t -" j-wivtiirri-iiv rTTr wmh4 J TTHMfWfcrtrJMM tawttiwai(te.iirTr' fr'fSagaatMlS W. ''Wm I mm , V v V . 141 & SPRING IS AT HAND. XIrs. Hippo and Mme. Leo Prepar ing for Easter Parade. Coolofclcal Gnrden Una Ita VatKy I'nlr No Lena Than the Smart Set on the Other Side Central l'urk. Special New York Letter. Mil. D01I0NQ wrinkled his brows in a very distressing manner. Ho had partaken o his third cup of tea and he looked nt the sky quite anxiously, Indeed, the ground hog must have known his business, lor there was every indication of an early spring. Having, evidently, made a satisfactory meteorological urvey, Mr. Dohong turned to his waiter and said somewhat impa ,liently; "Cheny! Cheuyl" Perhaps you don't know what cheny" means. In Unit case if you will turn to Prof. It. 1. Garner's lat est Chimpanzee dictionary, contain ing fully 25 words, you will sec that all well-educated monkeys say 'cheny" when they want something to drink. Mr. Dohonir wanted his iOurth cup of tea and he knew how to ask for it as well as you or I. Of course Mr. Dohong is a monkey. Otherwise he wouldn't have made that remark about 4,eheny" But in other respects he acted a good deal as a man might act whose table manners are not exactly up to the standard of the Waldorf-Astoria set, Imt who on certain occasions can ap pear fairly civilized while taking his breakfast. I have known Air. Dohong to go through an entire meal in u very decent manner. Then again I have seen him, when his keeper's back was turned (Mr. Dohong thinks the man. is his private waiter), grab up the teapot, utterly neglecting the cup, and swallow down the en tire contents at one big gulp. As a usual thing, however, he sips his tea "IS MY HAT ON STRAIGHT?" quite demurely and uses his napkin With considerable grace. In a word, Mr. Dohong is the most genteel monkey in the New York Zoological gardens out in the big Uronx park, to say nothing of the other animals, many of whom belong to the Smart Set. If you could have gone there the other day witli me and afterwards made a visit to the winter quarters of the animals in Central park you would have been proud of some of the specimens that Mr. Darwin insisted came down di rectly from our ancestors. The in mates of the "zoo" are feeling par ticularly fine. It may be that, like their more highly-educated brother animal, man, thej' nre animated with -the exhilarating thoughts of spring moving, for several new houses have been prepared for them and doubt less they are anxious to get into their commodious homes. There is the new lion house, for in ftance. It is the finest one In the world. The 12 lions which have been installed there nre very happy in it and look complacently at the vis itors for whom seats have been pro vided. Or if the lions tire of the pub lic gaze they may retire to their pri vate apartments that have been ar ranged at the rear of their cages. All the modern improvements have been placed in these new houses running water, steam heat, etc. Numerous other new quarters have been constructed for the other in habitants ofthe "zoo" and the mem bers of the various families are rather on the qui vive in anticipation of moving time. Why, if you could have seen old Mrs. Benr the other day gathering her cubs about her and walking up and down tho spa cious yard allotted to her and hers, you could almost have imagined that he had her boxes ami bandboxes about her packed and readyfor the moving. And gracious goodness! Over in the elephant house there is the same kind of excitement. Not that the elephants are going to move this spring. My, no! They have their own house, you know an elegant old mansion but still there are indica tions that the rejuvenating effects of Fpring are upon them. Of course, it is tile time of tho year when the new styles in spring and summer coats nre in vogue. There 's not an animal in the Hronx or Central park that will not have a new coat this spring, a'hat is why they are all feeling so frisky In tho elephant hoUBe. One might, if one were real intimate with tho family and if one were there all the time, see Mrs. Elephant trying on a new love of a hat and nuking her maid, Miss Monkey, if it were on straight. Or if one would go over to tho hippopotamus' apartments one might possibly see Papa Hippo being measured for a new spring suit. But, anyway, all the auimalts are begin ning to admire themselves and pre paring to lay off their winter cloth ing. And perhaps you think the ani mals are not vain. I have seen two Guinea cocks do a genuine cakewalk for the delectation of a hen which stood Bobcrly by and awaited the conclusion of the performance. Any self-respecting animal or bird knows MEASURING MR. HIPPO. when it is well dressed and makes a presentable appearance. When the great crowds of visitors throng the Zoological gardens and Central park at the first show of pleasant weather and see the well kept animals in both places, they will not realize the care