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Sri Just One Arrest After Another for This Man 2 t, AGAd1I * \!i f : \ v'h ha dou i- :;I. 1, -- ,r, r, \ 'il. t rea. , ' r0 * I ( t x:; rel.igsed .\rthi:r K ,, . i. ga I lan. t, "l t !No Sail, t , . ri li , a ,h i r . gl.,t r the ,, 1:!t Al( EI ee t . , oui ;e+ kept the .smtia:l ardtl ,()tlD -tnd of a re olo ,r w, ti\ r:ig he Sweei hn elaind anti I aneIl E" .c t ,lll a ( Iisto Iner half an hour after the l:ntl"d lt in the Colon saloon. ('apt ;.eorge ICoon. in ri izen'i (cloth es. haidowi - ti ra ldit and a tap to mtatch in [!Iulis street, rade stile of Thie ti\ . ti)t Item of his (lestritioln, aind tapled thit ite sui r to the left of the co'lar. ( lion ln S (o to C('olon s the tap ta;n whispered in the ear of tit- gray uollar mucih as a friend night haxe done The young nian w as llurollsed. hut glimpsed the hadge beneath the < aptain's < oat and w ent along Knee land reqnuirred two good looks to de lide, it wasn t the robber I know Jhis fellow- .ou re .Mac- .la 'lfe.- ain't that the naime"' MItElfee set tul the drinks and Mutt, Chief Bully of the Wolf Dens, Reformed N W YEORK - Mutt has reformed There is no doubht about this lie is just aH nirbe and amllable now as any wolf in captivity. P weas not always noted for this For three ears lie reigned sulpremen as chief bully of the wolf dens in the New 1ork zrololical parks Now a little cub has taught him to behave h:m self. and when Mutt gets out of the hospital he will he good Like most of tile other w ,lxes in the park Mutt was born in1 C;.ptivlt . His mother. I'annie, and his father. ilusky, are two of the best natured animals there. Mutt, however, showed "hen lihe was a cub that he had not inherited the amiability of his par ents In-tead, he was a replica of his grandfather, Growler, who was captured in northern Canada and who while still in the cub stage became unpopular with the keepers Mlost of the wolves in the park are as tame as house dogs. They like to be petted by the keepers and know their friends They seldom snarl or growl, and do not show wolfish traits until feeding time and then all they do is to howl with joy when they see the kepers coming with the meat. When still a cub Mutt showed that he was going to be different. He be gan by fighting with his brothers and sisters and then with all the others in the dens. His temper and bullying got worse as he grew olM-r and then he was given the name which he now bears A few days ago Mutt tried to show that he was the ruler of the dens by refusing to let the other wolves eat An Interurban Collision That Was Startling car overtakes a polecat doing his fa vorite stunt of trying to follow the gleaming rails to their end on a moon lit night. But a few days ago the unusual did Ltkppen. A motorman and a conduc tor were taking an empty "special" from Rocky River to the yards at Avon Beach power house. Half way. they ran upon a siding to permit a reg ular car to pass. They failed to no tice that a heavy swarm of bees wbich seemed to include all there were in the three surrounding townships had Returned Traveler Finds Home Rolling on Skids C HICAGO.-Anton Baca, formerly of 624 West Harrison street, came home the other alght after a few weeks spent with a railway construc tion gang in Montana, to find that his happy home had disappeared. Enoch Arden at least found his house on his return from his wander ings, but all that greeted Baca was a vacant lot. Where a few weeks be fore had been a happy fireside, a wife and fi' children, and a family cat, was now an aching void-a nothing ness--a vac'-uum Itaca n.ad, inquiries of the neigh bors as ifi \\here his house had gone, but none- of the:n was able to give an intelligent ansit or Some hinted that perhaps the railroads had bought up the Ipr per:y. ' hile others intimated that i;ca '::1 was a castle in Spain. iteachtug . ' al-istd street in his iquelt-. l,* l rd '1 ' . '. i, :Ct-nien Have %e,'.1 s.e.n amilth :.c ,, n holls. e° It was here a whilde itr IMove in, Iiyi i mal. : thlt' dis touraging reIply Youli v d tld up in the station house unless ou re car.e l t, i rr as its captain ak again TFhen .1c [.' , TIe out .lorsrs anid saun i" I rein station Some r , c. ]r l ithliton aent over hinm Si, i r I, ii, called: 'W ait a ,, Lat . ..l :nqt:iringi' over , · ,,. t . L, . titenant itarm " , *l, a n aalII \\, ~i, a tiuncied BIarmfuhre S -a el:t.g of ,r M1 Ellfee s i..