TP pi 1 CLAYTON 1 cowboys t saddle In LAYTON BANKS, one of the best I hat ever t hrrw lepr oyer "Wyoming, had just finished ride on the great outlaw horse, Steam boat, the worst horse In the world. The ilir black hors had fouRht with every trick at his command and had pitched, Bunnshcfl, elUcateppca ana cnangea ends, winding: up his performance with a. series oC hard, crashing descents t ri fi t had un seated many a champion. The cowboy v v panting heavily as he leaned against the corral irate. "If it hadnt been for the sandy soli out there, he'd got me," admitted the oowpunolior. I've Wn on .ill the nsd homes in the "We Steamboat sure hai t . I Riiess, hut old a right to his title. He is the worst outlaw that ever hap pened, ami that black hide of hls'll be full of cussedneiis until he dies." "What makes Steamboat Ii ardor to ride than any .other horse ?" was asked. 'Tt the way he imes down to the Sionnd. There are other outltiWH - that io more fancy step? when' they're buck ing. bJt they don't jar a man, like old Steamboat. You see Steamboat is a big, heavy horse. Me in about 12 years -old. and he has been Imping just the same for eight years. o" over since they first -put a saddle on 1 . '. m. He fouRli t Just the same way when he was brought in off the ranRfc anl tlipy tried to break lilm. He frlves '. irt of peculiar, sile twlatlng Jumps, r rtd. - when he hits the Krounj you tlilnl; you've fell off one o: those SO-story terees down in New York. Xe looks easier t ride than lota of other horses, but be isn't. He's the worst horse In the .world., all right, when it comes to making a flgrht. When You Try to .'.-- tcl" r II i m. ' "There's no eowboy wants to try to scratch Steamboat. went on Da n k s, as be peered through at the big horse who was walking calmly about Within the cor ral, looking like anything but an equine desperado. "You'll Wnow it's customary or bronco-busters to scratch the shoul- dcrs of a horse with their spurs, just "to gret the buck out of em quicker. Well. 1 o ts of cowboys may be able to s tay on Steamboat just the way ,1 have done, by not stirrin' him up very much. But you The Most Widely Read of They Are the Builders of Headlines in the Dally Venders Xpw York Sun. THE authors whose writings are read by the greatest number of persons are the headline writers for the daily newspapers. The writers of the best Fellers among books do not compare with them. For advertising purposes It is customary to assume that every copy of a newspa per n seen by five readers. If this as- numption Is correct every copy of a news paper of a quarter of a million daily cl r- dilation Is seen by a million and a quar- ter of readers. 3f anything: ln a newspa per l.o read it is the headlines. Writers of books, of magazine articles, of much of the matter In the weekly and daily papers write at their leisure. The news reports for the daily press are, part of them, written hurriedly. Ttie new headlines are put on with little time for thought. Nearly every newspaper has its own sisle ol Mines, permitting ttie m of only a certain number of letters, or within a few letters of that number, in m. line. Thia requirement engages the attention ot the headline writer and occupies part of the brief .time in which he has to do his work. Yet much depend? upon the ready sKill and ability of the headline man. No mat ter how newsy- and bright a paper may be. it ean be made to appear unlnterest- In g and dull it the Headlines do not come up to the level- of the text. And. too. the conscientious headline writer does not make beads that, the text does not bear out. In the brief time at hm disposal. In the limited space t his enrnmand a.nd within the restrictions im posed by the headline style and typog- raptiy or hta" paper, be must maKc the most of the material which he is to ln- troduce. Within I ti memory of newspaper work- ers and readers not yet old there have Wn (treat changes In headline methods. -V style of headline that was so common nulf . century bko as to he almost uni versal may be cha.rivcteried as the wood- ph head, for example: "COMMON COUX- i ll, PROCEEDINGS; Resolutions Adopt 1 2 r get him on hard ground, where he can get out the full ffeet of his jumps, and then try to scratch him. and the best rider in the world'U go over on his head. Otto Ploegor, one of the finest riders in Wyoming, made a bet he could Bcratch Steamboat. Well lie rode him fine for a tew jumps and might have stnyefl on rig-ht through, hut the first time he save a little rnkc with his spur old Steamboat woke up- The boss had been kind of loafliv alone, like he was savin' to him- sel f : 'Well. Otto is a nice boy and I don't want to hurt him." But when he reit that