THE SUNDAY OREGONIAX. PORTLAND. JULY 19, 1908. OREGON CAVES RIVAL THE MAMMOTH CAVE OF KENTUCKY CAVERNS IN "SOUTHERN PART OF STATE HAVE BEEN EXPLORED FOR SEVEN MILES WITHOUT FINDING THE END BY W. L. CRIPSEY. PEW people in Oregon, to say noth ing of our country in general, are , aware that in the southern part of this state isto be found a series of cav erns second only to the world-famous Mammoth Cave of Kentucky. Indeed, the Oregon caves may one day be grant ed first place, for no attempt at thorough exploration has ever been made, though the main passages have been penetrated to a distance of more than seven miles, with no indication of the end. It was in 1874 that Elijah Davidson, out hunting in the mountains, followed his doxs on a fresh hear track, to find them baying before a dark opening in which the wounded animal had taken refuge. Krom the cavern rushed a stream of limpid water, through which Mr. David son had to wade in entering. A few feet Inside the hear was despatched, but the discoverer had seen enough to fill him with wonder and curiosity, and as soon as neighbors could be enlisted In the expedition, the party returned. The country being thinly settled, it was some time before the caves were sufficiently known to attract visitors from abroad. Then a party of San Fran ciscn capitalists became Interested and decided to develop them as a commercial enterprise. Men were hired to cut a trail over the mountains, others worked inside, enlarging small passages, that they might be more easily traversed, a hlg hotel was planned and all was bustle and activity. The promoters themselves camped at the entrance, spending many hours daily in the caves. Cards whiled away the time and games for princely stakes were played In a. chamber still known as the "Gamblers' Hall." At the close of the Summer the capitalists de parted, with assurances that money would be sent to pay the workers, but the paymaster never appeared. It was a great disappointment to the sturdy mountaineers, who had worked for a small wage and then lost that. After several years had elapsed two young men built them a cabin and un dertook to establish their residence there, so that by "squatting" they would be given a title to the claim when the Gov ernment surveyed the land. Several bridges were constructed over the moun tain streams, more work was done on the trail and the boys worked hard, but seeing that the longed-for survey was Indefinite and uncertain of accomplish ment, they reluctantly abandoned their cabin. Within the past year the United States Government has reeognlzed the caves as one of the scenic marvels of its domain by withdrawing the spot from entry and d-.-signating it a National park, a fitting sequel to Its romantic history. "The Marble Halls of Oregon" He In the midst of the most picturesque moun tain scenery Imaginable. Descending Into a Utile valley over rugged granite boulders, the forest-covered mountains rising on every side, one comes to Cave Creek, which bursts from the foot of a perpendicular granlto wall 100 feet In height. Nature has draped the white facade with luxuriant green moss, In beautiful contrast to its uncovered por tions. It Is like a grand overture Intro ducing the theater of wonders to fol low. Entering a low passage by following the bed of the stream, one gradually ascends over rugged rocks to the upper levels, leaving the water below. A hundred feet and the real beauties begin to disclose themselves. The walls are of creamy whiteness, while slender stalac tites depend like icicles from the celling; stalagmites rise from the floor; fantastic formations of the same soft white abound on every hand. Daftness, abso lute and Impenetrable, is but intensified by the candles as one moves through the larger chambers. Silence as in a vacuum reign-not a sign of life exists in air or water. Every stalactite has its drop of crystal liquid, yet it never seems to fall, and the caves are in most places re markably dry. The air Is pure and fresh, the temperature remains at 60 de grees the year around. One of the first rooms Is the "Queen's Palace." At the sides, rising in tiers like the seats of an amphitheater, are shelves draped with translucent stalac tites, couches hung with fairy tapestry. It Is a royal apartment in very truth. Not so large as some others, but unique in Its attractiveness, is "The Or gan I, oft." Down the center hangs a Mrs. William Wife of Democratic Leader CULTURED,' kindly and dignified, , with' the world of experience that has been hers since her husband, the unknown Nebraska lawyer, delivered the "cross of gold" speech in the Chi cro Coliseum 12 years ago, the wife j of the Commoner Is a woman eminently qualified to fill the position of "first lady of the land," or any position in which fate may place her. Mrs. William Jennings Bryan has played no small part in the shifting , scenes that have brought her husband again Into the great white light of po litical leadership. Herself