THE SCRANTON TlUBlJiNE-JL-'lUDAr, DECEMBER 22, 1899. ARMY ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT A HEAD QUEER TLIQHT OF THE CHINESE EMPIHE. More Than a Million Soldiers With out a Central Commander Individ ually They Aro Bravo Men, but in Organization nnd "Equipment They Are Simply Grotesque Navy Like the Army. Ucrlln Correspondence of London Times. I am able to forward to you a trans lation of the most Interesting portion of an article on tho Chinese army from the pen of Uaron von Heltzlngen, a. major in the German army, who has been out for some time In China re organzing a portion of the Chinese forces, and who holds tho Chinese rank of general. The following Is his de scription of the Chinese army: The peculiarity of the political geo graphical and economical conditions of China, the historical development of the state and of the family, and other causes, have given a peculiar character to the Chinese defensive system. As military forces arc to be noticed the Manchu troops, the provincial troops and the so-called Irregulars, which are enlisted In case of need and again dis missed. No such thing exists ns a centralized command of these bodies. The Manchu troops aro In general the descendants of the Mnnchus and of thoi-o Mongols and Chinese who In the seventeenth century overthrew the Ming dynasty and established the pres ent one upon the throne. They still constitute the chief support of tho Ta tslng dvnasty, nnd are divided Into eight "banners," according to their eight differently colored flags. ThMr strength may be reckoned at about 'loo.Oui men. Originally they were kept In Peking as a body guard, but the viceroys of the provinces, In order to weaken the central authority, manage 1 to break up this force under the pre text that they wished the Imperial power to have representatives in the provinces. According to other accounts the detachments wcte sent them from the beginning in order to enable them to keep control of tho eonqueicd ter ritories. These troops are quartered In parts of the town specially walled In, the so-called Tartar quarters. The obligation to military service Is here ditary among them, and originally. In addition to concessions of land, they received high pay and portions of rice from the court. Even now every Man chu receives a salary from the emper or but It Is so small that It does not sunice for his own maintenance, much less that of his family. However, the military duties aro not fulfilled very conscientiously, and the soldiers have plenty of time to devote to other oc cupations. Marriages between Man chus ami Chinese are strictly forbid den, but 1 have none the less seen a considerable number of small-footed women in the Tartar quarter at Han king, and Manchu women, as is well known, aie not allowed to cripple themselves by artlliclally lessening the size of their foot. livery son of a Manchu and Manchurln Is entered by name In a roll kept by the govern ment and Is entitled to a salary from the imperial treasury. Although tho Manchu troops have degenerated con siderably through the Idleness of their live, they have, nevertheless, even In quiet lecent times, given proofs ef their devotion to the throne and of heroli' courage. In the streets of the Tartar quarter the angular, light brown faces of the well built men, and the curious headgear nnd long red trousers of tho women, form an agree able contrast to the Chinese custom. The Tartar general Is the commander of the few thousand Manchues who are stationed In eaci province. He holds with the governor a privileged position in the province. These Man chu garrisons are of verv little use; they rather tend to Increase the dis content of the Chinese by reminding them that they are a subjert race. Tn considering the external development of the Imperial power the Manchu troops may bo neglected. Till: PUOVIN'CIATj TROOPS, The provincial troops, with their green banners, are recruited entirely from the Chinese population. They arc under the control of the vicerovs and governors and are enlisted voluntarily. They constitute the g.tnisons of the most Important towns and aro In trusted with watch, police and Inspec tion duties. They number about 10( 000 or r.no.OOO men. A small number of these troops stand In a close relation to the governor and act as his bodv guard. The only control the central government has over tho provincial troops Is that It settles the amount of the nnnual estimates and appoints tho superior