8 THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, SEPTEMBER 15, 1907. BY FRANK G. CARPENTER. HAVE just , returned from a visit to the . biggest university! of the . Mohammedan world. It has more stu dents than any of our colleges, and twice as many as either Harvard, Tale or Cornell. It has, all told, over 9,000, and Its professors number 240. Its students come from every country where Mohammedans flourish. , There are. hundreds here from India, and come from Malaysia and Java. There is a large number from Morocoo and 'also from Algeria, Tunisia and Tripoli. There are Nubians as black as your ,'hat, Syrians and Turks as yellow as 'rich Jersey cream, and boys from southeastern Europe with faces as fair our own. mere are long-gowned, nrbatned Persians, fierce-eyed Af Whanletans and brown-skinned men pom the Sudan and from about Kuka, iBornu and Timbuktu. The students kre of all ages from fifteen to 75, nd some have, spent their lives in the fcollege. ' A Mighty Mohammedan Force. This university has been in existence or almost a thousand years. It was (founded A. D. 988, and from that time to this it has been educating the fol lowers of the Prophet It is today perhaps the strongest force- among these people in .Egypt Ninety-two E-er cent of the inhabitants of the Nile alley are Mohammedans and the. most the native officials have been' edu cated here. There are at least 35,000 men in the public service among its (graduates,- and the Judges of the vil lages, the teachers In the mosque schools, and the Imans or priests who serve throughout Egypt are connected with it. . They hold the university in the highest regard, and an order from "4t professors would be as much. If iiot more, respected than one from the Jthedlvlal government ' The education in this university is Vialmost altogether Mohammedan. Its "curriculum Is about the same as it was -' t thousand years ago, and the chief students are the "Koran and Koranic law, together with the sacred tradi tions of the religion and perhaps a llt- t' grammar, prosody and rhetoric. - "Within the past few years there have ,been attempts to extend its sphere, and It now has thirteen government pro cessors, but their teaching Is done out side the university itself. A number of the professors are also teaching in the government schools connected with the mosques of the Egyptian villages, but even there the Koran takes up half the This university has been in existence ISfrSVt SWffl Vjjj Jildi LjS I ) J, V Stor almost a thousand years. It was ISi 4 ! , : FX A ?-, .l !f W ,7 i , 4,T: J -t fCT"- V - $ 71 - I ' ?J Oa a. " ill? I - y r i ; oHy 1 1 I .;ifr; til A f r i - -t , - r ri - 1 bju 111 r 4--J 1 ' V ' 1 11 - irv flr 0Js4 XZATfZ. ' time and religion is far more important "than science. ... -, t. How Egyptians Study Their Bible. . . . - ..' Indeed it is wonderful how much time these Egyptians spend on their bible. The Koran is their primer, their first and sec . end reader and also their college text ' book. As soon as a baby is born, the .' , " . call to prayer is shouted in its ear, and when it begins to speak its father first -teaches it to say the creed, which runs somewhat as follows: , . "There is no Ood but God; Mohammed ' . is the apostle of God," and also "Where fore exalted be God, the king, the truth I There Is no God but be! The lord of the glorious throne." When the boy reaches 5rfr 6 he Btarts . to the mosque school, and there squats ; down, cross-legged, and sways to and fro as he yells aloud the texts of the Koran. "- He studies the alphabet by- writing with a black brush texts on a slate of wood or tin. and he pounds away from year to . year committing the Koran to memory. ' There are now more than 200,000 pupils in the Egyptian schools, of whom a majority - are under 13 years of age. By a recent ''' '" census it was found that over 60,000 of these boys could recite a good part of the - v. Mohammedan bible, and that 4600 had t . memorized the whole from beginning to end. Another 4500 ware able to recite one- " half of it from memory, while 3800 could correctly give three-fourths of It. When "' it Is remembered that the Koran con-.- : tains 114 divisions and in the nelghbor- l hood of 80,000 words. It will be seen what this, means. I venture that there are not "-JJ 4000 children in the United States who m can reel oft the New Testament without 1 looking at the hook, and that with our I vast population we have not 50.000 boys I 4 who can recite even one book of our " ' Bible from memory and not mispronounce a word. - . The Mohammedans revere- their bible quite as much as we do ours. While It is being read they will not allow it to He upon the floor, and no one may read or touch it without first washing himself. It is written in Arablo, and Its style is considered a model. They believe that - it was revealed by God to Mohammed, .. . and that It "is eternal. It was not written at the first. , but was entirely committed to memory, and it is in that way that it is still taught to a large extent I understand that the b v.i : - ! s y- v -5 v'. - - 1 y , i'il5 I f&.4- .J -x x rfr1 , , fhq't.