Africasi Artidte f Ate Atag; IRoaevete Own minim The Wonder Trip By Railroad Through the Heart of the Wr!ds Greatest Natural 'Zoo. State Scenes and Experiences That Will Be CoL Roosevelt s on the Fir'st Stage of His Journey from Mombasa, on the Seacoast, to Nairobi, His First Headquartera in Africa--The Plains Are Crowded With Wild Animals. From the WindowVof the Carriage the Whole Zoological Gardens Can Be Seen oTsPorting RsTl? Yet the Railroad Is As Fine As Any In Europe and Its Comf Zrll A. Cat--Chared By a Rhinoceros-The Method of Hunting the Behemoth. Only m. fw montlii ilko "Winston Churchill, Under Secretary of Stat for ths Colonics of Great Britain, completed an exploration and hunt Ins trip In Africa that took him owr precisely the same ground that ex Presldent Theodore Roosevelt will cover durlnc the months that he Js In the rark Continent. Mr. Church ill has set down. In his entertaining way, the more striking- of the travel and biff same hunting adventures that befell him during; the course of his African Journey. These befell him, as already said, along the same route that Mr. Roosevelt will travel. Therefore, the seven African articles by Mr. Churchill that The Oregonian begins publishing this Sunday will give the reader a very good and vivid idea of what la la store for Mr. Roosevelt as he follows Mr. Churchill on the various stages of his journey from Mombasa, through the heart of the jungle and big game country, to Khartoum on the Nile, where civ ilisation will be reached one more. In todays article Mr. Churchill de scribes In Interesting detail the scenes and experiences that art In store for Mr. Roosevelt as he travels from the seacoast to the town of Nairobi, where he will establish his first headquarters'for the bunting of big game. BY WINSTON CTTURCHTXX. THil acpect of Mombasa as she rises from the eea and clothes herself wlUi form arid color at the- swift ap proach of the ahlp Is allurtni and even delicious. But to appreciate all these 'harms the traveler should come from tho North. He should aee the hot stones of Malta, baking and glistening on a steel-blue Mediterranean. He should visit the Island of Cyprus before the Autumn rains have revived the oil, when the Messaorla Plain Is one broad wilder ness of dust, when every tree be It only a thorn-bush Is an heirloom, and 'very drop of water Is a jewel. He should walk for two hours at midday In the streets of Port Said. He should thread the long, red furrow of the Sue Canal, and swelter through the trough of tho Red Sea. He should pass a day among the cinders of Aden, and a week among the scorched -rocks and stones of Northern Somaliland; and then, af ter Ave days of open sea, his eye and mind will be prepared to salute with feelings of grateful delight these Hhores of vivid and exuberant green. On every side Is vegetation, moist, tumultuous, and varied. Great trees, lad In dense foliage, shrouded in reppei s, springing from beds of ver dure, thrust themselves through the undergrowth: palms placed together by Hovering trailers; every kind of trop-lt-Hl plant that lives by rain and sun shine; high waving grass, brilliant patoheji of purple bougainvlllea, and In the midst, dotted about, scarcely keep ing their heads above the fertile flood of nature, the red-roofed houses of the town and port of Mombasa. The vessel follows a channel twist ing away between high bluffs, and finds a secure anchorage, land-locked, in 40 feot of water at a stone's throw i from the shore. Here we are arrived at the gate of British East Africa; and more, at the outlet and debouchment of all the trade of all the countries that lap the Victoria and Albert Lu.kes and the head-waters of the Nile. Along the pier now being built at Killndinl, the harbor of Mombasa Island, must flow, at any rate for many years, the main stream of East and Central Afri can commerce. Whatever may bo the produce which, civilized srovernment and enterprise will draw from the error moua territories between Southern Abyssinia and Lake Tanganyika, be tween Lake Rudolf and Ruenzorl, as far west as the hea'd streams of the Congo, as far north a.a the Lado en clave; whatever may be the needs and demands of the numerous populations comprised within those limits, it is along the unpretentious Jetty of Killndinl that the whole trofflo must pass. One of Uio World's Most Wonderful Ilailwujs. Kor Killndinl (or Mombasa, as I may be permitted to call It) is the starting point of one of the most romantic and most wonderful railways In tho world. The two iron streaks of rail that wind away among the