TIIE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MARCH 6. 1910. I '. MUSEUM'S OLD RESTAURANT Ancient Mexican Temple of Metla Reproduced. -70VEL PLACE FOR A DLTOfER fireat PaJna Tskri In Make the l.lke nee Exaet Rain o rro . terted by th Mexican GflTrrnnirnt. NT.W YOFK. March 5 -In th bft'tmfnt of the American Museum of Natural His tory. Soventy-sixth street st. Is a very Interesting restaurant recently finished called th Mllla restaurant, which 0'iM be evidence If any were needed of the ex treme car In detail taken by the official, of the establishment. In appearance the restaurant la a very good representation of an ancient Mexi can temple. Stepping from the elevator you look about In a square, room whoso walls convey the Idea of extreme niaa sIveneHS nnd are In fact several feet thick. The llnteJa and sides of the entrance wh'oli leads from this foyer to the patio or din In; room propor and from the dining room to a third room a.ro oblong slabs, the plu-- . w efr'Z'yfiZ: TAMALES AND ENCHILADAS FOR MEXICAN QUESTS. fJWeW (Copyright, 1310, by Bobbs Merrill.) CHAPTER Ill-Continued. The disappointment was the greater for my few moments of hope. I sat up In a white fury and put on the clothes that had ri.een left me. Then, still raging, I sat on th edge of the berth and put on the ob noxious tan shoes. The porter, called to his duties, made little excursions back to me, to offer assistance and to chuckle at my discomfiture. He stood by, outwardly decorour. but with little irritating grins of amusement around his mouth, when I finally emerged with 'Hie red tie In my hand. But the owner of those clothes didn't become them any mot than you do," he sa'd, as li piled the ubiquitous whisk brot m. "Whan I get th owner of these clothes." I retorted grimly, "he will need a shroud. Where's th conductor?" The conductor was coming, h assured me; also that there was no bag answering the description of mine on the car. I slammed inv way to the dressing room, washed, choked my fiftten and a hulf nock Into a fifteen collar, and was back again in less than five minutes. The car, us well as its occupants, was gradually tak ing on a daylight appearance. I hobbled In, for one of the shoes was abominably tight, and found myself facing a young woman In bluo with an unforgetable face. C'Tlue women already." McKulght says: "That's going pome, even If you don't count the Ulliuore nurse.") She stoud, half turned toward me, one hand idly drooping, tho other steadying her aa sho gated out at the flying landscape. I had an Instant In presslon that I had met her somewhere, under different circumstances, mure cheer ful ones, 1 thought, for the girl's dejection now was evldv.nl. Reside her. sitting dowp, a email dark woman, considerably older, was talking In a rapid undertone. The girl nodded Indifferently now and then. 1 fauoled, although I was not sure, that my appearance brought a startled look Into the young woman's face. I sat down and, hands thrust deep Into the other man pockets, stared ruefully at tho other man's shoes. Th Stag was set. In a momdit th cur fin was goln , And fa t little sr tain was going up on the first act of th for a while we w uld all tay peechrs and ulng our Hltl sV.gs, and I. th villain, would hold center stage while the gallery biased. 'I he porter was standing beside lower ten. He had reached in and waa knocking valiantly, rtut his efforts nut with no rsaponse. He winked at nic over tils shoul der; then lie unfastened tha curtains and taut forward. Uul-ud him. I saw hUu stiff", beard his muttered exclamation. Irg of which ha required extreme nt'-ety nf construction. In the original temple of Mitla a step some nine and a half Inches from the ground lowered the head lins and ormveyed to the explorers a defln t Impression of the lesser height of the an cient Mexican. For what ue this step was Intended could not he discovered and In this facsimile of the building It has been omitted, giving the space required by the modern American physique. The entire coloring of the place Is a cool gTsy, the plaster composition retaining Its ordinal tint and for relief are orna mentations of frets of terra cotta placed tu a geometr'tal design which In the original building had undoubtedly om religious significance. Whether the pe culiar coloring was selected by a primi tive taste or expressed a symbolic mean ing Is also undetermined. The famous Roman key seems to be duplicated In this fretwork and everywhere one Is haunted by peculiarities cf resemblance between th architecture of the ancient Mexicans and that of the Egyptians, there being an en tire absence of curves or suggestion of circular figures. The ventilating of the place la done by air currents conveyed around th top and sides and the open air effect of the ancient temple given by an arrangement of bam boo poles over which are trailing vines. In the entrance hall and the annex to th patio two strange windows of atalned glass saw the bluish pallor that spread over his face and neck. As he retreated a step tl;e Interior of lower ten lay open to the day, Th man In It waa on his back, the early morning sun striking full on his upturned