Importtttioa of Wild Aryngs Rainbow Gold By Tcmplo Bailey ii 1 return or Colonel VtJ 7 7 a. W?. "'inu fBli suture lifeg UiMfew v I Q killed during their In- ( B&My J pi8'0" otho Jungle. Np I HE return of Colonel Roosevelt and party from Afrlcn, with the cargo of nnlmal speci mens which had been killed during their in vasion of the Jungle, caused a New York dealer in wild beasts to talk interestingly of the busi ness in which his Arm Is engaged. There are nearly a dozen Arms in Now York city that carry on an immense business In the trans portation of animals fresh from the Jungle. And this number, of courso, does not include such Immense foreign nnlmal firms as tho Hagcnbacks. It Is a paying business, as indeed, aro all businesses where the demand exceeds tho supply. Tho demand for wild beasts Is far greator than the supply, and as a consequence prices aro Rood, and tho dealers men of wealth. Tho extent of this demand' may be appreciated when ono con siders that most of tho great cities In tho United States have zoological parks or menageries, and that the animals aro constantly being purchased by them. Then thoro aro private collectors and circuses and tho like, that aro over ready to pay tho highest prices for deslrablo anlmnls. The ani mal dealer who could secure and bring to this country three or four gorillas would make a small, fortune. But no dealer has over succeeded In do ing this. The gorillas dlo In a few weeks In cap tivity; they could not stand an ocean trip for a day. A rusty old German liner lumbers noisily Into Quarantine, and then lies motionless on tho tldo. An olllcer, with broad, red, bewhlskered face, stands at tho head of the companion ladder, and he smiles a peculiar smile, us a husky screaming traps Just ns mlco nro caught, and monkeys aro alBo trapped. Such great beasts ns the rhinoceros and tho like nro not captured by tho animal men, but are secured from nntlve poten tates, who give them nway as a mark of special esteem or barter them for brass ami other trifling but showy gowgaws. "We take comparatively fow Hons from the wilds now. It is cheaper to buy them In captivity. Polar, griz zly and Russian bears also are mainly bought and sold In captivity; but oth er wild bcnstB are taken lu their lnlrs." FOOD LONDON IS CHEAPER. I HERD. f)F lv n JUPMtirj rows of glowing green eyes and great teeth with the flash of red tongue writhing between. A zebra switched tho reporter with his tail and ho turned, only to Jump almost out of his skin ns an elephant touched him on tho other shoulder with his trunk. iilu lem rises from below. "Tho animals aro get-re ac Ln,,? , l? h,Vc"f wnen' 2," a lcPard lng Ugry," he explains; "you know we hav0reaChed Ut aftor hla coat tB- several hundred of (hem on the 'tween decks. Want to see them? All right." In another minute probably the most compotent nnlmal man In the world Is at our side. He Is not a trainer, or even a tamer; he Is more. Ho Is a sort of animal cook, and his special, business is tho personal manage ment of wild animal tours. Ho receives them lions, tigers, leopards, elephants, everything else at Hamburg, where they have been brought fresh from their nuttvo wilds, nnd not only super intends their shipment aboard a vessel bound for New York, but he sails with them to mako sure that they arrive safely and in good health. And bo sure thnt If the tiger gets off on his diet nnd needs a nice fresh live rabbit to tone up liis sys tem, this man will be nwara of tho fact almost before the tiger is and, ergo, a nlco big jumping mmny Is sacrificed In uccordanco with tho pre cepts of wild beast mnterla medtca. Then, too, ono can never tell Just when tho big boa is go ing to rouse from his last gorge; when ho does ho wants a toothsome young goat, nnd he wnnts It quick. It Is a part of the animal man's duties to anticipate the boa's appetite with all possible expedition. He is a quiet, unassuming man, with stoop shoulders and bushy whiskers, and he leads the way to the 'tween decks without a word. Per haps tho uninitiated may believe that a tour through the nnlmal section of a freight-enrrying vessel Is an unimpressive experience. Well, let them try it and see! This can bo said at the out set It Is somewhat