officers. Judged by our conceptions the Chi nese troops are, to all intents and pur poses, quite untrained, badly nrmd nnd thus useless. M"reoer they lack a centralized command. The so-called "braves" are still to bo counted aa among the best. They are better armed and provided for. Some of them have been through a course of EurJ pean drill, and their oflkers Pave been trained In military schools. The duty of arranging for th commissariat and armament of the troops Is intrusted to tho generaln and the superinten dents of the camps. These maintain, ns a rule, only a small proportion of tho legulatlon strength, a fraud which Is connived at by the superior official-), who divide tho profit with them. Oc casionally a camp is temporarily or oven permanently broken up but It Btlll appears p the accounts. The wages which are paid are generally insufficient, and the soldiers endeavor to supplement their myitis by private work and by robberv. Chinese oflicers regard the post of mm erlntendent of a camp as a speculation. Cheating is universal. The nccou ferment and training of tho soldiers are dlffeient In every province. In ono province the men are exercised with antiquated lances, halberds and plls. in another with Martini rifles, nnd In another with Herman model 8S. Tn ono year Krupp guns are brought out, remain lying about somewhere and in a short tlmo are in such a state that It is Impossible to use them. The oflicers are secretly glad of the opportunity to buy new weapons, nnd make a snvill profit on tho transaction. Tho officers. HUo all other ollclals In China, have to make their living by embezzlement. They obtain their position by the favor of high officials and disappear with the fall of their patrons without receiving either fi pension or further employ ment. The conurtion is Increased by the fact that rank nnd official post are obtained by purchase, and tint punishments, even for serious crimes, can be bought off. Ah Is natural in such clrcumstancea, hlleobedlonoe Is rife in the official world. The attempt at re-orgranlration after European models which have been made by somo governors have made no progress. Tin body of troops formed at Wusung has fallen back Into Chinese hands, NAVY ALMOST AS BAD. What has been said of tho military forces applies to a certain degree to the navy, although tho officers are here better trained, nnd In soma Instances honorably anxious to do good work. Tho purchase of modern ships of war and torpedo boats is being carried on as rapidly as means will allow; but there Is a lack of officers capable of commanding nil these ships and main taining an undivided control over them. It must be added that neither tho land nor the sea forces are sufficiently sup ported. There Is a lack of roads, rail ways and modern formications. The so-called fortresses are mostly built with sloping walls of clay scarcely a foot thick at tho top. Forts built uc coidlng to European nations are only to be met with at a few places on tho coast. Of those in tho north, the fort resses which, In conjunction with tho fleet, were designed to defend the en trance Into tho Oulf of Pe-chl-11 have passed Into the possession of the Euro epan powers. Port Arthur and Ta-llen-wan, and of Chl-fuan. tho northenst point of the Slmn-tung peninsula. There remain to be mentioned the forts which protect the coasts of tho Gulf of Lcao-tong and of the Gulf of Pe-chl-11, Of those, ln-hw, on the Lnnho river, has to protect Mukden. The most lmpoitant link in the chain of fortifications defending the approach to Peking Is Taku, at the mouth of tho Pelho river. It Is Intended to protect the barrier of the liver, and there Is a lino of forts extending from Taku to Tien-Tsin and the camp -y the north ern at my. Of the fortifications of tho Yang-tse river, the fort at Wusung has recently fallen Into cfmplete de cay. The Nan-shl-tang and the mod ern Szctzelln battery still remain. At ICiau-yong, too. there ure a few modern batteries existing side by side with the ancient ones, and the same Is true of Tsln-Kiang. Further up the river the batteries at Nanking are the only for tifications of any Importance. To the more Important fortresses of the southern coasts of China belong tho fortifications of Tsln-Hal, which guard the entrance to Hang-Chau, and those of Fu-Chau at the mouth of the Blvcr Mln. which consist of five forts built by French engineers. Further south we find the fortresses of Amoy and Swatcau, and. opposite Hong Kong, tho group of forts at Canton. These last consist of three zones intended, in con nection with mines and torpedoes, to protect Canton from attack. It would not be worth while to consider more fully the importance of these vailous fortifications. The high clay walls of tho majority of the forts, the sentry houses, the flag poles and the high gates offer magnificent marks 4ir ar tillery. Tho protected shooting places are quite antiquated. The size of tho court-yards, with the clay huts which they contain, facilitates the destruc tion of the forts. Only a few battel ies conespond to modern con.