a lawyer of no mean ability, as her husband and his legal friends can testify, she has In turn been her husband's amanuensis and legal aid, his adviser in political vicissi tudes and successes, his companion in great campaign tours and world travels, and always his unfaltering comrade and consoler. Mrs. Bryan has undergone experiences such as probahly never have fallen to another American woman. But multi tudinous experiences have never altered the gentle, cultured daughter of the blind lawyer, who in 1SS1 gave her hand to a gaunt, unprepossessing and clientless lawyer, whose career in Illinois appar ently had been stamped "failure." Of the ruined and ill-matched features of her, husband, widen time and Impending portliness have materially softened since then, Mrs. Bryan still candidly remarks: "He was. I think, the homeliest man I had ever seen." The wealth of affection intoned in the declaration, however, plainly tells of the sentiment that lies behind the face tious reference to her husband's moet prominent characteristic. A brief expression of her husband, when his neighbors celebrated his home coming after the convention of 1896, is a glance into the domestic lifo of the couple. After the crowd had cheered wildly for him for several minutes, one megaphone-voiced admirer of the. couple caught sight of Mrs. Bryan and shouted: "Three cheers for the next first lady ' of th land!" As the cheers died away for a moment Mr. Bryan smiled and said: "My friends and neighbors. I am greatly obliged for the implied compli ment, but to me she has always been the first lady of the land." Mrs. Bryan, who Is 47 years old. and the grandmother of two children, is the daughter of John Baird, whose ances tors were among the earliest settlers of Pennsylvania. On her mother's side the paternal stock were residents of New Vork since KevoHitlonary days. Her father. wa a man of high literary t fsati' -.rrTL: ,...r"L .v-j-i .."'ir '" " ' sv ' j " assw - " 1 "1I",""-J "mwp v S&S m" i , .,, . , KSZsUNl!Elb THE Mn1E , ; -' VC roTALALACTTT-oTA"LACMlTE "iBiWM i ' tGF THE CJ10ST CMAM5ErJ i MUif illfv rswS. w h-i f; jlv.,MSt3j:J ;sr-; "Mill I ! fc-v"-- - mwst-. -v,t- ife : -f 4iP' fe4-7 .t -m U IbeOueejir MajeeuuiK uiomerrai cra-perx row of enormous stalactites of different lengths. Struck gently with a bit of stone, they send forth mellow sounds like deep-toned bells, the pitch of the different pipes sometimes varying as J ennings Bryan, of Fairview W ho Hopes to Be "First Lady of the Land:" A Helpmeet Always. tastes, and devoutly religious tempera ment. For 15 years prior to his leath he was blind, and In those years his daughter was his constant companion, her unceasing care and solicitude recom pensing him In part for the infirmity which had befallen him. After her mar riage to Mr. Bryan and the couple"s re moval to Nebraska, Mr. Baird was a member of the household until his death. Mrs. Bryan's acquaintance with Wil liam Jennings Bryan began In the Jack sonville, 111., seminary, of which she was an attendant, and his courtship was im petuous and eloquent. The exceeding "plainness" of Mr. Bryan did not handi cap him materially, and their marrlaga followed four years of ardent courtship. ' Before her marriage to the ambitious young lawyer, Miss Baird had decided that to be a true helpmeet she must aid in a material way. To that end she took up the study of law after her mar riage and a few years later took the examination for admission to the bar with a dozen male candidates in Lin coln. Neb., and received the certificate that makes her eligible to take charge of a case in any of the state courts. . Mrs. Bryan never participated In a court trial. Her object had been to aid her husband, and her help took the form of acting as his legal amanuensis, looking up authorities and preparing citations for Mr. Bryan and conferring with him on the important cases that now were coming to his office. Withal, her domestic duties were not neglected, and the social friends or others who were entertained by the Bryans would have been astonished to know that she had maintained personal direction of her numerous household af fairs in addition to the unofficial part nership in her husband's legal business. As the success of the "boy orator of the Platte" grew and his business prospered, Mrs. Bryan withdrew gradually from ac tive touch with all his affairs, but when a matter arose on which Bryan deemed that the soundest and most logical ad vloe was necessary his first and last call was for his wife. ' When William Jennings Bryan In 1S9 grasped the leadership of the Demo cratic party his wife was In ths great hall that echoed and re-echoed wtth the tumult following his great speech and nomination. She was his constant companion In his whirlwind campaign of that year, two of their three children being con stantly with them. The slender, . brown haired woman of that time seemed ill fitted for the strain of the tumultuous months