cutler seemed undecided, but Ludlow grasped -his hand eagerly. “Come on, old fellow, down -to the sea-level,” he cried. This broke the -tension, and all three men smiled.</p> - -<p>“There is nothing for me to do but obey -this, Cutler,” said the sheriff, slowly; “but I’ll -tell you straight I don’t feel like doing it.”</p> - -<p>Ludlow turned to Benson and informed him -that Judge Nolan had made him a Court officer, -the tenure of his office being thirty days, and -that he would brook no interference from -Benson or anyone else. That settled it. The -trio walked down the path, where Miss Thurloe, -with tears in her eyes, thanked Cutler for his -brave and manly action on her behalf. She -said that she had reason to believe he would be -acquitted, and that, as no warrant had been -issued for his arrest until after he had shot the -men who had attempted to stop him, it must be -a case of self-defence.</p> - -<p>Cutler was received with cheers by the crowd -in camp—the same men who were thirsting for -his blood an hour before—and soon everybody -was seeking the nearest way home, and the -scene of action was shortly deserted. It is not -possible to chronicle that Jim Cutler was -triumphantly acquitted at his trial. His -character went strongly against him—that is to -say, the fact that he had previously figured in -“shooting scrapes”—but, nevertheless, his -sentence was a comparatively light one. The -State’s attorney (analogous to counsel for the -Crown) laid great stress on the fact of -Cutler’s having visited Goldman’s shop, -obviously seeking trouble, when he should have -reported the attempt on his life to the authorities. -He was sentenced to five years in the State -prison, but was pardoned at the expiration of -eleven months. He is now living in Butte, the -capital of the State of Montana, where he has -opened a saloon. Miss Thurloe left Three -Corners, and is believed to be teaching in -Pittsburg, U.S.A.</p> - -<p>The local newspapers poked much fun at the -soldiers who took their cannon miles out to -bombard what they jocularly called “a one-man -army”; but all the same they meant business, and -had matters not ended as they did there would -have been a change in the landscape just there, -for the top of Table Hill would in all probability -have been blown to pieces, and Jim Cutler with it.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i009.jpg"> -<img src="images/i009.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">323</span></div> - -<hr class="chap" /> -<h2 id="Photographing_a_Volcano_in_Eruption">Photographing a Volcano in Eruption.<br /> - -<span class="smcap medium">By Frank Davey.</span></h2> - -<blockquote> - -<p>A vivid description of a photographer’s adventures in securing pictures of the eruption of Makuaweoweo, -in Hawaii. With pen and camera Mr. Davey depicts the awe inspiring grandeur of the lake of fire in -the crater of Mauna Loa, the pyrotechnic display afforded by the active cone on the mountain-side, and -the horrors of night amid the lava-wastes, where death menaced the party on every hand.</p></blockquote> - -<div> -<img class="drop-cap" src="images/o.jpg" alt="O" /> -</div> - -<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">On</span> Tuesday, July 1, 1899, reports -reached Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, -that the volcano of Makuaweoweo, -situated at the summit of Mauna -Loa, thirteen thousand six hundred -and seventy-five feet high, on the island of -Hawaii, had burst forth with all the fury of -years gone by. I was anxious to get some -photographs of the eruption if possible, and so -made all the haste I could to get my paraphernalia -together and catch the steamer <i>W. H. -Hall</i>, bound for Hawaii.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i010.jpg"> -<img src="images/i010.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“PAHOEHOE” LAVA, WHICH APPEARS AS THOUGH IT HAD COOLED WHILE FLOWING QUIETLY.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>I left with the intention of reaching the scene -of action from the Kau side of the island, but -when, upon arriving at Kailua, Kona, I telegraphed -to Mr. N. S. Monsarrat, at Kapapalu, -I found that he had a house full of guests bent -on the same journey, and that all his horses had -been engaged. Rather than lose time, therefore, -I decided to take the most difficult route -of all—right over the great mountain from the -Kona side. The obstacles to be overcome may -perhaps be imagined when I state that Mauna -Loa is a volcanic mountain, nearly fourteen -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">324</span> -thousand feet high, and that one has to make -one’s way for the entire distance over every kind -of lava formation.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i011.jpg"> -<img src="images/i011.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“A. A.” LAVA, WHICH LOOKS AS THOUGH IT HAD SOLIDIFIED WHILE TOSSING LIKE A SEA IN A STORM AND THEN BEEN BROKEN -UP BY EARTHQUAKES.<br /> -[<i>From a Photograph</i>.]</p> -</div> - -<p>It was with great difficulty that I managed to -get horses and mules from the natives, who knew -the condition of the country, for the animals -inevitably get badly knocked about, their legs -being terribly cut by the lava, which is divided -into two classes—“Pahoehoe” and “A. A.” -The former term is applied to tracts of comparatively -smooth lava, which appears as though -it had cooled while flowing quietly; the latter is -applied to stretches of broken lava which seem to -have cooled when tossing like an ocean in a bad -storm, and to have afterwards been broken up -by earthquakes. No words of description can -convey an idea of its roughness and hardness, -which may be faintly realized from an inspection -of the above photograph.</p> - -<p>During the time I was hunting for horses a -number of gentlemen arrived and expressed -their desire to join me in the expedition. I was -only too pleased to have their company, so five -travellers threw in their lot with me: Professor -Ingalls, Colonel McCarthy, and Messrs. Sterns -Buck, J. Ballard, and H. C. Klugel. These, -with three guides, completed our party.</p> - -<p>We were up early the next morning. The -first part of the journey was one of the most -delightful rides I ever had. We rode for hours -through magnificent tropical growths. There -were giant ferns, some of which must have been -thirty or forty feet high and three feet in -diameter, groves of guavas, coco-nuts, and other -fruits, miles of wild mint and bright-coloured -flowers, and orchids of most delicate shapes.</p> - -<p>At dusk we reached the edge of the timber-line, -in a drenching rain, a downpour such as is -experienced only in the tropics, where the rain -descends in sheets. We ate our supper and -then spent the night huddled miserably together, -trying in vain to keep dry.</p> - -<p>We resumed our journey at daybreak, over the -most terrible country that can be imagined. The -sharp edges of the lava cut through our stout -boots like broken glass, and the poor animals -suffered greatly. Still, however, we persevered, -and finally reached the summit just as it was -getting dark. Near the centre of the mountain-top -an area of about four square miles sinks to -a depth of one thousand feet. This is the great -crater of Makuaweoweo, which we had endured -so much to see.</p> - -<p>As I stood there in the cold, in the midst of -those cheerless and God-forsaken wastes, I gazed -down with speechless awe upon the untrammelled -frolics of the God of Fire. The tempest-tossed -lake of molten lava below the rim of the great -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">325</span> -cauldron was a typical workshop of Vulcan. -The face of the lake of liquid fire alternated -continually between black and white, like molten -iron in a furnace. Oxidation and cooling of the -fiery fluid would blacken the surface with a -pall that covered it in darkest gloom; then -a trembling, caused by further subterranean -outbursts of steam, would break this ice-like -oxide into a fretwork of tens of thousands of -incandescent cracks, lighting up the smoke-charged -pit with a fierce glare. Another -moment, and in different parts of the lake -geysers of fire of every imaginable colour would -rise like fountains in a public garden.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i012.jpg"> -<img src="images/i012.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE AUTHOR SURVEYING THE CRATER OF MAKUAWEOWEO FROM A PINNACLE OF LAVA.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>The great forbidding-looking walls of this -“home of everlasting fire” sparkled with the -unusual light, and then, as the spouts of flame -died away, the surface would again turn black, -leaving the whole mass to all appearances dead.</p> - -<p>We found that the worst outbreak was about -five thousand feet farther down the mountain-side. -Some of our party were seized with such -a sickness of horror at the crater’s edge that -they rolled themselves up in their blankets and -refused to look down upon this fiery maelstrom—and -that after two days of arduous -effort to reach a point of view!</p> - -<p>When the time came for sleep, another man -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">326</span> -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">327</span> -and I turned into a “blowhole” in the lava; it -was an immense bubble that had cooled and -left an opening so that we could crawl in. We -little thought that there was another hole at the -other end, and the piercing wind blew through -this like a funnel; but we had to stay there, for -it is dangerous to wander about over the rifts -and chasms of jagged lava in the darkness. -Here, in this strange bed-chamber, we slept, or -tried to sleep—shivering and shuddering through -the chilly solitude of the night in those desolate -mountain wastes.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i013.jpg"> -<img src="images/i013.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE CRATER OF MAKUAWEOWEO, SHOWING THE AWFUL LAKE OF LIQUID FIRE.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>Walking across the congealed masses of lava -next morning, one began to think that at any -moment one was liable to drop through to the -very gates of Hades and be precipitated to the -most horrible of deaths. Underneath one was -a bottomless abyss of mud, sulphur, and rock; -and to contemplate being cast into that fearsome-looking -lake of fire and brimstone was not -at all comfortable. The Biblical description of -hell does not convey even a faint idea of that -terrible lake of fire below us, which appeared to -be fretting and fuming as though anxious to get -loose and destroy everything in its path. The -crater of Makuaweoweo at that time, without -doubt, afforded the spectator a more awe-inspiring -display of the forces of Nature than -has been granted to man elsewhere on earth -without the sacrifice of life.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i014.jpg"> -<img src="images/i014.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE AUTHOR AND HIS COMPANIONS AS THEY APPEARED JUST BEFORE LEAVING THEIR HORSES TO VISIT THE WORST OUTBREAK.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>Soon after daylight we prepared for the -descent to the point that was throwing out -molten lava at a white heat. It was practically -impossible to take the horses farther, so we -tethered them to stones near the yawning depths -of Makuaweoweo, and left one of the guides to -look after them. We were very thirsty, but it was -some time before we could find water, though -snow and ice were plentiful. Farther down, -however, we discovered water in a deep crack -in the lava, filled the canteens, and started on -our downward journey. I was suffering from -mountain sickness; my head felt as if it would -burst and my stomach was upside down. We -stumbled along with difficulty for about two -miles, when I had to get the assistance of Mr. -Buck to carry my camera. Two of our party -who had started out in advance gave it up and -returned—they could not stand the strain of the -rough travelling. This left but four of us, with -two guides.</p> - -<p>Presently we reached a cone where the lava -had piled up to the height of about one hundred -feet, then, bursting out at the side, disappeared -into the ground, to reappear about a quarter of -a mile farther down and repeat its action. These -cones averaged two hundred feet in width at the -base and one hundred feet in height, and we -passed five “dead” ones. A sixth was still -smoking, but was not active. Two of the party -tried to climb to the top of this cone, but were -unable to do so.</p> - -<p>We then pushed on to cone number seven, -which was belching forth huge volumes of steam -and sulphur. The fumes, most fortunately, -were being blown away from us. At this stage -one of the guides refused to go any farther; it -was too dangerous, he said, so he proceeded to -retrace his steps, while we others continued our -journey toward cone number eight. This was -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">328</span> -the last and largest, and was, I should estimate, -about two hundred feet high; in fact, a veritable -miniature volcano, spouting red-hot lava a -hundred feet in the air with a ripping boom that -could be heard for miles. Boulders that must -have weighed a ton were being hurled high into -the air as if shot from a cannon. Others followed -to meet those coming down, and as they met -they burst like explosive shells, scattering molten -matter on all sides. This flowed down the -incline in cascades like water, showing red, -yellow, blue, and all the colours of the rainbow.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i015.jpg"> -<img src="images/i015.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">TWO OF THE “DEAD” CONES PASSED BY THE PARTY.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>It is impossible to describe the grandeur of -the effect, and a knowledge of the force that -was causing the display made one feel very -small indeed. Some of the ejected masses were -as large as a horse, and when they were belched -forth were at a white heat. They went so high -that they had time to cool and return to the -vortex black.</p> - -<p>It was three o’clock in the afternoon when we -reached this wonderful display. It had taken -us nine hours to reach the volcano, and we were -thirsty and well-nigh exhausted. We could not -approach very near on account of the heat, but -I made some photographic exposures, and then -sat for an hour watching the wonderful sight. -As the sun went down the magnificence of the -scene increased. The ground shook at each -explosion to such an extent as to make us sick. -We found quantities of what is known as “Pele’s -hair.”<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">1</a> It is caused by the wind blowing the -liquid lava through the air, forming fine threads -like human hair.</p> - -<div class="footnote"> - -<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">1</a> -Pele, according to the native legends, is the goddess of the -volcano, and dwells in the crater.</p></div> - -<p>As we approached cone number seven on our -return journey the wind changed, and to our -consternation we saw a cloud of sulphur blowing -right across our path. These masses of vapour -are so impregnated with sulphur and poisonous -gases that it is impossible for any living thing to -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">329</span> -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">330</span> -exist among them, and to get caught in their -midst means death. Alarmed, we started to go -around the other side, but found the lava was -too hot; the surface was cool, but there was -living fire beneath, and we dared not proceed. -We kept on until the lava began to move under -our feet, and then beat a retreat to face the -sulphur again, for it was better to be smothered -to death than slowly roasted.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i016.jpg"> -<img src="images/i016.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">CONE “NUMBER SEVEN”—IT WAS ABOUT TWO HUNDRED FEET HIGH, A MINIATURE VOLCANO, SPOUTING RED-HOT LAVA AND GIANT BOULDERS WITH A ROAR THAT COULD -BE HEARD FOR MILES.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>We made a number of attempts to pass that -deadly barrier of vapour, but were forced to -return each time, nearly suffocated. It looked -as though we should soon be choked to death—the -fire at the back of us, the sulphur in front. -Professor Ingalls remarked that we had better -make the best of our time by taking notes, and -then prepare for the worst. Just at this critical -moment I happened to turn round and saw an -arch, as it were, in the sulphur smoke, where the -wind was blowing it up from the ground.</p> - -<p>“Look! look!” I shouted, in great excitement. -“Run for it!” And how we ran! -Providence gave us the chance and fear lent us -strength, for under ordinary circumstances we -could never have run as we did, owing to the -condition of our feet. The danger, however, -made us forget the pain, and we ran for dear life. -We had scarcely got through that arch of clear -air when down came the cloud again, as though -lowered by some great power. The only guide -who had stayed with us fell exhausted at the -edge of the vapour-mass. How I managed to -drag him along I do not know; I hardly realized -what I was doing, but I managed to save him.</p> - -<p>Once past the danger-point we crawled along -at our best pace, for at any moment the wind -might turn in our direction, when we should be -again overtaken by that terrible death-cloud. I -had left my camera behind in our wild flight, -but fortunately I saved several plates.</p> - -<p>It was now night, and the only light we had -was the lurid glare from the volcano. Suddenly, -as we stumbled painfully along, we came upon a -man sitting by the side of a dead cone; it was -the guide who had returned. He said he did -not expect to see us alive again, for he had seen -the deadly smoke blow across the mountain.</p> - -<p>If it had not been for the light from the -volcano we should undoubtedly have perished of -cold and thirst, as we should have been compelled -to stop walking. As it was, we dared not -halt for any length of time, or we should not -have had warmth enough to keep the blood -circulating. All that night we crawled over -that terrible lava. We fell down at intervals of -about twenty feet, often breaking through the -black crust, sometimes up to our waists, cutting -ourselves on the sharp projections until our -hands and legs were woefully lacerated. Almost -as soon as we fell we dropped asleep; then, as -we got colder, we would wake up and force ourselves -on again for a few dozen yards or so, only -to fall asleep, wake, and struggle up once more. -The agony of the situation and the pain of our -wounds were enough to make a man go insane.</p> - -<p>At last it began to get light, but still we had -come across no water, and that in our canteens -had long since been exhausted. Very few -people, fortunately, know what it means to have -their throats and lips so swollen and cracked that -they are bleeding for want of water. I could -scarcely speak. We hunted the depths and -crevices of the lava, sometimes going down ten -or fifteen feet, looking for water, only to be -disappointed again and again. At last I got so -weak that Mr. Buck had to take my package of -plates off my back, where I had tied them.</p> - -<p>Suddenly I saw a break in the lava nearly full -of beautiful water. I pulled Mr. Buck’s arm, -pointing to it, and mumbled, “Water.” Slowly -he pulled off his coat and started to climb down -the crack. It was about eight feet wide, narrowing -to three. I leaned over the side, holding -the canteen for Mr. Buck to fill. He went -down a few feet, and then stopped. I -motioned to him to fill the bottle, croaking, -“Water.” He did not look around, but mumbled, -“I see no water,” as if in a dream. Picking up -a piece of lava, I tossed it down and cried -hoarsely, “<i>There</i> is the water.” But to my -astonishment the pebble went down, down, -down, out of sight, with no sound of a splash, -into a fathomless abyss. The crevice was so -deep that we could not see the bottom, and the -shock of the discovery made me faint. How -Sterns Buck managed to return he does not -remember; it is a wonder he did not fall, to be -mangled upon the sharp corners of lava.</p> - -<p>I came to my senses dazed and almost -bewildered, and Buck and I sat motionless for -some time staring at each other. After a time -we scrambled on again until we came upon the -guide sitting upon the edge of a high crack, -eating frozen snow, and tearing at it with his -teeth like a hungry dog. We followed his -example, not without pain, but the snow tasted -good.</p> - -<p>Some of the party who had previously returned -met us near the summit with coffee. When -they saw us coming they got things ready so as -to make us as comfortable as possible. After -washing our lacerated hands and feet we took a -good sleep, and awoke much refreshed. The -journey home was, comparatively speaking, easy, -but the memory of that night amidst the lava -will last me to my dying day. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">331</span></p> - -<hr class="chap" /> -<div class="figcenter"> -<img id="Our_Leopard_Hunt" src="images/i018.jpg" -alt="Our Leopard Hunt." /> -<p class="center"><span class="smcap medium">By Thomas B. Marshall.</span></p> -</div> - -<blockquote> - -<p>An exciting story told by a former official of the Gold Coast Government. With a friend and some -natives he went out to shoot a marauding leopard. They accomplished their mission, but before the -day was over one and all of the party had received a good deal more than they bargained for.</p></blockquote> - -<div> -<img class="drop-cap" src="images/i.jpg" alt="I" /> -</div> - -<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">In</span> 1899, while in the service of -the Gold Coast Government, and -stationed at Kumasi, I received -orders “per bearer, who will accompany -you,” to proceed to a point on -Volta not far south of where it -debouches from among the Saraga Hills. -“The bearer,” a nice young fellow called -Strange, was newly arrived in the colony, and -his pleasant home gossip was not less welcome -to me than my information about the country -we were in was to him. Our rough forest -journey, then, passed as pleasantly as such -journeys can, and by the time we arrived at our -destination we were the best of friends.</p> - -<p>Akroful, a town of about seven hundred -inhabitants, was the nearest place of any size to -the spot where we pitched our camp, and we -were soon on good terms with its headman, -Otibu Daku, and his son, Dansani, both of -whom put us in the way of some good shooting.</p> - -<p>We had been in this place about a fortnight, -when we began to be annoyed by the depredations -of a marauding leopard, who took to -visiting our live-stock pens, and at last we -decided to lie in wait for him. I took the first -watch until a snake crawled over my legs; then -I went to bed. It was a harmless one, but it -reminded me of the need of precaution, so next -night found our lair surrounded by a very -uninviting floor of cactus leaves.</p> - -<p>The fourth night after our vigil commenced -Strange succeeded in wounding our sell-invited -guest, and we determined to track him down as -soon as it was light. Otibu Daku and his son -willingly agreed to help us; and I took, in -addition, two of my own men who would, I -knew, “stand fire”—Ashong Tawiah, an Accra -man, and Nyato, my chief steward-boy, a -Krooman.</p> - -<p>The two Ashantis led the way, Otibu Daku -carrying a “long Dane” gun; his son, a -machete. Tawiah and Nyato also carried -machetes, and the former, on leaving camp, had -picked up a broad-bladed Hausa spear. Strange -and I each had a repeating rifle and a revolver, -for, as Nyato told me, “Dem headman, ’e say, -plenty tiger lib dem part.”</p> - -<p>The trail was easy to follow. There was not -much blood, but the ground was soft from -recent rain. It was rough going, however, and -the machetes were constantly at work clearing -a way. Up and down small watersheds, -squelching through marshy bottoms, crossing -streams on fallen trees, we frequently lost the -track, but by some sort of instinct our guides -always found it again.</p> - -<p>At last, after descending a more than usually -steep incline, we found ourselves in a valley of -some size. The bush here was very thin, and -we progressed without difficulty until we came -in sight of the inevitable stream, the opposite -bank of which, rising steeply, evidently formed -the commencement of the next divide. I was -about a dozen yards to Strange’s right; the -ground was clear of bush between us and the -stream; and on the nearer bank, his head overhanging -the water, lay our quarry, clearly dying. -But he was not alone. Stretched by his side, -licking the wound that was letting out his life, -lay a fine female leopard, evidently his consort. -On seeing us she rose to her feet, snarling; -she abandoned her ministrations and became -militant—a defender-avenger. Strange fired -hastily on sight, and a convulsive heave of the -prostrate body showed where the bullet struck. -With a light leap the leopardess cleared her -mate, and with long, low springs raced down -towards my friend. He fired again at thirty -yards, wounding her, and she swerved slightly -and came in my direction. We both fired -together, whereupon she stopped suddenly, -reared straight up, pawing the air—then fell -backward, stone-dead. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">332</span></p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i019.jpg"> -<img src="images/i019.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“SHE REARED STRAIGHT UP PAWING THE AIR—THEN FELL BACKWARD, STONE-DEAD.”</p> -</div> - -<p>Hardly had the double report died away -when our attention was attracted to a movement -on the other side of the stream. Tawiah -pointed.</p> - -<p>“Oolah! tiger him piccin!” (“Master, the -leopard’s cubs”), he cried. Slinking away downstream, -with long, stealthy strides, their muzzles -to the ground and tails trailing low, were two -half-grown leopards, the head of one level with -the other’s haunch.</p> - -<p>“Tally-ho!” cried Strange, and let fly at -them. His one fault as a sportsman was a -too great eagerness to get the first shot in. -The white splinters flew from the buttress of a -great cotton-wood, and the nearer cub, startled -as never before, leapt a man’s height from the -ground, and, coming down, raced away downstream -after its companion.</p> - -<p>“Come on! We’ll bag the whole family,” -said Strange, jumping into the stream. Otibu -Daku was already across and I was about to -follow, when I noticed, fluttering up the farther -slope, one of those beautiful insects called the -“dead leaf” butterfly. You will see one fluttering -along like a fugitive piece of rainbow—then -suddenly it will alight on a withered branch or -heap of dead herbage and disappear, the underside -of the wings being in shape, colour, and -even veining an exact imitation of a withered -leaf.</p> - -<p>I was an enthusiastic collector, and never -went out without a folding net that could be -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">333</span> -fixed to any fairly straight stick. Bidding -Tawiah remain with me, then, I let the others -go on after the cubs, and in a couple of minutes -was in pursuit of my own particular quarry. -The slope was nearly bare of bush, and I did -not have much difficulty in making the capture. -Placing it in a flat box containing some poison-wax, -I took my rifle from Tawiah and went on up -the hill, leaving him tying up a scratch on his leg.</p> - -<p>I was not quite easy in my mind. We had -been too hasty in concluding that the cubs we -had seen belonged to the leopards we had shot. -They had been driven away too easily, and most -likely were heading straight for their own den, -where, at that time of day, the old ones would -certainly be at home.</p> - -<p>I hurried on in the hope of getting some -indication of my friend’s whereabouts. At the -top of the ascent a soft breeze met me, it was -pleasant and refreshing, but it brought that with -it that made me drop flat behind a bush and -throw my rifle forward. There is no mistaking -the odour given off by the larger carnivora, and -the strength of the smell that assailed my -nostrils was such as to convince me that my -first hasty thought—that I had headed off the -cubs—was wrong. Such an effluvium could come -only from a den, and an occupied one at that.</p> - -<p>There were three possibilities. It might be -the home of the dead leopards, of the strange -cubs we had seen, or the lair of yet a third -family. I looked back. Tawiah was not in -sight, but I knew he would follow. In front, for -a hundred yards, the level crest of the ridge -was covered by a sparse, wand-like growth that -was no impediment to the view. Beyond the -ground fell away again, and just on the edge, -and rather to my right, stood two enormous -cotton-woods, the space between them being a -labyrinth of roots standing thigh-high from the -ground.</p> - -<p>To this point, with what speed and silence I -could command, I made my way. Midway -I stopped abruptly to listen. A deep snarling, -worrying sound filled the air, coming from -straight ahead. Reaching the nearest root, I -looked over. The rapidly falling ground -beyond was hidden by a far-sweeping buttress -from the tree on my left, which, running -parallel with the one I stood against, made -a passage about four feet wide and two high. -Stealing away to the left, where the nearer root -sank below the surface, I entered the passage, -and, on all fours, reached a point midway -between the two trees. The noise I had before -heard was now very distinct, and, blending with -it, yet dominating it, came a continuous buzzing -sound like the far-away roll of a drum. I knew -it for the purring of a full-grown leopard.</p> - -<p>Looking back, I was glad enough to see -Tawiah reaching the level. I raised a warning -hand, and, waiting only to see that he observed -me, turned, and very cautiously looked over -the root in front. From where I crouched -the ground fell away very steeply and -was bare and stony. Then began a gentler -slope covered with a low scrub and running -down into a valley similar to, but larger than, -the one we had just left. Down the centre -flowed a stream, the same on whose banks, -higher up, we had left the dead leopards. I -was on a kind of spur, round which the stream -made a bend away to my right. To my left it -lost itself in an expanse of shallow water covered -with great water-lilies, which merged in its turn -into the stream of the Volta, half a mile away.</p> - -<p>Just where the change of slope began was a -great outcrop of rock. About a foot above the -base, and facing me, was a ragged opening, and -in this, with both paws hanging over the edge, -lounged a fine she-leopard. The air hummed -with her complacent purr, as, with blinking -eyes, she watched the rough play of two well-grown -cubs. Presently she rolled over on her -back, and, with downward-hanging head, struck -idly with a mighty paw at a white butterfly -flitting above her. She was the personification -of soft and sinuous strength.</p> - -<p>Suddenly, away to the right, a shot rang out. -The purring ceased, and instantly the great cat -was couched, rigid as a bronze casting. Except -for the tip of her tail, not a muscle moved. -Presently the tense expression relaxed, and -with a guttural sort of sigh her head dropped -on to her paws. But only for an instant. -The stealthy rustling of something approaching -reached her ears, and she resumed -her alert attitude. Then her eyes half closed -again, and she seemed to go smooth all over. -A suave, fawning expression came into her face; -her purring redoubled; she rolled softly on to -her side and gazed intently in the direction of -the sound. The noise came nearer, and -presently, as I expected, her mate appeared. -He paused for an instant to look back, and -at that moment Strange’s rifle spoke again, and -the leopard sank down, biting savagely at his -hind-quarters. With one movement as it -seemed, and with a sort of deep-throated cough, -his consort was by his side, and then began an -awful duet of snarls and growls, rumblings and -snufflings, with the cubs for chorus.</p> - -<p>It was high time for me to take action; a -wounded leopard and a leopardess with young -can make themselves pretty awkward. I aimed -at the female as being the more dangerous, and -was about to pull the trigger, when a movement -in the valley attracted my attention. One of -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">334</span> -the cubs we had first seen was tearing across the -open, making for the stream. Some distance -behind followed the other, evidently wounded. -Close upon him ran Dansani, machete in hand. -As I looked the cub turned and Dansani struck. -Nyato was close behind, and level with him, -but farther out, Otibu Daku stole swiftly with -long, bent-kneed strides, his “long Dane” gun -held across his body. Strange was not in sight.</p> - -<p>The foremost cub was nearly at the stream -when he raised a howl of fear or of warning, I -do not know which. On the instant, from a -clump of bushes on the farther side, there leapt -two greyish-white forms. Clearing the stream, they -charged straight down on the young Ashanti.</p> - -<p>All this was photographed on my brain while -my finger was on the trigger. The scene was -blotted out as I fired, and from that moment I -had enough on my hands to occupy my -undivided attention. The leopardess was -killed outright. The next instant I fired at -the male, but one of the cubs gave a jump -and received the bullet meant for his sire. -How the brute did it I do not know—for he -had a broken thigh-bone—but next moment the -old leopard was tearing up the slope towards me, -and very business-like he looked. I fired again -and clipped his ear; then his claws were hooked -on to the root in front of me, and all I could -do was to smash the butt, pile-driver fashion, -down upon his head. He seized it in his jaws, -and the hard wood cracked like pitch-pine, -while the wrench nearly tore the weapon from -my grasp. He gave me no time to reverse -it for another shot, or to draw my revolver. -Four times did he struggle to draw himself up, -and but for his broken leg I could not have -prevented him. Four times, luckily for me, he -allowed his fury to vent itself on the rifle-butt. -The struggle only lasted seconds, but it seemed -hours, and already the fury of it made my -breath come short.</p> - -<p>And then the cub decided to take a hand! -It had been pacing to and fro, snuffing the -blood and growling; it then suddenly turned, -and dashed straight to the scene of combat. A -leopard cub by itself is not more than a man -can manage, but as a reinforcement to an -infuriated parent it is a serious matter. I heard -Tawiah behind me.</p> - -<p>“Take the piccin,” I yelled, and put all my -strength into an effort to thrust my foe back. -Instinctively he tried to use his injured leg, and -this time he lost grip altogether, and his claws -scraped down the root, making great furrows -in the wood. I let him have the gun, and -seized my revolver in time to plant a couple of -bullets in his head as he came up again.</p> - -<p>Meanwhile Tawiah had accounted for the -cub, but he was badly clawed down the leg. -To my surprise—for I did not remember the -brute using his claws at all except to hold on by—my -coat was ripped, and I had several nasty, -but not severe, scratches down chest and arms.</p> - -<p>Our attention was now diverted to the scene -below, and what we saw sent us both down the -slope as fast as we could race—Tawiah ahead. -One cub lay dead—Dansani’s victim—and a few -paces from it stood the young Ashanti, preparing -to dodge the foremost of the parent -leopards I had seen break cover. He sprang -aside as it reached him, but the brute wheeled -as if on a pivot and reared. Then came the -crashing report of the “long Dane,” a fearful -yell, and Dansani reeled away with his hands -to his head, and fell. The leopard, roaring -horribly, rolled over and over, apparently broken -in two. Its mate, swerving at the report, -turned and raced straight for Tawiah, who had -just reached the level ground. I shouted -to him to come back to me, thinking that -revolver and spear together would match the -furious brute, but apparently he did not understand, -for, waving me to follow, he tore off to -where, midway between him and the advancing -leopard, stood a small Dequa palm. His -object, I learnt afterwards, was to hold the -leopard at bay there till help arrived. It was a -mad idea, for the savage brute was covering -three yards to one of his.</p> - -<p>Just at that moment I caught sight of Strange—hobbling -along, supported by his rifle, five -hundred yards away; there was no help to be -expected from him. Nyato was rushing on to -settle with the remaining cub, that, screaming, -was alternately dashing towards its wounded -dam and back to the stream. Otibu Daku was -carrying Dansani to the water, and the female -leopard, her hind quarters straddling like those -of a frog, with the small of her back blown away -and reared on her front legs, was rending the -air with the most awful yells.</p> - -<p>The male passed the tree, and only about -forty yards separated him from my faithful -follower. I ran on. Trusting to luck, I fired -two chambers, but without success. The distance -between them decreased rapidly, and -Tawiah, seeing the hopelessness of his position, -grounded his spear, and, gripping it by the -middle, backed up the butt with his knee in the -hope that the brute would impale himself. Then -I saw that Strange was kneeling, taking aim. -He could never hit a running leopard at that -range, I told myself; it would appear no bigger -than a cat to him.</p> - -<p>I was twenty yards behind Tawiah, and barely -ten separated him from the leopard, when a -ball of smoke floated away from Strange’s rifle. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">335</span> -I dared not hope, and Tawiah remained like a -rock. Then, suddenly, the leopard halted, and—for -all the world like a kitten chasing its own -tail—spun round and round till we could hardly -tell one end from the other. I sent two bullets -as near the centre as I could, and Tawiah, -charging in, drove his spear in at one side and -out at the other. The battle was over.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i022.jpg"> -<img src="images/i022.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“DANSANI REELED AWAY WITH HIS HANDS TO HIS HEAD, AND FELL.”</p> -</div> - -<p>We found that Strange’s bullet had pierced -the skin of the neck just where it joins the head, -and had half stunned the animal. But what a -glorious shot! I paced the distance to him; it -was four hundred and sixty odd yards! He had -made just a little too much allowance for speed, -but what of that?</p> - -<p>Strange, it appeared, had stepped on a loose -stone and strained his ankle badly. Poor -Dansani was horribly mauled. The beast had -clawed him from the crown of his head to the -knee in one awful sweep. Half the scalp overhung -his face, one eye was destroyed, the -muscle of the upper arm was in ribbons, and -the stroke, glancing from the elbow, had laid -open his thigh to the knee. A revolver-shot -finished his assailant. We did what we could -for Dansani on the spot, and Nyato and his father -carried him home on a hastily-constructed litter. -Later he recovered, but was terribly disfigured.</p> - -<p>Tawiah and I took it in turns to help Strange -along, and when we reached the spot where our -first victims lay we found their young ones -mewling over them. They slunk away, and we -did not molest them. The cub Nyato had -chased allowed self-preservation to triumph over -filial affection, and got away also. My rifle was -utterly ruined. And so ended our leopard hunt. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">336</span></p> - -<hr class="chap" /> -<h2 id="TURTLE-FARMING">TURTLE-FARMING.<br /> - -<span class="smcap medium">By H. J. Shepstone.</span></h2> - -<blockquote> - -<p>An interesting description of the way in which turtles are “farmed” in various parts of the world. -The most up-to-date and scientifically-conducted of these curious establishments is that of Mr. Hattori, -in Japan, where the snapping-turtle, the most vicious of his species, is bred and reared.</p></blockquote> - -<div> -<img class="drop-cap" src="images/t.jpg" alt="T" /> -</div> - -<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">That</span> strange creature, the turtle, is -now receiving the attention of the -farmer, and is being scientifically -bred and reared in various parts of -the world. Indeed, turtle-farming -on a large scale is now carried on both in Japan -and in America, while the great palisade enclosures -on the shores in the West Indies, -where turtles are confined until wanted for the -London market, may well come under the same -designation.