apples in a French press, operated by French peasants. The Vienna Cafe occupies the middle of the centre walk; regular meals are served on the lower floor, while the upper is devoted to wine and beer tables and cold lunches. The In- dian Bazar comes next and is situated on the north side of the walk. Here the visitor may pur- _chase a great variety of oriental merchandise. For the protection of the Plaisance a Fire and Guard Station is located near this point. The Algerian and Tunisian Village adjoins the Indian Bazar on the north. With its Moorish dome, minarets and ——— towers, its exterior of richly-colored VOLCANO OF KILAUEA. and glazed tiles; the main build- ing presents a most striking appearance. The vil- a concert hall, Kabyle Arab houses, with natives lage shows a street in Algiers, also one in Tunis, engaged in their ordinary occupation and amuse- ments, and a theatre, with musicians, dancing girls and jugglers to the number of fifty, are special features of the orien- tal scene. As in many of the other exhibits various wares of local manufac- ture are’sold. From North Africa to the Sandwich Islands is but a step. Here is found the cyclorama of the Volcano of Kilauea. The greatest volcano in the world, situated in the island of Hawaii, is portrayed in awful sublimity upon 22,248 square feet of canvas. Ata height of more than fifty feet above the ground the figure of Pele, Hawaii’s god- dess of fire, surmounts the entrance por- tal. Upon the same side of the walk is the Chinese Village, with joss-houses, tea-garden, restaurant, bazar and theatre. Grotesque idols and fragrant incense in the former with dramatic talent of the highest quality and rich costuming in the latter, gives us outside barbarians realistic views of the mode of worship and amusements of the inhabitants of the Flowery Kingdom. Some fabulously high-priced teas are shown in the tea- garden, while in the restaurant both CHINE‘ E VILLAGE,