Oregon: city coura EM MAGAZINE SECTION". OREGON CITY, OREGON FKIDAY. FEBRUARY 16, 1906. PAGES 1 TO 4. THE NEW WEST POINT, STRENUOUS LIFE PROVIDED FOR THE YOUNG CADETS AND FUTURE OFFICERS. Mm Is to Make Men Quick and Self- Reliant Extensive Additions Being Made to Institution Social Life a Feature The United States Military Academy at west 'oint has long enjoyea an in ternational reputation as the finest training Institution In the world, and j this prestige will be considerably en hanced upon the completion of the large scheme of Improvements now under way and upon which Congress will expend more than seven ' million GUARD MOUNi' AT WEST ' POINT. dollars ere they are fully completed in the year 1912. Already the Creation of the "new West Point" has pro gressed far enough to prove how bene ficial will be the undertaking. While the primary purpose of Uncle Sam's unique institution on the banks of the Hudson River Is, of course, to educate young men for positions as officers of the United States Army, the superiority which has won for it world-wide fame is due to the marvel ous efficiency of the mental and physi cal training without regard to the use to which the knowledge is to be put. It Is In the Interest of this ambition to graduate perfect specimens of Ameri can manhood that the costly Improve ments are being carried forward. Nearly Trebles Present Capacity. For one thing the new buildings will provide accommodations for 1,200 ca dets, instead of for 450 as at present, and these new structures will also in clude a new gymnasium, riding hall, academic building, cadet headquarters, etc., as well as a handsome hotel for The Cadets h Become Ex pert Polo Players and Swordsmen. the accommodation of the numerous visitors, including many members of the fair sex, who come to the Point for the various social functions which are scattered through the school year. The new West Point will place some added comforts within re- -h of the cadets in gray but it will result in no lessening of the strenuous activity of their every day life. The West Point er is roused at six o'clock every morn ing, after eight hours sleep. He must be on the Jump from tne moment ne opens his eyes, for only twenty minut es is allowed him to wash, dress, fold up his bedding and set In ordor his room and its contents. At 6.30 o'clock the young men form in companies and march to the mess hall for breakfast. Almost immediately after breakfast begins a routine of study that includes such branches as mathematics, draw ing, modern languages, geography, chemistry, geology, etc. Interspersed between the study and recitation hours are intervals of drill, and what in any other school would be given over to recreation periods are devoted to ath letics in accordance wun a ueuuue program. 10 Plane rnysicaiijr rci isn. The cadets at West Point go in for almost every known muscle-building exercise. Early in the morning they irn thrnmrh the well-known "sotting up" drill and time is also devoted par ticularly in summer to tennis, golf, polo, hurdle riding, baseball foot ball and swimming . The gymnasium pur suits include boxing, fencing-, single stick exercise, etc., in addition to which instruction and practice In dancing are compulsory during two years of the four year course. u it. r-va- ? a ' , art i (J liWli The social side of life at West Point has unquestionably proven one of the greatest attractions of this unique school, admission to which is so eager ly Bought by young men in all parts of the country. 3 Ordinarily the West Pointer has only half- an hour dally, the interval following supper that he can call his own. On Saturday after noon however, the lads are "free" from two o'clock until 6.30 o'clock, the sup per hour, and on Wednesdays there Is similar freedom from 4 o clock In the afternoon until 6.30 o'clock. At such times the famous Flirtation Walk, where so many romances have had their beginning is a mccca for a con siderable portion jof the young men. On Saturday evenings from 8.30 to 10.30 oelock there is dancing. When They Camp Out. In the eyes of most of the cadets the happiest portion of the year at West Point is the summer interval when the whole battalion goes into camp in the wooded area on the north side of the Academy grounds, remaining under canvas from June until September. During this season visitors are espec ially numerous, and the social life at the Point Is seen at its best The cadets at