IT IS hardly necessary to write anything to go -with this cartoon, for every reader probably can draw a Setter opinion than the ; riter can frame in words as to what the young colt is saying to himself, if animals can think. It would be quite natural for the colt to wonder what makes this horse hold his head so high and stand so awkwardly. With Indians and Whites at Ketchican, Alaska Eva Emery Dye Pictures Life In Act lye Mining and Fishing Town Where the Stranger and Xatlve . Meet. BY EVA EMERY DYB. "S EH them Jump!" An eater throng leans over the bridge at Ketchikan, looking down upon an enormous haul of fishes below. "Oh! see them jump!" Screams an excited school ma'am from Denver. "Let 'em jump; It's their privilege; it's a free country," hiccoughs an Alaskan Mr. Dooley with tongue a bit limbered from the Jus he Is carrying. " 'T's a fr-ree country." "The ohly free country is where nobody lives. Mickey," retorts the rubber-goods drummer from Seattle. "Whoop-e-e!" shrieks "ten little Indian boya all in a row" on the beach under the bridge. With all their tiny might they tug at the net the men are hauling In. A big salmon flops in their direction find every terrified urchin runs, elfin locks en end and dingy shirt-tails flying out behind. "Oh, that little darling!" a baby Indian not more than 4 years old has cut his foot on a sharp rock and all the air resounds with woe. "I believe, mamma, you are more interested in the Indians than you are in the salmon," remarks an Oregon City boy. "I certainly am. How nice it would be Ito take that dear little fellow home With lis." "Tou'd soon tire of him." says the doc tor's wife who came out as a missionary, but now has settled down at Ketchikan. "Wow-wow-wow!" howls a flsher-boy mocking the crying child. In a - moment the hurt foot is down, the keen black eyes scrutinizes the laughing American. No maternal sympathy could have stilled the pain quicker, back goes the infant tugging at the net. Thus early are' young Indians initiated Into the Industries of their fathers. "Thirty thousand fish in that net I don't believe it. 'Tls not possible." "Possible, madame, why the net broke this morning with 43,000 In it." " "How do yoa know? Did you count them?" "No. but others have. The hauls here are something enormous. Look at the water yourself alive with fish." And alive it certainly was, twinkling with the myriad of fins of schools and shoals and swarms of purple salmon seeking the inlets of Ketchikan Creek. All over the bay as far as eye could see im patient humpbacks were leaping and fly ing and splashing back into the water. Up the creek they were swarming, crowding and tumbling over one another In a mad rush to the falls, an almost impassible barrier where all day long they bumped and broke their noses in a vain endeavor to surmount the sharp and craggy rocks. Following up the bridge-walk along the Ketchikan I met a lad of with a sharp .hook on a rod. "Where are you going, my little man?". "To catch a fish for my mother's din ner, was. the prompt reply as he slid down under the bridge and in the twink ling of an eye Impaled a huge salmon on the cruel hook. "Who would have thought there was so much blood in him?" one might exclaim with Lady Mac beth as the crimson tide gushed out of the mad and anguished victim. In sharp contrast with the Indian boys the Ameri can seized his prey by the gills, laid it on a rock and with one blow ended its struggles. Back he goes and in three minutes three huge fish, all he could drag, were ready for the pot. "Let me catch one!" pulling up her skirts, down goes the Denver ecrool ma'am, without rod or line and with her bare hands hauls out a monster of the deep; beside it the Oregon City boy lays another and anoiuer and with a camera snaps the catch of the morning, simply picked out of the over-crowded creek. "Now for huckleberry pie," orles the school ma'am, stripping the neighboring bushes. In a few minutes the Oregon landlady of "The Eagle". is preparing their banquet gathered in the space of a few minutes on the banks of the shin ing Ketchikan. No one need go hungry here, with streams alive with the finny folk, the woods full of deer and tsar, the hill sides red with berries and every Island Inlet the nesting place of sc --fowl. There are no hens In Ketchikan, but sea-gulls' eggs, as large as ducks', answer every purpose. Few cows have found their way to this mountain-shore retreat, built on piles and hillocks like' Astoria carnation cream from Forest Grove enriches the morning coffee. Few horses are here, not more than two or three, but the laundry man, the milkman and the gro cer's boy make their rounds with hand carts. And the board streets are clean, clean as a floor, with not a speck of dust or trace of beast or wagon wheel. And the breeze blown over the bay comes In fresh as on an untrod Nebraska prai rie. In fact, exhilaration pours like wine out of the sunshine and the clear skies of the brief bright Summer of the north. For they tell us the Summers are short, raining late in flprlng and be ginning again early in the FaJL But In that short time vegetation leaps in the hot sunshine and all the quick-grown garden vegetables have a luscious crlsp ness seldom found