preceding th election. Many times it seemed that she was on the verge of collapse and it was against her its much as two octaves, yet no two alike. These reverberating chimes give an in dsjscribably weird and beautiful effect In the silent chambers. "The Ghost Chamber" is modeled on husband's wishes and the advice of friends that she remained at his side until the end. Time has proved that 4 -V she was right In her contention that she could endure the strain and that her husband needed her. In the 12 years that have passed Mrs. Bryan has aged apparently little more than her husband. Strands of gray have crept into her hair, while most of the . r.f;-t 1 H - , rj' the grandest scale of all, though so Ir regular in Its outline that dimensions convey but little meaning. Emerging Into this great salon, one is startled by a gigantic shadowy white outline lost in long strands that waved over the broad T t V, ,1 V. 1. .... V, .... .1 t..,A tcan- ' peared entirely. But In both faces matur ity appears to have come and softened the anxious features of both, lending fores and firmness to that of the hus band and calmness and peace to that of Mrs. Bryan. In his second campaign and in the long lecture tours of Mr. Bryan his wife s I was not with him constantly, although she made many trips through the country to attend events which marked epochs in the career of her husband. ' After the Commoner had been estab lished, the home at Fairview purchased and the affairs of Mr Bryan, in his home the obscurity of the further end. Unlike most of the other rooms, the "Ghost Chamber" is hollowed out of a brownish rock, and the stalactite formation only appears in one place, where it covers the wall like a crystallized waterfall, producing the Bpectral effect that names the room. The dome Is fully 100 feet in height, while the length of the! room must be as much or more. Scores of passage lead from the "Ghost Chamber" in every direction, yet city grown to such dignity as to need constant supervision, the wife more and more assumed position as domestic di rector of the household, and a home and social life was established that have made her the social leader as well as the most popular woman of Lincoln. The world tour of the Bryans brought more breadth to the personality and view points of the couple, and the trinkets, souvenirs and gifts accumulated in the tour have 'made the Fairview home one of the most interesting in the country. The home is a handsome structure, occupying the summit of a slope, and commands a beautiful view of the sur rounding country and the City of Lin coln. Almost 200 acres of land, under cultivation, the property of the Demo cratic leader, surround it. Flowers bank up one sld.3 of the house, on whose broad verandas much Democratic history will be written in the next three months. In the great reception rooms the ar tistic nature of Mrs. Bryan has been given vent, and mural decorations, pic tures and vases form a harmony of color and beauty that have won the admira tion of the most aesthetic of Its Eastern guests. The social life of Mrs. Bryan is not one that encompasses much of mere gay ety or entertainment for the sake only of entertainment. She Is a believer in woman's clubs, holding their Influence generally to be toward the betterment of the home. Shortly after her removal to Lincoln she established the' first Sorosis Club in the city and frequently has been an of ficial in it, as well as its most active supporter. In the discussion of current topics In the club Mrs. Bryan always has taken a leading part, although she avoids politics and purely political discussions at all times. She is a voluminous reader and has followed the trend of her husband's studies as assiduously as himself. Mod ern economics, political and social, the philosophy of the past and present and current political themes and their intri cacies are as familiar to her as to the most astute and learned politicians in Washington. She has endeavored to keep In touch with modern literature, although she frankly confesses that it has little charm for her and that she finds the style of the writer is more Interesting than the theme of the book. . She is an ardent ad mirer of Victor Hugo, of whose work she says: "Every word he has written is a classic message." The three children of the Bryans are as popular in Lincoln as their parents. While the companions of their parents on the world tour, recently completed, they have seen little of the strenuous political life of Mr. Bryan and have been kept in the background and away from public view, so far as Mrs. Bryan has been able to accomplish it. The mar riage several years ago of Ruth Bryan was the first intimation to many news paper readers that a grown daughter of the "peerless leader" was in existence. William Jennings Bryan, Jr., and Gnace the fact that but a single one leads to the outer entrance gives an idea of the intricacy of the caverns and the danger In attempting to