</p> - -<p>Curiously enough, the species of turtle -favoured respectively by the Japanese, Americans, -and by English people are totally different. -For instance, the Japanese -farmer gives his attention -to the propagation of the -snapping-turtle and -American to the -diamond-backed -terrapin, while -the turtle soup -so much prized -by the wealthy -and sought after -by the sick in this -country is made -from the green -turtle of the -West Indies.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i023.jpg"> -<img src="images/i023.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">A GROUP OF YOUNG TURTLES JUST HATCHED.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>The terrapin -is quite a small -creature, rather -flat-backed and -rounded in outline, -its scales -being marked -by independent -black patterns -composed of many geometric -figures placed one -within another. At one -time it was found in -large quantities in the shallow bays and salt -marshes along the Atlantic coast from Massachusetts -to Texas. The discovery that its flesh -made a delicious stew and an ideal soup, -however, resulted in the creature being hunted -so vigorously that to-day it is exceedingly scarce. -Indeed, whereas a terrapin, seven inches in -length, could be picked up a few years ago for a -few cents, it would be difficult to secure one -to-day for a five-pound note. It was this -scarcity of the terrapin, and the big demand for -it among the hotels and restaurants, that have -led not a few enterprising men to establish farms, -where these much-sought-after creatures are -bred and reared for the -market in large numbers.</p> - -<p>The terrapin being -small, perfectly harmless, -and requiring -but a little pond -of salt water to -dwell in, there -is nothing particularly -exciting -in farming it. -Indeed, a terrapin -“farm” consists -merely of a -number of small -ponds or basins -in which the -creatures are -confined according -to their age -and size. Thus, -in the smaller -ponds, we discover -those just -hatched from -the eggs—curious little -things not much bigger -than a billiard ball. As -they breed well, and it is -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">337</span> -not necessary to keep the creature long before -it is ready for the <i>chef</i>, terrapin farming may be -described as a fairly remunerative business.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i024a.jpg"> -<img src="images/i024a.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">GENERAL VIEW OF MR. HATTORI’S TURTLE-FARM NEAR TOKIO, JAPAN.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i024b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i024b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE EMBANKMENT OF A “PARENTS’ POND”—EACH OF THE WIRE CIRCLETS HERE SHOWN COVERS A DEPOSIT OF EGGS.<br /> -<i>From a Photo. by M. Ichikawa, Japan.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>Decidedly more up-to-date are the snapping-turtle -farms of Mr. Hattori, situated just outside -Tokio, the capital of Japan. The Japanese -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">338</span> -people will proudly tell you that -they are the only turtle farms in -the world, but, as I have already -shown, this is hardly correct. -These farms were established -some few years ago now, and are, -without question, a great success. -On an average, Mr. Hattori supplies -to the hotels and restaurants -of Japan over sixteen thousand -turtles a year, while another five -thousand are shipped to China. -So far as the farm itself is concerned, -it consists of a number of -rectangular ponds, large and -small, the larger ones having an -area of fifteen to twenty thousand -square feet.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i025a.jpg"> -<img src="images/i025a.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">YOUNG SNAPPING-TURTLES A FEW DAYS OLD—THEY -ARE KEPT IN A SEPARATE ENCLOSURE -IN ORDER THAT THEIR CANNIBALISTIC ELDERS -MAY NOT DEVOUR THEM.<br /> -<i>From a Photo. by M. Ichikawa, Japan.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>One or more of the ponds is -always reserved for large breeding -individuals, or “parents,” as they -are called, and one of the assistants -visits this pond twice a day -to look out for new deposits of -eggs. Over these he places a wire -basket, with the date marked -upon it. In one of our photographs -a number of these wire -baskets may be seen, though -unfortunately the eggs are not -shown, being covered with a slight layer of sand, -this work being done by the turtle itself. The -covering serves a twofold purpose—the obvious -one of marking the place, and, in addition, -that of keeping other females from -digging in the same spot. When -hundreds, or even thousands, of these -baskets are seen along the bank of a -“parents’ pond,” the sight is one to -gladden the heart of an embryologist, -to say nothing of the proprietor.</p> - -<p>The hatching of the eggs occupies, -on an average, sixty days. The time, -however, may be considerably shortened -or lengthened, according to -whether the summer is hot and the sun -pours down its strong rays day after -day, or whether there is much rain and -the heat not great. As the turtles lay -sixty eggs to the nest at two sittings, it -will be seen that in a single season many -thousands are added to this unique -establishment, but at least five years must elapse -before they are large enough for the <i>chef</i>.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i025b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i025b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">CHOPPING UP FOOD FOR THE BABY TURTLES.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i> -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">339</span></p> -</div> - -<p>One would imagine, remembering the quantities -of eggs laid by turtles, that they would be -very plentiful, but there are few creatures that -have more enemies. All that the mother turtle -does is to deposit her eggs on the sand of some -island and there leave them to be hatched out -by the sun. Before this process is accomplished -they are often destroyed by rats and birds, -while very few of those that are hatched survive -very long. The moment the young turtle -emerges from its shell it seeks the water, and -there crabs and various kinds of fish are ever -ready to devour it. The young just hatched at -the farm under notice are put in a pond or -ponds by themselves and given finely-chopped -meat of a fish like the pilchard, while the bigger -ones are fed largely on live eels. This feeding -continues to the end of September. In October -the snapping-turtle ceases to take food, and -finally burrows in the muddy bottom of the -pond to hibernate, coming out only in April or -May.</p> - -<p>Snapping-turtle farming is much more exciting -than raising the American terrapin. The former -is a vicious creature and will snap at -anything—hence its name. Indeed, in disposition -it is the very opposite of its American brother. -It believes most thoroughly in the survival of -the fittest, and to it the fittest is number one. -It is a chronic fighter, and inasmuch as its jaws -are very strong and, like a bulldog, it never knows -when to let go, it is a reptile to be either mastered -or avoided. Indeed, the men at Mr. Hattori’s -farm can tell many exciting little stories concerning -the voracity of this strange creature. -One farm hand, for instance, is minus a finger, -the result of not using sufficient care when -transferring one of the larger reptiles to a new -pond.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i026.jpg"> -<img src="images/i026.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">FEEDING THE EELS WHICH IN TURN PROVIDE FOOD FOR THE LARGER TURTLES.<br /> -<i>From a Photo. by M. Ichikawa, Japan.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>Many naturalists have visited this unique -farm and, after a close study of the turtle and -its habits, have confirmed all the bad qualities -that have been recorded concerning it. In -securing its food it shows that it possesses no -mean intelligence. At one time it crawls slowly -and silently along with neck outstretched towards -an unsuspecting fish, springs upon it by a -powerful thrust of its hind legs, and snaps it up; -at another time it drives the fish around the -basin and terrifies it until it falls an unresisting -victim. Again, the reptile may be observed -buried in the sandy soil of its prison with only -its bill and eyes protruding. On the approach -of a fish the head and long neck dart forth from -the sand with lightning speed and the prey is -caught and instantly killed by a savage bite.</p> - -<p>In its wild state the snapping-turtle is distinctly -a nocturnal animal, and does its hunting -after sunset, when it emerges from its muddy -home to look for food. In the presence of -danger it becomes bold, defiant, and even -desperate. When driven to bay it retracts -its neck, head, and widely-gaping jaws into -its shell, awaiting a favourable opportunity -to thrust them forth slyly and bite savagely. -Anything which it has seized in its jaws it -holds with wonderful tenacity, at the same time -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">340</span> -vigorously scratching the earth with its sharp -claws. There is only one way to catch the -snapping-turtle, and that is to secure it by the -tail. Some of the men at Mr. Hattori’s farm -are very dexterous in seizing their victims in -this fashion.</p> - -<p>A little time ago a Russian officer visited -the establishment and listened, with some -incredulity, to the stories of the voracity of the -reptiles in the ponds before him. He carried -in his hand a stout cane, and was told to place -it near one of the bigger animals. He did so, -and was surprised to find that in a few minutes -it was bitten clean through. Before now the -snapping-turtle has been known to bite through -the flat of an oar. Not only will this turtle -catch all kinds of fish and frogs and devour -them greedily, but it is not averse to hunting -waterfowl. Mr. Hattori declares that, in addition -to raising turtles, he could rear ducks and geese -as well, but dare not, as the reptiles would only -kill them. When a snapping-turtle detects a -duck it cunningly makes its way towards the -creature, seizes it by its legs, pulls it down under -water, and then drags it to the bottom of the -pond. Here it tears the duck to pieces with -the aid of the long claws of its fore paws and -devours it.</p> - -<p>It is this snapping propensity which makes it -desirable to keep the reptiles in ponds according -to their ages; it would not do to put those just -hatched in the same basin as the bigger ones, -as they would quickly be eaten. Until they -reach their sixth year they are never “mixed.” -When they reach this age, however, they are -capable of taking care of themselves and are -allowed access to the bigger ponds. By this -time the turtle has reached maturity and may -begin to deposit eggs, though it is not at its -prime till two or three years later.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i027.jpg"> -<img src="images/i027.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">WEST INDIAN TURTLES ON BOARD A MAIL STEAMER BOUND FOR LONDON—IN SPITE OF EVERY CARE, THE MORTALITY -AMONG THEM IS VERY HEAVY.<br /> -[<i>From a Photograph.</i>]</p> -</div> - -<p>What the Japanese epicure prefers are turtles -not more than five years of age, when the flesh -is soft and in desirable condition for the making -of stews and soups. At this age the snapping-turtle -weighs from sixty to eighty pounds. -Those that are destined for the table are kept -in a pond to themselves, and taken as required -in nets or pulled out of the water by their tails. -They are then placed in tin boxes or cases with -air-holes, and sent by train to their destination.</p> - -<p>The turtle that is consumed in this country is -the green species, from the West Indies. The -creatures are imported by Mr. T. K. Bellis, who -will not hesitate to tell you that of edible turtles -the green variety is the best. Mr. Bellis -imports some three thousand turtles a year. -They arrive in batches of one hundred or more -every fortnight by the Royal Mail steamers from -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">341</span> -Kingston, Jamaica, and are obtained from the -coral reefs lying to the north of the island of -Jamaica. Twelve to fifteen small schooners are -employed in the trade, and upwards of a -hundred and twenty men.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i028.jpg"> -<img src="images/i028.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">A CONSIGNMENT OF TURTLES AT A LONDON TERMINUS.<br /> -[<i>From a Photograph.</i>]</p> -</div> - -<p>These fishers of strange “fish” (the turtle’s -technical name) stretch nets of twine from rock -to rock, and the moment the turtle feels itself -entangled it clings tenaciously to the meshes, -and is then hauled to the surface. The -schooners in due time return to Kingston with -from eighty to a hundred and fifty of these -remarkable creatures, which are promptly -deposited in palisaded enclosures, flooded at -every tide by the sea. Here they are fed upon -a certain kind of herbage known as “turtle -grass,” and taken as required. The bringing of -these creatures overseas is a very delicate -business, and frequently sixty out of a hundred -perish <i>en route</i>, in spite of the most elaborate -precautions, such as the constant spraying of -salt water daily on board the mail steamer, and -the use of foot warmers for the turtles in the -railway vans from Southampton to Waterloo. -Before now, Mr. Bellis has lost eighty-eight -turtles out of a shipment of a hundred.</p> - -<p>This susceptibility to travel is one of the most -remarkable things about the turtle. If you are -anxious to transport him alive it is a hundred -to one he perishes of cold, but if you do succeed -in getting him home the difficulty then is to kill -him. The vitality of this strange sea creature -after decapitation is almost beyond belief. Mr. -Bellis once sent a large turtle to an hotel in -Newcastle. The <i>chef</i> cut the turtle’s head off and -hung the body upside down to bleed. Twenty-four -hours after that turtle knocked down a man -cook with one blow of its fin! The green turtle -is not a vicious creature to handle, like its -snapping Japanese brother, but its fins are very -strong, and one blow from them is quite sufficient -to break a man’s arm.</p> - -<p>Mr. Frank T. Bullen gives a remarkable -instance of the tenacious hold of the turtle upon -life. “On one occasion,” he records, “our men -cut all the flesh and entrails of a turtle away, -leaving only the head and tail attached to the -shell. Some time had elapsed since the meat -had been scooped out of the carapace, and no -one imagined that any life remained in the -extremities. But a young Dane, noticing that -the down-hanging head had its mouth wide open, -very foolishly inserted two fingers between those -horny mandibles. It closed, and our shipmate -was two fingers short, the edges of the turtle’s -jaws had taken them clean off, with only the -muscular power remaining in the head. Then -another man tried to cut the horny tail off, but -as soon as his keen blade touched it on the -underside it curled up and gripped his knife so -firmly that it was nearly an hour before the -blade could be withdrawn.” Signor Redi, the -great zoologist, records how he once cut a turtle’s -head off and noted that it lived for twenty-three -days without a head, and another whose brains -he removed lived for six months.</p> - -<p>The green turtle, the species favoured in this -country, is not a carnivorous creature, like the -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">342</span> -snapping-turtle, its food being a particular kind -of sea grass found on the coral reefs in the West -Indies. Some time ago Mr. Bellis brought a -large quantity of this grass to London, with the -idea of feeding the creatures in captivity, but -they refused to take it. In his cellars in the -City one can see any day a number of these -turtles. Here they are kept until a telegram -arrives from a distant hotel, when away goes the -turtle to be turned into soup for the forthcoming -banquet. Those hotels which do not care about -the trouble of killing the creature can procure -the soup in tins and bottles direct from the -importer, and it is not surprising to learn that -large quantities are sold. It requires eight -pounds of the best turtle-flesh to make one -quart of soup.</p> - -<p>The green turtle grows to an immense size, -but it has been found that specimens weighing -more than a hundred and fifty pounds are not -desirable, the flesh becoming coarse as the -animal increases in weight. The shell of this -variety is practically valueless, but the hawksbill -turtle yields what is popularly known as -“tortoiseshell,” and the armour covering of a -good specimen may be worth eight pounds. Its -flesh, however, is too coarse for consumption, -though here it should be added that it is doubtful -whether those who occasionally partake of -green-turtle soup would relish that made from -the flesh of the snapping-turtle.</p> - -<p>It is a notorious fact that turtles grow very -slowly and attain a great age. Curiously -enough, neither Mr. Hattori nor Mr. Bellis can -tell to what age a snapping or green turtle will -live. Mr. Hattori has quite a number of turtles -that are known to be from thirty to fifty years of -age, while some of the bigger specimens that -arrive at Waterloo for the Bellis cellars are, it is -believed, twelve to fifteen years old.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i029.jpg"> -<img src="images/i029.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">TURTLES IN MR. BELLIS’S CELLARS IN THE CITY OF LONDON.<br /> -<i>From a Photo. by Conolly & Goatam.</i> -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">343</span></p> -</div> - -<hr class="chap" /> -<div class="figcenter"> -<img id="SHORT" src="images/i030a.jpg" -alt="SHORT STORIES." /> -</div> - -<h3>THE AMBASSADOR’S TRUNK.<br /> - -<span class="smcap medium">By E. A. Morphy, late Editor of the “Straits Times,” Singapore.</span></h3> - -<div> -<img class="drop-cap" src="images/t.jpg" alt="T" /> -</div> - -<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">The</span> circumstances of this little smuggling -incident, though known to -several persons in the Far East, -have hitherto been hidden, so to -speak, under a bushel. In bringing -them to the light it should be stated that—for -obvious reasons—fictitious names have been -given to the individuals -chiefly concerned, but -the facts are just as -stated.</p> - -<p>Far and away the most -distinguished passenger -on the big German liner -was the homeward bound -Japanese Ambassador. -He did not look the -part, however. He was a -squat, unobtrusive little -man whose trousers fitted -him badly, and whose -carriage, when he was -hampered by European -clothes, suggested an insignificance -that was only -partially belied by the -intelligence of his homely -countenance. His appearance -reflected no radiant -blaze of glory, yet he -was returning to his -native land crowned with -some of the finest diplomatic -achievements of the -century.</p> - -<p>This statement is due -to his Excellency, but -it practically dismisses him from the story, -which mainly concerns his trunk—his trunk -No. 23, to be precise, for the Ambassador’s -trunks were all numbered. There must have -been half a hundred of them at least; all the -same typical German steel trunks, but distinguished -from other less important trunks of -the same make insomuch -that each one was adorned -with two broad painted -bands of scarlet, which -showed out bravely and -effectually prevented their -being mixed up with any -ordinary baggage. Apart -from all other considerations, -the wisdom of the -Ambassador in thus distinctively -marking his -own trunks lay in the fact -that the process insured -their instant recognition -by the Japanese Customs -officials, by whom they -were immune from examination.</p> - -<p>This last fact was the -one which counted for -most with Fritz Vogel, -steward and trombonist -of the liner, as he daily -contemplated the mountain -of luggage and calculated -how many Manila -cigars one of those -great red-striped trunks -would hold.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i030b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i030b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“HE DAILY CONTEMPLATED THE MOUNTAIN OF LUGGAGE -AND CALCULATED HOW MANY MANILA CIGARS ONE OF -THOSE GREAT RED-STRIPED TRUNKS WOULD HOLD.” -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">344</span></p> -</div> - -<p>Carefully packed, he figured it, one might -crowd ten thousand cigars into each trunk. -Ten thousand cigars, at eighty Mexican dollars a -thousand, meant eighty pounds. Duty at one -hundred and fifty per cent. <i>ad valorem</i> on eighty -pounds would mean a hundred and twenty -pounds, or, as Fritz Vogel calculated, two -thousand four hundred marks. Therefore, as the -meditative trombonist further worked out the -possibilities, his Excellency could, by simply -loading up a few dozen more trunks with cigars -at Hong-Kong and getting them passed free -through the Customs at Yokohama—or at -Nagasaki or Kobe for that matter—make more -in a week than he could hope to earn in a -month of Sundays by sticking to the thorny -paths of diplomacy.</p> - -<p>Born west of the Suez, the fertile idea -germinated in Vogel’s brain all through the -dreary wastes of the Canal, and sprouted up -green and vigorous, despite the withering blasts -that pursued the liner down the Red Sea and -across the Indian Ocean to Colombo. At -Singapore it had become an obsession. When -steaming through the Narrows into the latter -port, however, on the way to the German mail -wharf, Vogel observed a red-funnelled Jardine -liner at the Messageries wharf, with the blue-peter -flying.</p> - -<p>An hour later the <i>Laisang</i> left for China, -carrying a hastily-written letter from Fritz Vogel -to his friend Max Krebs at Hong-Kong. It -contained a fair statement of the salient facts -in the case, and a crude but lucid sketch of one -of the pieces of baggage, together with a description -of the scarlet bands and full measurements. -It also stated what has not been set forth above—that -each of his Excellency’s trunks was numbered -in large white figures at each end and on -the top, and it suggested that in the case of any -person desiring to have access to those trunks -whilst they were still on board the liner, Nos. -23, 24, 27, 32, etc., were the easiest to reach.</p> - -<p>Mr. Krebs was a “runner” for a native compradoring -firm. He went out to the ships to -“drum up” business for his employers, who -supplied anything and everything that a ship -could require, from cigarettes to engine-oil. In -the old days before the Russian War Mr. Vogel -had done a good deal of trade with Mr. Krebs -on the short run between Yokohama and Hong-Kong. -But the stringent Customs regulations -that had ensued upon the increased tariffs -imposed after the war had practically killed the -business, save so far as concerned a paltry bit -of trading with passengers in faked curios, and -the occasional disposal of a few imitation gems -to homeward-bound tourists when the vessel -was west of Colombo.</p> - -<p>Opportunities like the return of an Ambassador -to Japan did not occur once in a blue moon.</p> - -<p>The liner tarried a day and a half over cargo -at Singapore, and the <i>Laisang</i> got into Hong-Kong -nearly twenty-four hours ahead of her. -Mr. Vogel learned the fact the moment the -German liner arrived at the big China port, and -his heart was filled with sickening apprehension. -He had been dreaming of trunks full of cigars—German -steel trunks with red bands, and -numbered with big white characters—ever since -he left Singapore. He had marked off the state-room -wherein, until the proper psychological -moment, the extra trunks—if any—could be -stored safely. He had mentally arranged every -other detail in his projected bid for fortune, and -had even marked down those of his comrades who -should be selected as his accomplices. He had -counted over, time and time again, the round -thousand marks that would be his personal -profit out of every trunk full of cigars he could -pass through the Yokohama Customs as the -baggage of the returning Ambassador. He -did all this while still faithfully, if mechanically, -discharging his onerous duties as steward and -master of the trombone.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i031.jpg"> -<img src="images/i031.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“A NOTE WAS HANDED TO HIM BY A CHINESE MESSENGER.”</p> -</div> - -<p>It was not until a few hours after the arrival -of the steamer in Hong-Kong—hours that felt -like ages—that Vogel heard from Krebs. A -note was handed to him by a Chinese messenger -boy, and Vogel opened it with feverish impatience. -Mr. Krebs wrote with that laconic -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">345</span> -brevity of diction which indicates the resourceful -mind. “Will send you one trunk.—O. K.,” -it read.</p> - -<p>Mr. Vogel pondered for a moment whether -“O. K.” meant Oscar Krebs or “All correct” -(American fashion); then he heaved a great -sigh of relief as he realized that it was all the -same.</p> - -<p>That evening Mr. Krebs came on board -unostentatiously, and a big trunk wrapped in -rough sacking came with him, and was temporarily -stowed -away by Mr. -Vogel in one of -the state-rooms -which held -some of the -Ambassador’s -spare boxes. -Thence it was -subsequently -carried to -another cabin, -where there -were some spare -things of Mr. -Vogel’s. Had a -hypercritical -observer subsequently -studied -all the trunks -in the Ambassador’s -collection -he might -have noticed -that one of them appeared to be the least trifle -newer than the rest, but it would have taken a -Sherlock Holmes to detect the circumstance off-hand. -The trunk in question was numbered -“23.”</p> - -<p>In due time the liner arrived at Yokohama, -but the mails that had been forwarded overland -from Nagasaki reached there a day before her. -Thus it came about that when the Ambassador’s -baggage was franked through the Custom House -and sent up to the Imperial Hotel at Tokio, two -friends of Messrs. Krebs and Vogel were installed -as guests at the last-named establishment. Thus -also it came about that, thanks to ten yen well -spent on a porter, the Ambassador’s trunk, -No. 23, was whisked away to the nether cellars -of the hotel the moment it arrived there, and—as -the Ambassador himself did at an earlier stage—it -virtually passes out of this story. That is -to say, what must have been the ghost of the -Ambassador’s trunk vanishes from mortal view; -but not so the real article. When the diplomat’s -baggage was supposed to be all in, and a count -was taken, trunk No. 23 was found to be missing.</p> - -<p>The row that ensued was something awful. -Telegraphs and telephones were called into -requisition, and imperative, not to say drastic, -orders were dispatched to the Customs authorities -at Yokohama, to the railway authorities at -Shimbashi, and to all other authorities everywhere, -commanding them to instantly produce -his Excellency’s missing trunk.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i032.jpg"> -<img src="images/i032.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“THEY HAD PASSED IT AND FORWARDED IT, AND GOT A RECEIPT FOR IT.”</p> -</div> - -<p>The Customs authorities declared they had -not got the trunk; they had passed it and forwarded -it, and got a receipt for it. There could -be no doubt, -from their point -of view, that the -Ambassador -had taken delivery -of his -trunk No. 23. -The railway -authorities were -equally agreed -on the same -point. The baggage -was all in -special carriages; -not a -pin could have -been lost between -Yokohama -and the -Shimbashi -station at the -capital, whence -it had been -handed over to -his Excellency’s servants for removal to the -hotel. The police authorities were equally -certain that there had been no hanky-panky -business of any kind. It would have -been impossible for one of the Ambassador’s -trunks to go astray or be stolen, either in the -streets of the seaport or in the capital itself. -The steamship authorities had a receipt for every -article. They knew the Ambassador’s trunks, and -especial care had been taken of them throughout -the voyage. Nevertheless, they would again -investigate.</p> - -<p>Then, Banzai! there came a telegram from -the chief purser of the liner:—</p> - -<p>“<i>Ambassador’s trunk No. 23 found on board. -Must have been left behind inadvertently. Forwarding -to Tokio at once.</i>”</p> - -<p>The little Custom House inspectors looked -at the newly-found trunk in utter stupefaction.</p> - -<p>“Truly,” said they, “we passed this identical -trunk not three hours ago.”</p> - -<p>“<i>Hayako!</i>” (Hurry, there!) shouted the head -inspector, as they dallied over the mystery. -“His Excellency waits!” -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">346</span></p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i033.jpg"> -<img src="images/i033.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“THE LITTLE CUSTOM HOUSE INSPECTORS LOOKED AT THE NEWLY-FOUND -TRUNK IN UTTER STUPEFACTION.”</p> -</div> - -<p>The trunk was expressed up to the Imperial -Hotel by special train.</p> - -<p>Ten minutes later the Director of His Imperial -Majesty’s Customs at Yokohama ordered -a Commission of Inquiry into the matter -of the registering as received and delivered -of one Ambassador’s trunk, -No. 23, when the same had never -either been received from the liner or -delivered to the railway or to any other -authorities by His Imperial Majesty’s -Customs. The matter was also taken -in hand by the Imperial Railway and -by the Tokio and Kanagawa police -authorities.</p> - -<p>Though a couple of years have passed -since these investigations were inaugurated, -no definite finding in the matter -has yet been officially published. In -certain quarters, however, there is a consensus -of opinion that such a trunk did -really pass through the Yokohama -Customs, but that it was a phantom one.</p> - -<p>Mr. Vogel took away two thousand -two hundred yen (two hundred and -twenty pounds) from Yokohama that trip. -At Hong-Kong, nine days later, he settled -up with Mr. Krebs.</p> - -<p>The cigars and trunk had cost nine -hundred dollars, while the expenses -and “commissions” in Japan amounted -to a trifle less than three hundred dollars. -There was a balance of a thousand dollars to -divide, and they duly divided it.</p> - -<h3>HALF AN HOUR IN A BLAZING FURNACE.<br /> - -<span class="smcap medium">By George S. Guy.</span></h3> - -<p>One of the most remarkable and appalling -experiences possible to conceive recently befell -a young man named Robert Perry, at Apedale, -in Staffordshire. Tramping about the country -in search of work, he arrived one night, utterly -tired out, at an ironworks, and unwittingly took -shelter in an “air furnace,” used for the purpose -of reducing very large pieces of iron, too large -to be dealt with in the ordinary way. As it -happened, the fire-bars of this particular furnace -had been taken out, and Perry had no difficulty -in creeping through the opening and thus -making his way inside. Here he had to mount -a wall five feet in height, and eventually reached -the melting chamber, which at the time contained -about five tons of iron waiting to be -smelted. Arrived at this point, in blissful -ignorance of the dangerous character of the -place he had selected to sleep in, and appreciating -only its dryness and seclusion, he lay -down to rest. Exactly why he should have -selected such a strange bedchamber it is impossible -to say, but tramps have been known to -choose even stranger quarters—such as lime-kilns -and brick-kilns. Anyhow, the fact remains -that he went into the furnace to sleep. What -happened afterwards is told below, from information -gathered partly from the man himself and -partly from other persons who figured in his -terrible adventure.</p> - -<p>After a long walk in the broiling sun Perry -arrived at Apedale quite exhausted, and set -about looking for a snug, dry place where he -could lie down and have a sleep. During his -weary tramp he had been no stranger to curious -resting-places, and he had spent the previous -night under a railway arch. Presently he came -across the smelting works of the Midland Coal, -Coke, and Iron Company, and, seeing a furnace -which he took to be unused, examined it -intently. The wide, open front of the contrivance -looked tempting, and he decided to -make its interior his abode for the night. -Crawling into the opening for some little distance, -he discovered that he had a wall five feet -in height to climb over, but scaled it without -much trouble. Beyond he found himself in -pitch-darkness, but clambered cautiously onwards, -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">347</span> -trying to find -a comfortable place -to lie down. Proceeding -up a slope, -he reached a sort -of chamber beyond, -where a number of -great pieces of iron -were lying about. -Here the weary man -lay down, and, -being very tired, it -did not take him -long to fall asleep. -Let him tell the -manner of his -awakening in his -own words.</p> - -<hr class="tb" /> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i034a.jpg"> -<img src="images/i034a.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">FIRE-GRATE WHERE PERRY CRAWLED IN.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>I do not exactly -know what awoke -me, but upon trying -to raise myself a -frightful choking -feeling came over -me, and I became -conscious of great -heat. Then, like a -flash, I realized what -a dreadful mistake -I had made, and -what a terrible -situation I was in. -The furnace was <i>not</i> -disused, and now -the workmen had lit it, and I was a prisoner -inside! For a moment I felt sick with horror, -but it did not take me long to pull myself -together and try to find a way out.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i034b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i034b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">PLAN OF THE FURNACE—THE CROSS DENOTES WHERE PERRY SLEPT.</p> -</div> - -<p>The whole place was in total darkness. -Although I could hear a dull roaring somewhere, -and feel the waves of heated air and -fumes passing over me, I could not see the -slightest sign of any light. Tremblingly I felt -up and down the -sides of my prison -to see if I could find -a door, but nothing -of the kind could I -discover. I tried to -retreat farther into -the furnace to get -away from that awful -heat, but had to -return and face it -again. Now, with -a sickening heart, -I saw that flames -were approaching -my position. Thinking -my end was near -at hand, I decided -at all costs to go -down the slope. -This meant that I -must face the fire, -which was now licking -up towards me, -sucked inwards by -the tremendous -draught. Shivering -with horror I made -the attempt, but the -heat and flames were -unendurable, and -beat me back. Then, -crouching down, I -worked myself along -the side, thinking -this my best plan. At last—Heaven alone -knows how—I reached the foot of the wall. -In a half-dazed, choking condition, I tried to -climb up, but was met by a veritable hurricane -of fierce flames, which knocked me down and -burnt all the hair off my head. Half-blinded, -scorched, and with my brain benumbed from -the effects of the fumes, I still did not quite -lose heart: something seemed to force me on -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">348</span> -to make a struggle for life. Suddenly, as I -lay there gasping in that inferno of heat -and flame, I heard voices outside, but I -could not understand what was said. I wondered -dully whether, if I called out, the men -I could hear speaking would hear me, so, -in my agony of physical suffering and mental -distress, I shouted, “O Lord, save me! O -Lord, save me!” The murmur of voices still -went on, but presently one man evidently heard -my cries, and called out to a “Mr. Phillips” -that he thought he heard a shout for help. This, -however, Mr. Phillips—who seemed to be the -foreman—ridiculed, and they went on working -as before.</p> - -<p>I was now on the verge of giving up; my -strength seemed to be failing me, but I decided -to make one final attempt to get on the wall. -I am glad to say that it was not in vain, and -after a desperate struggle I succeeded in reaching -the top. This seemed to renew my energy, -and I braced myself for what I knew was my -last hope. I gave one horrified glance at the -furnace below, the flames -roaring and leaping madly, -and then, with all the strength -of my fire-scorched lungs, I -shrieked out once more, “O -Lord, save me!”</p> - -<p>The men outside stopped -work at once.</p> - -<p>“Did you hear that?” -cried one, excitedly; “I -heard it quite distinctly that -time; someone is shouting -out ‘Lord, save me’!” This -time Mr. Phillips admitted -that he <i>did</i> think he heard -a noise as if someone was -calling out, but where could -it come from? It was impossible -for anyone to be in -the furnace alive, for the fire -had been going for some -time. Then someone else -said, “Open the fire-door -and see if you can see anything.”</p> - -<p>The fire-door! Where -was it, I wondered—far away -or near at hand? Then, to -my great joy, I heard them -releasing a bolt just a few -feet from where I was. At -last it opened—a place about -a foot square—and I saw -daylight streaming in and -then a man’s face. He peered -in anxiously, but evidently -he could not see me, for I was now as black -as the furnace itself. Then he seemed to half-close -the door and I nearly swooned away, for -this was my last chance.</p> - -<p>Desperately I strove to shout, but the heat, -flames, and smoke prevented my uttering a -sound save a choking gasp. Fortunately for -myself, however, I moved, and the watcher -happened to catch sight of something about me—probably -the whites of my eyes shining in -the reflected light. “Good God!” he cried. -“There’s a man in the furnace! Pull the bars -out as quickly as you can.”</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i035.jpg"> -<img src="images/i035.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“I FOUND MYSELF FALLING—RIGHT ON TO THE HUGE FIRE.” -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">349</span></p> -</div> - -<p>I did not trouble to -think what or where -the bars were; I knew -only that the men had -seen me and would do -everything in their power -to get me out. I heard -them pulling the bars -out in frantic haste, -and saw Mr. Phillips -trying to squeeze himself -through the small -fire-door.</p> - -<p>With my flesh scorching -and my breath -rapidly failing me in -that awful whirlwind of -heat and flame, I put -my arms down for him -to catch hold of. He -seized me by the elbows -and told me to jump, -but this I could not do, -for I felt too far gone. -With that he gave me -a jerk, and I found -myself falling—right on -to the huge fire! The -bars were out, and the -fire was keeping itself together by the pressure -of one block of coal on another; but when -my weight came upon it, it collapsed, sending -up a rush of flames -all around me. To -my intense horror, I -felt the skin on my -arms giving way, but -the courageous Mr. -Phillips did not -release his hold. His -hands were now on -my wrists, and, exerting -all his strength, he -pulled me up towards -the door.</p> - -<p>The pain of my -burns was simply fearful, -and I could have -shrieked with agony, -but somehow, except -for a few moans, I -kept quiet.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i036a.jpg"> -<img src="images/i036a.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">ROBERT PERRY AS HE APPEARED AFTER HIS DISCHARGE FROM -THE INFIRMARY.<br /> -[<i>From a Photograph.</i>]</p> -</div> - -<p>Presently the foreman -succeeded in -pulling me out of the -small door, but I felt -as if dead, and as -though I was shrivelling -up and growing -smaller. As I lay on -the ground, in agonizing -pain, I appealed to the -men to strangle me. -Again and again, in semi-delirium, -I repeated the -request: “I’m done for! -Strangle me! strangle -me!” My whole body -seemed to be on fire, -but my rescuers lost no -time. Procuring some -oil, they saturated me -with it, thus, in a measure, -soothing the pain. Then -they got me on to an -ambulance and rushed -me off to the Chell -Infirmary, where I received -every care and -attention.</p> - -<p>Never, so long as I -live, shall I forget the -terrible time I endured -in the furnace, and my -unspeakable joy when I -saw Mr. Phillips at the -fire-door.</p> - -<hr class="tb" /> - -<p>I am indebted to Mr. Hill, the general -manager of the above-mentioned company, for -a plan of the furnace. It may be interesting -to add that, even had -Perry contrived to -shelter himself from -the flames at the foot -of the wall he mentions, -he would very -soon have met with a -death too awful to -contemplate, as the -molten iron would -have flowed down and -overwhelmed him. The -authorities inform me -that Perry’s adventure -is altogether unprecedented -in the whole of -their experience. At -the moment when his -first cry was heard the -furnace had been alight -for some considerable -time, having been -started with a large -quantity of wood and -many barrow-loads of -hot coal in order to -raise the heat quickly!