,wp i pun ii mi i;-tv rwvmf ; -i ' , ; ; . ' f ' ' r ', j ' . If 7 i I. i ? f ' . v vi "AT EVERY STEP YOU MEET A I'HETTY SWISS GIKL IN A WHITE CAP." (Copyright. 1!to2, by Frank Q. Carpenter.) I y ll't'EUNE, Nov. 19. (Special Cor- I - I respondence of The Her-.) I I M Iwinril a at fl It I n if Anwirl.Min In- heard a striking American in vasion proposition the other day. Its enuneiator was Adolph Frankenlhal, our consul at Ilerne. He niado It In Jest, hut It might lead to matters ofenrnest. It Is that our trust magnates should monopolize Switzerland l'or money making purposes. Frankenlhal says they could turn the country Into a sightseeing park and drain the pockets of tho world's traveling public. They could buy the water powers and thus concentrate Its indus tries, and by the addition of electricity multiply their cut put a hundred fold. mdeid, the tourist business might easily bo controlled by a trust, and with It th's enormous hotel industry, which now an nually brings In many millions. All that would be necessary would be to buy thn best of the hotels which control tho most beautiful views and then to organize a system by which cut-and-drled coupon tickets could be furnished, taking tho trav eler from his homo in Europe or the United States and returning him there after his tour at a fixed price. He could thus know to a cent what his trip was to cost, Tk nn, o,n,.n r, hnuf sr. Tho Una uhlnli nnw nmnlint tn Bhnut ' .... per cent of one expenses, couia be cut off and the Increase in comfort would be enormous. This is the gist of Consul Trankenthal's proposition. Since then I have looked fur ther Into the matter and can give you some facti as to the vast sum Switzerland Is making out of the foreigners. The hotel business In this country Is enormous. Switzerland Is Just twice the Ize of Massachusetts, but Its hotels and boarding houses are crowded into a com pass of less than half Its area. Neverthe less it has 1,900 hotels, and it Is estimated that there Is $120,000,000 In the business. The hotels now take in about $30,000,000 a year and a large percentage of this Is profit. About half of them are open all the year round, and during the summer all are crowded. Travelers to the number of almost 3,000,000 swarm into Swltzer- land from all parts of the world. They wan- xne snowy range of tho Alps broadens as der about from hotel to hotel and from ono yo.u go upward and at last you reach tho view to another, dropping their money at top wth one of the most beautiful views every turn. Indeed, the receipts of tho 0f the world spread out before you. Ju9t hotels during good years are more than below is the Lake of the Four Cantons, the receipts of the government, and their with a score of Swiss cities and villager army of employes is larger than our stand- dotting Its shaded shores, and all about Ing army was at the beginning of the Span- you, walling the horizon, are the mighty Un-American war. There are about 28,000 Alps, giving you a view of mountain men and women employed in them, and of grandeur at least 120 miles long. The peaks these 12,00 are females. f the Alps are covered with snow and A trust could materially cut down the the snow lies in drifts and masses in the cost of running these hotels, for it would rocks. In places It has formed mighty buy things in quantities. As It Is now it Is glaciers, great rivers of ice, which are estimated that more than $15,OOQ,000 a year slowly but Imperceptibly flowing toward Is spent for provisions and help. About the valleys below. You are so high that $$,000,000 goes Into the kitchens, which in everything is dwarftd. The steamers upon one season consume $70,000 worth of cheese, the lake look like toy boats, the barns $25,000 worth of tea, $500,000 worth of cof- and houses of the peasants have dwindled fee and more than $100,000 worth of sugar, to the Noah's arks of the toy stores and Jt costs the hotels every season at least the great hotels are dwarfed into cot $3,000,000 for bread, $400,000 for butter and tages. $3,500,000 for vegetables and Jams. All What a place for meditation. The gran these things are bought In driblets, each deur of the mountains Is Indescribable and hotel paying for Its own. The trust could you can appreciate the feeling of the cow run a central supply station and make div- boy who, coming Into Swltzerlat d at n'ght, Idendtf out of Its savings In purchases alone, awoke to find himself surrounded