face. But the light did not disturb him. A small stain of red dyed the front of Ms night clothes and trailed across the sheet, his half-open eyes were fixed, without see ing, on the shining wood above. I grasped the porter's shaking shoulders and stared down to where the train Im parled to the body a grisly suggestion of motion. "Qood lord," I gasped. "Tho man's been murdered!" CHAPTER IV. Afterwards, when I tried to recall our discovery of the body In lower ten. I found that my most vivid Impression was not that made by the revelation of th opened curtain. I had an Instantaneous picture of a slender, blue-gowned girl who seemed to sense my words rather than bear them, of two smell hands that clutched desperately at the seat beside them. The girl In the aisle stood, bent toward us, perplexity and alarm fighting In her face. With twitching hands the porter at tempted to dra-jr the curtains together. Then In a paralysis of shock, he collapsed on the edire of my berth and sat there swaying. In my excitement I shook him. 'For heaven's sake, keep your nerve, man," I said bruskly. "You'll have every woman In th car in hysterics. And If you do, you'll wish you could change places with th man In there." Ha rolled his eyts. A man near, who had been reading last night's paper, dropped It quickly and tip toed toward us. He peered between the partly open curtain, closed them quietly and went back, ostentatiously solemn, to Ma seat. Th very crackl with which h opened his paper added to the bursting curiosity of th ear. For th passengers kr.ew that something was amiss: I was conscious of a sudden tension. When the curtains closed th porter was mors himself; h wiped his Hps with a handkerchief and stood erect. "If my last trip in thla car," he re marked heavily. "There'a aomethtng wrong with that berth. Last trip the woman In It took an overdose of some sleeping stuff, and wa found her, Jos' like that dead! And It ain't more n thre months now sine there waa twlue born In that very spot. No, air, It ain't natural." At that moment a thin man with promi nent eyea and a spar grayish goate creaked up th aisle and paused besld me. Torter alckT" he Inquired, taking In with a profeaalonal y th porur'a horror struck face, my own excitement and the with antique figures glv light, but are apologised for by the constructors of the place as being slightly out of keeping with th or. Th figures are emblematlo of the Mexico of a later date than th Mitla temple. They were put In because It was absoultely necessary to make som con cession to modern needs In the way of light and air. The furnishings of the place, necessarily conforming to the present-day needs, are f 'ee from any s'ar'llng anachronisms. While chairs are unknown at the epoch repre sented, the museum chairs made of heavy tropical wood duplicate the angular archi tecture of the temple stools and the center table, a atngla enormous slab of wood. Is supported by rough pedestals of shortened tree trunks. This table slab is of Sequoia glgantla redwood, made from a single tree and is part of the excess of the rhlllpplne exhibit of woods sent by the museum authorltiea to the Seattle exposi tion, the most complete exhibit ever gath ered, it is said, for uch a purpose. The chairs are also manufactured from this oversupply. The table slab is about ten Inches thick and weighs approximately 00 pounds and the chairs are of corre sponding weight There Is no intention expressed by the bead caterer, Robert Moulder, who was at one time connected with the Department of Instruction of the museum to supply curiosity seekers with duplicates of Mexl can menus. Their taste for the curious must be aatlafleld by the eye alone, but th power of environment has weakened thla original viewpoint and he finally admits, driven to the nearest Mexican cor ner, that he ha a regular order with a maker of tamalea to furnish him that eatable whenever required and chill con carne, frljoles, mole of chicken may be had if the order la placed long enough ahead to give him time for the necessary preparation. The mole of chicken aa prepared in the kitchen of the establishment la certainly a chef d'oeuvre. It consists of the breast and wings of chicken, practically all white meat, which are boiled In a special pot, jointed and cut and then cooked anew, th final touch being; given by a marvelous sauce made of the hot chills. The ingre dients are one of the secrets of the place. Simple and severely plain as the Mitla restaurant Is to the casual glance, It really represents the work of several months, preceded by that of years, when data were gathered In Mexico, photographs taken and preliminaries perfected by the staff of museum workers under the direction and part of the time under the personal' super vision of Prof. Marshall H. Savllle of Columbia university and curator of Mexi can and Central American archaelogy for the museum. Every one of the several thousand bits of plaster In the mosaic of the restaurant was manufactured In the department of preparation situated in the museum, and one of the helpers says that while the architecture is generally spoken of as "Az tec" In design