I TENT LIFE—— 1 1 —AT TAMPA. J SNAP SHOTS DESCRIBING THE DO- H || MESTIC SIDE OF CAMPING. § FULLY a mile and a quarter north of the Court House on Franklin street, * n a s r ° ve °' Fi° r * Ihtfflri ida pines, lies the liJJjpScamp of the United yiMp/ vf\y States forc « s i n The Northerner reaching Tampa at night now can hardly realize that he left New York or Washington so short a time before. The real color of this first impression is given by the brown faced, roughly clothed troops, who tramp up and down, and gossip in the doorways—men who show in their faces the grit and daring that have led to victory since Cfcsar's time, and in their bodies the endurance of Indians and the strength of a 'Var sity rush-line. At first the careless ness of their attire creates an unfa vorable impression. Half of them parade the streets in their shirts. Every man seems to have au individ ual way of wearing his hat. Some stick tne top straight up, others jam it flat, and the rest. wear it as sane people always thought it should be worn. Their leggings are of un dressed leather, neat and serviceable. For the most part their chins are covered with the fuzzy beginnings of campaign beards. Electric cars run from the camp. Once on the camping-ground the visi tor finds the soft shade of the pines in place of the white glare of the open he has left. He sees the new PK r a g - Jorgensen t rifle s stacked ■ down the com pany streets, and the ammunition belts, each carry ing two hundred cartridges, hung over them. The new bayonet is a knife-liue weapon several inches SHOWERY WEATHER, shorter than those of the old triangular form, and fur nished with a haft. Most of the men, when at leisure, go into town, the others lounge in their tents, reading and talking. A reason able amount of good-natured horse play is seen among them. Among the men nothing but words of praise are to be heard for their officers, and among the officers nothing but good things of their men. The officers know ( ( 1•> that in battle the Mi, troops under them will do as they are ,7,' ordered, to the let- J I *jj ter; and the men Ju know that they will tilJw be told to do the -- -IkJl'-if right thing at the Outside fatigue duties, their regu- AFTER THE RAIN. Jar routine consists of drill at sis in the morning, half an hour's march in full kit at noon, and "guard mount" in the evoning, followed by "retreat." At all times of the day troop-trains with artillery-men, and pack-trains with their guns and horses, pass through Tampa on their way to Port Tampa; white and colored fly through, followed by cheers and blessings. Then the last car swings out of sight, and we know that in hfllf an hour an other battery will be under canvas in tho neighboring camp, and that an BOUffDINaj THE SEVILLE. other pawn is moved to help in the checkmating of Spain. In the camp there is drill every morning nt seven; regimental drill and brigade drill. As an instance of how regiments are scattered among the cramped army posts of the United States, it is to be noted that many offi cers have now seen regimental drill for the first time. Brigade drill is a still greater novelty. After morning drill the men are allowed and expected to loaf. In this hot weather loafing is, in fact, a part of the regimen. The camps look like very sleepy places by noonday, though all as they should be. On Sundays there is still greater re laxation. Many goto the long rail way piles and docks at Port . /M Tampa, where a /II breeze may be /W if waited for One excursion *' 9 Batter y 'Point, on the " other shore of ■CAMP FORAOERB CAP- the stubby pen tcss A PP.IZI. insula which supports Port Tampa. In the fore ground is the high hulk of a vessel left to strand there several years ago under yellow fever quarantine, and since used for storage purposes by a phosphate company. The vessel is or was the Osceola, of Buenos Ayres. Blue-shirted soldiers fishing for suck ers and occasional pompano from her EVERY SOLDIER HIS OWN "WASHERWOMAN." rotting decks or stripping and swim ming in the shade of her uplifted bilge are among the exotic sights in Tampa these days. The camp of a regiment is laid out like a little village and is a model of neatness and order. Not a scrap of paper or vestige of debris of any sort is seen through its length and breadth. STORY-* /.LINO AROT'XD THE CAMP-FIRE. and the men who "police," or clean, go over the field as a New England housewife picks threads from her car pet. AU the work of this sort in a regiment is done by its prisoners— men who are under short arrest for misdemeanors or for some breach of military regulations; and, clad in brown, they go about in detachments of two or three under guard of a sen try, who bears a loaded rifle and who is responsible for the prisoners he is in charge of. When a regiment is going into camp the busiest and most harassed person in it is the qnartermaster. He it is who has charge of all camp equipage