-eptions. Bat teries, too, are to be found which are composed of twenty or more guns dif fering entirely from one another In size ami consti action. This fact alone would render It Impossible for the action of the whole battery to be directed by a single will, and the same effect is pro duced by the placing of a single gun at the summit of each of the J Ills at Kiau-Yong and Nanking. Hut the Im portant principle that the flic of a bat tery should be directed from a single center is not understood by the Chi nese, with whom It Is not the officer, but tho man In charge of the gun, who directs tho firing. The guns, too, are In a very sad state where there are no European instruc tors. In the forts on tho Yang-tse lino powder Is even now used for heavy Krupp guns, while on the other hand brown prismatic powder Is used for firing salutes with Armstrongs. Tables of charges are only to he found when they havo been fixed to tho guns. Cov erings and packings are not, as a rule, watertight. Ammunition Is generally placed in damp rooms, nnd nobody has any Idea of the ballistic capacities of the guns. CO-OPERATION NOT UNDERSTOOD But even if the fortifications were u a better state, they would be of little use to China, for there Is no commander who is capable of under standing what is meant by the co operation of troops and fortifications. There is not even an officer who has a clear idea of the Co-operation of different Kinds of troops on the field of battle, and from this judgment I would not even except Lieutenant Gen eral In-Chang, who speaks German and is at present In command of the northern troops. During tho many years I spent in China I only once heard of a proposed combined strategic avium vi me troops, i iefer to the plan which Is reported to have been drawn up by the counsel of war at Peking and sanctioned by Impeilal decree for use In case of war with i European power. According to this plan LIn-kun-I. the viceroy of Nan king, would be appointed as commander-in-chief of the Yangtse valley with C3.000 men under him. The Viceroy Cheng-Chl-Tung, in Wut-Chang, would bo entiusted with the command of 4S.000 men in the central portion of Yangtse. The defense of the west would be under the control of the gov ernots of Hu-Pol and Hu-Nitn with 1S. 000 and 30.000 men respectively. The waterways of the Yangtse would be protected by Admiral Huan with 40, 000 men. General LI of An-HIn would be appointed to command the southern fleet. I have not been able to ascer tain with certainty whether this plan has any real existence. In any case tho Chinese government has not at its command one-tenth of the number of soldiers whose disposition Is thus arranged for, and, tho lack of roads would render It very difficult to use them as proposed. And then, too, It must be considered that these troops lack everything they would need to take the field with any chance of success; leadership, disci pllne. training, arms, accouterment and commissariat, all aro wanting. Even tho small corps that was built up wlih such energy nnd success at Wu-Sung Is no longer an exception to the rule, since it has been removed to Klnu Yong, and deprived of its German in structors. The China of tho present day has, In fact, no understanding for military matters, nor has the govern ment the money necessary for tho cre ation of a good army. Nono tho less tho government has recently taken up once more the idea of reforms, which, however, aro chiefly concerned with tho extension and improvement of tho navy. It is not soldiers nor modem weapons of which China has the greatest nefd. What is wanted is a man with tho courage and ability to bieak with tho old traditions, to utilize tho treasures which exist In the country, to reorgan ize tho administration, to put an end to the mlszovernment of the official-. S5'1! riJi. n v: a S3& 88 m SSHM mi to create an cflli'Ient hody of troopi