1907. REMINISCENCES OF A NATURE FAKIR U; - -4 v am THE ' OREGON i SUNDAY ' JQURNAK PORTLAND, . SUNDAY MORNING. JULY 14, 1 1 ' f r vi. -r mi j w w h -:i-7.' r th M if OLD WHISKERS, THE RAM By Joha Kendrlck Banc. (Copyright.' 10T. by Joseph B. Bowles.) "Yl KB," the captain wu saying " entered tha postoffloe to get my mall and buy a. porous niuter to atoo the leaK in my roof, "they alnt aa maay dm around thaaa beta parts tn ha. an' somehow or thty other Z don't blama -am much for not bain' ao aoelabla aa tney wu oom trolley cams through, ana a piaoa began to All up with aummar boarders. They was a time when thJa bera placa waa worth llvln' In for man or deer, but thM davs la gone. When tha poppy ia- tlon waa largely made up of fisherman ad noor artists that came up ner. in April and hung around, until Thanks ilvln paintln' us an our houaea an" ? Ji an' them there deer. It waa a pleasant piece to live in, dui now n ain't nothrn; but proflUhK auess iaey wviw ... , . Of 2 r h.m artist fellers the money '; to bur postage stamps to send home for get" . . Painting Worth More Than Ram. 1 ain't sarin that ye can't. Joe." aald tha captain. "But aomehow or other them old days makea putty fine thlnkln'. Haw, haw! aay, do you remember that fellow Dusenberry. the anlmlle painter that eome up here In 'ST lookln for material? He waa a great feller, that man Dusenberry. He could paint a cow at one eettln' that would look ao like a goat, you could almost hear him baa. I never aea such a feller for colors. Why, he'd take that worn out old ram of 81 Wotberspoon's and paint Mm every color In the rainbow except tha color he was, an' sell the blame thing for more'n the 'rlglnal old ram waa worth. I think he must ha' painted that anlmlle every day for three montha, rallln' each one of his pictures by a different name. Ilka "Sheep Life on the Coast o' Maine,' "Old Horace, the Maa--' cot.' The Children's Hour," A Study - In Scarlet,' and things like that" : "He kind o' atopped comln', ikuii to me," said tne postmaster. l am t seen JDusenberry for 19 yeara." Artist Loses Job. , "You bet he stopped comln'," aald tha captain. "He sort o' lost his Job when that old ram turned up his toes to tha '. daisies. He got so bis mind klnU o' ran on old Whiskers so hard he couldn't r think o' nothln' else. Thafa tha trou- 5 rent men Vi-J Im," aald the postmaster. I can kind raatle along oeuer mc V r'T t miiiii in tnem mi wirea nu m 1 "t,- ' bla with these here specialties. Te get o sot on one line o' work that after ' a while ya can't do nothln' else. That waa the trouble with Dusenberry. !. - Down to Boston it got so they called fcim the leadln' ram painter o' New England. !- People that wanted pictures io' rams wouldn't go to nobody but ' Dusenberry, and he like a durn fool, : thlnkln' that Old Whiskers wasn't never a groin' to die, went right on, season after - aeasbn. paintln' nothln' else. He didn't ven look around for another ram to aort O give variety to his pictures.' "And finally old Whiskers died?" I put in inquiringly. . : pid Whiskers Dies. "Tep finally old Whiskers died. aald tha captain. "Te see Dusenberry's rams got ao pop'lar among ' the art ' lovers of the etlght that Dusenberry found he could afford to build a shack lip in Bill River's rock pasture, right by tha sea. to do his paintln' In in wet weather. He called it a stuglo. It - looked like a woodshed behind and a 1 1 cold frame in front Tha ' front part waa all built o glass, to that Dusen berry could get all tha light ha needed to paint by. Them artists need a lot of It, and I tell ye, I'd bate to have to pay for them windows they has runnln' from tha cellar clean tip to the roof. The first season ha had that there atuglo waa tha moat successful finan cially in Dusenberry's career. He came up about tha first o' May an' he didn't go back to town Aintll lata tn October, and every day except Sundays he turned Whiskers. He had him gasln' out to aea with a mournrui loox in nis eye, an called It 'Longing.' I don't know what he waa longln' for. but tnat a wnat Dusenberry called it an' I will say It was a mighty Interestin' picture, tho' I never seed the sea lookln' quite so yalier, nor old Whiskers looKin' quite ao green. Swallows Pea Green Rocks. "Then he dons another showln' old Whiskers standln' along the skyline eatln' rocks, with the sun gotn' down on the other aide of him. He called that Twilight' an' I told him I thought it waa a durned appropriate name. 