and who is responsible for the trans portation of it Also he must stand ready to supply any deficiency, from feed for horses or mules to a coat for some private who is suddenly minus his; and he and the commissary ser geant, his right hand man, think not of themselves until the regiment is in- stalled under cover. Eaoh officer car ries his own camp outfit—tent, blan kets and mees cheat—and sees to it before he leaves garrison. There his responsibility practically ceases and falls upon the shoulder of his"stryker" —not a socialist, but a servant pro vided an officer by army regulations. The is a sort of general facto tum, and is usually a man from the officer's own company or troop. He is a jack of all trades, and good at them, too; and when the regiment reaches camp he makes at once for his own particular officer and looks after him. It is the stryker who pitches the tent and unpacks what luggage his superior may have after he has first extracted it from the pile of regiment al impedimenta. He fetches water and puts the towels by the hand ba sin, and sometimes he even builds a bed. In the meantime, while officers' tents are going v up, those for the com panies are being pitched with perfect order, and in an inoredibly short time are taut and fast. They are laid out in sets of two lines on what are called the "nojimanv Htrant.a " and dav and night ore patrolled by sentries who have two hoars on and four off alter nately. Near the company street are the kitchens—the tents where the ''grab" is cooked for the men, and for the officers as well, who have theirß served in the "mess tent," where two or three have gathered together to be served as one set instead of eating separately. Not only do the offioers thns have cne another's society, bat dabbing together cats down expenses, for whatever an officer has in mess outside of the commissary provision he pays for from his own pocket. There are always several "messea" (the work strikes civilian ears most unpleasantly) through the regiment, and those officers who are known to be bons viveurs under all conditions are eagerly besought to take into theirs those who are not so expert in providing the goods of life even when they have the money and inclination. The offioers' "line" is always a little away from the men's tents, which are under the immediate charge of the first seargeant and corporals of each company, and at the top of the "line" is "headquarters," where the colonel and his staff are established. The men in camp usually smuggle in some kind of a pet or "mascot," which is not always left behind when the order comes to move, unless it may be into action. The Sailor*' Hen Coop. A sailorman is fond of pets, but a ship is no place for animal life. How ever, there nre few ships, sail or steam, that do not carry out of port a coop of hens and a rooster. These seem to be for company, or associa tion, or something of that sort, for the oldest mariner never heard of one of the hens being killed for the mess, and a hen at sea absolutely refuses to lay eggs, and small blame to them. The hen coop is generally placed on the forward deck, near the fo'c'sle, in which the sailors live. They have a box of sand in which to roll and are made as comfortable as possible. Af ter one or two'voyages the hens be come excellent eailors, and it is a queer sight to see them balauce them selves on their sea-legs when the ship tosses and rolls. When the ship is in dock the fowls are always driven into their coop and kept there until the ship is at sea, when they are released and given the freedom of the deck. At night they seek the shelter of their coop of their own accord.—Kansas City (Mo.) Star. A Itunuway Star. There is in the constellation of the Great Bear a famous little star which has been called a "runawoy," because of the extraordinary speed with which it is moving. But it is so far away that the effect of its motion can only be Loted by careful astronomical ob servations. Professor Simon New comb has said of this star, which bears the name "1830 Oroombridge," that the united attractions of the en tire known universe could not have set it going with such velocity and would be unable to arrest it. Now Professor Kapteyn announces tho dis covery of a telescopic star in the southern hemisphere, in the constella tion Pictor, which appear to be mov ing considerably faster yet. What its real velocity is, however, can only be told when its distance is known.— San Francisco Chronicle. ElMtlc Shoestrings. Our English cousins have added a great convenience to the toilet in the form of elastic shoestrings, elastic cor-' sot laoes and other similiar articles. They are far superior to the old styles of elastic cords, which are made both there and here. They are remarkably strong and durable, and give a play to the muscles and joints, which prevents stiffness and discomforts. For low shoes they are simply delightful, as they enable one to have a laced shoe, which is the neatest and trimmest of all footwear, and at the same time to have the give and yielding quality which is the chief charm of elastic gaiters.