THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAU PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING. JUNE - C, 1CC1. ) 4K ::- 't'V -;v BY, L AD Y'HENRY SO M E R S E T wVi;--,v:"'- ;CV j "H 1804. by .tee ABierlria-JourMl- Btaa-locr.) , t . ? 'OWmraterlous are the ways of Providence. Whf Is It that children of the tender eat year are subletted' to the nerce.t tortures? God give us His Holy Spirit to amend our hearts and Uvea, for ' we are desperately . wicked.' They who do such things, end we who da not prevent them. Shalt I deliver rny poor children In the print works? God .be with we!" ;. ..., ; -v -f v work, a practice which the state, the legitimate protector of those who can not protect themselves, has, in our M me, wisely and humanely Interdicted, pre vailed In the seventeenth century to an extent which, when compared with the extent of the manufacturing , system, seems almost incredible. At Norwich. the chief seat of the clothing trade, n little creature, of ( years was thought fit to labor." . ' " An idea has therefore long-prevailed that child labor has been killed, that workers; and asked her age. Nelly was t years old, thinly dad, with shoes tn holes', a pathetic little figure, with a face already drawn and saa. one explained that she lived with her "mother, two brothers, one sister, baby nnd me, the oldest of the lot;" that her mother made dolls' clothes for living, and she helped. . J . V' :' ..' 'How much does she get a weear "Five shillings, but sometimes not so much, and they all lived In one room.", 'What part of the work do you dor 7 'All parts, sir. I can make dolls' JackeU and shirts, and petticoats and bodices, ana every ring wot it wears. "And when Oft en' undertaker, A nervous child, whose eyes looked, as though they, had -rested 6n grewsome sights. , , "I works mostly all the evenln'e," said the boy. "I goesWith the men to meas ure corpses, and I ,'elps to put them in their coffins." t -t' i ' . In the mill districts the life of the little .half-timer meant "diminished health, arrested growth and neglected education, and above HI It robbed the child of that heritage of play which. Is forever the right of all healthy, happy Children. .,' . , . ..- No wonder, therefore, that when these facts. were put before. the country the national conscience was stirred.- From the school teachers the i verdict . was unanimous. . The half-timers ' having. many of them, begun their labors at 4 o'clock , In the day, are , listless and sleepy. Especially sm0ng.,the girls did the bad Sects manifest . themselves. i fit Why There Is Macedonia by Lord edoar newtqn I you workf '"In the dinner times, but mostly la ILI A O "lawa.-a kail nielli vkea 1. lilt .u ........ . , ' . . ' '' " I" " ra,UBl and preyed on unprotected lives. : of the stupendous undertaking of en- Uut ,B tn taBt day, of th nineteenth neavoring iq pass tne factory leamia- i -, nn ' inn ihn imi.. ., umi auuuiu pruitwi in cuuuren ui j hf Mrn tnllad with wear hands' and tne evens ana mania. . the' country from the crashing condl- I .. ' In a& , it Ags MA 1 asMM . Mllllcf tit I "How late do you stop up. helping" tions under which they were being- com-i.hnr m.d. almost; more unendurable "Till nearly ' . , tiled to work, i Lord Asltley, as be It,, , that hi h.4 tn he wodnui I .What sad stories the aally-dreaaed then was, had espoused the cause of-the ,n, ,h. a.- , .hM n,,i .-half. I dolls could have told their lltUe foster -wek, with the chivalry of 8lr Gala- thev m eelied. well as Darents. - ' , ' icmi'niia ir vi m mwm m uiiiii,. mrtnA nt aiui mtiiaaa npk it i Anainar miia or a nemea ntr Domirim ine cruemea uev nraciroe in tneir jtw . iB(Ua that the factory oouia no longer I wno hum, win. ,r awupnw awn inwua iiruiin or wtiiy niw. nu ir ne abandoned his schemes or rerorm, .hi. .n. ti ...r. M ... the nrlee nald. The little Bale tax la woman la maklna- match boxes at two but, nothing moved him from his holylhut lh, carrat workahooa of the alums I looked up and said:, "1 have helped pence-farthlns arose there is no lels purpose. , Jarcre alwava inen -to the little toilers mother ever so long, ever. sine I was ure for lor. LJfe Is one long drive to And yet,. how great waa the problem to 'regulate, even In a measure, such an evil. , To legislate for factories and pub lics worka la comparatively easy, "but to step acroaa the threshold of home and control the parents' 'authority over the child more difficult. . y J But the revelations of the last few years. thnka to those who have con secrated their lives as 'children's friends, have shown how abject poverty can blind Its victims until! they no longer The lives of the children In the cotton and calico works 'had specially stirred his pity and Indignation. . Their employ- meat began between the age of 7 to I, but cases were known of babies begin ning-work: from I to' 4 years of age. Hours for young girls were' Intolerably long, often lasting from It to II hours where no factory Inspector could Inter fere. V The manufacture of dolls and the making of dolls clothes Is an Industry In which many children Are engaged. Dolls, the Idea. conjures up happy hours, tender . memoriae. I can toulte little.'" i -Why. you are little bow,- new Her Interviewer. . "How long have worked, two or three yea re r keep the soul and body together, and children have to be - enlisted in me T APPEARS useless and somewhat unreasonable to lay the whol blame .for - the - present state terror- In ' Macedonia , upon the Turkish government.. ,' - j. ; ,r ' The sins of that government are tin doubled, . yet who. In . his 'senses, can suppose that the