</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i036b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i036b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">MR. PHILLIPS STANDING BY THE FIRE-DOOR THROUGH WHICH PERRY -WAS DRAGGED.<br /> -[<i>From a Photograph.</i>] -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">350</span></p> -</div> - -<h3>THE HEADLESS WOMAN.<br /> - -<span class="smcap medium">By Charles Needham.</span></h3> - -<p>I had just recovered from a troublesome -throat affection, and under the doctor’s orders -had moved out of town for a spell of fresh air -and quieter surroundings, selecting the little -village of Canewdon, in South-East Essex, as my -retreat. I had always had an eye on the village, -first making its acquaintance whilst yachting off -the coast and in the River Crouch, where my -boat had its permanent berth.</p> - -<p>Canewdon is actually little more than a straggling -hamlet four miles by road to the north of -Rochford, and about nine from Southend-on-Sea. -It required only a very short residence -there for me to find that the secluded little place -considered it had its own corner in history, and -a very pretty turn in folk-lore and superstition as -well. To begin with, Canewdon claims King -Canute as one of its founders, and its domestic -romances and tragedies would make a presentable -volume in the hands of a scribbling -antiquary. It had, however, something more -than mere history, and far less to my liking, for -me to feed my imagination upon, as I was soon -to discover.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i037.jpg"> -<img src="images/i037.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE OLD COTTAGE AT CANEWDON IN WHICH THE AUTHOR RESIDED.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>After a good look round I settled upon a -comfortable old cottage, with a small garden -traversed by a brook, only a very short distance -from the ancient, square-towered church. Into -this, having taken it at a very moderate rental, -I moved a small amount of furniture, my books, -and other paraphernalia, and prepared to settle -down to the life of a hermit for a time. The -woman who came from close by to “do” for -me looked upon me, I fancy, as something of a -curiosity, but, for some reason I had not then -discovered, she seemed a little uneasy at my -solitary existence. She would remark that I -must be lonely, or that it was unlikely that I -should stop in the place very long. I put all -this down to a friendly disposition, coupled with -a desire to draw me out as to my place in the -larger world I had dropped from so suddenly.</p> - -<p>For the first day or two matters went -smoothly enough, and I began to feel that -my choice of locality had been a lucky and -inexpensive one. Then something occurred -which startled me sufficiently to make me alter -my opinion.</p> - -<p>I always used the little kitchen at meal-times -for convenience’ sake, and one night I remained -there reading until very late, the kitchen being -lit only by one small lamp at my back. I had -just closed my book—it was about one o’clock—and -was summoning the effort required to take -me bedwards, when I noticed a very slight -movement of the iron latch upon the door -leading into the back garden. My thoughts -naturally flew to burglars. The locality was -lonely, and no doubt my coming had been duly -talked over in the village with all the exaggeration -and surmise an out-of-the-way place is -capable of.</p> - -<p>I was, of course, considerably startled, and -sat watching the latch slowly rise, evidently -actuated by a very delicate and even pressure -from without. The door itself was bolted at -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">351</span> -both top and bottom, and when the latch had -risen clear of the hasp I fully expected to hear -the bolts rattle as the person outside put his -weight against the door to try it. But nothing -of the sort happened; the latch, after remaining -suspended for a moment, fell back again into -place as slowly and evenly as it had risen.</p> - -<p>Startled and puzzled as I was, I still held to -my belief that this must be a timid attempt at -robbery, and that, finding the back door locked, -the intruder would try the front one also. Nor -was I wrong, for I had scarcely slipped quietly -into the sitting-room and taken up my position -when the latch there began to rise in precisely -the same manner. This door possessed only -one bolt, and that at the bottom, so that -the door, an old and ill-fitting one, would -show the slightest pressure at once. But -none was placed upon it, and the latch fell -into place as evenly and noiselessly as before. -By this time I must confess to being slightly -scared, and when a chair banged heavily on the -floor and a loud shout of “Who’s that?” -brought no sound of a retreating shuffle on the -cobble-stones outside, I had to summon all my -remaining courage to unbar and fling open the -door. Not a soul or a sound met me as I -stepped outside. The night was a light one in -early September, so that a retreating figure could -have been followed by the eye for twenty or -thirty yards. After a careful look round the -garden I went to bed nonplussed at the -weirdness of the whole affair.</p> - -<p>The following day brought another intruder—a -material one this time. I found that during -the morning a travelling caravan had taken a -pitch just outside my hedge; and its owner -turned out to be an Oxford man, who, with his -wife, was leading a vagabond life about the -shires. He was an extremely well-read man, -and we soon got on the best of terms, exchanging -books and opinions, till he inspanned for pastures -new a week later. The night before he left I -was treated to another queer happening.</p> - -<p>We had been talking and reading in my tiny -sitting-room till about eleven o’clock, when my -vagabond friend bade me a sleepy “Good night” -and opened the front door. He had, however, -only just put his foot on the cobbles when he -stepped backwards with a sharp exclamation, -and a scared look on his face.</p> - -<p>“What’s up?” I asked.</p> - -<p>“It’s awfully queer,” he replied; “I could -have sworn I saw a face looking straight at me -close to that bush”—he pointed to the privet -hedge at the left of the door—“but there didn’t -seem to be any body to it. I’m certainly not -drunk, but I may have been dreaming.”</p> - -<p>After my recent experience, which I had not -thought it worth while to mention to such a -hard-headed soul as my chance companion, I -felt anything but comfortable. We were both -rather ashamed of our brief lapse from common -sense, and laughed the incident off as best we -might.</p> - -<p>The following day found me in all the doubtful -glory of my solitude once more, and I must -confess to having been thankful when an invitation -reached me that same evening, from friends -at Fambridge, for a few days’ fishing.</p> - -<p>I have never suffered from that popular -present-day malady known as “nerves,” possibly -because of an open-air existence with plenty of -exercise, but, though I had only been there a -short time, the cottage and the locality now -seemed to have become almost uncanny to me. -Had I mixed more with the inhabitants, I -should have discovered, as I did later, that this -strange feeling was not without some foundation.</p> - -<p>The few days I spent in Fambridge put all -thought of the two queer incidents out of my -mind, which will show that the subsequent -events were not the outcome of an overtaxed -imagination or a course of long brooding upon -disquieting phenomena.</p> - -<p>It must have been about nine o’clock in the -evening that my Fambridge friend put a little -Welsh pony into his governess-car to drive me -back the four odd miles to my cottage. The -night was fine, but there were clouds about and -no moon, so that objects outside the radius of -the lamps were hard to distinguish. The pony -had already had a fairly hard day of it along the -coast, but he was a sturdy little beast and pulled -like a steam-engine, rattling us down to the outskirts -of Canewdon in excellent time.</p> - -<p>We had been bowling along, talking about the -day’s sport, and were now rapidly nearing a stile -leading to a footpath upon the left of the road, -which takes one by a short cut across a field, -over another stile, into the churchyard, and so -into the village High Street. We had barely -reached the stile when the pony pulled up short, -reared, and refused to go another step in that -direction. The pony, always a strong and -willing little chap, had never done such a thing -in his life before, and my friend was not only -puzzled but annoyed. A sound beating had no -more effect than words of encouragement; there -the little beggar stuck, his four legs splayed out, -the picture of all that was most stubborn in -nature, whilst we two sat in the car trying to -devise some plan by which to budge him.</p> - -<p>My friend was at last obliged to ask me to -take the short cut I have just spoken of instead -of being driven round by the road the remaining -mile and a half to my cottage. I was, of course, -willing enough. The short cut would take me -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">352</span> -barely ten minutes, and I had very little to -carry; so, bidding him “Good night,” I jumped -out. As I came from behind the trap I noticed -a tiny flickering light a few yards ahead, upon -the left-hand side of the road, but it was very -dim and did not arrest my attention sufficiently -to make any impression on the mind. I was -able to lead the pony round without any -difficulty, and when his head faced Fambridge -he seemed to recover his spirits at once, and -the red points behind the lamps receded at a -rattling pace up the road. When these had -disappeared I turned again to climb the stile, -but became at once uneasily -conscious of something -unusual a little way -ahead of me.</p> - -<p>The spot the pony had -refused at was a good -deal shadowed by large -elms, and these, together -with the cloudy sky, -made the road still more -obscure. The small light, -which I had taken little -notice of at first—thinking -it probably one of -the village lights showing -through the trees—was -still ahead; only, instead -of being upon the left of -the road, it was now upon -the right. For a few -seconds I stood looking -at it, feeling very much -like turning tail and bolting -down the road. The -flame, for it was no other, -showed greeny—white -against the black background -and shivered in -a strange, eerie way.</p> - -<p>The most extraordinary -part of the business -was that it seemed to -come from nothing -visible, but to appear, -as it were, burning in -space three or four feet -above the road.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i039.jpg"> -<img src="images/i039.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“THIS MYSTERIOUS SOMETHING TOOK THREE RAPID STRIDES ACROSS THE ROAD AND -DISAPPEARED.”</p> -</div> - -<p>I had, of course, read -ghost stories in which -“corpse candles” and -ghostly lights of one -sort and another -figured largely, but I -had never expected to -come across one, and -this could be translated -in no other way.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">2</a> The close proximity of the -churchyard, with the square tower of the church -itself showing through the trees, added too -much colour to the scene to my liking; but, -scared though I was, a certain fascination took -hold of me, and I advanced a step or two in -order to examine the phenomenon at closer -range. I had scarcely taken two paces, however, -when the clouds parted a little, giving a -better light beneath the trees, and at the same -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">353</span> -moment the weird flame flickered wildly and -went out.</p> - -<div class="footnote"> - -<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">2</a> -The light somewhat resembled the <i>ignis fatuus</i>, or will-o’-the-wisp, -but was larger and greener in colour. Moreover, there was -no pond or marshy ground anywhere near the road.</p></div> - -<p>But this was not to be the end of my ghostly -experience. The stronger light brought many -roadside objects into prominence, and the -moment the flame disappeared I became conscious -of an indistinct black blotch against the -lighter background of the hedge. It was, of -course, too dark for me to be certain of its -exact shape, even had I been in a calm enough -state of mind to take in details; but in any case -I was allowed only a momentary glimpse, for -whilst I stood with the breath caught in my -throat, this mysterious something took three -rapid strides across the road and disappeared -without a sound into the thick hawthorn hedge -opposite.</p> - -<p>At this stage I must confess to having lost all -control of myself. Without another look I took -to my heels and ran, as though all the powers of -darkness were behind me.</p> - -<p>The scare I had got made me quite oblivious -of my direction, but I suppose natural instinct -guided me, for I found myself at last, almost -pumped out, trotting into the little High Street -of Canewdon by the road along which I should -have driven, and no doubt in far better time. -I had no relish, in my then state of mind, for -another lonely night in the cottage, although it -stood only fifty yards away, so I made my way -to the Chequers, the only inn the village possessed, -and asked for a bed.</p> - -<p>My recent arrival in the place had given me -little time to become acquainted with the village -notables, but I fancy the landlady knew me by -sight, and no doubt thought the request strange. -In any case her “Certainly, sir,” was followed -by a close scrutiny. “You’re looking very queer, -sir,” she added; “has anything happened?”</p> - -<p>Surrounded by more human elements, I began -to feel thoroughly ashamed of myself, and rather -doubted the wisdom of giving the narrative away; -but the thought that, perhaps, being a resident, -she might be able to throw some light upon my -weird experience finally decided me to make a -clean breast of the whole affair; and I promptly -did so in the little inn-parlour.</p> - -<p>I had barely got half-way through the incident -upon the road when she sat back in her chair, -and said in a quiet, almost matter-of-fact -tone:—</p> - -<p>“You’ve seen the headless woman, sir.”</p> - -<p>“The headless woman?” I asked, startled. -“Who’s she?”</p> - -<p>“I may as well tell you,” she replied, “though -we don’t talk of it much here. Have you noticed -a wooden house painted white, and standing -alone about a hundred yards this way from the -stile on the Fambridge road?”</p> - -<p>I said that I had, and thought it was a farmhouse.</p> - -<p>“Well, so it was till the murder happened,” -replied the woman. “The story goes that somewhere -about forty years ago a farmer there took -to drink, went mad, and murdered his wife. He -didn’t stop at that, either, for he cut off her head -and buried it, and it wasn’t found till some time -after the body had had decent burial.”</p> - -<p>“So she’s supposed to haunt the place?” I -asked.</p> - -<p>“There’s no suppose about it, sir,” she -replied, very quietly; “a tidy few people here -have seen her, much the same as you did. My -husband has, too, by the stile leading into the -churchyard. It took him a week in bed to get -over it. Sometimes it’s just a face, and sometimes -just a black bundle like a body without a -head; but always near one of them two stiles, -and round about harvest time. Heaven send I -never see the sight!” she concluded, devoutly.</p> - -<p>“I’m not particularly anxious to renew the -acquaintance myself,” I replied, “but how do -you account for the lifting of my latch?”</p> - -<p>“Well, I can’t say for certain, sir, but, if my -memory serves me, there was a gaffer living in -your cottage—he’s dead now many a year—who -used to work at the White House and was there -when the murder happened. He saw her pretty -often in his garden, I’m told, but couldn’t be -got to speak of it. It may be she walks there -too.”</p> - -<p>I spent a very mixed kind of night at the inn, -and on the following day returned to Fambridge -and less ghostly company. From here I made -arrangements for a change of quarters, and from -that day to this I have not set eyes upon -Canewdon, nor have I any inclination to do so.</p> - -<p>This strange happening is perhaps too strange -for everybody’s belief. My “spirituous” state -at the time is an opinion largely held by chaffing -friends; but I ask that three points be taken -into consideration. I am practically a teetotaller; -my imagination is no more abnormal -than that of most of my fellows; and, lastly, no -whisper of ghostly visitations in the village had -reached my ears prior to the narrative as told -by the landlady.</p> - -<p>The whole affair would make an interesting -little piece of investigation for the Psychical -Research Society. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">354</span></p> - -<hr class="chap" /> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<img id="SOME_SAVAGE_PASTIMES" src="images/i041.jpg" -alt="SOME SAVAGE PASTIMES" /> -<h2><span class="hidden">SOME SAVAGE PASTIMES.<br /></span> -<span class="smcap medium">By E. Way Elkington</span>, F.R.G.S.</h2> -</div> - -<blockquote> - -<p>Savages, big and little, play games like -other folk, and some of their methods -of amusing themselves are very curious -indeed. Mr. Elkington has made a -collection of the least-known and most -peculiar pastimes, and here describes -and illustrates them.</p></blockquote> - -<div> -<img class="drop-cap" src="images/t.jpg" alt="T" /> -</div> - -<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Throughout</span> the world there is -a peculiar similarity in the games of -the human race, and undoubtedly -they all spring from the same sources, -being the result of imitation, by -children, of the duties and pleasures of the -elder generation. In the savage races, however, -we find them in their most primitive and -interesting state, and in this article I propose -to describe a few of the least known and most -peculiar—some which I have myself witnessed, -and others that I have collected from well-known -travellers.</p> - -<p>As with ourselves, it is not only the children -who play, and the pastimes of their grown-up -brothers are equally interesting. Naturally -the games of the elders require more skill, and -in some cases considerably more endurance and -fortitude. For instance, the whip game, played -by the red-men of British Guiana, is one that -calls forth the most enduring qualities of these -sturdy natives, and is an ordeal in which few -Englishmen would care to take part. The -origin of it is not known; some say that it was -originally an act in a burial scene, but more -probably it is a festival game.</p> - -<p>For all functions in Guiana a copious supply -of drink is prepared, the local name of which is -“paiwarie.” This is a native-made fermented -liquor, which has the desired effect, in its preliminary -stages, of putting the drinkers into a good -humour. After a certain quantity of “paiwarie” -has been handed round, the players of the whip -game, men and boys, line up in two rows facing -one another; each is provided with a whip ornamented -with fibre tassels, those of the two end -players having whistles attached. When all is -ready a gentle stamping is commenced, which -gradually grows louder and louder till the earth -begins to throb and the players show signs of -getting worked up. Then shouts of “Yau, -au!” are heard, and the now excited players -wave their whips and sway gently backwards -and forwards as they stamp their feet. Presently -the two end men with the whistles attached -to their whips pass down the centre of -the row, whilst those lined up move slowly -in an opposite direction. Now the stamping -increases and the whistlers whistle at each -other in wild excitement. Then they begin -waving their whips at one other, feigning to -strike with tremendous force, but finally they -come down on their opponents’ calves with only -a mere touch. After this has gone on for some -time the two leaders run back to their original -places at the head of the row, and others go out -and do as they have done.</p> - -<p>When all the players have gone through this -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">355</span> -exhibition the real business begins; so far it has -only been play.</p> - -<p>The women now come on to the scene -bearing calabashes of wine, which is greedily -swallowed, and then two of the players challenge -each other to a real whipping competition.</p> - -<p>Silence soon prevails, and the onlookers take -up their places ready to watch this extraordinary -ordeal.</p> - -<p>As soon as the challenge has been accepted -the two men step out in front of the audience -and stand facing each other. As a rule they -are splendidly-built fellows, and as they wear -practically no clothing for this ceremony, their -physical development is very noticeable.</p> - -<p>Cautiously they judge their distance, letting -the lash of the whip just touch their adversary’s -calf. When they have thoroughly satisfied -themselves that they can get a perfect swing, -one of them stands firmly, half turned away -from the other, who immediately swings his -whip with tremendous force and brings it down -on his opponent’s calf with a crack like the report -of a gun.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i042.jpg"> -<img src="images/i042.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE EXTRAORDINARY “WHIP GAME” OF BRITISH GUIANA—THE COMPETITORS SLASH AT ONE ANOTHER’S BARE LEGS IN -TURN, OFTEN CUTTING DEEP INTO THE FLESH.<br /> -[<i>From a Photograph.</i>]</p> -</div> - -<p>The man who has received this blow, though -it has in all probability cut right into his calf, -does not flinch, but joins the whipper in a wild -sort of dance, accompanied by loud shouts of -“Yau, au!” Again the same man presents his -calf to be cut at, again the lash descends, and -more dancing follows, until it is time for the -other man to go through the same ordeal. When -he has had his share the two adjourn to the hut -and indulge freely in “paiwarie,” and other -players take their places, until all the grown-ups -have tasted of the delights of the game. The -younger fry then step forth and challenge each -other. Women, of course, do not take any active -part in this weird performance beyond handing -round the drinks.</p> - -<p>Though this is rather a strenuous game, there -are many less painful ones with which the -children amuse themselves. One of these, -called the “Jaguar Game,” is similar to our own -“Fox and Geese.” A long procession of boys -line up and grip each other by the shoulders, -and sway backwards and forwards crying out, -“There is no jaguar to-day!” Whilst they are -singing this merrily, a youngster bears down upon -them from his hiding-place amongst the onlookers. -He comes running along on his hands and one -leg, the other leg being raised in the air to -represent the tail of the jaguar. On his appearance -the whole line of boys is thrown into -confusion; they grow wildly excited and swerve -and sway, and dodge round, always keeping in a -long, snake-like line, with the foremost boy facing -their adversary, the jaguar. It is the jaguar’s -duty to catch the last one in the row and bear -him off to his lair.</p> - -<p>Sometimes this game is varied by the jaguar -having two young cubs with her, who also run -on “all threes”; they add greatly to the excitement -of the sport by snapping, snarling, and -generally behaving as young cubs should. The -game goes on till all the row has been captured. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">356</span></p> - -<p>In the “Monkey Game” laughter reaches its -highest point, for this is one of the wildest they -play; and not only the children indulge in it, -but the grown-up men sometimes take it into -their heads to play it, when it assumes a very -different aspect. With the children it is pure -fun, with little or no danger attaching to it.</p> - -<p>A crowd of youngsters line up and move -about like monkeys who are merely enjoying -themselves. Suddenly one of them stops and -gives vent to a shriek of fear; the others take -up the cry and immediately break their line -and run wildly all over the place, chattering -excitedly. When the simulated panic is at its -height the smaller boys spring on to the backs of -the bigger ones, -and are raced about -all over the place -till fatigue puts an -end to the fun. -When their elders -play the “Monkey -Game,” however, -they often become -so worked up that -they really behave -like a crowd of -monkeys gone -stark, staring mad.</p> - -<p>Sir Everard F. im -Thurn, K.C.M.G., -at present Governor -of Fiji, to whom I -am indebted for -the photographs of -these Guiana -games, relates a -most trying experience -he went -through during one -of these mad frolics. -He says that the -players suddenly -burst in amongst the huts, swarmed up the -roofs, tearing great mouthfuls of thatch away in -their flight, and then dashed into the rooms, -upsetting everything they came across and -destroying food and furniture. “The old man -of the settlement and his wife, in real anxiety -for their goods, tried to protect what they -could, tearing it even from out of the -’monkeys’’ hands or throwing food to them -to distract their attention from more valuable -property. At last, with the help of two bystanders, -the old man secured the more violent -of the players, and, despite some too genuine -scratchings and bitings, managed to fasten them -by ropes round their loins, monkey-wise, to the -posts of houses. At last five had been so caught -and tied in one house; and then, if there had -been uproar before, there was pandemonium -now. The captives screamed and shrieked and -yelled; they rolled as far as their cords would -allow, and tore with their teeth everything that -came in their way: food, clothes, hammocks, -pans, and calabashes.... The whole mighty -uproar only ceased when all were literally too -tired to do more.”</p> - -<p>This quaint instance of a game running away -with its players seems strange to us, but -probably if a savage saw some of our football -matches he, too, might think the players had -suddenly gone mad.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i043.jpg"> -<img src="images/i043.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE “SHIELD GAME,” IN WHICH THE COMPETITORS ENDEAVOUR TO PUSH ONE -ANOTHER OVER—TRIBAL DISPUTES ARE OCCASIONALLY SETTLED WITHOUT -BLOODSHED BY CHOSEN TEAMS.<br /> -[<i>From a Photograph.</i>]</p> -</div> - -<p>The “Shield Game” is another pastime of the -grown-up natives. -In this each man -is provided with a -strong shield made -of palm-leaf stalks. -Armed with this -he faces his opponent. -After much -preliminary stamping -and feigning -they close and a -mighty struggle -commences, in -which each man -endeavours to push -his adversary back. -It is a kind of tug-of-war -reversed. -Besides being a -game, it is often -used as a means -to settle disputes, -in which, of course, -the strongest man -wins. The accompanying -photograph -gives an -excellent idea of -the pastime. Occasionally when tribes fall out a -whole line of experts are chosen from each side, -and the dispute is settled without bloodshed by -the success of either side. It will be gleaned -from this that the quality of “pushfulness” has -an added value in British Guiana.</p> - -<p>To go back to the games of children and also -to jump a few thousand miles to the west, we -find some interesting and curious pastimes -among the aboriginals of Australia, where the -young idea copies the ways of its fathers and -makes games of their serious ceremonies. -Amongst other things they play at marriage, -taking some of the romantic details prior to the -ceremony to make their game. In some parts -of Australia an aboriginal has first to catch his -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">357</span> -wife before he can marry her, and the youngsters -have probably heard from their mothers that -this was not always the easiest thing to do, -for there may have been others anxious to wed -her—provided always that she was a good -worker, looks being of small account. So the -children have taken all these things into consideration -and made their game from them.</p> - -<p>As these aborigines have no proper villages, -but live in shelters thrown together in the most -primitive fashion, the children choose a spot in -the bush where Nature has made a sort of -covering; they then congregate and imitate -grown-up people, chattering about nothing in -particular, whilst the young man hovers round in -the bush. Suddenly he bears down on the -players and attempts to abduct one of the girls. -This arouses the others, who all try to stop him, -and one of the young gallants attacks the would-be -abductor and a mock fight ensues, the -winner bearing the maiden off in triumph to -the bush.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i044.jpg"> -<img src="images/i044.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">AN AUSTRALIAN ABORIGINAL CORROBOREE<br /> -<i>From a Photo. by permission of the Queensland Government.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>Amongst the men there are few real games; -they all seem to take life rather seriously, and -as soon as they are grown up they devote their -whole time to obtaining food and taking part in -the numerous religious ceremonies, some of -which are most elaborate and trying functions. -To us these may appear very like games, but to -the aborigines they are particularly sacred. Of late -years, however, they have turned one or two of -these ceremonies into dances or corroborees, -but probably this has been done to amuse the -whites and extract money from them—like the -Maoris, who now dance the “Haka” as if it were a -spectacular dance for the benefit of the Pakeha. -With the coming of civilization and peace -some phases of its serious import have gone. -The photograph given above shows Australian -aborigines performing the kangaroo dance, -which is a modified exhibition of one of their -ancient ceremonies. It is not an exciting affair, -nor beautiful, as these savages are not adepts -at dancing. All they do is to crawl about, -stamping and gesticulating, whilst the man -dressed as a kangaroo goes backwards and forwards -and up and down the line with a sort of -high-stepping action. This kangaroo dance at -one time had a significant meaning, and was -probably danced in connection with an old-time -legend, but, like many similar ceremonies, -it is now carried on simply because the -ancestors of the present generation taught it. -This in itself would be quite sufficient to keep -the most absurd custom alive, for ancestors are -held in great reverence amongst savages.</p> - -<p>One of the most amusing games I have ever -witnessed in savage lands was in New Zealand, -where I saw a crowd of children dancing an -imitation “Haka.” The “Haka,” when danced -seriously by grown-ups, is a most awe-inspiring -and thrilling exhibition which stirs every -nerve in your body; but when children -dance it, it becomes a grotesque and laughable -affair. The Maoris, men, women, and -children, have a well-developed sense of -humour, which is more than most savages have, -and the word “savage” hardly applies to them, -for more civilized and Christian beings would be -hard to find. When white men first came in -contact with them they found them anything -but civilized except in their ideas of justice, in -which they were able to give us lessons; in -hospitality even now they can put a white man -to shame. However, for the purpose of this -article I will call them savages.</p> - -<p>The children from their earliest days begin to -laugh. I do not remember ever seeing one cry—and -they seem to spend the rest of their days -with a smile hovering somewhere near their -faces, ready at the slightest provocation to come -out. As the “Haka” is composed of a series -of body movements, in which facial expression -plays a prominent part, the children have plenty -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">358</span> -of scope to caricature the whole performance, -which they turn into a merry pantomime, -stamping and shouting, rolling their eyes, -and hanging out their tongues in curious -imitation of the real performers. The girls, -too, have their dances, and -these are really both pretty -and interesting, for they are -handsome creatures who -know they are good looking, -and enjoy showing themselves -off to the best advantage, as -one can see by the pretty and -fascinating movements of the -various dances they practise. -The only thing that mars -them is their anxiety to make -grotesque faces every now -and then, but perhaps this -too is done by way of contrast. -The men have the -same failing, and though their -expressions are more savage -they do not add to the charm -of the dances. To perform -a dance of welcome in front -of a visiting tribe, and pull -horrible faces at them the -while, is hardly likely to make -the visitors feel at home, but -the Maoris understand it, -and so do not get cross, as -you and I might.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i045a.jpg"> -<img src="images/i045a.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">MAORI BOYS PERFORMING THE “HAKA.”<br /> -<i>From a Photo. by permission of the New Zealand Government Tourist Department.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>In the Solomon Islands, British New Guinea, -and the New Hebrides the children are also of -a playful disposition and have many games -which resemble ours, such as leap-frog and -pick-a-back, whilst the elder generation have -musical instruments resembling -the jews’ harp, the -fiddle, and the Pandean -pipes.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i045b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i045b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">A YOUNG NICOBARESE ISLANDER PLAYING A -FLAGEOLET WITH HIS NOSE.<br /> -<i>From a Photo. by E. H. Man.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>Certain musical instruments -are more or less -common all over the world, -but often the method of -playing them differs, as the -accompanying photograph -will show. It represents a -young Nicobarese playing a -reed flageolet with his nose! -Lots of people in the most -civilized lands sing through -their noses, but playing -through them is, I believe, -only practised in savage -lands. In these same islands -the natives have a sounding-board -which I suppose they -would call a musical instrument, -for it takes the place -of the well-known tom-tom -used in other countries. Here -it is beaten to keep time for -dancers. It is a curiously -constructed instrument, -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">359</span> -resembling a native shield; in fact, some -travellers have mistaken it for one. Scooped -out of the trunk of a tree in the same way that -ordinary dug-out canoes are made, it is about -five feet long and two or three feet broad; -like a shield, it is concave in shape. One of -the ends is pointed, and when in use this -is stuck in the ground diagonally; a stone -is placed under the other end to raise it. To -play it the native plants one foot firmly on the -buried end whilst he strikes the board with his -disengaged foot.</p> - -<p>“Musical” entertainments are popular in -the Nicobar Islands, and the young men vie -with each other in composing ditties which -they hope will become popular and thus make -them famous. So far none of these songs have -been pirated in England, but this does not say -that in the islands they are not “all the go.” -Such tunes are composed to be sung to the -accompaniment of the sounding-board and -dances. These, among the women, resemble -more than anything else the antics of timid -ladies bathing at the seaside. The dancing of -the men is not much help to the musician -either, as it consists of a few movements rather -like dumb-bell exercises for chest development, -so that it can be understood that the young -Nicobarese has no light task before him when -he seeks fame in composition.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i046.jpg"> -<img src="images/i046.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">A CURIOUS DANCE POPULAR IN THE NICOBAR ISLANDS.<br /> -<i>From a Photo. by E. H. Man.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>On the West Coast of Africa there is a remarkably -interesting dance in which the movements -of the dancer supply the “music.” For -the particulars of this dance and for the photograph -of the performers I have to thank Mr. -T. J. Alldridge, some time District Commissioner. -The native dancing girls wear most -fantastic garments. Their bodies are covered -with a net made of native cotton, from which -hang great bunches of palm-leaf fibre. Tufts -of the same material decorate their wrists -and waists, and some wear curious knicker-bockers. -To these latter garments are attached -small pieces of hollow iron, from which rings -are hung, and when the dancer gets in full -swing these make a curious jingling noise. An -accompaniment is also played by other women -on another quaint instrument called a <i>sehgura</i>, -which is made out of a hollow gourd covered -with a net, on which are fixed a number of -seeds. To produce the sound the ends of the -net are held in the two hands and tightened -and slackened alternately, while rhythmic -shaking is now and then indulged in to vary -the accompaniment.</p> - -<p>In this part of the world there are several -interesting games of chance, for natives are -inveterate gamblers and will stake all they -possess—huts, wearing apparel, and even their -wives. One of their favourite pastimes is -played with a concave board, which is put on -the ground facing the players, who stand or -squat a little way off. They then spin a sort of -top into and across it until one of them fails to -send it with sufficient force to carry it to the -far end; it is then the business of the next -man to spin his top with sufficient force to drive -his opponent’s out, and so beat him.</p> - -<p>Gambling seems to be common in all parts of -the world; the Eskimo have many interesting -games where chance and skill are combined. -One called “nuglutang” is very popular and is -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">360</span> -played by several -men at a time. -From the centre -of the room -(generally from -the roof) is slung -a plate of ivory -having a hole in -its centre. The -Eskimos stand -away from it, and -each in turn endeavours -to throw -a stick through -the orifice. In one -of their games, -called “saketan,” -they have a -curious way of -“staking.” The -game is a sort of -roulette; a board -is placed on the -ground, and a -small cup with -rounded bottom -and a lip is spun -on to it. The -man in front of -whom the lip -stops is the winner, -but, unlike most -winners, he is actually -a loser, for he -has to go and fetch something to pay in as a -stake, which the next “winner” takes, but he -in turn pays in another forfeit in its place for -the man who follows. So the game goes on -until the last man wins, -and he appropriates the -stakes out and out, making -himself the only real -winner, whereas the first -player to whom the cup -pointed is the only loser -in a game which causes -the wildest excitement -whilst the issue is in -doubt.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i047a.jpg"> -<img src="images/i047a.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">WEST AFRICAN DANCING GIRLS.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>It is a peculiar thing that -string games, like some -others already mentioned, -are popular all -over the world -amongst the -coloured races, -and what is perhaps -far more extraordinary -is the -fact, recently discovered, -that some -of these string -figures are made -in exactly the same -way, and are of -the same design -in places as widely -apart as America, -the South Sea -Islands, and -Japan. The last -photograph, taken -by Mr. William -A. Cunnington, -shows a very -interesting string -figure from Central -Africa called -“Sumbo” (a fishing -net), which -is by no means a -simple one.</p> - -<p>For the description -of this figure -and permission to -reproduce the -photograph I have to thank the Secretary of -the Anthropological Institute.</p> - -<p>Besides having tricks of this sort in which the -hands only are employed, there are many now -known which are made -with hands and feet, and -others again are worked -round the neck and the -hands.</p> - -<p>Dr. Haddon has made -a particular study of the -subject, and has, in -collaboration with Dr. -Rivers, published particulars -of many of the -string tricks performed -in various parts of the -world.