in. slower-growing gardens. Ketchikan on the ' Island of Ttevilla glgedo that doughty old mariner who came up these shores a century or two ago Ketohlkan Is new. She shines with fresh paint and varnish. hotels good ones, too offices, stores, houses, all are spick and span with electric light, steam heat and mountain water piped in flumes from the falls of Ketchikan. Tour ists sweep in here In droves when the great steamers go humming. by and are amazed at the saw mills, canneries, ex cellent stores, schools, churches, hospit als, and even an open public library THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, AUGUST 18, 1907. X. WHAT HAS The' horse himself is at a loss to know why he is checked so high, and why he must endure an enormous strain on his back. He still switches at flies, but his tail fails to drive them off him. Like the innocent young colt, the matured horse wonders at the strange order of things. Perhaps he thinks he is being punished for some offense he has committed. - He is compelled to stand very still, owing to the weight of metal perched on a rock on t-- hillside. Ketch ikan boasts of its dally paper edited by ex-Governor Swineford, who for more than 20 years has made his home In this northland. Governor Swineford tells the story .that In '84 he. stumped the State of Michigan for Grover Cleveland and in his speeches told what great things the Democrats had done for the country, made the Louisiana Purchase, bought New Mexico and Cali fornia and brought in Oregon, while all the Republicans could claim was "that frosen peninsula of Alaska up under the Arctlo circle." "Hold on, my friend, you are making a fool of yourself," a man called him to task one night at Bay City. "Let me ask you one question: What do you know about Alaska." "Not one infernal thing," was Swine ford's -answer. But he took the hint, began to Inform himself, sent for every book or report he could find on the country, and when Cleveland was elected Don M. Dickinson asked the campaigner what he wanted for his services to be collector of customs somewhere or Min ister to some South American country. "Neither," was Mr. Swineford's answer, "All I ask is to be made Governor of Alaska." He got the appointment and has lived here ever since. Not the least interesting of the schools is that for Indians, conducted by an Epis copal missionary, who is now adding a cooking department for he girls and has enlisted the Indian women in reviving the almost lost art of basketry. "Do you go to school T' I asked on 'of the urchins at the fishing camp. "Tes, ma'am." "Can you spell cat?". "C a t." "SpelL dog." "G 1 v, dog." All these Indian children are remark ably well dressed, and the Indian men and women, and comely squaws any day may be seen trundling their pappooses in neat little go-carts with as pretty little dresses and hats as I ever saw among the well-dressed colored mothers of Boston or Washington. Environment is rapidly changing the wards of our country into self-respecting and self-supporting citizens. The only touch of age visible in Ketchikan is now and then a toletn pole, standing as it stood before the white man came, save that instead of a hovel the Indian house behind it compares very well with those of the neighboring whites. In fact, all line the same streets along the water front of Ketchikan. Many Oregon people are here and our landlady at "The Eagle" is a refined gentlewoman from Eugene, and her equally cultured sister is clerk in one of the leading stores. Our table waiter Is a Newberg boy who works up here Sum be rs for money to take him through col lege. "How much do you get?" I inquired. HAPPENED TO THIS HORSE ? "Seventy-five dollars a month and board, almost clear money," was his an swer. Captain Steers on the gasoline mail boat was born In Oregon City 26 years ago. gets $100 a month and expenses, and is throwing up his Job for J150 a month farther north. Twice a month the mail launch makes its rounds into neighbor ing nooks and fiords where fishermen have their canneries and miners have their claims. And here, too, are little homes kept warm and comfortable by American mothers through the long Alaskan Winter. At one of these I saw a little girl of dazzling beauty, so al most supernatural appears the radiance of the white In this land of Indians. So handsome, Indeed, appeared the women of Ketchikan some perhaps tourists, with alabaster countenances, in sharp and sudden contrast.to the dusky nativo wom en. And still a wonderful amount of .white blood reveals Itself among the In dians, some very fair girls and perfectly white little children, even with Bunny brown curls, touring the streets in the wake of grandmotherly old squaws. A few of European blood are here, Scotch. Irish and Scandinavians. "Ah!" exclaimed a worthy Norseman, "if my countrymen only knew what a land is lying here unsettled, Norway would be depopulated." But more and more the best blood of America is coming Alaskaward, and nothing helps this more than the tourists, ever in increasing numbers, carrying home "great tales of the pleasant land of the new Northwest. Ketchikan, the home port of thousands of miners, is . said to be lively in Winter, when the hermits come in from the