- I .J i ' IT? . J jry roars' ; &&?o2& present Khedive can recite the -most of it During my Interview with his i father, Tewnk Pasha, he told me that he could begin at the back and by memory alone recite the Koran clear to the front. The Better classes of Mohammedans have beautiful copies of this book. They have some bound !n gold with the texts Illuminated, and the university here has a collection of fine editions which is looked upon as one of its greatest treasures. Nine Thousand Bald Heads. This famous Mohammedan university is situated in the heart of business Cairo. When I rode to it today on my donkey I passed through a mile or so of covered bazars, thronged with tur- baned men and veiled women and walled with shops in .which long gowned Egyptians were selling goods and plying their trades. The univer sity is known as . the Mosque of El- Azhar. which is one of the oldest masques of Cairo. It covers several acres, and the streets about it' are largely taken up with Industries con nected with, the university. One of the bazars is devoted to bookselling and bookbinding, and another to head dressing. Every Mohammedan has his head shaved several times a week, and in this college there are 9000 bald headed students. The scholar who would appear here with our ordinary college football cut would not be ad mitted. The students wear turbans of white, black or green, and there is not a hair under them except on the top of the crown, where a little tuft may be left, that the owner may be the more easily pulled Into heaven. My way went through this street of the barbers. There were a number of them working on the heads of the stu dents. The banbers made them kneel down to be shaved, and I saw one or two lying with their heads In the laps of the men twho were shaving them. The barbers used no paper, wiping the shavings on the faces of their vlo tlms Instead. At the end they gave the head, xace and ears a good wash ing.. -.s I approached the entrance of the university I saw many young, : long gowned, turbaned men, with their books under their arms, standing about and some carrying manuscripts in and out. Each student has his shoes in his hand when he enters the gates, and I was made to put on a pair of slippers - over my boots before I went In." The slippers were of yellow sheepskin and a turbaned servant tied them on with red. strings. Mohammedan Stndents at Work. Entering the gate, I came into a great stone-flagged court, upon which the study halls of this university face. The court was surrounded by arcades upheld by marble pillars, and In the arcades and in the Immense rooms Deyona were thou- sands upon thousands of students. They sat in groups on the floor, listening to the professors, who were lecturing on various subjects, swaying back and forth as thex eaiur out their words of wisdom. the groups were studying alojjd, and altogether the confusion was as great as that at the Tower of Babel when the tongues of the builders were changed. There were at least 6000 men, all talking at once, and some, It seemed to me, were shouting at the tops of their voices. I had many unfriendly looks as I made my way through the mass, and narrowly es caped being mobbed when I took snap shots of the professors and students at work under the "bright sun which beat down upon the court. The inmates of this school are among the most fanatical of the Mohammedans, and I have since learned that the Christian who moves among them is in danger of personal vio lence. I spent some time in this university, going from hall to hall and making notes. In one section I found a class of blind boys who were learning the Koran, and I am told that they are more fanatical The Personal Recollections of John L. Sullivan The Big Fellow's Idea of What's the Matter With the Country In Financial Matters. v BY JOHN I SULLIVAN. i HIS time of year always reminds me of the flsht I had with Frank Her- aid, of Philadelphia, which was finally pulled off 21 years ago the ISth of this month, After I had chased him from New Tork to Pittsburg. I poliBhed Her ald off In two rounds, making short work of him after I got him inside the ropes, but he sure led me a dizzy race before I cornered him and made him put up his hands and take what was coming to him. James Gordon Bennett was so struck on Herald (probably because Herald's name was the same as Bennett's paper) that he wanted to bet $5000 that Herald could wallop any man in the world. Herald was boosted as the man who was to put me to. the bad. and a lot of people were beginning to believe It. I finally got a match with Herald, but the cops stopped it, and Herald's crowd took a train for Pittsburg Intending to cop out some glory by taking the stage and claiming I was afraid to meet him. I got wind of them taking fhe train, and I was on another train, an hour later, for Pittsburg. By jsynming things along, after my arrival In the morning, Tom Hughes arranged things for us to meet that night in Alle gheny City, In the rink. The smashing that Xgave Herald in the two rounds made him easy for Joe Lan non later on. and Joe's defeat of Herald was the reason why Lannon was matched to fight Jake Kllrain in a hotel In Water town, Mass.. the following March. Jake put Lannon out in 11 rounds, and this victory made a lot of rainbow-chasers think Jake was to be my master. But all the guessing went wrong. Tips to the Author of the "Double Cross." Philadelphia Jack O'Brien is going to write a play called the "Double Cross, and he's going to show up all the things that made the preliminaries in a faked flsht That's what Jack says, and thera-. than any of the others. In another place I saw 40 Persians listening to a professor. They were sitting-on the ground, and the professor ' himself sat on the floor with his bare feet doubled up under