—Sau Francisco Chronicle. ALL THE WAY ROUND! How the Publisher Made One Illustration Answer For Four Chapters of the Novel. "2. ~'tjcuad sjq mojj.{( Mi g s -;n»(0]A isaitn bbja OAjjoajea —I tn 2 ■">? aoppns y,, in nsu-avao 0 8 o® i '"S C? 9 © J* £ CHAPTER I. a U "Projected by her father's boot Claud pitched headfirst ss? down the stairs and through ; 2 § c the portieres." 5 S —Rrnnl-lun T.|f« FIRM HATERS OF SPAIN. FOR FIVE CENTURIB6 THE PORTU GUESE HAVE LOATHED SPANIARDS. Public Sentiment in Portugal Constats Chiefly of Detestation of Their Next Door Neighbors The 111-Peeling Is Kept Alive Principally by the Women. "I was astounded when I saw that bulletin about Portugal hesitating to turn the Spinish fleet away from the Cape Yerde Islands," said a cosmo politan looker-on ia New York to a Sun man. "What struck me as so impossible about it was the hint of an alliance between Spain and Portugal. "Why, I have lived in Portugal and mixed with the people, and I know that they could stand almost anything better than that. Portuguese senti ment—the sentiment-of the people at large, of 'Antonio e Maria'—consists chiefly of hatred to the Spaniards. They may be indifferent about other matters, or divided iu feeling. Some of them are Miguelistas, or Legiti mists, some are heartily attached to the actual dynasty; mauy in the cities —most of all in Lisbon—are republi cans, but the one unifying sentiment of the people is the anti-Spanish sen timent. "When you come to consider what their history has beon I don't see how they could have been otherwise. They have altogether five great national heroes, Dom Enrique, who was pio neer of all European exploration in the Atlantic; Vasco da Guma, Dom Sebas tian, "the Faithful Prince," who is the centre of various poetical legends; Dom Joao, and Gil Eannes Pereira. It is safe to say that most of the plain people of the whole country know lit tle or nothing of the first two of these beyond their names. As for the Faith ful Prince, mauy of them, probably, are not quite sure whether he was a real historical personage or only mythical. But every Portuguese 'lavrador,' from the Minho to St. Vin cent, knows Dora Joao, who in. 1385 drove the Spaniards all the way from Aljubarrota, in Portugal, to Burgos, in the middle of Spain,and Gil Eannes, who bent them nt Valverde in the same year. Those two are the Bruce aud the Wallace of the Portuguese, but there is this difference between the Scottish and the Portuguese hero worship, that the one is a mere mat ter of historical pride, while the other is part of a living, active, political force. "The fact is that since she lost Brazil and fell into a state of general decline the people of Portugal have become intensely retrospective. They nourish their pride on national memo ries, aud the fundamental national fact for them is their independence of Spain. They began to be a nation when they broke loose from the king dom of Castile and Leon in the eleventh century, and ever since then, except for a couple of generations iu the sixteenth aud seventeenth centur ies, they have existed as a nation under the continual threat of absorp tion into Spain. The honse of Braganza stands to the Portuguese people for no good thing but the re volt of 1640, by which their couutry was redeemed into independence. And the people feel that the price of inde pendence is perpetual hatred of Span iards. We can understand the feeling only by imagining what it would have beeu in onr country if the original thirteen states had been collectively much smaller than Great Britain and separated geographically from that couutry only l>y a line on the map. "Nobody who has lived in Portugal can fail to have noticed the signs of this undying hatred on all hands. Do you know, for instance, the true mean ing of the saying. 'A bad Spaniard makes a good Portuguese?' Of course, there is the Spanish interpretation, which is the obvious one. But there is also the deeper Portuguese inter pretation, aud that is, that any bad friead to Spain is by that very fact a good frieud to Portugal. "You can see evidences of the feel ing, too, in the very language of Por tugal, which its speakers seem to have purposely developed iu such a way as to make it as unlike Spanish as pos sible. Written, it looks like Spanish, but spoken it sounds much more like Polish or Czech. It is a curious fact that no self-respecting Portuguese woman wouid be seen wearing a man tilla, for the mantilla is the Spanish woman's headgear. And during the last reign it used to be remarked iu Lisbon that only two ladies there ever smoked, the queen, Maria Pia, mother of the present kiug—an Italian—aud the Duchess of Palmella—this, again, because the habit of smoking had long been distinctive of the Spanish among all other womaukiud. "I believe thin anti-Spanish feeling has been kept alive all these centuries very largely through the perseverance of the Portuguese women. Perhaps they remember that it was a woman who cast the die for the anti-Spanish re volt, in 1640 by pronouncing the mem orable sentence, 'As for me, I would rather have death as Queen of Por tugal than a long life as Duchess of Braganza'—although.it is true, that woman was a Spaniard. "Once I a*ked a Portuguese girl if she really hated all Spaniards. She said of conrse she did. I reminded her that the Christian religion com manded us to love all men. 