Turks, under present auspices, . will ever consent to ; the in troductlon of real .reforms as we tin derstand them? J is conceivable that they might do to in the eleventh hour under extreme pre sure, but what algni are there of any' extreme pressure be ing exfrciiiea r.. . r y ... ;. ' The whole . force and influence. ( the Turkish government ae at present con stltuted, will always be arrayed against any serious f liange because It realises that such t change,, Implies its own suppression. It Is hopeless to attempt to persuade tne official Turks uiat. gen nine reform In the European provinces are not only in tne Turkish interest. but constitute the only chance of keep ing them in , their . own poBsesslon. Genuine reform to them Implies foreign control and they believe that when once foreign control la eatabllshed their own rule muat r-nmm t n ah mrtA -. lfft K I M. Inn . thAMAM iU .nil. b yo struggle, Hero, then, th. state step. In. h ,tt .UtenUy d" .tuU . i iv rrom rm nam nnint r vfw k. Why. indeed, should lie Suppose that and education they had none. . 'Such was 'the, condition of the little ones for whom Lord Ashley pleaded and ' Obtained a reluctant hearing before -the . parliament . opened. - In February, . 1S J. ' by the young queen herself, but on the Soth of .June his bill for the protection of these little slaves became, through his unwearying efforts,. the lsw of Eng land. -Half a century ago Maoauley , wrote; ,:;.r', -M ,v :.! "It may.be here noticed that the prnc called ."grand I 'eipea 'er ever since i can recnem-i moueriyr- men i can oniy ie mat atnl.(M, . -t..mnt. . r..i r-f. in 1 M V . . I Ik. Ju.KI .a.a lllnK , hllMl A I . . r r . . These are home induatriesv Into which I woman's heart to the child of her child I .. nn. . . i - - I n ..iv ii . inuMn. inouia m through the mlat of years even now. a factory Inspectors are not expected te lis a good simile of what a country ougm E - . in Mrnf ? cerUin waxen face whicn I tnougnt tne inquire; out me vernier, bi xam waw is ana now wuun Tn- tak ---yincin- B, v-, entrusted, of all countries, to Russia and Austria. KCan1 any one mention an Instance where either of these nowera has shown the slightest disposition or inclination to bring about genuine re- rorms in Turkey? Every, one must know' by this time that It has been the undeviatlng policy of Russia, at all events, to keep Turkey in as weag ana unsound a condition possible. , As regarda ? Macedonia day, "The eond'tlrms under 0ilch the work L.i kutiisii in ih mrM ami I mwr I mlatrees waa the same, aa child after I to the child whom It protects. waa carried Our were abominable, most amell the fracrance of the hawthorn child passed under review.. "They have I Victor Hugo has said: "He Who has of the children contracted diseases of blossom without remembering a certain I to toil and moll at early morn and lataloeen the misery of man only, has seen the eyes, the wages were, extremely low, I window throurh which thin precious doll at night to keep the hungry wolf from I nothing; he must see the misery of waa naaaed. when I was In Quarantine the door." I woman. He wno has seen tne misery oj for some childish Illness, and thlsl One of the children, a gin or ii. was i woman only, naa seen notning; ne must viaiAB of heautv laid In u-v arms that I a barmaid In shop la Bethnal Green. I see the miaery of childhood. unnyr spring morninj," i.-- - i ner cnooi Run ntpi nr nnii;u i now, uiua uu. iu And yet the happy children who clasp I most or tne day. Dui.me ouinw oouritne iitue naix-iimers are proiecieu. o their treasures Uttle know whrt the and evenings were oevotea to uiisi can-1 it enactea oy tne ainrs most uwuwi word means to white faces, bending in ling, and Mghta on Baturoaya. . .. i majesty,- nays tne recent ac -mat a dark rarrets -over dolls' clothes. A London newspaper ; correspondent who. following In , the ' steps of the "Children's Earl." haa done mucn to effect" the reform Which has Just been "How late do you serve Vt the thlld child shall' not be employed between the every one, 'too, knows that one. If not was asked. i - 1 hour of In the evening and In the both, of these countries has every in- TUI abaht leven, sir. . mornlnr. ..... tentlon of seeking accessions of terri- i"How much do you getr" "A child tinder the age of 11 yrs torjr there when the breaking up of tlfe tlce of netting children prematurely to made law. Interviewed one of these HtUe "A shillin' a week, and my food.' , Willie, pale boy, waa employed by ''" 'A . ! ' . i . "U ' '.1.1. V.' ; i a ' i' Our Homes Must Fit Us Like Our Clothes BY BAILEY MILLARD ' ' OoprriM. 10. hy W..R. Baarat.) "". HARLES KEELER, the poet, says I . there is a movement in California - V .- toward a simpler,-a more vital ' ; art expresslojv - It .is a- move ment which includes painters. nd poets, composers and sculptors, and only lacka , co-ordination to give it a signincani. m fluence uDon modern life. ' .' . Mr. Keeler thinks that one of the first steps of this movement should so to . Introduce more widely the ' thought of the simple home to emphasise the gros- nel of the simple life, to scatter oroaa . cast the faith in simple, beauty, to make , prevalent the conviction tnat we must live art before we can create it. - Here ts a doctrine to which X most cheerfully subscribe.