hills and foliage -of Mombasa Island do not break their smooth monotony until, after piercing equatorial forests, stretching across im mense prairies, and climbing almost to tho level of the European snow liue,they pause and that only for a time upon the edges of the Great Lake. And thus Is made a sure, swift road along which the white man and all that Ve brings with him, for good or ill, may penetrate into the heart of Africa as easily and safely us he may travel from London t Vienna. Short has been the life, many the vi rispltudrs. of the Uganda Railway. The adventurous enterprise of a Liberal gov ernment, it was soon exposed, disowned, to the merciless criticism of its parents. Adopted as a cherlshel foundling by the Conservative party, it almost perished from mismanagement in their hands. Nearly 10,000 a mile were ex- I'riiura upon iin ctmnLrucuon, ana SO , eager were all parties to be done with " ' vl 11? " -uP ' . 111 - " .""a . - x V-"-,. - V ' ' II f? ' ' v wlll " , , x J ' - B k-'.-v ' ' -aaaaiJi -e-4 tv-v,ssr & V V? K.x . - -fill A.' ... ..- i f ... .t v .. --..,';.. . v. , '- .Vi.H 0t 's L Alii- J fesaraOTcM4 i r r ' xA rJ f nf'Hlf -v. :-! pV v .MUJLZ.- - BjlL-. t. -y.V '1, - .11! COJVSTRUCTfOM suing its proper and natural route across the plateau to the deep waters of Port Victoria, it fell by the way into the shal low Gulf of Kavlrondqi lucky to get so far. It is easy to censure, it is impos sible not to criticize, the administrative mistakes and miscalculations which tar nished and nearly marred a brilliant con ception. But it is still more easy, as one traverses in 48 hours countries which 10 years ago would have baffled the toil some marches of many weeks, to under rate the difficulties in which unavoidable Ignorance and astonishing conditions plunged the pioneers. The British art of "muddling through" is here seeh in one of its finest expositions. Through everything through the forests; through the ravines, through troops of maraud ing lions, through famine, through war, through five years of excoriating Parliamentary debate. muddled and marched the railway, and here, at last, in some more or lees effective faslrlon. It is arrived at Its goal. Other nations pro ject Central African railways as lightly and as. easily as they lay down naval programmes; but here is a railway, like the British fleet, "In being" not a pa per plan or an airy dream, but an Iron fact grinding along through the Jungle and the plain, waking with its whistles the silences of tho Nyanza, and start ling the tribes out of their primordial nakedness with "Americana" piece goods made in Lancashire. Let us. then, without waiting in Mom basa longer than is necessary to wish it well and to admire the fertility and promise of the coastal region, ascend this railway from the sea to the lake. And first, what a road It Is! Every thing is in apple-pie order. The track smooxnea and weeded and ballasted, as if it were the London & North western. Every telegraph-post has Its number; every mile, every 100 yards, every change of gradient has its mark not In soft wood, to feed the white ant, but In hard, well-painted iron. Con stant labor has steadily improved the grades and curves of the permanent way, and the train one of the com fortable, practical Indian trains rolls along as evenly as upon a European line. Nor should it be supposed that this high standard of maintenance is not warranted by the present financial po s.tion of the line. The Uganda . Rail way is already doing what it was never expected within any reasonable period to do. ' It is paying its way. It is be ginning to yield a profit albeit a small profit upon its capital charge. Pro jected solely as a political railway to reach Uganda, and to secure British predominance upon the Upper Nile, it has already achieved a commercial value. Instead of the annual deficits upon working expenses which were regularly anticipated by those most competent to Judge, there Js already a substantial profit of nearly 80,000 a year. And this Is but the beginning; and an Imperfect beginning for at present the line is only a trunk without its necessary limbs and feed ers, without its deep-water head at Killndinl. without its full tale of steam ers on the lake; above all, without its natural and necessary extension to the AiDen nyanza. Riding in Front of the Engine. Wm mQV rlii.M. ,V. . . .. journey into lour r -r j juugies, me plains. lake is an essential part of the rali- -vur-jway, ana a natural and Inexpenslv CAHCLOMC TK UCASDA &AII.WA I, . v m Jiiii ,. v7Vw- y pw III I i x-v Jt fw-v)! W