* l'he gray suit and cap. ta ' th saloon-i thi said .- I , ., sail M,1 Elfee, and the . i st .;i-d C lever,. said the i : r t tt t iIr Bll \. t ont go- guellie ý it, r hito k -wotlet s the The. ba1tr ,an re ealted i, e itentifi ante ,.t rtr rlmfuhrer and the night twre r. It was toi,,ard midnight that laor:li ;ti-r - as in the Union station I a he. l, re rt attle a commotion in the crt'td a:lh out of it camne three--De tietit s S:'ton anli IDuncan wilth a fa ltiliar iltit bet w een thetm. ot int t- Colon job." said Simon Y'ongtf man" said Barmfuhrer. a tlfew i nt s later, after explanations haid tet: tade. Please -please, wilt o;l gc rf` the streets"' Y*,s ,s s:r I 11 go right home." sail Mii Elfee, Aearil' lie glanced right a , ! ;tt. rip e for the Illinois streei! t, a a south botund. andi was gotne I i olitiilntcmen tbreathed more freetI Sonil-t ,he e,. a smiooth faced young iai a with a rete lier, in a gray suit and U*i, r a gray cap, scurried through the ihight with two dollars from the I t oloti ri ash register, in his pocket. un conils ious- of the label he puti on the ai t iot-es of an iinnocent bistanlder. GUESS TMATIL .(EEP 'IM GOOD FOR ý AVWHILE an. of the meat throiwn to them until he had taken what he wanted Even after he had a full dinner he refused to let the others get near the meat. Then a cub. only a . ear old. decided to reform the bully Mutt was chew. ing a bone and the cub ran up and snatched it from him. The other wolf started after him The cub ran up on the rocks in the back of the cage. Mutt was right behind him. The cub ran to the edge and then dropped. Mutt was running too fast to stop and tumbled over him As a result of his fall Mutt landed ten feet below on the concrete. He tried to get up. but could not and be gani to howl with pain. One of the keepers ran to the den and seeing that the bully was injured called in I)r. W. Reid Blair, chief veterinarian of the park I)r. Ilair found that the wolf's right forepaw had been broken just above the knee. The injured animal 'as carried to the hospital and splints and bandages were adjusted. Mutt did not growl once during the operation and now, while he is in the hospital while the leg knits, he is trying to show the keepers that he is a changed animal. settled on the slender bough of a tree o er the farther end of the sidetrack, bending It down They took notice, however, when they collided with it. As the car came to a stop they were made aware of the fact that there were some bees about. What had been a harmless looking mass became an angry and ac tive enemy. Crawling through the transoms and ventilators, hundreds of bees invaded the car, looking for those responsible for the interruption of their housekeeping arrangements. The hunt was brief and successful. The motorman sprang out of the ves tibule and did a sprint up the track that would have made any winner of a 100-yard dash look as if he were standing still. The conductor did the same thing in the other direction. But there were more bees outside than in side and they made another dash back. concluding that the interior of the car presented the less of the two evils. What those two men under went while trying to smoke the bees out with a piece of burning waste it is better to draw the curtain over. 1Wandering over in De Koven street. the homeless one espied afar off a dim. shadowy bulk looming up in the mid. die of the thoroughfare. As he ap proached nearer, the light of Intelli gence dawned on his face. Here-on skids and rollers, was his long lost home It had evidently been taking a journey. If he had waited it might have come to meet him. A light still burned in the window. Climbing up on the skids, he peered in and te, his i(, discovered the wife" of h',- b'om,in. surrounded by the little Itcas Xlrs Itaca explained that dur ing the absence of her lord and mas. t.r "ht arents had decided to move the house "I couldn't tell you,' she said, e cause I didn't kuoa where .ot wel' UP TO THE HUMANE SOCIETY Capture of Two Wild Lambs Likely to Cause Humane Law En forcement. \Va> hIgtoti --A question of a state s right to ellforce h!umane law.. In i nii( h the I nited States go\errlnietit is in conflict is now pr.esented to tihe flu mlane so.let I of Montana "i", i lhd larbt the tirst 'v\.i :iak n 1 0into captiit . recently a ere captured on Trilje l)im ide lmountain t i i, r Na tional pairk Thie I('oilumbia ;rdlel: :oou et ,utti had secured pert;,i'o froml the puoirnlentit for tao (;ii.ile park ralt :ers to go fort: into the nti outtain' A and get teo al!d lambs fir V- \llt.ltlOt . I'~, x)pe'dtion was success:i!]