32 THE SUNDAY OBEGONIAN, . POETLAND". JUNE 24, 1900. ONE HUNDRED YE;ARS AGO JOURNALISM AT THE BEGINNING OP TnE CENTURY. Fenr Old Xewspapers Foaad la the Family Client of a Well-KnoTvn. Resident of Portland. T. B. Howes, of this city, vice-president end general manager of the American District Telegraph Company, has a number of very old newspapers. Dating back, as they do, to the early history of the Re public, they possess a quaint and peculiar Interest. These venerable reminders of the past present most unique sidelights upon the topics of those days of the long ago, alike profitable to the student of his tory, or the mere searcher after the curi ous. Mr. Howes possesses four of these ancient Journals. They are the Massa chusetts Mercury and three copies of tho New England Palladium, of different dates. Tho Massachusetts Mercury bears date of Friday, October 17, 1800. The three copies of the New England Pallad ium are dated, respectively. Friday, June 2, 1809; Tuesday, January 14, 1812; and Fri day, April 16, 1S13. All these papers were printied at Boston. Mass. The Massachusetts Mercury was found ed about 17S4. Tho New England Pal ladium was established in Boston in 1753. Young & Minns were the publishers, and the .paper was issued by those "printers to the state," on Congress street. The New England Palladium was subsequently merged with the Boston Advertiser. Both the Mercury and Palladium were consid ered Influential journals in their day, and fulfilled their mission In molding the thought of their timea. Vell-Prcncrved Copies. Tho papers in the possession of Mr. Howes are In a remarkable state of pres ervation. Each is a flve-column folio, about the size of the average four-pago Sunday school paper of today. The paper upon which they are printed is consider ably heavier and coaner than that em ployed nowadays; the print is clear and legible. Upon, tho margins of the papers is the name of the subscriber, "J Howes, Esq.," written in ink. The characters are as distinct and easily read as the day they were written. Jeremiah Howes, of Massachusetts, was the great-grandfather of T. B. Howes, of Portland. Through tho painstaking care of Jeremiah Howes, the papers were preserved. They formed part of a bundle containing some 20 or CO copies, and placed in a wooden box and stowed away in an old garret. As father succeeded son, this box or "generation chest," as it was termed in tire Howes family, de scended from one hand to another, down to the present time. Practically forgot ten, it lay through all the passing gener ations. Some years ago, while on a visit to Massachusetts, T. B. Howes resurrect ed the old "generation chest." In the division of the contents between himself and his brother wore included the old newspapers. In one of them not those in T. B. Howes possession appears an account of tho death of President "Wash ington. A heavy black border and turned column rules servo to emphasize the event. Jeremiah Howes. Some special reference to Jeremiah Howes himself are not out of place. He was tho Lieutenant of a company of Colo nials stationed at Dorchester Heights during tho Revolution. His commission as such officer is now owned by his great grandson. This document Is wonderfully well preserved. Jeremiah Howes was about SO at the time of his death, which occurred about 1S2L It was In March, 1776, that "Washington occupied Dorchester Heights. At this time Lieutenant Howes must have been about 45 years of age. It will be remembered that on that event ful night, prior to March, 17, 1776, follow ing a stormy day, the Continentals com pleted strong fortifications, rendering abortivo any attack by General Howe, the British Commander. This led to tho embarkation of his army in the ships of the English fleet, and its departure for Halifax. The old town of Yarmouth, Mass., was founded in 1633, in the county of Barn stable, on Cape Cod. Thomas Howes, an ancestor of the Revolutionary Lieutenant, was one of the founders of Yarmouth, and one of the grantees, from the Ply mouth Colony, of the land upon which tho town was built. The title deeds cover ing the transfer are now In T. B. Howes' hands. To Teturn to these old Boston newspa pers. The obso'ete forms of expression havo a quaint flavor. The queer ways of spoiling, the odd. old-style, long "s" and many other peculiar things servo to show the distinction between Journalism in this country a century since and that of to day. It is strange to note that many medicines now advertised were advertised own then. Others are now no longer known, but have gone the usual way of quack nostrums. Some Remedies. In the century-old Mercury one Dr. Ham ilton's "Grand Restorative" !s represented to be a sovereign remedy for the "cure of the various complaints which result from dissipated pleasures, the Immoderate use of tea," etc. An "excellent corn plalstor" (plaster) has a first-page loca tion, "next to pure reading matter," as tho advertising contracts cay. Some body's preparation for "rheumatisms" and one for "hooping cough" (minus the "w"), are mentioned. One Dr. Jackson in his professional card "Informs the public that he has, at present, a supply of cowpox matter, and Inoculates for this disease." This appears at a time only