it is really of a period pre vious to the Axtec Influence, previous even to that of th Montegumas. and that the moKt Interesting data came to them from old manuscripts written by the Jesuits. In these writings the Mitla Temple is spoken of as being In existence when Mon ies urn a reigned. To Its great age and the mystery of Its Inscriptions and the use to which a great part of its enclosed courts, secret chambers and underground corridors was put Is added the fact of its wonderful preservation, utterly unexplalnable by any climatic reasons, for ruins of later date have crumbled and worn away. Mr. Flgglne. who had charge of th con struction of the Mitla restaurant, comes covered with plaster from the workroom, where a sheath down Is being fitted to th life-slxe plaster cast of a sebra, and lead ing the way by a seotion of globe on which are placed some hundred or so tiny sheep tllghtly gaping curtains of lower ten. He reached for the darky's pulse and pulled out an old-fashioned gold watch. "Hm! Only fifty! Whafa the matterT Had a shock?" he asked shrewdly. "Yes," I answered for the porter. "We've both had one. It you are a doctor, I wish you would look at the man In the barth across, lower ten. I'm afraid It's too late, but I'm not experienced In such matters." Together we opened the curtains, and the doctor, bending down, gave a comprehen sive glance that took In the rolling head, the relaxed jaw, the ugly stain on the sheet. The examination needed only a mo ment. Death was written In the clear whit of tha nostrils, the colorless lips, th smoothing away of the sinister lines of the night before. With its new dignity th face was not unhandsome: th gray hair was atill plentiful, the features strong and well cut. The doctor straightened himself and turned to me. "Dead for some time," he said, running a professional finger over the stains. "These are dry and hardened, you see, and rigor mortis Is well estab lished. A friend of yours?" "I don't know him at all, I repllrd. "Never aaw him but' once before." ' Then you don't know If he Is traveling alone?" ' Na, h was not that Is, I don't know anything about him," I corrected myself. It was my first blunder: th doctor glanced up at m quickly and then turned his at tention again to tha body. I.Ik a flash there had come to m th vision of th woman with th brons hair and tha tragic face, whom I had surprised in the vestibule between the cars, somewhere In the small hours of the morning. I had acted on my first Impulse th masculine on of shielding a woman. The doctor had unfastened th coat of tha atriped pajamas and axpoaed th dead man's chest. On the left side wss a small punctured wound of Insignificant sis. "Very neatly done," the doctor said with appreciation. "Couldn't have done It bet ter myself. Right through tha Intercostal space: no Urn even to grunt" "Isn't th heart around there some where?" I asked. The medical man turned toward me and smiled austerely. "That's where it belongs, just under that puncture, when It isn't gadding around In a man's throat or his boots." I had a new respect for the doctor, for any on Indeed who could crack even a feebl jok under such clroumstancea, or who could run an impersonal finger over that wound and those stains. Odd how a healthy, nomal man holds th medical profession In half contemptuous regard NATURE STUDENT8. of varying breeds, showing the effect of migration, etc., continues the description of tha work commenced by one of his aids. "When Prof. Seville made a survey of the Mitla ruins he found ono court which contained more than 500,000 pieces of stone that had been cut and ground, of course, without the use of any steel Instruments, which were absolutely unknown at that time. These ptecea were put together so accurately that they could without break ing or crumbling sustain th weight put upon them. They did not us cement In those days, that being also a later produot for architectural use, and altogether the old Mitla Temple, the most important of the Mexican exhibits, having a facade In one place of nearly 200 feet. Is the wonder and admiration of every archaeologist and every architect who has seen It or its photographed representation. "The restaurant, duplicating it In part, has been built absolutely to scale, using the measurements taken by Prof. Savllle and the photographs as guides. This has been made easy by the perfection of the ancient architecture, where the relation of one piece to another was accurately maintained throughout. The atones that went over the top of the door to the patio In the original temple were twelv and one-hslf feet long, two and a half feet thick and four feet wide, while alx to seven feet was the height of most of the original doorways, Including the steps. "There was a Hall of Pillars, which we have not yet duplicated, but may In tUa by continuing the space already allotted us for the purpose. Several of th pillars In this hall are fifteen to eighteen feet high and there was a long covered court, entrance to which was obtained only by a circuitous route, which muet have been employed for aome rellgioua ceremonial, concerning which there is absolutely