by thes A general Impression prevails In the mighty hills. He gazed and gazed, wlih United State that traveling In Swltier- tear In his eyea, and at last threw up his Swiss Hotels as land is cheap. I do not find It so. The rates at the better class hotels are not far from the rates at similar hotels In the United States. None of the 1,900 hotels I have referred to charge less than $1 a day, and the ordinary traveler finds that his cx ptnses run up to over $5. You pay bo much for your room, and then, like as not, some thiiiK more for light and attendance. If you breakfast In your bed room nn extra chargo Is made, and the beBt table d'hoi,. dinner now costs a dollar and upward. Everything extra' must be paid for, and some of the hosts are little more than high way robbers whose victims are traveling foreigners. I do not know that the railroads of Swit zerland could bo acquired by any trust, but they are certainly profitable. In litOO they paid a net profit of over $11,000,01)0, and their travel Is Increasing every year. Only four years ago the government decided to buy them, and the transfer of the lines riom private parties to the state is now i:ndir way. The roads, including the tram way, have a length of nbout 2,501) miles, and there are so many rack and cable lines running tip the Bides of the mountains to give access to the beautiful views that Mark Twain Fays, "Every Alp has now a lidder up lis back like a pair of suspend ers." One of the nlccm things of the govern ment railway system Is Its general season tickets or passes, which Include all Switz erland. The railroad companies will sell you a ticket for two weeks, a month, a quarter or a year which you can use for that time on all the railroads and steam boats of Switzerland. These tickets are sold at fixed prices, and they have to bo ordered at least two hours before leaving time. You must furnish an unmounted photograph of yourself, which Is pasted on tho ticket. A two weeks' ticket over all the Swiss roads costs, according to class, from $7.r.O to $12, and a imnthly ticket from $10 to $20. If you travel third-class the price Is $10; socond class, $14, or first-class, $20. For three months the rati s are $24, $34 and $IS. and for the year, $00, $S4 and $120. This ,nat for 120 you COuld Btart in on January 1 and keep traveling day and night Svvl8S trains and steamboats, with the vcry bpst accommodations, until December 31 without extra charge. Such tickets are ... i -..I.- .I...... sold to anyone wnu im hh mi. I like the Swiss railroads. The cars are about the same as ours. There is a pass ageway through the center, with doors ai each end. The seats of the second-class are upholstered in velvet; they are clean and comfortable. The windows nre in brass frames, and they can be dropped down ou of sight when you wish to look out. The express trains have dining cars, called "wagon restaurants," and the din ing car porter conies through and calls out that dinner Is ready In French, English and German. The Swiss roads are well ballasted and well kept. The tracks nr watched for avalanches and landslides, and at every crossing stands a bareheaded girl, with a red flag, to warn all that the train is coming. At every station you find from a dozen to a Bcire cf hotel porters, in livery, each bearing the name of his hotel on his cap. These notes are writtf n at Lucerne, under tho shadow of tho Pllatus and tho Rigl. 1 went across the lake to Vitznau the other day and took a ride to the top of Mount Rigl on olio of the first of Switzerland s Klgl on OHO , l llnAfl T la Ktillt nn 1hp Rnmu '"' nu-o. - . . a l nil..), llnnli Thn nnvd principio as laai up i mu -- -" ere open, and they are pushed by a little engine behind. Tha views are magnificent. There are no sides to the cars and you rise slowly above Lake Lucerne, which flows In and out like a mighty river through the moun tains you are climbing. Now the view U hidden by trees, tall, lean maples wall tho sides of the tracks and the banks are cov ered with dandelions, daisies and red clover. Higher up the lake view widens, moun tainous islands rise out of the water like green monsters rearing their heads. Mount Pllatus comes into view. Its sides arc gray and hoary and tho snow iu Its crevice i marks the wrinkles in its withered old face. You crawl along ravines with precl- DCes hundreds of feet below you a Field for I Jin wmmyt : S - t Ur j 111 t - -K ' - ' : . 