spur rake down his shoulder h$ give a jump that made OLto's bones squoak. Then he give another a little worse, and Otto fell off so Jarred that he" didn't dare speak Tor ten minutes' for fear his teeth'd fall out." - Genesis of t-lie Burking Horse. Nobody has ever solved the problem of the outlaw horse. The motives that actuate the human outlaw are easily ac counted for, but the had horse of the plains offers a deeper problem. A horse born and bred In the surroundings of civilisation will manifest bad temper per- naps, but only by biting;, Kicking and squealing. But ss a rule this home can be made a fairly respectable member of equine society. The range, horse, with his added accomplishment of bucking, is rarely tamed when onoe he has shown the disposition of an outlaw. There is no evidence that the first horses brought into this country by the Spaniards knew how to buck when they were turned loose on the plains, forming the nucleus of the wild norsc bands of today. No doubt bucking- was learned when some moun tain lion made a deadly leap to the buck of one of the horses. Kicking- would not dislodged the lion, SO -the horses began to buck. The mountain lion endeavored in vain to maintain his position. Teeth and claws would not avail against those peculiar twisting .lumps and jarrins de scents, and soon Mr. Liion tumbled igno mlniously In the dust, while the horse, scratched and bleeding, made mental note of tile best way to shake off an enemy. At any rate, no malur how it was learned, the Ducking instinct is', strong In the Western range horse. ' Bishop ed, Motions Carried and - Ordinances Passed," A radical departure from this was the catch word title, a heading tliat was in-, tended to catch the attention of the read- er by, setting forth m a word, usually in large black letters followed by one or more scare marks, the nub of the story iK-iifHin 11, as, i or instance. "SJASHUP: ' roiiowea unes m emaller type ex- plainlng: that there had been a collision of railway trains somewhere. This style of head is still- used by some newspapers in an aggravated form and sometimes with colored Inks. Another sort of 'headline that was In use some 30 years ago much more -than now may, for want of a more accurately descriptive word, be termed the Ingenious head. The makinjf of it requires some in genuity In combining words, so that by sisrht or sound or by both they would at- tract attention to the text, and a little wit in the head of the writer was a. help An example of this sort of headline winch will fairly lllwtra,? .lie meaning was written over a story from a New Jersey town tellinfr of a ehost scare that proved to be the work of some mischiev ous Individuals. The top line was; "Ho- ciisiwcus In Holiokus." The latest scheme of newspaper head- 1 lnes which has been generally adopted is to set forth the most interesting feat- tire of ttie story in the top line, and In the subsequent lines to tell the story as fully- as the spjfoe devoted to the head ing will permit. This gives the pith of the news to the reader who only glances at the headlines. i t h this style of head usually hop. a. Bummar' of the storv In the openfnR paragraph, with the headlines and this paragraph the reader gets the story in brief from beginning to end. and In what follows he gets t tie details, if he is suf ficiently interested to read on. Tiiere is a form ot newspaper heading known as the display head which breaks away from the newspapers style of head lines and is used only for matter of a very startling or important Character, In these headlines the writer, with few re strictions a.s to the paper's customary style, endeavors o set forth the news as strikingly as possible. A few newspapers use display heads every day in every eft- tion on every page and in almost every THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN. PORTLAND, JANUARY 13. 190?. t J H Once a Bucker. Always.a Bucker, Is a Rule That the r0110WS, , ifSi.lY X 7MI Authors of the united states. ' column so indiscriminately that when they have news really worth a display head they are powerless to indicate its Importance. The force of the newppaper headline has often been exemplified, A headline brought the word mugwump into common use in this country, not, however, at first as a word of political significance. Tte- ferring to some act or the former auto crat ot Asbury Park, a headline writer wrote "MiiRwiinip Bradley" ti i i so and so. Then arose a newsnaoer dlseucnlon as to the meaning ot the word, and It was threshed out of the chaff of Indian lore. later. when Theodore Roosevol t, a s a representattve of his district at the State capital was active In an oleomargarine investigation in New York