v S t extension to its length. In the early morning, then, we start from Mom basa Station, taking our places upon an ordinary garden seat fastened on to the cow-catcher of the engine, from which position the whole country can be seen. For a quarter of an hour we are still upon Mombasa Island, and then the train, crossing the Interven ing channel, by a long Iron bridge, ad dresses Itself In earnest to the conti nent of Africa. Into these vast re gions the line winds perseveringly upon a stift up-grade, and the land un folds Itself, ridge after ridge and val ley after valley, till soon, with one farewell glance at the sea and at the fighting tops of His Majesty's ship Venus rising queerly amid the palms, we are embraced and engulfed com pletely. All day long the train runs upward and westward, through broken and undulating ground clad and en cumbered with superabundant vegeta tion. Beautiful birds and butterflies fly from tree to tree and flower to flower. Deep, ragged gorges, filled by streams In flood, open out far below us through glades of palms and creeper-covered trees. Here and there, at intervals, which will become shorter every year, are plantations of rubber, fiber and cotton, the beginnings of those inexhaustible supplies which will one day meet the yet unmeasured de mand of Europe for those indispens able commodities. Every few miles are little trim stations, with their water tanks, signals, ticket-offices, and flower beds, complete and all of a pattern, backed by impenetrable bush. In brief one slender thread of scientific civiliza tion, of order, authority, and arrange ment, drawn across the primeval chaos of the world. Plains Crowded With Wild Animals. In the evening a cooler, crisper air Is blowing. The humid coast lands, with their glories and their fevers;- have been left behind. At an altitude of 4000 feet we begin to laugh at the Equator. The jungle becomes forest. .... - $02 SM not less luxuriant, but distinctly dif ferent in character. The olive replaces the palm. j.'he whole aspect of the land is more friendly, more familiar, and no less fertile. After Makindu Station the forest ceases. The traveler enters upon a region of grata. Immense fields of green pasture withered and whit ened at this seasor. by waiting for the rains intersected by streams and watercourses densely wooded with dark, flr-looklng trees and gorae-looklng scrub, and relieved by bold upstanding bluffs and ridges, comprise the ' new panorama. And here is presented the wonderful and unique spectacle which the Uganda Railway offers to the Euro pean. The plains are crowded with wild animals. From the windows, of the carriage the whole zoological gar dens can be seen disporting Itself. Herds of antelope and gazelle, troops of zebras sometimes 400 or 500 together watch the train pass with placid assur ance, or scamper 100 yards farther away, and turn again. Many are quite close to the line. With field-glasses one can see that It is the same every where, and can distinguish long files of black wlldebeeste "and herds of red kongonl the hartebeeste of South Afri ca the wild ostriches walking sedately In twos and threes, and every kind of small deer and gazelle' The zebras come close enough for their stripes to be admired with the naked eye. We have arrived at Simba, "The Place of Lions," and there is no reason why the passengers should not see one, or even half a dozen stalking across the plain, respectfully observed .by lesser beasts. Indeed, in the early days It was the custom to stop and sally out upon the royal vermin whenever met with, and many the lion that has been carried back to the tender- in triumph before the guard, or driver, or any one else could think of timetables, or the block system, or the other Inconvenient re strictions of a regular service. Farther up the line, in the twilight of the even ing, w saw, not a hundred yards away. J a dozen giraffes lollopplng off among y ens I. I. 1 hi iiimni- - -il j. COW CATCHER- now wmsroAf (ON TfFRKXtfA r7z ptoasE-Vt-L-1 , - J scattered trees, and at Nakuru, six yel low lions walked in leisurely mood across the rails In broad daylight. Only the rhinoceros is absent, or rarely seen, and after one of his species had measured his strength, unsuccessfully, against an ' en gine, he has confined himself morosely to the river -beds and to the undisturbed solitudes which." at a distance of two or three miles. everywhere engulf the Uganda Railway. Hunting; From the Railroad Line. Our carriage stopped upon a siding at Simba Station for three days in order that we might more closely examine the local fauna. One of the best ways of shooting game in this part of the world, and certainly the easiest, is to get a .trol ley and run up and down the lin?. The animals are so used to the passage, of trains and natives along the one great highway that they do not.