a. I ' ri? - f, - ' " $ ' ' ; I ' " ' - ; i . " I - -" , 1 1 I ; v ' - - ' - 4ft- - ' , v . , , t;" - : - ,r " 1 1 ?l4w4r"r - ; - son on one side and a drunken pros- I V i .. ? n ,. . jmmam ., . i f ' ' 'V ! !'S, wr, III ? " f ! Jonathan Adan,. worth. t,t- J tor o t t E .f- X U ' ' ' Mfr fi . t I ? , 1 t . , " I nis raise teeth and white lawn cravat ; A-3. l vY?b. . S'lltr I I i , " "nw - 4; -4, iji, ' i I " $:t j J I "Wi-nty," recently graduated from t alK, depo.ltinS them on the tabic v.hi'e I rT""""""-'"" ,u fTrVNi CSZAlt''y1TTTl'ZZ7:, T ' ' t I " X4 - tf C 5-4 I 4 1 I Harvard Medical School, bachelor. the prospecto?. being of an affertlonat ; ""TTTX ' A LITTLE i ! ' c 1 1 ! 1 I 1 I i i clubman and flmt nnd foremost a I disposition, cuddled up closely and snored 1 ' V 1 ' I tf" V , H " ' ' n V I P -t t "H.tonlan." vlefu the Artorla peacefully In the unhappy traveler's ear. J 1 ' J 1 JOV OP UREEX 3 3 1 L ,V'1!', I tk I I ' I rea-tt and write, hi ImpmwIaM I UnhyRienic, to say the least, isn't It. olt J f X ' .f 1 ,! ' S "'i'. ' '-'."rf T'-v ' V$ - 1 W i t thereof to bin chum. Mlle Standlsh I fellow?' .5 4 S I . V J ' -1 " ' ' 1 1 n . Z 1-4 Va ( . Chittenden, of Beacon street. , ... I 1 T-,-!;,! 1 Z J ' ' .-f J?' L.. j The mist gradually dlspel.eda, we I , J Jff A'! fl ' " ,V I' , , .ORTI.A.VD, Or.. Sept. 7, 1907. Mv Dear Stan: Your brief note of last Saturday just received, and I win own a sense of guilt at your charge of negligence in the matter of correspond ence. Still, when you learn the cause, I'm quite certain you will regard me with a greater degree of leniency. To tell the truth, I am just recuperating from a severe attack of "Astoriania." , which is a violent form of Dementia Americana, peculiar to this locality, and culminating annually in the regatta held at Astoria. Or. Nowhere in the United States. is professional gaiety brought to such a degree of perfection, and I can only wish that you had been along to experience the novel sensations of a first attack. 5Iy flrst knowledge of the malady was gained at the University Club here In Portland, where I was put up and very pleasantly taken care of by one of our fellows. We were gathered in the li brary after dinner one evening, when a chap from Princeton who had been be having very decently towards me asked If I had ever visited the Astoria regatta. He went on to . explain that It was a typical Western celebration sort of a local Mardi Gras and advised me to take It in. Astoria. It seems, Is a fishing town of about 15.000, situated at the mouth of the s Columbia River, about 100 miles below Portland. According to the prospectus, , it is the only official gateway to the ' Orient, but the Portlanders, when they mention it, call it well, I was always brought up not to mix in neighborhood differences of opinion; besides, my vo cabulary has already been sufficiently contaminated since I left the Hub. The prospectus goes on to say that Astoria owes its fame to old John' Jacob, who intended it to become the "New York of the Pacific," but some individual, stirred possibly by rancor, has suggested that its widespread rpute might be traced more directly to its phonetic similarity to that indispensable article of household economics "for which children cry," 1 decided, upon the spot, to attend. Next morning I arose at the unholy hour of 6:30 o'clock, found that I had barely time to swallow a cup of coffee, and rushed for the steamer which was scheduled to leave at 7. You know for years our Sunday morning habit of cod fish cakes and beans, and how It ruf fles me to have it interfered with. There may be a respectable baked bean in Portland, but so far I have been unable to find It. The sickly attenuated speci mens which are served you for the real article can only be surpassed in Inferior ity by the canned variety which are sometimes substituted. Add to a meager breakfast an enforced walk to the dock with the burden of a heavy suit case. and supermount these humiliations with a sight of the steamer Just beyond Jump- ing distance, and you have my mental ttitude. This last misfortune, however, proved a blessing in disguise, for on in-.