'Yes,' she said, 'but that was a long time ago, before theie were any Span iards. '" His Gentle Urlef. Ella—l see that Bella got married yesterday. I wonder why she had such a quiet wedding. Stella—lt was on account of a recent death in the family of the man she married. Ella—Who died? Stella—His first wife.—Town Top. . vj. CUBA'S OLDEST PATRIOT. Juan A ratio Chosen to Raise the Flat of the Republic Over llavapa. In Tampa, Fla., lives a Cuban, nearly ninety years of age, who was the first man to shed his bloou in the field for the freedom of his country when the first uprising against Spain took place in 1850. His name is Juan —-T— --* »• e • °o • - JUAN ARNAO. Arnao, and he is respected by all Cubans as the oldest of their patriots. He played a prominent part in all the previous revolts against the Spanish rule in Cuba. Now he has been selected to raise the Cuban flag over Havana when the new Government of Caba is established after the downfall of the Spaniards. In epite of his age he is full of pa triotism and eager togo to the front. He walks erect, with a firm tread. At Ibor City, the suburb, where his house is, he is the most popular of all the residents. It was in 1843 that he first con spired against the Spanish Government in an anti-slavery movement. He was prosecuted and imprisoned. In 1848 he conspired again with General Narciso Lopez, and was the control ling spirit of an uprising which was attempted in that year at the city of Matanzas. On May 19, 1850, Lopez attacked and seized, with a handful of Americans, the city of Cardenas. Arnao was the only conspirator in the island w ho gathered a body of patriots to help him. But Lopez suddenly de parted, and Arnao had to dismiss his ' men. On August 12, 1851, he took the ! Seld once more with Lopez, and nar ! rowly escaped death upon the defeat of the patriots. He conspired again iu 1852, in 1855, and loaded with ohains was sent to Spain by the Cap tain-General. Escaping from his Spanish prison, he arrived at New York in 1860 to assist in the prepara tions for the war of 1868. During the ten years' war he took to Cuba several expeditions, and when the peace of Zanjon was signed in 1878 he protested against it and was engaged in riot against Spain until the revolu tion of 1895 broke out. Then, on ac count of his advanced age, the Cubans refused to let him take an active part in the war. Juan Arnao says he is the happiest man on earth because God has permit ted him to see the realization of the hope of all his life. Ho says to all the young Cubans: "My children, we have won, be cause this great and noble nation has interfered in our favor. Now let ua prove when peace reigns in Cuba that we deserve the friendship and protec tion of the American people. We have been brave; now we must bo wise." The Art of Teutlne. Soldiers made rheumatics for life by your tentless first night in camp, look on this picture, and admit that the English do these things better. Here is a one night's camp. Having decided to stop on the banks of the Abara River, in the Soudan, Tommy Atkins and his officers lost no time in building their white city. A part was built of stone and brush. A canvas town was up "whilfr they waited." The HOW BRITISH SOLDIERS BUILD IM PROMPTU FORTIFICATIONS. preparations for defence and for shel ter were made with the skill and swift ness of -men who are accustomed to a life on the march. Of conrse, the American militiamen woald not greatly care for the experi ence which gives the English soldier his speed as a camp constructor, bat it is safe to say that there were some thousand men in the various camps throughout May who wished that they had some training in the art of being comfortable in a damp plaiu on a chilly day. Instantly Killed by a Hose Stream.] Thomas H. Hobson, while piping at the Horseshoe Bar Mine, on the American ltiver, below Michigan Bluff, Cal., lost control of the monitor and was thrown some distance. He attempted to rise, and the stream of water struck him in the back, killing him instantly. SCIENTIFIC SCRAPS. The average amount of sickness in human life is nina days out of the year. It is a noteworthy fact that sheep thrive best in a pasture infested with moles. This is because of the bettei drainage of the land. The discovery has been made