- In my small way I have been preaching the simple life all along,- and it la so rarely that any. body like Mr. Keeler comes along with - a book of this sort that I must bo for given a little i glow of enthusiasm over - him and his writing. j " 5 Mr. Keeler says, very truly, that the - building of a home should be an event of profound Importance. "It should be with man, as with birds, the culminating event after oourtahlp and ' marriage, upon . which all the loving thought and energy of the bridal pair Is bestowed. "How often In our modern life,'" he says, "do we find a far different proced - ure? The real estate agent and the in v vestor confer, and as a result we have ." rows of houses put up to sell to ahlff--4ees homeseekers who are too Indifferent to think out their own needs, and help lessly take what has been built for trade. The taint of commercialism is over these homes, and all too often the life within them is shallow end artificial." Mr. Keeler hplda that the building of . houses is an art, not a trade, and there fore it is needful for thoae 'who are to occupy them to think out their jieedsi then they should let an artist create out of their disjointed Ideas an artistic whole. - ' vv' ;..)';, v ' '. This, he says. Is so apparent that It seems an Idle trulam, yet comparatively; . few realise Its true significance., ." "It Is not enough" nays the author; I "for a boss carpenter or contractor to style himself an architect and hang out his 'sign shingle. ' We must demand of our architect that he be & real creative artist; that he understand form and pro portion; that he be a man of taste and originality; .that he appreciate - not merely the general type, but the Inner spirit of the architecture of other peo ples and other Ideals of culture. "Such a man will sublimate our crude and Imperfect conception of the home and make It a vital expression. Such a home will not merely fit us. but .will be like the clothes of a growing child loose enough to allow us to expknd to its full Idea and with seams that can be let out as the experience of years enlarges our deals." i, ,-...". . Now. I submit... that this is the right sort of literature to utter in a land where the boss carpenter and contractor have things nearly all their own way when it comes to house construction. We have but to look about us to wit ness the handiwork. of these choice splr its. To say the least the work is often execrable the horrid houses stand as monuments to their Ignorance and stu pldity. What punishment awaits xthese evil doers. It is difficult to haaerd, but I do not go so far as to declare that their sins are such as to wholly exclude them from the scheme of redemption. Let them be counseled In time. Let them be willing to work after the plans of persons who appreciate the difference between a home and an' ugly shelter, no matter how costly. People living In what they consider model houses would be surprised . to learn what artists think of their homes. .. ' The other day I was complaining of the Inartistic appearance of a huge ad vertlslngBlgn stuck . upon a hill in a certain quarter of the city. I made sure that I had impressed my artistic listener but he merely remarked: "Oh, that sign isn't half so bad aa some of the frame houses they've built out that way." Mr. Keeler observes that the great sin in most of the 'domestic architec ture of America Is the failure to ob serve the one essential rule of using every material in the manner for which It Is structurally best adapted. For example, he says that the arch of I specified occupation Is likely to be In masonry is tl.e strongest structural use I jurious to the life, limb, health or edu of stone and brick, but that an arch of I cation of the. child, the certificate shall shall hot be employed tn atreet trading. "No child who la employed half time under the factory and workshop act, 1901, shall bo employed In any other oc cupation. ' ',! "A child shall not be employed to un, carry or move anything so heavy as to be likely to cause Injury to the child. "A child shall not be employed in any occupation likely to be Injurious to his life. limb, health or education, regard being had to his physical condition. "If the local authority sends to tne employer -of amy child . a certificate signed by a registered medical practi. tloner that the lifting, carrying or mov ing Of any specified weight is likely to cause Injury to the child, or that any Turkish empire In Europe takesplace. And, In face of this elementary fi ui governments or tne great powers profess t believe In a satisfactory so lution or tne Macedonian difficulty, . If. however, this optimistic view ere vails in Europe there Is little trace of it to be round in the Balkan peninsula. During the course of a fairly extenslvo tour in European Turkey last . month x imur cuni serosa a amine independ ent person who did not scoff at the td4 of Russia and Austria being in earnest Why should they beT anked practical people. The policy or these two gov ernmentS' IS not dictated by sentiment they have, It is. true, no particular love ior tne aura, dui tney nave even less for the growing nationalities of the near east; they have every Intention of helping themselves, largely when th general scramble for . territory take place and the very last thing they de sire is that young- and vigorous states should bar their way to the Med l terra nean or that the .Turkish administra tion snouia .no , improved to ' sucn an extent as to render foreign Interference Unneceaaaryi : ' If any doubt la still felt aa to their sincerity it, Is only necessary to con sider what has been effected slnee the adoption of the Muersateg program. . . .That scheme was adopted In Novem ber, 1I0J, and what Is there to show for It- Two assessors who have never ten -auuonics, wno oonnne their. ener gles to visiting Hllrol Pasha three frmea a. araalr anil . wnn iMrr! m.lr. any attempt to - conceal . their