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i047b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i047b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">STRING GAMES ARE POPULAR ALL OVER THE -WORLD—HERE IS AN INTERESTING FIGURE FROM -CENTRAL AFRICA.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i> -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">361</span></p> -</div> - -<hr class="chap" /> -<h2 id="The_Marriage_of_Lulu"><i>The Marriage of Lulu.</i><br /> - -<span class="smcap medium">By the Rev. A. Forder, of Jerusalem.</span></h2> - -<blockquote> - -<p>The author is a missionary who has travelled extensively in the East, and is thoroughly familiar -with the wild tribes of the desert. In the subjoined narrative he relates the love-story of a young -Arab girl—a real life romance with the conventional happy ending of fiction.</p></blockquote> - -<div> -<img class="drop-cap" src="images/i.jpg" alt="I" /> -</div> - -<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">It</span> was that time of the day which -Orientals call <i>asr</i>, between four -o’clock and sunset—just the time -when the Arab chief likes to be on -hand so that he may receive and -welcome any who may seek the hospitality and -shelter afforded by his simple home, and see -for himself that sufficient food for man and -beast is provided, so that both may sup and be -satisfied.</p> - -<p>On a certain afternoon Sheikh Khaleel sat -at his tent door watching the sun slowly sink -toward the west, wondering, as he pulled at the -dying embers in his pipe, if it would be his lot -to entertain any guest that night.</p> - -<p>As his sharp eyes looked out from under his -shaggy eyebrows he saw in the distance a rider -mounted on a camel, whose head was directed -straight for the camp under the chief’s control.</p> - -<p>It was not long before both camel and rider -stood at the door of the guest-tent, and the -chief, having tethered the ship of the desert to -one of the tent-pegs, invited his guest to enter, -and at once set about preparing the coffee -according to Arab custom.</p> - -<p>The new arrival, whose name was Abd-el-Thullam -(the servant of cruelty) was well -known to the Arabs for scores of miles round, -and a visit from him always meant something -unusual and of importance, hence the wonder -of the host and his neighbours at the coming -of one with so uninviting a name, which was -obtained by deeds that gave subject for conversation -around many a camp-fire after supper. -Speculations as to the coming of this well-known -chief were many, and although not audibly -expressed filled the minds of all present, and -of none more so than the women, who were -separated from the menfolk only by the coarse -goats’-hair curtain that divided the tent. Little -did the host’s only daughter think that she was -the cause of this unexpected visitor coming -among them, or how much his presence meant -to her and others.</p> - -<p>Arab etiquette forbids any direct asking of -questions or quizzing into the affairs of a guest, -so both before and after supper the conversation -was upon subjects far away from the one that -had brought Abd-el-Thullam into the camp of -Sheikh Khaleel, and the simple folk of the -wilderness closed their eyes in sleep without -having the faintest idea of the object of Abd-el-Thullam’s -visit.</p> - -<p>With the morning light the camp was astir, -both men and women going about their daily -callings, each one wondering what the day would -reveal. After the matutinal cup of coffee the -guest made known the object of his coming, -doing so in such forceful and measured language -as to impress upon the little company of -listeners the fact that his wishes must be complied -with.</p> - -<p>Condensed into a few words, the rather -lengthy speech of the “servant of cruelty” was -somewhat as follows: “Sheikh Khaleel, may -Allah grant you a long life and build your -house (grant you sons to perpetuate your name -and family). To the women of my household I -desire to add another, for has not our Prophet -given us permission to have four wives? Already -I have three. Now I have come to ask for -your daughter, and am ready to give the price -that you may ask for her. As I am to join a -raiding party in a few days the matter must be -settled at once. May Allah give you patience -and wisdom.”</p> - -<p>The statement was so unexpected that no one -could make reply for a minute or so. At last -the silence was broken by Khaleel saying, “The -will of Allah be done! What is decreed must -come to pass.”</p> - -<p>Now, the business of a betrothal and marriage -is not usually hurried among Arabs, for much -talking is necessary to settle the price of the -bride, and time is needed in which to pay the -amount agreed upon, and to arrange and comply -with the wedding festivities and customs. -Hence Sheikh Khaleel and his neighbours were -surprised in a two-fold way, first by the boldness -of the request, and secondly by the desire to -hasten the matter. So, reminding the impatient -suitor that “God was with the patient ones,” -Khaleel bade him wait a while.</p> - -<p>But the man desirous of many wives pressed -his claim and asked the price of the girl, again -saying that he was ready to give whatever was -asked.</p> - -<p>All the while Khaleel had been wondering if -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">362</span> -this was not his chance to make a good bargain, -although for two reasons he was loath to part -with his daughter, whose name was Lulu (the -pearl). Was she not his only daughter—in fact, -the only child Allah had spared to him? Moreover, -although there had been no formal or -public betrothal, he knew well enough that -Lulu’s heart and affections had already been -won by a young man of his own camp and -community. But here was the opportunity to -drive a good and hard bargain. And what did -it matter, after all? It was only about a girl, -who might any day be taken ill and die; also, -he might have to get her off at a small return -later on if he allowed this chance to slip by.</p> - -<p>At last Khaleel spoke, making known the -terms on which his daughter could become the -fourth wife of the unwelcome guest. They were -as follows: a mare, one hundred goats, fifty -sheep, and two hundred silver medjidiehs (each -worth three and fourpence), all to be paid -within three days, with the stipulation that, -should Lulu die before the time for taking her -to her new home, viz., seven days of feasting, -the above payment should become the sole -property of Chief Khaleel, her father. In -addition to the above the new son-in-law was -to give for five successive years one hundred -measures of new wheat and fifty of barley.</p> - -<p>The terms were received in silence, and anyone -glancing at the faces of those assembled -could gather that each thought the price high, -but all knew that the visiting chief was rich and -well able to pay the fee demanded, if he chose -to do so.</p> - -<p>Nearly the whole day -was spent in arguing, persuasion, -and calculation, -but Sheikh Khaleel was -immovable, the more so -as he saw a chance of -getting his terms.</p> - -<p>Finding that talking was -of no avail, Abd-el-Thullam -finally consented to -the terms on condition -that, as soon as the purchase -price was paid, the -seven days of wedding -festivities should commence. -To this Khaleel -gave his consent, and, -although the day was far -spent, the prospective -bridegroom mounted a -horse which had been -brought for him and rode -away, leaving the camel -on which he had arrived -as an earnest of his return. For three days the -camel was tied before the guest-tent, and was -only redeemed just in time to save it from being -forfeited.</p> - -<p>We must now leave the guest-tent and for -a time consider some other people who were -keenly interested in the happenings just related.</p> - -<p>First, a word about Lulu. As already stated, -she was the only child of her father, and, such -being the case, she was naturally better cared -for and more thought of than if there had been -rivals in the shape of brothers. Her father -spared her in many ways the indignities so -commonly imposed upon females in the East, -one distinction between her and other girls of -the tribe being that her face had not been -tattooed.</p> - -<p>At the time of our story her age was about -fourteen. The bloom of youth on her cheek, -with the uprightness of figure so common among -Arab girls, made her queenly in appearance in -spite of her oft-patched flowing robes.</p> - -<p>Among her own kith and kin she reigned -supreme, for, having lost her mother soon after -her birth, she had claimed the nursing and -attention of most of the women in the camp; -hence she was ruled by none and spoiled by all.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i049.jpg"> -<img src="images/i049.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“FOR THREE DAYS THE CAMEL WAS TIED BEFORE THE GUEST-TENT.”<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>Some of the youths, too, had paid her -attention, and, having grown up side by side -with her, were more than mere friends. One, -whose name was Abd-Salaam (the servant of -peace), had even found it in his heart to love -her, which aspiration he knew was not in vain, -for on more than one occasion Lulu had assured -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">363</span> -him that when the time came for her to become -a wife none but the “servant of peace” would -suffice.</p> - -<p>Now it so happened that all that had passed -and been settled in the guest-tent between father -and visitor was unknown to either Lulu or her -lover, for the former had been away all day -gathering fuel on the hill-sides in company with -another girl, while Abd-Salaam had gone with -others to a distant town in charge of some -sheep, the day he left the camp being the one -on which the wife-seeker arrived.</p> - -<p>It is customary among the Arabs for the girl -who is to be betrothed not to be consulted as -to any likes or dislikes on her part, and she -knows nothing about her being traded off to -some stranger until informed by having the large -outer garment of the suitor thrown around her, -and hearing the announcement that she belongs -to him.</p> - -<p>The surprise of Lulu, therefore, on her return -to the camp may be imagined when the scribe -of the community approached her and, all -unawares, covered her with a large camel-hair -<i>abba</i>, saying, “The name of God be with thee, -O Lulu. None shall have thee but Abd-el-Thullam.”</p> - -<p>Surprised as she was, she threw off the cloak -and entered the tent, inwardly vowing that none -should have her but the constant companion of -her girlhood. With the liberty allowed her as -the chief’s daughter she went into the guest-tent, -and, with hands clenched and determination -written on her face, informed her father that her -home and lot should not be among strangers, -and that the hated “servant of cruelty” should -be no husband of hers. In this way warfare was -declared, and the probability of trouble in the -near future announced.</p> - -<p>That night she was sprinkled with sheep’s -blood, as a sign that her life belonged to another. -Next day she was accompanied by the women -to a spring, and, according to custom, thoroughly -washed and purified, while on the day following -busy fingers worked incessantly making a -wedding-robe for the supposed bride. Lulu -tolerated all these formalities in silence, but -inwardly decided that, do what they would and -act as they might, she would never be the bride -of the one who was to supplant the choice of -long ago.</p> - -<p>The afternoon of the third day came round, -but no suitor with the price of the bride had -appeared, and it looked as though Lulu would -be released from her probable marriage, and -her father become the possessor of a camel -for little trouble. Just an hour before sunset, -however, a cloud of dust in the distance told of -the coming of flocks, and ere the golden orb -disappeared altogether Abd-el-Thullam had -handed over what was demanded in return for -his prospective bride. The bleating of the -sheep and the clinking of the silver pieces only -made Lulu vow afresh that no tent of a stranger -should shelter her.</p> - -<p>The price having been paid in the presence -of witnesses, the wedding festivities commenced. -The firing of old flint-lock guns was the signal -that announced holiday-keeping for a week. -Sheep were killed, bread baked in abundance, -and coffee-drinking went on continuously. This -is a time much appreciated by the dwellers of -the wilderness, for then they are able to satisfy -the cravings of hunger and for once in a season -eat until satisfied.</p> - -<p>Whilst the men raced on their horses or -fought imaginary battles, the women whiled -away the hours in dancing, singing, or sipping -coffee between puffs at their long pipes. So the -days passed, and the end of the marriage feast -approached.</p> - -<p>Only Lulu took no part or interest in all that -was going on, and as the men or women -chanted in turn the virtues, praises, and good -fortune of both bride and bridegroom, it all fell -like water on a duck’s back so far as the girl-bride -was concerned. Inwardly she longed for -the return of her boy lover, so that he might -in some way intervene to stop the proceedings, -and so win her for himself according to their -mutual pledge.</p> - -<p>But the “servant of peace” did not come, -for the demand in the town for sheep was poor, -and he had to wait many days ere the flock was -disposed of and he free to return to his goats’-hair -home. As time and tide wait for no man, -neither did the last day of the wedding festivities -tarry, and all too soon for the greatly-distressed -Lulu the seventh day dawned, and with it no -visible escape from what seemed her inevitable -fate.</p> - -<p>With the constant attention of the women, -escape by flight was well-nigh impossible, but -before noon a probable way of deliverance -presented itself which Lulu was not slow to -grasp. A small company of gipsies arrived at -the camp, one of whom—an old woman—professed -a knowledge of drugs, and verified -her statements by producing a small box of -mysterious-looking compounds in powder.</p> - -<p>The arrival of the party drew away attention -from Lulu, but she engaged the attention of the -vender of drugs, and elicited from her the fact -that among her wares was poison. It was only -the work of a few minutes to exchange cash for -a mysterious powder, directions for the use of -which were imparted to Lulu in an undertone.</p> - -<p>As evening drew on preparations were made -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">364</span> -for the sending away after supper of bride -and bridegroom. The camel that was to carry -Lulu to her new home was decorated and made -ready, and the torches and tom-toms seen to and -handed out to those who were to accompany -the procession on its way to the camp of Abd-el-Thullam. -It seemed that nothing remained to -be done save to partake of supper and start.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i051.jpg"> -<img src="images/i051.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“IT WAS ONLY THE WORK OF A FEW MINUTES TO EXCHANGE CASH FOR A -MYSTERIOUS POWDER.”</p> -</div> - -<p>During the serving of the unusually large -meal, which occupied the attention of the women -for a time, Lulu slipped out backwards under -the rear curtain -of the tent and -disappeared. -Few missed her -for a time, for -all were busy, -but when the -call was given, -“Bring out the -bride and let -her husband -claim her,” great -was the astonishment, -for no -bride was on -hand. One -abused the -other, and the -angry bridegroom -accused -his host of -treachery and -would have shot -him but for the -interference of -others, who reminded -him -again that Allah -was with the -patient ones.</p> - -<p>All denied -that the girl was -dead, for had -they not seen -her alive only a -short time before? -She would -return soon, -they said, and -put an end to -the confusion and mystery.</p> - -<p>Meanwhile scouts were -sent out around the camp, -only to return later without -tidings of the fugitive. All -that night watch was kept, -but morning dawned without -the mystery being -solved, and as the day wore on speculations -were indulged in as to whom the purchase price -of Lulu belonged, for, although she had now -disappeared, she on her part had not done -anything within the seven days of the feast to -cause her intended master to claim the price -paid for her. The sun set again without any -light being shed on the disappearance or whereabouts -of the girl-bride, and Abd-el-Thullam -was furious at being balked of his prey, swearing -by every oath available that he would lose -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">365</span> -neither wife nor purchase price, even if the -regaining of one or the other made lifelong -enmity between the two tribes.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i052a.jpg"> -<img src="images/i052a.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“AN OLD TOMB HEWN IN THE SIDE OF THE CISTERN.”<br /> -[<i>From a Photograph.</i>]</p> -</div> - -<p>We must now leave the puzzled company in -the guest-tent and see what had become of Lulu. -After slipping under the tent-cloth, she commenced -to run as fast as her bare feet would -permit her. In her excitement and joy at being -free she cared little in which direction she fled, -and although the night was unusually dark, by -reason of heavy storm-clouds, she sped on over -hill and valley until thoroughly tired and exhausted. -As she rested her weary little -frame on the soft herbage of the wilderness -the solitude and stillness made her nervous -and afraid. Her trepidation was not lessened -by a sudden movement near her—made, -probably, by a jackal more alarmed than -herself.</p> - -<p>The fright made her rise quickly and again -take to flight, but after running a few hundred -yards misfortune overtook her, for, without -warning, she tripped and fell headlong into -an old unused cistern quite twenty-five feet -deep. The fall made her unconscious, and -as the pit was far from the camp she was -safe for that night, while a tangle of creepers -and thorns over the mouth of the cavity -made her fairly secure by day.</p> - -<p>Here, bruised and unconscious, the poor -little bride-to-be lay until daybreak, when, with -the rising sun, her senses returned to her. -Having considered her surroundings, she -decided to secure herself further by creeping -into an old tomb hewn in the side of the -cistern, where at least she could -die in peace rather than be the -slave of one utterly distasteful to -her. So, with one last fond -thought for her absent lover, she -swallowed the gipsy’s potion and -crawled into the small aperture. -Here she soon fell into a stupor, -caused partly by weariness, but -mainly by the powder bought -from the old drug-vender.</p> - -<p>But what had become of the -boy-lover all these days that he -had not returned to the camp -and become conversant with all -that had happened to his little -companion?</p> - -<p>As already stated, he was -delayed by a slack market; but -after some days he was free to -return, and, in charge of two -camels, he set out for his wilderness -home. On the day after Lulu’s -escape he was crossing the great -plain, happy at the prospect of reaching camp -before evening. Being somewhat religiously -inclined, he halted at noonday to pray, and soon -after remounting was warned to seek shelter from -a storm that was announced by a sharp crack of -thunder. Looking about him he saw a cavity -in the ground wide and high enough to allow -his camels to enter. By dint of pulling, coaxing, -and beating he forced the beasts in, and at last -all three found themselves in the same pit into -which Lulu had fallen the night before.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i052b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i052b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“HE HALTED AT NOONDAY TO PRAY.”<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i> -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">366</span></p> -</div> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i053.jpg"> -<img src="images/i053.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“SUDDENLY HE WAS SEEN TO FALL HEAVILY.”</p> -</div> - -<p>The heavy rain dripping through the opening -above made the youth seek better shelter, so he -presently crept into the old tomb, and, to his -amazement, found that it was already occupied -by someone apparently deep in slumber.</p> - -<p>Curiosity made him try to rouse the sleeper, -but it was of no use. Crawling farther in, it was -not long before the amazed camel-boy discovered -that the insensible girl was his dearly-loved -Lulu. Assuring himself that she was not dead, -and, of course, ignorant of the circumstances -that had brought her to the cavern, he left her, -and, taking the best of the two camels, rode off -post-haste to carry the news of Lulu’s condition -to the camp and get help.</p> - -<p>The announcement -caused a -good deal of talk, -stir, and excitement, -which was -suddenly put a -stop to by Abd-el-Thullam -jumping -on his mare -and making off at -full speed toward -the cavern, hoping -to be the -first to secure his -dearly-bought -bride.</p> - -<p>Others joined -in the race, but -it seemed as if -no one would -overtake the -eager chief, when -suddenly he was -seen to fall -heavily, having -been thrown to -the ground by -his mare putting -her foot into a -hole.</p> - -<p>He did not -move, and -when the others -reached him they discovered to their consternation -that he had broken his neck and was -quite dead. Instead of a reluctant bride being -escorted to the distant camp, therefore, the corpse -of the unfortunate chief was carried thither.</p> - -<p>On reaching the cavern the men found Lulu -still deep in the drug-induced slumber, and, -making a rough litter out of their roomy outer -garments, they carried her to their camp and laid -her on her rude bed of heather and dry grass.</p> - -<p>Fortunately, the old gipsy-woman had not left -the camp, and now, taking in the situation, she -administered a dose of some concoction that -soon had the effect of rousing the sleeper and -making her able to explain her presence in the -rock-hewn tomb.</p> - -<p>Slowly but surely Lulu regained vigour, and -the old youthful spirit came again, much to the -joy of Abd-Salaam and her father. After a few -weeks another marriage feast was kept, for there -was now no obstacle to the wedding of the lovers, -the price of the bride having been paid by the -ill-fated “servant of cruelty.” The affair was hurried -this time, for the feast was to have a happy ending; -love, instead of custom, had won the day. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">367</span></p> - -<hr class="chap" /> -<div class="figcenter"> -<img id="THE_BREAKER" src="images/i054a.jpg" -alt="THE BREAKER OF RECORDS." /> -<h2><span class="hidden">THE BREAKER OF RECORDS.<br /></span> -<span class="smcap medium">By Herbert G. Ponting</span>, F.R.G.S</h2> -</div> - -<blockquote> - -<p>The amusing story of an American who set out to eclipse the round-the-world record. The author, -himself a globe-trotter of many years’ standing, describes him as “the most extraordinary man I ever -met,” and after reading the narrative we fancy the reader will be inclined to agree with him.</p></blockquote> - -<div> -<img class="drop-cap" src="images/i.jpg" alt="I" /> -</div> - -<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">I met</span> him at Dalny, in August, -1903—the year before war broke -out between Japan and Russia.</p> - -<p>I had been travelling in Manchuria, -and had come down from -Mukden only just in time to catch, by the skin -of my teeth, the weekly steamer to Japan. The -train was more than an hour late, and the -drosky that I hired at the station—with my -luggage piled in anyhow by the Chinese porters—had -been driven by the dishevelled moujik in -charge at a pace that laughed at speed limits -and scorned such trifling obstacles as ruts and -holes nearly a foot in depth.</p> - -<p>As we tore up to the steamer’s berth at the -great wharf, that was later to prove of such -inestimable value to the Japanese, the driver -shouting and lashing his three horses into foam, -the gangway was on the point of being lowered, -and I had horrible visions of having to spend a -week in that most dead of dead-alive towns, in -which I already seemed to know every house.</p> - -<p>With commendable courtesy, however, the -officials permitted me to get myself and effects -on board, and a moment later we were steaming -out into the fine harbour.</p> - -<p>The steamer was the <i>Mongolia</i>, which had -the misfortune six months later to be the first -Russian vessel captured by the Japanese.</p> - -<p>I was leaning over the rail, watching the hills -receding from view, when I suddenly felt a tap -on my shoulder, and on looking round was confronted -by a rather sallow-faced, wiry-looking -individual of medium height, with steel-grey -eyes that seemed to pierce through mine clean -into my brain.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i054b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i054b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“THE DRIVER SHOUTING AND LASHING HIS THREE HORSES INTO FOAM.” -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">368</span></p> -</div> - -<p>“Say, d’you speak English?” he asked me.</p> - -<p>I admitted that, being an Englishman, I had -a moderate command of the language.</p> - -<p>“Well, I ain’t English, I’m Amur’can,” he -replied.</p> - -<p>“So I see.”</p> - -<p>“Well, say now, how’d you know I was -Amur’can?”</p> - -<p>“By your accent; one would scarcely -make the mistake of taking you for anything -else.”</p> - -<p>“Well, say, you’re smart enough to be an -Amur’can, too, at that rate. Anyhow, I’m -mighty glad to see you, for since I parted with -my friend, who went to Port Arthur, I ain’t had -a chance of hearin’ a language that anyone could -understand. I’m out to beat the record round -the world for the <i>New York</i> ——, and if I only -make it in Japan I’ll beat the previous best by -exactly twelve days.”</p> - -<p>He then related to me how he had left New -York and travelled <i>viâ</i> Liverpool, London, -Dover, Ostend, Berlin, Moscow, and the Trans-Siberian -Railway to Dalny; and here he was, -bound for Nagasaki, Japan, where he would -take the train for Yokohama, and thence travel -by the <i>Empress of India</i> to Vancouver, by the -Canadian Pacific Railway to Quebec, and from -there back to New York.</p> - -<p>“I’m going to publish a book on the trip, and -I’ve got about enough information to fill it -already. Say, though, my wife’ll be glad to see -me back again in New York. She’s a beautiful -woman, my wife. She’s tall and dark, and has -a straight-front figure—a woman can’t be -fashionable without a straight-front figure—and -when she walks she leans forward like a -kangaroo and does the glide. Ever seen it? -I tell you, sir, there’s nuthin’ like it; and it -takes a New York girl to do it properly, and -there ain’t many girls in New York as can lick -my wife at walkin’. I’ll introduce you to her -sometime if I ever see you in New York, an’ if -you don’t say she’s about the slickest thing you -ever saw in skirts, well, you ain’t much of a -judge o’ weather.</p> - -<p>“Say, now that I come to look at you, I’ve -seen you before, I guess,” he rattled on. -“Wasn’t you the chap that come rushin’ on to -the platform at Mukden just as our train was -movin’ out of the station?”</p> - -<p>I acknowledged that I was. Owing to the -impossibility of obtaining any reliable information -in the town, several miles away, as to -the time of departure of the trains, I had reached -the station, to my great chagrin, just in time to -see the <i>train de luxe</i> move away from the -platform. I had thus been compelled to take -a slow and very dirty train three hours later, -and hence the reason of my nearly missing the -boat at Dalny.</p> - -<p>“Looks as if cuttin’ things fine was rather in -your line, eh? Say, though, you couldn’t take -risks like that if you was doin’ a record round -the world. You nearly missed this boat. I -was watchin’ you, and if you’d been on my job -you’d have perspired like a pig as you was -drivin’ up to the wharf, with that woolly-faced -pirate yellin’ and thrashin’ them horses to soapsuds, -and the steamer whistle blowin’ and the -whole durned push hollerin’ and monkeyin’ -with the ropes of the gangway. You’d have -had your heart in your boots, young feller, if -you’d been on my lay-out and seen how near -you came to botchin’ up the whole job.</p> - -<p>“And talkin’ of botchin’ jobs, if this steamer -doesn’t arrive in Nagasaki in time to catch the -eight o’clock train on Thursday, I’m done. -That train’ll just give me time to catch the -<i>Empress</i> at Yokohama. If I miss it there ain’t -another boat until the <i>Gaelic</i> for San Francisco, -nine days later, and as that’s a slower route I’ll -be fourteen days longer than if I catch the -<i>Empress</i>. Gee whiz, though, it’ll break my wife’s -heart if I don’t clip that twelve days off the -record. She and I figured this whole thing out -together months before I started.</p> - -<p>“Now, this boat’s due to arrive at Nagasaki at -eleven o’clock, and if she does no better’n that -there’s no power on earth can help me; the -game’s lost. Guess I’ll have to try and square -the captain to get her into harbour by seven -o’clock. If I can’t do that my wife’ll be heartbroken; -she’s set her heart on this. You ought -to see her; she’s the finest girl in New York—tall -and slender, with dark eyes and hair, and -she’s got a straight-front figure. But, say, I -guess I’ll have to try and square the captain; I -ain’t a nervous man, but I’m gettin’ nervous -about this.”</p> - -<p>With that he took me on one side, where -there was no possibility of any eavesdropping, -and, drawing his watch from his pocket, said, -“You see that watch? How much do you -suppose it’s worth?”</p> - -<p>I looked at it closely. It appeared to be a -handsome gold-cased, centre-seconds hunter, but, -after the American fashion, the gold was not hallmarked. -I confessed that I could form no idea -of its value, but it appeared to me to be an -expensive one.</p> - -<p>“It’s a most difficult thing for anyone but an -expert to tell the value of a watch, and you -aren’t the only one to think this is somethin’ -choice,” said my new acquaintance. “Now -you’ve got a whole lot to learn, and I’m goin’ to -put you up to a tip that’ll save you a pile of -money. There’s not many experts on watches -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">369</span> -to be met with travellin’, and most people would -think this worth fifty dollars at least. That’s -where they’re wrong. I buy these watches by -the dozen, and they only cost me one dollar -and twenty cents each that way. They’re gold-washed, -but they look like solid gold. I always -have one on my chain; it’s no good havin’ it -anywhere else. It must be on the chain you’re -wearin’, and when the time comes for business -you’ve got to tenderly draw it out of your pocket -as if it was somethin’ you valued more than -your life.</p> - -<p>“Now, when I started out from Moscow I -bought a second-class ticket, and I got into the -best unoccupied first-class compartment I saw -on the train. After a while the conductor -comes along to examine the tickets. I handed -him mine. He couldn’t speak a word of English, -but he gave me to understand by pretty good -actin’ that I’d have to clear out into the other -end of the train.</p> - -<p>“Not bein’ a bad hand at actin’ myself, I was -right <i>in</i> it. I gently pulled my watch from my -pocket—it was one like this I now have on me—and -showed him clearly that I intended to -give it to him when we reached Irkutsk if he let -me stay where I was. I repeated the word -Irkutsk several times, each time touchin’ his -pocket.</p> - -<p>“Well, sirree, you ought to have been there -to see his face when he caught sight of that -watch! His eyes bulged out of his head so you -could hang your hat on ’em, and to show what -he felt like in his heart he took hold of my hand -and shook it.</p> - -<p>“After that he was like a mother to me all -the way. Other compartments were filled up, -but I had mine to myself always. Every time I -passed him I gave him a wink and tapped my -watch-pocket, and he switched on the nicest -smile he kept in stock.</p> - -<p>“Gee whiz, though, comin’ across Siberia -the inside of that train was hotter’n the gates of -Hades, and every day that feller would come to -my room two or three times to see if he couldn’t -do something to make me more comfortable.</p> - -<p>“At Irkutsk I handed over the watch, and -either his joy at receivin’ it or his sorrow at -partin’ with me was so great that he tried to -kiss me.</p> - -<p>“Irkutsk is where they change trains, and I -met an Englishman on the platform who lived -in Port Arthur; he was goin’ back there by -way of Dalny. He had been on a holiday to -England, and was comin’ back on third-class -trains, as he had spent about all his money, -and had only just enough to skin through -third-class. When I found he knew the country -and could talk Russian, I invited him to come -along with me; I told him I’d fix things up all -right.</p> - -<p>“Well, by and by the conductor comes along, -same as the other had done. There we were, -both in a first-class compartment, one with a -second and the other with a third-class ticket. -I didn’t have need to do any dumb show this -time, for my friend, who spoke the lingo, did all -the gassin’, and told him there was a nice -present waitin’ for him when Dalny was reached -if we could stay where we were, and when I -tenderly took another watch out of my pocket -and looked at it as though it was the only thing -I’d ever loved on earth, he was as much overcome -with joy as number one had been.</p> - -<p>“Well, that watch fixed it just as I knew it -would. We both stayed where we were, and -when, at Dalny, I handed it over to the conductor, -I calculated those two watches, worth -two dollars and forty cents, had saved me about -one hundred and twenty-five dollars.</p> - -<p>“That Englishman was as chock-full of -knowledge about Manchuria as an egg is full of -meat, and I got enough information out of him -to write up the whole trip across Russia and -Siberia.</p> - -<p>“Now you see the point I’m gettin’ at. -There’s more of them watches in my bag, besides -this one on my chain, and I’d like to see the -captain of this ship richer by one of ’em, provided -he does somethin’ to earn such a valuable -present as he’ll consider it, until he gets to -pryin’ into the works and askin’ experts’ -opinions about it; but by that time I’ll be a -long way off and it ’ain’t likely as I’ll ever -see him again. There’s one disadvantage -about this game that’s worth remarkin’—you -can’t play it on the same man twice.</p> - -<p>“As soon as I came aboard this ship and -found out from the steward the time she gets -to Nagasaki, I saw another watch would have -to go, and that the captain o’ the ship would -be the fortunate possessor. There’s a difficulty -in the way, as he can’t speak English; and I -can’t approach him through the steward, as -that would give the captain away, but I’ve -discovered there’s a Russian lady in the saloon, -whom the captain’s already gettin’ on with like -a house on fire.</p> - -<p>“She speaks English with the prettiest accent -you ever heard, and I was talkin’ to her for half -an hour in the harbour before you showed up. -I’ve already told her what I’m doin’, and got her -quite worked up about it, an’ I’ve decided she’s -the one to work the captain for me. There she -is now, comin’ out on deck. Excuse me; there’s -no time to be lost; I’ll get hold of her before the -captain sees her.”</p> - -<p>As they walked up and down the deck talking -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">370</span> -animatedly together, I could see my new acquaintance -was making a deeper impression -every minute. Once a few sentences reached -me, and I chuckled inwardly.</p> - -<p>“She’ll be broken-hearted if I fail to make it.... -I’ll introduce you to her if you come to -New York. She’ll like you and you’ll like her. -She’s tall and dark, with big black eyes, and -she’s got a straight-front figure and a——” I -had to make a guess at the rest, for they had -turned the corner by the wheel-house before the -sentence was finished.</p> - -<p>I never doubted what the result of his interview -would be. Already I felt that the arrival -of the <i>Mongolia</i> at Nagasaki by seven o’clock on -Thursday morning was the only thing at present -to live for. I was completely dominated with -enthusiasm for the success of this man’s undertaking, -and felt certain he would as surely win -the Russian lady’s sympathy and co-operation in -his project as he had already secured mine.</p> - -<p>After half an hour he came back to me.</p> - -<p>“That little woman’s all right. She’s made -o’ good enough clay to be Amur’can, an’ says -she’ll do everythin’ she can to help me. She’s -gone to call the captain now.”</p> - -<p>Soon she appeared with the captain, talking in -the most animated manner to him and punctuating -every sentence with most expressive gestures.</p> - -<p>Then they came together towards us and she -said, “I haf ze captain told what you say off -your great journey, and he tell me it iss impossible -we come to Nagasaki so early unless -he burn extra fifty tons of coal. Ze captain say -if you pay ze coal he can do it, but if you not -pay ze coal it iss impossible, but ze captain he -like verry much to help you.”</p> - -<p>To this my travelling companion made reply, -“Madam, will you please tell the captain that -the cost of the extra fifty tons of coal is but a -trifle, and I’ll do a good deal more than pay for -that. I am so anxious to catch that train that -if the captain will bring the ship into the harbour -by seven o’clock I’ll make him a present -of my watch.”</p> - -<p>The lady interpreted this. The captain -shrugged his shoulders, then he looked up at -the funnel, from which great rolling convolutions -of thick black smoke were belching, and he let -his eye run along the line of reek floating lazily -in the cobalt astern for many miles—almost, it -seemed, to where the yellow, sun-baked Manchurian -hills were disappearing below the -horizon—his brows knitted in thought.</p> - -<p>Before he had finished his cogitations the -would-be breaker of records put his hand into -the left pocket of his waistcoat and drew out -his watch. He carefully removed the chamois -skin bag, soiled sufficiently to show it had long -protected the treasure it covered, and holding -the watch, which looked a perfect beauty as it -caught the sun, in the palm of his hand, he -addressed himself straight to the captain.</p> - -<p>“Captain, I <i>must</i> catch that train, and if -you’ll help me to do it, sir, my watch shall be -yours before I leave the ship. Ain’t it a beauty?” -and he held it out for admiration.</p> - -<p>All this he said in a manner that carried -conviction with it. The lady interpreted again, -but even that seemed unnecessary. The captain -had capitulated, and from that moment the -result lay in little doubt. The success or failure -of this man’s trip had hung in the balance, and -the issue was decided by a five-shilling watch -glittering in the sun on the deck of a Russian -steamer in the Yellow Sea.</p> - -<p>Being in the secret, I could feel only admiration -at the record-breaker’s sang-froid and the -clever and dramatic manner in which he played -his part.</p> - -<p>The captain smiled and made a gesture of -deprecation, but his eyes told us that he meant -that watch should be his, and presently he went -below to give directions to the chief engineer. -From that moment the black smoke rolled out -of the funnel thicker than before, hanging over -the steamer’s wake clear to the horizon.</p> - -<p>The record-breaker contemplated it and the -unrippled seas with joy.</p> - -<p>We went up into the fo’c’s’le, and as we -leaned over the bow and saw the speed at which -the sharp prow was cleaving the glassy water, -sending thin feathers of spray high up along the -steamer’s trim and tapering sides, his enthusiasm -knew no bounds, and his praises of -“God’s country” and his wife became almost -dithyrambic.</p> - -<p>All next day, as we steamed past the archipelago -of rocks and barren islands that fringes the -coast of Korea, the sea remained calm as a -pond, and when at half-past six o’clock on -Thursday morning we dropped anchor off the -quarantine station at Nagasaki all doubt seemed -to be at an end. There was some delay, however, -as, though the doctors quickly came on -board, made their examinations, and gave us a -clean bill of health, it takes time to get under -way again, enter the harbour, and take up -a berth amongst the shipping this bustling port -always contains. We anchored at seven-twenty. -The record-breaker knew nothing about the -place, and it is a long way to the station. I -knew it well, however, and, as I felt as keen on -his catching that train as he did himself, I -chartered a <i>sampan</i> and had all our luggage -lowered into it, whilst he went up on to the -bridge to express his thanks and present the -watch to the captain. I saw him take it from -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">371</span> -his pocket and make a little speech as he handed -it over, and I saw the captain bow his thanks. -Then he shook hands, and in another moment -he was beside me and we were being rapidly -pulled to the landing-place, or <i>hatoba</i>.