and attention that liave been bestowed upon the menageries during tho long cold months of the winter. They will not realize that many of the nnimals re quire the tender watchfulness that is given to babies when the tempera ture gets down about zero. Hundreds of the birds and animals that are na tives of tropical countries would con tract colds and pneumonia and con sumption if the temperature in their houses were not kept perfectly even. The iires must be watched day and night and intelligent keepers are constantly in attendance. Then, too, the food must be prepared in a cer tain way and if any animal is the least indisposed he is given medicine and treated as tenderly as if he were a human being. At the Bronx now there are abotit 1,000 animals, and in the Central Park menagerie about 400. Many of these animals are very expensive nnd in the event, of their death would be hard to replace. The most expensive animal is the rhinoceros, which is valued at $12,000. The. one in Central park is GO years old, but according to the best accounts pf naturalists he has 30 or 40 years to live yet, if he reaches the full span of his exist ence. The price of an elephant vnries from $1,500 to $2,500, and his longevity is usually placed at from 50 to CO years. Lions are worth all the way from $S00 to $1,500, and live to be from 20 to 30 years old. The ages of other animals run from 10 to 25 years. Aside from the expense of acquir ing two such menageries as those i ' READY TO .MOVE. the Bronx and Central park the cost of maintaining them is enormous. Many of the animals must have beef, and they must have it in large quan tities, which at the present Jigh price even for inferior cuts (but the quality must be of the highest), re quires tlie expenditure of thousands of dollars during the year. Then there is a large corps of keepers', many of whom must be skilled in their line of work, the expense of heating and numerous incidentals that make a total sufficiently largo to cause the tax dodgers to dodge all the harder. It costs over $100,000 a year to maintain the animals in the New York Zoological gardens and the Central Park menagerie. The two institutions nre under entirely separate management. Tho "Zoo," as it Is commonly called, is already one of the largest menageries in the world. When com pleted it w.ill be the largest. It ii situated in the center of the great Bonx park, to the north of the city, and connected with innumerable trol ley lines and the Third avenue elevat ed railroad. FREDERICK BOYD STEVENSON". n Wfi$ P-4L WASHINGTON'S MALL. Most Attractive Public Reservation in the Country, Proponed New National Mnncmra Uulldinff Will Add Imprennlvr- ni' to It I'lacc Well Worth Vlaltlng. Special Washington Letter. THE III is a public reservation ex tending from the capitol to the white house, and it is called "The Mall." There Is a well kept boul evard more than a mile and n half in length, because of its devious windings through the bowered park, although the direct distance from the white house to the cnpitol is only a mile. It wns the purpose of the designer of the city thatMhis reservation should be kept guarded from tho public, so that the presidents might have a pri vate driveway to the legislative halls; but that idea did not long prevail, and "The Mall" has always been opened to the uses of the public. This great reservation is in South Washington, and cannot be seen from Pennsylvania avenue, because that thoroughfare Is lined with business hoUses; very few of them worthy of the situation, and substantially all of them too small and insignificant in appearance to be located along tho grandest avenue in the world. When William M. Springer, of Illi nois, was in congress he advocated and tirged the purchase of the entire south side of Pennsylvania avenue by the federal government, for the purpose of erecting thereon handsome and sub stantial public buildings. The idea did not then prevail, but it is gradually becoming popular. It can be safely predicted that within another decade the government will mnke that pur- PROPOSED NEW NATIONAL MUSEUM BUILDING. chase, although the cost will be tre mendous. When it was urged by Mr. Springer, 20 years ago, the whole south frontage of the avenue could have been bought for comparatively little money. The congress recently appropriated $3,500,000 for the erection of a munic ipal building for the District of Co lumbia, and specified that it shall be built on the south side of Pennsylvania avenue, one block from the treasury department. The post oflice depart ment is now located on that thorough fare, and hereafter when appropria tions are made for a hall of records, the department of commerce and other great public needs, they will be erected on contiguous ground. It takes n long time to build any city, and particularly a nntionnl capital. The botanical gardens are located on the Mall, directly opposite the cap- PROF. S. P. LANGLEY. (Secretary