- as a rule, take much notice, unless the train or trolley stops, when their suspicious are at once aroused. The sportsmen should, there fore, slip off without allowing the vehicle or the rest of the party to stop, even for a moment: and in this way he will fre quently find himself within 250 or 300 yards of his quarry, when the result will be governed solely by his skill, or want of skill, with the rifle. There Is another method, which we tried on the second day In the hopes of finding a water-buck, and that is. to prowl among the trees and undergrowth of the river bed. In a few minutes one may bury oneself In the wildest and sav agest kind of forest. The air becomes still and hot. The sun seems In an in stant to assert his Just prerogative. The heat glitters over the. open spaces of dry sand and pools of water. High grass, huge boulders, tangled vegetation, multi tudes of thorn bushes, obstruct the march, and the ground Itself is scraped and guttered by the rains into the strangest formations. Around you breast high, shoulder high, overhead, rises the African Jungle. There is a , brooding silence, broken only by the cry of a bird or the scolding bark of bab "Ve i . SL osi. oons, and the crunching of one's own feet on the crumbling soil. We enter the haunt of the wild beasts; their tracks, their traces, the remnants of their re pasts, are easily and frequently discov ered. Here a lion has passed since the morning. There a rhinoceros has cer tainly been within the hour perhaps within ten minutes. We creep and scram ble through the game paths, anxiously, rifles at full cock, not knowing what each turn or step may reveal. The wind, when It blows at all, blows fitfully, now from this quarter, now from that: so that one can never be certain that it will not betray the Intruder in these grim domains to the beasts he seeks, or to some other. less welcome, before he sees him. At length, after two hours' scram ble and scrape, we emerge breathless, as from another world, half astonished to find ourselves within a quarter of a mile of tho railway line, with its trolly, luncheon, soda-water. Ice, etc. Off After Ithlnoceros. But if one would seek the rhinoceros in his open pastures, it is necessary to go farther afield; and accordingly we started the next morning, while the stars were shining, to tramp over the ridges and hills which shut in the rail way and overlook remoter plains .and valleys beyond. The grass grows high from the ground honeycombed with holes and heaped with lava boulders, and it was daylight before we had stumbled our way to a spur commanding a wide view. Here we halted to search the country with field-glasses and to brush off the ticks detestable Insects which infest all the resorts of game in Innu merable swarms, ready to ppread any poison among the farmers' cattle. The glass disclosed nothing of consequence. Zebra, wildebeests and kongoni were to be seen in troops and herds, scattered near and far over the plains, but never a rhinoceros! So we trudged on. mean ing to make a wldo circle. For an hour we found nothing, and then, J'jst as we were thinking of turning homewards before the sun should get his full power, three beautiful oryx, great, dark-colored antelope with very long, corrugated horns, walked over the next brow on their way to water. Forthwith we set oft in pursuit, crouching and creeping along the valley, and hoping to inter cept them at the stream. Two passed safely over berore we could reach our point. The third, seeing us, turned back and disappeared over the hill, where, a quarter of an hour later, he was stalked and wounded. It is always the wounded beast that leads the hunter into adventures. Till the quarry is hit every one walks del icately, avoids going the windward side of unexplored coverts, skirts a reed-bed cautiously, notices a conven ient tree, looks often this way and that. But once the prize is almost within reach, you scramble along after it as fast as your legs will carry you, and never trouble about remoter con tingencies, be they what they may. Our oryx led us a mile or more over rocky slopes, always promising and never giving a good chance for a shot, until at last he drew us round the shoulder of a hill and there abruptly was the rhinoceros. The impression was extra ordinary. A