different from n menagerie. It means something to come Into closo proximity to n hundred and odd wild anlmnls that havo been ruthlessly snatched from their lairs in Afrlcn or Asia, or olsewhero, and clapped into llttlo barred boxes, not as large as dry goods cases; slammed In and out of dark holes in tho vessels of sovornl seas on the way to Hamburg; then Anally placed in the styglan 'tween decks of a German hooker. The swinging cross sens of tho North Atlantlo have not Improved their tempers, or their nerv ous systems, and tho visitor at Quarantine is quickly impressed with that fact. Tho howls and whines and the barks cense abruptly as the stran Kers enter. For they bring tho smell of land, and the great beasts sniff inquiringly, nnd hungrily, too. The cages lined both sides of tho gloomy space, with a little passageway between tho boxes. Per liaps this passageway was threo feet wldo, not more. The cages wore piled two and sometimes lhrco deep, in tho bottom cage, for Instance, would be a tiger; in tho next above a smaller ani mal, say, a leopard or a lynx, and above that n parrot, or a bunch of neorkat. Think of It! A three-foot passngoway, with ferocious anlmnls, stretching nlong for 100 feet on all sides. Talk about nightmares! The reporter's hair stiffened out like so many pieces of wire, and ho wished most fervently that ho had not come. It was more agreeable, he felt, to see these anlmnls In n me nagerie where tho cages are ample and tho bars an Inch thick. "netter keep In tho middle of tho alslo," says ono of the animal men; "these fellows sometimes reach out for you." ' Words such as these, of courso, hardly tended to reassure. It really was too dark to seo much. One caught a view of the cages stretching away In Gloomy perspective until lost In the durkness, of in ono wny this lower deck section was a good placo to visit; tho Joy and rellof In being ablo to leave it furnished tho biggest nnd most absorb ing sensations that this monotonous world has held for tho reporter in the last fow months at least. Uartels & Co.. aro tho largest dealers in wild beasts In this country. "A large wild animal dealer." said our Inform ant, "imports considerably more than a hundred largo wild animals each year. For Instance, our record for ono year which I happen to huve at hand, shows that wo Imported In that period 20 elephants, 35 camels, 20 tigers, 6 HonB, 45 leopards, 20 pumas, 18 panthers and hundreds of birds nnd monkeys and smnll things. Cubs Hon and tiger and bear cubs aro In special demand by wealthy families. They aro reared and potted like kittens, but In tho end thoy outgrow their plnyfulnoss and tho families who bought them from us aro only too willing to pay us to come and tnke them away when thoy attain any sort of growth. We havo. received many orders for hippopotami, but the beasts nro hard to capture and ninety-nine times out of a hundred they do not live through tho voynge. In fact, menageries throughout the coun try have to dopond of late years upon tho progeny of the hippopotami In Central Park, Now York, for specimens. "Like all animal dealers, wo maintain oxpert animal catchers In all parts of the world, nnd it is theso men who All tho ships which arrlvo hero. The Hngenbecks havo two collecting stations, one In Calcutta and tho other In Aden, Arabia. From this point tho animal catchers go forth and spend months in the wilds, returning to tho Btatlons with tholr catch. Wo ourselves send catchers direct from this country at present wo havo men in South Amerlcn, on the hot sands of Africa, In tho Himalayas, and elsewhere, filling our orders. Ono of thorn was recently In Arabia on n camel hunt, two nro now In tho Ean Indies trapping tlgors) and so thoy aro spread about In places where wild beasts abide. "Sometlmos we receive nn order for a largo number of elephants. Wo telegraph this order to our catchers in tho elephnnt country, who, nftor organizing tho natives into a hunting band, pro ceed to collect tho desired number. A huge In closure Is built In one of tho main elephant paths, and at night when the big animals come to feed they aro driven Into the lnclosure or k-uldah by means of Ares and shouts and tho firing of guns. Boaters on tamo