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i058.jpg"> -<img src="images/i058.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“’AIN’T IT A BEAUTY?’ AND HE HELD IT OUT FOR ADMIRATION.”</p> -</div> - -<p>There was not a moment to lose. It was -past seven-thirty, and a good twenty minutes to -the station. Hastily bidding the <i>sampan</i> to -wait with my luggage, I engaged rickshaws and -we were off at full speed. We reached the -station at seven-fifty-five. Having Japanese -money on me I paid the rickshaws, whilst he -bought his ticket with money he had got -exchanged by the steamer’s purser.</p> - -<p>He hastily shook hands, thanked me, and got -into the train just one moment before it left.</p> - -<p>The watch had <i>really</i> done it, but by actually -less than a minute, and if I had not been there -to help him he would have failed after all. He -promised to write me from Yokohama, but this -he never did. The last I saw of him he was -waving his hat out of the window to me till the -train was out of sight.</p> - -<p>The last I heard of him was a few weeks -later, when I read in an American Press telegram -that he had won his spurs and had beaten -the previous best round the world by exactly -twelve days. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">372</span></p> - -<hr class="chap" /> -<div class="figcenter"> -<img id="A_White_Woman_in" src="images/i059a.jpg" -alt="" /> -<h2><span class="hidden">A White Woman in Cannibal-Land.<br /></span> - -<span class="smcap medium">By Annie Ker.</span></h2> -</div> - -<blockquote> - -<p>Some incidents of a lady’s life in the wilds of New Guinea. Miss Ker went out to Papua—as the -country is now called—attached to a mission, and describes the many strange, amusing, and -exciting experiences she encountered during her seven years’ sojourn among the natives, who, -not so very long ago, were always fighting and much addicted to cannibalism—a practice which -still prevails among the wild tribes of the unexplored interior.</p></blockquote> - -<h3>III.</h3> - -<div> -<img class="drop-cap" src="images/t.jpg" alt="T" /> -</div> - -<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Towards</span> the end of my stay in -Papua my special work was translation, -chiefly of the Scriptures, and -there was a big pile of manuscript -awaiting revision. This was generally -done by one of the mission clergy and myself, -assisted by intelligent natives who possessed a -quick ear for mistakes. The little boy seen in -the first photograph was known as “the Pundit,” -because, although only fourteen years old, he -gave us great assistance in the difficult work of -translation. He had a -wonderful memory, and -was very discriminating -in his choice of words. -He would sometimes -volunteer opinions as to -the style of the sacred -writers, and considered -the Prophet Jeremiah, -on the whole, “easier” -than Isaiah—in which I -agree with him, so far -as concerns rendering -the books into a native -dialect. Perhaps it was -for this reason that our -youthful “Pundit,” when -he was baptised and -formally discarded his -heathen name of Bonagadona, -chose that of -“Jeremiah,” by which -imposing cognomen he -is now known.</p> - -<p>Before long the revision work came to a -standstill, however, for my fellow-reviser had -gone far north to a pioneer station called -Ambasi. It was finally decided that, accompanied -by our mission nurse, I should take the -MSS. to Ambasi and finish the revision there. -So we set out on our long journey up the coast -in the little fourteen-foot schooner. I am not -a good sailor, and I found the journey very -uncomfortable; I was only able to admire -Nature when we anchored.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i059b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i059b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“THE PUNDIT”—THIS LITTLE LAD, THOUGH ONLY FOURTEEN -YEARS OLD, RENDERED THE AUTHORESS GREAT ASSISTANCE -IN THE DIFFICULT WORK OF TRANSLATING THE SCRIPTURES.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>We spent a very interesting time in Collingwood -Bay, where only two white women had -ever been seen, and that within the year. The -women here wore strips of tappa cloth from -waist to knee, instead of -the grass skirts of the -more eastern tribes, and -the houses were of a -finer and larger type.</p> - -<p>The villagers, after -they had got over their -surprise at seeing us, -gave us almost too hearty -a welcome. We were -implored to pull down -our hair, and great was -the astonishment expressed -at the sight when -we did so. They also -failed entirely to understand -our hairpins, hats, -and, above all, our long -noses and small waists! -The Papuans’ methods -of hairdressing, however, -would certainly cause -almost equal astonishment -in civilization. -Look, for instance, at the following photograph, -which depicts the coiffure of a man -belonging to the dreaded Doriri tribe, a people -living inland from Uiaku, whose warlike instincts -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">373</span> -have not yet been subdued. -It will be noticed -that the hair is allowed -to grow long, divided -into plaits, and elaborately -braided until it -looks like a collection of -rope-ends.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i060a.jpg"> -<img src="images/i060a.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">A NATIVE OF THE DREADED DORIRI TRIBE—THE HAIR IS -DIVIDED INTO PLAITS AND BRAIDED, UNTIL IT LOOKS LIKE A -COLLECTION OF ROPE-ENDS.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>At Wanigera, a few -miles away, where a -mission station had been -in existence longer than -at Uiaku, we met with a -quieter reception, though -one old woman, after a -long look at me, asked a -child if I were <i>really</i> -a woman. I wondered -what strange creature -she imagined I was, for -surely, in a white muslin -frock, she could hardly -have taken me for a -man!</p> - -<p>During our stay at -Wanigera a great hunt -took place, and some -of the warriors called on -us before setting out. -Their ornaments were -very striking, and the colours almost dazzling. -Altogether they looked a very fine set of men, -and would, no doubt, prove enemies much to -be dreaded in the day of battle. On this -occasion, however, they only waged war with the -brute creation, and they -told us at the close of -the day that the bag was -a very good one.</p> - -<p>The interior of the -great church on Sunday -was a fine sight, being -filled with from two to -three hundred natives, -all decked out in feathers, -shell ornaments, gay -tappa cloth, and vivid -flowers. Not less striking -was the almost military -precision with which -each row of worshippers -left the building in turn -at the close of the -service. If these natives -went in for such amenities -of civilization as -church parades, the -spectacle would be a -striking one indeed.</p> - -<p>In a neighbouring -village to Wanigera there -is a remarkable tree -house, prepared by the -tribesmen as a place of -refuge from marauding -enemies. From the heights of this arboreal -retreat they were able to hurl down stones upon -the attacking party.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i060b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i060b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">PAPUAN WOMEN DECORATED FOR A DEATH-DANCE.<br /> -[<i>From a Photograph.</i>]</p> -</div> - -<p>A fine specimen of Papuan womanhood may -be seen in the middle figure of the next photograph -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">374</span> -reproduced. These women are natives of -Nonof, a village not far from Wanigera. They -were profusely ornamented in order that they -might take part in a dance held after the death -of a chief. It is almost an unheard-of occurrence -for women to don such decorations, which are -regarded as the exclusive property of the men, -and it looks as though the ladies were beginning -to agitate for equal privileges in the way of -finery with their lords and masters. A native, -on being shown my collection of curios, which -included some ornaments, remarked that I was -<i>me oroto</i>, or “like a man,” because of my many -possessions.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i061a.jpg"> -<img src="images/i061a.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">PREPARING LIME FOR USE IN BETEL-CHEWING.<br /> -[<i>From a Photograph.</i>]</p> -</div> - -<p>The natives of Papua are very much addicted -to betel-chewing. Areca palms are plentiful up -the coast, but pepper-leaf and lime are required -as well. The lime—which in some districts is -prepared from coal—is obtained in Collingwood -Bay by burning shells. The above photograph -well illustrates the primitive process in use for -slaking the lime after the burning of the shells. -The lime is then stored, and ladled out from a -calabash when required.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i061b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i061b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">A HUT IN THE FOREST—OBSERVE THE REMARKABLE ROOF.<br /> -[<i>From a Photograph.</i>]</p> -</div> - -<p>Our stay at Wanigera having come to an end, -we embarked once more on the little schooner -and set off again. We anchored each night, for -the native captain was not very certain of his -bearings, and reefs were plentiful. On the third -day after leaving Wanigera, however, he was -either influenced by the crew or had a sudden -impulse of recklessness, for after the sun had -set he tried, in the uncertain light, to bring the -boat into harbour on a particularly reef-bound -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">375</span> -part of the coast. There was a strong wind -blowing, and the waves were slapping angrily -against the sides of the vessel, when suddenly, -without a moment’s warning, there was a grating -shock, and we realized that we had struck a reef. -It was almost dark by now, and the lights of the -settlement could be seen two or three miles -away.</p> - -<p>The captain let go the anchor at once, but the -boat began to roll so violently that we felt doubtful -as to whether the cable would stand the strain. -Meanwhile the boys scrambled into the dinghy -and rowed around to investigate our position. -Strange though it may seem, no harm appeared -to have been done to the boat, but we were so -surrounded by reefs that we did not dare to -move from where we were anchored. So there -we pitched and rolled about all night, though -the strength of the wind abated later on. -What with one thing and another, I felt like a -very frightened tennis-ball, and I was extremely -thankful when, at sunrise, we were able to make -for the shore, where we spent the day and night -at the house of a friendly magistrate.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i062.jpg"> -<img src="images/i062.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">A FISHERMAN’S HOUSE AND CANOE.<br /> -[<i>From a Photograph.</i>]</p> -</div> - -<p>We were now only thirty or forty miles from -our destination, and the next afternoon arrived -at Ambasi. No white women had ever been -there before, and for many days we were visited -by parties of natives, all eager to see the strange -white ladies. Women carrying their babies -astride on their shoulders, old men leading little -boys, and married couples, with or without their -families, would pay us long visits, wanting to -know what a sewing-machine was, to look at our -bedrooms, and, above all, to taste our food. -The nurse had her hands full soon after she -arrived, for the people had great faith in her -remedies, and patients presented themselves in -shoals for treatment. Her pet patients appeared -to be old men, who became frightfully jealous of -one another if she appeared to devote more -attention to one than another. They would -glare fiercely at the patient who was being -rubbed or otherwise treated, and were only -partly mollified when their own turn came.</p> - -<p>During our stay at Ambasi we dispensed with -such luxuries as mirrors and sheets, and rolled -ourselves in blankets, to sleep contentedly in -hammocks slung on the veranda. We could -not, however, do without mosquito nets, for -without them rest would have been quite -impossible. At night we were surrounded by -the pale sparks of fireflies, and far below, on the -beach, the natives’ flaring torches would flicker -for hours as they fished, standing patiently in -the sea. In the early morning the sweet notes -of a bird would wake us from some lofty -tree at the edge of the thick forest close by, -behind which rose in majesty the great Owen -Stanley range, standing out distinctly in the -clear morning air. The highest peak, Mount -Albert Edward, over thirteen thousand feet -high, had not long before been ascended for -the first time by a magistrate and one of the -mission staff.</p> - -<p>We could not always keep dry under our -roof, which allowed the rain to penetrate it in -many places. One memorable night I piled -nearly all my belongings in a heap covered by a -mat, and at last sought shelter from the prevailing -showers under the table, which was, I am -glad to say, rainproof. But it would not have -done to be without rain, for it was our only -water supply, the spring on the beach being too -brackish to drink.</p> - -<p>The Ope, a small river, was only three miles -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">376</span> -distant, within easy reach of the station by boat -or beach. I visited it one Sunday morning, -taking with me a village boy who knew a little -broken English. It was a glorious walk on the -hard yellow sand, for the tide was out, but the -return journey was most fatiguing, for the waves -had covered the firm portion, and at each step I -sank ankle-deep in the yielding sand.</p> - -<p>When we reached the Ope no canoes were to -be seen, except on the farther bank. We called -and beckoned, and after a time a small boy -brought one over to us, on which we embarked. -There were no paddles, a very slender stick -being our only means of propelling it, and we -naturally made poor progress. Our little ferry-man, -however, was not disconcerted. Kneeling -down and putting his right leg overboard he -obligingly paddled with that, and most successfully.</p> - -<p>It was at the place to which I was going that -the launch had once been wrecked, and where, -some years before, the Bishop of New Guinea -and one of his laymen had spent the night in -peril of their lives, after escaping from drowning -and from a shark. It was with some anxiety, -therefore, that I looked forward to our arrival.</p> - -<p>I am bound to say, however, that no one -could now accuse the villagers of evil designs -on us, for I was presented with a young coconut -to drink, and saw nothing amiss in the -behaviour of the natives, unless a request to -take down my hair can be regarded as such.</p> - -<p>A chief had died the week before, and the -dead man seemed to have been related to the -majority of the people, for many were daubed -with light yellow clay, which is their form of -mourning. The widow herself was seated on -her husband’s grave, which was situated <i>inside</i> -the house. There, according to tribal etiquette, -she must remain until she had finished making -her mourning jacket of netted string trimmed -with “Job’s tears.” I was glad the poor thing -had something to occupy her mind, for the -horror of the situation was increased by the -presence of two old crones who, one on each -side of her, wailed incessantly.</p> - -<p>Burial in the house in more settled parts of -Papua has been forbidden by the Government, -and where the missions are located graveyards -have been set aside and fenced in.</p> - -<p>When my work at Ambasi was over the little -schooner arrived once more to take us back. It -was now the calm season, and our progress was -decidedly slow. The little cabin below, where -the nurse and I slept, was stuffy in the extreme, -and it was delightful to get on deck in the early -morning, though I was seldom able to do more -than lie there with a bit of sail or a blanket -stretched above to keep off the rays of the sun. -Then it would become unbearably hot, and I -would retreat to the airless cabin once more -until the cool of the evening approached. All -day long the sails flapped aimlessly and the -blocks thudded loudly on the deck, for the -breeze was usually too light to help us. Towards -evening a wind sprang up, but too late to enable -us to make for an anchorage among the reefs in -the treacherous half-light. Matters improved as -we got farther down the coast, however, and -though on the last day we saw a waterspout in -the distance we met with no mishaps, and -finally reached our journey’s end in safety.</p> - -<p>Though there are marked differences in the -Papuans themselves, as well as in their dwellings -and languages, the time will come, no doubt, -when, under the influence of the white man, -they will abandon their primitive Stone Age -ways for twentieth-century ones. Then, -probably, much of their charm will vanish. -They may reap many benefits, but, as with so -many other savage races, it is more than likely -that the change will not be altogether to their -advantage. At any rate, I am glad that I have -lived with them and known them at home, -while they are still unspoiled children of -Nature.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<img src="images/i063.jpg" -alt="" /> -</div> -<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">377</span></p> - -<hr class="chap" /> -<div class="figcenter"> -<img id="My_Experiences" src="images/i064a.jpg" -alt="" /> -<h2><span class="hidden">My Experiences in Algeria.<br /></span> - -<span class="smcap medium">By the Baroness de Boerio.</span></h2> -</div> - -<blockquote> - -<p>The Baroness’s husband, an officer in the French army, was ordered to Algeria, and took his wife -and children with him. There, located at a tiny post far from civilization, in the midst of fierce and -unruly tribes, the authoress met with some very strange adventures, which she here sets forth in a -chatty and amusing fashion.</p></blockquote> - -<h3>II.</h3> - -<div> -<img class="drop-cap" src="images/s.jpg" alt="S" /> -</div> - -<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Some</span> time after my arrival at Teniet-el-Haad -my husband and I, together -with our first lieutenant and his wife, -were invited to a “diffa” given in -our honour by a Caid named Si -Benrajah.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i064b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i064b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE FRINGE OF THE DESERT.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>He most politely sent his wagonette to fetch -us and was at the door of his house to receive -us. He was a tall, good-looking man, and his -costume was exquisite. His <i>serronal</i>, or wide -trousers, were of pale-grey satin cloth, the large -pockets on each side richly embroidered in silk -braid of the same shade. Silver lace covered -his short bolero, which opened over a shirt -which was a mass of green and red silk, gold -and silver embroidery. Over that again he -wore a lovely white silk “haik,” which, covering -his head-dress and kept in place by the “camel -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">378</span> -cords,” fell round his shoulders, and was then -caught up in front from the knee to the gold -waistbelt by a cerise coloured silk handkerchief. -Over his shoulders hung his burnous, the outer -one of fine grey cloth to match the costume, -handsomely embroidered at the corners and -round the hood, the under one of fine white -flannel.</p> - -<p>He led us majestically -into his “drawing-room”—which, -alas! bore unmistakable -traces of the -Caid’s various journeys -to Paris. There was -nothing Arab but the -lovely carpets and the -smell.</p> - -<p>A rickety Louis XV. -<i>canapé</i>, with chairs to -match, stood stiffly -against the walls; their -coverings of chintz -badly wanted washing. -An oval table, a walnutwood -wardrobe, a -washing-stand without -the accessories, and -two big mirrors, whose -frames had once been -gilded, completed the -furniture. We here -partook of refreshments -in the unromantic -shape of absinthe -and lemonade, accompanied -by Huntley and -Palmer’s biscuits and -wafers. I was much -disappointed, for I had -hoped to see something -more Arab and -to eat and drink according -to the customs -of the land. I supposed -this was “progress” -in Benrajah’s -idea; at any rate, he -looked most satisfied -with himself and his -surroundings. He introduced -another Caid to us—the Caid of -Biskra, I think, who was passing through—a -fine, handsome man, whose photograph is here -reproduced.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i065.jpg"> -<img src="images/i065.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE CAID OF BISKRA.<br /> -[<i>From a Photograph.</i>]</p> -</div> - -<p>We breakfasted in a large tent, as Benrajah -said it was still too warm in the house. Remembering -the close, “camelly” sort of smell, I quite -agreed with him.</p> - -<p>As we entered the tent Mme. G——, the -lieutenant’s wife, whispered to me, “Now, mind -you don’t refuse a single dish the Caid offers -you. If you do you will mortally offend him, -especially as it is the first time you break bread -under his roof, and the ‘diffa’ is in your honour.”</p> - -<p>“All right,” I answered, cheerily.</p> - -<p>“Bon! bon! bon!” -she cried. “Don’t -forget, you <i>must</i> eat -everything he offers -you.” She skipped off -roaring with laughter, -which, at the time, I -thought very silly of -her.</p> - -<p>I was again very disappointed -by the civilized, -European way in -which we ate. Instead -of squatting -cross-legged on the -ground, eating with -brotherly love out of -the same dish with a -wooden spoon or our -fingers, we sat round a -well-laid table, with -knives and forks, and -dinner-napkins embroidered -with the -Caid’s initials. Everyone -and everything is -getting so horribly civilized -nowadays, I reflected, -sadly.</p> - -<p>The repast began -with a red-hot liquid -in which vermicelli -floated. It burnt my -unaccustomed mouth -and I did not fall in -love with it, but as I -had never tasted anything -like it before I -did not even want to -refuse when the Caid -offered me a second -helping. After the -soup came some boiled -chicken, on which the -red liquid had been poured. He helped me -largely—twice. The third course was mutton, -with prunes; the fourth mutton, with red -liquid; the fifth a French <i>ragoût</i>, with an Arab -taste; the sixth was chicken without the red -liquid; the seventh an Irish stew gone wrong; -the eighth—well, perhaps my readers are -beginning to feel as tired as I did after having -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">379</span> -partaken twice of all these dishes. Indeed, I -was beginning to feel very serious, and longed -ardently for the end of this Gargantuan repast.</p> - -<p>After about the twelfth course an Arab in -waiting cleared a space on the table before the -Caid. My hopes were raised to the heights, -but, alas! only to fall to the lowest depths in a -very short space of time. Suddenly something -knocked my hat on one side, and everyone -yelled at me. Dazed, I looked round and -rubbed my nose into a sheep’s leg. Starting -back, I met the convulsed and, as I imagined, -reproachful eye of an enormous sheep lying in -a contorted attitude on a big brass platter. -Si Benrajah -turned to me with -a gracious smile. -“I am much -honoured, madam,” -he said, in -perfect French, -“in being the -first to offer you -a ‘meshui’ on -your arrival in -Algeria.”</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i066.jpg"> -<img src="images/i066.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">A TYPICAL ARAB HUT.<br /> -[<i>From a Photograph.</i>]</p> -</div> - -<p>A “meshui,” I -learnt, is a royal -dish, and is only -offered to those -the Arabs delight -(or are compelled) -to honour. -It is simply a -whole sheep -roasted over -wood embers, -and served uncut -on a brass or -silver platter. It -should not be cut -with a knife, but -torn off with the -fingers and eaten. -If you wish to be -particularly polite to a friend who is present, -you wrench off a piece of flesh and present it -with your greasy fingers, and he receives it -much flattered, returning the compliment with -<i>his</i> greasy fingers. This style of eating was -certainly not over-civilized, so I ought to have -been better pleased than I was. As a matter -of fact I felt very bad, and hoped against hope -that the Caid would forget me.</p> - -<p>“You are not yet accustomed to our habits,” -he said, kindly. “Take a knife and fork and -cut off the meat.”</p> - -<p>So I cut off a few small bits in a dilatory way, -secretly wondering if I could not surreptitiously -throw them to some lean, hungry dogs who were -peering into the tent door.</p> - -<p>“What silly little bits!” cried Benrajah, -laughingly. Then, after well licking his brown, -henna-stained fingers, he tore off a huge piece -and offered it to me! A cold perspiration broke -out on my forehead, and I almost longed for -death.</p> - -<p>“Eat! eat!” he cried, gaily; and, choking -down my despair, I ate.</p> - -<p>How could I dare to do otherwise after -Mme. G——’s warning? Are not the laws -of hospitality sacred and to be observed -throughout the world? But it was terrible -tribute to pay to -foreign customs, -and I felt a lesser -desire for originality.</p> - -<p>“It is good?” -inquired the Caid.</p> - -<p>“Delicious! -delicious!” I -answered, with a -ghastly green -smile.</p> - -<p>“Ah! Here -is a <i>comme il faut -Roumia</i>!” he -cried, enchanted—and -promptly -tore me off a -beautiful brown -piece of meat, -weighing, I should -think, about three -pounds! My cup -of anguish was -full, and I prayed—yes, -actually -prayed—to be -delivered from -that three pounds -of meat.</p> - -<p>And I was.</p> - -<p>Crash! The table-cloth was half dragged off, -and, amid a rain of knives and forks, plates and -glasses, my little girl rolled on to the ground. -I did not lose my presence of mind, but, seizing -my pounds of meat, all unseen in the commotion -I threw them to the lean dogs, who made very -short work of them. Then my motherly feelings -came to the fore, and I went to the rescue of my -child. It was soon apparent what had happened—the -poor mite had been given too much -wine by the thoughtless Mme. G——, and -was very seedy for some days afterwards.</p> - -<p>It would be reasonable to suppose that the -“meshui” was the last of the courses, but it -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">380</span> -disappeared only to give place to the Arab -national dish, the “couscous.” At sight of the -snowy pile of rolled semolina, surmounted by -more mutton, a feeling of revolt took possession -of me. I felt I could dare Lucifer himself; -and so I refused the couscous, although in a -cowardly way, by pretending that fresh air was -necessary for my poor little Renée. Perhaps it -was, but if it had not been I should have said -the same.</p> - -<p>I do not think I ever quite forgave Mme. -G—— her two practical jokes, for practical -jokes they were. When I described my sufferings -at having to eat all the Caid gave me, she -laughed herself ill and said, “What a ‘blue’ you -are!” Which is the French military way of -calling you a greenhorn.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i067.jpg"> -<img src="images/i067.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“I LOOKED ROUND JUST IN TIME TO SEE AN ARAB LOWERING HIS GUN.”</p> -</div> - -<p>One of my husband’s great amusements in -this out-of-the-way garrison was to construct a -hiding-place, in front of which he fixed the -carcass of some dead animal, and there, gun in -hand, to await the wild beasts such as hyenas, -jackals, lynxes, and golden foxes, who scented -from afar the goodly supper awaiting them. -On these occasions they generally found too -much pepper, and often suffered from a mortal -indigestion. I sometimes accompanied my -husband on such expeditions, and greatly -enjoyed crouching silently in some hidden -corner, listening to the wailing of an approaching -hyena, or the querulous squabbling and -howling of the shrieking jackals. And then, -when the dry sticks cracked and the dead leaves -rustled quite close to me under their stealthy -pads, my heart would leap into my mouth for -fear they should mistake <i>me</i> for their supper. -One night whilst thus listening to some -approaching creature my husband, crouching -about twenty yards from me, suddenly rose -up and called out in Arabic, “Who goes -there?” I looked round just in time to see an -Arab huntsman lowering his gun, which was -pointed full at <i>me</i>. He thought I was a hyena!</p> - -<p>During the winter, when the snow lay thick -on the ground, I preferred staying at home to -keep up a huge fire and fabricate hot drinks in -readiness for the frozen huntsman’s return; it -seemed to me more a wife’s duty!</p> - -<p>Another short incident of my life in Teniet-el-Haad -may not be uninteresting. My husband -had gone to the manœuvres with his Spahis, and -our <i>bordj</i> was only guarded by about thirty -“Tirailleurs Algerians.” Then, one day, a -terrific storm burst over the land. The air -was so thick with fine sand that I could not -distinguish the trees before my windows, and the -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">381</span> -sun hung in the sky like a lurid orange ball, -seemingly about to drop. The heat was stifling; -one gasped for breath, and, although every door -and window was hermetically closed, the rooms -were full of sand.</p> - -<p>Presently a terrible clamour arose from the -village—shouts, cries, screams, gun-shots. Then -from the <i>bordj</i> courtyard I heard sharp orders -given, the clanking of weapons, and finally the -sound of a body of infantry running. The wind -howled and shrieked, the sand-storm grew -denser and denser, and still the clamour continued -in the village. I sat in the drawing-room -with my little ones around me, wondering if it -were a serious revolt, and what would happen to -us if it were. For the district of Teniet-el-Haad -was a large one, containing thirty thousand -Arabs, and we were far from any important -garrison, while our protectors, all Arab, consisted -of thirty “tirailleurs,” and ten Spahis -belonging to the “Commune Mixte.” Pensively -I placed my revolver close to my hand, -and waited anxiously.</p> - -<p>After a few hours the sirocco cleared somewhat, -the noise ceased, and the tirailleurs -returned. The whole affair, they told me, had -been got up by the mountain Arabs against the -Jews, who had been “doing” them. So the -Arabs had taken the law into their own hands -and administered justice by repaying themselves -a hundred-fold and making off with their booty -up the mountains, well hidden by the sand-storm. -In the scuffle a boy and two men were -killed, all Jews—so it did not matter, so the -folks said.</p> - -<p>My husband was second captain at Teniet-el-Haad, -having given up his rank as first captain -in the Hussars in order to facilitate his return to -a regiment. He was therefore the oldest in -grade in the 1st Spahis, and the earliest vacancy -as first captain fell to him. We had been at -Teniet about ten months when he received -orders to take command of the Laghouat -squadron. It was the beginning of February; -snow lay thick and deep on the ground up in -this high altitude, and the great question arose -how we were to get to Laghouat. Should we -take the short cut by carriage across the mountains -to Boghar, where the regimental brake -would meet us and take us on, or go down to -Affreville by the rickety diligence, train to -Medeah, and continue by carriage?</p> - -<p>Going by train was a difficulty and an extra -expense on account of our dogs. We had four—three -fox-terriers and a shooting dog. I do -not know what he called himself, but he had a -double-barrelled nose and an over-frank and -exuberant nature. He and Charleston, the old -fox, could not bear each other. It was quite -impossible to put them together in the dog-box, -and to pack them separately would have cost as -much as four times as many children. So, in -consideration of their feelings and our purse, we -decided—oh, irony!—to take the short cut if -the snow and slush would allow of a carriage -travelling along the narrow mountain tracks.</p> - -<p>We consulted the different French and native -authorities, and finally decided, if the snow and -slush would allow, to take the short cut over -the mountains. We started off one fine -morning at five, in a small brake lent by a Caid, -who also promised to send us four strong mules -to an inn some twenty miles off. The first -twenty miles were soon done, and at half-past -seven we were enjoying some good hot coffee, -whilst our Spahi was unharnessing his team and -making inquiries as to the whereabouts of the -new relay and coachman. Ten minutes after -he appeared, with a very concerned face. “Mon -capitaine, Sidi Belgacun has sent two mules no -bigger than donkeys, and the boy who drives -them is a mere baby!”</p> - -<p>This sounded cheerful, and with one accord -we went out to inspect. The Spahi’s account was -unfortunately but slightly exaggerated, and we -stood staring at our tiny steeds with dismay. We -had still fifty kilometres before us, and the roads -for at least twenty-five were nothing but cross-country -paths. Should we turn back, or try to -find other horses and go on? I voted emphatically -for going on. Aided by the Spahi, -my husband finally unearthed a man and two -horses, and at eight o’clock we set off once -more.</p> - -<p>Everything again went well for ten kilometres; -then our misfortunes really began. When going -up a hill the ground grew soft and the wheels -of the brake sank in.</p> - -<p>“The snow is melting farther on,” remarked -the coachman, laconically; “the underground -springs are overflowing.”</p> - -<p>On we went laboriously, our Jehu yelling at -the struggling horses, whilst the carriage wobbled -to and fro in a most alarming fashion. “Don’t -you think it would do us good to walk a bit?” -I suggested. “It would make things easier for -the horses.”</p> - -<p>“It would be safer,” said my husband, who -was looking anxious.</p> - -<p>So out we got—and two minutes later the -whole concern toppled over, our boxes, portmanteaux, -and packets flying all over the place. -The horses were plunging and kicking; the -coachman, an Italian, and the Arab boy -were yelling and swearing in their respective -languages, whilst my husband <i>exclaimed</i> in -French (he doesn’t swear, but I am sure he -would have liked to on this occasion). The -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">382</span> -scene was so unutterably comic that I could not -help myself; I laughed until the tears rolled -down my cheeks. I draw a curtain over the -face my better half turned on me—scowling was -not in it—and although I assured him I was -really quite as upset as the carriage he has not -recovered from my frivolity to this day.</p> - -<p>The men picked up the carriage and the -baggage and put all in order and we thought we -should get on again, but, alas! the wheels refused -to move an inch; the more we tried the deeper -they sank. After two hours of vain endeavour, -Peppino, the coachman, suggested sending Ali -to have a look round the country to see if he -could find a village and get men with spades -to come and dig us out. The boy set off, -returning later with five stalwart men, who -comparatively soon dug us out and accompanied -us for a few kilometres on our way, -pushing and yelling when necessary. Then -they left us, saying the road was good right up -to Boghar. It was now past two o’clock, and -our lunch loomed very dimly in the far distance, -having been ordered for twelve o’clock at Boghar.</p> - -<p>About three o’clock we saw snow on the side -of the road, which again grew slushy and soft. -My husband and Peppino were obliged to run -behind, pushing at the wheels at the difficult -places, whilst the Arab boy cheered on his mules -and Peppino’s horses.</p> - -<p>The snow got deeper and deeper. Presently -we passed a carriage abandoned on the side of -the road, farther on a dead horse, and again a -form, which looked terribly human, covered by -a white pall.</p> - -<p>After a while we came to a wider part. On -the right was a sloping mountain-side half -covered with snow, half with golden narcissus, -and showing a dry watercourse, dotted about with -huge stones. On the left was a smooth field -of snow, across which wheel marks could be -distinguished. “We must cross here,” said -Peppino, “as someone has before us; the snow -is doubtless hard, and by whipping up the horses -I will get you over. The road is impossible.”</p> - -<p>My husband was not of the same opinion. -He considered the watercourse a better road -than a snow-field, and the presence of stones -made him surmise that the bottom was hard.</p> - -<p>The matter was hotly discussed, but finally -my husband gave in, seeing that Peppino knew -the road and he did not.</p> - -<p>Away we galloped—bump, bump, bump. -Then, without warning, there came a tremendous -crack, and, lo and behold! there we were, sitting -in our carriage, whilst the horses and Peppino -continued with the wheels! It was, of course, -a terrible dilemma, but again I had to laugh; it -was really too funny.</p> - -<p>My husband and Peppino carried me and the -children and perched each of us on a stone, -where I stood on one leg and cawed like a crow. -“One should always take misfortunes gaily,” -I said. That was the last straw; my better half -had to laugh, but the smile was rather sickly. -Then we held a council of war.</p> - -<p>Peppino, good man, saved the situation. -“I will go back with the horses and fetch the -carriage we saw abandoned at the side of the -road,” he said. “I know the owner, and will -take the responsibility for borrowing it on my -own shoulders.”</p> - -<p>So off he went, whilst we cawed to one -another from stone to stone and ate snow, -there being nothing else to do. Before long -Peppino returned triumphantly with the borrowed -carriage, the luggage was transferred, and we -started off again, leaving our first equipage -standing disconsolately in the snow.</p> - -<p>All went well until eight o’clock, although my -husband and Peppino had constantly to push at -the wheels. They both looked ten years older -than at the start, so lined and weary were their -faces. At about eight we came to a narrow -track, a real road winding round the mountain -above a fathomless precipice. On each side -the snow lay in drifts of five and six feet deep, -and the centre track showed no sign of previous -passage.</p> - -<p>We had not gone fifty yards along this road -when the horses stopped and the wheels disappeared -in a drift. Yelling, pushing, and pulling -had no effect whatever. The horses were then -harnessed to the splash-board, but their strenuous -efforts only resulted in tearing it from the body -of the carriage.</p> - -<p>All this time I was sitting in the snow trying -to keep the little one warm, and hopefully -encouraging the two elder ones, Charlie and -Renée. From the mountain top came the discordant -howling and barking of jackals; from -the blackness below arose the sad wailing of a -hyena. I very nearly became tearful.</p> - -<p>Peppino again offered his services, and proposed -riding off to fetch help at a sheikh’s some -ten miles away.</p> - -<p>“Get into the carriage, wrap yourselves up -warmly with everything available, and wait,” he -said. “In five or six hours I will bring assistance.”</p> - -<p>There was nothing else to be done, so we -made the best of a bad job, packed ourselves -up, and tried to sleep. The children, of course, -succeeded at once, as did my husband, worn -out with the efforts of the day, but I could not. -My hunger was great, and I do not think I have -ever before or since imagined such cold. Talk -of African heat; African <i>cold</i> has the first place -in my memory. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">383</span></p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i070.jpg"> -<img src="images/i070.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“I KICKED VIGOROUSLY, SHOUTING ‘HENRI!’ AND ‘PEPPINO!’”</p> -</div> - -<p>The night was pitch-dark, and it was far from -amusing to sit there listening to the animals -prowling round. A hyena or so came very near -to our mules, who shivered and snorted for a -long time after.</p> - -<p>Numbed with cold, I suppose I at last fell -asleep. Suddenly I was awakened by a great -commotion. Then came yelling, the sound of -horses plunging, and I heard the children -shrieking “Mother!” I rose precipitately, a -light flashed in my face, baby was seized from -me, and I myself was borne off like an infant -by a man who appeared to be a giant. He -hurried away up the mountain-side without a -word, which did not at all seem to me the right -behaviour of rescuers. Why thus seize us and -bear us off into the mountains?