'For, Dusenberry,' says I, It'll soon be twi light for any purple ram in creation when he geta to swallowln' pea green rocks while a sorrel sun'a a-aettln' back of his off hind leg.' I don't think Dusenberry sot much store by my re mark. He got kind o' pink around his gills hlaself when I made it, and said that color-blindness waa a common gift among the uneddlcated. I allowed as how I attributed mine to the excise laws which acts as a sort o' restraint n' in fluence on the eemaglnatlon. bein', aa they are wholly prohlbltlnlstlc. But howsomevar the liquor regulations in terferes with a sense o color among the natives up here, Dusenberry. aa I says, continued workln' all that summer, turn In' out a new view of old Whiskers every day exceptln' Sundays, which he devoted to iettw tils pictures ary. it a surpns ln" when you set your mind on It what variety tnnre is in an old ram like that. Tou'd think one picture would tell about all they was to be said about old Whis kers, but Dusenberry didn't seem to find no difficulty about gettln some new aspect o' the situation day in and day out. When the first of September came ha hired a freight car an' sent 92 them He paintln s off to Boston to be rramed up ror Ms rail exhlDltion, an1 then he turned to to do thutty more, only thla time with the sperrlt of au tumn in 'em. He had Whiskers lespln' over the scarlet rocks of October; look In' wistfully at a pink tug-boat out on tne lead-coiorea ocean carryin' Diue tan bark to Portsmouth he called this one "Expectation," though whether he meant by that that old Whiskers expected to see the tug blowed out to sea, or was hopln' it would come ashore so's he could eat the tan-bark he never ex plained." Quits Asking Questions. "Didn't ya ask?" queried the postmas ter. "No," said the captain. "Long about the tenth week I sort o' quit askln' Dusenberry for reasons for anything. He got kind of tetchy whenever I mada remarks about what he was doln,' an' finally I ' decided I'd better not make any more, because sooner or later I might say somethln' that would make him say somethln' that I'd have to lick him for. and seeln' as how his wife bought eggs o' my wife, and lobsters an mackerel o' me, an" milk o' my son, an' butter o' my daughter Sallle's second husband, it didn't seem wuth while for si la . i .4i:Vim Ami r .- m mmm ':va:i.'sl ma to Insist on my views as to the dif ference between art an' nature. I got so that once when Dusenberry showed me a sketch he'd made of old Whiskers in which the old ram was dyed to a sort o' cross between lemon-vermlHlon and the color of Ike Barclay's dun cow, etln' a colored thistle growln' up be tween two orange rocks. Instead ' laf fln' at it I looked at it for a second, an' then I burst out kind o' passionate. 'I gorry, Dusenberry,' says I, 'that's artP Ha was mighty pleased with that, an' he cocked his head to one side and slapped me on the shoulder and says, 'You're comln' on. Captain, you re comln" on. We'll make a cricket of you yet.' I felt like savin' that if he painted me he'd trob'ly make a grass hopper out o me before I knowed It, but I didn't Abused Dumb Beasts. m "I Just thought of the relations of our families and didn't think it wuth while to bring up animosities. It didn't seem to -hurt the ram, neither though if I'd been Si Wotherspoon and had had any pride In tha beast I wouldn't ha' let Dusenberry treat him the way he did. Fact Is, It warn't none o' my business, but I do think, and ain't afeared to say, that Dusenberry wasn't as grateful to old Whiskers as he might ha' been. "I remember that very month of September there was another one o' them artists down here paintln' the cove, an' he and Dusenberry wasn't particularly friendly, neither. They belonged to different schools, some body said, an' for that reason they hated each other like pizen. DuKfn berry'd sneer at Bogglesworth's pic-1 tures, and Bogglesworth would say that Dusenberry d do very well paintln an' mm mm BPS MlrnrU barns an' plumbers' . signs, out as rar as art was concerned well, he wouldn't Room Rugs Made from remnants at 25 per cent discount. Furnishers i.iv.-i say anything about Dusenberry -an' art in the same century nea just iaugn, an' shrug his shoulders like that French piano player down to the Rlvervlew, an' walk away. Well, this feller Uog glcsworth, as I was sayin', ha come down here to paint the cove. He done It about as often as Dusenberrr done the ram; at sunset; before breakfast, and after lunch; In the fog, an' out of it; an' I must say he got most of it in except the smell o' tirh an' sea-weed. He called his things 'Moods,' an' some of 'em wayputty durned moody." Picture Paid Grocery Bill. "I remember him," said the post master. "He paid me for his August groceries with a picture of the cove at midnight in October. "He's the feller." said the captain "We got the "Cove at Dusk' as part payment for two crates o' fresh eggs an' 40 pounds o' codfish served at var ious times. The balance ain't been heard from for nine years, and for the past six I ain't asked for no letter from Bogglesworth at this here post office, which shows how I feel about my chances o' gettln't it Anyhow, Dusenberry an' Bogglesworth wasn't stuck on each other, as them summer boarders puts it, and somehow or other old Whiskers he seemed to feel It, and whenever Bogglesworth would come anywhere's around he'd begin to blat and growl, and frown and shake