" :jF&IWiiS;yC7 Y x fffp Ivv fc r ' "" - Growth o? Art and Culture as Shown by Their Evolution JHTIHE average American devotee of I pinochle or poker, and even of the relatively "swelV bridge which has aroused such a wave of protest against fashionable "gambling," thinks only of the game. He' doesn't realize that,' so-f 'anas the luxury, the really artistic side of card playing is concerned, he compares with all ancient and some modern aristocracy about as a Spartan of classical antiquity would 'have compared with the dainty and elegant followers of Xerxes. - ' But in Europe there are many ex quisitely artistic card suits in use among the wealthier 1 classes, and manufacturers find fame and occasional fortunes in pro ducing whole new galleries of the royalties of the card table. t Yet this modern world, with its un paralleled facilities for truly magnificent printing, has done no more than learn its lessons from the triumphs of the past. Where exist public and private collections of playing cards which not only show on their faces the history of Europe from the Middle Ages down, but actually preserve to us portraits of the most distinguished personages. W rE A IX know it was th devfl who in- Tented cards. But when and how his Satanic majesty persuaded himself to give to humanity the one relief from the ennui that drives most of us to his hospitality is something history has no record of. There is another legend of their origin, far less authentic, as having been devised to divert King Charles VI of France, in 1392; but the credit that accords them to that other, shrewder majesty is a good deal more reliable. Long before Charles VI was thought of in lYanee the Synod of Worcester, in 1240, had forbidden the use of cards, because of that very t attribution of them to the other royalty in red. 'Then again, in 1379. we have a record of the duke of Wenzel buying a deck of cards, .with the king of Castile, eight years afterward, Bolemnly . backing up the horrified Synod of .Worcester. , . The diverting cards were spread all over Fnrope more than a century before Columbus discovered America. Y One old chronicle traces the Italian name for card games, raib." to the orient, allying it , with the "naipea"' of the Spanish and tying up . both of them with the Persian "naib," meaning iccroy or governor. On smne other evidence, le iibt than that, the most probable opinion i that cards had their origin somewhere in the East At ft they afforded do patne, as we con tinue the Tword. They served primarily the jrpcm of our modern picture postals, as a means of information. Certainly that is. the main object of the rar-U attributed to Aixa JfantrgTi. in the r!5d half cf the ftenth erntufy. There, in tve ieetLoiia, w sea depicted the varices social , THE OREGON SUNDAY .rw .n- ill in ! i mm u ,i -A',VC' h t.O -LfeMiX ... ....... I. -""r x Ktiii i m m wm-. v v I Jfrs MliiMnm W Z?'" o--r'r- ( A"" tt'W 'V ,w.j fi'-i x1 ' L -J 7 ' V hiY l'''--' NfVT V' V .! -;.v-,.vY-. V - - "', ; J..3-' I . .. -V-; .. - . 't; yu, -U:- 4 ; ;: 7 . 7.7. ; 77,y' ( J ' L y ' , L .T.rr - 1- 1 J- JOURNAL TORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 5, 1003 VtersjrciJSj&&tA Ar Jfe pott's &&VL. . . . ? Crafty. &r.-&fZSrtrrX 8tation8 rom bessar to the pope; the arts, ' the virtues, the muses and the planet world. Bn fl8cendsncy which has proved permanent, they had their values determined in every suit by numbers and signs. J ust as religion safeguarded learning in the Middle Ages, so the cards recorded progress in culture and in art. Playing cards and prayer books the an cient missals ran an incongruous race for artistic decorations in. those old and insistently joyous days. Kings and nobles were oftentimes the recipients of missals painted; in every capi tal: letter in 7. magnificent miniatures by the geniuses of medieval art, whose piety immured them in monaster jes and induced them to de vote whole lifetinles o a single breviary. But those , ostentatiously , .appreciative recipient were most humanly prone to spend their rev enues for decks of cards, to relieve the strain of their virtue. ' ' The-duke of 'Milan, in 1430, quite coolly pieces of gold, and, what' was more, paid for , them. -Y .' ' .' .' Those who, could not afford such elegancies were content with .mere daubs, or some crude stamping of the paper surfaces. And tfle pro letariat hadn't any at all. They thanked heaven when the night closed in with a square meal safe iu their stomachs, and their stomachs safe in their skins. , ... When the art of painting gave 'birth t moidern democracy, its first thought was to put a deck, of crds in the hands of every nascent 'democrat. " 1 . ' ' The close of the fifteenth century brought the immense advance of the woodcut and copper plate. Playing cards were among the. first to respond to the ; new facilities ; -. their output fairly jumped in volume. The general level of artistic quality rose,, too; 'for,, with 'the line im- prints supplied, it was a comparatively1 simple matter to wash in water colors. ' The time 'came when art was furnished for popular consumption in playing cards as well as in china. Europe profits by it now.' In these later days there-are some very clever card decks, and at prices which those. not so exalted as dukes can afford. One of the most interesting of the last cen tury was known as "The Criea of Paris," put out between 1830 and 1840. The series showed the street venders of all classes, :and were ex cellent' examples, of .genre "work, very valuable no.w as permanent portrayals of the eity types at a period when it becomes moet difficult to visualize them from description. Y 1 Our card today can be as, handsome as a person of even moderate means and a mind which is taken up exclusively with, the game can desire. Germany produces some cards' which are extremely graceful and attractive, aj . though the old practice of using portraits, last exemplified in the portrayal of Prince Felix von Lichnowky, has fallen into complete desue tude. '.;.. . The hunting pack, where acorns replace tha eld sign of the club, is too.-; the most popular in modern Germany. Put the designs, carefully and patriotically as they are draws and colored, d rot compare with the dash and grace of. say, -the four jacks of a deck produced by the Altca turge? factory. , .-- -