City, a re porter mentioned him as "tho stalwart young mugwump or reform." Still later ttie word turned up in Its well underwood political significance. .A. headline f?ave to Thomas A Edison the di'signatlon "The Wizard of Aleiilo w to myea m fresident of the United States and Wheeler was Vioe- Prcslrlent the latter had little to do with affairs of state and was often reported as being on a fishing trip In riorttiem ew York. A headline SnoWe ot him as "The Lone Fisherman of Malone." and the designation of the Lone Flsherman clung to him with considerable persist- enee. When Jerry Simpson, of Kansas, was a fierure In Washington as a member oT Congress a headline writer called him "The socKiess Socrates or Medicine Lodge." and the appellation, wholty or in worth whllei a lot of in stances could be recalled of the readlnes3 of headline writers while working under the stress of the moment. One nlprht there came by wire the announcement of the death of an ossified man who had toured the world with circuses.' The busy copy "editor headed It "He ried Hard." A headline to be remembered for its striking combination or pathos and mat' ter of fact was printed over a paragraph telltnK of the burial at sea of a. little Rus sian child of Immigrant parents from an Incoming steamship. The ship's log told In nautical terms the nlare wW t!ia bodr was cast into the Water- and the f '- V Vtsw Cowboy J ''A 'r - headline read; "Latitude and Longitude of a Little Fellow's Grave.' A small daily in 7ew England dispensed with the services of headline writers ; when the copy canie in Xrpm the tele grapher It was given out to the componi-' tors and they made the heads, usually setting: them up In the composing sties: and following: along with the text. One night tho wire briefly told of the death In Buffalo of Millard KUlmore. 'The conn po?5itor set up a head for It and in the morning the paper announced the death of the 13th Fresident ot Die United States under .the fullface lower case caption. "Man Dead." LIKES TALK-OF-AMERICANS English Paper, However, TVot Able to Distinguish What Is Slang. (London Globe.) " Henry Arthur Jones has our support 1 ii his eulogy of trie American lan gruage. "American colloquial lan- guago." he says. "Is racier than ours, has more bite and sting: and swarms with lusty young" Idioms struck off red hot with vitality." That is the secret of the beauty of Amorics-p. It is. to employ it for tho moment, a real, live tongue, hitting: you where you live, and ail wool right throu&rh. English sounds insipid and ts.me after it. though to do us Justice, we are gradually assimilating- Amer- Jean iaiome ana worKing them into tlie fabric of our speech. It is becoming quite common to hear people say they can not "stand for" a thing, when a few years back they would have said simply Mani" One hr-ars. too, of a thingr being a "soft' proposition or a "tounh proposition." It seems to us that there is more hu- mor in American colluquialisms. One somehow feels that the man who in vented them must have been a pleasant fellow. The Kng-lish colloquialism too often suggests the public house, One should dist.ng-uish, however, between the colloquialisms of America and its slang. The slang may be a shade too racy lor those who HKe the colloquial isms. We have known men who liked to affect: toe American Idiom in their conversation bclne aa baffled by Mi works or George Atle as was Andrew Lang1 when reviewing thai writer's "Fables in Slang--" " Cl lie m P Ski ' Alt J- - J-, - a The: Making of Silk: by a Artificial Product That Is Said to Itlval That Made by EVERAL varieties of artificial silk are In the ruSrket In Vrance. dis- played in some of the stores and of fered for sale at figures much below the genuine article, Next to CtiarQonnet the viscose is the most common. It is one of the valuable forms of dissolved cellulose, which may be precipitated and made to assumn almost any form desired: that is to say. it may be precipitated into fila ments of thread as fine as a spider's web or in masses tfcat can be made ag hard as rubber. It may also be precipitated Into skeels or molded into a variety of forms. Viscose was discovered and named by Messrs. Cross and Vovi of London, and it wax they who first demonstrated its use. These gentlemen found that when cotton, wood pulp or any other form of cellulose was treated with a solution of caustic soda and the solid residue thus obtained treated with UlflllpnWO VI carugn anfl this mag? TO again treated with water the whole pass Into " solution and front this solution, th ce llu loee was e precipitated at will. To C. H. Steam of Kew Gardens, Lon- don, $s due the credit of evolving artifi cial sillc from this solution. He