under the control of one central au thority, and to construct roads and lallways so that troops could ho Im mediately dispatched wheievcr a dis play of military power was necessary to defend the empire. AMONG THE AFRIKANDERS. The Boer Women Have an Intense Hatred of the English. From the New York Trlliune. "Tho Boers of South Aft lea aro a distinct race liy themselves," said Louise V. Sheldon, who lived thrfta ypars In South A ft lea. "They aio and always will remain pilmltlvo men and women, who iicfer to live on Isolated fauns, far from am neighbors. The, Boer's ancestor, probably som-j Dutch or French Huguenot exile, 'trekked' tc the command of the outlander, who came and took possession of his idavcH and farm. Hut he will not 'trtk' again to please nny enemv. "Tho Boer women nre very prolific, many of them having fioni fifteen U, twenty-three children. This Is not an uncommon fact, and these children an ruled by their mother with u strong hut silent hand. Tho women of this race aro tall and massive, with glanta for sons, '.hom they bring up In bare footed freedom to tun over their na tive veldt. "Good features' and n beautiful com plexion aiv common to the Boer wo men, and, althoiiRh shfi muy only live In a piimltlve house of cement and clay, nho Is most careful of her looks. When Jn an ox wuuoii cr cape cart sho .f WE HAVE CUT THE PRICES TODAY ON ALL HOLIDAY GOODS. THERE MUST NOT BE A DOL LAR'S WORTH LEFT WHEN THE CURTAIN RINQS DOWN LATE SATURDAY NIQHT. NEVER HAVE QIFT QOODS BEEN SO LITTLE PRICED AS NOW. Christmas Thin There are none of us infallible. We go to the markets and look over the Christmas novelties ; we see things that we think will sell, we bring them home and spread them out before you in all their gorgeous array. As a rule, we are not disappointed; the gift-things find quick owners here. But not always. And so it happens that certain lots of articles, bought for the Holiday Trade, are not marching out of the store as quickly as we could wish. It may be the price; if so, we have remedied that for Friday. It certainly is not the styles or qualities for over our buyers is the generalship of experts, who seldom make mistakes. W O'CLOCK &i This week's sale, coupled with our enormous Christmas trade, Holiday Goods are added several articles at startlingly low prices. Come early in the day if you can. Decorated Lamps. $1.25 instead of $1.4!) and $1.8!). This for your choice on Friday of nearly a hundred. All hand-decorated, with globe or dome shades, extra large burners and twenty i-tylcs and colors to choose- from. All day Frida after 10 o'clock. Double Roasters. "J!l cents instead of -10 cents. May as well have the turkey done to a (urn when you can buy a roaster for so little. Double roasters, too. Made with patent vent will hold the biuigest bird that ever strutted into your kitchen. All day Friday after 10 o'clock. Lace Curtains, SI. Ill iutead of $2 the pair. Wu have never offered a better bar Ran in our upholstery store than is this one. Very fine quality curtains, full :'M yards long and ." 1 inches wide, complete with white pole an ornament to any home. All day Friday after 10 o'clock. Cluster Scarfs. $;.!)S instead of live dollars. This for your choice on Friday of seventy-five Cluster Scarfs in Stone Marten, Sable and Klectric Seal; also a few in the much desired imitation Silver Fox. This is a typical fur season never have cluster scarfs been so much in de mand; the markets arc practically empty and yet we give you this unparalleled chance for Friday. All the newest season's shapes. All day Friday after 10 o'clock. i drives with iter face swathed in foldod linen, allowing only the oves to remain uncovered. The hot winds that t-weep over the country from tho Kalharl de sert blister and burn and play h.noc with the .-d:ln "She Is not as ignorant as one would suppose, but she lacks that woildly wlso self-possession which the Eng lish woman ha cultivated. she Is In a way shy and speechless before a foreigner, unless he or she Is an American; then a metuinoiphosH takes place. Her eyes spaikle, a littlo added color files to her cheeks as she sayy, 'You come lroiii u republic llko our own.' "She Is encrpetlc to such a degrea that It llrt.i an Ameikiin woman who i.i not a club woman to watch her. Her leligion Is of tho Hutch reformed creed, and she and hr family 'trek' Into town every three months to a beautiful church built of stone, erected at a cost of $30 000 or Si'u.OW. In a vll lago