hlsself all over as If he was mad from one end to the other; and one mornln' while he was arrazln' around the stuglo eatln' some real grass and chawln' up the old odds and ends of Sunday newspapers an' 10-cent magazines that lay around, he see old man Bogglesworth settln' in front of his easel down on the rocks, doing the cove so hard that If a house tell on him he woman t ha- knowea 11. Butts for Friendship. "The very sight was enough" for old Whiskers, He let out a snort ye could hear from -the Presb'terian church down 's far as the merry-go-round on Pike's beach, an' started on a dead run for Bogglesworth; an' the first thing we fellers as was cleanln' fish an' mendln' our nets down by the cove knowed he'd butted Bogglesworth, an' his easel, an1 his paint box, an' has camp stool clean over the cliffs Into the water." "Great heavens!" I cried. "What did Bogglesworth say?" "He didn't say nothln'." said the cap tain. "He Just sputtered. It took him a week to get the salt water out of his system, an' then he left. But do you know even that didn't seem to toueh Dusenberry. He Just went along paint In' old Whiskers any old way but his way to the very end. A more ongrate ful cuss I never see. You'd ha' thought arter a service or tnat kind, entirely personal, he'd give the old ram a show and put him down as he was Just once, anyhow. And so it went until the end. Along about September 20, Dusenberry found he was 10 pictures behind his oraers and It become necessary to paint two a day, so he arranged with Si o let him keep old Whiskers at the stuglo nights. Instead of havin' a small boy come an' dfive him home every even ing, lie tnougnt oy aoin' this he could begin early in the mornln' and finish up one picture before lunch, and tackle the other one afternoons an' that wan his finish. Tragic Finish. "Monday night, Dusenberry Jocked Whiskers in the stuglo and went home to supper, an1 next mornln', bright an' early, he come back an' there was that poor old ram lyln dead on the floor." "Poisoned r I cried. "No,", said the captain. "Wusa 'n that. It would ha' been money in Dusenberry's pocket if old WhiBkers had been plzened. He'd eat up 18 "pic tures of hisself during tha night, an' they waa too much for his artistic soul. Wal, I must be goln'," tha . captain added, aa he rose up Trom tha sugar barrel. "Good night, an." -' ' "Good night," said the others, as th captain went out, "You ought to write that story up, captain," said I the next morning." "li s a good one." --'.'Wo, thanky," said tha captain, and EASY The Specials for Next Week ARE Brass and Iron Bedsteads All descriptions at 20 per cent discount illiam Gadshy COR. FIRST AND WASHINGTON mmmmm IftlUROlLEADERS OrAMERICA V--'. ;ri-,.: ffi lSSHHHNMM,llriSSM J Rev. Arthur S. I T IS said that in the history of the American Episcopal church no man before Arthur S. Lloyd three times declined election to the epis copate. The Episcopal church can offer no higher honor to Its clergy than election and consecration to the bishopric, and that this honor lias been thrice refused by Dr. Lloyd would alone mark him an unusual man in his church. The dioceses of Mississippi, Kentucky, and southern Virginia auccessively chose him. His declination of tha first was not counted to . be strange other men have declined election to small dio ceses. When he refused to become bishop of Kentucky, those who thought the'y knew said: "Ho-; is waiting for Virginia to elect him." For Dr. Lloyd is known to be a loyal son of Virginia. But Virginia acted and again there came a declination, and, with it Dr. Lloyd's reasons, "i nave nov n aatu. , mu lshed tha workentrusted to me by the church. , I cannot leave it." . , , : What is tha-workt -About saves years ago the Domestic and Foreign Mis sionary society of the Episcopal church was In search of a general secretary. Several men had been elected to the then he leaned over and whispered, con fidentially in my ear. v "'Ye see, I get my eye: on tha postmastership , her, an' I don't want to do nothin' in literary line - to offend the president. Ht mightn't believe that any old ram ever had such a taste for art that he'd gorge hisself to death .on it, and I tell ye, I'd have duraed hard time gettln' afterdavlts to prove . it. .Dusenberry's sensitive. on the subject and tha ram's dead." . - - -' . . . . -- ;v WEEKLY or MONTHLY PAYMENTS Almost every imaginable style, over 100 different patterns. & Sons The House Furnishers STS. Am. Lloyd,' D. D. position and had declined to aerve. Then It was announced that ,the board of mis sions, aa the governors of the society are usually known, had elected the Rev. Dr.