. car ribd Uit aI :d the to rai i. rs broui ght tao ltatl , to (,lacier park statiOni. Fiuit at toSS their backs after: the fash i: of a s:,:ie carr :ng her papoose Ihe poor little lamts act,, tileatiIng piteo li) and afte hi ting sit to tihe a ,'o at I tuttI" one (if themn dtd clouds in the hl(ock. niO ntati of ;ia d I- 1 t niothr sheep worrying as to the whereabouts of their lost lambs in Montana even w\ild animals are protected to the extent that man must not rob a mother animal of her young. The remaining miountain iamb now is in the ilutte zoo bleating ini a main tier that would indicate it \\allts its miother Now the question arises, has the IUnited States goverlnment the r:ght to gi\e to Superintendent (Ialern of Gla t cler Natiional park preser\ e the right to send tao rangers into thie mloiuntains to rob two mIot her rnountaini sheep of their young and then send the crying lambs into the state of Montana to be kept bleating their hearts out in a zoo' Secretary of the Interior IDepartment Lane will be asked to intervene and send the little lamb back to its mother in the Triple Divide country 'FIND' CAPT. KIDD'S TREASURE Gypsy Enlightens Rancher-it is in a a Rocky Cave on Western Coast, Ho, Ho. (tegon City, Ore.-Declaring that he has received an inspiration from a gypsy fortune teller which will lead him to discover the famous treasure of Captain Kidd. which has been sought for centuries, I. W. Rivers, a prominent Willamette rancher, will start from this city shortly for the Oregon coast. Rivers states that several years ago while he and his wife were visiting at the Oaks they consulted a fortune teller, who told them that they would discover the treasure She stated that it would be found in a cave in a rock, which is a prominent feature of the coast scenery near Nestucca beach. last year Rivers and his wife went to the beach and found the cave, which is marked by a cross and a horse shoe Inside the cave, accord ing to the fortune teller, they were to find the fortune at the end of a log. The log was found by Rivers, but he dug at the wrong end of it and so did not get the fortune. This, according to the fortune tel ler. is just as he would do, for she said he would have to make two trips before he would get the fortune. He is now trying to get capital to finance the scheme. PROTECT OLD BEAU'S GRAVE Paris Jo.key Club Believes That W. K. Vanderbllt is the Mysterious Benefactor. ParIs.-The newest mystery of the Jockey club is the identity of the rich American who keeps in good condition the grave of George Brummel, known In history and du"tn'k his lifetime as Beau Brummel. The grave is at Caen, in Normandy, and a goodly sum is ex pended upon It every year. The bene factor is at great paine to conceal his name It is surmtaed and believed by many that he is an American who is very rich and who lives in Normandy. This American owns a unique collection of Brummel's letters, drawings and other things which belonged to the Beau. A section of the Jockey club holds I that the possessor of the collection and benefactor of "Beau's" grave lh W. K. Vanderbllt. Bank Examiners Praised. -t St. Paul, Minn.