THE PHILIPPINES IN Luzon Mothod T.Tolin T. McCutcheon, riilllpplne cor respondent of the Chicago Uncord, writes at follows: It Is very difficult, even here In Manila, to get a compre hensive Idea of "the situation In the rhlllpplnea." The most we know Is that our troops are scattered over every province In Luton, as well as In the chief cities of the other Islands, nd thnt In Luton alone there are 21fl separate garrisons holding cities nnd villages and strategic points In the twenty-seven provinces of the Isl and. The Filipino method of wnrfnro hns changed from their old, defiant meth ods to a new and more Insidious one, thnt Is as much If not more to be fenred. Long before Tnrlne wns tnken Ag ulualdo realised thnt Ms troops could not stand against ours. Even n force numerically much stronger could be driven at will by comparatively small 'American forces. This was where dis cipline, morale and esprit du corps combined to make the smaller force .vastly superior to the larger one, be cause the latter lacked these elements. Soon after this discovery, which he seems to have been long In making, he heard that the United States wns going to increase the Philippine army to about 05,000. ft force that could annihilate him if he contested Its ad vance or will. lie then Issued, nlong In October, a proclamation advising many of his followers to return to their homes, hide their rides and await a call at some future time. Oilier of his followers were held under arms and directed to begin a guerilla war fare In the territory held by the Amer icans at that time, or to be held by them later on. That proclamation, which wns un doubtedly forced by the vigorous cam paign luangurnted at the time by Gen erals MacArthur, Lawton, Wheaton and Young, marked the end of organ ised resistance on a largt- scale. It Will bo remembered thnt Tnrlac was taken without a shot, and thnt our troops occupied in turn nil the prov lncos of the north with fewer than a dozen fights of any consequence. From thnt time on it beenme a foot rnce after the demoralized bnnds thnt were leaving the Tnrlne lowlands. There wns no established cnpltnl, no machin ery of government, no grand army nnd half the cabinet surrendered or were captured. i Officially the revolution was crushed, BPAiiisHFiLrriNO matrix, oibls. but General Conccpclon, Agutnnldo's chief of staff, uttered a dissenting opinion which, as since proved, was prophetic. . "Yon think it is over, but it Isn't. Hon have now disrupted -the army and acatfcred it far and wide. You have some of the leaders in prison and your jtroops occupy tho whole north coun try. But how many rifles have you captured? When you've got the arms, then and .only then, will the revolution be over." They have a curious custom at the liilJiuu uuua. aii iuv B'i lu " men on the other. When a man euu iiuu. Di'ii-i-io uim Kin, uuu. ni- nnclnir. delivers hat back tn her He returns to his own side. ore is no cuance lor Buy niriauon. A'he Filipino girls are not flirtatious. in great occasions they always seem to bo overwhelmed with a sense of rigid propriety. There nro no soft brown eyes coyly glancing, or Ilttlo bands gently pressing. When Miss Filipino treads the stately national ' quadrille or whirls lightly to the stir ring measures of a quick-played waltz be dedicates her thoughts and sou to grace and symmetry and completely forgets those dainty little coquetries which every maiden is entitled by an dent decre to use. 3 JBUNQAO, 8ULD ABCHIPELAOO, THS MOST BOUTHEBLY POSSESSION OV THE UNITED STATES. There wns an extemporized supper. Uk.ll the girls sat at one end of the tsbls and all Life men at the other. All the chuhsfat the man end were ikn when went In to the feast, WAR AND IN PEACE. of Salt Making. and, contrary to all precedents, I wns consigned to the henrt of tho enemy's country. On each side was a mestizo. Across the table was a row of dark girts who were evidently overwhelmed by the radical departure from an old custom, and I suspect that I figured promi nently as the subject of many of their whispered Vlsayan remarks. By ex hibiting Industry In pnsslng things I Dually won their friendship nnd re stored confidence. Everybody his own salt-maker, so the Ilocnnoes nnd Tangnslnnus of Northern Luzon believe, nnd they fol low out the theory In practice, for TEXTS AND ROLDIERMADE HUTS OP TI1E AMERICAN GAP.IUH0N AT BCNOAO, HULU, OUR BOUTHERNMOBT POSSESSION IN TUB PHILIPPINES. nearly every family living on tho const of the groat Llngnyen Gulf manufac tures salt for homo consumption, nnd sells the surplus to thi vlllnges of tho Interior. In one settlement near Dngupnn tho occupntton reaches the dignity of nn Industry, and nn entire village is en gnged In cr.vstnllzlng the snlt out of the enrth. The process Is tho execcd- SALT MARINO IK SOBinRmt LUZON. Ingly eln-.plo ono of scraping tho salt sonked lnud of the low const coun try with a wooden harrow nnd allow ing the sun to evaporate tho