elophnnts then rldo Into tho ln closure nnd ropo tho beasts, and In a short time they becomo accustomed to being led about. Ele phauts are nnturally mild, nnd wero this not tho enso thoy nover could bo captured, because of their great, hulking strength. "The nntlves also enptured elephants In pits, n barbarously cruel method In which more than 50 per cent, nro killed by the fall. Tho animal catchers tnko tigers and Hons In pits also. Thoy dig a hole, cover It with matting and place on this matting a dead goat. At night tho Hon or tiger steals from his lair, sees tho goat and springs upon It. Tho matting, of course, gives way and down into the pit goes tho lonrlng boast. Then tho catchers run up and throw nets Into the pit nnd tho struggling nnlmnl soon becomes hopelessly en tangled, Nooses nro hon lowered Into tho pit and the beast Is dragged out to tho cage. Six out of every ton nre killed In this process. Leopards and Jaguars and tho smnller animals are caught in "For many years," said a man who camo back from a European tour tho other day, according to nn exchnngo, "I havo been In tho habit of getting into nn argument with friends nftor my return about tho prices of food In tho best rcstnurants In Now York nnd London. I havo been contending that New York restaurants wero putting up their prices all tho ttmo and somo of my friends havo tried to convince mo that you could get a meal cheapor at tho higher prlcod restaurants In Now York than in London. "I determined this tlmo to collect somo ronl data for comparison and as a result I havo kept tho bills of many meals I had In London, It is my intention to duplicate the meals I had over thcro at somo of the restnurants hero, Item for item. I did this with one of them tho other dny nnd demonstrated tlint-for such a meal Loudon 1b a lot cheaper than Now York. "Here Is the bill for n luncheon I had at ono of tho most oxpcnslvo hotels In London: s. d. Hors d'oeuvres varies 0 0 Pilaff o of sweotbreads 2 0 Asparagus 2 0 Cheese (Neufcbntel) 0 C Coffee o 0 Beer l o Totals c 0 "Now, six shillings nlnopenco at ?4.885 to the pound Is J1.C5. As for the dishes themselves thoy could not havo been surpassed anywhere For tho hors d'oouvres I had a dozen different dishes to select from. "Did you over And hors d'oeuvres varies on tho Dill of faro of a New York restaurant? Try It. Of courso you may get them at n table d'hoto, but I mean on tho carto du Jour of n restaurant where you pay soparatoly for each thing you eat. "In Paris there Is a rostnuront In tho Avonuo do 1'Opern, whoro you can havo about twenty dif ferent varieties of llttlo Ash and cold snlads and appotlzers for about 15 or 1C cents. It took mo n long tlmo to And this In a Arst-clnss houso hero, nnd thon when I did so It wns In a restaurant which Is not usually considered among tho most expensive In tho city. Hero hors d'oeuvros varies masqueraded under tho title of 'buffet russo.' Thoy charged mo 50 cents for It, as against tho 18 charged In tho London restnurant. "My pllaffo of Bwoothreads tasted exactly llko mat I Had In London and cost exactly tho same, 50 cents. I ordered some asparagus. On tho bill of rare thoy had asparagus with Hollundnlso sauce for 40 cents, but I wnnted It cold, with French dressing. They did not tell mo It would ho any more, but for It they chnrged mo 70 cents. For tho Neufchnto! cheese thoy charged 20 cents and for the coffoo 15. The robbery came on tho boor. "In, London If you want n llttlo pitcher of beer thoy serve you an excellent brow of Ptlsener or Wurzhurger In n llttlo sealed vessel holding n pint for n shilling. I asked tho waiter to bring mo a smnii pitciier or beer on draught, knowing they did not servo tho beer as In London. Ho brought mo a pitcher and charged mo 70 centB for It. "Now my bill camo to $2.05, or oxnctly $1 moro than tho snmo food nnd drink had cost mo In Lon don. I gavo tho Now York waiter a quarter and ho scnrcoly nodded. I gavo tho London waiter hIx pence and ho thnnkod mo so that I could hour him." Copyright, igio, b Atioelttod Llterttr Vftt Tho dimness of tho big drawing room was slightly lessened by tho glow of tho light through tho perfo rations of tho samovar. Evelyn Her- rick was pouring tho ten. I had