four years after Jenner'3 dl5covery of vaccination (179G). and marks the early stages of this method tor preventing the spread of small pox. An advertisement for the "Hay Market Theater," of that olden time, appears odd ly enough now. It reads thus: October J7. "pHE Public are respectfully Informed the Entertainments announced for last Evening were from the unfavorable ap pearance of the weather, postponed till THIS EVENING. Friday, October 17, when the favorite Comedy of SPEED THE PLOUGH. With the Farce of Set a Beggar on Horseback, and He'll Ride to the Devil. And a New Song of A.B.C. by Mrs. Baker "With a Variety of Entertainments for the Benefit of Mess. DOWNIE & COWLES, & Mrs. BAKER. Will actually be performed. Imagine a theatrical performance in this . age being postponed on account of "the. unfavorable appearance of the weather!" From another advertisement it would appear that those staid old New Englanders were not averse to Indulging in lottery tickets. The advertisement an nounces the following: "Three Thousand Dollnrat "Yesterday the drawing of the Philan thropic Lottery recommenced. The draw ing will be completed without any further delayance. Those who Intend to purchase tickets had better apply Immediately, whilst the wheels- are favourable to pur chasers. "The following- is a Kst of prizes wh!ch remain in the wheels undrawn, viz.: 1 of 3000. 8 of 500. 12 of 100. IS of 50 and 97 of 23 dollars and not two blanks to a prize. Tickets and Quarters, warranted un drawn, may be had at the Lottery Office. No. 39. Cornhlll, from 6 o'clock in the morning to the same hour in the even ing. ' A correct list of the drawn num- Vbe vbera exhibited gratis. Oct. 17." Thle Is assuredly quite a drop from the ways of the days of Governor WInthrop and the Puritans. A communication from John Jay, who was envoy to Great Britain In 1794, con cerning his mission, appears In the Mer cury. A brief reference to the Jay treaty, which he secured on that mission, is apro pos. By the terms or -the treaty, the east ern" boundary of Maine was determined, and the citizens of the United States ob tained' more for $10,000,000 for illegal cap tures by British cruisers. Ab the treaty failed to make any provisions relating to Impressment, or regulations of neutrality between the British and French priva teers. It was violently denounced by Jay's political enemies. He was even burned In efligy at Boston. But. despite all calumnious attacks. President "Washington ratified the treaty, with the approval of the Senate, August 14, 1795. In his letter, printed In the Mercury, Mr. Jay spiritedly defended him self against the anti-Federalists. It seems these had circulated a report, and even published an itemized statement, purport ing to give the total of Mr. Jay's ex penditures while abroad as $52,720 So. He thus replies to the animadversions: -Jay's Reply. "Being at Philadelphia on official busi ness, in May, 1794, President "Washington desired me to go as Envoy to Great Brit ain. I earnestly endeavored to fix his attention elsewhere; but he persevered, and I found it Impossible to reconcile It with my duty to persist In declining the appointment. Circumstanced as I was, and aware of the business, of the tem per of the times and of tho union of cer tain Interests against any amicable set tlement with Great Britain, personal con siderations opposed my undertaking the task. "When I finally yielded to the Pres ident's request, I told him that I declined any compensation for my services; that my necessary and actual expenses only should be paid, but that my stated sal ary as Chief Justice must be continued." Mr. Jay further remarked that "calum ny1 has been an engine of party, in all countries, and particularly In elective governments." He shows, further, and by Incontestable evidence, that he only expended JIS.OOO, all of which was ac counted for to the United States Treas ury. Thus was "another lie nailed," as the political organs of this day would say. There is an account of the death of General Kleber, the Commander-in-Chief of the French army In Egypt, who was appointed by Napoleon Bonaparte. It was after he had subdued a revolt that he was assassinated' by a Moslem fa natic, at Cairo. June 14. This atfeount shows how slowly news traveled In those days. "When it Is- realized that the paper "is announcing as news an occurrence that took place four months and three days prior to its publication, it seems rather odd. The Palladium. The New England Palladium of June 2, 1S09, contains many curious references. For instance, one A. Clark "informs his friends and the public" of his "boarding school for lads, opposite the Rev. Mr. Bates' meotimy-house, in Dedham." He says he can instruct boys "in the latin and- greek languages, English grammar, reading, writing, arithmetlck, geography and history." Even In the early part of the nineteenth century, political parodies occasionally appeared in the newspapers. The Palla dium, of the Issue now under considera tion, publishes a poem on James Madison, parodied from Robert Burn's "John An derson. My Jo." Tho paper states that It was sung"at the late celebration in Al bany of the triumph of Federal Repub licanism in the recent election In New York