hills to taste the com forts of civilized life. And In Bummer, of course, the passing steamers bring never-ending throngs, alighting, like birds of passage, for an hour or two, and then away. At night-time, perhaps, a resounding blast - echoes and re-echoes among the hills and all the town is out to greet a floating palace, gay with lights, gliding in over the dark water. No scene can be more impressive than this coming of a great steamer, bearing a breath of the outer world to a lone Alaskan hamlet. Or. perhaps, it is a trade steamer from Seattle, laden, heaped and weighted to the gunwales with all the merchandise $30,000,000 a year that has made this North a marvel of beauty and of devel opment. Great is the waste, too, in this merchandise. Land freighting Is so dif ficult that often the mining camp is left undisturbed in the hills, tent, stove, fur niture and all, to rot and decay in the Winter rain. But life, movement, prog ress, rushes on, undeterred by the aban donment of here and there a camp. Life is too short and water-freighting too easy to burden one's self with what has served its purpose in the hills. Musio is here, and dancing, theaters and Sunday schools, women's clubs and ladies' aid societies, all the Interests and activi ties of any American village. Such is life at Ketchikan, three days from Seattle and six hours from Port Simpson, the nearest Canadian point below Alaska. Ketchikan. Alaska. The eyelids of the avtrsgre man open and shut 4,000,000 times a year. I I f t I1U Ell. itnii IVl IVI V on-y--r M ... raft . IwjI),. ..... V. in his mouth resting on his tender lower jaw. If he could, only for a change, get his head a little higher occasionally, it would rest him, but the martingale prevents that. With back aching and the tendons in his leg throbbing as the result of the manner in which the weight is thrown on them, he endures the torture uncomplain ingly. If the little colt were endowed with reasoning powers and knew that this wretched horse was once a happy youngster like Our Schools Should Teach Highest Idealism One Jjofty Plan to Set the Feet of Portland Children and Youth In the Right Way. BY J. C. L. RECENT investigation In official and corporate circles has proven the wholesome wisdom of the present National Administration, in laying bare for publio inspection all that affects the public welfare. When our newspapers are supplied with clear and accurate state ments of business 'transacted, as well as proposed changes in methods and princi ples of all that pertains to the public, they will no longer have to fill their columns with questionable matter in or der to cater to the general reading pub lic. This custom would shear grafting rings of their strength, bosses would be thrown out of business and the vital sen timent of the glorious old constitution would be a sentient principle. If It Is necessary that municipal affairs, railroad systems, insurance policies, 'Na tional protection of public lands should be laid bare for public inspection, that that same public may be educated to-an intel ligent understanding of conditions, keep pace with progicss and demolish arbi trary or obstructive policies, then, so far from eliminating the publlo school sys tem, it should stand at the head. ' The results of such a practice would be re act ory and the educated intelligence ac quired by the masses from an aroused personal Interest in matters in which they have a right to act would at least equal the improvement in an administration of general affairs by the poople who must accept results. Apropos of the free discussion of the publlo school system of Portland which has been permitted through the press It seems timely to bring out one point that is at least faulty. Those who have been at the head of the public schools of Port land during the last decade have evolved ft system that is In many ways admtrable. Vast strides have been made in the last ten years, probably the hardest ten years that will ever occur In its history; but, like all human Institutions, It Is open to criticism. In this age of free" and rapid exchange of thought and knowledge there la no reason why our city should fall to keep pace with educational prog ress by an exclusive policy that proceeds from contentment with prevailing condi tions. The truest way to Judge and the one freest from personal bias is found in comparison with puhjlc school systems In other cities. One, who has been identi fied with educational interests for many years, was visiting In an adjacent city more than a year ago.' She was particu larly pleased with the fine, commodi ous High School building of dark gray stone. In talking with one of'the teach ers a conversation something like the fol lowing occurred: "Your Board of Education was wise to erect a building large enough, to accom modate the growth of the city for many years." "Oh! That is crowded now, we are al-; ' himself, how miserable would he become, for he would realize that in a few more months he, too, would have his head yanked up, not, to speak of having his tail cut off and of being subjected to other tortures. Do "horsemen" realize what torture they are causing when, for fashion's sake, thev distort horses as they "do? (Copyright, 