Park Animals and the Deep Snow Photographs Made by a Staff Artist at Kivcrvicw Park PANORAMA OK RIVKRVIEW PARK LOO KINO SOUTH FROM TILBIMAIN DRJVB. f .-, ...... .. - wJlffife .?:. J I ,- 3 1 V : WW EUS. WERE NEARLY BURIED IN DRIFTS. BUFFALO DIDN'T MIND TIIE STORM. "v ',L.il .r-r.m . . viiii ill i... ii. .r. 1 BIT OF TANGLED WOODS AND SNOW, DEER PADDOCK WAS FAIRLY FREE. Land of Arab Kings (Continued from Fourth Page.) ' All Arabia believed tbat It was tbe abode ot ihn DjinQH. Whoever approached It was met and slain by DJinna, appearing as pil lars of sand, as serpents or desert rob bers, but equally deadly whatever form they assumed. For many hundred years, travelers tempted by the legends tried to And Antra, but always in vain. Most who tried re cently were turned back before they passed Into the desert; for the saltan, while ho pretends to control tbe desert dwtlWrs, knows better. Therefore, to evade respon sibility and still to keep up his pretense, he adopts the happy expedient of forbidding travelers to cross the "dead lino." The explorers who were turned back were luckier than most of those who got through. Most of them never returned. Tbe few who did had little to tell except stories of fights with Bedouins and uarrow es capes. None of them saw tho "Ghost Pal ace," and In tbe course of time men leaned to the belief tbat Anira the Beautiful aa ft fiction f Arabia. Dr. Musll was more fortunate. In 1900 he had made a short visit to Arabia and bad won the friendship of one of tbe most powerful of the Arab rulers, Emir TaJJal, the chief of the Bent 8achr, the "Sons of the Rocks." He accompanied him on a fighting expedition againRt another tribe and his services as surgeon had endeared him to the old Arab. The Emir Tajjal was an Arab of the traditionary kind. Throughout the deserts, from end to end of the peninsula, he was equally honored for his Integrity and no bility of character and feared for his power. So, when Dr. Musil, accompanied by his friend, Alphons Ieopoll Mlelich, the painter, arrived in Madaba on the desert frontier in 1!K)1, prepared to search for Amr, the watchfulness of the Turkish au thorities was set at nuught by bis Arab friends. Tho Turks, suspecting the object of the Austrlans, warned them that they would bo arrested if they tried to leave tbe place. But one night they evaded the guards and made- their way to a rendezvous In the desert Just outside of Madaba. Here Sheik Hajel, the. brother of the Emir, and as noble-hearted as tbat Emir himself, met them with seven camels of tbe purest breed to be fou.id in Arabia. Armed bedouins guarded the outfit, while others crept Into the town and smuggled out the travelers' effects. Then the two Austrlans were garbed by the Arabs In the favorite disguise of the men of the Arabian Nights stories that of physicians, Musil being named the phy sician Mutsa and Mielich the physician Hunna. Sheik Hajel had spared no expense. That Involved no financial hardship for him, however, for Dr. Musil nays that he Is so rich that bo cannot estimate his own wealth. Tens of thousands of tribesmen pay him tribute and every caravan that goes be tween Mecca and Muscat, or Mecca and Damascus. do the same. Tbe unhappy caravans call it robbery. The Sheik and the Euilr call it tribute paid to them as musters of the land. Fcr three days and nights the party crossed fiery sands. Then they saw, far on the horizon, t great building, and the Arab warriors stopped and prayed. The shlek once more pressed on the Austrlans tho danger Into which they were going. Finding them obdurate, he and hlB men concealed their own superstitious ter rors and advanced. They found a strange palace indeed. For more than 1,000 years of loneliness the red sands of Arabia had piled around it. For more than 1,000 years probably no human foot had entered It. Yet It looked out over tbe lllimltible deserts, not a ruin, but a noble structure with all Its linea Intact. There was only one door to the whole building. Nothing could Induce the Arabs to enter and the Austrlans went in alone. To their great delight they found the great wall paintings of which the legends had told. The colors were still well pre served and the pictures showed the life and history of centuries before Christ and of a nation and kings whose names have been only legends for twenty centuries. The travelers had been In the castle a little more than an hour when shots rang outside. Rushing forth they found a hot fight on between their escort and a horde of desert robbers. - ' The Austrlans unslung their rifles and pitched In. But the party was hopelessly (Continued on Seventh Puge.)