of the Smlthaonlun Institution.) itol grounds; and they nre bounded on the north by Pennsylvania avenue and on the south by the Mall. The gar Jens liave a frontage of three blocks on the avenue, and thence westward the business buildings occupy the av enue frontage. Driving westward along the Mall we come to Aririory square, where the ftrs't troops were enlisted for the de fense of the capital in 1SG1; and where now are located the buildings of the federal fish commission. To the right, as we drive westward, is the railroad depot where Garfield was shot; and :o the left is the long wharfage where hundreds of thousands of Foldiers em barked and debarked, and in plain view is the celebrated long bridge. Crossing Seventh street, we come to the army medical museum, which be longs to the office of the surgeon gen eral., Here ore exhibited marvelous things in surgery nnd medicine; cele brated coses treated on the field In In dian warfore, the Mexican, civil and Spanish wars. And, after crossing Ninth street, gtill driving along the J boulovard of the Mall, beneath the lm penetrable leaves of magnificent trees and surrounded by sward as green and smooth and attractive as nature ever made, we come to the National mu seum, which is an outgrowth of tho Smithsonian institution. Next we come to the department of agriculture, which is surrounded by the best kept grounds in this city; a department -so rapidly growing that congress has recently made a pre liminary appropriation for the erec tion of a new and more commodious building, also to be located on Penn sylvania avenue. And then, crossing Fourteenth street, we come to the great bureau of engraving and print ing, where all of our paper money Is made. Next, still within the Mall, wo come to the Washington monument, and here, circling northward, we como into the grounds of the white house and department of state. When you come to the national capital you must take tlilfe drive; or, if you can't afford to drive, take one whole day for a strolling walk through the Mall. It Is often neglected by visitors who do not see it, and have never heard.of it. You should take time t6 enter tho National museum and also the Smith sonian institution. In 1810 an act of congress was approved which found ed the Smithsonian, nnd out of that institution the National museum has grown to great proportions. Smith- son not only gave money, but also, a collection of curios which formed tho nucleus of the great collection1 which now standB unrlvnlcdl in the world for magnificence nnd variety. There wns a private socictj' known as the Na tional Institute which gave to tho Smithsonian an excellent collection, some time about 1850. Then, in 1870, the grenter part of the mntcrial gath ered for the centennial exposition at Philadelphia was given to the Smith sonian, which expanded that institu tion beyond the capacity of the orig inal building, so that in 1S70 con- ,gress appropriated $250,000 for tho building now known as the National museum. In the building which wns yet un adorned, but tinder roof, the inaugural ball was given on the night of March '4, 1881, when Garfield was inaugurated. This building and the Smithsonian, with nil of their store rooms, stables and sheds, make use of 23S.089 square feet of floor space; and that is not half enough. For lock of space most de plorable conditions are now apparent, every branch of the service being se riously hampered by inadequate space. Long ago It became impossible to moke proper disposition of (specimens, so that year after year large and' valuable collections ore packed avtoy in rented buildings. Consequently, they are not half catalogued; and even those which are catalogued are inaccessible. These conditions liave been placed before congress by the officials of the museum, and at the last session on ap propriation of $5,000 was mode for tho preparation of plans for a new build ing, which must cost not more than $1,500,000. The plans have been laid before congress, and the appropria tion will probably be mode before tho adjournment on March 4. The plans contemplate the erection of a rectan gular building 480 feet front, 345 feet deej), and SO feet high, with four floors and about 400,000 feet of floor space. It is the purpose of the officials of the museum and the Smithsonian to make out of the proposed appropria tion just one-half of the building, and afterwards complete it with a subsequent appropriation which ne cessity will require. The fireproof building which the service needs will eob't not less than $3,G0O,'d6(f; but the congress always takes two bites at a cherry of that size. Tho one half which it is proposed to erect will present the appearance of u completed structure. 