THE 8FNDAY OREGON" IAN. PORTLAND. NOVEMBER 17, 1907. 3 Wherever They Are Established They Kill the Business of the Saloon iHSflSSfl WK$&:-i'-K" l iJijMfcfftm ' .iBssaaMBgjiBsaffB SHHh&QHBHeB in nmi Mniiiiin" ib ttcttti m -t"' '11 If 7Z-ft JZAILFOAD JVEtflir OFF HOURS ATA SOtTHERN PACIFIC CLUBHOUSE tenik v - 7 ' - ' ' " "-yiyTipryi'-1J" jfc-4M-'' ppplp 1 TK?i: 0" CZra HOUSE THAT THE SOUTHERN PACIFIC. IS BXKLDJHe- FOIL ITS EMPLOYE 3. THI5 ONE IS AT TUCSON, ARIZ.. periodicals and dnliy papers. THV fiction department of the library, which con tains practically every current book of Importance, la operated on a circulating system that Rives to each club the benefit of a large number of volumes. Club stationery Is furnished for mem bers, and an effort Is made to induce the men to keep in touch with their families and to continue home ties, however much their employment may Keep them away from their own towns. Opportunities for study are offered and every Inducement is made to the men to take advantage of these opportunities to improve their edu cation. In competition with the railway clubs, the saloon, which was formerly the only place the men had to go to, has proved a failure, ill best testimony to this effect being found In the consistent opposition of saloon-keepera wherever clubs are located. There Is the same freedom In the railway club that the men formerly found in the 'saIotfs and a great deal more comfort. No Ironclad rules are made. The men meet in the clubs on the eiiual footing of gentlemen; There are no membership fees and no deductions from the payroll for club maintenance. Trifling fees are charged for beds, bath and billiard-room about enough to cover wear and tear and no more. A Southern Pacific official who has from the start been closely, associated with the esrhbllshment of the clubs, soma up their purpose In this way: '"The object is to raise tile tone and character of the men hy offering opportu nities for healthful and moral recreation, and to make them feeJ that their own suc cess, the success of the company, and the safety of the people who are served de--pends on each Individual doing his part well, not because he has to do It, or la paid to do It. but because it Is right." RECREATION AS WELL AS HACIFIC CLUB HOUSES I hereby certify that I mm a hnna Ad ffinplnye of the Southern Pacific Company, and I he reby agree to conduct myelf as a gentleman while enjoying any of the privilege! of the club. THIS la the only certificate of mem bership to be required of the men who will use the chain of c.ujbhouaes HEALTH AND COMFORT JIRE PROVIDED FOR IN THE SOUTHERN that the Southern Pacific Company Is building along its lines in N. facia. Cali fornia. Arizona, New Mexico and Texas. Railway clubs are no new thing, but the Southern Pacific's are different. There Is nothing of the conventional, the severe. or the hideous about the clubhouses. No expense is spared to make them beautiful as well as useful and comfortable, both without and within. Usually the style of architecture is determined by the sur roundings. The explanation as to why the company is spending thousands 'of dollars on these clubhouses Is very simple. .The expendi ture might properly be charged up to Im provement of service and safety appli ances. Modern railroading requires' men with clear heads and strong muscles. Tljf railroad believes that It will be more like ly to keep its meif'fn this condition if It provides comfortable quarters for ttjem, with opportunities for healthy recreation and companionship. The bedrooms of the clubs, arranged so that they may be darkened during the day for men who have night runs, are spread with immaculate linen. The bath rooms, toilets and washrooms are models of inviting cleanliness. There are card rooms, writing and reading tables, bil liard, pool and lounglng-rooms, all artisti cally furnished. Mr. Harrlman Is the Carnegie of the Southern Pacific Clubs, which are supplied with books, as well as A Side Light on History. Harper's Weekly. The following Is quoted verbatim and a Long Island City examination paper In English history: William of Orange was a good and wise man. The'people were tired uf j James L rule and they hoped that Mary would become Queen. Just then James gave birth to a prince, and this done'Marjfout of her chance. The peo ple would not stand for this, and they appointed William of Orange as their King." . QBEEOMD CLERZOWmiAV mOlMES Change in the Fashion of Nether Garments Worked Reform in the Red Man "A BV TTtVIN .S. COBB. NVTHIXG new In the papers tonight about, the Injlan up rlsln'?" asked the Head Bell Boy of the Hotel St. Reckless, who still reads the Young Pathfinder series sometimes in the privacy of his apart ments. "I didn't know there'd been one,' said the Hotel Clerk. "But at that I've always looked for the day to come when Buffalo Bill's troupe would or ganise the International Rrotherhood of Scalp-Finishers and Feather Workers and go on strike for an eight-hour day and a closed shop. I suppose by tills time Cody's name's been posted on the unfair list outside the , Second Presbyterian Chim b and the Woman's Club at Rosebud. South Dakota, and they're fixing to take old Major Burke's union card away from him. Or maybe tiiere's a walkout up at the.Hippodrome on account of the employment of scab foreign war