NOTEBOOK spires and domes and roofs and far-stretching thorough- fares which gave to the spectacle the daintiness and deli- cacy of a picture and reminded one of airy unreal cities in the glimpses of a dream. Yes, the changes are great and marvelous and for number are past enumeration. And last night as I went to my room in the hotel when my missionary work on the platform was done, I struck the crowning blessed innovation of all, apparently—six fat green bottles in a wire frame hanging on the wall by my door. Gratis refreshment for the weary instructor in place of having to go to the bar and lie. I took that frame down and carried it into my room and got out my lemons and sugar and calculated to have a good solitary sociable time all to myself, and says I—"Here's to prohibition—for the next man that comes along the hall." But sorrow and disappointment must come to all; and thus also came it even to me, when I examined the labels to see what brand of sourmash it was, and found that those homely bottles were to put out another kind of fire. The electric lights hung in the sky were the old arc lamps, and it is not likely that the tele- phone mentioned was in his room—not in 1884. Mark Twain lived to enjoy a great many innova- tions—those of the next 25 years: the automo- bile, for instance, and the phonograph, but he died too soon for the radio and the talking- pictures, and it is unlikely that he ever got a glimpse of a flying-machine. 173