--"When the deposit- 1 ing public shows as much interest in a bank legislation as the average bank- 1 or. then, and only then, will bank su- a pervision approach the acme of per fection." declared Edward H. Doyle, I state bank commissioner of Michigan. at the annual convention of the Na tional Association of State Bank Su pirvisors Mr Doyle discussed at length the duties of a bank examiner, 1 and declared that in 94 per cent. of cases hle had investigated, he found the examiner's judgment of doubtful atisets and dishonesty of officers to be correct French Consul Gets Free Dog License. ('hicago Far hle it for :ne to vio !at. atn itt latll onrtial treatv." said Mayor Hlarrison to A. (;ait h. secretary I of the local French consulate, who ap plied for two free dog licenses under the treaty of February 23, 53, ex empting consular officials from taxa UAldh TURNS CLOWN FOR LOVE OF HER CUB Lioness Sacrifices Feminine Hor ror of Becoming Ridiculous. KEEPER TELLS STORY After Watching the Antics of the Mo ther and the Delight of Her Prog eny He Humanely Concludes to Re unite the Family. New York.--Pompey, one of the three lion cubs born a few months ago in the zoo in 'entral park, has been put back in the cage with his mother, according to Hill Snyder. head keeper and oriental researcher into the mar velous of the animal kingdom. Sny der gave out this statement as one of the n eek's happenings in the zoo. Bob Ilurton, his assistant. Keeper Cunning ham. Pat Keenan, in charge of the monkey house, and Andy Smith, the veteran policeman, knowing that there must be more to come, waited patient ly while the head keeper took his seat on a bale of hay in the hayhouse. says the Times. "It was a case of either putting them together or else sending the mo ther to the hospital." began Snyder. -It was a remarkable demonstration of mother love on the part of the lioness, and her affection was so strong that in manifesting it she had lost even the feminine dread of mak ing herself ridiculous. "It was decided some time ago that the cubs were able to shift for them selves, and so the mother was taken from the cage and put in the next one. The cubs did not appear to mind the change much at first, for they could see their mother through the iron bars which separated the two cages. After a while, though, Pompey seemed to want his mother. "Then the lioness became aware that Pompey was grieving over his separation from her, and did her best to comfort him. She would push her muzzle through the bars and lick her cub. This did not seem to help mat ters much, though, for the cub still whimpered and refused to take an in terest in life. I noticed this, but de cided. not to interfere, for I believed the lioness would find a way to con quer the situation. And she did. The 1 Cutting Up All Sorts of Undignified Antics. whole trouble was that the cub want ed to be amused. The lioness pro ceeded to supply the remedy." At this point Snyder paused. "The whole thing is so surprising," he said, "that I hesitate to relate the result of my careful observations." "Go on, Bill," cried his friends in chorus. "As I said before, it was the lioness that first discovered the trouble with Pompey." continued Snyder after his friends had assured him that his repu tation for veracity was proof against skepticism. "I shall never forget the shock 1 Ssuffered when as I approached the cage after the crowd had departed from the lion house the other day and discovered the lioness, usually a most sedate animal, trying to stand on her head in a corver of her cage. With his little head pressed against the bars and standing erect on all four feet was SPompey in his cage, his teeth showing and looking for all the world like a happy youngster laughing at a clown. " 'Get down,' I commanded the mo ther, and as she scrambled to her feet Pompey began to whimper, just as though he was protesting at my inter ruption of the fun. "I could not understand the object of the lioness at first" he said, "but after a little observation the whole thing was clear to me. That lioness was cutting up all sorts of undignified antics just to keep that cub from pin Ing. At one time I saw her waltzing about to the great enjoyment of Pom pey. and at another time I saw her walking on her hind legs and growl ing, while Pompey quivered all over with pure enjoyment. Every time the lioness would stop for any length of 'time Pompey would whimper, and his mother would do some other stunt to amuse him. I figured out that the lioness would wear herself out unless something was noce, and so I put Pompey back with his mother. Now he is contented, and both are getting a rest." Prince Spent His Allowance. London.