Ninth King and Queen of the Realm of the Great AkSarBen I ' . I ' V ,V ' i-Sf fV-u Y : '-' v "'"W,V - V MR. FRED METZ. MISS BESSIK BRADY. Carpenter's Letter (Continued from Paga Twelve.) tines of Hamlet. Copenhagen lies on lilt: narrow strait leading from tho B.uile s.'a out through the Kattegat and Skaga.rak to the German ocean. It has a tine hir.or, anil this has made It one of th- mo.-il Im portant cllina of northern Europe. It com munda the straits, and has always b. rn a great meeting; place. Thrte yearn lie. ore Columbus dlmovcieJ America Rlshop Ab ealon built a catle here and lived off the trade. Since then the harbor has bis n widened and deepened, and 1 now ono i the best In Europe. The city haa estab lished a free port at a ret of W.Ww.uoo, un I thero are two nil lea of quays, at which tha largest ocean steamers can land. Th.rty five thousand saijng vessels and steamers come and go out of Copenlug n every year, and Ita trade extenus to all pail of the world. The Dane are noted aa Bailors. They command ships almoat everywhere, and you will seldom strike a harbor without finding one or more Danish captain in charge of the larger Vtavcla tht-re. I drove out to the free p rl the ol hut day. It has enormous cranes and all facili ties for haiid.ing g ods. I not.c d sever,) 1 American producta among the th nga load ing and unloading. American cotton, petroleum and Indlitn corn were, being taken out of vessels from New York, and also Minneapolis flour and Chicago p.uk. There were many ateamers In the hirbor; several from Itusaia, two from Norway and Sweden, three from England and an equal -number from Germany. There were ships from thi West Indies and South America " and alto one at. out starting out (or Green land, f There Is considerable trade between Greenland and Denmark. Greenland Is to a large extent a Danish colony, and there are many Danes In Iceland and the Faroe Inlands. The Greenland colonies are chiefly -on the west coast, extending through a4out 13 degrees of latitude, or something like 700- miles. They have there also a mission' and trading station, and do a considerable export business. The trade Is largely In the hands of the Danish Royal Greenland company. It la monopolized by the state, and only govern ment vci-cl." are allowed to sail In Green land wuteis. According to Denmark's treat lex with us the British and other people, theae waters are closed to all vessels whjch have not the permission of the Danish gov ernment, and it Is also necessary for trav--elers who wish to go to that part of the country to get such permission. Without a traveler has such permission he cannot enter, and this permission la not' granted without the pel non who asks, for it la hacked by his own government. This Is done In order to protect the na tives from unscrupulous traders. The gov ernment will not allow the natives to sell Inore than they can dispense with lest they le starved In the winter. They will not sell them Intoxicating liquors, and they are really doing what thewan to elevate their condition. The exports from Denmark to Greenland are chiefly provisions, firearms, dry goods, hardware, tools and Implements. They lend ' soma tobacco, ropo and wooden' goods. Their Imports are seal oil, sealskin,' bear and fox Bklns and eiderdown. About 30.0(0 seal skins are sent from that island li Denmark every year, and' also those of the pnlar bear and of the blue and white fox. The eiderdown la brought as it cc-nies from the nests of the ieder duck.. It is here cleansed and prepared for the market. " . . FRANK G. CARPENTER. Dying in Paris "It la cheaper to live than to die in Paris," says a member of the American ' colony "in the City of IJglil. now visiting .i New York. "However dear the living raiy be to thtir friends, the dead are sure to be dearer for a short period, at all events. .. For a stranger in a furnished apartment the affair is still worse. The landlord claims the right to refurnish and relit the chamber at the expense of the deceased. In the case of an American who recently died, leaving two young daughters, as It were, unprotected, the landlord brought in an exorbitant bill for new furniture, paper, paint,' and seized the corpse for payment - as it was leaving the house for the ceme tery. It Is advisable In :i lease to have the expense of dying agreed upon." If it were not for the natural sentiment of respect for the dead It would be a j'lly retribution to leave the corpse in the h:indu of such a . harpy to be gotten rid at his own expense, New York Press. Poor Richard Junior The receiver of flattery Is usually sincere. Caution is often another name for hon esty. Chirlty covers a multitude of sinners; and It feeds them, too. An apology is hard to make, harder to take, and hardert to shake. . A self-made man botches the job when he thinks he has finished the work. Ability never amounts to much until it acquires two more letters stability. The value of life used to depend on the liver; now It Is the vermiform appendix. Wall Street Is a very small thoroughfare, but it is not a strai3ht and narrow path. Matil.mony may be speculation, but It la well for the girls not to stay too long on the market. It is easy for a man to be willing to put himself In another's place when the place pays 110,000 a year. Saturday Evening Post. Why He Was Glad It was in one of the prisons not a thou pand miles from Philadelphia. The story Is told that the other Sunday the chap lain of the institution, after delivering a sermon to the prisoners, spoke privately to as many as time would permit. To a rather mild looking man he said: "My friend aren't you sorry you are in here?" "Not on your life," said the man. "Not sorry? How can that be? What are you here for?" "I'm here for having three wlvcV said the prisoner. Philadelphia Press. J J.:U HM MISS, I I twm I ' 1 Z. , -At J ' ' ft - r V. a. v J k t Q Q O t w . ' ? -- ' O) o " o o - : ,.g j t-tririir-rfTr-f1 f t OMAHA POLIOK FORCE. ASSKMBLEpAKJTRR lNSPEJJTIONBY THE BOAR D OF .FIRJK AND POLICE COMMISSION EKA-Photo by a Staff Arttet, i