West Point are In very truth picked men, for not only is ad mission gained by passing a very severe entrance examination, but there are examinations scattered all through the four year course and If a cadet fails to comeup to the mark at any of these periodical tests he Is al most certain to be dropped from the rolls. Indeed, so severe is this weed- ing-out process that only about one half of the young men who enter West Point succeed In graduating. A Democratic Institution. One phase of conditions at West Point which is calculated to make every American proud of the institu tion Is the splendid democracy which prevails. Special privileges are un known at the Point. The boy whose father is a multi-millionaire wears the same grade of clothing,' sleeps in the same kind of a bed and eats food that is precisely on a par with that fur nished to the cadet who started in life as 'a bootblack. Each student at the Military Academy receives from Un cle Sam the sum of five hundred dol lars a year and out of this he must purchase all his necessities at the "store." If he spends more than the allowance such excess is a debt which Is duly charged against him and must be liquidated from his future pay. He Broke up the Meeting. A temperance lecturer, speaking in Keene, N. H., reminded his hearers of the story of Dives and Lazarus. He pointed out how, when Dives was in Hades, he did not ask for beer or wine or whisky, but for one drop of water. - - w--- --rr-r--T'- " -ir-rr-" '" - K DANCING IS CONSIDERED A NECESSARY ADJUNCT TO Th'K "POINT," "Now, my friends," said the lecturer, "what does that show us?" A voice from the back of the hall instantly re plied: "It shows us where you temper ance people go to." PALACE FIT FOR TITANIA. MOST BEAUTIFUL PALACE IN ENGLAND RESIDENCE OF AMERICAN WOMAN. Is Now Looking for an Irish Castle. Canada Wants a Local Premier Native American Might Hold Such a Position. The Duchess of Roxburghe, nee Goe let of New York, after many fruitless attempts to find a suitable residence in Ireland, has intrusted the matter to Lord Barrymore, who married, as his second wife, the widow of Arthur Post of New York, and thereby, quite natu rally, greatly improved his financial position. That is one reason he Is par tial to American women and willing tc do all In his power to assist them. Few men know Ireland better than he does. At one time he was one of the best hated men In the country, and diligent students of Irish history with- THE DUCHESS OF to the last quarter of a century would say that it is a wonder he is still liv ing. He is looking out for a house for the Duchess in picturesque Galway. A. fine mansion, constructed of Irish granite and situated between Tuam and Claremorris on the Midland and Great Western Railway, has been in spected in this connection. It is known as Grove Castle, and was erected about forty years ago by an eccentric- bach elor millionaire named Cannon. The estate attached to the house is of little value, but the house and grounds are beautiful. There is plenty of fishing and shooting in the neighborhood, and in the hunting season it attracts many aristocratic folk. Floors Castle is the English resi dence of the Roxburghes. It stands on a terrace overlooking extensive mead ow lands spreading down to the Tweed at its junction with the Teviot. It is like a veritable fairyland of cupolas and minarets, of turrets and embras ured parapets. The castle was built In 1718 by Sir John vanbrugh, in the conception of some happy moment. Sir- Walter Scott described "t" mansion of Floors" as "a kingdom for Oberon and Titania to dwell in, whose majesty and beauty impresses the mind with a sense of awe mingled with pleasure." Vanbrugh might well be dubbed the "architect to first dukes," from his close association with Blenheim for the first Duke of Marlborough, Kimbolton for the first Duke of Manchester, and now Floors lor the first Duke of Rox burgh, who had just received this fur ther title. The third duke was so en grossed with the lifelong task of get ting together his priceless collection of old English literature that he tad no t'me for the domestic life, and, dy ing unmarried, left no son. The dis tant kinsman who succeeded died also without a son, and the title for a while I ! . If. was dormant pending a dispute be tween three claimants. Until this time the family surname had been Ker alone, being the ancient family of the Kers of Cessfprd; it now became