</p> - -<p>We must have been attacked by brigands, and -my husband knifed as he slept! I kicked -vigorously, shouting “Henri!” and “Peppino!” -but received no answer, and my heart sank. Then -I called “Charlie!” “Renée!” and to my great -joy their voices answered quite close behind me. -I therefore left off kicking—which, indeed, had -no effect on my burly captor—and consoled -myself with the thought that, though apparently -a widow, I was not left childless.</p> - -<p>After five minutes or so my giant began to -shout. Other voices answered; then suddenly -I was planted on my feet in the inky darkness, -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">384</span> -but almost at once a dozen matches were struck -and held to a huge heap of dry brushwood. In -two seconds we had a royal bonfire, which not -only warmed us but lit up the country all round.</p> - -<p>Brigands or no brigands, I thought, these -Arabs were very thoughtful fellows.</p> - -<p>I asked several times, “Where is my husband?” -but they all raised their hands and -shoulders in vague denial of any knowledge of -his existence. I -was beginning to -be really alarmed -when his welcome -form loomed in -view astride a mule. -I do not think we -have ever quite -understood how he -came to miss us in -the confusion -caused by the headlong -arrival of our -rescuers. He had -galloped after us -along a road where -we had not been at -all; but, not finding -us, had come -back, and had been -guided by the firelight.</p> - -<p>After a good -warming at the fire -we started for the -sheikh’s house, ten -miles off, the children -being carried -by Arabs on horseback, -and I astride -a mule on a “barda.” -On our arrival we -found couscous and -sour milk awaiting -us, and—what was -far better—some good mattresses spread on the -ground in a big, white-washed room. At ten -next morning we left, the kindly sheikh having -lent us his wagonette. Peppino had gone back -with some Arabs to dig out and bring along -Carriage Number Two.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i071.jpg"> -<img src="images/i071.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE BARONESS DE BOERIO, WHO HERE DESCRIBES HER ADVENTURES -IN ALGERIA.<br /> -[<i>From a Photograph.</i>]</p> -</div> - -<p>About half-way to Boghar we met the -regimental brake coming spanking along. The -soldier driving told us that at eight o’clock an -Arab had come to him saying that he was to -harness up at once and drive for eight miles -along the Teniet road, when he would find the -Spahis’ captain, who was stranded with his -family at Sheikh ben Shinan’s.</p> - -<p>This experience of Arab telegraphy rather -astonished us, for we were still greenhorns in -this respect. Since then nothing of the kind -surprises us; I have often learnt of distant -happenings from the Arabs long before our own -civilized methods brought me the news. Arabs -travel a great deal -by night, passing -on the tidings from -one to another—they -are terrible -gossips—so that it -is the case of the -hare and the tortoise. -Their signalling -is done by -movements of the -burnous by day and -fires by night. In -each district certain -heights are especially -used for this -purpose. Whilst -travelling by road -on one occasion I -remember hearing -a long hoot-like call, -and on looking in -the direction of the -sound I saw an Arab -on a hill, evidently -signalling with his -burnous, for he was -making regular up-and-down -and to-and-fro -movements -with it. Half an hour -after we saw another -Arab with a huge -flock of sheep. In -the evening, when -we arrived at the place we meant to camp at, we -found ourselves expected by the sheikh, and a -hospitable couscous prepared. He bade us -welcome, saying we were later than he had -thought. When we inquired how it was he expected -us at all, he only vouchsafed to say, with half-closed -eyes, that he had known we were on the -road some hours before, and had supposed we -would stop the night there. Thereupon we remembered -the white-robed Arab on the hill and -the shepherd far away, and began to understand.</p> - -<p class="caption">(<i>To be concluded.</i>) -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">385</span></p> - -<hr class="chap" /> -<div class="figcenter"> -<img id="Shot-Gun_Jim" src="images/i072a.jpg" -alt="Shot-Gun Jim." /> -<h2><span class="hidden">“Shot-Gun Jim.”<br /></span> -<span class="smcap medium">By Edward Franklin Campbell.</span></h2> -</div> - -<blockquote> - -<p>It is safe to say that few commercial travellers meet with such exciting experiences as befell the -three “drummers” who figure in this narrative. A business trip into the wilds of Arizona landed -them into as fierce a skirmish with Indian outlaws as could well be imagined.</p></blockquote> - -<div> -<img class="drop-cap" src="images/t.jpg" alt="T" /> -</div> - -<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Take</span> a young fellow just raw from -city life, throw him into the wilds -of Arizona, and arrange for him to -tumble head-first, so to speak, into -a brisk skirmish with Indians, and -he will have something to remember. Such -was the experience which befell me about 1890.</p> - -<p>For some years I had been travelling through -California, visiting the -largest cities and towns, -introducing a “line” of -goods for a large San -Francisco importing -concern. Such had been -my success that nothing -would suit my firm but -to add Arizona to my -territory, a proposition -I made no objection to.</p> - -<p>Of late years Arizona -has vastly improved, and -trouble with the Indians -has become almost unknown, -especially since -that notorious warrior, -Geronimo, was deported -to the State of Florida, -but up to the ‘nineties -there was still an occasional -flare-up.</p> - -<p>Both Geronimo and -the villainous “Apache -Kid,” a bloodthirsty red-skin -brigand, figure in -this story, the first indirectly -and the second -very prominently.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i072b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i072b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE AUTHOR, MR. EDWARD FRANKLIN CAMPBELL.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>Having reached the -town of Wilson, in the -southern part of the -territory, I fell in with two fellow-commercial -salesmen—Levy, representing a large dry-goods -concern, and Bates, handling a line of boots for -a St. Louis house.</p> - -<p>Levy imparted the fact that he was going to -visit a large mining camp, called World City, -located some hundred and sixty miles to the -north and as many miles distant from the railway. -Bates said he would join Levy provided -I would make one of the party.</p> - -<p>Although my route did not include this side-trip, -I became convinced that it would pay me -well to visit World City. By sharing expenses -with Levy and Bates, the -trip could be made most -reasonably, so I wired -my house accordingly, -and Levy hastened to -make arrangements -with a local celebrity, -a Scotchman named -McGill, for transportation.</p> - -<p>An agreement having -been made with McGill, -the balance of the day -was consumed in making -preparations for our -departure on the following -morning. There -were blankets to buy, -for one is never safe -without them. No -matter how hot and -burning the day may -be, the nights are always -crisp and chill on the -Arizona plains, and one -never knows while making -such a trip when he -will land at his destination. -Nine chances out -of ten he will be hours -late. Our journey was -no exception to the rule.</p> - -<p>On the following morning I was aroused by -McGill. On the wagon, which was a heavy -four-wheel affair, he had loaded three shoe-sample -trunks, the property of Bates, and two -immense square trunks carried by Levy. Beside -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">386</span> -this there were sundry boxes and bundles of -blankets, as well as our heavy overcoats and -small personal luggage.</p> - -<p>After a hasty breakfast of ham and eggs—I -generally ordered ham and eggs in Arizona -because other meats were far from tender in -those days—we took our places on the wagon. -Levy occupied the front seat with McGill, while -Bates and I sat on top of a huge trunk, slippery -and uncertain.</p> - -<p>Although the animals seemed good and hardy, -they were small, and I do not think we realized -the great weight of the combined load. At the -wheels we had a pair of small and nimble mules, -and as leaders a pair of small bay horses, whose -looks did not recommend them.</p> - -<p>The first day out all went well, and we reached -the little town of Bonita, a most desolate-looking -place. We had travelled less than thirty miles.</p> - -<p>We drove up to the door of a little adobe -building with a thatched roof. On the front a -crude sign informed the public that it was a -“General Store.” Another placard indicated -that it was also a public-house, or “saloon,” as -they are called in America.</p> - -<p>On entering we found ourselves in a small -room with a rough counter running down one -side, behind which was the smiling face of the -proprietor, who lived with his wife and two -beautiful daughters in the one adjoining room—these -two rooms constituting the entire building.</p> - -<p>We spent the night on the floor of the store, -in front of the counter, and next morning -resumed our journey, hoping to reach the little -group of buildings known as Standard before -night. In my own mind—and I think the -others believed the same—I did not really -expect to reach Standard that night, for it was -nearly fifty miles distant and our animals were -far from fresh.</p> - -<p>I think it was about ten o’clock in the morning -that we saw a cloud of dust several miles ahead. -In time it proved to be a company of negro -soldiers, marching to a neighbouring military -post.</p> - -<p>As they came alongside we could see a -number of rifles sticking out of the canvas of -the great covered wagons which accompanied -them. They halted, and an officer, whom -McGill said was a colonel, came over. He -saluted us pleasantly and asked laughingly:—</p> - -<p>“Are you not afraid to travel in this direction?”</p> - -<p>McGill inquired why, whereupon the officer -explained that “Apache Kid” was out with a -small band of warriors, that Geronimo had -disappeared from the Indian Reservation, and -that serious trouble was brewing. The troops, -he added, were being moved for the purpose of -heading off “Apache Kid” and his crowd.</p> - -<p>The smiling face of the colonel rather misled -me. He did not seem really serious, and, as I -sized up the situation, I believed it quite possible -that he recognised our party as “tenderfeet,” -and desired to frighten us.</p> - -<p>After the soldiers had become a mere blur in -the distance we resumed our journey. We had -gone but a few miles farther, however, when an -accident occurred to our wagon. Something -gave way—I don’t remember what—and it -became impossible to proceed. Levy took a -look at the wagon and declared it was “no good, -anyway”; Bates joined in the abuse, and McGill -lost his temper. Finally, I acted as peacemaker, -and suggested that something would have to be -done as the afternoon was advancing. Either -we must return to Bonita on foot, abandoning the -wagon and contents, or McGill would have to -take the team back and secure another conveyance.</p> - -<p>The last alternative being accepted, we drew -lots, and it fell to Levy to return to Bonita with -McGill, while Bates and I remained to look after -the property.</p> - -<p>McGill insisted that with the load off he would -be able to haul the wagon back to Bonita for -repairs, so we set to work and, after a struggle -with the trunks, got the vehicle in shape to be -drawn.</p> - -<p>It was with great misgivings that I saw my -companions depart. It was not to my liking to -remain as a guardian of that mass of luggage. -Bates did not seem to mind it. He simply -offered me his last cigar, then lighted it himself -and sat down on the bare ground.</p> - -<p>I think we could see in every direction for -twenty miles and more, except toward the -mountains, which were to the east, some five -miles distant.</p> - -<p>“Well, Bates,” I said, “what are we going to -do? It’s getting mighty cold. The wind -sweeps down from that mountain as if we might -get a little of the storm brewing up there.”</p> - -<p>“That’s no mistake, my boy, and if I am not -in error we are going to get snow inside of two -hours. Most extraordinary for Arizona.”</p> - -<p>“Don’t you think we could arrange some -shelter with these trunks and roll of canvas?”</p> - -<p>“Just the thing, my boy. Glad you suggested -it.”</p> - -<p>So we set to work and built our house, forming -our walls by arranging the trunks in a square, -leaving a small opening to be used as a door. -On this we spread the great piece of canvas -which had been brought along to cover the -wagon in case of storm, thus making a roof. -That it might not be carried away by the wind, -which was now howling like a hurricane, we -weighted it with small boulders. With other -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">387</span> -rocks we built a small fireplace and chimney, -without and facing our door. With the limited -supply of wood, which was very scarce—sagebrush -and gnarled mesquite—we built a small -fire in our fireplace, much to our joy, for we -were now actually blue with the cold.</p> - -<p>The sky was now thoroughly overcast with -snow-clouds and the snow was beginning to fall, -settling in miniature drifts beneath the sage -bushes.</p> - -<p>In removing the trunks from the wagon our -labours had been heavy, and we realized, as -Bates expressed it, “we were twenty miles -from nowhere, and not a drop of water nearer -than Bonita.”</p> - -<p>Bates rummaged through the kit for a drink -of any kind, but was only able to produce a -diminutive flask with about one swallow of -whisky in it. After offering this to me he took -it down with a cheering “Here’s to you!”</p> - -<p>“Don’t throw away that flask, Bates,” I -called to him as I saw him taking aim at a near-by -sage bush. “I may be able to collect a -drink with that.”</p> - -<p>I filled the little flask as full as I could -pack it with snow which I collected under the -bushes, then held it carefully over the fire, -reducing the snow to water. This barely gave -us enough to moisten our lips, and I gave it up.</p> - -<p>Then we wrapped ourselves up in our blankets -and reclined inside our improvised house and -discussed matters.</p> - -<p>“I say, Bates, what did you think of the -colonel’s story about Apaches being out?” I -asked.</p> - -<p>“Can’t say. I know if I were an Apache -and had a warm wigwam to crawl into, the -warpath could go to perdition. I’m sure I -wouldn’t bother with it this kind of weather. -You won’t have the pleasure of meeting Geronimo, -’Apache Kid,’ nor any other human—and, -I might add, inhuman—being till the -weather lets up.”</p> - -<p>“What have you got for protection in case -we do run across them?” I asked.</p> - -<p>“Well, the only protection I have is a pair of -boots made by the Sun Shoe Company, which I -represent. With these on, and a fair start, I -might outrun them. That’s all I’ve got for -protection. What have you got?”</p> - -<p>“Well,” I said, rather apologetically, “I have -a revolver here, but it isn’t much good. It -might do to fire salutes with, but I’m afraid it -would not do much execution. The fact is, -I’ve not fired the thing for some years.”</p> - -<p>“Now, look here, my boy. If you should -ever shoot me with that thing, and I should -find it out, I should be quite put out about it,” -said Bates, with a laugh. “We might as well -quit worrying. If the wild and woolly Apaches -get us, it’s fate. They’ll get us, that’s all. I’m -going to sleep.”</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i074.jpg"> -<img src="images/i074.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">LOOKING OUT OF BRICK DUST CANYON.<br /> -[<i>From a Photograph.</i>]</p> -</div> - -<p>Suiting the action to the word, he rolled over -and left me to my dreary thoughts. I tried to -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">388</span> -sleep and did drop into a light slumber, from -which I was suddenly awakened by a startled -exclamation from Bates.</p> - -<p>As I opened my eyes he was just going -through the doorway on all fours.</p> - -<p>“Bring that revolver here,” he called to -me.</p> - -<p>As quickly as possible I was out after him. -He was gazing towards the mountains in the -distance.</p> - -<p>“What has happened?” I asked, in some -alarm at the sudden call to arms.</p> - -<p>He explained that something had come to the -door of our house. He could hear it, but only -caught a slight glimpse of it as he raised his -head, for it dashed out of sight immediately. -It was evidently an animal of some sort, for we -found the marks of its feet and claws in the soft -earth. Whatever it was we never caught sight -of it.</p> - -<p>We were now thoroughly awake. The weather -had cleared, the sun was shining warmly and -my spirits were beginning to rise.</p> - -<p>Far off, down the incline of the plain, we -could see the spot known as Bonita. Between -us and the town all was open, save for some -sage bushes here and there dotting the -view.</p> - -<p>Surely McGill should now be on his way -back, but not a sign of him could we see.</p> - -<p>We recalled the fact that we were hungry. -Bates rummaged in the kit. The net results -were a small paper of biscuits and a tin of beef—nothing -else.</p> - -<p>We ate all the biscuits and half of the beef, -collected more firewood, and, at about six -o’clock, discovered the team slowly wending -its way from Bonita. It was more than an hour -before it arrived at our camp.</p> - -<p>Another serious matter now confronted us. -Either we must stay with our improvised camp -or, as McGill suggested, make for Brick Dust -Canyon, in the mountain, where lived a -frontiersman named James W. Smith, who had -a little farm situated on an oasis of productive -earth in the midst of this vast wilderness of -alkali and sand.</p> - -<p>Eventually we decided upon the latter alternative, -and succeeded in loading up and making -a start.</p> - -<p>For a long time we crept upward, no one -riding except McGill, in order to relieve the -tired animals.</p> - -<p>Reaching the summit of the ascent at last, -McGill stopped, for we had now to descend -into a deep canyon.</p> - -<p>Daylight had by this time given way to -deepest night, and ahead all looked black and -forbidding. Our driver could not even see the -road, which was, moreover, obscured by a -growth of trees in the canyon.</p> - -<p>“Gentlemen,” said McGill, “this rig has no -brake to hold it. There is a big down-grade -here and a sharp turn at the bottom. From -there to Jim’s house is about a mile. We must -manage to stop one of the hind wheels, for these -mules will never be able to hold the load in -check; besides, I can’t see the road, and must -let the animals take their course.”</p> - -<p>We tied the right rear wheel with a stout bit -of rope and started again, but with this difference—Levy, -Bates, and I each lighted cigars, which -Levy had brought from Bonita, and, puffing -vigorously at these, walked ahead of the load, -endeavouring to pilot McGill by the glow of the -lighted “stogies.”</p> - -<p>There were times when the mules and the -locked wheel were insufficient to check the -wagon to any great extent, on account of the -steepness of the grade, but at first all went well. -It was not long before we reached the sharp -turn at the bottom. We were greatly in advance -of McGill now, and, indeed, we could hear -nothing of him, so Levy went back to investigate -and to warn him of the danger ahead. He -found the wagon halted at a fairly level spot to -recuperate the exhausted animals. Levy told -the Scotsman that he was about to plunge down -the last and most precipitous piece of road, and -urged him to give it up.</p> - -<p>McGill was headstrong, however, and insisted -upon going ahead, so we took up our stand with -our cigars, to mark the turn at the bottom, and -the big vehicle started.</p> - -<p>We could hear it gaining speed every moment. -Mingled with the rumbling of the wagon and the -clatter of the animals’ hoofs we heard the shouts -of McGill, who had now lost all control over his -team.</p> - -<p>On they came with a rush and a roar, and we, -who were lighting the way, discovered we were -in some danger. At the last moment we sprang -back into the rocks and brush at the side as the -team swept irresistibly on.</p> - -<p>The leaders took the turn all right, but the -next instant there was a crash and a yell from -McGill. The wagon had left the road and -plunged into a tree, the harness gave way, and -Bedlam broke loose.</p> - -<p>The Scotsman saved his skin by jumping fairly -into a bush, while we sprang to the animals’ -heads to check them. They showed, however, -no disposition on their part to run away; they -knew when they had had enough.</p> - -<p>Away down in the distance we could see a -light, which McGill said was at Jim’s house. -He would leave us with the animals and seek -assistance from the house, he told us. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">389</span></p> - -<p>“I shall go across-lots,” he shouted back to -us, “by a trail which will save a lot of walking.”</p> - -<p>For hours Bates, Levy, and I awaited his -return in vain. We exhausted every topic of -conversation we could think of, and at last, -tired, disgusted, and feeling thoroughly out of -sorts, we set off down the road, taking the -animals with us.</p> - -<p>Although we could still see the light, we -walked for a long time before we actually -arrived before a small adobe -house, which was surrounded -by a thick wall some eight feet -high. The road led us to a -pair of huge solid gates, which, -being closed, prevented us seeing -within. We called out, -and in a few seconds a voice -answered us, and we were conscious -of someone approaching -the gates with a lantern.</p> - -<p>This proved to be Jim Smith -himself. He seemed to be in -a very merry mood, for, -although we were total -strangers, he almost laughed -in our faces. He had a story -to tell, it soon appeared, of a -misfortune which had befallen -our friend McGill.</p> - -<p>It seemed that in attempting -to take his short cut -“across-lots,” the Scotsman -had struck a cattle trail, which -led to a watering-trough set -beside a newly-dug well, the -existence of which he knew -nothing of.</p> - -<p>By a curious accident, he -walked straight into this well and -plunged into eight feet of water.</p> - -<p>It happened that Smith was at that moment -bringing some young cattle into his walled -enclosure, and, hearing the muffled cries of -McGill in the well, believed they proceeded from -a cow in difficulties.</p> - -<p>Lantern in hand, he made his way to the well -and called out. Judge of his surprise when he -heard a voice, as from the tomb, growl:—</p> - -<p>“I’ve lost my bloomin’ pipe!”</p> - -<p>Looking into the well, he discovered McGill -clinging to the sides as best he could with fingers -and nails. It was but a moment’s work to -throw him a line and bring him out, as sorry -and dejected-looking a scarecrow as one could -imagine. Strange to relate, it was all that Jim -could do to keep McGill from going back into -the well for his cherished briar, the loss of which -seemed to worry him greatly.</p> - -<p>We found the Scotsman in a very bad temper, -complaining bitterly of the loss of his pipe, -which he told us he was smoking at the time -of his misfortune.</p> - -<p>We received a hearty welcome from Jim -and his wife. The latter was busy soothing -their ten-months-old baby to sleep. There -they lived, in that little one-room house, eating, -sleeping, and cooking in the same apartment.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i076.jpg"> -<img src="images/i076.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“SHOT-GUN JIM.”<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>I began to speculate as to where we tired -travellers would find a place to -lay our heads. The house was -a solid adobe, without windows. -In the doorway hung a frame, -on which was fastened a strip -of canvas in lieu of a door.</p> - -<p>A hearty meal was prepared -by Mrs. Smith, after which we -were invited to go out and -bring in our beds.</p> - -<p>On our return we found -that Mrs. Smith and the babe -were already in the huge bed -in the corner. Jim was preparing -to follow, and we were -invited to spread our blankets -on the floor, which, like the -Bonita store, was mother earth.</p> - -<p>Our sleep was far more restful -than on the previous night. -At an early hour we were -awakened by Smith, who -seemed to be worried about -something. I followed him to -the door of the house and discovered -that he was holding a -whispered conversation with a -stranger, a young fellow of -about eighteen years. As soon -as I approached they stopped -speaking and I was introduced -to the young man, whose name was given as -“Hank.”</p> - -<p>Suddenly Smith spoke:—</p> - -<p>“We might as well tell ’em about it, Hank,” -he said. “They’ve got to know it sooner or -later. Tain’t safe to get out of this place now. -Besides, your horse is used up.”</p> - -<p>I glanced in the direction indicated, and saw -a horse covered in lather, with drooping head and -general dejected appearance. I knew he must -have had fearful riding to be in this condition.</p> - -<p>“Well, you tell ’em, Jim,” replied Hank. -“I reckon we’re here, all of us, to stay awhile.”</p> - -<p>“I can’t afford to remain, Mr. Smith,” I said, -thinking that the wrecked wagon might be the -reason for the conversation. “If the outfit will -hold together I think we had better go on as -soon as possible.” -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">390</span></p> - -<p>Smith looked at me with pitying eyes.</p> - -<p>“You may never leave this place at all,” he -returned, gravely. “This young man is the -only survivor of a massacre, about ten miles -from here. ‘Apache Kid’ and his band are, -perhaps, at this very moment close to our gates.”</p> - -<p>Instinctively I glanced at the gates, and -noticed for the first time that heavy timbers -were propped against them.</p> - -<p>“Not only that, but McGill has disappeared,” -continued Smith. “I think he may have gone in -search of his pipe. We dare not risk going -outside the enclosure, and he must get back as -best he can.”</p> - -<p>Just then the others of our party and -Mrs. Smith, with the babe in her arms, joined -us, having begun to realize that something was -amiss.</p> - -<p>Then Jim began to organize his forces. First -he took an inventory of the available arms and -ammunition, calling on our party to exhibit such -weapons as we had about us.</p> - -<p>Next Jim brought out a number of guns. -There were three excellent repeating rifles, with -several hundred rounds of ammunition, and an -old shot-gun, which proved of no value. Next -came Jim’s own pet—a beautiful double-barrelled -shot-gun. With these were several -boxes of ammunition. Last came a motley -array of “six-shooters,” a part of which were -serviceable and for which there was a limited -amount of ammunition. Two hand-axes and a -small affair for chopping firewood were counted -as weapons for close quarters.</p> - -<p>The whole lot was delivered into the care of -Mrs. Smith, who was instructed to load the guns -and arrange the ammunition conveniently on a -table brought from the house.</p> - -<p>At odd moments the good woman was -assembling quantities of food, so that, in case -of an attack, prolonged or otherwise, we might -have her services at the ammunition.</p> - -<p>Meanwhile Hank had been sent to the top of -the house, which had a low, flat roof, where he -was keeping close watch with a pair of field-glasses. -He called to Jim that he believed he -had discovered McGill in the topmost branches -of a tree, a long distance up the canyon. It -appeared that he was making signals, for we -soon discovered that he occasionally waved a -white handkerchief, and he appeared to be trying -to draw our attention to something to the -south.</p> - -<p>Presently Hank reported that McGill was -climbing down the tree, and in a moment he -was running down the road towards the house -as fast as his long legs would carry him. Jim -prepared to open one of the gates.</p> - -<p>Just then a shot rang out, followed by others. -We could hear McGill coming full tilt. Jim -opened the gate a little way and reported that -a band of Indians were in close pursuit of the -Scotsman.</p> - -<p>A moment later, breathless and exhausted, -McGill flung himself through the open gate, -which was speedily secured behind him.</p> - -<p>As quickly as possible Jim ran a rough wagon -out of a shed and placed it alongside of the -wall. It was evident now why this latter had -been built high and strong; the reason for -placing the wagon beside it, however, was not -yet evident to us.</p> - -<p>Soon we heard the rush of a score of Indian -horses, the whoops and yells of their savage -riders, and the crack of their rifles.</p> - -<p>Their shots did no damage, however, but were -sufficiently accurate to cause Hank to dodge -behind the stone chimney, whence he dropped -over the edge to the ground.</p> - -<p>There was a savage onslaught upon the -immense heavy gates, but they held firm, being -well braced by the timbers. So far not a -sound had escaped us, and it was evident that -the Indians were chagrined that they had not -made a greater impression.</p> - -<p>For a few moments we could hear them in -consultation before the gates, and presently a -voice called out in broken English.</p> - -<p>To this no reply was made, nor was any -evidence of life vouchsafed from our side.</p> - -<p>“Now, boys,” whispered Jim, “get ready. -They’re going to show their heads in a minute—just -over there, near the wagon. That is the -easiest place for them to look over, and I have -tried to make it look more inviting. So look -alive and each pick his game. Don’t miss, or -there’ll be trouble.”</p> - -<p>Next moment five ugly Apache heads bobbed -up over the wall simultaneously. They were -evidently so sure that the place was unprotected -that four of them, in their enthusiasm, clambered -half-way on top of the wall before they became -aware of the reception that had been planned -for them.</p> - -<p>The volley that followed their appearance was -almost like one shot, and the four most daring -red-skins received the bullets intended for them. -Two were killed instantly, and partly hung over -the wall as they doubled up; two others, mortally -wounded, slid off the wall and were dragged -away by their companions. The less venturesome -got away with a whole skin.</p> - -<p>With our volley pandemonium seemed to -break loose; the red-skins let out a yell that -fairly chilled us to the bone. Jim called us to -seek shelter at the rear of the house.</p> - -<p>We were none too soon, for a terrific fire was -poured into the enclosure by the Indians, who -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">391</span> -were taking haphazard shots towards us, without -putting their heads into jeopardy.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i078.jpg"> -<img src="images/i078.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“THE VOLLEY FOLLOWING THEIR APPEARANCE WAS ALMOST LIKE ONE SHOT.”</p> -</div> - -<p>Presently we discovered that one lot of the -savages were trying to burrow under the gates, -and were indeed making some headway. Jim -seemed to be everywhere at once, using his -shot-gun as his sole means of defence. The -moment a hand was seen in the growing excavation -under the gate he let drive with his -shot-gun, and another Indian was out of -commission.</p> - -<p>I remember I kept a sort of mental tally of -the fallen. Hank had told me that there were -about twenty-three in the band, so I calculated: -“Four dead on the first attack on the wall; -one shot through the hand, under the gate. -Balance to their credit—eighteen.”</p> - -<p>Just then we received an unexpected shock. -We saw a curl of smoke rising above the gates; -the savages were piling brush against them, to -which they had already set fire. This was a -serious matter, which even Jim had not calculated -upon. He ordered us to lie low while he -took a look round.</p> - -<p>I was so interested to know what he would -do that I could not resist the temptation to put -my head around the corner of the house, and -this is what I saw.</p> - -<p>Jim crept on hands and knees towards the -wagon which we had placed against the wall. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">392</span> -In a moment he had reached it, shot-gun in -hand, and silently and slowly raised himself into -it, gradually straightening out with his head and -arms just above the wall. Then, quick as a -flash, he took aim. There was a crash—or -rather a double crash, for he had fired both -barrels—an awful yell from the Indians, and he -was speeding back to safety.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i079.jpg"> -<img src="images/i079.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“I FELT MYSELF BEING DRAGGED OVER.”</p> -</div> - -<p>One savage, braver than the rest, took a quick -shot at him. The bullet did no harm to Jim, -but came near being fatal to me, for I had been -so intent on watching him that I now found -that I had unconsciously stepped into the open.</p> - -<p>Instead of bolting for shelter, I had but one -thing in mind—to check up the account and -see how many “good” Indians there were and -how many bad ones.</p> - -<p>Consequently, in a moment—foolhardy as it -may seem—I was on the wagon, peering over -the wall, taking account of the dead and -wounded at the gates.</p> - -<p>Although Jim’s shot-gun had done fearful -execution, there were but two who appeared to -be actually dead.</p> - -<p>Just then something struck me in the face, a -hand grasped me from over the wall, and I felt -myself being dragged over, into the arms of the -“Apache Kid” himself! Several other savages -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_393">393</span> -were running to his assistance. All that I can -recall is that I thought my last hour had come, -and struck out blindly with my fists, clinging, as -best I could, to the wall with my legs.</p> - -<p>I am not an experienced boxer, but I had the -advantage over my assailant, for I was uppermost.</p> - -<p>Things seemed to be going badly with me, -however, for I felt my hold on the wall gradually -weakening.</p> - -<p>Just at that instant I heard a rush behind me. -I was so done up that I could only think of -more Indians, but in reality it was Levy, Hank, -and Jim coming to the rescue.</p> - -<p>I was grasped from behind and felt that I -should be pulled to pieces. I let out with my -fists with renewed vigour, and landed such a -fierce tattoo on the face of my captor that he -involuntarily sought to protect his face with his -hands, whereupon Levy, Hank, Jim, and I fell -into a confused heap over the side of the -wagon.</p> - -<p>It was a few minutes before they restored me -to my senses, and I found myself with clothing -half torn off, covered with dust, and generally -bruised.</p> - -<p>My first words were:—</p> - -<p>“Two killed, three wounded badly; net -balance thirteen. That number is unlucky. -We’ll win!”</p> - -<p>“What in the name of common sense are you -talking about?” asked Bates, who was bending -over me.</p> - -<p>“Well, there were twenty-three Indians when -we started; we killed four at first shot, three at -the second, and two at the third, besides -wounding three beyond present help. That -leaves thirteen, doesn’t it?”</p> - -<p>We were recalled to a sense of our peril by -the sound of breaking timbers. The gates were -being forced!</p> - -<p>Through the chinks we could see the Indians -working industriously with a battering-ram, -improvised from the trunk of a tree. At any -moment the gates might fall, and we knew there -would be little hope for us once the red-skins -gained an entrance.</p> - -<p>Jim now sent his wife inside the house for -better protection. The little babe had, up to this -time, been peacefully sleeping on the bed, which -must now be used to barricade the door of the -house. Consequently, the little fellow was -disturbed as his mother moved the huge affair -against the opening, and he, too, added to the -din of the engagement.</p> - -<p>“Now, gentlemen,” said Jim, “we’ve got to -make a last stand. The gates will be down in -a minute; they have been greatly weakened by -the fire. Every one of you to the roof!”</p> - -<p>Up to the roof we climbed as a last resort. -I think we all realized the gravity of the -situation.</p> - -<p>We stretched ourselves flat, weapons in hand, -and waited. It seemed ages. We could hear -the cries of the infant mingled with the sobs of -the distracted mother. Bates, who had an -abominable voice, tried to sing a hymn. Smith -told him to be quiet—the situation was trying -enough without his music.</p> - -<p>Presently there came a crash—the gates were -down. In rushed the red-skins, a fearless crowd. -There were just thirteen; I counted them.</p> - -<p>“Now, gentlemen, let ’em have it,” called -Jim, in a low tone.</p> - -<p>Well, we did let them have it; there was no -mistake about that. There was a blaze from -the rifles, Jim’s shot-gun, and the revolvers, and -we all pumped lead as fast as we could.</p> - -<p>When the smoke cleared a little we looked -below. There were eight red-skins as dead as -ever they could be. Three more were crawling -away on all fours, seriously wounded.</p> - -<p>This left two on my record unaccounted for. -We soon spied them making off over the little -hills towards Brick Dust Canyon as fast as their -legs could carry them.</p> - -<p>One of them was “Apache Kid,” the leader. -He got off with a whole skin, but I’ll wager that -he had some marks about his face.</p> - -<p>When we got down from the roof we could -no longer hear Mrs. Smith or the babe, and -feared they had been killed by stray bullets. -Repeated calls failed to bring response.</p> - -<p>When we forced an entrance we found her in -a dead faint, lying on the bed beside the infant, -who was chewing his fist and chuckling as if in -great glee.</p> - -<p>Woman-like, Mrs. Smith deferred her swoon -till all danger was past.</p> - -<p>To the delight of McGill, his miserable briar -was recovered that day by Jim, who said he did -not want the well spoiled, otherwise he would -have left it there.</p> - -<p>“Shot-gun Jim”—for that is how he is always -known now, on account of his fearful execution -with his shot-gun, for it was he who really saved -the day—has never been troubled by Apaches -since. He still insists on living in that forsaken -spot, forgetful of the terrible scenes of carnage -and danger he has passed through, working at a -copper mine which he discovered up beyond -Brick Dust Canyon. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_394">394</span></p> - -<hr class="chap" /> -<div class="figcenter"> -<img id="A_Perilous_Mission" src="images/i081.jpg" -alt="A Perilous Mission." /> -<h2><span class="hidden">A Perilous Mission.<br /></span> -<span class="smcap medium">By S. F. Martin, late of the Royal Niger Company’s Service.</span></h2> -</div> - -<blockquote> - -<p>The modestly-told story of a daring deed. At a time of great anxiety, when England and France were -on the verge of conflict in Africa and the powerful Mohammedan native States were watching for an -opportunity of throwing off the yoke of both countries, Mr. Martin was District Agent of the Royal Niger -Company at Borgu. He was instructed to secure reliable information as to what was happening in the -turbulent robber kingdom of Kontogora, and he obtained it by the hazardous expedient of disguising himself -as a Haussa and, taking his life in his hands, penetrating right into the enemy’s capital. His adventures -during this journey are set forth below, though the narrative contains barely a hint of the strain of -the ordeal or the awful fate that would have befallen the author had his real identity been suspected.</p></blockquote> - -<div> -<img class="drop-cap" src="images/t.jpg" alt="T" /> -</div> - -<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Towards</span> the latter end of 1898, -before the conquest of Nigeria, I -was placed in charge of the interests -of the Royal Niger Company, -Chartered and Limited, in the -Borgu district of the Niger Territories. My -instructions, amongst other things, were to -watch events, political and otherwise, and to -report the same to head-quarters.</p> - -<p>It was a time of great stress and no little -peril to our West African Empire, for not only -were the various races of the Territories in a -state of unrest and hostility to the white man’s -domination, but at that period we were also at -loggerheads with the French, whose troops were -encroaching on our frontiers from all sides, -necessitating a special field force being formed, -under Colonel (later General Sir Frederick) -Lugard, to deal with the situation. The native -Mohammedan States, seeing this, thought to take -advantage of the crisis to the detriment of both -nations.