him. I could see his -yellow toes sticking out of his black gown. He was lecturing on theology and the students were attentive. Another class near by was taking down the notes of a lecture. Each had a sheet of tin, which looked as though it might have been cut from an oil can, and he wrote upon this In ink with a reed style. The letters were In Arabic and I could not tell what they meant. ' I looked about me in vain for school furniture such as we have at home. There was not a chair nor a table In the halls; there were no maps nor diagrams and no scientific Instruments. There were no libraries visible and the books used were mostly pamphlets. There is no charge for tuition and the i fore It may not be true. But he ought to be able to get all the actors in the right I places In a play of that kind, for he 1 knows, if anybody does. He might en-1 gage that celebrated actor, Jim Corbett for the star part, with Kid McCoy as the faithful friend and Joe Gans as the soubrette, and some of the promoters for heavy villains. Jack himself wift shine best taking the money at the door, for he don't play unless he hitches up with the mazooma. For a wind-up to the play all the fakers and get-rich-qulck fighters might be dumped Into a tank, and it would sure be popular. If the drink Is made plenty wet and deep. But I'd advise the victim of the double cross to keep quiet for a while and give the sporting publio a chance to forget some things. He's made a long meal ticket out of the easy marks that have been falling for loaded dice and he ought to let it go at that for the present O'Brien must be suffering from the heat if he thinks he can get any more big wads without earning them. His best play Is to nail what he has, and not go wasting it trying to stage a fake. The sport are hep to the shady side of the boxing game and he can't get them to stand and deliver any more unlesB he chloroforms them, " and that Ksn't so easy as he Is doping It out to himself. "Tried for a Third Term," Said Roosevelt.. I made a jump from Louisiana to Utah a few weeks ago and part of the trip was made brisk by three millionaires, who damned Roosevelt by the hour. They threw the iron into Teddy gay and hearty, ail right because he'd been putting the heavy foot on some of their graft I got lugged into the conversation because the President is a friend of mine, and I didn't think these millionaire guys had him sized right. "You sports ought to get out and live with the real people a while and find out what they are thinking about," says I to the hot coal and iron barons., "The man poor and the rich are on much the same level. Many of the undergraduates are partially supported by the university, and it is no disgrace to be without money. Some of the students and professors live In the university. They sleep In the schoolrooms, where they study or teach, lying down upon the mats and covering themselves with blankets. They eat there, and there- are peddlers who bring in food and sell it to them: Their diet is plain, a bowl of bean soup and a cake of pounded grain, together with a little gar lic or dates, forming the most common meaL Such food costs but little, but to those who are unable to buy the univer sity gives food, 900 loaves of bread being supplied without charge to needy stud ents every day. As I passed through the halls I saw some of the boys mending their clothes, and others spreading their wash out in the sun to dry. They did not seem with the dinner-pail knows you people have- been throwing it into him from every point of the compass, and he don't care a hurrah If every resident of Wall Street has to sell his devil wagon and bathe In water Instead of champagne for a while. In fact, he likes to see you peo ple squirm, and when you say Teddy is guilty, he says Teddy is the man for him." "You've got to get nearer the common people than you do looking at them, out of parlor car windows, to know what's happening in this counrty," says I. "and until you get next to them you're sure go ing to be in wrong and bad. There's got to be a new deal, and BxOBevelt is wise to what's got to be, and he's got a few laps ahead of you folks." "You don't think Roosevelt will run again, do you?" one of the barons asked me. . "The answer to that is what Teddy said to the editor of a paper in Indianapolis when he got the returns from the Fltz Jeft fight. 'Poor Fitz, he tried for a third term.' " What's the Matter With TJs. The trouble with the whole country is that everybody that has a look-in to cor ner some money wants to pinch all there is outside the mint All kinds of busi ness have gone crooked. There's crooked fighting, crooked booze' and all kinds of crooked stuff put up for the publio to eat and get the stomach ache. The fellows that run the stock market have put their own game so far on the blink that since Lawson peached they may have to get down to plain porch-climbing to pull oft a living. Take the booze business as a sample of how the little man gets shook down. Twenty-flve years ago you never heard (ft anybody getting sent to the crazy house from drinking. Nowadays It's a common thing to hear of somebody going off his nut for fair because he can't stand the stuff. It's because they take a few cents' worth of carbolic acid and red pepper, shake it up in 60 gallons of rain ashamed of their poverty and I saw much to admire. 