State." Here Is a sample verse: James Madison, my Joe-Jem, now tell us what you mean? Will you pursue your patron's steps, lnvislon and in dream? Tho Nation's razins on you, Jem, and much expect, you know Don't disappoint their fondest hopes, James Madison, my Joe. Madison, the third President, was elect ed this year (1800). It was then that the embargo law was replaced by a non-intercourse law, prohibiting trade with England and France, 'but allowing it with the-Test of the world. Jefferson handed over to hi successor the prospect of an immediate war. As the war materialized, the supporters of Madison could not com plain of "James Madison, My Jo," for ho did not "disappoint their fondest hopes." There was evidently no gag applied by a censor to the press in those days, as the following editorial paragraph attests no leee-majeste: "The Indications which Governor Lin coln could see of a friendly adjustment with France have not been visible to cur dim-sighted President and Congress!! His Honor had better lend them his specta cles." The President referred to Is Madison." One Joseph Callender advertises "Genu ine .Spanish Cigarrs" that "are pro nounced, by Judges that have smoaked them" of fine quality. Gerry, Anti-Federalist. The New England Palladium, dated January 14, 1812, is a rare old paper. It contains .a speech delivered by Elbridge Gerry before the Senate and House of Representatives of Massachusetts, late in the previous year, at the time he was tho anti-Federalist Governor of the state. Considerable Interest clusters about El bridge Qerry's name. He was Interested In naval operations during the Revolu tion; was a member -of the Continental Congress, and was one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. He also assisted In framing the Constitution of tho United States, although he refused to sign it. In his legislative address, which occupies six columns, there is such a be wildering moss of information that It Is difficulty to make an excerpt. One point that attracts the attention Is his refer ence to tho successful termination of the Revolution and the founding of the Order of tho Cincinnati. He also alludes to British Impressment of American seamen in his address. Touching this matter, he said: "Thus It appears by the public law, that our National Government has for many years past had a right to repel that mon arch who has Invariably vitiated its per fect rights; that foreign recruiters, who use no force to enlist volunteers, are sub ject to be Immediately hanged; that the press-gang of Great Britain, having forci bly taken from vessels of the United States their native citizens, have com mitted crimes of a deeper dye, and have richly merited a similar punishment; and that man-teallng. sanctioned as It has been by His Britannic Majesty, in o flagrant a degree. Is, and for a long time has been, a Just cause for declaring war against him." Ono final extract from these relics of Journalism of tho historic past will serve to bring this to a close. Here It is a "Congress Epigram," as the Palladium calls it: The Demo's in va striko to make an excuse. For their much-boasted Speaker's low. vulgar abuse; Whilst the Federalists, sticking to truth, plainly say. That nothing but dirt was expected from Clay. CHARLES E. SAWYER. Crooned the Grent Divide. The editor of "The Lost Creek Lyre" thus describes a llttlo incident of everyday edltorial life in that lively camp: When he lit inside our sanctum "We most cotirteouslr thanked him For the honor he had paid as by the call, ' And his hand -shot like a rocket To his 'arsenal hip pocket As he passed a rude remark about our gall. He had come prepared to nght us. To unmercifully smite us. On his mortuary feace to hang our hide. But our nerve was workln steady And our Gatllng gun was ready And he prematurely crossed the great divide! Denver Post.. IN THE PROMISED LAND EASTERN OREGON'S COLONY OF "WEST VIRGINIA MOUNTAIN FOLK Llttle-KaotTO Settlement of Hardy, God-Fearlnfr, Contented and Hospitable People. On the spurs of tho Powder River Mountains. Just east of the Grand Rondo River, in Wallowa County, Or.. He thou sands of acres of fertile, heavily timber ed, well-watered Government land. There is probably no other region In the United States, of which there is so little known ' More bent to,18 the wretched than to rise, by the outside world as this. It is 50 In these days of eham and show, It l miles to Elgin, -the nearest railroad point, J refreshing 'to attend one of these unpre over a road which Is none of the best. J tentious meetings, to listen to theold A few years ago, about 50 families of fashioned hymns, when ' some brother MEN JN THE MARK "West Virginia mountaineers, tired of struggling for a livelihood on the poverty-stricken hills of their native state, began to look about for a place where they could better their condition. By some means their attention was directed to Eastern Oregon, and, rising like" a flock of migratory birds, they flow West and settled down -on these fertile hills. The head of each family took up 1C0 acres of land, under the homestead law, and at once began- to clear away the for ert and open a farm. So delighted were the settlers with their new location, that they named It "The Promised Land," and the settlement is known by that name all over that part of the state. Clearing away and disposing of the heavy timber was no easy task. Great trees, many of them more than 100 feet high, and from two to three reet in diam eter, were cut down, sawed Into lengths that coiT"d be moved rolled together ami burned. Just to get rid of thean. It seem ed like wanton destruction to bum these magnificent trees; but there was no other way, and the monarchs of the for est had to go. The newcomers cut logs and built for themselves cabins more or less pretentious, according to their means. Each one helped the other, and these "homo raisings" served the double pur pose of making homos and promoting sociability. Old-Fanhioncd Honpltnllty. The men are strong, hardy, sober, in dustrious and sensitive, quick and will ing to do an act of kindness, and equally quick to resent an insult or an injury. The women are pictures of health and ro bust womanhood. The people are noted for their hospitality. The visitor, -be he friend or stranger, is always welcomed In the old-time Southern manner. The best his host can provide is set before him. and an offer to pay is regarded- as an Insult. The members -of the commun ity are primitive In manner of Irving, as pioneers must be, but then kind-heartedness, their hospitality and their keen sense of hocor proclaim the gentle blood of the "old Dominion." The "Promised Land" Is a neighborhood, all to itself; being so remote from every settlement, the people do not suffer for want of el bow room. While their life is made up of days of hard work, they are not with out amusements. The evenings in Sum mer are short, and after va long days' work, cultivating their crops, they ore tired enough to want to rest. But. during the Winter, they have more time for enjoyment. The days are spent in clearing away the timber and taking care of their stock, and the long evenings are devoted to social Inter course. Almost every week some on of the neighbors gives a party, and old and young gather in the log cabin and pass the hours away to the music of the fid dle, and when "The Arkanf as Traveler." "Tho Irish Washerwoman" and "The Devil's Dream" take the place of Schu bert's "Serenade." Chopin's "Polonaise." etc., of the fashionable olty gatherings. If the youngsters want to Indulge in a dance, the room is cleared, the young fel lows select their partners and. while one of their number "calls off" the others keep time to the merry strains of the music. These amusements may be crud- or even rude, but they recall Goldsmith's lines: O luxury! Thou cursed by heaven' decree. How ill exchangid are things like these for thee. In their religious life and they are all church members the people of the Prom ised Land are as primitive as they are In other respects. They are nearly. If not all. members of -the Christian or Camp belllte church, and they believe In doing right. The little log schoolhouse Is util ized as a church on Sunday. The minis ter Is a regular old-timer, who pounds the pulpit, while he expounds the gospel of hell-fire and brimstone. In the Bloom Ington (Ind.) Star, which Is being ed ited, "as the devil would edit it," his Satanic Majesty Is made to say, editor ially: Satnn'a Editorial. "The world moves, and things are com ing my way fast. Even the churches are falling Into line. "When the old-fashioned preacher of former days pounded the pulpit and preached straight to the text, l,4. wiiBt':'i 'Christ and him crucified I had a pret ty hard road, but now, with the 'liberal and up-to-date preachers, I am getting along easy." If pounding the pulpit would make It hard, the devil would have a hard road to travel In the Promised Land. If anybody wants to hear a specimen of the good old-fashioned simon-pure gospel of 50 or 100 years ago, let him attend "preachln " in the little log schoolhouse, with these "West Virginia mountaineers. Tho preach er is not a salaried one. The force of the "call" does not depend on the amount of money he Is to get; he thankfully takes what the people give him on Sun day, and works during the week. He may teach the little district school, but he preaches for the good It does. Um Wilful ho to fawn, or seek for power, Iy doctrine fasnloncd to the varying hour; For other alms his heart had learned to prise. PUBLIC-EYE.' HANNA. "raises the tune," and tho entire congre gation Joins In the singing. The Inhabitants of The Promised Land are not up todate In many other ways. Notably, they are hardly ever sick, and they don't take much medicine, for there is not a doctor or a drug store, or any other store, for that matter, nearer than 25 miles. -3o they don't indulge In popu lar panaceas, nor In popular luxuries. They live healthy, out-door lives, work hard, keep regular hours, fear God and j make good citizens or tne great aiaie oi Oregon, and of the United States. H. B. METCALF. Quick an n Winlc. A wink lis quick, but not so quick but that photography and a watch can jneas ure the rapidity of its motions. The clos ing of the eye, the rest and the opening of it have been measured and are found Sfu. ? r. i i ii -""V" This is a 'quick wink, and winks have been measured that required 40 thou sandths of. a second more time. For these measurements especially ar ranged photographic apparatus Is re quired, and then when a bit of white pa per Is placed, on the eyelid. Its mqtlon can bo accurately determined. In a qv.ck wink the closing of the eye has been found to require 75 thousandths of a second, tho rest twice as long and the "opening 170 thousandths of a second. 