n Icttor from Chrlntlnn thtn morning," sho snld as alio handed n cup to Bruco McKcnztc. "Whnt did sho say?" ho asked, ea gerly. "Walt until theso nonnln nn" nlin murmured, "nnd then I will rend It to you." It was nn hour boforo tho crowd molted awnv. nnd oven then thov worn not alone, for Phllln Hcrrlck lounnod on tho conch In tho corner. Evelyn rend tho noto In nn undertone. "I nm comlnc homo. Evelvn. Aftr all theso years of Htudy my volco Ib a iniiurc. Do you remember thnt I used to say thnt I would And my pot of gold nt tho end of tho rnlnbow, nnd Bruco would tell, mo that no ono ovor really found rnlnbow cold 7 All th nun years I havo been seoklnir a thine thnt did not exist, nnd you hnvo stayed nt homo nnd hnvo found happiness. I often think of you nnd nruco nnd of tho friendship thnt has grown tip bo- iweon you. something you said in your last letter makes mo feol that you two nro nbout to enter upon n dearer relationship than friendship, nnd I wish you happiness, I who havo missed happiness lu my senrch for rainbow gold." Bruco nnd Evelyn looked nt cnoh other. "You seo. sho knows." Evelvn said nt last. From out of tho shndowB Phllln Hor- rick asked, "Has sho lost hor vo!co7" "Yes." Evelyn told him. "her hnnu. tlful volco; and Bho gavo up every thing for It." She did not sny. however, whnr. wnn In tho thoughts of each ono of tho CONDITION PRECEDENT. "Tho religion of somo people Is too lenient," hbki ijisnop uesiin in a recont nddross In Nantucket. "Somo pooplo suggest to mo, In their view of religion, a llttlo girl whoso teacher said to hor: "'Mary, what must wo do flrst beforo wo can expect forgiveness for our sins?' " 'Wo must sin flrst,' tho llttlo girl answered. Nasnvuie uanner. UNFASHIONABLE EVENT. Among other ovents, wo shall havo a sack raco for ladles. Professionals barred. "Whnt do you mean by professionals?" "Those who havo been wearing tube gowns."- Answers. Philip Sank Down on tho Fur Run In Front of Her. threo an thoy sat in tho dim room. They find nil loved Christine, and sho hnd boon encased to Bruno- tint foot. Ing tho call of her genius, sho had cnosen n career rather than marriage. And now Evelyn nnd Bruco wore en gaged and Chrlstlno wns coming hack. ueninu tlio snmovnr Evelvn whia. pered to hor lover, "I am afraid." or what?" ho domanded. "That when she COinnR hnnlr vnu will And that you havo not fnrtt,m her." Ho shook his hond. "Rim ,n,i lovo mo, and now I know Mint t .11.1 not lovo box not In tho way thnt I love you, Evelyn." Their voices nfter thnt nnnu inn n murmured monotone Tim iint-innon gntherod, and tho man nn thn nnu looking through tho partod curtains! count seo tno stars. Ho thought of tho girl who was cominc linoi wi,nn sho had gone awny sho hnd boon rndl- ant witli hopo nnd benuty. Sho had boon courted by n doznn mimimra And sho was coming back a fnlluro; coming back to And her lover ready to marry another womnn. Hla henrt ached for h never ached for hlmsnir uia lovd had been hidden thnt sho might not bo hurt by seeing It. hut through nil tho years there had been for him no other woman. And oven as he thomrht nt l.nr . came, parting tho curtnlns softly and standing thoro lu tho dimness boforo nny of them Bnw hor. Sho laughed a llttlo toward them, and thoy Jumped to their feet In startled nmazemont. 'You didn't oxnect mn nn on. i, nsked, nnd kissed Evelyn nnd gavo er nanus to Bruce nnd to Philip, She hnd lost somo of hor beauty. Sho was paler and thinner, and thn iim gone from her eyes. 8ho gave a llttlo tired sigh as sho dronnoi in i. chair that Phllln had nlanmi In trnut of tho Aro for her. "How good It seoms to ho with vnu all again," sho Bald, "thn thmn ,!nr peoplo with whom I played as. n child." Presently sho wont on. "A nil nnw Evelyn Is going to mnrrv Bruno, whinh Is ns It should be. I havo come back to glvo you my blessing." Tho word was said 1 irhtlv. but Philip, watching her, saw tho trouble In hor face. Did sho still lovo Bruco? Would this mnrrlago mako her still moro unhappy? "When I wont nway," sho said aftor a sllonco, "I thought that my return would bo n triumphal ontry Everyone would want to hoar mo. sing nnd now no ono will enro to. hear mo." Philip snnk down on tho fur mg In, front of . her. "Is It nil