S--w-?r3feitS $&- .Fv2 - THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND,' JULY 17,,JL9(&. 4 , Jm - j n W a ! .-Vti &ar w 3 9fe te(mtmi Entered at the Postofflce at Portland, Or.. as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCHEPTION BATES. Br mall (postage prepaid In advance) Dally, with Sunday, per month $0.85 Dally, vrlth Sunday excepted, per year 4.50 Dalb, with Sunday, per year. . 3.00 Sunday, per year --jo The "Weekly, per year The "Weekly, 3 months Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday ex- cepted - oC Dally, per week, delivered, Sunday In- eluded . 20c POSTAGE RATES. TTnlted States, Canada and Mexico 30 to 14-page paper c 10 to 30-page paper -c 32 to 44-page paper .......3c Foreign rates, double. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICES. (The S. C. Beckwith Special Agency) New Tork: rooms 43-50, Tribune Building. Chicago: Roome 510-512 Tribune Building. The Oregonlan does not buy poems or Btorles from Individuals, and cannot under take to return any manuscript sent to It without solicitation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. KErT ON SALE. Atlantic City, N. J. Taylor & Bailey, jiews dealers, 23 Leeds Place. Chicago Auditorium annex; Postofflce News Co., 17S Dearborn street. Denver Julius Black. Hamilton & Kend rick. 006-012 Seventeenth street. Kan&as City, Mo. Ricksocker Cigar Co., Ninth and Walnut. Los Angeles B. F. Gardner, 259 South Spring and Harry Drapkln. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh, 50 South Third; L. Regelsbuger, 217 First Avenue South. New Tork City L. Jones & Co., Astor House. Ogden F. R. Godard. Omaha Barkalow Bros., 1612 Faroam; McLaughlin Bros., 210 South 14th; Megeath Stationery Co.. 1308 Farnam. Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co., T7 "West Socond South street. St. Louis '"World's Fair News Co., Louisi ana News Co.; Joseph Copeland; Louisiana Purchase News Stand and Wilson & Wilson, 217 N. 17th st.; George L. Ackerman. news boy, Eighth and Olive sts. and J. J. PurcelL 28 South Third st. San Francisco J. K. Cooper Co., 746 Mar ket, near Palace Hotel: Foster & Orear, Ferry News Stand; Goldsmith Bros.. 236 Sut ter; L. E. Loe. Palace Hotel News Stand; F. W. Pitts, 1008 Market; Frank Scott, 80 Bills; N. Wheatley. S3 Stevenson; Hotel Francis News Stand. Washington, D. C. Ed Brlnkman. Fourth and Pacific Ave., N. W.; Ebbltt House News Stand. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem--perature, 57 deg.; minimum, 52. Precipitation, a trace. TODAY'S WEATHER Cloudy and occasion ally threatening, with showers; south to west winds. PORTLAND, SUNDAY JULY 17, 1904. THE MORALITY OF INDUSTRY. How to bring up our yodth so that they shall be self-supporting members of society, and at the same time sup porters of society itself, is the problem that concerns all parents, whose chief anxiety is or should be the welfare of their posterity. Unless in the season of youth ere the mind becomes rigid un der the influence of habit, and takes the set it is to bear through life our young people be taught the duty and the method of self-support, they are al most sure to fall below necessary re quirements in the efforts of life; and therefore sooner or later to become de pendents, fail to make their way in the "World, and sink at last to inferiority and helplessness. Such is the fate of multitudes It is, it must be, the solici tude of all parents of forethought to make preparation against this unhappy consequence, which only can be averted by implanting the working habit and instilling the principles that will sup port it. For the working habit the mere homely ability of working fairly and honestly for one's bread is of more value to a country, when diffused among its people, than all other gifts be they hills of gold or rocks of dia mondsthat can fall to Its share. Such habit will make a poor country a coun try poor by nature like Scotland, a rich one; but without such habit a country rich by nature, as Spain was, and possessing all advantages of cli mate, soil and position, as Spain had them, may and will take the retrograde course. "What is true of a country is true of the individual units that make up Its population. If a people of a country, or any con siderable part of them, possess not this habit of industry and the ability it cre ates and is created by it. then it mat ters not what else they possess there is a weakness in the constitution of that people and country for which there can be no compensation in other ways. The welfare of a country has two foun dations. Right principle is one; the other is industrial habit combined with useful skill. Such is the constitution of man that the two never can be sep arated without loss or deterioration of both. The wealth of a country lies not in the present accumulations of its people, but in these principles of life and these habits of industry, directed by intelli gence and skill; for present wealth, however great, would soon disappear unless conserved and renewed. The world could eat up all it possesses, in a very little time, unless labor should re new its stores. The best equipment for the world that any young person can receive is in struction In habits of industry and in principles of morality. Except to the weak and Infirm, alms are an injury, moral and .physical; not blessing, but cursing, both him that gives and him that takes. The best and most moral of all alms is work; and if you have wherewithal to employ in useful labor the working alms of a community, then you do a real good. It degrades char acter, and is most wasteful in an eco nomic sense, to give or receive as gra tuity what might have been received as wages. The opportunity to work is all that any one should desire who Is fit to live. To bring up our youth to useful em ployment, in some