'KOP-JEE;" RIVAL OF "13-14-15. illVill 1 -tH U lttiHra IwJa isSPlllillllliM 'raallBHv ' vMH it , J HSBreml ' LATEST PUZZLE GAME OF THE EAST. Tho newest puzzle to weary the brains of New Yorkers is "Kop-Jee." which is played with a flat, clrdular box. about 44 Inches In diameter and half an Inch deep, and which contains six ordinary marbles. The same Is simple enough, and the Inventor says "It can bo done in a minute, ir you know how." The bottom "of the box Is a flat surface, which is ridged twice about a sixteenth of an inch the first rldfe qr piano forming a circle about half an Inch ,rotn the side of the box. and the next rldjre about half an inch further toward the center. This makes a raised circle in the center, which Is known as the "kop-Jce." In the middle of It Is a small hole, and on the lower raised portion art. five other holes. The marbles are all alike, except one, and the object Of th puzzle Is to work that one marblo Into the bole In the upper "kop-Jee" and then surround it with the other five marbles, each In a hole In the lower rldge. To many this appears at first glance to be Impossible, and It would be if the marbles were kept rolling In the box. But there Is a movement by which the marbles can bo so shitted that they 'tan be put Into position, one at a time, where they will almost drop into the holes. This is particularly true of tho marble which Is to go on the top plane. It being about thO'laslest one to get in place. But thaf'5 If you know how. Most persons don't. And they spend wild "hours trying to find out. Perhaps that Is why the Inventor has printed this warning on the box: "Be alone when you try ksp-Jeo. Don't have a parrot In tho house." NEST OF THE BALD EAGLE CARTLOADS OF WOOD OFTEf TTSED IN ITS CONSTRUCTION. Its Predatory Ocapanta Foraplns Propensities FiilnavrU and Owls Tor Neighbor. At the tops of tall old trees In the heart of swamps and heavy woodland, situated usually In the vicinity of water, the bold eagle builds. Its nest, a great mass of tangled roots and decayed branches from the surrounding trees, or of driftwood from the shore, is a conspicuous land mark for many miles around. Several cartloads of wood are frequently used In the construction, and some of the eyries are occupied by the eame birds for years. From two to three eggs of a dull" white color and slightly larger than the domes tic duck egg are deposited by the eagles In February and March, and the young birds come out of the shells In time to get tho benefit of the- great run of fish in. tho water of the bay early in the Spring. Thofood of the young "birds consists mainly of fish, wild fowls and occasion ally small animals. The eagle's habit of robbing the fish hawk of its well-earned prey is charac teristic of its foraging propensities. Fre quently, when hungry, the great birds follow the flshbawk, and as the hawk arises from the water, after a plung?, with a cry the eagle sweeps downward upon the unfortunate fisher .and. causing him to drop his prey, will, with a sudden motion, grasp the fish hi Its talons and, soaring upward, leave the ill-fated hawk screaming with rage below hlm. The eagles bully the flshhawks to such an ex tent that the poor birds are afraid to meet their tormentors, and begin to cry out In a most pathetic manner when the eagles appear. As scavengers about the shores of the bay and Its tributaries, the eagles are somewhat akin to the vultures, as they appropriate the dead fish and other flesh which is washed up by the waves. Hunting for Food. Although much of the eagle's prey comes with but little exertion, there are times when it becomes necessary for it to work for food. The great birds have been known when pressed by hunger, to swoop down upon flocks of ducks, brant and even wild gosse, selecting a particular fowl as the flock scattered, and, giving chase, usually securing the quarry after a flight of several hundred yards. Wound ed ducks and other smaller wild- fowl are legitimate prey for the eagles, and on the fresh-water marshes, muskrats which are left In traps after sunrlso are fre quently appropriated. Domestic fowls also suffer from ra'ds "of the eaglet, and as the farmers are. con stantly en the watch for a shot at the great birds the species is rapidly dimin ishing. Along the water-courses or the Eastern Shore are favorite haunts of the eagles, and many nests are In the vicin ity of the streams. Marketing the la ge timber has destroyed many of the b-.t nesting sites, and few very old nests now remain In tho state. The birds commonly known as black eagles are the young during their firat year, when tho plumage lacks the whiye head and tall which adorns the adult. During the second year, the erroneous name of gray eagles Is commonly applied to the birds, and they do not attain the plumage marks of maturity until the third moulting season. At the top of tall trees on which the