wide plain of white, with ered grass stretched away to low hills broken with rocks. The rhinoceros stood in the middle of this plain, about 600 yards away In jet-black silhouette; not a 20th-century animal at all. but an odd, grim straggler from the Stone Age. He was grazing placidly, and abova him the vast snow dome of Kilimanjaro towered, up In the clear air of morning to complete a scene un altered since the dawn 6f the world. Charged fcy a Behemoth. The manner of killing a rhinoceros In the open Is crudely simple. It is thought well usually to select the neighborhood of a good tree, where one can be found, as the center of the encounter. If no tree is avnilablc. you walk up as nrar as possible to him from any sid. except the wind ward, and then rhont him in the head or the heart. If you .hit a vital spot, as sometimes happens, he falls. If you hit him anywhere else, he charges blindly and furiously in your direction, and you shoot him again, or not. as the case may be. Bearing all this carefully in mimi. we started out to do battle with Behe moth. We had advanced perhaps I'm) yards 'towards him. when a cry from one of the natives arrested us. We looked sharply to the rlht. There, not 150 paces distant, inuler the i-hade of a few small trees, stood two other monsters. In a few more fteps we should have tainted their wind ttn.l brought them up with a rush: anil suppose this had happened, when per haps we were already compromised With our first friend, and had him wounded and furious on our haiuls: Luckily warned in time, to creep baek to the shoulder of tho hill, to skirl its crest, and to emerge 12 yards from this new objective was the work of only a fo.w minuteB. We hurriedly agree to kill one first before touching the other. At such a range it is easy to hit so great a target; but the bulls eyo is small. I fired. The thud of a bullet which strides with an impact of a ton and a quarter, tearitic through hide and muscle and bone with the hideous energy of cordite, came back distinctly. The large rhinoceros started, stumbled, turned directly towards tho sound and the blow, and then horc straight down upon us. in a peculiar trot, nearly as fast as a horse's gallop, with an activity sur prising in so huge a bea.st, and instinct with unmistakable purpose. Great is the moral effect of a fe who advances. Everybody fired. Still the ponderous brute camo on. as if he were invulnerable; as if he were an engine, or some great steam barce impervious to bullets, insensible to pain or fear. Thirty seconds more, and he will close. An Impalpable, curtain serins to roll it self up In tho nilnd. revealing a mental picture, strangely lighted, yet very still, where objects have new values, and where a patch of white grass in the foreground, four or five yards away, seenis to po.sseys astonishing eiRiilfleunee. It Is there that the last two shots that yot remain before the resources of civilization are exhaust ed must be tired. There is time to reflect with some detachment that, after all, we were the aggressors: we il is who have forced the conflict by an unprovoked as sault with murderous intent unon a peaceful herbivore; tnat if there is such a thing as right and wron between man and beast and who shall Kay there is not? rl?ht is plainly on his side: there, is time for this before 1 perceive thai, stunned and dazed by t lie frightful con cussions of modern firearms, he lias swerved sharp to the right, and ho is now moving across our front, broudsldc on, at the same swift trot. More firinjr, and as I reload some one says he is down, and I lire instead at his smaller companion, already some distance off upon the plain. But one rhinoceros hunt is like another, except in its details, and I will not oc cupy the reader with the account of this new- pursuit and death. Suffice ft to say that, in all tne elements of neurotic ex perience, such an encounter seenis to me fully equal to l-.air an hour's brisk skir mish at 60 or 7u yards and with an im portant addition. In war there is a cause, there is duty, there is the hope of glory' for who can tell what may not be woii before nijrht? But here at the end is only a hide, a horn, and a carcass, over which the vultures have already benun to wheel. (Copyright. 1009, by Winston Churchill.) Next Sunday's African article bv Mr. Churchill will describe the town of Nai robi, where ex-President Roosevelt will have his hunting headquarters for sev eral months: the country round about, over which Mr. Roosevelt will hunt, and the manner and adventures of Run tine the lions of East Africa. A