'EVERY ALP NOW HAS A LADDER UP ITS BACK, LIKE A PAIR OF SI S-IENDERS." f .' j-V '. 7- N. -""r" It I :r 1 tt-i'rs- MR. CARPENTER AND ENGINE lint nnrl tn xtentorlan tones cried out. tones cried 'Hurrah for God!" Tho Alps have a beauty of their own which in many respects surpasses that of the Himalayas or the Andes, although the latter ranges are more stupendous In their grandeur. It is only the top3 of the Alps that are bleak and bare. The valleys are covered with verdure, and there are nests everywhere in the hills good for pastures and gardens. These mountains are of In- calculable value to Europe. Dleak and bare o il. w i. ki. denced by the snow upon them, which squeezes the rain from the winds, and through the Rhine, the Rhone, the Danube and the Po elves Germany. Austria France and Italy the water that makes their lands tillable. It Is the Alps which furnish the water for tho great river trade routes of Europe and which Indirectly have made this continent the most civilized and best part cf the world. The blot on the beauty of the Alps U the Swiss tendency to turn every rock and view and every cubic foot of ozene over to the traveler at so much per minute, The sublimity In God's mountains is ped- died out for a consideration. There is not a beautiful view unmarred. Every place has its hotel. On tho very mountain tops you find men selling alpenstocks and pic- ture postal cards. On the Rigl I was offered a genuine St. llernard puppy, ana was shown kennels In which the Swiss raise them to make money, out of the legend that thev sometimes rescue lost tourists. As for that, however. I learn that the St. Bernard dogs have long since lost their Job. The various hospices kept by the monks are now connected with nil parts of the moun- tains by telephones, and the lost party Is easily found by the trackers going from to P"8t' ua lop vi me mgi is a uig uuici, mo Rigl-kulm, where you can get a dinner for $1 and full board for about $3 a day, and there are other hotels scattered from the hot tern all the w av to the top. If you eo to sleen at the ton you will hear the toot of an Alpine horn a half hour before tun- Trust Operations AT THE FOOT OF THE RIGL rUe. waklne vou tin for the view, and throughout the day a piper plays to the tourists and comes around and pokes his tin collection plate under your nose for pennies. At every step you meet a pretty Swiss girl In a white cap, who Inveigles you Into buying pressed flowers and edel- wels, and the picture postal woman has her stand at every beautiful point, with half tone reproductions of the same, which sho offers you for two cents apiece. Indeed, the postal card business is fast ,L ii , F!- rope. There are thousands of stores on the continent which sell nothing else, and in Switzerland you cannot travel five miles without seeinar a nostal card stand. Festal cards are sold at the railroad stations, at the drinking places, at every hotel and restaurant and even In the postofflcea themselves. i mean by this there are stands In the pestoffices, separate and apart from thn stamp windows, which sell cards bearing pictures upon which you must put an ad- dltional stamp before they can go. Such cards are found In all the department stores at reduced prices, and boys and men peddle them about the streets. In Geneva I f aw a woman pushing a cart which was loaded with such cards, and while eating my dinner at restaurants outside the hotel I frequently have made a man arop aown a pacxage or caras on ine iao;e, leiung me look them over and see if I don't want to buy. These cards have half tone engravings of the public buildings and views of the vl- clnlty. Some bear the coat-of-arms rf the town, as in Berne, where the bear Is the mascot for everything. Some, beautifully colored, represent the types and costumes of the neighborhood Others are com2 and 1ome "e fanclf,un' artistic. Some. i v uvV "v , are indecent, and of such a character th'it they would not pass through our mala, but others are as beautiful as chromos and suitable for framing. The cards sell from 1 to 10 cents. Some are In seta and others single. Such cards are now made in every country, and you can buy Ger man, English, French and Italian cards almcst everywhere. The most of the cards have little more than a place for the stamp and address upon them, the other side being given up to a picture, with only room for one or two lines in writing. The card saves the trouble