</p> - -<p>The most turbulent of all these native States -was Kontogora, a town lying to the eastward of -the Niger River. At the time of which I write -there were British troops at Jebba, Leabba, -Boussa, Roffia, Gomba, Lafagon, and Illa, as -well as smaller garrisons scattered about, all on -the Niger. There was a strong force also at -Zaria, a large town away to the east, some distance -south of Kano. The French were prowling -about in between.</p> - -<p>It being reported that Kontogora was preparing -to take up arms, I determined to find out -the facts of the case for myself, as, if this State -seriously intended causing trouble and gained -any successes against us, the whole Mohammedan -Empire was sure to rise to a man, and it would -be difficult for us to hold our own, to say -nothing of expelling the French. My orders -were to remain in Boussa, but, having weighed -the pros and cons very carefully, and decided -that it would be well within the spirit, if not -exactly the letter, of my instructions to take the -action I intended, I determined to find out in -person how far this rumour was true and how -great the danger really was to our Imperial -interests. I had mastered the Haussa tongue, -the prevailing language of those regions, and -could hold my own easily with the Haussas -themselves, my natural aptitude for picking up -tongues standing me in good stead. Consequently, -without informing anyone where I -was going, beyond leaving word that I was off -on a shooting trip, on the night of the 17th of -November, 1898, I dyed myself from head to -foot a deep brown, arrayed myself in very -shabby Haussa clothes, and set off, with my -guide, Mama, for Kontogora. I took the name -of “Abdu Maidowda”—Abdu the dirty. All -carriers in Haussaland take nicknames, given -them by their masters or companions. It is -seldom that a white man ever knows the real -names of his servants.</p> - -<p>We tramped all that night, and next morning -stopped at a small village in the midst of farmlands -in the N’gaski Kingdom. The whole -country hereabouts was bitterly hostile to the -white man’s <i>régime</i>. The state of unrest -was manifest everywhere; people went armed -to their work in the fields, as raids from -neighbouring towns seemed to be of frequent -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_395">395</span> -occurrence. Although the various native kingdoms -were quite at one with regard to their -hatred of the white man, yet amongst themselves -they were always warring and raiding for slaves—the -big towns bullying the smaller villages. -The main cause of this was the heavy slave -tribute levied by the Sultan of Sokoto—the -great head of the Moslem Church in the Sudan—on -all his vassal States.</p> - -<p>Having rested for a few hours, we set out -again about midday. It was fiercely hot as -we trudged through the guinea-corn fields that -stretched for miles all around us, and the heat, -striking down from the fiery sun, that hung -directly overhead, made me dizzy. I staggered -along at times in a -kind of hot, sweltering -day-dream—seeing -things that did -not exist, and thinking -the most absurd -thoughts. Once I -called a halt at a well -of very dirty water, -flung myself down on -my hands and knees, -and bathed my head -and neck for several -minutes, Mama looking -on amused. The -people in the fields -were gathering in the -corn in feverish haste, -but every now and -then they paused long -enough to question -us as to our destination -and whence we -came. We invariably -told the same tale—we -were travelling to -Kontogora from -Illorin.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i082.jpg"> -<img src="images/i082.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE AUTHOR, MR. S. F. MARTIN, IN HAUSSA DRESS.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>It must have been -about 4 p.m., judging -by the sun, when, on -that second day out, -we topped a rise of rocky ground and came face -to face with the head of a caravan of some thirty -people, with a large number of goats, coming -from the westward. There were several women -on donkeys, ten armed men on horseback, and -the balance consisted of carriers. As we stood -watching them the caravan halted and one of -the horsemen came prancing up to us with a -great flourishing of his spear. He asked us, very -roughly, whence we came and whither we were -bound. Mama answered that we were from -Illorin, whither we had taken loads for a rich -merchant from Kano, and were now bound for -Kontogora, where we hoped to obtain work, as -we understood that the Emir was preparing for -war on the white man. He then asked our -questioner if we might not join his caravan, and -if he would let us carry a load each in return for -our food. At this we were taken before the -head of the party, who proved to be an enormously -fat woman. With a wave of the hand -she gave her consent, and we were forthwith -enlisted in the line of coolies.</p> - -<p>We pushed on that afternoon to some farmhouses, -where we halted for the night. The fat -lady took up her abode in the headman’s hut, -and we carriers wandered about to find quarters -for ourselves. For -the most part we slept -in the open, beneath -a great tree growing -outside the entrance -to the headman’s -compound. Mama -and I had no intention -of losing sight -of our companions, -as we did not wish -to let slip this excellent -chance of getting -in to Kontogora, -which was also the -destination of the -caravan, without -danger of possible -discovery. The farm -people were good -enough to give us -food and drink, and -also supplied us with -plenty of firewood.</p> - -<p>After sitting around -the fire for a short -time, we coolies one -by one curled up on -our mats (each -carried a small grass -mat) and, with our -feet to the fire, slept -the dreamless sleep of the utterly weary.</p> - -<p>Next morning I was awakened by Mama -shaking me by the shoulder. My clothes were -wet with dew, and I commenced to shiver with -cold, cursing myself in my sleepy condition for -being so foolish as to put myself in such a -perilous predicament.</p> - -<p>As I arose and stretched myself I beheld -silent forms passing to and fro, and signs that -the world was awakening became increasingly -evident. Then fires were lit and breakfast -cooked; but not before we had washed our -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_396">396</span> -eyes, mouth, and hands, uttering a few words -from the Koran the while. After partaking of -boiled guinea-corn and soup, we espied the -fat lady preparing to mount her donkey, and, -securing our loads, took our place in the column -that began to form up. Soon we were once -again trudging through the open country on our -way to Kontogora.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i083.jpg"> -<img src="images/i083.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“ONE OF THE HORSEMEN CAME PRANCING UP TO US WITH A GREAT FLOURISHING OF HIS SPEAR.”</p> -</div> - -<p>All along the route I was struck with the -apparent haste with which the people were -gathering in the corn. Our companions told us -that the Seriki (King) of Kontogora was preparing -to wage war on the white man, and had -ordered his people to get in all their corn at -once.</p> - -<p>The day before we entered Kontogora we -were overtaken by a raiding party, who were -returning to that place with their spoil—about -twenty young girls and women, as well as several -little children—all tied together, each having one -wrist made fast to the neck, across the chest.</p> - -<p>Their captors were Fulehs and Haussas, on -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_397">397</span> -horseback, armed with swords and spears, and -one or two with guns. Some of the poor captives -looked terribly emaciated, and could hardly -get along. I saw one woman get a slash of a -hippo hide whip across the face, that sent her -reeling to the ground, with a great gash on her -forehead. The incident stopped the whole -column for a few minutes, as the woman was -fastened to her fellow-prisoners by the neck, -and, when she fell, prevented them from advancing. -The whip was then applied freely in all -directions. The chief of the band ordered the -wounded woman’s squirming comrades to pick -her up and carry her, but they were unable to -do so, being too utterly worn out, I could see. -They were coated in dust from head to foot, -and the perspiration trickling down their naked -skins and mingling with the dust made the -poor things appear a sorry sight. The band -had, apparently, captured them at some far-distant -spot, and must have brought them along -at a great pace, judging by the rate they were -going when they overtook us.</p> - -<p>Furious at their inability to pick the woman -up, the ruffian in command raised his spear -and plunged it three times into the body of the -prostrate woman. He followed this up by -actually trampling her under his horse’s feet, -while I groaned in an agony of horror and -impotent rage at the ghastly spectacle.</p> - -<p>The brute, having satisfied himself that his -victim was dead, cut the grass rope that bound -her to her fellows with a slash of his sword, and -ordered the party to proceed. They left us at -a quick walk—some of the poor captives even -running in their terror—and were soon out of -sight over a rise in the ground. Our party -followed at a slower pace in dead silence, leaving -the poor mangled thing by the roadside to -provide a meal for the vultures and hyenas that -would soon be on the scene. I for one, however, -realized then that no wild beast of the desert -could compare for utter brutality and lust for -blood with the human satyrs who overran that -land at the time of which I write. For miles -around, between Kontogora and the Niger, and -farther afield to the north, south, and east, the -smoking ruins of raided villages told the ever-repeated -tale of death and violence, robbery -and rapine, and I knew full well what would -happen to me should my disguise, by any -mischance, be penetrated.</p> - -<p>About five miles outside Kontogora our -caravan was stopped by some horsemen who -came galloping towards us and drew up across -our path. They had a long parley with our -chiefs before allowing us to proceed, and only -did so on payment of a toll. These men were -scouts, and I found out later that the whole -country for five miles around the city was -effectually patrolled, no one being allowed to -enter or leave without permission. When we -finally arrived outside the walls of Kontogora it -was night, and in the moonlight the scene was -beautiful and striking. The high castellated -ramparts, with watch-towers over the gates, looked -strange and fantastic in the soft, mysterious light.</p> - -<p>As we approached the gate we mingled with -the members of another caravan. Mama and I -were at the tail of the line, about five or six -from the end. We chose this position to minimize -the possibility of trouble, although there -really seemed little chance of that in such a -deceptive light. Still, there was just the chance, -as we soon found out when the head of the -caravan reached the gate. Here it was abruptly -ordered to halt, and the guards held quite a -long palaver before it was allowed to proceed. -At the same time a little incident occurred that -made my blood run cold for a few minutes. -There was a cry of “Abokai! Abokai! Kai!” -(“Friends! Friends! Halloa, there!”) from -the gate, and the whole column was soon calling -“Aboki! Aboki!” (“Friend! Friend!”)—the -Haussa manner of hailing anybody. -They were shouting, it soon appeared, for -myself and Mama, and we were speedily -hustled forward by our companions. When -we reached the gate our employer, the fat -lady merchant who had engaged us, indicated -us to the guards with a haughty wave of the -hand. We could see a crowd of mounted and -unmounted men in the darkness of the gateway, -and one among these, who seemed gigantic in -the moonlight as he rode forward on a horse -equally gigantic, curveted up to us. Striking -my turban from off my head with the tip of -his spear, he loudly asked for our names. I -answered that we were two poor travellers from -Illorin, come to offer our services to the Emir. -He asked us where our belongings were and the -money that our master had paid us at Illorin. -I told him that the white man had met us on -the road and taken everything, as we were -friends of Kontogora. At this the captain of -the gate gave vent to some extremely sulphurous -language. Then, with a slight movement of the -reins, he caused his horse to rear up on his -hind legs and, with pawing fore-feet, to burst -furiously through the crowd of coolies round -about us, trampling one or two badly. Finally, -the caravan was allowed to move on under the -gate into the town. As we entered, the <i>mallams</i> -(priests) were calling to prayer, and the long-drawn -cry, like an appeal for mercy, floated -through the night, striking on the air with that -strange, indefinable sense of mysticism that -belongs to the East alone. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_398">398</span></p> - -<p>We wound in and out, out and in, through -the moonlit streets with their black shadows, -their mud walls, and conical, thatch-roofed -houses. Then we emerged into the market-place, -near which our employer resided. Entering -her compound, we put down our loads, -and, seating ourselves, awaited our wages. -Mama and I were the first to be paid. We were -handed one string apiece of cowrie shells—equivalent -to one shilling each, at that time -and place. We haggled over this like true-born -carriers for fully half an hour, and, as the fat -lady’s head slave refused to budge, accepted -what we got with a blessing—and promptly -received another five hundred cowries for our -good nature. The Haussa will often do this, -for, as much as he fears a curse, by so much -does he value a blessing. A great many rogues -take advantage of this trait in the native character.</p> - -<p>Having been paid off, Mama and I left the -compound rejoicing. Here we were, in the very -heart of Kontogora—scatheless! We wandered -into the market-place, where some people were -still loitering, and decided to sleep in one of the -stalls and begin our investigations in the morning.</p> - -<p>It was many hours before I got to sleep, as -my feet ached fearfully and were badly torn and -blistered. During the march I had alternately -gone barefoot and in sandals to rest them, and -at times I got badly knocked about when carrying -the leathers in my hand. Several times -during the night bands of young Haussas passed -through the market-place, shouting and laughing, -boasting what they were going to do to the -Turawa (white man).</p> - -<p>Four batches of labourers passed through -also, between the time we retired and dawn, -dragging dead horses out of the town. Tom-toms -were going all the night; at times the -whole air quivered with the rhythmical sounds. -The quaint tinkling of the Haussa guitar rose -and fell at intervals, and from time to time the -weird notes of the “ghoghie,” or native fiddle, -could be heard from the compounds. A spirit -of excitement and revel seemed to pervade the -whole town.</p> - -<p>Next morning we loitered about until the -market began to fill, when we bought some -food. We then repaired to the Galadima’s -residence, and enlisted in the army of labourers -that were employed in repairing the walls of the -town. Many of these labourers were slaves, -sent by the various chiefs and big men; others -belonged to the Emir himself. About four -hundred of us were dispatched to the north -wall. Here some made bricks out of the soft -clay; others, including myself, stood on the -wall and laid them, and yet others passed those -already dried up to us on the wall.</p> - -<p>While working in this way I gathered a lot of -information. Raiding parties had been out all -the week, I learned, and spies and runners -from Zaria brought in news every day concerning -the movements of the white men in -that city. Bands of armed men were continually -bringing in slaves from the ruined -villages in the surrounding country. It was -said that N’gaski and Kontogora would join -forces, attack the whites in Zaria, and drive -them out. Dandugnsu and Ridjion, neighbouring -towns, had promised their support in -the campaign. I also learnt that orders had -come in from the Sultan of Sokoto that the -Emir was not to commence a war against the -white man, but to remain on the defensive. -The Emir of Kontogora had replied that he was -quite prepared to meet all comers, from whatever -direction—a pretty broad hint to Sokoto, I -thought. One fellow laying bricks told Mama -that the man who killed Lieutenant Thomson -at Bida, in the late Niger Sudan campaign -undertaken by the Chartered Company against -the Fulehs of Bida and Illorin, was now in the -town and was considered a very great hero.</p> - -<p>About midday an order came for some twenty -men to repair to the Emir’s compound. I was -chosen as one of the gang, together with Mama. -So off we marched. When we arrived we found -that a horse and a cow had died, and were to -be dragged out of the town and thrown into the -moat under the walls. Tying up the hind legs -with grass rope, we hauled the carcasses through -the streets and out by one of the gates and -dumped them into the ditch. Having finished -our unpleasant task, we trudged back to the -north wall and recommenced laying bricks.</p> - -<p>One swaggering youngster had annoyed me -very much all the morning. He was an overseer -amongst the men, and apparently one -of the wealthy young bloods of the town. -Shortly after my return from removing the dead -horse this youth strutted up to me and started -cursing me roundly in Haussa, saying that I -was more like a woman than a man and that -my work was no good. Finally, raising his -hand, he struck me in the mouth. Forgetting -myself completely for the moment, I stepped up -to the fellow, who promptly drew his sword. -Without any trouble I disarmed him; then, -catching him by the neck, I shook him like a -rat and dropped him into the ditch on the far -side of the wall.</p> - -<p>For a moment there was dead silence; next a -chorus of applause and laughter broke out. -But Mama plucked me by the sleeve. “Go,” -he said, in a low tone; “I will meet you to-night, -an hour after sundown, at the place we -slept in last night.” -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_399">399</span></p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i086.jpg"> -<img src="images/i086.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“I SHOOK HIM LIKE A RAT AND DROPPED HIM INTO THE DITCH.”</p> -</div> - -<p>Divining my danger, I slipped away and -mingled with the crowd, nobody venturing to -interfere. I passed down some side streets that -zigzagged about confusingly, wandered in the -outskirts of the town for an hour or more, and -then made my way to the market-place, which -I found swarming with people.</p> - -<p>Buying some boiled guinea-corn, I sat down -outside a stall and munched my lunch. The -woman who sold me the food was a garrulous old -person, but perfectly good-natured. She asked -me all about myself, and I told her that -I had come from Zaria, where I had fled -through fear of the white men. She informed -me that I had nothing to fear from them; -were it not for their guns they would be quite -harmless. Then I asked her when it was that -Kontogora intended setting out to drive the -Turawa from Zaria. “Go round the blacksmiths’ -shops and inquire at the smithies,” was all the -answer I could get. I thought the idea a good -one, and, bidding my new friend “Good day,” -I sauntered through the crowded market-place, -stopping at various booths. In one of these -some blacksmiths were hard at work, making -arrow and spear heads from bits of iron and tin. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_400">400</span> -As I stood looking at them I gathered, from the -conversation that was going on around, that some -of the Emir’s sons were expected to arrive in -Kontogora that day, and that they were bringing -some of the white men’s guns with them that were -taken at Hella, when Lieutenant Keating’s party -was massacred. Here was a bit of news worth -having! The conversation turning on matters -that did not interest me, I strolled on until I -arrived at the head blacksmith’s shop, near the -Emir’s compound, where I watched the hammers -pounding the red-hot metal. I could see that -the whole town was busy making arms, which -boded ill for the whites.</p> - -<p>Suddenly I heard a shout of “Gashi! Gashi!” -(“There he is! There he is!”). Then there was -a rush of feet, and a flash of swords in upraised -arms. Evidently my pursuers had found me -out. I backed into the blacksmith’s shop, -followed by a yelling crowd, and caught a -momentary glimpse of my tormentor of the -morning. Then, without warning, something -was thrown over my head, and I was dragged -violently backwards, flung to the ground, and -stunned by a succession of heavy blows.</p> - -<p>When I came to my senses I found myself -being hauled unceremoniously to my feet, my -arms bound firmly. In this ignominious state I -was dragged amid curses and cuffs through the -town, a yelling crowd of bloodthirsty ruffians -surrounding me. They hauled me through a -doorway into a compound surrounded with high -walls, on into a big building, through many -rooms and passages, and ultimately down some -rough steps into a filthy, stinking dungeon, -reeking of mould and damp. Here, with a -violent push, I was flung headlong to the -bottom, where I lay helpless in absolute -darkness.</p> - -<p>The air was damp and chill, and the place -was infested with all manner of loathsome -crawling things; I could hear them tick-ticking -and scuffling along the floor and walls. Shortly -after my entry some filthy thing touched my -fingers, and I shook it off with a yell. It was -a dread place, and drove all hope of saving my -life clean out of me.</p> - -<p>How long I lay there I do not know; it was -long enough, at any rate, for a sharp attack -of fever to seize me and run its course. It -racked my bones; I tossed and turned on the -slimy floor, groaning aloud in my discomfort. -The hot fever-blood throbbed in my head; -my eyes and face burned, and my body became -parched and dry. I moaned for water—oh, -for one drop of cool water! At one time I -thought I saw the door open and Mama enter -and loose my bonds, but it was only a vision -of my disordered brain. Finally I sank into -unconsciousness. I awoke—drenched in a profuse -perspiration—with men’s voices sounding -round about me. A figure was standing over me -holding a lamp—an earthenware, ewer-shaped -vessel with a cotton dip—which gave a wavering -yellow radiance and cast grim dancing shadows -on the walls. I could see that the door was ajar, -and a pale light was stealing into the horrible -place from outside. Roughly I was dragged -to my feet. I staggered a bit, but soon steadied -myself, and—pushed, cursed, and beaten—I -accompanied my captors up the steps and out -into the light of day again, or, rather, of evening. -One glorious breath of the upper air repaid me -for all that I had suffered in that black hole of -Kontogora. I did not care now if they were -leading me out to kill me; I was not going to -die like a rat in that horrible pit.</p> - -<p>As we emerged from the compound we were -joined by a chattering, mocking, hostile crowd -of men, women, and children. Every now and -then one of the latter would strike me with a -stick, my guards making no effort to protect me. -At last we entered the Emir’s compound and I -was taken into his presence. He was seated on -a dais covered with mats and a leopard skin, -and was talking in a low monotone to some men -lying round about him on the floor of the -chamber.</p> - -<p>The young blood that I had flung over the -wall, and who was the cause of all my troubles, -stepped out and told the King what I had done, -asking leave to kill me then and there. Next, -to my astonishment, Mama stepped out of the -crowd and told the Emir plainly that he and I -had come all the way from Illorin to serve him, -and had intended craving his permission that -morning had not my tormentor interfered and -sought a quarrel with me, in which he had got -thrown over the wall for his pains. Subsequently, -through treachery, continued my faithful -guide, my enemy had had me taken and -flung into prison without the Emir’s knowledge.</p> - -<p>The Emir, who seemed a decent sort of old -man, listened patiently to his two petitioners. -Then, advising my enemy to calm himself, he -told one of his retainers to question me. I -thanked Heaven that the simpleness of my disguise -and my grip of the Haussa tongue precluded -any very great possibility of detection. -The Emir, before my questioner started, informed -the assembled crowd that, were I proved -to be a rebel and a traitor, he would hand me -over to my enemy to do what he wished with.</p> - -<p>My inquisitor was a type of the grovelling -bully. He tried to put one or two posers to -me, but got more than he expected in return; -and I actually got a smile out of the Emir, -which elicited the loud and flattering applause -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_401">401</span> -of the retainers, when I suggested that my questioner -was behaving very like a traitor himself -in trying to cast a slur on the character of one -of the Emir’s most faithful subjects. I told that -monarch that I had come all the way from -Illorin to serve him, and this was the way I was -being treated—dragged, beaten and bleeding, -before him from a dungeon, and bound like a -common slave. Suddenly the Emir asked me -how many white men there were in Borgu; I -told him about one hundred thousand, and more -to come. He seemed greatly impressed, as well -he might be. I then craved permission to enter -his service, and he inquired if I could ride. I -told him to try me. This he agreed to do. If -I could ride and prove myself worthy of entering -his service he said he would pardon my -imprudence of yesterday and make me a -member of his bodyguard.</p> - -<p>My bonds were cut, and as these fell from me -the pain of the blood returning to my swollen, -half-numbed hands was excruciating. I managed, -however, to keep a brave face. We retired from -the Emir’s presence and waited outside under a -great shady tree, where, eventually, a fiercely-pawing -stallion was brought up, and I was -ordered to mount. This I did, the brute biting, -kicking, and plunging all the time. I had to -get into one of those horrible native saddles that -box you up completely, fore and aft. Once -mounted, I let the horse do as he pleased, and -he led me a terrible dance, rearing and plunging -about, dashing first to one side and then -another. As he was in the midst of his attempts -to buck me off, the Emir appeared and stood -watching the tussle with interest. As a matter -of fact, the horse had not much chance when -once I was on his back, for I had had a great -deal of experience of the Haussa beast, and -knew his ways. He soon grew tired, and within -half an hour was quite submissive. I used no -stick, but just sat quietly in the saddle. To my -surprise and delight the Emir told me that the -horse was mine, and that I was to come to see -him on the morrow, about noon. I thanked -him gratefully and rode off, Mama walking by -my stirrup.</p> - -<p>After a consultation we agreed that it would -be dangerous to remain in the town any longer, -as our enemies were bound to try to get the -better of us, sooner or later. We therefore -arranged that Mama should leave the town at -once, and make for Boussa as best he could, on -foot; I would leave that night. We then parted, -and I was left alone in the midst of the enemy.</p> - -<p>At sundown I rode through the south gate, -but was immediately stopped by the guard. I -told them that I came by order of the Emir, but -they demanded proof. This was distinctly -awkward, for, of course, I had no proof to -give. I therefore resolved upon a bold stroke. -I requested the chief to ride with me, telling -him I would give him in confidence all the -proof he would require. Unsuspectingly he -rode up alongside. Leaning over towards him, -I suddenly gripped him by the throat with both -hands, at the same time ramming my heels into -my horse’s sides. The startled animal leapt -forward, wrenching my opponent from the -saddle with a jerk, and I swung him across my -horse’s withers, where I held him—my right -hand on his throat, my left gripping his left -knee, bending him backwards like a bow. In -this fashion we flew along the path by which -two days before I had entered the robber city -on foot.</p> - -<p>A howl of execration and a clatter of hoofs -followed us, and a shower of arrows and spears -fell harmlessly on either side of me. When we -had gone about a quarter of a mile I slid my -hapless prisoner off on to his head, intending to -stun him. My horse, feeling the relief, went -away at renewed speed, and I had no difficulty -in outdistancing my pursuers, especially as they -stopped to see to their unconscious chief. I -met one party of traders coming into the town, -but they stood aside to let me thunder past, not -doubting that I was an emissary of the Emir -on some urgent business. The moon was just -rising as I topped a low ridge, and all the world -was soon bathed in a soft and silvery veil of -light. Kontogora was far behind in the plain, -the thousand conical roofs away in the distance -looking strangely unreal.</p> - -<p>As I drew near the five mile radius I began -to wonder how I was going to get through the -line of scouts. Capture now would mean death -in some horrible form or other; at all costs I -must not be taken alive. Suddenly I heard a -shout far away on my right, and in the dim light -saw a body of horsemen coming my way. -Touching my mount with my heels I again gave -him his head, and he flew like the wind, with -ever-increasing speed. The pace was terrific -and absolutely foolhardy in that light, although -the road was fairly good. I expected every -moment to be pitched head foremost to the -ground, but the surefooted beast kept on without -a stumble. The shouts and thunder of -hoofs behind grew fainter and fainter, until at -last, to my infinite relief, they entirely died -away. Still, however, I kept on. Here and -there, when the road passed through a village -or beside a farm, frightened figures would slink -away into the shadows and a startled cur would -burst into a violent fit of barking, as I clattered -by on my panting steed, now reeking and white -with sweat. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_402">402</span></p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i089a.jpg"> -<img src="images/i089a.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“IN THIS FASHION WE FLEW ALONG THE PATH.”</p> -</div> - -<p>I rode fast all through the night, my horse -showing splendid spirit and pluck, and at sunrise -halted on the banks of a river. Leaving -my hard-ridden beast to cool a little first, I then -watered him and, cutting some guinea-corn -stalks from a patch near by, gave him a good -feed, munching some myself at the same time -and quenching my thirst at the river. Then, -after about two hours’ rest, I proceeded, but at -a lesser speed.</p> - -<p>I rode all that day and well into the night, -finally resting by the pool where I had cooled -my heated brow on the way to Kontogora. -After some hours’ halt I pushed on again, -obtaining food at farmhouses on the way, and -next evening, utterly weary, arrived at the Niger -opposite Boussa. My journey was over; I was -safe at last! Arriving at my quarters in the -Niger Company’s compound, I flung myself -down on my camp bed just as I was and slept -for sixteen hours.</p> - -<p>The faithful Mama turned up four days later. -He went to Yauri, a friendly State, coming down -river by canoe. For his services I presented -him with the Emir of Kontogora’s horse.</p> - -<p>During all the years that have gone by since -my secret trip to Kontogora and my subsequent -escape I have never regretted having run the -double risk of disobeying orders on the one -hand and risking my life on the other. I -had been instructed to get news and I got -it—not the idle tales of paid spies, but a record -of sights seen and things heard with my own -eyes and ears.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i089b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i089b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -</div> -<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_403">403</span></p> - -<hr class="chap" /> -<h2 id="A_Voyage_on_an_Ice-Floe"><i>A Voyage on an Ice-Floe.</i><br /> - -<span class="smcap medium">By Dr. Wilfred T. Grenfell</span>, C.M.G.</h2> - -<blockquote> - -<p>Dr. Grenfell may be described as the “Good Angel of Labrador,” having for years devoted himself to -ministering to the hardy toilers who live in that grim land of snow, ice, and fog. In this enthralling -story he describes how, while on an errand of mercy, he and his dog-team got adrift in the open -sea on a tiny cake of ice; how he killed three of the dogs to provide himself with warm clothing; how -he made a flagstaff out of their bones; and how he was finally rescued when hope was well-nigh dead.</p></blockquote> - -<div> -<img class="drop-cap" src="images/i.jpg" alt="I" /> -</div> - -<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">It</span> was Easter Sunday, but still -winter with us, and everything was -covered with snow and ice. Immediately -after morning service word -came from our hospital to say that -messengers with a large team of dogs had -come from sixty miles to the southward to -get a doctor for a very urgent case—that of a -young man on whom we had operated about -a fortnight before for an acute bone disease -in the thigh.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i090.jpg"> -<img src="images/i090.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE AUTHOR, DR. WILFRED T. GRENFELL, C.M.G.<br /> -<i>From a Photo. by De Youngs, New York.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>There was obviously no -time to be lost, so, having -packed up the necessary instruments, -dressings, and -drugs, and fitted out the sleigh -with my best dogs, I left at -once, the messengers following -me with their own team.</p> - -<p>Late in April there is -always a risk of getting wet -through on the ice, so that I -was prepared with a spare -outfit, which included, besides -a change of garments, snow-shoes, -rifle, compass, an axe, -and oilskin over clothes.</p> - -<p>My dogs, being a powerful -team, would not be held back, -and though I managed to -wait twice for the other -sleigh I had reached a -village about twenty miles -on the journey before nightfall, -had fed the dogs, and -was gathering one or two -people for prayers, when they caught me up.</p> - -<p>During the night the wind shifted to the -north-east. This brought in fog and rain, -softened the snow, and made travelling very -bad, besides sending a heavy sea into the bay. -Our drive next morning would be somewhat -over forty miles—the first ten miles across a -wide arm of the sea, on salt-water ice.</p> - -<p>In order not to be separated too long from -my friends, I sent them ahead two hours before -me, appointing a rendezvous at a log shanty we -had built in the woods for a half-way house. -There is no one living along all that lengthy -coast-line, and so, in case of accident, we keep -dry clothes, food, and drugs at the hut.</p> - -<p>The first rain of the year was falling when I -left, and I was obliged to keep on what we call -the “ballicaters,” or ice barricades, much farther -up the bay than I had expected. The sea of -the night before had smashed up the ponderous -covering of ice right to the land-wash, and great -gaping chasms between the -enormous blocks, which we -call “pans,” made it impossible -to get off. As soon as -I topped the first hill outside -the village I could see -that half a mile out it was all -clear water.</p> - -<p>An island which lies off -about three miles in the bay -had preserved a bridge of -ice, however, and by crossing -a few cracks I managed to -reach this island. The arm -of the bay beyond this point -is only about four miles -straight across. This would -bring me to a rocky promontory -and would save -some miles on the round. As -far as the eye could see the -ice seemed good, though it -was very rough. Obviously -it had been smashed up by -the sea, and packed in again -by the strong wind from the -north-east, but I judged it had frozen solid -together again.</p> - -<p>I set off to cross this stretch, and all went -well till I was about a quarter of a mile from the -landing-point. Then the wind suddenly fell, -and I noticed I was travelling over loose “sish” -ice, almost of the consistency of porridge; by -stabbing down, I could drive my whip-handle -clean through it. This “sish” ice consists -of the tiny fragments made by large pans -pounding together on the heaving sea. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_404">404</span></p> - -<p>So strongly did the breeze now come off-shore, -and so quickly did the packed mass, relieved of -the wind pressure, begin to scatter, that already -I could not see one floe larger than ten feet -square. I realized at once that retreat was -absolutely impossible; the only thing to be done -was to make a dash for it and try to reach the -shore.</p> - -<p>There was not a moment to lose, so I tore -off my oilskins, threw myself out on my hands -and knees by the side of the <i>komatik</i> to give a -larger base to hold, and shouted to the dogs to -go ahead.</p> - -<p>Before we had gone twenty yards, the animals, -divining their peril, hesitated for a moment, and -the <i>komatik</i> instantly sank into the slush. It -then became necessary for the dogs to pull, and -they promptly began to sink in also. Earlier -in the season the father of the very man I was -going to operate on had been drowned by his -dogs tangling their traces around him in the -“slob.” This unpleasant fact now flashed into -my mind, and I managed to loosen my sheath-knife, -scramble forward, find the traces in the -water, and cut them, meanwhile taking a turn -with the leader’s trace around my wrist.</p> - -<p>There was a pan of ice some twenty-five -yards away, about the size of a dining-table, and -on to this the leader very shortly climbed. -The other dogs, however, were hopelessly -bogged in the slushy ice and water.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i091.jpg"> -<img src="images/i091.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“ONE OF THE DOGS GOT ON TO MY SHOULDERS, PUSHING ME -FARTHER DOWN IN THE ICE.”</p> -</div> - -<p>Gradually I hauled myself along the leader’s -line towards the pan, till he suddenly turned -round and slipped out of his harness. It was -impossible to make any progress through the -“sish” ice by swimming, so I lay there helplessly, -thinking it would soon be over, and -wondering if anyone would ever know how the -tragedy happened. Suddenly I saw the trace of -another big dog, who had himself fallen through -just before he reached the pan. Along this I -hauled myself, using the animal as a bow anchor, -but much bothered by the other dogs, one of -which, in his struggle for life, got on to my -shoulders, pushing me farther down in the ice. -Presently, however, I passed my living anchor, -and soon, with my dogs around me, I lay on the -little piece of ice. I had to help the dogs on to -it, though they were able to work their way to -me through the lane of water that I had -made.</p> - -<p>We were safe for the moment, yet it -was obvious that we must be drowned -before long if we remained on this -little fragment, so, taking off my -moccasins, coat, gloves, and cap, and -everything that I could spare, I tied my knife -and moccasins separately on to the backs of -the dogs. My only hope of life seemed to be to -get ashore at once. Had I been able to divine -the long drift before me, I might have saved, in -the same way as I saved my knife, a small bag -of food. The moccasins, made of tanned sealskin, -came right up to my thigh, and, as they -were filled with water, I thought they accounted -for my being able to make no progress.</p> - -<p>Taking the long traces from all the dogs but -the two lightest, I gave them the full length of -the lines, tied the near ends around my own -wrists, and tried to make the animals go ahead. -Nothing would induce them to move, however, -and though I threw them off the pan two or -three times, they always struggled back on to it. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_405">405</span> -Fortunately, I had with me a small black -spaniel, a featherweight, with large furry paws, -something like snow-shoes, who will retrieve for -me. I threw a piece of ice for him, and he -managed to get over the “slob” after it, on to -another pan about twenty yards away. The -other dogs followed him and after much painful -struggling all of them got on but one.