field of effort, is the problem, therefore, of those who have In their hands the destiny of our youth and the destiny of the state. Nothing is more false than the. saying that the world owes one a living. It owes him nothing, and he will be no good citizen of the world who doesn't realize that he Is entitled to nothing that has not been earned. A large number of property-owners In the assessment district affected have remonstrated against the construction of a steel bridge across Sullivan's gulch on Grand avenue. The cost of "a steel bridge is large and very many taxpay ers think a properly constructed wooden bridge is all that is necessary. They have been assured by competent au thority that such a bridge will last many years, and as 4t will accommo date traffic quite as well as the more costly structure, the latter Is deemed both extravagant and unnecessary. The duty of scrimping and pinching for the benefit of posterity has its limits, hence i& A W fiSdtiblSnkv " . '3:2wii4riSBKBBKiyii3&Sft&MHBBBBBSMHH TiiffillMT'"lfy'rfiCffiitilWftftfftf ifra liiifflHlHMPffffiillilMWFii'flif ffBffHffwflgffiWfiiifTBMtBfnf i 'HTiH TwjWvilnrHHBPMBPFWlBWMMtTrWnS f;ng'' "-i this view may be taken as the pruden tial one. In the -meantime, however, the demand for a bridge or bridges across Sullivan's gulch is an insistent one, and the delay In building causes daily inconvenience to- a large number of people. A compromise of differences on the subject ought to be reached without unseemly and unnecessary delay. SOME AMERICAN CITIES. A long block and a wide street will enable a city to recoup itself in dignity for the loss of almost every natural ad vantage. The narrow street is neces sarily a practical obstacle to growth and esthetlcally a blot; for It is only with a considerable open space before It that any piece of sculpture or archi tecture can impress the mind. "Wide streets and long blocks go together In evitably; for their opposite must spring from a narrow and constricted view of the city or town that Is planned. Here in Portland we understand at length the penalty of narrow streets and short blocks; for the cost of paving is nearly doubled and becomes to an extent pro hibitive, and incidentally street-car travel is very slow. St. Louis has no elevated railroads, while these are a necessity In smaller cities, notably Kansas City. The rea son Is that the surface cars are enabled to take care of the traffic, because the blocks are long and stops infrequent. A trolley-car takes you from down town to the World's Fair grounds in thirty minutes a distance that would take an hour In Portland or New York City, because of frequent stops. A heavily laden Washington-street car will consume far more time In stops than In travel between First street and Willamette Heights. This mistake In the planning of Portland will be of in creasing discomfort and detraction as time goes on. It would pay us, if it were practicable, to close up half the streets and widen the others. Few cities make the most, or any thing at all worth while, of their op portunities. Buildings that might be disposed with Impressive effect upon the beholder are scattered about to no purpose either of convenience or beauty. A recent correspondent com plained bitterly of the arrangement which, after putting the tourist down at our prepossessing union passenger station, leads him through the depress ing districts of the North End. He was right; yet the same thing prevails in New Tork, where the Incoming voy ager, after a sublime entrance past Liberty statue and through one of the noblest harbors in the world, in view of the imposing edifices of the lower end of Manhattan Island, is dumped Into the miserable slum regions of West street. An inspiring example in this respect is Cleveland, whose jump from tenth to seventh place among American cities was the sensation of the twelfth census. Cleveland has secured a goodly portion of its lake front against the Inroads of business, and there the visitor will soon see completed a Custom-House, City Hall, Courthouse, Public Library and Chamber of Commerce, all In an ad vantageous combination and near the union passenger station which, also, one Is fain to hope might be rebuilt in view of the present structure's fierce and losing battle for forty years with the blackest smoke that ever assailed a weary passenger's eyes and poisoned his breath. As the proper study of mankind is man, so the most fascinating aspect of that study is in the crowded centers of municipal life. There Is more to see and profit by in New Tork than In all the World's Fair at St Louis. The re generated and reconstructed Coney Island is more creditable and more pop ulous than the much-advertised "Pike." There are finer paintings and more fine paintings in the Metropolitan Museum in Central Park than in all the gal leries of the World's Fair; and when you have threaded the thronged ways of the East Side, with its ghetto Italian quarter, and have studied for a day what is perhaps the richest and the most interesting street in the world Fifth avenue the memory is one you would hardly exchange for all the ex hibits that have been crowded into the gates of the St. Louis Exposition. It is a happy thing for Portland that with all the mistakes we have made in planning, or in the absense of any plan ning, the hills above the city are so largely in the public possession. These eminences must be crowned some day with edifices of stateliness and beauty. Such locations, in all history, have been spontaneously chosen for Impressive public adornment, It may be with a military castle-fortress, as on the rock of greatest elevation In old Edinburgh, or temples as on the Acropolis at Ath ens, the Notre Dame de la Garde of Marseilles, and the wonderful cathedral of St John the Divine on Mornlngside