'The professors serve for nothing and support themselves by teaching In private houses or by reading the prayer at the mosques. It is considered a great honor to be a professor here; and the most learned men of the Mohammedan world are glad to lecture in the El-Axhar with out reward. In fact the only man about the Institution who "receives a salary la the president who has 10,000 plasters a year. .This seems much until one knows that the piaster Is only. 6 cents, and that It takes this many of them to make $500. I asked as to the government of the university, and was told that it had a principal and under professors. All stu dents are under the direct control of the university, and if they misbehave outside its walls the police hand them over to the collegiate authorities for punishment The students are exempt from military serv ice, and it is said that many enter the Institution for this reason alone. There seem to be no limitations as to age 'nor as to the time one may spend at the col lege. I saw boys between 6 and 8 studying the Koran- in one corner of the building, and gray-bearded men sitting around a professor In another. The most of the scholars, however, are from 18 to 22, or of about the same age as our col lege students at home. Education in Egypt. This university, has but little to do with the great movement of modern education which is now going on in Egypt It is rather religious than educational, and the live, active educational forces outside it are two. One of these is the United Presbyterian Church and Its mission school, of which I will write later, when I visit their college at Asslout about 300 miles farther up the Nile Valley, and the other Is the government, directed by the British, who are collecting the taxes and administering all matters of importance in Egypt today. In addition to these there are about 1000 schools supported by the Copts, who, by the way, are the most Intelligent of the native population. Egypt was very illiterate when the British took hold of the administration, and even now not more than six or seven per cent of the natives can read and write. The desire for learning is increas ing, however, and the system of common schools which has been Inaugurated is being rapidly developed. There are now over 10,000 schools in the oountry with something like 20.000 teachers andrhaps 250,000 pupils. There are a nuffber of water and call It a barrel of whisky. Can you beat that game? The boxers have got Into the swing with the rest of the business men, and" the Jails are not getting all that ought to be coming to them. I'm not doing any preaching, but I will give this tip, that unless we take the swift flop to the old way of doing things you might as well try to preserve snowballs in the warm place as to expect the small man to-smile and look pretty while he's taking the packages that are being handed to him. Strong Praise for American Firemen I was walking down Broadway, New York, one night with Colonel Blake, the West Pointer, who was at the head of a part of the Irish Brigade in the Boer War, when a lot of fire trucks came along on the Jump. Blake grabbed me over the edge of the sidewalk to see the proces sion dash by. "These firemen In New York, Boston and some other large cities," says' Blake, "catch my eye every time. I've seen ar tillery go into action over in South Africa, where there are some of the best horse handlers in the world, but the American firemen do go to a fire in a way that just stirs my blood." I consider that one of the best compli ments that has ever been paid to our American firemen, and they ought to know it Colonel Blake was a Texan, he was at West Point and in the regular cavalry, and he's seen some Indians and Boers ride for their everlasting lives. Yet he put our firemen up with the best of them. I was glad to hear this compliment from such a noted fighter as Blake, and the reason I'm writing it is for the firemen to read it and throw out their chests a lit tle. Colonel Blake was no hot-air mer chant and what he said struck me as a very remarkable conclusion for him to ar rive at knowing all the rough riding he had done In the Indian and. Boer Wars. When the American firemen get such tes timonials as the above, Idvlse them to paste them up where they can see them once in a while. Moose Attacks a Horse. Kennebec Journal. ' Three young men from .Milltown, near Calais, went out Into the coun try districts recently to spend the day and left their old horse standing under r r a ;n k CARPENTER TELL aUEER J TUDIE5" IN A COLLEGE WHERE THE TEACHER WORK WITH OUT PAY private schools, several normal schools and also schools devoted to special train ing. In the last few years . a system of technical education has been inaugurated, and the Government now has model workshops at Boulac and Asslout It has a school of agriculture here at Cairo, a school of engineering and schools of law and medicine. The Village Schools. An important movement has been th . introduction of modern studies into the village schools belonging to the Moham medans. These were formerly, and axe to some extent now under the University of El-Axhar. They were connected with the mosques and were taught by Moham medan priests. They were supported by the people themselves, and also by a Mo hammedan religious organization known as the Wak, which has an enormous endowment There are something Ilk 10,000 of these schools here and there over the lower part of the Nile Valley, and they had an attendance of something Ilka 200,000. They taught little more than the Arabia