accom plished this by forcing- the viscose solu- Hon through a tube which terminate In a multitude of infinitesimal holes, the end of the tube being; at the same time ina- mersed In a troug-h' containing a solution capable of precipitating the eelluloee. As the precipitation begln immediately on coming: in contact with the precipitators' liquid each film, maintains its own in- tegrity and by the first operation quite a number of minute filaments are twisted Into a larger but still very small filament adapted- to weaving: into a fabric- Mr. Steam tlrpt applied It to tne manufacture of carbon fllmentu for eleetrlc lamp bulbs. In the manufacture of which he was then and still Is engaetl. II" soon found that he could make Waments as large aa a lead pencil and as fine as a snMer's neb. New Process X-'on nd . The last discovery was found "by him to' be specially Interestintr and he soon applied it to the manufacture of artificial Biog-rLpIiy pfSteamboat !Mfeanl Horses t s Ethelbert Talbot, in his recent book, "My People or the Pl-iino." tells of a time when he was compelled to ride horseback from a ranch to the church where he was to speak. The ranchman offered him the choice of two xaddle horses, one of which "bucKed a little and the other a good deal.' Naturally the binhop chose the one tha t "bucked a little" and mana pred to make the " Journey without dlsanter. Toriay( in ppite ol restricted range th same evil is manifest in the Western bronoo. It would seem that the bucking Instinct has become hereditary. On any big ranch in the West there are always plenty of outlaws that are the despair of their owners, and even the gentlest tempered saddle horse sometimes gets the fever and does a few bucking steps Juiit to show he has not Horgotton the trick. . - Riders Who '"fake (lie Top Ofr." Fortunately the Went haw bred a ra ce of riders to compete with its horses. Since the earliest days of the cattle business the feats of the bronco-busters have chal lenged admiration. Not all oowboys have been pronco-bustenj. in fact, the busters have formed hut a small percentage of the cowboy element in the West. 1 n the old days the cattlemen hired two or three bronco-busters to breaK ttie horses of the outfit. There might be HX cowboys with an outfit and only one or two bronco-busters. The busters did nothing else but ride wild horsftn. In fact they earned their "pay at that alone. They might be calleu upon to "take the ton ofT' a dozen or more bad horses In a day. Once in a while an outlaw of the Steamboat type would be struck. The "top" would never be taken off him, for he would buck as hard as If the bronco- buster had neved been on his back. Such horses were simply turned out on the range , again, as they were of no use, save for purposes of exhibition. "Amont' the old-time busters in Wyo ming, Arthur Norton was the finest," said John M. Kuykendall. of Denver, who was a ranch-owner and rough-rider in the silk. This viacose silk is now produced in France at Araue la Bataille, near Dieppe; at Taulignan. in the department of the .Drome; In Stettrin. Germitny. and in other places in Italy and Switzerland. Merchants Inform me that it responds readily to hues, while it ts sold for about two-thirds the price of the genuine silk:, which it closely resembles. An allied in- Oustry to whicn ylBco-ie is applied is tne manufacture of artificial horsehair. The article is now manufactured in England, and the industry is said to be very pros- pcrous. ? Viscose and its products contain nothing that la In any way allied to guncotton, and is no more inflammable than ordi nary silK. Another difference between viscose and the Chardonnet silk la that the former requires no alcohol in its manufacture. The viscose si 11c thus far manufactured in Kra nee has found pur- chasers In that country and hut little of It has been exported. Another variety of artificial wllle manu factured from a 'base of hydrate of cop- per was patcntea in lSMDyii, Dwp A description of this process, in a small volume written bv JVT. F. Wlllpms and published In 1S4 by the Oentral School of Arts end Manufactures In Fanr states that this product differs from all others In the nature of the corps employed, in the chemical reactions upon which it i based and in the results obtained. A. few lines from the description made by the inventor follow: ' 1 employ, in the lie, Hut pure cellulose. in a cupro-ammoniacal liquid (Schweitzer reactive), cuprate of ammoniac, and the solution obtained is stored In a reservoir, from which It is made to emergre through capillary orifices under a pressure. Rivals Natural Product. "In cmerglns from these orifices, tne vlficoeo spray of cellulose 1? dissolved In Schweltxer liquid and passes through a special chemical bath. such as clUorydrlque acid, acetic, oxalic, tartaric or citric acid, which coagulates the cellulose and con verts it into a solid fiber, while taking: from it a part of the copper and the am- moniac . which has been drawn into it. Then thft fiber Is treatec. with a dilud chloridrle acid bath to take from It all the i .inw..:::v.:i-va.