visit them alone. Oc casionally some one goes in by tying a string at the entrance and unwinding the ball to serve as a return guide. Dozens of these cords have been left in place, and they give one the uncanny feeling that if they were but followed' to the end there would be found a dead man, for so seldom are the caves visited Bryan are the younger children, and their education nas been one of the most absorbing cares of their mother for many years. She has frequently expressed the opinion that the real education of the child must come from the home and has lent her efforts to make the education a thorough one. In this connection she frequently has declared that athletics is an essential part of each girl's education. "Without a strong, healthy body no woman's mind can be capable of sus tained effort for the proper performance of whatever may be her work," Mrs. Bryan has said. "But the most desirable. Indeed the most essential, quality in a girl, as well as in a boy, is common sense. Without that as a foundation no superstructure of Character or education can be built." The physical health and mental vigor of the Bryan children is a standing trib ute to the soundness and enforcement of the theories of the mother. The pets and rulers of the Fairview home, however, are Ruth and Bryan Leavitt, the i and 3-year-old children of Mrs. Leavitt. Visitors to the home in the preconventlon days have found the Helen Keller BEFORE my teacher came to me I did not know that I am. I lived in a world that was a no-world, writes Helen Keller in the Century. I cannot hope to describe adequately that unconscious, yet conscious, time of nothingness. I did not know that I knew aught, or that I lived or acted or desired. I haa neither wjll nor intellect. I was carried along to objects and acts by a certain blind natural impetus. I had a mind which caused me to feel an ger, satisfaction, desire. These two facts led those about me to suppose that I willed and thought. I can remember all this, not because I knew that I was so, but because I have tactual memory. It enables me to re member that I never contracted my fore head in the act of -thinking. I never viewed anything beforehand or chose It. I also recall factually the fact that never In a start of the body or a heart beat did I feel that I lived or cared for any thing. The poets have taught us how full of wonders Is th3 night; and the night of blindness has its wonders, too. The only lightless dark is the night of Ignorance and Insensibility. We differ, blind and seeing, one from another, not In our senses, but In the use we make of them, in the imagination and courage with which we seek wisdom beyond our senses. I have not touched the outline of a star nor the glory of the moon, but I believe that God has set two lights in my mind, the greater to rule by day, and the lesser by night, and by them I know that I am able to navigate my life bark, as certain of reaching the haven as he who steers by the North at certain seasons and so Isolated Is the locality that this might easily happen to an over-daring explorer. Soon after the discovery of the plae the complete skeleton of a bear was found In one of the inner rooms, and If brute Instinct did not serve to ' liberate him from that terrible maze, there would be, little hope for a human being. "Th Golden Staris." a wonderful na tural flight, lead out of the Ghost Cham ber and ascend for manv feet, ome- times through a passage so small that one crawls on his stomach or stays be hind if Inclined to embonpoint. Appro priately enough, "The Chapel" Is soon reached, and here is a charming little lake of the coldest, clearest water, lying at one side of the room where the wall and ceiling approach to within a couple of feet of each other. Hollow stalactites, like clear glass reeds, connect them, and where these have been broken away to allow visitors to drink the delicious water, the remaining fragments carry many a feminine tress as a reminder of fair visitors. On and on, now climbing a ladder or descending by clinging to the rooks and stalactites, until the guide startles his charges by whispering, "There must be some one else in the cave." Far, far be low, in a seemingly bottomless pit. glim mers a candle. It Is but a stub left by the guide in the Ghost Chamber, and we are on an upper level, near Its dome, where a single misstep would mean a 'fatal accident. Climax of beauty and grace Is tha "Pond Lily Boom," most difficult of ac cess, richest In Its adornment. The ascent by long ladders and . slippery walls is fraught wtth danger at every turn, yet the risk Is well repaid. Cover ing the walls of this room, as though carved in wax. are stalactites shaped as lily pads and blossoms, while from the celling hang immense fluted chandeliers of the most delicate formation. Every thing in the room Is of dazzling purity and whiteness. As though this were not enough to enchant the beholder, dainty marine shells are found in