-Lloyd. "Who is he?" was the gen eral question. The general secretary, unknown seveji years ago. Is today one of the best known and best loved men in the Episcopal church. An Historic Journey. Dr. Lloyd has just returned to Amer ica from what promises to be an his toric Journey. This for two reasons. In the first-Place it was the first trip around the world ever undertaken by an Episcopal missionary secretary to visit tha missions of that church. In the second place, it was during this journey that "Dr. Lloyd met with the bishops and other missionary leaders of the church of England and the American Episcopal church, in a conference jit Shanghai,. China, and with them decided to establish . an autonomous Chinese Episcopal church, to elect ao soon aa possible a Chinese bishop to head it, and to withdraw American and English bish ops from the Chinese field. This de cision is tha fruition of 70 years' work In China by tha American Episcopal church and. 45 years' "work by tho Church of England.- It has been said of Dr. Lloyd that he is not a man -who does great things; that, rather is he one who works steadily and consistently; making aura and per manent advance with what he under takes. He 1 not . spectacular Ha un dertook to plaoa Episcopal mission work upon a. better basis than that on which ha found It As on means to that and M.'iS.-JiM.Ui:!.W.V 1 - . MMB I' r the apportionment plan of auimort adopted. It represents what Dr. Lloyd cans me "square deal." The cnurch la committed to mission work, ha holds. Therefore every church and every communicant- should bear a proportionate share of the burden. '-..The apportion ment plantells what the share of each church and Individual is. Under it tha Income of the board of missions haa doubled and la still going up. Elected in Oregon. Dr. Lloyd waa born in a Virginia, vil lage, as his first work as a clergyman waa dona as missionary in Virginia, where a peculiar type of Episcopal churchmanshlp prevails, low and evan gelistic. Of such stock is tha Eptsoo pal secretary. Some aay he la homely; others speak of his awkwardness. But when he talks each person -In an au dience hears a message to himself, and the great heart aad charm lag person ality of the man impresses itseiC- Dr. Lloyd was two years ago elected bishop coadjutor for Oregon to assist the-late Bishop Morrla, but declined tha election. SHABK ATTACKS BATHEB Fireman's Experience Turned Hair From j Black to White in a Day. From the San Francisco Chronicle. The arrival of the big steamer Ari zona n yesterday brought a harrowing tale of n battle between Frank Fonda, a member of , the crew ' and a shark in the waters at Sallna Cruz, In which tho shark, with its teeth tore the forearm almost off the unfortunate sailor. Three ' flneeru were sround in the massive laws of the big fish, while Fonda's right foot was almost severed. The tragedy occurred on a hot day while the Arizonan was -lying at Sa llna Cruz. About 40 members of tha F1TH I ..nf IB crew went In bathing among the break- j ers. Fonda's companions observed waving h'.s arms wildly in tne a If tn Kent off nomethlntr ajid then beneath the waves. They thoughty&w- 'I ever, that he was playing the drowning Joke and laughed. Soon the water where Fonda had been swimming became dyed a blood red arid the man's companions secured a boat and put out to save him. As they ap proached the spot where the blood col ored the water there was a swish and the ahark, coming to the surface, rolled over, displaying Ua glittering; belly. In the Jaws the men could plwlnly see a piece of Fonda's foot. Two of the men oeat the shark off with oars, and then Jiving brought to the surface tha muti lated body of the fireman. He waa taken ashore and was found to be still living. A litter was mada upon which Fonda was placed and taken to the hospital. He Is now at tha hos pital at Sallna Cruz fighting between lfe and death. His hair had turned from a Jet black to white. It Is ex pected that he win lose his right foot and several of his fingers. The sharta measured iv rest in length. A HOTEL ZOO But Perhaps This Story From Chi ' 0Ro Is a Nature Fake. The Inquiry for 'a man named Wolt at the Palmer House In Chicago evoked such response that Manager Vlerbuchen asserted "a gamey collection of travel ing men" was present, puns a writer In What to Eat. 'Have you a srentleman here named Wolf Leopold Wolf T" the clerk waa asked. Dave Lyon made the inaulrr. Ha was answered In tha affirmative and aent up his card. - "Just tell him there is a Lyon after him," he said to the boy with a laugh. "Arid if it will help any." aaid a trav eling salesman standing near, "tell him a Bear-is aftor him also." He then handed over his card, bearing tha name Victor Bear, New York. 1 While they laughed over tha incicfajt John A. Fox of Cincinnati, secretary V tha rivers and harbors congress, stepped . up and said:- 1 And to make it a gamey bunch, put a Fox into the kettle.'' Before tha Quartet stopped laughing John W. Fish, ,who had Just registered from ' Atlanta, (and Charlaa W. , Hunter from St. Louis floined the group, the 1st- ter saying, VI tuea this will about finish tha . game," and invited - the gathering out to suppaV with him at tha Jungles restaurant. ' -