branches grow sparsely, a mass of sticks, leaves, moss and roots seems to be dumped promiscuously Into a great pile at the intersection of the highest limbs. "Viewed from the top, the nest presents a different aspect and the pkill and patient labor manifested In the compact mass of crooked sticks and roots have given It a really artistic curver about the symmet rical cup In which the eggs are laid. Peraltitent Builder. In any large area of "heavy timber sit uated somewhat remote the birds build, and if disturbed and broken up. they will build and lay again. The young remain in the nest until they become very fat on the rats, squirrels, moles and other small rodents and reptiles which form the usual diet of eagles. Occasionally, raids upon the barnyards have gained for the bald eagle the name of hen or chickens hawk, and the en.nl y of the farmer. The red-tail eagle is much ! more addicted to the poultry habit than 1 J? .. . . ,,,,' fll . c.mor.tT. Its relative, but through their similarity of appearance the chicken-raisers do not discriminate between them, and the red shouldered, which rarely approaches the poultry yard, is frequently hunted down for the misdeeds of another species. In the lowlands and deep, inaccess'blo swamps, where the trees grow thick and water covers the ground during the W'n ter and Spring, the great horned owls are at home. They can be heard uncan- nlly hooting in the dark recesses of the woodland. Just after New Year's the owls begin looking about for a building site. In the' depths of a-convenient hol low, or upon the old nest of a crow or hawk, the owls, after much patching to suit .their Individual tastes, some time during February, deposit their clutch of two or three white, globular eggs. Close sitting Is required during Incuba tion at this cold season, and Instances have been noted where, during a violent snow storm, both the nest and incubating bird have been covered with several inches of snow. Many eggs are destroyed by1 the crows, who suck them. The owls which choose the hollows for their nest ing site, escape this source of danger, and it Is strange that more of the species do not utilize these natural tree cavities. Youbk Oirls. The young owls when hatched are white and resemble balls of thistle down. Small animals, birds and reptiles are included In the bill of fare of the owls, and their nocturnal foraging often brings them, into contact with the poultry yards. Tho barred owl Is closely allied In hab its to the great horned, nesting about the same time and under like conditions. An absence of the long ear tufts and a round, human-like face are characteristics of the species. The deep-toped, mirthless laugh ter of tho barred owla which Inhabit the remote swamps of the Eastern Shore, makes a great Impression upon the su perstitious colored persons living In their vicinity and frequently cause the wood land to be dubbed "haunted." in their category of places they refuse to ap proach after r.lghtfall. During April, especially the first of the month, many other hawks and owls build their nests, and by the first of May. when the song birds begin to mate, the owls and all of the large hawks, except per haps the fishhawk, have hatched their offspring.' or are well under way with the incubating process. Baltimore Sun, PASSPORTS NOT REQUIRED. Americans Mny Travel In Europe "Without Them Pant UaKes. "Passports are not required in Europe." said Mr. Hunt. Chief of the Passport Bu reau of the Department of State, recently to a reporter of the Chicago Record. "That is to say, a passport Is not needed to secure admission to any of the; coun tries except liussla and Turiiey.- Should the tourist Intend to remain at any par ticular place on the Continent for a long time; should he Intend to take up a tem porary residence or engage in business, for example, then he is called upon to establish his identity, and this can best bo done by means of a passport. The present passport Is not. the old passport or international law. That was a safe conduct to a man, with permission to go through a country, given by the ruler of that country. It then became a paper given by a sovereign to a person about to enter upon a voyage, requesting the sov ereigns of the countries to be visited to permit him to enter. The language, used in our passports now is to let the person to whom It Is Issued pass freely, and to give him all lawful aid and protection. "As a matter of fact, the American passport has never been issued to a for eigner to travel in this country, as a pass port has never been required here, except In brief periods and limited areas during war times. The passports which are being Issued in such large nunsbers now are cer tificates of American citizenship and an evidence of the person who holds it to the right of American protection. The only real passports, in the old international law sense, that the Department of State has ever Issued were sent to Mr. Polo, the Spanish Minister, and Lord Sackville West, the British Minister. Merely n Forinnlity. "They were addressed to officers of the United States, giving safe conduct to the bearers, and were merely a formailty. having no weight at all, because anybody Is free to travel In the United States