-An Oxonian, who vouches for its truth, tells the following story: Frequently when undergraduates make up a dinner party preceding a visit to a theater it is understood that each pays his own shot One day a Magdalen man, on meet ing the prince of Wales. asked him to join a party for a dinner and play "I should love to go," the prince said, "but the fact is I haven't the three shillings" Why don't you write home?" the friend asked. 'l have." the princt replied, "but mother says I r-ust make what i have do until the end of the term." MOUTH STAYED OPEN FOR FORTY MINUTES Both Dentist and Patient Were Greatly Relieved When Jaws Snapped Together. Chico. ('al.--F. M. Price. proprietor of Price's candy store on Blroadway. knows how It feels to hale lockjaw He suffered for forty minutes with it and lives to tell the tale. And his ex perlence is one that he is not desir ous of having repeated. Price had scme teeth that needed fixing, and sought the services of a local dentist. The tooth manipulator ' spent fifteen minutes at the job, which required Price to keep his mouth wide open--a good deal wider than he is in the habit of doing. When the job was completed and I the dentist gave the customary In structions to "expectorate. please.' Price refused to expectorate. He sm- t ply couldn't. that is all. His jaws re 0 - a Sit 0 tO If r If His Jaws Refused to Comb Together. fused to come together, and all efforts t of the dentist to bring them together 3 failed. i Price and the doctor became fright- r ened. There was reason for fright. The doctor worked frantically for aid t when a happy thought struck him. a lie braced his feet against the wall, f placed two thumbs into Price's yawn- h ing mouth and gave a sudden and un- t usual Jerk. The jaws snapped tggeth e .r with a sound like a pistol shot and r the dentist came near being loser a pair of thumbs by the operation. Price declares that he never wants a repetition of the experience, and r the doctor shudders when he speaks of it. The jaws ,'.ere locked just forty minutes by the clock in the den tist's office. Aside from a soreness in both jaws. Price was all right the next day. MAN BARKED LIKE A DOG Thought He Was Holding a Skunk at Bay-Animal Fast In Trap. Winsted, Conn.-By Imitating the bark of a dog for a whole hour a Mount Carmel man standing behind a tree thought he held a skunk at bay for that period, but when his brother in-law, E. J. Richmond, arrived with a gun and dispatched the animal it was discovered that a polecat was fast in a steel trap. Richmond and the former's bull ter rier were out in the country when the dog espied the skunk, the loud bark ing of the terrier prompted the man to investigate, and they found dog and skunk facing each other, but some distance apart. Richmond vol- a unteered to go back home, a half i hour's walk, for a gun. and left his t brother-in-law and barking dog on i guard over the skunk. On noting its r master's absence, the terrier aban- t doned its post and started post haste ( after him. Then from his position be- 1 hind the tree, the brother-in-law began a imitating a barking 4og, and every time the skunk movedPhe barked. When Richmond finally returned t with the gun, his brother-in-law ex claimed hoarsely: "Kill that skunk a quick." and he did as commanded, to the chagrin of both men. CALLS WOODPECKERS INSANE I Because Birds Store Pebbles Instead of Acorns Professor Says They Are Insane. Ban Frazcisco, Cal.-The woodpeck era of Sonoma county are suffering from a mild form of insanity, accord ing to a learned and erudite document issued by the museum of vertebrae zoology of the University of California, The document says: "The reason why Califirnia wood peckers in the vicinity of Bonoma mountain would have stored pebbles instead of the customary acorns is a mystery. We know that Instinc( works as automatically as an alarm clock. In the failure of an acorn crop it would seem possible that the wood peckers might instinctively store some c other available kind of food, but to have chosen stones instead of food carries the analogy too far. It seems as though any bird with the intelli gence of the California woodpecker which would make the same mistake 1 ought to be classed as insane." t Pigs Big Factor In War. t Washingtpn.