language, the Koran and reading, writing and arithmetic. Lord Crome wanted to bring these schools under the Ministry of Public Instruction and intro duce modern studies. He tried to force the teachers to come under him. but the refused. He then offered to give every mosque school that would come in an appropriation of 60 cents for every boy and 75 cents for every girl, and this has apparently solved the problem. The vik lage schools are rapidly adopting modern methods. Already 6000 of them are subject to the irovernment and within & short time) they will all be under the Immediate direction of its educational department At present It Is necessary to handle them carefully and to make the religi ous studies among the most important Now, the half of each school day is set apart for the study of the Koran and the precepts of Islam, and I am told that such of the Mohammedan scholars as do well are more likely tot get appointments under the govern ment than If they were Christians or Copts. Female Education. The girls of Egypt are beginning to go to Bchool. For a long time it was hard to persuade their parents to send them either to the government schools or private schools, but of late some of the native educated women have been given places as teachers and many girls are now preparing thomselves for school work. Other parents are send ing their daughters to school to give them a good, general education, as the educated boys want educated women for wives. There are at present some thing like 2000 girls" schools, with an attendance of over 13,000 girl pupils. A movement is now going on to es tablish village schools for girls, and the time will come when there will be girls' schools all over Egypt and the Mohammedan women may become edu cated. Bemyrolent Egyptians. We are apt to think that the only kind of charity Is Christian charity. I find that there is Mohammedan char ity as well, and that many of the richer Moslems give money toward education, and other such things. I have spoken of the endowment of the El-Azhar Uni versity, which is almost entirely of this nature. Some of the village schools are aided by native charity, as are also some high schools. In 1903 Mahmounl Suleiman constructed, at his own cost, and endowed liberally, at Abou-Tlg. an industrial school in which are taught weaving, carpentry, blacksmlthing and turning. That school has now ninety two pupils, all of whom, are receiving their training free of charge. The khedlve has an industrial school with 200 pupils on his private estates, and there is a Mohammedan benevolent so ciety at Alexandria, which has raised 50.000 for an industrial school there. That school will accommodate over 500 pupils, and It has now an endowment of about $4000 per year. One of ths princes of the khedlve's family la start ing a similar school In the Behera provinces, and the towns of Fayoum and Benl-Suef are raising money for industrial schools. There is also talk of a national university along modern lines, to be supported by the govern ment. This is favored by many of ths leading Egyptians, and Lord Cromer has advocated it in his report of this year. It is stated that this university will be absolutely scientific and liter ary, and that Its doors will be wide open to all desirous of learning, Irre spective of their orgln or religion. the shade jf the whispering pines while they communed with Naturs some little distance away. They were startled by the neighing and snort ing of their steed, and upon reaching the spot where the animal was tied they witnessed an exciting encounter between a bull moose and the horse. The monarch of the forest Just hap pened along and found the horse en croaching upon his domain and very naturally resented the intrusion. He made a run for the unfortunate steed and a bow on collision was almost a sure thing when the old horse's fight ing blood got up, and instead of wait ing to be rammed like a fishing-boat In a fog he stood upon his hind legs and caught the bull moose a swat fair upon the nose with both forefeet. Both animals sat down suddenly to think the matter over, the moose from the surprise of the shock and the horse because he lost his balance, and it would doubtless have gone hard with the latter, which was encumbered with the harness and rigging, had not the young men set upon the forest king with yells just as he was about to resume the attack upon his helpless adversary. Anyone who remembers the noise which a Milltown man is capable of making when out for a good time will pardon the moose for his sudden and undignified retreat Human Hair Imbedded In Oak. Greenfield find.) Dispatch to New York Herald. After four two-Inch boards had been taken off an oak log at James Webb's sawmill, a walnut peg, an inch in diam eter and a foot long, was found, which reached the heart of the big log. where. It la estimated, it had been driven, prob ably 75 years ago. At the end of the peg was a coll of black hair, long and silken. Old people of the neighborhood are of ths opinion that the coil of hair was placed there In accordance with a prevalent cus tom of pioneer times. This custom pro vided that when a man and wife coald not get along or agree, instead of sep arating, as in these days, the neighbors cut a lock of hair from the head of each. A hole was then bored in a thrifty tree . and the locks of hair were driven to the heart by a walnut pin. After that it was believed the couple would live happily ever after.