-juii-y I found a comfortable launch, which was going down, and on asking permis sion to go along was welcomed with a i ivarmth of courtesy that went a long ways to re-establishing my faith in my lucky star. This faith was strengthened when one of my fellow passengers related his ex perience on th night steamer a week previous, it seems that he had not re served a berth and was obliged to sleep on the floor under one of the tables in . tha dining-room, wUJ a Methodist pa,r Dear Stan: Your brief note of last boat, towed by a : por tender. The I' 1 ff 'MEM M H B.I I " . ' T , " The mist gradually dispelled as we slipped down the river and before long we had overhauled one of the racing boats towed by a power tender. The most conspicuous feature of this en counter was the display of yellow jer seys and muscular "limbs enough to ex cite the envy of a professional acrobat. Shortly afterwards we ourselves were subjected to the humiliation of being overhauled by a trim speed boat of graceful lines which passed by us as though we were fast to a snag. Our re venge came In good season, when we ov ertook them drawn up on shore and la boringwith a choice assortment of pro fanityover a balky engine. A striking example, my boy, of the hare and the tortoise. The most illuminating experience of the day, however, was the amount of gastronomic pleasure which may' be ex tracted from an expenditure of a quar teror as they call It here two bits,, when accentuated by this bracing Oregon atmosphere. We were Informed by the solitary lounger on the wharf of the lit tle town where we went ashore for din ner that the sheriff had closed one of the two only restaurants in town and that the proprietor of the other had gone to Portland for a square meal. We were directed, however, to a private house where the homely fare found me in a most responsive mood. On the way back to the boat we came across a pear tree in which were suspended some huge cir cular bits of tin. These, we were in formed, were used by the birds as look ing glass, to detract their- attention from the ripened fruits. I will confess to you that I am somewhat dubious of the veracity of the explanation. With the soothing effects of our hearty dinner and a post prandial pipe, time slipped plaasantly by until a certain irregular motion on the part of our lit tle craft gave indication of the tide which rushes in over Astoria bar. Altering our course ' to cross the river to Tongue Point which lies Just above Astoria, the full force of the northwesterly afternoon breeze caught us full amidships. I've ridden over corduroy roads and I've es sayed to stay on the back of a farm horse, but for the real pea-ln-a-gourd sensation, give me Astoria harbor and a 35-horsepower launch to buck the .wind and tide. There wasn't a dry eye in the house as they say of the melodrama and by the time we rounded the point at least a portion of those marvelous two-bit dinners had been fed to the famous Co lumbia River salmon. ' After awhile we drew up alongside the dock and made fast to an abandoned pile driver. We had intended to sleep on board, but the bedding had been drenched, so after making all snug we ambled ashore. Talk about a mob! Why, there were more people than you'll see in the stadium all next football season. They reminded one of a bunch of bees, each one trying to light on the same spot and then flying busily away as soon as ihey have attained It. We searched all over town before we could find a place to sleep Did I say sleep? At Astoria there "s no sleep during regatta week for either the Just or unjust. Finally we were packed away in the least possible space. I suppose the canning industry is largely responsible for the skill with which a huge crowd of visitors is disposed of In the prospective New York of the Pacific. Then we went for something to eat. Three hours later we got it or as much of it as had been left by those who got in on the ground floor. The service was what might be called in mild language rotten. Four separate times I ventured to ask for a spoon before I could get it, but finally our hunger was subdued, if not satisfied. we had nvrh,I.J ,. .v,. I Ii . - -'Si. . ' .. S.'.W HI jKrnu-imimia 14 v V ' J - - . 3 and we went home to our "downy cots," at least. mlna. hr oka down. in. tha. course. THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN. PORTLAND, SEPTEMBER 15, 1907. 'I kV ' ' '4t Is l( WLBctTFS yvLTNGsmps witpe: interested. 