-Pigs and prepared ness were the main factors in the I success of the Balkan allies, accord- 1 jug to official reports received here 1 The armies went through regions I where pigs were abundant and .the a soldiers subsisted largely on pigs,. saving a large item of transportation. 80-Year-Old Stenographer. Memphis.--Mrs. Pricella . G.ory. ' years old. lIvin at 2.2 Putler street, lMemphis, accepted a position in I a local attorney's offince as stenogra pher. She began taking lessons two months ago and says she can get as much speed from her machine as iU she vere a youg womar 00 *1: 0 S, 73 `. T ME was, and not so long ago. ,hat Berlin, as capital of the kingdom of Prussia. was mere ly a second rate continental city that the average tourist passed by as unworthy of extended stay Hut now, as the capital of im perial Germany and the chief jewel of the Hohenzollerns. Berlin can fling down the glove of defiance in the face of Pa:-is, London or St. Petersburg and claim distinction as a national cap Ital of the first class, with an atmo sphere purely her own and embellish ments that make her well worthy of attention. Late this month the tourist season will be in full swing in Berlin. says the New York Evening Post. The spring review of the guards is the sig nal for the swing of tourist traffic in the direction of the German capital. Besides affording the visitor a wonder fully colored dramatic spectacle, this occasion provides first rate opportuni ties for studying the German soldlir and the military system which is the foundation of the German state The review is held on the Tempelhofer field, and is attended by the emperor and atl his staff. Trappings of the German Soldier. The German soldier togged out for dress parade need give the wall to no man. His American brother is hope lessly outclassed. He has unlimited gold braid; his patent leather boots are speckless and shining; his uni form is gaudy; his plumes are rich; his helmet gleams with brass. Seen in the great blocks and squares of battalions, troops and batteries, he >utshines the most tastefully garbed musical comedy chorus. Each regi ment has something distinctive about its uniform :o distinguish it from ev ery other, and many of the uniforms are individualistic to a degree. The foot regiments still wear the miter hat of Frederick the Great's time that the British grenadiers wore in the eighteenth century, without which no revolutionary novel or drama would be complete. The emperor goes to the review in a carriage, but after he has arrived he mounts his horse and ,at the conclu Cr .···· ~·;jir:~:~~~:~:~:i~:~ii~~4 o.·:: ...~... F:,·:··~.. r·: :'::i ".:`*.j ": ··~.·:~ ?i k·:j i-~· 1:s:'i:~:'~~i~Z~~:':-~:~;·4~::~~:::1 ~* i- :::.: ;~ :·:.:'::5:::::::~:~:.-i '~ c r-:- ~,i::~'~'.'.::''''' DPI LINDLJJ ston of the march past he rides back into town at the head of his troops. bands blaring "The Watch on the t Rhine," chargers prancing, batteries : rumbling and the streets echoing the tramp of the goosestep, while every t Gernran who has not been out to the I Tempelhofer field lines the Belle-Alll- I ance-strasse and yells "Hock der Kais- I er" until he is black in the face. The Germans are fond of saying: that Berlin is as gay as Paris nowa- a days, and whisa French avcestry or associations may compel you to decry this boast the fact remains that there is a great deal of truth in the assert I tion of gayety. Berlin of today is em inently modern. It has been built up since the war of 1870-71 clinched the 1 Germanic union and laid the founda tion of its greatness. Geographically speaking the situation of the city is not imposing, but the mathematical I Germans have made the best of things, 1 and certainly can claim to have built I up a city clean and sightly and regu- 4 larly planned. It lies on a fiat, sandy plain midway i between the Oder and the Elbe, with 1 which it is connected by a we' of wa- I terways, and it is intersected by the i Spree, a tame stream with rot half the I energy or charm of Munich's lear. The oldest part of the city, the Ait-Kolin. 