aoathv ana neipiessness. -. .. , r It Is true that General G lords and the International ' military " delegates have at last started from Constantino- pie niter spending no lees man tnree and a half months there In endeavoring to ascertain the exact nature, of their functions, but even now it Is not clear that they . are going to be allowed a free hand, and the preposterous delay to which these officers have been sub jected Is In Itself a reflection on Austro- Russlan sincerity. Had the two'govvl ernments meant business the three and half months would have, been reduced to 41. hour., f ) r. f. , .Win; 'The plain truth Is that there Is only one . power which haa been In earnest right along, and that la England. ' It Is from England that, all real useful suggestions have cone. and If It had not been for the efforts of Lord Lans downs and Sir Nicholas O'Conor. things would look even less promising than they do at present With the' exception of 'France, Eng land .appears to be the only country which has been absolutely uninfluenced by selflah considerations. Germany has oatentatlously held aloof and has pos-" slbly hinted - occasionally to the Porte that there Is no necessity for hurry.1 The1 desire Of Germnnv to stand well; wlth the sultan is well known, and if the results of the nreaent proceedings la the arrival of Austria, at a Balonlku. that only means that ultimately Salon ika will in all probability become & Gar- ' man port ; , . .;, , , ,: , IV is, - nowever. rather unfortunate' that the Bulgarians ln Macedonia think that England will oome to their aaalat- . ance;ir things 40 wrong, conviction fostered by mlslnte,rpreUtioh of parlia mentary statements, by the declara tions of Irresponsible persons and oven . by the action of British cbarlublo so cieties, whose benevolent work. how. eyer impartial, is always believed by the eastern peasant to be direct An to the" government : . v It is. Indeed.-difficult to aae tinai i.a. Uted British acUon on behalf of the' people of Macedonia could be product ive of any good, and were It attemnta.i the experiences of Armenia might eas- ' lly be repeated. It has freauenUv hen asserted that France and Italy would ' be ready to join with England In Insist ing upon a more drastlo scneme of re form, but I have never been able ia discover the foundation t thia asser, . tlon, .What la certain la that If weat- r tempted anything decisive we ahouM Immediately . find ourselves klona . anrf ' confronted not only by the sultan, but by Russia, Austria1 and Germany aa WelL And so the misrule of the aultan continues and will , continue for ion time to! come. ...r-i '. .v 1 " ' 3? MEothelSbtieMj TT T VV wood, on the contrary, has no structural value, and Is a mere imitation df a uae- ful building 'form. It Is ' generally painted to Imitate the effect of stone and thus sins even more seriously In becom ing a sham. tTHIN the past Yew weeks the . country Tias ' been shocked , by the downfall of two Society favorites "In What U known as the best society. In one ease the criminal had resorted to a bold attempt to rob gentlemen at a club where ho had been -welcomed as person worthy of consideration. . He bo- longed to one of the besti families, and had married an "estimable young woman who was the daughter of t a, wealthy widow. , He was a young man of 'ability be admissible as evidence tn any sub sequent proceedings against the em ployer in respect of the employment of the child." - ' There la no phase of modern life which to my mind gives better Indies- He, says that the' round tower, the 1 "oh of progress than tne. ract mat ineiand education. After playing the role curving bay window and a multitude of 1 child has become an inaiviauai, wun ot ,a daring "robber, he attempted flight. detachable ornaments are cheaply ren-1 separate rignts. reoognixea oy xne eute, 1 but was killed by nis pursuers, who, I that it ia nrotected from cruelty. Over- I nnan mtnnvlnr the itlavdtaa he wore, dla. demands that they be built of masonry, work, oppression 01 any aino, wneiner 1 covered his .identity.- He holds that it Is a good general rule I hy mpioyers or pareav.. ...u ' One.caa scarcely Imagine the anguish in imoer construction ' to ouna in I """" " rr w-T wl. I or hU wire and ramuy to bo obliged to straJaht anarular lines, thus In. a. maaa. dren If not properly ted,, must oe,: De-i. .. ihvlinvi ahould hi hn Wte insuring the effect of strength, dig- cause In tho Interest i of their country. 1 Bucn m vlllala He must have been liv VU uva uvaa ww imvh w a-- - of our civilisation, must be made. ef ficient b a due care of tho children, for the community ahould look upon Its Ut tle ones as the nation's raw material. ae thav ahould be the . nation's best asset) But' this question of feeding nity and repose.' ."Wood," the author declares, "i ' a I good material. If left In the natural fin iah, but it is generally spoiled by the, use or paint or varnish." ?