moisture until the ground takes on a condition of dry powder. This almost lmpnlpa- bio dust Is scrnped up in baskets nnd packed iuto a nnrrow bnmboo splint woven trough, some six feet long, plastered with clay. Water Is then poured upon tho dry snlt enrth by the Jarful, nnd leaches through, pnss lng out by n smnll tube ot tho bot tom. The clear water with salt in solution is then boiled down until It crystallzcs in an iron kettle bnilt In the top of a clay oven, as seen in the A FILIPINO BAMnOO BAND. foreground of tho picture, which Is reproduced from nnrper's Weekly. In the south, among the Tagalogs of Cavlto province, the process varies somewhat Every family living on tho const has Us own salt-ponds, which, skirted by beautiful bahiboo clumps aud great mnngo-trces, make very pic turesque artificial lakes. These ponds nro shnllow basins, sometimes moro than an acre In extent walled In with a low mud dike, and provided with an entrance sluice, through which the tidal waters may overflow the ground and be penned In. Over the entire surface of these flats are raised cir cular beds, ten to twelve feet in diam eter, flat on top and a foot la height 4 The salt water of the ocrnn ts allowed to come In till it reaches Just to the tops of these clrculnr beds, soaking them through nnd through. The sun does the rest of the work by rapidly evaporating tho moisture from them, nnd thc,snlt appears as n white etllor escence at the surface, to be carefully scrnped off by the owner. In this way they becomo practically self-feeding salt-machines of an exceedingly ntfvel character, though the output of snlt per diem from each bed Is very small. The native music of the riilllpplne Islanders.nccordlng to Harper's Week ly, Is rendered almost excluslrely on homo-mnde Instruments. These are built of bamboo, the big horns having but one note each. While the reed (at the left In the picture) carries the air. A nint to Any Man. Education Is seldom tho controlling factor In success. Wlfntl Must we belittle education after all our furore about the vnlue of educntlon? Dy no mentis. The secret of success is a mnn's disposition. The mnn who Is willing to nnd able to take responsi bilities will bent him who Is unwilling or unable. The mnn who hns the dis position to lift the burden of trlvlnl matters from his superior's consider ation Is the mnn who will be looked for when promotions are to be made. The question Is not. Have you done your duty? but. Do you rise to greater responsibilities? Tho opportunities for rising to grenter responsibilities are ever present The Manufacturer. A View of Panama, With Its ancient walls and foVflflca- tlons. Its tall buildings of gloomy gray nud roofs of red tllo, Fnnnma hns an oriental nppenranco as viewed from the htirbor, and the shapely architect ure of the twin spires of the cathedral adds much to tho beauty of tho scene. The fortifications arc feeble and crum bling, but nro picturesque. Tho sea walls which have resisted tho inces sant surf for more thnn two centuries nro covered with bnrnncles and moss. The cafes which overlook tho water seem cool nud comfortable from tho liny, but nro filled with the all-pcrvad-Ing smell which the nostrils of a new comer resent, but tho eccllmntcd for eigners nnd nntlvcs have long ago censed to perceive. Chicago Iiecord. INVENTS A SELF-ACTING TRAP. S. Itnckenbera; Thinks lie Can alalia Hate Annihilate Themtelvea. A Milwaukee avenuo Inventor thinks he has solved the problem of how to Induce rats nnd mice to cxtermlnnto themselves nnd assist lu the annlhlhv tlon of thoso that come after them, lie Is 8. Iluckcrsburg, and his aunlhl lntor Is a self-acting trap. Tho first night tho trap is In action It Is tightly closed and loaded with a table d'hote dinner. Tho second night tho hearts of the hungry rodents are made glad by the sight of an open door at one end. As It advances the rat's weight overbalances a sheet- TUB BKLF-ACTINO BAT TBAP. Iron false floor, the door falls with a click and his ratshlp Is doomed. In spection discloses but one way of es cape up a boxlike flue and this bo accepts. Once again an automatic door closes. The way leads into a largo funnel. Tho rat walks on until the funnel tips nnd It is pWlpltated Into a can of water. The tipping of the fuunel raises the door to the first en trance and things are in readiness for the next adventurer. In four nights 113 rata were captured and disposed of In one of the big clubhouses. Chi cago Record. "I know that u great many people do not like wy business," said the chimney-sweep; "but It soots me." Af ter the due acknowledgment of the courteous suites of bis audience, bo went up the flue. Baltimore Ameri can. - " CLEAR WATER FOR 60LUICR3, 4 Pocket Filter lienlened Par Uie Is) Warfare. Itelow Is a sketch of the Hamilton socket filter, after the nnmo of the patentee, says tho London Mall. The Bushmen's Corps, of whom every man was a specially selected volunteer, trained