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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1909)
THE SUNDAY OKEGOXIAy. PORTLAND, MARCH 21, 1909. PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN B ES5EE 17 it? tTV lit f 7 X &g, 7 V 4, X f BV GEORGE GKANTHAM BAIX. NKW YORK. March 17. (Special correspondence.) Picture that are taken to Illustrate the news ol the day reveal the constantly Increasing ef ficiency of the men who operate the camera In ull parts of the world. As umiai, Theodore Roosevelt Is occupying the limelight-Just now by reason of the near approach of the date of his leaving for the wilds . of Africa on a hunting expedition. In this connection the re-" production of a photograph of Roosevelt as a hunter, taken some 20 years ago, when he was a ranohman in the West, is Interesting. Jiwt ns the Government has under taken a teat of the Hudson Maxim noise less sun another inventor comes info the field with a device which he declares will make guns not alone relatively noiseless, but recollless; . and he claims also that by the use of his device black powder becomes smokeless. This Invent or is . J. C. Coulombe, of Northfield, Vt., and ha l " shown in this picture dis charging one of his guns equipped with his patented device. It will be seen that he holds it at arm's length without fear of the recoil. Mrs. John Jacob Astor is one of the oolety women of New York, who has taken an Interest recently in public af fairs. Her activities are confined to the question of vivisection. She is an antiivlvlsectlonist; and she has Just sent a letter to the members of the State Sen ate and Assembly urging the passage of the compromise Brough-Murray . bfll. known as the "open door" bill. The. 'Princess Hatxfeldt has been well known In the social life of Kurcpe. for many years, though almost a stranger to her native land. The Princess was Clara Huntington, daughter of the great railroad man. She married Prince Fran cis Hatafeldt, but the marriage, as Is not unusual . with international . unions, prowl to be unhappy, and she has been separated from her husband for years. . . rrlnceki Dorothea is the daughter of Prince Philip of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. ITer great grandfather was King Louis Philippe of France, but the Princess is distinctly of the German type, showing nothing ;of her French blood. She is married to Duke Ernst, of Schleswis llolstein. t Js reported from I,ondon that the famous yacht Valhalla has been sold to 'a firm of New York; ship brokers and Will como to Itus. country lor use a a 5 - X MS V A "fi " T I tig f mm ley ti 1 . "J training ship. ' For ten years the yaclit has been the floating home of Earl Crawford. Those who witnessed the start of the Kaiser's cup race in 1905 will never forget the quaint figure of the bearded Earl togged out in sweater and sourtvester, as he stood on the deck' of his yacht the " typical . "old salt:" For the Karl was no fair weather ' sailor he was the master of his ship, as well as Its owner. ' He brought it In third in the race for. the Kaiser's cup. Karl Crawford has not glveri up his life on the sea. He has sold the Valhalla' be cause he has bought a large clipper of the mercantile type. The . Valhalla ' la ship-rigged and carries a crew of about 100.- She. Js .of- 17W tons displacement. It is reported that she" will take the pla.ee of the St., Mary's, the old naval ship which recently went to the Junk Pile. ' " - Grace. Filkins is the chairwoman of the committee of ' women appointed by the auxiliary of the-Army and Navy League to agitate in favor of the raising of the Maine. She holds this position because her husband. Captain Marix, was the Judge Advocate of the board Vvhich in vestigated the sinking of the ship. Miss Filkins is In "The Third Degree," which is playing an indefinite engagement in pw York, and she has plenty of time outside her stage duties therefore to give to this - work. Although James J. Jeffries still emu lates the Sphinx In the mafrer of a pos sible match with Johnson,, he is going ahead with' his training during his two weeks' stay in New Tort and he TnaV Sam Berger, his sparring partner. Is traveling with him, and. everyday they go : through a thorough ' course at -some local gymnasium. - " Tewnk Pasha is likely to be " the cen ter otnews interest any'day if the tele grams from Constantinople telling of un easiness at rhe "k ildiz Kiosk ar correct his;BUge appearance a part of U.