out a declaration , giving my pedigree, my religion, hew 1 mad® a 
living, what I was here ftJP, hew long I was going to stay— also 
whether ©r net I was married. What do they do eventually with 
th® millions of such reeords they must hart? I gave my trunk 
receipt to the hotel boy to set the trunk in th® morning:, and 
then got to bed, worn to a frazzle. About '? in the morning X 
hunted 19 the boy. He said my trunk ted not ooiae, another train 
was da® soon, it would probably be on that. After breakfast , 
at wblok J.:aa was served , as wuohnaa half a teaspoenfwl , the 
t 
boy said £fc®htr#nk had not oome on th® morning train. 1 m 
him to go over with me. When I aesered them I had seen it 
through th® custom house at 3ai aburg and that they had made 
•mt papers because I had some linen from Vienna, they led me 
to another room and there was my precious trunk, wider bona. 
There was more talk and more papers, and then they took the liner, 
and gave me a receipt, xhe linen would be returned to me when 
Heft. (It would upset the republic if I gars some poor Muhich 
Sohneiderin a j@b making it up for me, I suppes®. ) 1 paid two 
fee© and then got away with my trunk, Start in order was to re- 
port t© th© polios, another time -consuming affair, i'nd thoy 
oharge $£ admission to their oityi It is so picturesque it is 
worth it; I guess. It is so beautifully , ol«a». Vienna was 
clean, toe, but much wae in need cf repair there. Her® things 
lo >k spio and span, i'he polio® wear those horrible spiked 
helmets w® ham seen m many pictures of these last several 
©o — 
years. All this business — getting some ferman money, 
Letter: , ' „ , . . 
took most of the mornin-./ Th® botanical garden and herbarium 
arc at Hymphonburg , a suburb, abort half an hour's ride m th® 
street car. After Vienna this seems such a tiny herbarium. It 
U beautl*Bll»ne««lSpea, %$ a beautiful .building , put-up 3»st^ 
before the war. Pr, Koas {not like Scetch Koss, lul Hrrrroos) 