to nil tho hardships of Aus tralian tip-country life, wns supplied with BOO of these little Alters. Leadftig medical authorities of Aus tralia, where the evils of drinking bad water nnd the difficulty of obtaining goood are most apparent, pronounce this to be the bent filter known to them. Inside the tint white metal box a carbon disc thnt hns been chemically treated Is fixed.' By nn Ingenious ar rangement this can nt any time be removed and boiled, when It Is flgnln rendy as a preventive of such awful scourges among soldiers enteric nnd dysentery. As witness of its vnlue, It may be noted thnt not a single man In the niiRhmen's Corps Is reported to have died of disease while In Booth Africa. The long tube Is for Insertion In the receptacle containing tho water, whllo rOCKHT PII.TKIl Fon SOLDIERS. to the shorter tube may be attached a flexible plM through which the pur ified liquid may be drawn. The grcnt advantages of tho Hamil ton filter nre Its shnpe and lightness. In aluminum tho entlro thing could be made to weigh less thnn two ounces. The Invention, which Is both dura bio nnd chenp, should commend Itself to the military authorities, and all In terested in our soldiers. Uenvjr Shoe. A womnn who Is a victim of tho big shoe habit snys that when sue took a trip West a few weeks ago Blio wore her "comfortable," heavy soled, rubber-heeled calfskins. In tho sleeping car sho gave orders to tho porter to black them. As her berth was the first ono from the little chicken-coop plnco In which the porter attends to his odd Jobs, sho hnd no dif ficulty in overhenrlng a little conver sation thnt took plnce between hlin and two of tho men pnsscngcrs. "They calls 'em golf shoes, don't they?" tho porter remarked. "I guess so," replied ouo of tho men, They're Just strong-minded shoes. Tho women are getting sensible. High tlmo, too." "Looklak thcymado out o' cowhide," the porter commented. "Lawd, look at them soles; 'bout four Indies thick." "Must be a mighty big woman," put In tho other passenger. "Bet sho weighs 200 If sho weighs a pound. I never snw such shoes In my life. Think she'd have to have derricks to lift them up with." But the eavesdropper fell asleep right there. In tho morning three pairs of eyes looked curiously nt her feet nnd then took In a slender little 103-pound figure. 8ho snld It was really verj amusing. The "Telenlaatlo." Two engineers of Berlin have re cently invented nn apparatus which transmits to a distance the figure, either living or Inanimate; tho apparatus lins received the name of "teleplustlc." Tho relief mny be ro- ceiveu in ruii size, or may bo enlarged or diminished at will, being qulto ex act, -xue transmitter consists of a frame containing a crent number of metul rods plnced sldo by side nud movame uacu and forth. The receiver Is a similar apparatus, In which tho rous are moved tiy a series of electro- magnets, wnen a relief Is pressed against the rods of the transmitter a scries of contacts la established which causo the receiver to produco tho re lief by means of Its rods, whose move ment corresponds exactly to thnt of the transmitter. It Is expected that this apparatus will render service es. pecially In the pursuit of criminals, as It will give an exact reproduction of his features. Scientific Amerlcnn. Man May Lilt nimtelr. Human evolution is not likely to make flight practicable by means of the vertical screw. Lord Itayleigb calculates that to support his own weight a roan, working ac the average power to be maintained for eight hours a day, would require a screw about 300 feet In dlametor, nnd it would bo necessary that this screw It self should have no weight nud should bo workable without lo from fric tion. Tersla flrst grow the cherry, tut Blum and the peach, . E T A P L A J 5 S cefy II CAt jJ THS EQlCBTg New York. City. Shnllow square yokes make the feature of the latest Imported gowns. The chic 'May Man ton bodice Illustrated shows its use to woman's fancy waist. advantage, and also the smart effect obtained by bnnds of nnrrow black velvet. The design, which Is suitable alike to costumes and odd wnists, is taken from a model of white taffeta with Arabe lace, but would be effect ive In any of the pastel silks or In veil ing nnd similar wool mnterlnla. The foundation Is a perfectly fitted lining, Including the usual pieces. The yolk portion Is faced onto the back, but made separate in the front, where It Is seamed to the right shoulder and neck and hooked over Into plnce. The waist proper Is gathered at the front, bencntb the collar and again at the waist but It is plain across the shoul ders at tho back and drawn down nt tho waist The shaped collar is laid MISSES' FIVE-OORED SKIRT. over tbo scam aud closes Invisibly at tho left side; the full waist closes at the centre from, as does the lining, but tbo edges nro concealed by the folds. Tho high stock is fitted with a dart and curves Into the throat. The sleeves are In ono piece, tho