-. ... This Is a Inatter which, perhaps, can not be entirely reasoned out It must I lfia- bavnnd his' means to have reached such a cllm&x in his career as to resort to measures so desperate - to - obtain monev. ' One can but think It 'Was well that a' life that 'had been so perverted should have ended. ? ' mi u an y reasoned out 11 must I tn another .ahase Of our edu-I . ne otner-was mat 01 SLjieiRia xavor- yet It Is a point vital to artistic work. There la a refinement and character to natural wood which Is entirely lost when the surface Is altered by varnish and polish. - Oil paint Is the most deadly foe of an artistic wood treatment. It la hard and characterless, becoming dull and srrtmy with time and Imparting a cold severity to the walls. . , He says that experience proves that tne protection afforded by paint is quite unnecessary in most climates. jShinalea. If left to themselves, rot very alowlv ana in a very Clean manner. - since the grain of the wood is In the direction of thedraina;e, the rot Is con stantly washed out instead of accumu lating. He declares that natural shin gles last fully three times as long aa a coat or-paint, and are thus In the end an economy. ' Both In the construction of the home and its f urnishlna-. the author pleads lor simplicity, signlfl cance, utility ana narmony. catlonal and social problems. hope to deal with later. To Rcclaiixv the Desert yW-aa-aag s all the attentions that could be heaped upon a young man.- Ho had the entree to all tho best- homes, and was never omitted from the list of Invited guests to social functions. Ho was the trusted receiving teller In one of the most im-. portant business companies popular, brilliant and . an unusually "handsome man, who waa naturally a fine character, but who, to keep pace with those with whom be waa constantly thrown, yielded to temptation and became an embeaxler, and consequently lost everything. ' Being confronted - by charges,- he broke down 'completely and "acknowlA edged everything, and Is now In a felon's ECRETABY J of ' .the Interior Hitchcock has set aside from the Irrigation fund tho aum of cell, with plenty of time to repent of his xi.ono.ooo to betrin building the follies and his crime? jus ooovnraii can . , 1 . f niiUlJlUGI r UHUICU , vvuh -- , m- ba attributed to want of moral courage,' which caused him to allow himself to be nattered Into, living- beyond his means, and, mora or leas to dissipation, think ing It was necessary he should keep up with the excesses of the wealthier class to hold his place amonr them. Tho older heads that must have no ticed he waa living too. extravagantly cannot hold themselves guiltless . that tney did not frankly call his attenUon to his faults and make an effort to aava turn rrom himself. , , ; . . . . -Society Is more or leas responsible for the fall of many younr rjen whom they spoil oy aauiation. Tney , make Insa tiable demands upon those who happen u pieaae mem or wno xurtusn mem amusement.- '!';.".,?.'..,"., Buch persons expect the recipients of tneir invitations or favors to bo In eon sunt attendance upon' their 'wishes, without stopping to consider how much time they are requiring' or how much inconvenience they may occasion. As a rule, people who have money and plenty of leisure are selfish and thoughtless and stop to think, of nothing; but their own gratification.- '. I , i 'ft ; Few yonng men have tho courage to rranxiy express tneir regrets that they cannot afford to return courtesies when they have once accepted them.- - To do so they are afraid of- losing caste and of their namea being eliminated from the list of favorites. . ' ' . '' To accept the flattering favorr and un dertake them ia sure, sooner or later, to Involve them in a sea ot troubles. Ac cumulation of bills and prossuro for the liquidation of obligations can have but one ending bankruptcy of -one's for tunes and ultimata exposure, . - To.reaort to embeixlement Is only to prolong the agony and suffer punish ment for crime, either by prosecution or flight from their country, to bo pur sued by the Nemesis that invariably fol lows crime. ' ' ' e recognised oy royalty and the ultra-fashionablo has become a aort. of . . mania with agreat. many , Amerloans, U -- "lUMwin eenaioie,, practical people, and whoso antecedenta would be '? diaguated witH such flunky Ism, ' , ' After obtaining what they consider ,' tlllffMII n Km .U..4- . . . - w w mviv 1 viaiu iu .ins mo ment there is any lack of response fiuan- ' nlallw lh. Wnn . k V. . . . mvw nioj , wfii ua uroppeu '- and. having no higher aim In life, tbey. . surrender self-respect and not infre quently, if they are In Positions of trust . " resort to ombesalement to keep up with the smart set of society, -: - -t ; a iew oriex years an tnare warm raw - ft thla Im AmamJa. L.i J . 1- . w . - iii 4. gm U9 - regretted that they have become 00 nu- 1 meroua aa thev am tulav . Thai. . . ence can only bo explained unon the the , vs-w miuuut ajtissj 11 a, auini nw 1 nn. generation that haa passed to their, re?, ward Indulged their offsprings too much, , and failed to impress them with - the riant kind of nrlnclnlaa of . alahltltv. thrift and proper self-respect.' ' : v 1 Tho almost, entire absence of diacl-. blip In American homes, and Indulgence (. In extravagance, has had a serious effect ' upon many : of the present generation, v haa begotten a false Idea of life and has caused the younger people of today to ' " attach too much lmnortanna tn tha nnlk. ions, manners, customs and fads of tho leisure class and to have too little re- . - spect for th unassuming; matter-of-fact people. All too many are trying to get. a living by their wltM Instead of being i," willing to work and adapt themselves to -whatever circumstances surround them.' The - difference : between receipts and expenditures -roust bo made up sdaje-- how, nd if JSersons with small salaries -.'f or Incomes try to do extravagant things that those of larger wealth can afford ,. they must axneot to falL their fall helnir- - . . . . T only a question of time . , '--"''.' The dam at the Junction of th Tellow-1 mendous importance to the lower Mia- stone and Sweetwater rivers is the first slsslppt valley its effect , upon Tiooas. v v.. 1 n.w arranaament I The Pathfinder dam alone will lm f, rrton hv th United BUtea