no until h gets sick, or an emergency like this arises, and then turns meekly to th n an who knows the Ins and outs of his mortal tenement, takes his pills or his patronage, ties to him Ilk a rudderless ship In a gale. "Suicide. Is it, doctor?" I asked. H stood erect, after drawing th bed clothing over the face, and, taking off his glasses, he wiped them slowly. "No, It Is not suicide," he announced de clslvely. "It Is murder." Of course, I had expected that, but the word itself brought a shiver. I was Just a bit dlrsy. Curious faces through the car were turned toward us, and I could hear the porter behind me breathing audibly. A stout woman In negligee cam down the aisle and querulously confronted the por ter. She wore a pink dressing jacket and carried portions of her clothing. "Porter," she began, In the voice of' the lady who had "dangled." "Is there a rule of this company that will allow a woman to occupy the dressing room for one hour and curl her hair with an alcohql lamp w'.ille respectable people haven't a place w her they ccn hook their" She stopped suddenly and stared Into lower ten. Her shining pink cheeks grew pasty, her Jaw fell. I remember trying to think of something to say, and of saying nothing at all. Then she had burled her eyes on the nondescript garments that hung from her arm and tottered back the way she had come. Slowly a little knot of men gathered around us. silent for the fin ,4ffffei wfc, . .M Mil T I''l lapllliwi It ( 1 : II8: if w WiMmMmw fell 5 n f data. This,, too, we hop to represent. If necessary. In dimensions which will sug gest rather than duplicate th original. "When Prof. Savllle first visited the Mitla temple. In th Hall of Pillars and the Long Court, aa well as in tha patto, alcoves and Inner rooms, desolation reigned supreme. The Mexicans used th place to camp In whenever an itinerant horseman doslred a shelter and horses and cattle were both housed there and allowed to roam at will. Many of the bits of plaster like this" and Mr. Figglns picks up a piece of the original work sawtoothed by some stone instrument of crude make "were kicked and defaced by the animals and there was danger that the whole place might In course of time lose its wonderful value by mere careless ness and Ignorance of Its worth to the world at large. It Is due to' these rep resentations of Prof. Savllle to the Mex ican government that today the horses and cattle have been ejected and an en trance gate protects the place from van dals. The mission fathers near by guard th ancient ruins and the key has to be obtained from them, the small fee re quired being used to protect further the temple. The Indians believed that pieces of atone taken from the temple would In time change to gold. "Before the main entrance of the temple when Prof. Savllle first vlalted it was an enormous heap of volcanic ash and refuse, which he had removed, this work taking 100 men about thirty days. The labor was rewarded by tha unearthing of a room which had In the beginning been situated In a court, the walla of which were de most part. The doctor was making a search of the berth when the conductor elbowed his way through, followed by the Inquisitive man, who had evidently sum moned him. I had lost, sight, for a time, of the girl In blue. "Do It himself?" the conductor queried, after a buslnossllke glance at the body. "No, he didn't," the doctor asserted. "There's no weapon here, and the window Is closed. Ha couldn't have thrown It out. and ho didn't swallow It. What on earth are yftu looking for, man?" Sotno one was on the floor at our feet, face down, peering under the berth. Now he got up without apology, revealing the man who had summoned the conductor. He was dusty, alert, cheerful, and he dragged up with him the dead man's suit case. Th sight of It brought back to m at ono my own predicament. "I don't know whether there's any con nection or not, conductor," I' said, "but X am a victim, too. In less degree; I've been robbed of everything I possess, except a red and yellow bath robe. I happened to be wearing the bath robe, which was prob ably the reason the thief overlooked 4t." There was a fresh murmur In the crowd. Somebody laughed nervously. Th con ductor was Irritated. "I can't bother with that now," h snarled. "The railroad company Is re sponsible for transportation, not for clothes, jewelry and morals. If people want to be stabbed and robbed in the company's cars, It's their affair. Why didn't you sleep In your clothes? I do." stroyed. This room he has left In th most perfect condition and It too Is preserved by the government from future desecra tions There was also an underground rave discovered and evidences of other subter ranean rooms. "The remains of th Mitla temple at near Ortiaha. a region particularly fertile In ruins, showing a thickly populated prov ince In former times. Mitla was rarely visited by explorers until a few years ago, but stnra thn rnnmlMinn nf the Xlevloan I Southern railroad the ruins r visited by hundreds of tourists from the United States every yesr. Prof. Savllle rays that the Journey Is a comparatively easy one . and best mad during the dry season