of writing letters to your friends and at the same time en ables you to show that you remember them. I have said that the business is a big one. It brings the government of Switzerland more than $300,000 a year in extra stamps. Tho country uses about 4,omi,ii'U postal cards for internal communications and l.'i, (00,000 for the foreign maiM. This, at 2 cents apiece, brings in an annual revenue of $;U0,0f0. and the car.ln sell fur at least that much more. The people here use mere pjstal cards in propori ini to their number than any other nation of Eurt pe. Switzerland has as goo.l a postal service as you will find anywhere. It has about 16,000 postofllces ami abeut 2,oou letter b:.xes, and it delivers mail to the very tops of the Alps. The postal service does many things that our ofilclnls would not think cf doing. It acts as banker and ex press company for the people. It will col lect your bills for you and briim the money to the house. If you live in Swilzeiland and a man ewes you, sav $2, all you have to do is to send him a bill for the amount in a scaled letter with a wold or two to the postofllce on the outside of the en velope, and In addition a 2-cent stamp. This stamp pays the postoflice for its trouble in collecting and delivering the money to you. The charge Is 1 per cent of the amount collected. If the bill is $lo. you pay 10 cents, and if $.".0, 50 cents, and for this the money will be collected iu any part of Switzerland. If payment Is refused, however, the government will not enforce the collection. After the same mann.'r all sorts of goods nre sent out C. O. It. by the stores and farmers. You can order gcods of any store in Switzerland and the postman will bring you the package and fiend back the mi tiey. Farmers forward their butter and chick ens through the mails, and I know of two American consuls who thus order live tur keys, chickens and ducks. Consul Lleber knecht of Zurich got his last yi ar's Thanks giving tuikey from Austria thrcugh the mails and sent back the money iu the same way, and Consul Frankenlhal gets all his fowls from the lower Danube. Th- y ar. shipped through the posli.fiice and the post men being the live fowls to his door and returns the money to the Hungarian farm ers who raUe them. If this could be done by our postofilce what an opening it would give the American farmer iu the direct sale of his products to the consumers. FRANK (J. CARPENTER. Pointed Paragraphs Chicago News: Every man knows that a crank is some other fellow. A ri pe often gets tight because that is the way it is taut. The man who U willing to help you U usually unable to help himself. It is a curious psychological fact that a man can be in a dozen different minds. Some men come into the world asking "Why?" but no one is able to answer. It is easy to have tho patience of Jo'o wlr n tho boils are on some olher fellow. The politician absorbs a lot of liquids in truer to mane nimseir solid with the biys. Avoid abbreviations in w rit Ing otherwise you will get Into the habit cf breaking your word. Employes may not be mcddlesc me, yet they are always minding somebody else's business. Policemen should be successful specula- tors. eo many Bervnnt glrIa ,et them ,n on )ne grcun,j floor. , , , . , . 1,a,h struggles are sad, but they are nothing In comparison with the struggles of some people to live. Don't snub a man because he lcoks green. A watermelon has a similar look, but it is 8""Hy all right at hi art. When some men talk, othrs are apt to regret that automatic ear-closers have not yet been placed upon the market. Time files but you can't make tho man believe It who is compelled to wait five minutes for a train at a country station, it UllClC 1 " II 11 1 111 S JKlXllllS A catfish on de line is wort a whale In d. watah. Ef yo' don't pull up de weeds yo' won't dig up a crap. Do hlghah de white lolluh de blaekah d coiahed pusst n looks. De biggest shoutah ain't de man what sees de contribushun plattah. When de 'possum thinks he's slyest he's closest to de frylu' pan. Sleep's mighty good, but de rabbit ain't a-gwine to wake do gunnah. Empty in' de pantry for dinnah ain't a- gW'ne to sot de table fer suppah Cole pertaters from yo' own patch is bet- (ah dan ch fronj npighbor.8 Youths' Companion: De watermillion dat Is greenest In de rind may hab de reddest heart. De man what's alters gibin' away giner- ally has to go a-borrowin" to de man what keeps what he gits.