-- 43 ID eanest of All in America 1 M,IIII KHMfcusUij r 'I i- days of the cattle-kitiRS. "Among: th riders of today I should 8v that Harry Brennan, of Sheridan, Wyo., is the near- est to .Morton. In fact Brennun rid? with Juat &r much ease and grace as Norton showed, hut- 1 should say he in hardly ag expert In handling wild horse and judging wild hoi-Be nature." "V !.-.-- to Genuine lUdlng. Today( If one wants to see the greatest feats of rough rldlngr. he should go out with some home outltt. There are only a few of thee horse outfits left, and, Uify will not be In existence many years, A typical outfit Is the Flying-U, that has hundred of horse out on the range be tween the. Yellowstone and . Big Horn Rivers. When there is a round up of tlifse horses one can see rough riding that merit the term. It ia .not for exhibition purpose but s strict 'business. Tho crnck brontfo-btistftra In the outfit are called upon to saddle and i-id dozens of wild, shaggy- horses ' that may have felt thft touch of n rope but onre in their lives, that -being when they were branded ax colts. SiH)h horses will plunge, rem-. fall backward and execute the most marvelous and unheard-of bucking steps. But most of them have the "top taken off"- at the lirst ride, for the lironco-bu.Mter will stick at his work all day t neccs- sary. Anions the worst horses in the West today sire Syblle. -Vlile O Hell. Two Step. Young Steamboat. I'oison and Gray Eagle. These horses are typical outlaw:', Thy bucked to th limit the first tlina they had a h; 1 1 1 f '. thrown on their backx. and they tut?R Juxt the same today. Ther. is no turning them, and they are of im use to anybody except when some bronco- busting1 exhibition is held and darinc cow boys i-islc life and limb for the salce of the applause of the. crowd. One cannot bur admire the spirit of those outlaw horses. As a Western poet has written, of the eciuine outlaw : Until he dies, and dien with unbroken prld- Each day ho' II fight, and welcome mmi- madv scars; And every nigtit will pause, with quiver iti ic side. And gaze with longing through the corral bars. - Denver. Colo.. January 5! iNow VVethod the Industrious Worm. copper and ammoniac by chemical action and by osmose. The rhloridrie acid con verts the Schweitier lirtuld into chloride of copper and chlorate of ammoniac, corps which are soluble and w hlch iepa- rate from yie filament where the pun cellulose remain. "To impart to this artificial si 11c ' a. closer resemblance to real stilt. which. contains azotic proflucw, the cellulose so lution may be treated .in a hath of Schweitzer 1 1 ti iI with s certain Quantity of animal substance, such as a4bu men or silk wastes or bourrc Oe sole. The m a--nient may be treated also In a solution of albumen copiously diluted with water." A process" of making artificial sllle somewhat similar lo that of Despei.ssls is callod thr "Pauls? proeeflF." and was pat- opted in 1897. Other processes are that of Promery ji tl Urban, patented in 1 Kfi ; the Consortium Mulhouslen, also patented in. 1KB: a prows patented by the PmtLni Artificial Silk Company in 190O; the -Thlele process. pa tented in 1893 : a not her. also by M. Thiele. patented in 1903; the pro ccFn or Wynne & Mtn, paifnifU 11 1&S5. This patent was for ma kin or silk: on s base of chlorure of zinc. In 1.S33 ii -Daddi wa granted a patent for manufac turing artificial bIIK from vegetable uu stances. Thf manufacture of and dealers in silk; tn Lyon watch the proftrei of all t he2 inventions with (treat interest, and many of them believe that a method will vet be found to produce an artificial article that will rival natural fllk in beauty and dura bility. It is an entirely new Industry, he llevefl to De susceptible of filling an im- portant place in the ftoM of modern in dustry. Thus learned chemists are de voting their time to the study of a men n x Of finding" new methods or ot perfecting those now employed, and It Is believed that the efforts now malt ins: wlli res-.::t In disco verlng a means to prod uce a tex ture which will nearly, it not entirely, serve all the puruosos of the beautiful silks spun from the cocoon. "ot Jlucii Help to Her. Punch. Mlsa Binkn (breathless. hurryinir t catch London train after week-end trip- Can you. ploaaA toll me the exact time? Old Salt Alf ebb. 6 r w