1 ' J? v Al f-T" 1 ' v-'-ifA&jf I . If , v ?.Vi of the night, but I was so atigued that I kept right on Bleeping, imagining all the time that I was trying to hold down the side of a hill. How can I describe to you the regatta so you may see it as I saw it? In the first place. I suppose they call it "re gatta" because there is so little that re sembles real yacht racing. Imagine a regatta at Newport or Marblehead made LUP of a cquntryf&ir1abaJ?y-ihow1 ball games, parades, ' a convention of country editors, a Norwegian Saengerfeat and balloon ascensions. You know what a stickler old Van de Puyster is for nau tical etiquette. How he would writhe under such a mixture! But I will con fess I enjoyed it heartily, and so, appar ently, did every one of that motley crowd which gathers each year from all along the Coast to help celebrate these festivi ties. The central figure of this carnival jg the queen, who on this occasion was brought to her throne in a grandstand built on the waterfront by a band of vikings. True the captious onlooker might have observed a suspicious rcsor.iblance in the 'inderbody of the ancient Norwegian barge o a tugboat of more recent design, but when one realized that the hearty song of homage which rose from full a hundred 'usty throats was in the tongue of those hardy Norsemen, that the blood of those ancient hetoes might still be traced in the veins of the queen's vassals, whose broad sweeps brought the unique craft to the float, it was a good bit more stirring than it looks here in prosaic ink. The queen herself was a most regal-looking young lady, whose comprehension of the somewhat exacting demands of her unique position assisted mightily In the success of the pageant. Her royal car, trimmed with blue hydrangeas, equaled any of the decorations that I ever saw at the coach ing parade up at the old Twin Mountain. As for the maids of honor well, old chap, knowing your desire to remain in the by-paths of single blessedness, I hasten to advise you to keep away from Astoria on regatta week. The Westerner, I am convinced, is more like a Child in his enjoyment of the spec tacular than our own immediate neigh bors. The sight of gold braid is life unto his nostrils, but as most all of the Pacific Coast is merely the most progressive part of Bostom New York and Michigan trans planted, it must be something in the. at mosphere. By the way, this atmosphere is a most delightfully uncertain quantity. How the pater would gloat over the possi bilities of the barometer. You know what a source of satisfaction it is to him to make his matutinal visit and speculate upon the outcome, or try to reconcile the difference between his instrument and the Transcript of the evening before. One day of Astoria weather would keep father mentally satiated for six months. But I started to tell you about the yacht racing. I can imagine the dis gust on the face of old Cap Collier, whom you remember as builder and designer of that ancient, deep-chested ark, the Lucy J., at what he would probably describe as a slab sided shin gle, which a feller couldn't tell ez how she were headed north or south ef it warn't a movin' in that direckshun. "But the boys who sail these boats know their business and while it is al most Impossible to see what enjoyment can be derived from pounding into a half gale with a lightly constructed skimming dish, it certainly affords en tertainment to the spectators. I will confess to a certain setae of disap pointment in not finding what we would term down east, the true sport ing spirit in these contests. There is a feeling of commercialism, a degree of selfish consideration that will ma terially hamper the progress of the yachting game in the' west unless it is remedied. Certainly this is unfortu nate, for nowhere could more of the right kind of interest be stimulated than on the Columbia river and the vicinity, were the delights of real yacht racing more fully appreciated. This even holds true of the fishermen, whose strongly constructed, spirlt-sall keel boats contrast vividly, with the scows which pose as yachts. There are something like 1400 of these flshboats employed here in the salmon fishing Industry and to see a race among their daring skippers is to witness as pretty a spectacle as the eye of a yacutsman would care to look upon. a , There1 will not be room here to tell you as much as I would have liked about the population of this town of Astoria or the natural advantages to which the visitor's attention is called as soon as he strikes town by the