-wolxew vlrZZZ ST aT fairs -under the - old regime, and when the young Turks gained control In Turkey- he was - retained In that, place. It is a. position of no little importance at this time, ; for the ' foreign, relations of Turkey are Intimately interwoven with her domestic troubles. .The talk of dis affection among the troops promises a new turn in Turkey, and those who were the Sultan in -the recent revolution may realize- that the crafty - old man was merely temporizing with fate till .' he could-regain his old strength. - -The marines have been . left between earth and water. The President put them ashore and Congress restored them to the sea; but. the ' President nartlv of i. nullified,. Lite . act f Congress. So that today the position of the marines is un certain. The individuals of the corps go-about their work and their play on board ship without much concern on the subject. In fact. It has more individual meaning for -the officers. The" marines were originally- the. policemen of the Navy. In later years they have "been fighting' men,, helping the sailors to man the- guns and fight on shore. ' - '. Old "Cy" Young, who ' is goinp 'from the Boston - to the Cleveland club this year, is never sx happy as when-he is living on his farm at Peoll. His wTfe runs the farm in his absence. When Ed Bang, the sporting writer, called on Old "Cy"'-a few days ago he' found him cleaning harness, chopping corn and keeping himself in condition for the com ing Summer by '. good hard work. -' He said he was glad to get back -to Cleve land, -and especially glad ' to play with Lajule.- 7 " : The literature of tire air . will receive another imaginative contribution -when Rudyard Kipling's new book is published. Mr. .Kipling .has, .done fo.r .aeronautics the remarkable work of creating a ter minology for the conditions of 100 years hence. He "tells' the: taU 'of" "The Night Mail," as it starts from the central postal tower in .London . for its. destina. tion in Canada, and narrating the condi tions and circumstances of its journey, he pictures the' 'developments of a -e'en-tory. In aeronautics. The book Is as terse as "The Ship . That- -Found . Her. self," and as full of technical terms. But Kipling has had to Invent for him self the terminology of future aeronau tics: and -it., is the use of these -coined terms which helps, to carry the imagina tion forward a century. ' ' " .' "Alfred G. ' Vanderbilt ha run back to New York for a few days pending the completion of. his preparations for run ning a coach between London .and 1 Brighton this Summer. The horses were shipped to I.ondon more than a month ago. so that tbey might become thor oughly acclimated. . There are nearly a hundred of them. Mr. Vanderbilt made this essay in. road coaching a year so and met with .such success that he is enoouraged to repeat the experience. . General Fraser Is the ' Governor of Bengal whose life was in danger re cently from . a fa.natlc. and who was saved-by the intervention of the Maha rajah of Burdwan. The growth of the native disaffection - in India makes ' the life of the provincial Governor uncer- tain. Bengal Is the most seditious of the provinces. Lady -Rood, wife of the new British, Ambassador to. Rome, was LilUas Geor gina Guthrie. She is a woman of tart and Is expected to exercise a great deal of Influence in diplomatic circles in the Lternal City. At tile Masquerade. Detroit Free Press. I was it cowboy and she was & queen At tbe annual masquerade; And our faces couldn't be guessed or seen. And our manners were not displayed. I danced with a gypsy and ahe with an earl. She with a clown and I a tlovfr girl. The sodaess of night or a. tramp of the street, We tripped the fantastic with untirint; feet. We lauKhed as we danced, and we took one and all. And our hearts were in tune at the mas querade ball. We never could tell who our partner might be. . 'And - 'twas little we cared at that maa--s. querade ball; Whether pauper or prince, whether servant or she Who bad handmaids to come at her beck and call. What mattered it then? No distinction ' was- made Whether Topsy In rags or Louise in bro cade; And she with the Irish policeman was proud . To circle the ball in full sight of tSe crowd; While I took the homeliest freak from the wall. And was slad of the chance at that mas- auerade ball.. ... X was a -cowboy and she was a queen. Apd never a one in that ballroom was made To . feel that, unwanted, she blotted th5 scene Equality -reigneil at that gay masquerade. The bars of distinction were broken in twain. The mighty,, tbe humble, the fair and the plain. Their faces were hidden and nobody knew Of the cheeks -that were pale or the eyes that Iftrked hue; And none was too awkward, too short or too tall. Before we unmasked at that masquerade ball. and . I still think this old world And I thought to myself. it now. What a glorious place would .becoma If it could be managed, some way or some how, That 'we" Would wear masks when our faces were glum: Tf by wearing a domino, as at a ball. We could humble the great and lift up the small. Then love 'would 'creep 'in' and all hatred creep out; To all we'd be kind- without shadow or doubt Then th rich would be poor and the-poor would be rich." For nobody hr then 'would care which. w as which,