ro long" as he does not violate the law. Oc casionally a foreign Minister about to go away on leave asks for and receives from the department one of tfhese safe con ducts, but they are rare and have not numbered three in three years. "The ordinary passport issued by other governments is similar to that which we give our citizens, both in wording and purpose. Some foreign countries, before recognizing the validity of a passport, re quire that a 'vise' be affixed, denoting that it has been examined and is authen tic. The vls in some cases must be at tached In the country wh-are the passport Is issued, by a diplomatic or consular of ficer of the government requiring It; sometimes simply by such officer any where, and then again at times at the frontier of the country to Which admis sion Is sought. Should an American citi zen, either native or naturalized, require a passport or Identification while abroad, he has the right to call upon the nearest American diplomatic or Consular officer for it. "It is safe for an American citizen to visit any country of Europe, provided he has not violated the laws in any of them. In those nations where military service is required of subjects, a native emigrating to the United States and taking up citi zenship here is free to return, provided he has not been summoned to perform the service at the time he departed; but no naturalized citizen can return to his mother country with impunity. If he vio lated any of the laws, deserted from the army, etc.. he will probably be n-?prehend-ed by the parent government upon his re turn, and the passport will not protect him, because a man cannot avoid .pun ishment for the Infringement of the laws of one country by becoming a citizen of another. Retrardinn; Citizenship. "Russia, Turkey, a"hd in a less degree Italy and Switzerland, adhere to the doc trine of perpetual allegiance. Switzerland and Italy do not commonly assert It against subjects who have become natu ralized citizens of the United States. The Department of State has had prolonged correspondence protesting against the at titude of Turkey and Russia, but has been unable so far to secure the desired concessions. "Our laws, you know, do net extend be yond the Jurisdiction of this Government, and while we may by statute proclaim the right of expatriation, we cannot en force It in either Russia or Turkey. The Czar of Russia and the Sultan of Turkey, when our citizens enter their domains, have to be consulted concerning this di vine right. The tendency of all modern International Intercourse Is in favor of its recognition, but that will do one little good, should he be arrested In Russia or Turkey and -thrown into jail. There he may, it is true, reflect upon his divine and also upon his actual Incarceration. "As a matter of fact, neltner Kussia nor Turkey carries its power to an extreme. It frequently happens that a naturalized citizen returning to his home In either country is apprehended and thrown Into prison. Things are made uncomfortable for him for awhile, and he. Is subsequent ly released with a warning. His experi ence Is a sufficient lesson to warn others never to return, and thus the purpose of the Czar and the Sultan Is accomplished." - Yes and Nol Come skeptic thinker, heathen. Pray hearken unto me; A question I would ask theo Anent life's mystery. Give but the heart's own annwer. Kot reasons what should st te; An answer aye, far truer Than research could'st teach thee. Wert ever thou the parent Of a child a world to thee nave death to dispossess then. Doubt'st Immortality ? Arthur D. Marshall in Astoria Dally News. m Couldn't Hurt Him. -vfn mn. the new boarder has just fallen A out of the third-story windewl". "Don t worry, my aear; ue umj yiat4.iv- ing his brutal-brothers act for the Summer vaudeville season." Clcveiana riaan vesu- SPRIGHTLY SARAH GRAND DECLINES TO LOOK UPON MAN AS HAYING ONLY FAULTS. On the Contrary, Finds Him Qult an Estimable Creature, and Bids Woman View Herself. Sarah Grand, the well-known authoress In proposing the toast, "Mero Man," at the annual women's banquet of ths Whltefriars Club, in London: England, recently, spoke "right out In meetln'.' Said she: "I decline to be accused of caKing man any names. I do not decline out of con sideration for 'mere men altogether, but in self-defense. To use such an expres sion deprives me of any dignity which I might myself derive from the dignity of my subject. "The saying is. 'In small things, libertsv In groat things, unity; in a-1 things, char ity.' but when you meet a man who do scribes himself as a 'mere man.' yon would always do well to ask what ha wants, for since man first swung himself from his bough in the forest primeval and stood upright on two legs, he has never assumed that position for nothing. My own private opinion, which I con fide to you, knowing it will go no fur ther, is that he assumes that tone, as sj rule, to overawe sovereign woman. " 'Mere man' Is a paradoxical creature. It is not always possible to distinguish between his sober earnest and h:s leg pulling exercises. One has to be on one's guard, and woe be to the woman who In these days displays that absence of the sense of humor which is such a prominent characteristic of our comic