dancers from Canada? Right from the very start 1 always contended that the late Sitting Bull had the right name for a walking dele gate, because 1 never saw one yet that would walk when lie could sit, but why " "Aw. quit your kiddin', Mr. Mc Bean." said the Head Bell Boy, "You know what I mean the Utes." "Oh. the Utes." said the Hotel Clerk, "the sassy little Unitarian Utes, from the Utah University. Why didn't you say so? Well, I understand that the truant officer went out and found them plsying mumbly-pcg back of the coal shed. The rlnglenders have all been stood up In the corner with their hands behind them and the next time they run away they're going to be made to stay In at recess. The officials unite In the statement that stern measures will be taken, if necessary, to break up this habit of playing hookey from the reservation in the Kali .of the year. They may even resort to spanking." "That ain't the way I've been read In' about it," insisted the Head Bell Boy, evidently endeavoring to quote the account from memory. "The Ute Is the last of the old on-clvllized tribes and recently when efforts were made to reduce their rations, they broke from bounds, being by nature blood thirsty In the extreme." "Well, I don't much blame 'em for being thirsty." said the Hotel Clerk, "seeing as how our zealous Govern ment restrains 'em from Indulging in anything stronger than red pop. On a reservation it's just like life in Kan sas without the hospitable drug stores, which I am told make glad even the most arid of Kansas landscapes. But you take It from me, Hops, it ain't blood that the Ute's thirsty for. it begins with a b and the other three j letters are two e's and an r, and If ; you're a smart boy you can guess the rest of it for yourself." "Ain't thoy the same bunch that I broke loose about this time last year?" ! demanded the Head Bell Boy. "It j seems to me like they wasn't so tame ; then." They're the same bunch, always al-' j lowing .for the natural increase in : young Utelets since that time," said the Hotel clerk, "and I distinctly re- ' call the function on which they em- i barked. Possibly it wasn't so tame as j you have Just remarked, but if It had : been any tamer than It was It would ; take words of one syllable to describe j It. As 1 remember, the Utes were seixed I with a great longing to return to their j old hunting ground far away to the westward in the general direction of the Setting Sun, not to mention the unseated Sehmitz and the seatless Ruef. How should they have known that their former hunting grounds are now dense ly populated with real estate agents, homesteaders from Indiana and Fed eral officeholders engaged In working up a healthy third-term sentiment? "So they put on the warpaint and took the warpath. That Is. they thought I it whs a warpath. But it wasn't. It was ' a board walk. And owing to the clerk In his hurry getting his labels mixed. Instead of warpaint, what they got was I Florida water. Poor things, they didn't know the difference. But they had the very best intentions tn the' world. They I took along their ladies with them, It being what would be called in college circles a co-ed. war party. "There was great excitement throughout the country. The War De partment, immediately ordered a large body of troops out and then ordered 1 them back again, thu' repeating a fa- vorite military evolution which In our 1 war with Spain waaworked by us j with such satisfactory' results for the Spaniards. Scores ol heroic war cor respondents crowded the buffet cars, all hurrying to the front, seady to expose themselves to the various magazines, and in them. Nothing is easier under such circumstances than for a war cor respondent to expose himself. "Meanwhile the Utes. led by their tri bal leader. Chief Charlotte R.UM 11, were sweeping across the defenseless country at the terrific rate of from 4V4 to 4i miles per day. I recall like 'twas yesterday the horrifying accounts which the newspapermen wrote on the spot, describing with fidelity and vivid ness the hair-raising atrocities which the marauding band hadn't committed yet. "At this critical Juncture somebody providentially swore out a warrant or . an injunction, and a deputy constable went out the next morning before breakfast and surrounded trie rebel lious savages arid arrested them for trespass or giving a street parade j without a permit or something of that sort. Anyway, he drove thorn relent- i lessly before hftn back to the roserva- I tlon, where they resumed their regular avocation In life, such as eatln.r, s'eep- . ing and selling club-footed ino'c isi is tiri Eastern tourists, with bLu beads I on then)." "Wot's the matter with them Injlana I anyway?" inquired the Head Dellboy, disgustedly. "For one thing the frontier lias grown un to an extent that makes It very hard to take the warpath without bumping Into a cluster of two-story frames surrounding young ladies' seminary or a canning works," said the Hotel Cserk. "If I was an Indian tribe preparing to embark on hostilities, I'd rent a vacant lot and pull off the event under a tent with the prop er policfe protection and the privileges rented out to responsible parties. With the exception of parts of Chicago and Pittsburg. Breathitt County. Kentucky, and several wards in our own beloved New York, the whole country