gov-lPund tho flood waters of 400 mUea of ! ' T 'W'aa'el""Jwi eiiasiWa,siawaawiawai"aawaiafc j A French Name for a Persian Game T From the New York Sun. i HE popular description of poker as the great American game must fall back Into tIe ranks of ex ploded myths, along with Bherl dan's ride and the' moon hoax. ; All the evidence about p&ker which has come to light points to Its origin In New . Orleans. . The questions is, where did New v Orleans get it from,, or Is It an Improve- ment on some game known to the popula tin. . . V. . , fllln .V. n I. m h. HM v. wu uiak kiJ', www, .. u. uol ira cuidui' bered, were French and used French . terms in any games that they played. ' There la no French game played with only to cards, ''but . there are several French rames In which all the poker . hands are to be found except four of a - kind. Amblgu, brelan and many others will at once sugrgest the"mBeives. But all these French games are played 1 with three cards only In the. hand ,;Of each player. Where could the inventora of poker have found a game played with five cards In each hand; and the pack consisting or w cards oniyT , - The standard pack of cards in Europe from the earliest days has been what la - now called the piquet pack, which is the aame as our American euchre pack, 33 cards, . There Is only one country In the world that uses a pack limited to 20 cards. and that is Persia; "-There is only onoffheodore Le-rras. au Palais, Paris.": country 'In the world where poker has' always been played with five cards In j the ' hand ' of each player, and that : is Persia;- but the game is .not called poker. It Is called "as naa" -- Those who are familiar wlpi this . ancient Persian game unhesitatingly as sert that some Frenchman must have broue-ht It to New Orleans in Ita priml : tlve form..- with the pack- limited to 20 cards and: the band of each, player In creased to five. The question . still" re mains. How dior It change its name? - The nanw of as nas is not only the name of a gam It la now generally used to distinguish the old Persian cards, with which as naa Is played,; from the Euro, peun cards, which are modern, f . The old Persian pack had eight suits 'and was called ganjlfeh, a. word which eema to be derived from the Chinese and. means "paper cards." Tho word It at present applied to European playing cards only, five cards in each suit .The old Persian pack had no aces, court cards and spots, like ours, but each suit was made up of pictures which ranked; Lion, king, lady, soldier, and dancing girl. This pack was called vara I as; varak 1 asanas, or simply as, from the game as or asanas, which was played with It This ancient game was simply 20-card poker, as it was played Iri America at the begin ning of this century. -' But if poker was originally known as asanas, how came it to lose that name? It seemed to the writer and also to Mr. Jesael that the answer to thla question must be looked for in the language of the people who brought . the tame from Europe, if they did bring It If thay brought it to New Orleans from Persia, or if some resident of that city was familiar with the Persian game and thought It an improvement on the French games of amblgu and brelan, the Intro ducer was probably ; French, and more familiar with: French game and French terms than withPersian. If this theory were .correct, the next thing to do would be to examine all the books published in the French language on the subject of playing cards and; oard games. ,;. : ,., Curiously enough, one of tha Oldest and most authoritative works: on card games was published In France and ran through a great many editions. This is the famous Academic - UniVeraelle des Jeux.' yChes : . ... . n.k I tne xcuiuweiuiia im v ; wua u ernment--a..y-vn. . w ,1" BwaetwaUf river, with their 'tribuUry launaing ensnjus ra, m im.v "" mouauln streams, v 'The site will not pairs, etc; In the French descrlntione- I wealth of tho country, - , . aret a chance to roll down Into the Mls- tne game we are told that a player! "The new tatm wm ; rurnisn -waver Sissippl vauey' and raise tne' river not opened the betting by saying-, "Je poque I enough to irrigate J60.000 acres of land torn. The water will be restrained from at cost of $10 per acre. As irrigated joining, tna great june noous. ' v- d'un jeton," or two chips, or as many as ne pieasea ana tnat then the others could see him, raise him, or drop out in their turn. In the German game, pochen, as It is piayea xoaay, we nnd exactly the same exoresslon still In use: "Tnh iwiu - or aa many chips aa the player cares to venture, and the answer of the player land is suitable for concentrated .farm ing, this are will support 126,000 per- , sons, though not nearly so many will at first find homes upon it this single fertile belt . along-a single stream will therefore support more people than there are today 1ft all Wyoming. Other reservoirs upon other head- Waters will have the same effect f What might happen- In the Mississippi valley If the1 levee policy were to con tinue indefinitely without aid from res ervoirs is 1 shown by tho destructive floods of the Hoangbo in China, whose broken levee les than to. years ago Je Trrliratlnn tmaafta closely . set Com- entering the betting against the opener j munltlea, ' These mean jagain that farm vastated . whole provincea and actually w invanaoiy, -jen poena mit" Both I life will not be lonely; that good schools 1 orownea seven minion peupts, poque ana pocnen. ate played with, tha I on hurhaa and aiolendid roads can be piquet pack, 3? cards. made br the settlers, enhancing . the Now it '.Is very curious that