gone youf volco?" ho nskod softly. "I still hnvo n llttlo volco." Bho said, "but no ono cares to hoar It," And ngnln thoro was silence. Thoro wns constraint, too, In tho ntmosphero, for Bruco nnd Evelyn had grown Into, each other's lives and away from Chrlstlno's. Only In Philip's heart was tho real wolcotno thnt sho craved. Sho felt this Instinctively, nnd It wns nor need of him, perhaps, that mado hor aHk later, when tho four had, talked of many things, "Will you rldo back to tho hotel with mo, Philip? I know Evolyn hnd a dlnnor engage ment nnd Bruco will want to say good-by to hor without us." Philip Insisted upon a stop nt n ton room, whero thoy nrdorod Icob as nn cxcuBo but uto nothing. They talked of Bruco and of Evolyn nnd of tho coming marriage. "Evolyn choso tho bolter part," ChrUtlno snld. "A woman Is only a woman nftor nil, nnd homo-keeping hearts nro happi est." Ho fo.lt that sho rcgrottod tho loss of Bruco, and tried to comfort hor. "I don't boltovo that you would havo boon happy with him, Chrlstlno," ho said. Sho looked at him startled. "With whom?" she domnnded. "With Bruco, of courso," ho snld. "Oh!" sho laughod n llttlo. "Did you think why, Philip, I am glad T gavo up Bruco. If I had loved him I could not hnvo given him up. If I hnd lovod him no enroer could havo taken mo awny from him, nnd that was why 1 went nwny to senrch for my pot of gold." Sho stoppod for n moment; then sho went on with somo hoBltn- tion: "Thoro wns somo ono olso that I loved, Philip, but I was not light enough or frlvolouB enough to turn from ono man to another. I felt that I must glvo up Bruco and tost my solf but tho other man novor told mo, Philip, that ho carod." Somothlng In hor volco mado him look at hor startlcd. "Would you havo given up your ca, roer for that other man?" ho do manded. "Yes," sho said softly. "I would havo been glad to havo used my volco for lovo Bongs and lullabys, Philip. I know that I wns following a phantom, that my greatest happiness would not como from a caroor. But I felt that I must go away because this other man wan true to his frlond, and be' cause I folt that I must bo very sure of myself." "I could not toll you. You under stand?" ho asked eagerly. "I did not dream thnt you carod, and I thought Bruco's llfo wns bound up In you." "I know It wasn't," sho Bald. "But that had to bo proved, and only my going nway could provo It, And I am moro than glad that I went nway, Philip, becauso I havo lonrned now thnt lovo Is tho greatest thing In tho world. I saw bo many womon over, thoro living their pitiful llttlo lives women eaten up by Joulouslos and am bitions nnd tho craving for oxcltoment, nnd I lenrned that nothing makes n womnn hnppy but lovo and a homo. All tho modern theories, all tho ad vanced arguments can nover mako mo bollovo anything olso." And thon ho know that all his wait ing wnB to havo its roward. Ho told hor, then, of his drenm,s nnd of hla uesires. no wnnted her In his life, seomed to them both, nB thoy wont out, that tho world had changed; thero was a rndlnnco nbout tho star lighted ovonlng thnt wnB a roAoctlon of tho radlanco within thomsolvos. As ho loft hor at hor hotel, Chrlstlno whlsporod, "I havo found my pot of gold, Philip." "Whoro?" ho demanded. "At tho other end of tho rnlnbow," she snld. "At tho eud that was near est home, Philip." Major 8hurtz. Lou Emerson, n stnto senator In Now York, owns somo big shirt fac tories up In tho northern part of tho stato nnd Is very rich. Ono day ho visited Republican hoadquartors In Now York when B. B. Odoll, Jr., was chairman. Odell was out and had left a flip young man In charge. Emerson walked In. "Is Odoll here?" ho neked. "Nope," replied tho flip young man without getting up. "Whero Is ho?" "Dunuo." "When will ho bo back?" ' "Dunuo." Emerson turned to lenvo. "Who shall I say called?" asked tho flip young man. Emerson went over to tho Alp young man, caught hold of his shirt by the bosom, and said: "Toll him the man who mndo that 50-cont shirt you aro woarlng called." Philadelphia Sntur day Evening Post. Not Qualified. "Here's a man whom I can nnm. mend to you ns a writer. Ho is dob. soBsed of a great deal of rudo strength," "Oh, then, ho wouldn't do for polito lltorature."