Innes Ker, as it remains for the settlement of this three-cornered dispute awarded the title to Sir James Innes, as heir by right of a maternal ancestress. It is a very pretty little bit of character istic history that Duncan Forbes, the historian, records in reference to this succession of James Innes as fifth duke that "his pedigree of thirty de scents proceeds regularly from 1153, and that in all their long line the in heritance never went to a woman, that none of them ever married an ill wife, and that no one ever suffered for their debts." Americans returning from Europe complain that invitations to the Italian court under the present king, Victor Emmanuel, are a good deal more diffi cult to obtain, and are more sparingly distributed than was the case when Humbert occupied the throne of united Italy in the Quirinal at Rome. The ROXBURGHE, foreign envoys are required nowadays to personally vouch for the social standing of those of their countrymen who are admitted into the presence of the king. It is well-nigh an impossi bility for our Ambassador to vouch for the social standing of every American tourist who happens to be "doing" Rome and takes it into his head to go and "call" on the king. In the Dominion of Canada there is a sentiment growing more or less lately favoring the appointment of a Cana dian to the exalted post of Governor General. The country has always been ruled by some member of the nobility sent out from England by the Crown. It is possible, therefore, if the Crown looks with favor on the petitions, that some day a man born In the United States may become Governor-General of Canada, There is nothing but the sentiment of the people to prevent this, There Is no native-born clause, as is the case with the Presidency of the United States. One who becomes a British subject by naturalization la just as good a Britisher as one born under the British flag. Disguised as a Tramp. That a man moving amongst the re spectable classes should disguise him- seir as a beggar, and go in search of adventure, is not a new idea. A young man with a taste for such experiments, nowever, introduced a novel feature, when masquerading as a tramp, by visaing, amongst others, some of his friends. He had a . splendid opportunity of testing their benevolence, for none of them recognized him with his seedy garments and-general, air of wretch? edness. His pilgrimage lasted five days, and aunng tnat period (he started in an appropriate state of pennilessness) he Deggea or earned just about sufficient to live in a rough fashion. He received innumerable Insults (many rrom unsusnectine acquain tances), and only one kind word (from a stranger). Even when he entered a shop or lodging-house with money to pay ior nis needs his ragged garments procured h!m much contemptuous treatment, and he learned a severe lesson on the importance of clothes. Indeed, his cynical conclusion Is that a man who seeks charity should. before all things, be well dressed! A Happy Family, A so-called "happy family" P. T. Bar num used to exhibit consisted of a lion, a tiger, a bear, a wolf, and a lamb, ail penned together in one cage. "Remark able!" a visitor said to Mr. Barnum; "re markable, impressive, instructive! And how long have these animals dwelt to gether in this way?" "Seven months," Barnum answered, "but the lamb has occasionally to be renewed." YAST PETIRFIED FORESTS. ANCIENT VOLCANIC UPHEAVALS IN ARIZONA DISCLOSE HUGE STONE LOGS. Varl-Hued Adamantine Forms Mil lions oi Years ola Preserved by the Government Against Spoils tion naturul wonders. Once they were a forest of stately pines grown to a height far beyond uiat attained by tne trees of today. Ages passed, and through some unex piaiuaule act of nature they were up rooted, prostrated to the ground, probably buried beneuth,tue earth by v oiuumc usnes anu me snows oi many winters. JSext came the waters of floods, leaving over the prone glauu an inland sea, and ail truces of the green forest were swept away. Vast periods of time passed; the seas van ished; volcanoes sent their ashes high in the air, and the explosions from tne interior or tue eartn swept up ward the debris, among which were the wrecks of the pines. Following wis penoa tne waters hurried toward lower levels, gnawing the masses and endeavoring to eat Into the very cell structure of the logs. Erosion was at work, and after centuries, through the probable action of acids and alkalies, the