In tha I comfort of rural Ufa v Fruits and vege- English translation of thla "Academia tables will abound on Irrigated -iand. des Jeux," and in all the English descrip- rThe desert wil blossom as. the rose. tions of the game of poaue. we find the 1 s There are half a billion acres of pub- players are instructed to say In English. Ho lands remaining unclaimed, ex "I poque for so much," and the following elusive of AUska. .yery much of this players are to respond, "I poque against domain is utlllsable through Irrigation: JjeSlaeSi toere are vaai arena ynvaia . v : ; Vill Pover ySo Astrology , ; The Hoangho Is a river In the air; the Mississippi is . becoming . one. :' - Head' water reservoirs alone can restrain It. JSTXaT AUt PjUBTIBTgH ABAJTSOVZI), From the Chicago Journal (Rep.) lowa'led In the advocacy of tariff re vision and the ratification of reciprocal 'V- v , iRf,idea. there are vast areas or private 1 ,,. t,.Iiiu ih natinn. -tx Z wv ,, ZOTa P??ue any prdl- land wvaiiaDia.ror agriculture ot n.gnor f m tn c,mato b, embodied un arv Eno-llah niHnii- . ..i ,iui vmni thrnnih mitp uinn v h . . ... In the 1665 edition of this work- we find the first description of the French game of hoc;. , which is ' carefully dis tinguished from the Italian game of hocca. , - , This game of hoc continues to be de scribed until the edition of 170S, with no mention of any. improvement or chantre In its form. In 1733, however, page SOS, we find a description of "le Jeu du Poque." which exactly agrees with the game known to all German children as pochensplel,- or pochen. The "Academic des Jeux" speaks of poque as a descend ant oroffghoot from the older game of hoc. . f The peculiarity of noaue is that after the cards are dealt and each Player has taken from the common pool the counter for the rank of the . highest cards held he is at liberty to bet unon the various combination at card ha hoidsv triplets, .:,.i7J liTT-' ' n?i proaucuveuea. v. "i'v. der the title or the -. "Iowa idea." 'and undoubtedly separate it Into two avliahi. 1. almost no limit to the. capacity of the Governor Cummins .Was its chief ex and call it iwuiik Tn 4h. t. I it.n.l o.. Urn nn,n n.nnla anil I POnCftt ' ' " . ' v 1 " M . .- IN, WIIUAll, Wie 1 LLU1IW4 DWIM IV " .. t'vw.v I - . . , . , I . .. ' , , r ' . . word poche already aa near tokr fl. l-nar kYmin for the world. Two hun- 10 uw in iw wnwmm 01 th4 vowel aound Will admit miitinna ran livi in tha Loulaiaiia " aelre Kr Uie tning tiatt , stood Tirk. a i. . . . . . . 1 . I MlnriAantfl. . ariei thA. mtatfu u inner .: thj vv iiixL mnrfl tiHrnrn i rnan r n a r ei aiMaa' i as a oIatisi i , J : i - L---- w-.- -t " --o " of New Orleans of French' birth or ex- The next best problem: is to get the OimvJ traction already familiar with th. nm. rav.nia on tha land as . Commander ??ota KographIcfl. a3 political af of poque and seeing asanas played for I Booth-Tucker of the - Salvation Army ine nrst time, ahould use the expressions I puts It to fit tho landless man to the English or German speaking , person, ( The' lata Mark Hanna was greatly in aaopting ne, game, should say, "I; po-j tereated in a bill ' Advocated by. Mr. W'. ; ' ' -v. ' ''Nf ',f ; -1; I Rooth-Tucker to (establish a department ......... - 1 ' . 1 . il ilia, 1 S "rL On ny competitive prod- .. ..vu.v wioiKu iiama , 01 1 yiuo an lumw vi T,,vvv,vvu u i ucts) win not be advocated by the na --..o xivpimr ana can tn ; game 1 vance to actual setuers upon irrigatea tiQnarx platform of - the Republican po-que and later to tpen . It''jpbker:w;;;j Und. ;: .xpeMonc.. .of, W Baivatlon " The New England states have 'nvie , and .Bohn's Army: in "vowraav; seems .o-sncw tnat had a' little tinge of the roelproottr on Handbook of Games'; make no reference j poor men who have conclusively failed tlment but It Is nor In the ascendant: to poaer until 1884. Cavendish," " the J to make in the citiea a decent living for the great majority of the leading Be- numwniY on wnist. ana for ne.j-tv tneir lamuie bucctmw in a-aininai Diitillcan tat.a-r inio. Mlrnta-an TnHl. 40 years card editor of the Field, which. I independence upon the farm colonies In I ana. rulifornla ra all for tha tiri during his life, was the recognised au-1 Colorado.--' What- these -can do . otherai schedales as they stand at presentIn inomy on ait matters relating to cards, loan do. ' ' ; : ! " ) other: words, are "stand patters."- So. wrote a book, "Round Games of Cards, I - Paternal government with a avenger lit will be without opposition that a in uiio. in wnicn poker Is described. Win-1 anoe for the United BUtes to estab- "stand pat", plank will be framed into leroiossom s oooa must have been nuh. I lmh . settlers, in tne westT perhana. but I the Dlatform to be indorsed at tha Chi. HnheA In THn planil - w... . I. . . . ... I w.Mn.iMn.l.,ili.n ill... k I n VA I. nAW M nM I. .. . .. . iiiq Runs mug, iiui IIIUIQ V " . mail uo llvumuau I V4MWVU1SI1MWII UV lUVUUb ..," tributes. Canadian - reciprocity . has been the text for much talk- up there. The ! Minnesota state platform waa straddle on the subject of reciprocity, and now the Iowa : platform is a corn' plete renunciation of the "Iowa idea." It may fairly be conceded, - then,' that as the copy In the British museum is J act ' Mr. Booth-Tucker point out that dated 1876. , . ; . . (the government would risk nothing In In the American reprints 'and copies of I advancing money to settlers, as the par- ome ot tne iuuropean woyiea, poker was tlal payment they would make in return tacked on at the end in an appendix aa would not only replace the principal, but early as 1S50. . In the 