outer scam reaching only to the elbow, and tho luco Is faced on to elbow depth. To cut this waist for a womnn of medium size four nud one-quarter yards of material twenty-one luches wide, or two nnd three-eights yards forty-four luches wide, will be re quired, .i...;. Two Popular Sklrtf. Tho five-gored skirt holds n perma nent place. It suits many materials as no other does, aud Is ulways relia ble. Tho Mny Manton model, shown In the largo engraving, fits snugly over the hips, and cnu be arranged In In verted pleats or gathered at the back as preferred. It cnu Include, tho cir cular flounce, or bo left plain, but tho deslgu, as shown, Is an excellent one. All heavy waslmhlo stuffs, Bitch as duck pique and ' linen, nro suitable, as well as cheviots and all tho range of early full materlnls. To cut this skirt for a miss of four teen yenrs of age, three yards of ma terial fifty luches wide, five nnd ono half thirty-two Inches wide, or six and three-quarters twenty-oue inches wide Will be required. Tho other pretty skirt shown in the largo cut is of dotted swlss aud Is daintily trimmed with a straight gath ered frill of the material, edged with Valenciennes lace und Insertion thnt gives tho fluffy effect now so fashion able. The frill Is attached to tho skirt by a band of tho Insertion, machine stitched on each edge, a second row belug applied at an evenly spaced distance above. The material may be cut from underneath if a Incey effect Is desired. The skirt comprises four gores. In the medium size the skirt meas ures nearly two aud three-quarter yards at the lower edge, and will re quire two and ono-qutirter yards of material thirty-two Inches wide, or one and one-qunrter yards fifty inches wide. If made without the rulllo. From one-half to three-quarters of a yard extra must be allowed for the ruffle, which Is cut four and one-half inches wide. If trimmed ns Illustrated nine yards of Insertion aud four and a half Op f yards of lace edging will be required for the medium size. The Chilian Nek Srnrr. The neck scarf of filmy chiffon, or soft silk, which was Introduced so suc cessfully last winter for evening wear, has becoma more and moro favored, and now fashionable women have them for almost every thin gown. They are charming adjuncts to any evening gown, nnd of renl utility In addition. The senrf costs a good dent when bought at the modish establish ments that alone have had them, but It may be made at home for n compar ative trifle. Three yards of chiffon, chlffouette, moussellne de sole or Lib erty satin, edged entirely with a knlfo plented rulllo of the snme, with or without lace, Is all that Is required. The I'erslan or floral designs In silk gauze rre especially chic. Trimming of Oriental Cloth. Pqunres of Oriental cloth make styl ish and Inexpensive trlimnlug for cloth gowns. If artistically used In combina tion with gold buttons, buckles or brnld. These squares of Oriental em broidery, on conrsc ecru cloth, can be bought for two or three dollars apiece, and hn-e until now been used only for bouse decoration, but this fall they will figure In vests, walstconts, hats, revers nnd all the color touches of a dark costume. The ChntHiilne Ita. Thv bnrbnrlc chatelaine, with Its score of jingling attachments, has been superseded entirely by the chnte lalne bng of metal or fancy leather, which holds the hnndkerc.ilef, purse and trifling matters of that kind. They come In gold, sliver, gun metal and Imitations of all. Maht Wrap For a Clillrl. Without a light wrap thnt can be slipped on at ease no child's wardrobe Is complete. The hottest days mean cool evenings, nnd changes lu tem perature must be expected nnd find tlIML'8 FOCR-OORED SKIRT. ono prepared,. e very charming lit tle Mny Manton reefer Illustrated, Is mndo of heavy pique lu a pretty shade of tnn, nnd Is trimmed with needlework. For all ordinary weather it supplies Just the necessary warmth, nnd can be laundered nt need; but the same model Is adapted to broadcloth, cheviot and all wool goods, nnd enn be relied upon as up-to-dnto for fall wear. Tho loose double-breasted fronts are senmed directly to the back, so ensur ing a graceful fit. The sleeves are two-senmed nnd in coat style, with turned-np cuffs. The big collar, which Is a feature in the pique, is cut on the sailor model at the back, but fits the throa( nt tLe frollt- Tho closing is effected with big, handsome pearl buttons and button-holes. If desired, the sailor collar can bo omitted, however, nnd tho simple turn over one, shown in the outline, used. To mnko tho reefer ns represented, with sailor collar, two and one-eighth yards of material thirty-two Inches wide, or one nnd one-eighth fifty Inches wide, will bo required In tho medium size. Without sailor collar, ouo and tlve-elghths yards of thirty-two inch CHILD'S BEBFIB. Inch material, with two and one-ball yards of Insertion and three aud one half yurds of embroidery, for trim ming, will be required.