1 So much of the building as is now proposed will be used tor storage purposes, primarily, because it is ab solutely necessary that the valuable collections now packed away in rented buildings shall be removed to fireproof rooms. The losses which are liable to occur by fire would be irreparable. The National museum is of three distinct functions, as described by its secretary. First, it is a museum of record. It preserves a vast amount of scientific knowledge; sec ond, it is a museum of research, be cause Its collections are arranged on scientific Hues, and constitute an everlasting stimulus to scientific in vestigation; and third, it is an edu cational museum, illustrating by specimens every kind of natural ob ject, every manifestation of human thought uud activity. SMITH D. FRY. SOME IMMENSE FARMS. Ok In Texna, Owned ly IlltnolN Sya dlcmto, la na Larue na the Stilt of Connecticut. While the United States census re ports 6,000,000 farms averaging 140 acres each in the southwest states, and territories, the average size i 500 acres each. Col. C. C. Slaughter of Dallas, Tex., has 1,250,000 acres ofi farm and ranch land. In the Pan handle district of Texas the Capi tol syndicate, of which Senator C. D. Fairwell, of Illinois, is the head, has a ranch of 3,000,000 acres, or more than as largo as tho state of Con necticut. They raise from 10,000 to 20,000 acres of corn and other forogo crops and ship from 18,000 to 20,000 beef steers each year; 250cowhoytt and 50 farmhands nre employed. In Oklahoma is one ranch of 50,000 acres. They rnlscd this year 8,000 acres of wheat, 5,000 acres of forage, millet nnd Knfilr corn; 8,000 to 10, 000 cattle arc shipped each year. Al though the expenses of running tho ranch are $95,000 a year, the profitn tho lust year were $150,000. Tho Forshn farm in central Kansas has 5,000 acres. On it nre a flouring mill, a complete weather bureau, post of ilco for owner and employes, gaa plant and long-distance telephone. The wheat grown is made into flour on tho farm. There is the largest, field of alfalfa in the United States, 1,500 acres in one tract. This cutrt three crops a year, about one ton at each cutting. Frank Rockefeller has 14,000 acres of grazing and farm ing land in western Kansas, of .which about 5,000 acres arc under "cultiva tion and the rest. In alfalfa and tim othy pastures. There are somu pf the finest bred Hereford and Short horn cattle in tho world on thia farm, valued at $350,000, including' one $10,000 bull. Tho grain for those, cnttlo is grown and ground on tho farm. He intends to convert 10,000 acres of pasture land into alfalfa. The cattle and horse barns are of iron and stone, .lohn W. Stewart, of Wellington, Kan., hns 140 farms,, all separate and in different partM of the state. It Is not uncommon, for a farmer in these sections to buy 15 harvesters, a dozen plows and as many corn harvesters at one-time. Fifty men make a good harvesting crew for a farm there. ALL-AROUND LOG SLED. It In Strong, ISoNlly 1'ul Tokc titer nnd. Can 111 IJNcd with Snow or Without. I have been putting out, some lum ber, and as thero was little snow, t have used the sled shown herewith. It is called a snapdragon and is' such as is used in the lumber camp. It can be used with or without snow. I took two yellow birch stumps; about FOR DRAWING LOGS IN WOODS, six inches through and three feefc long for runners. Tho two Jninks were abotit the same size and two feet eight inches long.. The forward bunk is put on with one bolt in each end, so it can have a good chance .fa work. For the middle bunk I put - twtf two-inch holes through .each ripijier then took a small, .round birch ofthe) size wanted, heated it hot in a flro and bent it in the shape needed to put over the, middle bunk and tho two ends down through the runner then wedged them solid, but so there would be plenty of piny. Tho nose of the runners must be made so they will not catch on every rock or stump. This can be done by putting the forward bunk at the very end of the runner. The chain' is put on. the log with a half hitch and drawn through a hole through both bunks. Hlreh is tho best wood, as it wears, the. smoothest on frozen ground. Orange Judd Former. Tin:; A' illume iif( Aijnni;iijiceN, . ' The appearance of our cheese, factories: and creameries has much to do with insuring on improvement in the products. The surroundings of these places do much to set this pace. A nicely built, clean creamery is an inspiration to all connected with it. The workers take better care of themselves, and the patrons! are mere careful to bring only good products. This is the tendency ef fective to n greater or less degree. What con we expect of the patrons, when the creamery itself is a tumbled-down affair, with drains filled with a stinking combination of putrid milk and dirty water? The "task of securing from the patrons. clean milk is nearly o hopeleis one, unless the establishment that re ceives it is measurably clean. Farmers' Itoview. The dairyman who looks oftcr the comfort of his cows will get the most out of them, lie will lessen tho cost of milk proictlon, which is tha sumo thing as im-reuse in price. Ssa-ssssJ" I "-