pa pers. . "I do not mean to say for a moment that man assumed his 'mere man tone for unpleasant purposes. On tho con trary, he assumes it for party purposes as a rule for dinner-party purposes. When man is In his 'mere man" mood. sovereign woman would do well to aalc for anything that she wants, for it la then that he holds the scepter out to her. Unfortunately, the mood does not last; if It did, he would have given us thei suffrage years ago. Uitlandcr and Boer. "Sovereign woman is the Ult'ander of civilization, and man is her Boer. It seems to me that woman is very much in the position of Queen Esther; she has her crown and her kingdom, and her royal robes, but she is liable to have her head, snapped off at any moment. On the other hand, there are hundreds of men who have their heads snapped off every day. Mere man has his faults, no doubt, hut woman can also be a rasping sort oC creature, esr-x:ially If she does not culti vate sympathy with cigarettes, as sha grows o'der. "Let us be fair to 'mere man.' Ha has always treated me with exemplary fa'rness. and I certainly have never main tained that the blockhead majority is en tirely composed of men. neither have I ever Insinuated that it is man that makea all tho misery- "Personally, and speaking as a woman whose guiding prlncip' through life has been to never do anything for herself that she could get a nice man to do for her. a principle which I have found en tirely successful. and which I strongly recommend to every other woman: per sonally. I have always found man an cxcelent comrade. "He has stood by me loyally, and held out an honest hand to me, and lent me hia strength when mine to? falling,' and helped me gallantly over many an awk ward bit of the way. and that, too, at times when sovereign woman whom I had so respected and admired and cham pioned, had nothing for me but bonnet pins. Men Stand by "Women. "In the great republic of letters to which I have the honor to belong In tho distinguished position of the letter 'Z my experience Is that woman suffers no Indignity at the hands of man on account of her sex. That is the sort of experience which creates a prejua'ce. It giv3 one a sort of an 'ilea that there are men in. the world who would stand by a woman on occasion; and I mu3t confess that I bgan life with a very strong prejudice of that kind. "For a woman to have had a good father Is to have be-n bom an heiress. If you had asked me as a child who ran to help me when I fe!I, I should have ans"-cred. 'My daddy.' When a woman begins life with a prejudice of this kind, she never gets over It. The prejudice of a man for his mother Is feeble In com parison with the prejudice of a woman for her father, when she has had a man for her father "It has be-n said that the best way to manage men is to feed the brute; but woman never made that discovery tor herself I believe It was a man In his 'mere man mood who first confided the re-crct to same young wife in distress somebody else's young wife. Feed and flatter him. Why not? Is there any thing more delightful in this world than to b flattered and fed? Let us do as wo would be done by. "The thing about 'mere man which im- presres me most, which fill? jne wit the greatest respect, is not his courago In the face of death, but the courago with which he faces life. The way In which we face death 13 not necessarily more heroic than the way in which we face life. One Kind of "Mere Man." "When it comes to facing life day after day, as so many men have to face it thei worklngmen. In all classes of society, upon whom the home depends, men whosa days are only too often a weary effort, and whose nights are an ache of anxiety, lest the strength should give out which means bread when one thinks of tho lives which these men live, and the way in which they live them, the brave, un complaining way in which they fight to the death for those dear to them wh"n one considers 'mere man from this point of view, one Is moved to enthusiasm, ancl one Is ram to conress tnat sovereign woman on a pedestal Is a poor sort of creature compared 'ntlth this kind of 'mere man, In that so often she not only falls to help and cheer him In his herolo efforts, but to appreciate that he Is mak ing any effort at all. "I positively refuse to subscribe to tho assertion, 'How poor a thing is manP It takes more genius to be a man than manhood to be a genius. As to the differ ences between men and women, I believa that, when finally their accounts havo been properly balanced, It will be found that It has been a case of six of one and; half a dozen of the other, both in tha matter or sovereignty and mcreness." Pointed Paragraph. The world contains an oversupply ofi average men. The gold handled by a dentist is always at a premium. The man who is learning to play tha cornet is his own tutor. A girl loses her self-possession when she puts on a wedding ring. Usually the more money a man has tha more selfish his children are. A woman talks until things geto serious, then she gives the man a chance. It Is easy enough to find a seat in a crowded street-car, but It Is always occu pied. Every man knows howmean his ac- niin'ntnr:.AC nrp hilt hp is never absolute . I ly sure about himself. New York Herall. . t