from December to April, the traveler leaving the city of Puebla In the early morning, changing from the opld region to the tropica voy aging tha major part of th day through som of the grandest railroad scenery In the world, the final part of the tour being a thirty-mile carriage ride to Mitla, situ ated In a delightfully temperate sone. "The Jesuit father who wrote of Mitla waa Motolinla, who said that Father Mar tin d Valencia passed through Mitla some time about the year 1537, and gives a brief account of a temple containing a hall of columns and also asserts ss one who knows whereof he speaka that the edifice Is more worthy of being seen than anv other of 'Nw Spain.' The very first men tion of Mitla, preceding the Jesuit account, placea Its conquest In th yesr "two rabbits' which Is-Mexican for 14M. , "The Spaniards ocoupled It after th con uest," says Mr. Figglns, again unearthing i bit of plaster, this time with a Spanish nscrlptlun, "and th now famous 'palace if th Columns' waa then used either for a dwelling or aa a public edifice, and a Spanish window built of bricks still exists n the southern part of the front wall of th structure. ' Several of the doorways have been partly walled up and remains of the brick walls may still be seen. One of the moat Important of the edifices, which contained mural paintings of the utmost value, has been partly demolished and a church and curate's house now occupy the site. A number of other rooms exist, but THE SQUARE THING AT I took an angry step forward. Then somebody touched my arm, and I un clenched my fist. I could understand th conductor's position, and besld. In th law, I had been guilty myself of contribu tory negligence. "I'm not trying to make you responsi ble," I protested, as milably aa I could, "and I believe the clothes the thief loft are as good as my own. They are cer tainly newer. But my valise contained valuable papers, and it Is to your Interest as well as mine to find the man who stole it" "Why, of course," the doctor said shrewdly. "Find the man who skipped out with this gentleman's clothes, and you've probably got the murderer." "I went to bed In lower nine." I said, my mind full again of my lost papers, "and I waked In number seven. I was up In the night prowling around, aa I waa unable to sleep, and I must have gone back to the wrong berth. Anyhow, until th porter wakened me this morning I knew nothing of my mistake. In the in terval th thief murderer, too, perhaps must have come back, discovered my error, and taken advantage of It to further his escape." Th Inquisitive man looked at me from between narrowed eyelids, ferret-llke. "Did any one on the train suspect you of having valuable papers?" he Inquired. The crowd was listening intently. "No one," I answered promptly and posi tively. Th doctor was Investigating the mur dered man's effects. The pockets of his trousers oontalned the usual miscellany of keys and small change, while In hla hip pocket was found a small pearl-handled revolver of the typo women usually keep around. A gold watch with a Masonic charm had slid down between th mat tress and th window, while a showy dia mond stud waa still fastened In the boeom of his shirt. Taken as a whole, th per sonal belongings were those of a man of som means, but without any particular degree of breeding. The doctor heaped them together. "Either robbery was not the motive," he reflected, "or the thief overlooked thesfe things In hla hurry." Th latter hypothesis seemed the more tenable, when, ofter a thorough search, we found no pocketbook and les than a dollar in small change. The suit cose gave no clue. It contained one empty leather covered flask and a pint bottle, also empty, a change of linen and oio callara with the laundry mark, 8. H. In the leather tag- on the handle was a card with tho name Simon Har rington, Pittsburg. The conductor sat down on my unmade berth, across, and made an entry of the name and address. Then, on an old en velope, he wrote a few words ond gave It to the porter, who disappeared. "I guess that's all I can do." he said "I've haT enough trouble this trip to last for a year. They don't need a conductor on these trslns any more; what they ought to have Is a sheriff and a posse." The porter from the next enr came In rnd whispered to lilm. The conductor rose unhappily, "Next car'a caught th disease," h grumbled. "Doctor, a woman back there has got mumps or bubonic plague, or something. Will you come back?" The strange porter atood sslde. "Lady ahout the middle of th car," ho said, "In black, air. with queer looking hair aort of copper color, I think, sir." CHATTER V. THE WOMAN IN THE NEXT CAR. With the departure of the conductor and th doctor, th group around lowr ten brok up, to reform in amaller knots mmm- a .. ..iLiM-wrv--" - - .. m u li ''r-wiwis--1 .1 it -se ir! Hsj rjffiM" D fc SI -s--WWs-Bi-tpaaa their beautiful aton work Is disfigured by w hltewash "Excavations for the Anietiean Museum of Natural History acre made in the vicin ity of the famous tnvjln within a radius of ten miles from eaut to west and about thie miles from north to south. Jn th valley in which the Mitla mounds