of not over 1,000 Inhabitants. "Ufr lazy, black, native ervanth havo to bo told ewry day from tho time they arrive from their distant huts in the morning until night Just what they must do. The Ka'llr has no memory for the white man's work, and therefore n, sharp "stick well laid on his back Is the .inly argument which tho Boer frau u.us and which will make him woik. "She can always get servants, strange to say, while- her Knfcllsh neighbor will bo forced to do her own work through lack of understanding how to rule them. Until or.e lives In the country and closely observes tha customs of the capo people lu govern u Illustrated Bibles. $1." on Friday instead of three dol lars. What more appropriate gift than a liiblc a good one that can be handed down from generation to generation. We offer on Friday only and on no other day, fifty Teachers' Bibles, con taining over six hundred magnificent il lustrations of Bible scenes and localities. Printed on superior quality of paper, bound in full morocco, silk sewed, full Divinity circuit, red under gilt edges, and complete with maps and helps. These arc the famous illuminated edi tion that have attracted universal atten tion. They arc sold in most stores at five and six dollars. Only fifty of them Friday at the special price of $1.S." much less than cost. All day Friday after 10 o'clock. Boys' Suits. $US the suit, instead of $'2.7i). Don't know of a much more agree able present to give a boy than a suit of clothes especially when you can buy the expensive kinds at our low Friday prices. breasted in style, heavy in weight and in many pretty and desired patterns, in any pretty and desired patterns. All sies from seven to fifteen years. All day Friday after 10 o'clock. is Is, ing' the native tho servant question remains as difficult to solve as heie. "The Boer frau stays at home and uins the farm (of several thousand acres), while the men of the family go to war, and her In'ierlted and ac quired hatred of the 1'ngllsh Is so in tense that she glories In being able to send her sons to destiny them. Sh. Is extreme In her llla-s and dlsllkea, nnd tho Bngllshman his no bitterer foe than the Boer frau. "The EngllMi have no love for prim itive, uncultured people, and they hava on several occasions presumed upon the outwnrd appfaramo cf timidity In the Boer, and in turn been soundly thrashed, "No one but Amc: leans could ever amalgamate with the Boers, and that will never be, because Americans hava enough to do Jn developing naturo's storehouses in their own country, for the poorest mines In Cripple Creek, Colo, which un not considered worth working, arc richer than tho vlchest minrs In tho Johannesburg gold llelds.- CASTOR! A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears tho &tSM& Signature rices cupse: ats OCLQCK will be a record-breaker. Photo Frames. IS cents instead of 150 cents. This for your choice of a big quantity of Photo Frames, seven by nine inches in size will hold the largest cabinets. Made with easel backs and finished with mats in front. A decided bargain at the price. All day Friday after 10 o'clock. Hand Sleds. L'O cents Friday instead of ."!) cents. There's plenty of snow ahead but the Big Store cannot wait for it. The little folks can, if they've a pretty sled to look t. Let's suppose that we need the room (and we do) and that you need the sleds. A fair exchange will be no robbery so come for these on Friday at twenty cents. In two styles the high one for girls, made with bent knees and prettily painted; the low ones for the bins made very strong to withstand all sorts of knocks. All day Friday after 10 o'clock. Rocking Chairs. Two lots for Friday a splendid gift for very little monev. Thc$L'.ri0 kind at $1.!)P. The $:i.00 kind at $li.2;t. Three hundred parlor rockers in ma hogany and oak finish. Your choice of saddle, cobbler or upholstered seat-. Made with high carved backs, turned and straight spindles and broad arms. An unprecedented offering right in the midst of the Christmas season. There'll be three hundred happy homes tomorrow night. All day Fridav after 10 o'clock. FOR CHRISTMAS Fine Umbrellas Eudless variety of Handles, Tied Oaks, Natural Crooks, Sterling Silver, Etc., in Taffeta, Puritan, Gloria and Fine Twill Silk. Great variety of '. ',' Pocket Books, 'pi Card Cases, Shopping Dags, ';; Boston Bags in Seal Alligator; V Morocco, Riissia Leather, Etc., Etc. : MEARS & HAGEN, m ssa 'f: To the wWM mm PRESENTS 415417 Lackawanna Ave. 1 n