1907, by Katherine N. Birdsall.) ready constructing two Other buildings in different parts of the city." "Why how many students have you?" "More than 2000." ' "Not in your High School!" "Yes." "Why your population is less than ours and we have scarcely 1000, how do you ac count for that?" The teacher was not a home product, tut a college-bred woman and efficient teacher from California. After reflec tive pause she answered: "Well, I will tell you frankly my opinion. . You have a system that dis courages the broadening out that comes from rp. Interchange of superior educational material. Instead of of fering a bonus for the very best edu cators of our land and there the field is wide and rleh--you take your High School girls of immature judg ment, character and education and turn them right back Into the gram mar schools as pupil teachers. As soon as they learn to fit Into their part of the factory and to run the ma chinery they go in as full-pay teachers. They have nover learned responsibility, they have no ideals beyond doing as they are told, and drawing a salary. They know nothing of the outlook, the sweep of vision, the heights and depths revealed by higher education, conse quently they furnish no Inspiration to their - pupils. How can they? The ohlldren find their inspiration in the business or social world, aonsequently they drop out of the grammar grades." Now, this statement needs no ser mon, with its tenthly, for elucidation. A machine may be a wonder in sym metry and accuracy, but it must be vitalized or we have only a machine product, and we draw the line when that product is human beings. It Is commendable for a city to provide re munerative employment for Its am bitious young people, but how much better for those same 'young people, as well as for the future of the city. If it provided ft loan fund for such students as were not able to pay their own way, that they may be enabled to go away and obtain the education that trains the faculties, widens the hori zon, gives loftier outlook. teaches them their Own limitations and how to ris above them; to accept tru Ideals, and above all to face respon sibility squarely, lift it fairly, adjust it well and carry it buoyantly. Teach ers are ideals themselves, to their pupils. Their influence in the shap ing of the character of those plastic beings is for all future time. If anyone doubts this, let him study history or cast a reflective eye over his own past. The future of our city is created In the schoolroom. Shall it be broad, vitalized individualism, with every faculty alert, or are we content with the machine-made article? Ask the farmer how his wheat, his oats, his potatoes produce if he perseveres in Copyright, 1907, by Katherine N. Blrdsall the rotation seed system. Ask the law yer, the diplomat, the manufacturer, the machinist, the journalist, if he is content with the routine of local in terests and local knowledge. China can answer for you. It is only the educator who can afford to retro grade, because perhaps higher educa tion has no immediate commercial value, no market price. Eternal vig ilance is the price of progress,. and we must awake to all possible advance ment in principles and methods of the education for the young or the car of progress will sweep past us and we will be left to plod along In its shadow and take its dust. How Indians Tan Beer Skin. The skiii dressing of the Indians, both buffalo and deerskins. Is generally very beautiful and soft. They stretch the skin either on a. frame or on the ground, and after it has remained there for three or four days, with the brains Bpread over the fleshy side, they grain it with a sort of adze or chisel. After the process of graining', though the skin Is apparently beautifully fin ished, it passes through another pro cess that of smoking. For this they hang the skin on a frame in a smoke proof house or tent. The fire is mad at the bottom out of rotten wood, which produces a strong and peculiar smell. The lire must be smothered to make the smoke. - The grained skins have to be kept In the smoke for three or four days, and after this the skins will always re main the same, even after wet, which does not belong to the dressed skins in civilized countries. TtW Inez. Oh, have you taw sweat Inez? She'ii went Into the east To splash around In aalty waves And break lx hearta at leant. She took her beat clo'a with her Our troubles are Increased. And we Hint hit th quick-lunch Joints While she can blithely feaat. Gee, bow we ml fair Inas While she In far away! The chief cleric baa a aolemn look Ha uaed to be so say; ' The boas U grouchy, and I heard ' Him awearln' yenterday Because there wasn't no one here ' Knew how to spell sasshay. Come back, come back, aweet Inez. To hammer on the keya; It seemed like musio when' you made Your O'a and I and E's. IT.?.back -nd brln y"T bathin' suit, Which Teaches to your kneea: Come back, we'll let you wear it in The office if you please. . THE NEW OFFICE BOY. -B. KT. Kiaer In the Chicago Record-Herald. Measuring ten feet six Inches, an while beins- kniM -. -r nrtnnn. victoria. entwined a tentacle so firmly areund the ....... vnr ot ils captors that the brane had to be cut- to free the man. mem- s.