1845 edition of repay interest at the rate of six per 'Hoyle's' Games," published by H.. F. cent. Thus thla?" fund, like the Irriga- Anners In Philadelphia, there Is no men- tlon moneys would constantly increase tlon of poker, but in -the supplement to and constantly.; as repaid, be available in vuuiuii fn.. uuv mere ui a very, prior i in part tor. ubo in new xocantiea description bt the game, ful ae In these rlorlnua - unltrnl ; anil l - Another phaao p Irrigation ia Of tr-j peace-' ovlug stateil - - -:!':":li:S:i-',' -- - " Politics and Tanndry, - - : ' From the Buffalo Express. v wecauae a cninese laundry man let a fiatiron stand too long on the bosom of a New York district leader's best shirt the laundry was wrecked by the states man's frlendsvi Is tnere any othe; coun try In the world where politics is no uae- (Mr ke T, B. Gregory.) I Science' Is simply tho braln-and will A t YOUNG man writes to say that he i n,an PPi t tn rough material , A Is greatly - discouraged. He has ff , nature. commanding . It, and utllla- , been to -"orte of the '.leading In or his advanUge. , ,.. T '. ' 'aatrolnB-ers-lnUh. cltv: and was 4 What science does on a grand scale i told that there was very little chance w,th hture the Individual may do with , of his being1 successful rh life,' except in a nis nf y wining to v a humble waV " ' ' - ' ' ' n may make his life a success. :f " , He want, to know If the aatroloaer'a 'Jf I"1!? b?: decision la to be taken M final, and If. I ..i,nin. i,im h. k- ,? In our oplnjoiv there i really suehj thingj hl, head, or the linen of- hls.hand,or . as ones fate being determine by the hl, ..horo,cope.. to .Jalnsf him. i j . . stars, t ,:.:ti- :. .. I , . iK ,), i.. ut v,- AV,ii.n. -. If the- young man has read SbakesDeare I n ssr-a-rt .; t tia aar At1 A "-Lm ak rah .r.ars-if1rltca he .cannot-have -forgotten ' W bright Iwhlh ha ' on ' ahmild allow hlmaalf tn 11 s ten . to with any degree of serious ness. J , ' . - v - It matters not what Is "against''1 you,. if you are only for yourself you are all right '- If you believe In i younself, if you have deliberately made - up your mind, to . reach the- goal you have speech of Edmund In the. play of King In Lear, act X scene 2 Shakespeare maxes Edmund speak as follows: .'-;-. "This Is the excellent foppery of the world) that when we are sick In fortune often that surfeit of our own behavior-' we make guilty ot our "disasters tho sun, I marked out for yourself, 'the - "stars" the moon and the stars; as if-we Were villains by necessity; fools by heavenly compulsion;' knaves, thieves and trenchers by spherical predominance; drunkards. liars and adulterers by.an enforced obedi ence to planetary Influence; and all that we are evil In by a divine thrusting, on. may shine ever so adversely, and the "lines" in -your hand anov tne "shape" of i your head may be ever" so unfa forabie, but" you will beat them in tha Success la not the gift of the stars It is won by hard work, by liberal ap An admirable evasion 'of man to lay' his I plication of -will power to the'diftlcul- goatisn. oisposuion , to tne charge of a I ties tnat wouia oar our way. star!" n v . Not all the stara that twinkle in tho In Edmlind'a little aoeerh we m.vlskv. and all the lines In all the hands. learn what the greatest: intellect -ever and all , the bumps ana depressions of : on tnis eartn tnouaht of the merit of I au tne neaas can 'oum uib wan tnat ia the doctrine that wpald read our for-l firmly determined -.p to , accomplish- Ita tunes In the stars. " - J purpose." But . while we are ouotina Shakes- Wo need learn that it . is not palm- peare it wUl do no harm to refer to ietry but piuoic. not phrenology but per mm' once more. In "Othello' lagO says I severance, noa aetroiogy out. assurance,' to- tne thoroughly dlscouraa-ed Roder-1 mat aeiermmes- tnings in tnis world. Igor j,'.. a. ,.- . .-I Never: mind about tha .."star1; j-that " 'TIsMn ourselves that we are thua I happened to-be m .the "ascendant" when or thus.' . Our bodies are vardnha. tn ihl you were horn, po . matter about r the which our wills are the gardeners, so I l'ne !n Jour Pnv or the contour of , that if we will nlant nettle, nr n l.t.lrour head If. you only have the. rlaht tuco,. set hyssop and weed up ' thyme; I ort of atuft inside of your head, - wlth. uppiy it with one gender of herbs oripienty . oi . aeierminauon ,ana coarago . I . ... . I .lL l.la11 ,1 . , J.. uibiiuci n wun many; eitner to navel wim m, m m nou,.v.::-!;..i vnu; t Milk 17 . - . 1. - ! I vmiijiv mm' uieunw -ui iiiaiturru wiLn industry why tho power and. eorrlalble authority, of this lies in our wills.. In other words, aa the same master . . b . . -sl I mma eisewnere puts it: . "it is 'not m i our stars, but In ourselves, that wo are underlings.' . , ' - f ' t - The- greatest T forca In ' the - world is the human will. And this mighty force, far , from being - determined, deter- - "ruth la the Case. " From the New York Herald. 'i . "Why Js It that neonlA hava tnmt th.ia '' belief In helir - - . ' "They haven't ; They're merely aono - oat on a mental strike against it.'V" , . so mines all other, things. .v . Hell rind Oak - r -v From the Louisville A Virginia girl, engaged to three men, It, is strongerthan gravity.' stronger I has settled the difficulty hv m.rrvina . ;' than the : tides of the . sea. Stronger f the man for whom ho r.ro th i.o.f than . the llKhthiho- of ' heaven, all of f It is not nrnhahin that th n Ahnun .', which cosmic giants have been tamed f will be long In reachinar the conclu.inn .' by. it and made to be. Jta docjio ervaht, that she was Bpeaking tho truth. -