4 built along the arms of the Spree, to Tall Wagging Muscles. I The wearing of tails is no longer a considered fashionable, but that we did once have tails, and are prepared to, grow them again should the fashion 4 change, is shown by remains in our pelvis of tail-wagging muscles, now rudimentary and degenerative from lack of use. Wiederscheim calls atten tion to the remains of arteries and veins which formerly nourished the tail. Gould and Pyle's "Anomalies and, Curiosities of Medicine" gives a pic ture of a child born with a tail. These ni)dern tails, however, are too short for any use, unless it is to make the father stop drinking.-New York Medi cal Record. A Calendar for Guest Room. A special calendar is a splendid thing for the guest room of the coun try house. A small daily calendar is Imouttcd on a heavy cardboard or 1lather-cov, ri(d bhard!. and b'-low it l;rilted in go(,d-si7ed bult I p rfectly I ibe I p . oP r or ' Itt rln g. "I;r: f t. Luihhon. 'Tea. .linuer." "L'a,. Mail L.;. v ' , nd and an ::pOrial iuLcr.nllaton 1t:o L.tieab~ diiirts hter gether ith that portiou lying I ately west is the center of b activity. Tthe estend and the west nards are the residence tricts while the northwest is pied by the academic, scientl* nilitary institutions The north t seat of the machinery manuta and the northeast of the woolen Widest Avenue in Europeos The t.ocial and official life at capital centers around Unter da den, wh,ch runs from the royal to the iHrandenburger To,. street, one of the widest In nearly a mile in length, forWl double avenue, divided by a fd promenade planted with lime Here one may see Berlin life i.L its aspects. South of this strlet the Friederichstadt, with its streets, the Behrenstrasse (str.S finance), the busy Liepzige and the Wilhelmstrasse, with the ace of the imperial chancells the British embassy upon it. the most important public squg the Opernplatz, around or near stand the opera house, the library and the university, the menmarkt, with the royal its center and the old and museums bordering upon it; the iserplatz, with the French embead the Brandenburg gate; the platz, with the column of vitcory; Relchstagsgebaude and the and Moltke monuments, and the lar Belle-Alllinceplatz, with the ment commemorating the batt. Waterloo. Close at hand are all the p hotels ,among them the l Kaiserhof. the Eden. the Aldea many others, all noted for their ice and modern conveniences. German hotel proprietor uses American hostelry for a model. Of the numerous bridges. the most remarkable is the ilcl brucke, built after designs by kel, with eight colossal flgurag marble, representing ideal staglM the life of a warrior, the works Drake, Wolf and other eminent tors. The Kurfursten or Lang was built in 1691-155, and res 1895. It has an equestrian the Great Elector. These span the Spree. Crossing the wehr canal are the Po torlabruckle, which carries the from two converging streets odter Potsdamerstrasse and the kulesbrucke, connecting the plats with the Tiergarten. The buildings of the Royal are divided into the old ad4 museum. The former is an edifice situated on the northeag of the Lustgarten. facing the.. palace. It was built in the lQ' Frederick William III. from by Schinkel. Its portico, A . by eighteen immense Ionic is reached by a wide flight do The back and side walls of the' are covered with frescoes Ing the world's progress from to developed and organised IUft trance is through bronze doors,' designs by Stuler, weighing sewv one-half tons. On the wall grand marble staircase, which the full height of the buildlngl bach's cyclus of stereochro r'4 tures is painted, representing great epochs of human progris the confusion of tongues at the of Babel and dispersion of the Refor&ation. guests to know. The hours for and departure of mails are marked, thus saving many q anrd often embarrassment on the of the guests. The Very Latest. "Let me see some of your bleI. gloves." replied a lady to a s "These are not the latest sty they?" she asked, when the were produced. "Yes, madsa, plied the shopman, "we hale th m in stock only two daye. d, In't think they u ere. becal*0 f.;:hion paper says black kids tan stitches and vice. versa. I the tan stitched but not the versa." Drunken Bears Cculdn't RiM. Four biz b.a ', , ; ; Iled;t Marlin-,ton. \V ': i a gUnnitl , hay+ ' ' ;:' I .:'. 'a , :, r . a ty of .-l:t +i,:. . Ket ,,n 'Il l t, .il ,,ýý " , t , the I 1 ':rs.