are located are many mounds In which es cavatlona were ina'le, revealing the founda tion of buildings now entirely destioyrd; buildings partially destroyed. In which th rooms were cleanid out. and tombs, tit walls of which wero of stone with the mosaic' pattern seen In the rooms of the temple duplicated in the museum restaur ant. Two burial pUcea were discovered, but for their complete exploration more time was required than was at the disposal of the expedition. In the tombs and burial places more than thirty skeletons wei taken out. The doorways of the burial chambers faced tha west, but there was no regularity In the manner of interring the dead. '"Some of the chambers of the Mitla tempi ruins were unquestionably designed for tombs of the ancient prieats, and they all have the mosaic decorations duplicated by the department of preparation for th Mitla restaurant. No structures of like character are known In any other part of Mexico or Central America. They are by far the most elaborate and Important burial chambera yet found In the new world, both In alio and In beauty of stone work. Un fortunately none has been opened by archaeologists and we know of nothing of what they formerly contained. Their form lends an Hdded Interest to these chambers , and analogies mlnht easily be drawn to th crosses of the old world. "Th large blocks used In the building of th Mitla temple, l'rof. Sivllle believes, wer transported long distances by means of rope and rollers, the stones were dressed at the quarries and the 'mosaic' designs csrved after they were placed In the structure, the designs being traced; out before the cutting began. Stone chisel might have bn used, and probably this tool was used by th ancient workmen;, work which has been duplicated here in a few weeks probably to k years to complete) originally." THE MITLA RESTAURANT. through th car. Th porter remalued on gut td. With something of relief I sank: Into a jat. I wanted to think, to try to rememDer m aeiaus oi mo provious nigm. But my inquisitive acquaintance had other Intentions. He cam up and sat down ba sld me. Like the conductor, he had taken notes of the dead man's belongings, his name, address, clothing and the gen eral circumstances of tha crime. Now with his little note book open before him, he prepared to enjoy the mlnur sensation of the robbery. "And now for the second victim," he began cheerfully. "What f your nam and address, please?" I eyed him with suspicion. "I have lost everything but my name and address." I parried. "What do you want them for? Publication?" "Oh, no; dear no!" h said, shocked at my misapprehension. "Merely far niy own enlightenment I like to gather data of thla kind and draw my own con clusions. Most Interesting and engroaslm;, Onoe or twice I hav forestalled the re sults of police Investigation but entirely for my own amusement." I nodded tolerantly. Most of us hav hobbles; I knew a man once who carried his handkerchief up his sleeve and had a mania for old colored prints cut out of Godey's Lady Book, "1 use that Inductive method orlglnnte.1 by Poe and followed since with such suc cess by Conan Doyle. Have you evor read Gaboriau? Ah, you have missed a treat, Indeed. And now, to get down to busi ness, what la the name of our escaped thief and Drobable murderer?" "How on earth do I know?" I demanded Impatiently. "He didn't wrlto It In blood anywhere, did he?" The little man looked hurt and disap pointed. "Do you mean to ssy," he asked, "that th pockets of those clothes are entirely empty?" The pockets! In the excitement I had forgotten entirely tho sealskin grip which in porter now sat at my reet, and I had not Investigated the pockets at all. With the InqulHltlve man's pencil takliiaT not of everything that I found, I emptied them on tho opposite erst. Upper left hand walxtcoat, two lead penclla and a fountain pen; lower right waistcoat, match box and a small stamp book; right hand pocket coat, pair of gray suide gloves, new, size seven and a half; left hand pocket, gunmetul clgarttto cas studded with pearls, half full of Egyptian cigarettes. The trousers pockets con tained a gold penknife, a small amount of money In bills and change, and a hand kerchief with the Initial "H" on It. Further search through the coat discov ered a card case with cards bearing the name Henry 1'lncknny Sullivan, and a leather flask with gold mountings, filled with what seemed to be very fair whisky, adti nionoKi ammed 11. P. S. "His name Is evidently Henry Pinckney Sullivan," said the cheerful follower of Poe. as he wro'e it down. "Address as yet unknown. Ftlond, probably, llavo you no ticed that It is almost always the blond men who affect a very light gray, with a touch of red In tho scarf? i'act, I assure you. I kept a record onco of the summer uttlre of men. and HO per cent fol lowed my ruli. Dark men like you affect navy blue, or brown." In spite or myself I was amused at th "Yea; the nil. lie. look wr.s durk-a man's shrewdness, tiue." I said. He rubbed his hands and smiled at mi dullRhtedly. "Then you wore black shoes, not tan " he said, with a glance at the aggrslC yellow ones I wore. T B Continued 1