strata near the floor, presenting an interesting prob lem to the geologist. "Holy of Holies" this room has been called by later vis itors, and certainly It does inspire rev erencesomewhat lessened when the guide gives his version of the name as "Holiest of Holes." Some of the names bestowed are almost as picturesque as the rooms themselves "Old Nick's Bedroom," "Kincaid's Dancehall" and the "Shark's Mouth." At one place is an immense pillar the thick ness of a man's body, reaching from floor to vaulted roof; again, there Is a broad shelf covered with minute crys tals resembling the tracery of frost on a window pane; here the floor lies in little ridges like sand on the beach as the tld goes out, and so strong is ths likeness that one Involuntarily stoops to take a handful. There are four distinct levels to ths caverns so far as known and an upper entrance has been uncovered- and en- largea, pernaps 300 feet up the mountain, : which makes it possible to avoid the waters of Cave Creek altogether. Night and day are as one in these vast un derground galleries, whose perfection ; must have taken century upon century. Not the slightest change in even the smallest stalactite is discernible ' since their discovery, save where vandals have broken them in unreasoning quest for souvenirs. There are two ways of reaching ths eaves, both invqlving a start from Grants Pass, whence stage Is taken to either Williams of Klrby, then a supple mentary journey on horseback or afoot. The Williams route is the shortest and the trail is being constantly improved: by Kirby is considered a little the easier Journey. No man Is so familiar with, the labyrinth as John Kincaid, who was the original explorer of many of ths passages and worked In their improve ment for three whole months. "Johnnie" and his "bar" hounds are familiar figures In the mountains. Thirty-five miles dis tant from Grants Pass, this very re moteness from the beaten lines of travel adds immeasurably to the zest of the outing. A whole week spent at the caves would bring fresh enjoyment and surprises with every hour. A scenic fea ture so new, so unusual, so mysterious, should be inducement to hundreds and thousands to visit this marvelous natural museum. sturdy youngsters romping through the reception rooms, clambering about the porches and in general Indicating their complete and triumphant possession of the premises. Whatever rules Mrs. Bryan may have enforced for her own children or secretly held in abeyance for other people's grandchildren, her own are ham pered by no regulations, restrictions or admonitions. They go where they list, and that is 'to every section of the home, and do what they please, and there is none to cry halt or to restrict them. The political conferences of their grand father have been Interrupted and his ad herents, who rule states and political bodies, made to render obeisance to ones mightier than William Jennings Bryan. It has come with good grace from the political leaders, as the children are win some and only childishly playful, usually heeding the mild admonition of the Dem ocratic dictator to: , "Run outside now and play." Mrs. Ruth Bryan Leavitt and W. Z. Bryan, Jr., were attendants at the Den ver convention and are expected to render full reports of its picturesque features to their father, mother, sister, nephew and niece upon their return. onBIindness Star. Perhaps my sun shines not as yours. The colors that glorify my world, the blue of the sky, the green of the fields, may not correspond exactly with those you delight in; but they are none the less color to me. The sun does not shine for my physical eyes, nor does the lightning flash, nor do the trees turn green In the Spring; but they have not, therefore, ceased to exist any more than the landscape is annihilated when you. turn your back on It. The calamity of the blind is immense. Irreparable. But it does not take away our share of the things that count serv ice, friendship, humor. Imagination, wis dom. It is the secret inner will that con trols one's fate. We are capable of willing to be good, of loving- and being loved, of thinking to the end that we may be wiser.. We possess these spirit born forces equally with all God's chil dren. Therefore we, too, see the light nings and hear the thunders of Sinai. We, too, march through the wilderness and the solitary place that shall be glad for us, and as we pass God maketh the desert to blossom like the rose. We, too, go in unto the Promised Land to possess the treasures of the spirit, the unseen permanence of life and nature. Hi Perambulator. -When Billy Brown was but a babe Tucked In a perambulator. His sister had to push the thing And It seemed to irritate her. Now Bill's grown up to William Browns, Owns a Summer home and motor. His sister's kindness he repays, And makes his auto tote her. But far as I can figure out Bis pligrht's aa bad as ver. She rides a mile, then pushes twr. While- Bill fusses with a lever.