</p> - -<p>Taking all the run I could get on my little -pan, I made a rush, slithering with the impetus -along the surface till once more I sank through. -After a tough fight I was able to haul myself -by the long traces on to this new pan. I had -taken care this time to tie the harnesses, to -which I was holding, under the dogs’ bellies, so -that they could not slip them off. But the pan -I was now on was still not enough to bear us, -and so this exhausting process had to be -repeated immediately to avoid sinking with it.</p> - -<p>I now realized, much to my dismay, that -though we had been working towards the land -we had been losing ground all the time, for the -off-shore wind had now driven us a hundred -yards farther out. The widening gap was full -of pounded ice, which rose to the surface as the -pressure lessened. Through this no man could -possibly make his way.</p> - -<p>I was now resting on a floe about ten feet by -twenty, which, when I came to examine it, was -not ice at all, but simply snow-covered “slob,” -frozen into a mass, and which I feared would -very soon break up in the general turmoil and -the heavy sea, which was continually increasing -as the ice drove offshore before the wind.</p> - -<p>At first we drifted in the direction of a rocky -point on which a heavy surf was breaking, and I -made up my mind, if there was clear water in -the surf, to try to swim for the land. But -suddenly we struck a rock, a large piece broke -off the already small pan, and what was left -swung around in the backwash and went right -off to sea. I saw then that my pan was -about a foot thick.</p> - -<p>There was nothing now for it but to hope for -rescue. Alas! there was no possibility of -being seen by human eyes. As I have already -mentioned, no one lives round this big bay. It -was just possible, however, that the people on -the other <i>komatik</i>, knowing I was alone and had -failed to keep my tryst, would, perhaps, come -back to look for me. This, however, they -did not do.</p> - -<p>Meanwhile the westerly wind—our coldest -wind at this time of the year—was rising rapidly. -It was very tantalizing, as I stood there with -next to nothing on, the wind going through me, -and every stitch soaked in ice-water, to see my -<i>komatik</i> some fifty yards away. It was still -above water, packed with food, hot tea in a -Thermos bottle, dry clothing, matches, wood, -and everything for making a fire to attract -attention, if I should drive out far enough for -someone to see me—and yet it was quite beyond -my reach.</p> - -<p>It is easy to see a black object on the ice in -the day-time, for its gorgeous whiteness shows -off the least thing. But, alas! the tops of -bushes and large pieces of kelp have so often -deceived those looking out that the watcher -hesitates a long time before he takes action. -Moreover, within our memory no man has ever -been thus adrift on the bay ice. The chances -were one in a thousand that I would be seen at -all, and, even if I were, I should probably be -mistaken for a fragment of driftwood or kelp.</p> - -<p>To keep from freezing I took my long -moccasins, strung out some line, split the legs, -and made a kind of jacket, which preserved my -back from the wind down as far as the waist.</p> - -<p>I had not drifted more than half a mile before -I saw my poor <i>komatik</i> disappear through the -ice, which was every minute loosening up into -small pans. The loss of the sledge seemed -like that of a friend, and one more tie with home -and safety lost.</p> - -<p>By midday I had passed the island and was -moving out into the ever-widening bay. It was -scarcely safe to stir on the pan for fear of -breaking it, and yet I saw I must have the skins -of some of my dogs—of which there were eight -on the pan—if I was to live the night out. -There was now from three to five miles of ice -between me and the north side of the bay, so I -could plainly see there was no hope of being -picked up that day, even if seen, for no boat -could get out.</p> - -<p>Unwinding the sealskin traces from my waist, -around which I had them coiled to keep the -dogs from eating them, I made a slip-knot and -passed it over the first dog’s head, tied it round -my foot close to its neck, threw him on his back, -and stabbed him to the heart. Poor beast! I -loved him like a friend, but we could not all -hope to live. In fact, at that time I had no -hope that any of us would, but it seemed better -to die fighting.</p> - -<p>In the same way I sacrificed two more large -dogs, receiving a couple of bites in the process, -though I fully expected that the pan would -break up in the struggle. A short shrift seemed -to me better than a long one, and I envied the -dead dogs, whose troubles were over so quickly. -Indeed, I began to debate in my mind whether, -if once I passed into the open sea, it would not -be better by far to use my faithful knife on myself -than to die by inches. There seemed -no horror whatever in the thought; I seemed -fully to sympathize with the Japanese view of -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_406">406</span> -<i>hara-kiri</i>. Working, however, saved me from -dangerous philosophizing. By the time I had -skinned the dogs and strung the skins together -with some rope unravelled from the harnesses I -was ten miles on my way and it was already -getting dark.</p> - -<p>Away to the northward I could now see a -single light in the little village where I had slept -the night before. One could not help picturing -them sitting down to tea, little thinking that -there was anyone watching them, for I had told -them not to expect me back for four days. I -could also see the peaceful little school-house on -the hill, where many times I had gathered the -people for prayer.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i093.jpg"> -<img src="images/i093.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE AUTHOR’S DOG TEAM.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>I had now frayed out some rope into oakum -and mixed it with some fat from the intestines -of my dogs, with the idea of making a flare. -But I discovered that my match-box, which was -always chained to me, had leaked, and my -precious matches were in pulp. Had I been -able to make a light, it would have looked so -unearthly out there on the ice that I felt sure -they would have seen me. However, I kept the -matches, hoping that I might be able to dry -them if I lived through the night. While working -at the dead dogs, about every five minutes I -would stand up and wave my hands towards the -land. I had no flag and I could not spare my -shirt, for, wet as it was, it was better than -nothing in that freezing wind, and, anyhow, it -was nearly dark.</p> - -<p>Unfortunately, the coves in among the cliffs -are so placed that only for a very narrow -space can the people in any house see the sea. -Indeed, most of them cannot see the sea at all, -so that whether it was possible for anyone to see -me I could not tell, even supposing it had been -daylight.</p> - -<p>Not daring to take any snow from the surface -of my pan to break the wind with, I piled up the -carcasses of the dogs. Moreover, I could now -sit down on the skin rug without finding myself -in a pool of water, thawed out by my own heat. -During these hours I had continually taken off -all my things, wrung them out, swung them in -the wind, and put on first one and then the other -inside, hoping that what heat there was in my -body would thus serve to dry them. In this I -had been fairly successful.</p> - -<p>My feet were the most trouble, for they immediately -got wet again on account of my thin -moccasins being easily soaked through on the -snow. I suddenly thought of the way in which -the Lapps, who tend our reindeer, manage to -dry socks. They carry grass with them, which -they ravel up and put into the shoe. Into this -they put their feet, and then pack the rest with -more grass, tying up the top with a binder. The -ropes of the harness for our dogs are carefully -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_407">407</span> -“served” all over with two layers of flannel, in -order to make them soft against the animal’s -sides. So, as soon as I could sit down, I started -with my trusty knife to rip up the flannel. -Though my fingers were more or less frozen, I -was able to ravel out the rope, put it into my -shoes, and use my wet socks inside my knicker-bockers, -where, though damp, they served to -break the wind. Then, tying the narrow strips -of flannel together, I bound up the tops of the -moccasins, Lapp fashion, and carried the bandage -on up over my knee, making a ragged -though most excellent puttee.</p> - -<p>In order to run easily and fast with our dogs -in the spring of the year, when the weather is -usually warm, we wear very light clothing; thus -we do not perspire at midday and freeze at -night. It chanced that I had recently opened -a box of football garments which I had not seen -for twenty years. I had found my old Oxford -University running “shorts,” and a pair of -Richmond Football Club stockings of red, -yellow, and black, exactly as I wore them twenty -years ago. These, with a flannel shirt and -sweater, were all I now had left. Coat, hat, -gloves, oilskins—everything else—were gone, and -I stood there in that odd costume exactly as I -stood in the old days on a football field. These -garments, being very light, dried all the quicker -until afternoon; then nothing would dry any -more, everything freezing stiff.</p> - -<p>My occupation till what seemed like midnight -was unravelling rope, and with this I padded -out my knickers inside and my shirt as well, -though it was a clumsy job, for I could not see -what I was doing. Now, getting my largest dog, -as big as a wolf and weighing ninety-two pounds, -I made him lie down in order that I could -cuddle around him. I then piled the three -skins so that I could lie on one edge, while the -other came just over my shoulders and head.</p> - -<p>My own breath, collecting inside the newly-flayed -skin, must have had a soporific effect, for -I was soon fast asleep. One hand I had -plunged down inside the curled-up dog, but the -other hand, being gloveless, had frozen, and I -suddenly woke, shivering enough, I thought, to -break my pan. What I took to be the sun -was just rising, but I soon found it was the -moon, and then I knew it was about half past -twelve. The dog was having an excellent time; -he had not been cuddled up so warmly all the -winter. He resented my moving with low -growls, till he found it wasn’t another dog.</p> - -<p>The wind was steadily driving me now towards -the open sea, where, short of a miracle, I could -expect nothing but death.</p> - -<p>Still I had only this hope—that my pan would -probably be opposite another village, called -Goose Cove, at daylight, and might possibly be -seen from there. I knew that the <i>komatiks</i> -would be starting at daybreak over the hills for -a parade of Orangemen about twenty miles away. -I might, therefore, be seen as they climbed the -hills, though the cove does not open seaward. -So I lay down and went to sleep again.</p> - -<p>I woke some time later with a sudden thought -in my mind that I must have a flag to signal -with. So I set to work at once in the dark to -disarticulate the legs of my dead dogs, which -were now frozen stiff, and seemed to offer the -only chance of forming a pole to carry a flag.</p> - -<p>Cold as it was, I determined to sacrifice my -shirt for that purpose with the first streak of -daylight. It took a long time in the dark to get -the legs off, and when I had patiently marled -them together with old harness rope they formed -the heaviest and crookedest flag-post it has ever -been my lot to see. Still it had the advantage -of not being so cold to hold, because the skin on -the paws made it unnecessary to hold the frozen -meat with my bare hands.</p> - -<p>What had awakened me this time, I found, -was that the pan had swung around and the -shelter made by my dogs’ bodies was on the -wrong side, for, though there was a very light air, -the evaporation it caused from my wet clothes -made quite a difference. I had had no food -since six o’clock the morning before, when I had -porridge and bread and butter. I had, however, -a rubber band on instead of one of my garters, -and I chewed that for twenty-four hours. It -saved me from thirst and hunger, oddly enough. -I did not drink from the ice of my pan, -for it was salt-water snow and ice. Moreover, -in the night the salt water had lapped up over -the edges, for the pan was on a level with the -sea. From time to time I heard the cracking -and grinding of the newly formed “slob,” and it -seemed that my little floe must inevitably soon -go to pieces.</p> - -<p>At last the sun really did rise, and the time -came for the sacrifice of my shirt. I stripped, -and, much to my surprise and pleasure, did not -find it was half so cold as I had anticipated. -I now reformed my dog-skins, with the raw side -out, so that they made a kind of coat, quite -rivalling Joseph’s. But with the rising of the -sun the frost came out of the joints of my dogs’ -legs, and the friction—caused, I suppose, by -waving it—made my flag-pole almost tie itself -in knots. Still, I could raise it three or four -feet above my head, which seemed very -important.</p> - -<p>Now, however, I found that, instead of having -drifted as far as I had reckoned, I was only off -some cliffs called Ireland Head, near which -there is a little village looking seaward, whence -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_408">408</span> -I should certainly have been seen had the time -been summer. But as I had myself, earlier in -the season, been night-bound at the place, I had -learnt there was not a single soul living there -in the winter. The people had all, as usual, -migrated to their winter houses up the bay, -where they get together for schooling and social -purposes.</p> - -<p>It was impossible to wave so heavy a flag as -mine all the time, and yet I dared not sit down, -for that might be the exact moment someone -would be in a position to see me from the hills. -The only thing in my mind was how long I -could stand up, and how long go on waving that -pole at the cliffs. Once or twice I thought I -saw men against their snowy faces, which I -judged were about five or six miles from me. -In reality, however, all the time I knew in my -heart of hearts that the black specks were only -trees. Once, also, I thought I saw a boat -approaching. A glittering object kept appearing -and disappearing on the water, but it was -merely a small piece of ice sparkling in the sun -as it rose on the surface.</p> - -<p>Physically I felt as well as ever I did in my -life, and with the hope of a long sunny day I -felt sure I was good to last another twenty-four -hours if my ice-raft would only hold out. I -determined to kill a big Eskimo dog I had at -midday and drink his blood (only a few days -before I had been reading an account of the -sustaining properties of dogs’ blood in Dr. -Nansen’s book) if I survived the battle with -him.</p> - -<p>I could not help feeling, even then, my -ludicrous position, and I thought if I ever got -ashore again I would have to laugh at myself -standing hour after hour waving my shirt at -those lofty cliffs, which seemed to assume a -kind of sardonic grin, so that I could almost -imagine they were laughing at me. I thought -of the good breakfast my colleagues were enjoying -just at the back of those same cliffs, and of -the snug fire and comfortable room which we -call our study.</p> - -<p>I can honestly say that from first to last -not a single sensation of fear entered my mind, -even when struggling in the “slob” ice. It all -seemed so natural; I had been through the ice -half-a-dozen times before. Now I merely felt -sleepy, and the idea was very strong in my mind -that I should soon reach the solution of the -mysteries that I had been preaching about for -so many years.</p> - -<p>It was a perfect morning, a cobalt sky and -an ultramarine sea, a golden sun, and an -almost wasteful extravagance of crimson pouring -over hills of purest snow, which caught -and reflected its glories from every peak -and crag. Between me and their feet lay -miles of rough ice, bordered with the black -“slob” formed during the night. Lastly, -there was my poor little pan in the fore-ground, -bobbing up and down on the edge -of the open sea, stained with blood, and littered -with carcasses and <i>débris</i>. It was smaller than -last night; the edges, beating against the new -ice around, had heaped themselves up in fragments -that, owing to its diminutive size, it -could ill spare. I also noticed that the new ice -from the water melted under the dogs’ bodies -had also been formed at the expense of its thickness. -Five dogs and myself in a coloured football -costume and a blood-smeared dog-skin cloak, -with a grey flannel shirt on a pole of frozen dogs’ -legs, completed the picture.</p> - -<p>The sun was almost hot by now, and I was -conscious of a surplus of heat in my skin cloak. -I began to look longingly at one of my remaining -dogs, for an appetite will rise even on an -ice pan. The idea of eating made me think -of fire, so once again I inspected my matches. -Alas! the heads had entirely soaked off them -all, except three or four blue-top wax matches -which were in a paste. These I now laid out to -dry, and I searched around on my snow pan to -see if I could get a bit of transparent ice with -which to make a burning-glass, for I was pretty -sure that, with all the unravelled tow stuffed into -my nether garments and the fat of the dead -dogs, I could make smoke enough to be seen if -I could only get a light.</p> - -<p>I had found a piece which it seemed might -answer the purpose, and had gone back to wave -my flag, which I did every two minutes, when -suddenly, for the second time, I thought I saw -the glitter of an oar. It did not seem possible, -however, for it must be remembered that it was -not water that lay between me and the land, but -“slob” ice, which, a mile or two inshore of me, -was very heavy. Even if people had seen me, -I did not think they could get through, though I -knew all of them would be trying. Moreover, -there was no smoke rising on the land to give -me hope that I had been seen. There had been -no gun flashes in the night, and I felt sure that, -had anyone seen me, there would have been a -bonfire on every hill to encourage me to keep -going. So I gave it up and went on with my -work. But the next time I went back to my -flag it seemed very distinct, and though it kept -disappearing as we rose and fell on the surface, -my readers can well imagine I kept my eyes in -that direction. Through my dark spectacles -having been lost, however, I was already partly -snow-blind.</p> - -<p>I waved the flag as high as I could raise it in -a direction to be broadside towards those places -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_409">409</span> -where I thought people might have gone out -around the ice after ducks, which is their main -occupation a little later in the year. I hoped -that they might then see my flag and come -straight on for me. At last, beside the glitter of -a white oar, I made out the black speck of a -hull. I knew then if the pan held out for -another hour that I should be all right.</p> - -<p>With that strange perversity of the human -intellect, the first thing I thought of when I -realized that a rescue -boat was under way was -what trophies I could -carry with my luggage -from the pan! I pictured -the dog-bone flagstaff -adorning my study—the -dogs intervened, -however, and ate it later -on—and I thought of preserving -my ragged puttees -in my museum.</p> - -<p>I could see that my -rescuers were frantically -waving, and when they -came within shouting -distance I heard someone -shout, “Don’t get -excited; keep on the -pan, where you are.” As -a matter of fact, they -were infinitely more -excited than I. Already -it seemed just as natural -to me now to be saved -as half an hour before -it seemed inevitable that -I should be lost. Had -my rescuers only known, -as I did, the sensations -of a bath in the ice -when you cannot dry -yourself afterwards, they -need not have expected -me to throw myself into -the water.</p> - -<p>At last the boat came -up, crashing into my pan -with such violence that -I was glad enough to -catch hold of the bow, -being more or less -acquainted by now with the frail constitution -of my floe, and being well aware it was -not adapted for collisions. Moreover, I felt for -the pan, for it had been a good and faithful -friend to me.</p> - -<p>A hearty handshake all round and a warm cup -of tea—thoughtfully packed in a kettle—inside, -and we hoisted in my remaining dogs and -instantly started back, for even then a change of -wind might have penned the boat with ice, -which would have cost us dearly. Indeed, the -men thought we could not return, and we -started for an island, in which direction the way -was all open.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i096.jpg"> -<img src="images/i096.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">“I COULD SEE THAT MY RESCUERS WERE FRANTICALLY WAVING.”</p> -</div> - -<p>There were not only five Newfoundland -fishermen at the oars, but five men with Newfoundland -muscles in their backs and arms and -five as brave hearts as ever beat in the bodies -of human beings. So we presently changed our -course and forced our way through to the shore.</p> - -<p>To my intense astonishment they told me -that the night before four men had been out on -a point of land, from which the bay is visible, -cutting some dead harp seals out from a store. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_410">410</span> -The ice had been extraordinarily hard, and it -had taken them till seven o’clock at night to cut -out twenty-four seals. Just at the very moment -before they left for home, my pan of ice had -drifted out clear of the island called Hare Island, -and one of them, with his keen fisherman’s eyes, -had seen something unusual. They at once -returned to their village, saying there was a man -on a pan, but they had been discredited, for -the people there thought it could only be -the top of some tree.</p> - -<p>All the time I had been driving along I knew -well that there was one man on the coast who -had a good spy-glass, and that he had twelve -children, among them some of the hardiest -young men on the coast. Many times my -thoughts had wandered to him, for his sons are -everywhere, hunting seals and everything else. -It was his sons, and another man with them, who -saw me, and were now with him in the boat. -The owner of the spy-glass told me he got up -instantly in the middle of tea on hearing the news, -and hurried over the cliff to the look-out with -his glass. Immediately, dark as it was, he made -out that there really -was a man out on -the ice. Indeed, he -saw me wave my -hands every now and -again towards the -shore. By a process -of reasoning very -easy on so unfrequented -a shore, they -immediately knew -who it was, but tried -to argue themselves -out of their conviction. -They went -down at once to try -and launch a boat, -but found it absolutely -impossible. -Miles of ice lay between -them and me, -the heavy sea was -hurling great blocks -on the land-wash, -and night was already -falling, with the wind -blowing hard on -shore. These brave -fellows, however, did -not sit down idly. -The whole village -was aroused, -messengers dispatched at once along the coast, -and look-outs told off to all the favourable -points, so that while I considered myself a -laughing-stock, waving my flag at those irresponsive -cliffs, there were really men’s eyes watching -from them all the time.</p> - -<p>Every soul in the village was on the beach as -we neared the shore, and everybody wanted to -shake hands when I landed. Even with the -grip that one after another gave me, some no -longer trying to keep back the tears, I did not -find out that my hands were frost-bitten—a fact -I have not been slow to appreciate since. A -weird sight I must have looked as I stepped -ashore—tied up in rags stuffed out with oakum, -wrapped in the blood-stained skins of dogs, with -no hat, coat, or gloves, and only a short pair of -knickers on! It must have seemed to some of -them as if the Old Man of the Sea had landed.</p> - -<p>No time was wasted before a pot of tea was -exactly where I wanted it to be, and some hot -stew was locating itself where I had intended -an hour before that the blood of one of my -remaining dogs should have gone.</p> - -<p>Rigged out in the -warm garments that -fishermen wear, I -started with a large -team as hard as I -could race for hospital, -for I had learnt -that the news had -gone over that I was -lost. It was soon -painfully impressed -upon me that I could -not much enjoy the -ride; I had to be -hauled like a log up -the hills, my feet -being frost-bitten so -that I could not -walk. Had I guessed -this before I might -have avoided much -trouble.</p> - -<p>We all love life, -and I was glad to be -back once more with -a new lease of it -before me. My colleague -soon had me -“fixed up,” and I -was presently enjoying -a really refreshing -sleep.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i097.jpg"> -<img src="images/i097.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE AUTHOR AS HE APPEARED AFTER HIS TERRIBLE EXPERIENCE ON -THE ICE FLOE, SHOWING THE FLAG-STAFF MADE OF DOGS’ BONES.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p class="copy">(Copyright, 1908, by Fleming H. Revell Company.) -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_411">411</span></p> - -<hr class="chap" /> -<h2 id="THE_WIDE_WORLD_In_Other_Magazines">THE WIDE WORLD: In Other Magazines.</h2> - -<h3>UNIQUE POST-OFFICE IN NEBRASKA.</h3> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i098a.jpg"> -<img src="images/i098a.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption"></p> -</div> - -<p class="drop"><span class="upper-case">Some</span> years ago, a traveller recounting his experiences -of the early days of the city of Nebraska, -U.S.A., says that on arriving at the odd collection of -shanties that then represented the beginnings of the city, -he inquired for the post-office, and was referred to an -old chap sitting on a log. Of this man he further -inquired where he could find the post-office, as he -expected a letter. The old chap removed his sombrero, -and, fumbling inside it, produced the expected -letter. Since then Nebraska has grown into considerable -importance as the capital of the State of -Nebraska.—“<span class="small">THE CAPTAIN.</span>”</p> - -<h3>CURIOUS FISHING SUPERSTITIONS.</h3> - -<p class="drop"><span class="upper-case">In</span> British Columbia the Indians ceremoniously -go out to meet the first salmon, and in flattering -voices try to win their favour by calling them all -chiefs. Every spring in California the Karaks used -to dance for salmon. Meanwhile one of their number -secluded himself in the mountains and fasted for ten -days. Upon his return he solemnly approached the -river, took the first salmon of the catch, ate some of -it, and with the remainder lighted a sacrificial fire. -The same Indians laboriously climbed to the mountain-top -after the poles for the spearing-booth, being -convinced that if they were gathered where the salmon -were watching no fish would be caught. In Japan, -among the primitive race of the Ainos, even the -women left at home are not allowed to talk, lest the -fish may hear and disapprove, while the first fish is -always brought in through a window instead of a -door, so that other fish may not see.—“<span class="small">TIT-BITS.</span>”</p> - -<h3>FLEMISH FISHERWOMEN.</h3> - -<p class="drop"><span class="upper-case">On</span> the coasts of Holland, Belgium, and Northern -France fisherwomen are a familiar sight, with -their great hand-nets and quaint costumes. Many -of the towns have distinctive costumes by which -their women can be recognised anywhere. Those of -Maria-Kirke, near Ostend, wear trousers and loose -blouses, while their heads and shoulders are covered by -shawls. They carry their nets into the sea, and scoop -up vast quantities of shrimps and prawns, with an occasional -crab or lobster and many small fish. They often wade -out till the water is up to their necks, and they remain -for hours at a time in water above their knees, rarely -returning until their baskets are full.—“<span class="small">WOMAN’S LIFE.</span>”</p> - -<h3>CANADA FOR THE SPORTSMAN.</h3> - -<p class="drop"><span class="upper-case">Canada</span> is an ideal country for the sportsman. Notwithstanding -its rapid commercial development, it -still has thousands of miles of wild and unexplored land, -where man has seldom or never trodden. Even in the -Eastern provinces, within a very short distance of civilization, -wild animals of many kinds—moose, caribou, elk, -deer, and even bears—still abound. From the Atlantic -coast to the Pacific slope, from the international boundary -line north to the Arctic circle, Canada offers magnificent -opportunities to the sportsman, whatever his tastes may -be; big and small game-shooting, fishing, camping, -canoeing.—“<span class="small">FRY’S MAGAZINE.</span>”</p> - -<h3>THE GEESE OF NIEDER-MÖRLEN.</h3> - -<p class="drop"><span class="upper-case">In</span> the little Hessean village of Nieder-Mörlen, between -Giessen and Frankfort, a strange scene may be -witnessed every evening at half-past five. Some two -thousand geese, which have spent the day on the river’s -bank below the village, at a given signal from their -leaders make their way homewards with much pomp and -circumstance and raucous noise. The strangest part of -the proceeding is seen when they reach the village street -and, without any guidance or driving, waddle each into -its own yard for the night. Like so many squads they -break off in their dozens from the main body, knowing -instinctively their owners’ door, and with solemn gait -enter in as though conscious of their own innate cleverness.—Mr. -A.H. Ross, in “<span class="small">THE STRAND MAGAZINE</span>.”</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i098b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i098b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption"> -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_412">412</span></p> -</div> - -<hr class="chap" /> -<h2 id="Odds_and_Ends">Odds and Ends.<br /> - -<span class="medium">A Wonderful Balanced Rock—What a Lightning Flash Did—The Sea Captain’s House, etc.</span></h2> - -<div> -<img class="drop-cap" src="images/n.jpg" alt="N" /> -</div> - -<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Near</span> Dome Rock, Colorado, thirty-two -miles up Platte Canyon from -Denver, is situated one of the most -wonderful balanced rocks in the -world. This rock, as will be seen -from the illustration, is poised with very little -of its surface touching the ground. The most -peculiar feature about the boulder is the -fact that it does not rest on a flat surface of -soft earth, but is perched out on an incline with -a very steep angle. The slope on which it -stands, moreover, is of smooth, solid rock, too -slippery for anyone to walk up, and how the -boulder maintains its position is a mystery.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i099.jpg"> -<img src="images/i099.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">A WONDERFUL BALANCED ROCK—IT IS PERCHED ON A STEEP SLOPE OF SMOOTH, SLIPPERY ROCK, AND HOW IT MAINTAINS -ITS POSITION IS A MYSTERY.<br /> -<i>From a Photo. by J. R. Bauer.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>Church bells and church plate, as related in a -recent <span class="smcap">Wide World</span> article, are not the only -kinds of buried treasure of which there are -traditions in Worcestershire. Mr. J.W. Willis -Bund, in his “Civil War in Worcestershire,” -says: “There is hardly a family who possessed -a landed estate at the time of the Civil War -that has not some legend of concealed treasure. -For instance, the Berkeleys, of Spetchley, say -their butler, to save the family plate, hid it -under one of the elms in the avenue. The -butler was wounded, and tried with his last -breath to confide his secret to a member of -the family, but could get no further than -’plate,’ ‘elm,’ ‘avenue,’ and died; so that -the plate remains hidden to this day.” The -occasion upon which the Berkeley plate was -hidden was the sack and burning of their -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_413">413</span> -family mansion at Spetchley, upon the eve -of the Battle of Worcester, by the Scots troops -who accompanied Charles II. from the North. -Sir Robert Berkeley was a devoted Royalist and -had suffered much for -the King, and members -of his family were serving -in the Royal army; but -the Scots, who had fought -upon both sides, were -not careful to distinguish -between friend and foe. -The only portion of -Spetchley which escaped -the flames was the -stabling. Here Cromwell -made his head-quarters, -and after the war Judge -Berkeley converted the -building into a house -and lived there for many -years. The elm avenue -in Spetchley Park, -where the plate was -buried, still exists, and -is one of the finest in -Worcestershire. For the -photograph given above -we are indebted to -the courtesy of Mr. T. -Duckworth, of the -Worcester Victoria Institute.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i100a.jpg"> -<img src="images/i100a.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE ELM AVENUE IN SPETCHLEY PARK, WORCESTERSHIRE—A FAITHFUL BUTLER, AT THE TIME OF THE -CIVIL WAR, BURIED THE FAMILY PLATE UNDER ONE OF THE TREES TO SAVE IT FROM THE ENEMY, BUT -DIED BEFORE HE COULD REVEAL THE SECRET OF THE HIDING-PLACE.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>The curious little -building seen in the -next photograph -stands at the end of -a private walk on the -shores of the River -Orwell, in Suffolk. It -is known as the “Cat -House,” for the -reason that, in the -“good old times,” a -white cat used to be -exhibited at a window -visible from the river -as a signal to smugglers, -who flourished -in the locality. When -the animal was shown, -the “Free-Traders,” -as the contrabandists -were euphemistically -called, knew that the -coast was clear, and -promptly sailed up -and landed their -cargo, secure from -the attentions of the “preventives.” Near -“Cat House” is Downham Reach, which was -the scene of some of Margaret Catchpole’s most -exciting adventures.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i100b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i100b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE “CAT HOUSE,” NEAR IPSWICH, SO CALLED BECAUSE A WHITE CAT WAS EXHIBITED AT THE -WINDOW AS A SIGNAL TO SMUGGLERS.<br /> -<i>From a Photo. by Frith & Co.</i> -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_414">414</span></p> -</div> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i101.jpg"> -<img src="images/i101.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THIS TERRIFIC OIL FIRE, STARTED BY A LIGHTNING FLASH, DID A HUNDRED AND FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS’ WORTH -OF DAMAGE.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>The accompanying photograph depicts a -terrific oil fire, which occurred on the night -of June 23rd, 1908, at Warren, Pennsylvania. -The conflagration started through a tank being -struck by lightning, and in a very short time -twenty-five oil-holders, large and small, together -with the wax-house, were destroyed. The fire -burned for nearly twenty-four hours, and its -fierceness is almost impossible to conceive. -The total loss incurred was something like one -hundred and fifty thousand dollars.</p> - -<p>The extraordinary-looking dwelling seen in -the next picture was built to exactly resemble -a steamship’s bridge, with chart-room and other -appurtenances all complete. This curious erection -is situated at Algorta, near Bilbao, in the -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_415">415</span> -North of Spain, and is called “Casa-Barco,” -or “house-boat.” It was -probably built by a retired sea-captain, -who felt like a fish out of -water until he had provided for -himself the same environment to -which he had been used during his -active career at sea. One can -imagine the old gentleman taking -his evening walk to and fro along -the lofty bridge, scanning the surrounding -country with a sailor’s -eye, and half inclined now and -then to ring for “more speed,” or -to send an order down the tube to -the steersman.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i102a.jpg"> -<img src="images/i102a.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">A HOUSE BUILT TO RESEMBLE A STEAMSHIP’S -BRIDGE.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>The cat seen in the next photograph -was the pet of the crew of -the ill-fated whaler <i>Windward</i>, -which was wrecked in Baffin’s Bay -last season. After the disaster -pussy had a long, cold voyage in -the open boats in which the ship-wrecked -men pulled—amidst ice-bergs, -snow, and tossing seas—for -over five hundred miles, encountering -dangers and adventures galore, -till after three weeks of fearful -exposure and hardship they were -picked up by the whaler <i>Morning</i>, -in which the correspondent who -sent us the picture was a passenger. -“Pussy then made up for -her sufferings by making her home -in my bunk,” he writes. “During -the cold nights of the Arctic autumn -I found her a very good substitute for -a hot-water bottle.”</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i102b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i102b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">A CAT WHICH MADE A FIVE-HUNDRED-MILE VOYAGE IN AN OPEN BOAT IN THE -ARCTIC OCEAN.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i102c.jpg"> -<img src="images/i102c.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">ANOTHER REMARKABLE ROCK—IT IS AN ALMOST PERFECT -GLOBE, AND THOUGH IT PROBABLY WEIGHS -TWENTY TONS FOUR STRONG MEN CAN SET IT SPINNING -ON ITS BASE.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<p>On the foreshore of the Mata Beach, -Mangapai, New Zealand, stands the -remarkable rock shown above. It is an -almost perfect sphere of hard blue -rock, shot with white quartz, of an -entirely different formation from any -other known rocks in the district. The -mystery is, of course, to know how -it reached its present position on -the soft sandstone of the beach. -Popular opinion is that in distant ages -it was shot from a volcano, since -extinct. The rock, which probably -weighs twenty tons, rests in a cup like -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_416">416</span> -depression in the sandstone formation on which -it stands, and is so nicely poised that four strong -men, encircling it with their arms and all pushing -one way, can set it spinning on its base.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<div class="tcell"> -<a href="images/i103a.jpg"> -<img src="images/i103a.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE BULL-THROWER SEIZING THE ANIMAL BY THE TAIL.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph.</i></p> -</div> - -<div class="tcell"> -<a href="images/i103b.jpg"> -<img src="images/i103b.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">OVER! THE BULL GOES CRASHING TO EARTH AMID A -CLOUD OF DUST.<br /> -<i>From a Photograph</i></p> -</div> -</div> - -<p>The two snapshots reproduced above illustrate -striking phases of an exciting Mexican pastime—that -of flooring bulls with the hand from horseback! -The rider, galloping after the bull, seizes -it by the tail and, passing his leg over the tail -for the sake of leverage, pulls the poor beast -round sideways until it trips and goes crashing to -earth amidst a cloud of dust. Needless to say, -the bull-thrower needs a strong hand and steady -nerves, or he may find himself in trouble.</p> - -<div class="figcenter"> -<a href="images/i103c-lrg.jpg"> -<img src="images/i103c.jpg" -alt="" /></a> -<p class="caption">THE MAP-CONTENTS OF “THE WIDE WORLD MAGAZINE,” WHICH SHOWS AT A GLANCE THE LOCALITY OF EACH ARTICLE AND -NARRATIVE OF ADVENTURE IN THIS NUMBER.</p> -</div> - -<div class="transnote"> -<h3>Transcriber's Note:</h3> - -<p>Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation are as in the original.</p> -</div> - - - - - - - - -<pre> - - - - - -End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Wide World Magazine, by Various - -*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WIDE WORLD MAGAZINE *** - -***** This file should be named 50608-h.htm or 50608-h.zip ***** -This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: - http://www.gutenberg.org/5/0/6/0/50608/ - -Produced by Victorian/Edwardian Pictorial Magazines, -Jonathan Ingram, Wayne Hammond, and the Online Distributed -Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net - - -Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will -be renamed. - -Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright -law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, -so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United -States without permission and without paying copyright -royalties. 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