is tiow en Joying the most of the comforts and all of the discomforts of the higher civiliza tion. They are playing dlabolo this week In Newport, R. I., and the Pecos Valley IT AINT BI.OOD THAT THE I'TES BEEN THIRSTY FOR. and as far away as Seattle I am Informed the undertakers give green trading stamps to stimulate trade. "But the main reason is pants North American pants. When you encase the noble but slightly bowed limbs of our red brother in pants you have destroyed his possibilities as a warrior. I tell you. Hops, our Indian agents bullded wiser than they knew when they Induced the ravening Modoc to wade Into a regular pair of pants half way of himself. We should have learned the lesson from his tory, but we didn't. History teaches us that when the Invading Gaul wore the first pair of pants into Italy the haughty noble of Imperial Rome simultaneously lost his toga and the gift of oratory and began acquiring the rudiments of the hot chestrjut business, the hand organ Indus try, and the other lines of endeavor with which he has, since been actively associat ed. See the haughty Roman In our midst today, and If he's got a monkey, the mon key will be wearing pants, too. along with a red coat, as a sign that he's a working member of society. "But we delayed Inaugurating the all Important step for upwards of 300 years We assailed the Indian from without with machine guns and we assaulted him from within with patent medicines and mixed drinks. We recommended for him a con stant change of scenery, and then sent the regulars along to see that he got It. But he still retained his original instincts and from time to time he went out and per formed dermatology upon the peaceful white settler, who asked nothing more than to take his lands away from him without noise or excitement. "And then here 15 years ago some statesman arose to discuss the Indian af fairs and spoke the short, yet magic word 'pants': and as for Lo. he's been as docile as Guinea pigs ever since. Oh, that we had thought of It sooner! How much trouble it would have spared us, and how much hair It would have saved us! "The great Tecumseh, dressed in a turkey tail fan and a small can of roof ing paint, was an awe-inspiring spec tacle, making his mighty oration against the palefaces, that will 'live as long as McGuffcy's Fourth Reader does. But suppose at the time he'd been wearing a pair of pants that bagged at the knees until, if you looked at him sideways, he'd appear to be getting ready to Jump off the rostrum would he have made that deathless speech? He would not. His remarks would have been confined to 'How' and asking for a plug of tobacco In the grunt langu age. Old Spotted Tail would now be prominently connected with the Wahoo Indian Troupe, and doing all his scalp ing at a cut-rate ticket office In Fargo, I had he but enjoyed me m&nltold ad I vantages of three dollars' worth of I Plymouth Rock pantings In the days of i his youth. As it is, he's quite dead, and It domestlc.ited Blaokfoot In a set of blue overalls and a golf cup is garner ing the .alfalfa above his grave for 11.23 i di'y, so that on Saturday night he may have the money to buy pants for hl3 growing family of llle Black footsies. "Tin rT'dman is now one of us. Hops. He cuts his own hair instead of ours. He has so far accustomed himself' to the use of soap as to enjoy eatfng the scented varieties freely. He has worn pointed-toed shoes for so long that he only gives the ancient corn dance of his pople when somebody steps on his foot. In Oklahoma he is getting ready to vote the Democratic ticket and organizing a' Bluffy Ruffles contest. His favorite tune is a ragtime air called Sister Sioux.' "And so the other day when news was brought to me that the Utes had taken the warpath I consulted the au thorities. From these references I learned that the Ute wore punts, not properly creased, perhaps, and lacking the fashionable braid that Is so much seen on seams this Fall, but neverthe less such as they were, they were pants. So I says to myself that these fright ened inhabitants who have fled for refuge to the Carnegie libraries which dot even the loneliest and remotest sections of our country might just as well go back home and start the cot tago organ to playlna; -Shy Ann' again. "Some of these days. Hops, we'll erect a large .stone pair of pants on an Im posing pedestal on top of Pike's Peak and label it "Civilization." I expect to attend the dedication myself." "Ain't there no wild Injlans any where no more the kind that just naturally love to pile onto a white man and drive him into trie ground?" asked the Head Bell Boy. "Yep.V said the Hotel Clerk: "I was hearing about just such a bunch the other day.' "Whereabouts are they?" asked the Head Bell Boy. "Out In Pennsylvania." said the Hotel Clerk, "playing on the- Carlisle football team." Before the Rain. T. B. Aldrich. We knew it would rain, ror all the mora A spirit on slender roj.es of mist Was lowering golden buckets down Ino the vapory amethyst. Of marshew and swamps and dismal fan Scooping the dw that lay In the flow-era. Dipping the jewels out of the sea, , To scatter them over the land In hower. We knew It would rain, for the poplr showed The white of their leaves, the amber grain Shrunk in the wind, and th lightning now la tangled in tremulous skelna of rain. 4 f