at Mc- Gill university that metal filings of any kind can be compressed into bars which will stand as severe tests as the original bars which supplied the fil ings. A case of disease of the jaw bones due to inhaling phosphorus vapor from matches has been reported by a French physician. The patient frequently used more than 100 matches a day iu lighting and relighting the cigars he smoked. Electric transmission of water power is now in operation in over 200 places in the United States, according to Mr. William Baxter, Jr. The horse power transmitted ranges from less than 100 to 12,000, the distance, from one mile to thirty-five. To determine the effect of the va pors of melted asphalt on plant life, experiments have been made by Pro fessor Sorauer with various plants, shrubs, etc., by subjecting them for a few hours to the action of the vapor. No immediate injury was noticeable, but after a few days changes took place which varied with different plants. The use of graphite as a lubricant is now recommended even by the organ of the Prussian steam boiler inspec tion society. An important condition, however, is Jhat the graphite must not only be free from all hard foreign bodies, such as quartz, but also be in the shape of Hakes, which cling to the rough surface of the metal and till up ill irregularities left in the manufac turing. A new viper has been discovered in the sandy portions of the desert be tween Mushki and Persia, where it is almost impossible to detect its pres ence, owing to its habit of lying buried in the sand with only its head visible. This is another instance of burrowing habits in snakes, a trait which probably originally led to the atrophy by disuse of the limbs with footed ancestors of snakes. Violet* Chemically Perfumed. As violets are much in evidence ilong the Loudon thoroughfares, writes a correspondent, the following inci dent may be of interest. I was in a chemist's shop when a coster girl en tered with a large basket of violets and set it on the floor. I bought a bunch and then noticed the chemist's assist ant pass a small glass phial to the girl, the contents of which she emptied into the basket. "Tricks of trade," said the chemist with a smile, while the merchant crave him a look of sly humor from under her hat. "What was that she bought?" I asked. "A penn'orth of wood violet," he re plied. "Those French violets don't smell. They rest on moist moss iu the basket, and the moist moss ab sorbs the perfume. That penn'orth will sell the basket." Then he told me that a "penn'orth" of musk per fume was used to improve the selling quality of pots of musk, and that he had had a hawker similarly ask: "A penn'orth of white rose, Guv'nor." As I went away I figured to my mind an old lady bending ever that basket in response to the merchant's observa tion: "Fresh, ma'am? Just smell for yourself."—London News. A Two*Han(lled flummer. People who stood around looking at men clearing up debris of a torn-dowu building were interested iu the mau ner of wielding a two-handled ham mer which they saw in use there, and in the hammer itself, which WHS bigger than any one man could have handled. Its two handles were inserted iu it like the sookes of u wheel in a huh, and they spread out like them. The handles were held each by a man, tha two men standing side by side. The big hammer was used here in breaking up stone so that it could be handled. When the hammer had been let fall two meu standing by the stone lifted it and bore it back by the handles as two men might raise a lad der by bearing back against the sida stripes while two men held the foot ot the ladder on the other side. Here the two men were each holding a handle of the hammer. When by the united labor of al! the big hammer had again been poised in the air,the men in front stood aside and it was again let fall upon the stone. —Now York Sun. Artificial Stone. A firm ia Scotland is engaged in the manufacture of artificial stone, which is, it is claimed, quite the equal of the natural product iu durability, hard ness and in its ability to stand weather tests. The ingredients are principally lime and sand, with watei at a very high teinj erature. Aftei being thoroughly incorporated the mass is placed in molds and subjected to a temperature of about 400 degree? Fahrenheit. Superheated steam is the heat employed for this purpose. It is a fact well understood by those who have made the subject a study that artificial stone may l>3 made suc cessfully from the materials men tioned. Mortar and stucco are in ex istence in some parts of the world that were made centuries ago. Naming tha Triplet*, Mrs. Paul Hetrick of Burlingame ia the mother of triplets. She calls them Cor* Dell, Dora Bell and Nora Nell. To distinguish one from the other she has tied a bine ribbon on the wrist of Cora Dall, a red ribbon on the wrist of Dor* Bell and a white ribbon on the wrist of Nora Nell.—Kansas City Journal.