logs of the ancient forest ure revealed to human eyes. Preserved For Future Ages. This is the history of the wonder ful petrified forest of Arizona which Congress, at its last session, set aside as a Government reserve. There are in all about 5,000 acres of land in this reserve.land valueless for commercial or agricultural pursuits, but the hand of nature has created of this vast ex panse a garden of monuments to the vegetation of long ago, forming an attraction for people from all parts of the world. Trunks of treeB, some a hundred feet long, and huge logs, lie in a con fusion in the same position as when nature, in the resurrection of the an cient forest, broke out in explosion due to the eTuptlon of volcanic crat ers. In every direction are to bo seen pieces of petrified wood, some only as large as a toy marble, others in blocks and logs from eight to ten feet in diameter; others are buried partly beneath the shale, and occa sionally there projects from the side, near the top of the mesa, the end of a uge log. These mesas are In themselves wonderful structures. They are com posed of shale, clay and sandstone of many colors, and the ravages of storm and wind have eroded their sides so that here nnd there they stand out like the playthings of a pre-historic giant child. By ponder ing ' upon this sight a faint . idea is given of the countless number of years that have rolled by since this erosive process" commenced. While there are to be round van- ous localities in Arizona, New Mexico NATURAL WONDERS and Utah, where petrified wood oc curs in great quantities, yet the re gion known as the "Petrified Forest oi Arizona" is most notable, and is properly classed amon? thp nnturni wonders of America. .In the first place, it is much more ancient than the petrified forests oi the Yellow. stone National Park, and of certain parts of Wyomlne and Cnllfnmln. the difference in their antiquity as geolo gists count being millions of years, and secondly, there is no other petri fied forest in which the wood nsHnmes so many varied and wnndrmn hrm. and colors. The solidified wood In this mineral state places, the logs and blocks among the gems of precious stone. The mineral wood is converted into shalcedony, opals and agates, and many of the pieces closely approach the condition of jaspar and onyx. The degree of hardness attained by them is such that they make an exel lent quality of emery. Among the color seen are every conceivable shade of black, red, white, Si' PETRDJIED SENTINEL OP THE MESA. yellow, blue-purple and lavender; and each piece has every natural appear ance of wood, though all are as hard as steel. Here and there sections show Bigns of decay arrested by the peculiar progress which converted the wood into mineral. The traveler sees small chips upon the ground, and on picking them up, finds them as heavy as so much lead and as dense as flint. The Government, while allow ing visitors to carry off little pieces of this character, prohibits the removal of any large blocks. Huge Stone Log Bridge. But after all, the climax of all this scenic beauty Is the "Natural Bridge," consisting of a great petrified trunk lying across a canyon 20 feet deep, and forming a natural foot-bridge on which men may easily cross. At the point where the bridge crosses, the canyon is about 30 feet wide, but the trunk lies diagonally, and measures 44 feet between the points at which It rests on the sides oi the canyon. The total length of the tree exposed is 111 feet, and measures where it crosses the center of the canyon, 10 feet in circumference. In the past few years the log has begun to show signs of yielding to that peculiar inclination of all petri fied trees to crack up into immense pieces; In fact, in several places trav erse cracks have already appeared. The Government, In order to preserve OP THE SOUTHWEST. this natural curiosity, has caused two stone abutments to be erected be neath it, making of It a bridge of three spans, in the hopes of preserr ing It for many years to come. GOLD miMFREE AND -" " An Amrrfrtn Morcnietit Wttch with Solid GU-FUted oae. wirrtntrd to kwp correct timet cautl la ppcriiiot to Bolid (hM Walch, wimotod tot 'A vcvif alio a (Juld-FUltd ULn Mt with a tiparklinffUtmarftgmorrntO toy on (or M-iiiitfl only a Jewelry floTeme- at low tin caco, mm n aDd Udrcn for Jewelry. if , When Mild, tend ui "Jitl'S. the and we eudyou Dm uom waicn ana nmi, a j " COLUMBIA. NOVELTY CO, no