om nipresent booster. I honestly believe you'll see more foreigners on Astoria's streets than you will on Third avenue. New York. I counted 20 nationalities represented in the big parade and had you been here you could have seen a row of six Chinamen smile with almost human intelligence as a tiny boy of 4 clad in the national tunic And flowing How Divers Are Trained THE Admiralty trains divers and every British warship carries at least one representative of the craft and frequently more. There are training schools at Portsmouth, Devonport and Sheerness. One of the difficulties with which divers have to contend is probably not realized by a landsman, namely, that the greater the depth the greater is the pressure of water on the man's body and the greater the labor and exhaustion of working. The naval authorities limit their men to a depth of 120 feet. The greatest depth to which a man has descended is said by Siebe to have been 204 feet, and the press ure at that depth was extraordinary, namely,. 88V, pounds to the square inch. One wonders how any human being could stand it. Twelve fathoms, or about 70 feet, would be enough for most men. The ears and nose would probably begin to bleed and the pressure on the head would be very Berious. A practiced diver can, of course, descend much deeper without such unpleasant sensations. His dress costs more than a hundred pounds; it is of tanned twill and rubber and made in one piece, with a big open ing at the neck. The helmet is of copper and screws on to the shoulders so tightly that the water cannot penetrate the joint. Air Is pumped down to him by a pipe made of canvas and rubber, and outlet valves, which only open outwardly, are placed at convenient places to permit the trousers of Greece toddled by to thi strains of "The Star-Spangled Ban ner." Six different nations settled th question of supremacy in a tug; of war and parted the best of friends. Astoria is a city of wood built over tide water. They will point out to f you a small lagoon where In a few months there will be a seven-story f hotel. You may wander to the placet j: where a few weeks ago the roulettfV wheel never ceased to whirr and yoi could get up against any brand of carl game your fancy happened to dictate 1 Today one-half the town gloats upor i this moral victory and the other hall I shakes its head and predicts financial ruin. The country fair affords gllmpset, of agrarian monstrosities that would make our New England farmer accuse you of unmitigated prevarication and the complexions of the ladles bear elo quent testimony to the beneficial ef fects of the moist air. No amount of growth will ever make a New York out of Astoria. There is but one orig inal and only New York, but flying under its own colors the little city will undoubtedly win attention and gold from that effete East, whose bank accounts they admire while they decry their lack of "Western spirit." Trust ing to hear from you soon and hoping I haven't bored you by this lengthy epistle, I am as ever yours. J. ADAM WE NT WORTH. extremely Important, as by them the diver can regulate his supply of air. In addition to this pipe the diver has a ligfelinc enabling him to communicate with his assistants above water. This was formerly done by a series of concerted tugs or jerks on the line, but the method is being superseded as a means of com munication by the telephone, the wires being conveyed by the lifeline. He there fore touches the button and talks as if he were in the city. ' Another great improvement is the use of the electric lamp, though in some West Indian waters a diver can see clearly for some distance. In other waters again the darkness is intense 20 or 30 feet down. The weight of the dress is extraordinary and Is necessary to enable the diver to maintain his stability. His helmet weighs considerably over a quarter of a hundred weight, and his ' boots, taken together, about as much, while if these be not suf ficient, he claps lead upon his shoulders. An Error. Not long ago at a luncheon a lady made a curious mistake. A plat, of delicious looking cakes was passed by the colored waiter. There appeared to be but one small chocolate eclair on the plate, and the lady was very fond oi chocolate. "I'm going to be impolite enough to take the only chocolate eclair," she said. "Excuse me. ma'am," said tne waiter, "dat's ma thumb, ma'am." f V