Heights, New York, or a park or gar den as the Plncian hill at Rome, East Rock in New Haven and the mountain at Montreal, or a Courthouse like the Palais de Justice at Brussels; but In any event we should have on some of these high hills a stately structure of white stone whose columns, pinnacles or towers may inspire the beholder as his eyes leave the turmoil of the street for the serenity of the arching skies; and If the structure could be at the head of a broad avenue, as the Lewis and Clark monument already sits In the City Park, facing Mount Hood, so much the better. There Is another thing Portland can do to Impress the visitor favorably, and that is to Improve and beautify the river front Here as on Chicago's lake front a narrow park might run along the east bank at least, with adequate provision, here as there, for traffic by water and rail. In time a more sightly wharf line can be planned, with rail road tracks and docks at the low-water level, a broad promenade at the street level, and stone and cement taking the plate of wood. Unless some of these things are done now at the proper time, future generations will, at the cost of millions, as in New York, raze whole urban districts for the creation of breathing spaces and the enforced en trance of light and air, safety and health These anticipations of the fu ture are no wilder now than similar vis Ions of progress seemed la their time in older places. When the canal where now Canal street stands was dug to drain the swamp of Lower Manhattan Island, the thrifty taxpayer growled at the reckless expense, because he knew full well, he thought, that the city would never extend so far north. Port land advanced from sixtieth to forty second among American cities between 1890 and 1900. At this rate of progress, and with Asia's teeming millions, under the leadership of Japan, imbued with the commercial powers of Europe, young men who cast their first vote this coming November may live to see the day when a new St Paul's shall rise from Council Crest, when along the Willamette from Sellwood to St. Johns another Thames embankment shall stretch in stately pride and when the park blocks, north and south, shall be lined with splendid structures, the equal of the Burlington depot at Omaha or the unbuilt Lincoln memorial at Washington. A GREAT QUESTION JUGGLED WITH. Judge Parker gives it out that he re gards the gold standard as Irrevocably established, and if elected he will act accordingly. Judge Parker therefore is for the gold standard; but his party Is against it After tremendous effort during many years to' break down the gold standard, the Democratic party, through motives of policy, now Is silent on the subject It has not changed its mind or purpose; It Is merely trying to sneak Into power under cover and concealment Had Judge Parker openly declared 'for the gold standard, before his name went to the convention, he would not have been nominated. But the managers waited till the nomination had been effected, and then got the telegram from him. Then it was too late for the convention to recall the nomination, or to send the platform back to the committee, for more specific statement It was a pretty play. But, as Bryan said, after the game had been revealed, If Parker had an nounced himself earlier, he would have had no possible chance for the nomina tion. And, If the party was for the gold standard, he continued, it would have been honest to put the declaration in the platform. In certain Democratic quarters the argument now is that there is no issue on the money question. Then why did Judge Parker bring It forward? He threw the question directly Into the convention, telling it in substance, that it had omitted a necessary declaration on the vital issue of the time. He spoke of nothing else, thus showing that he regarded this one thing as paramount But the convention, which was act ually against the gold standard, had consented to omit the former demands for free coinage of silver, merely to keep the peace. It would not, however, even in the stress and emergency pro duced by Parker's telegram, declare for gold; and upon this Juggle the party, the candidate and the platform are be fore the country. CHURCH UNION. In Canada a movement Is on foot with a view to the organic union of Methodist, Presbyterian and Congrega tional Churches, and at the recent Gen eral Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, held at St John, N. B., a reso lution was adopted Indorsing the move ment The Presbyterians wish to go one step farther, however, and have the union include the Baptist and Anglican Churches. The union plan has already been pledged the support of the Meth odist Church, and there seems a likeli hood that within a very few years three or more denominations In Canada will act as one. Christian people in this country will watch with great Interest the result of the movement across the line. For many years there has been a growing belief that the power of the church is weakened by the division of forces. Christian people have been desirous that a union be formed, but no basis of agreement being apparent, nothing has been accomplished. From any point of view there is much to be gained and nothing to be lost by a merging of the great Protestant Churches. Surely there Is a common ground somewhere upon which all can stand, and If half the effort that is made in defending the peculiar doctrines of the several de nominations were made In finding this common ground, the union would soon be perfected. Economy Is one reason for church union that appeals to every reasonable man. As an almost universal rule it may be said that every town that has two or more Protestant Churches has too many. In nearly every town the congregations could be accommodated In one-half the number of churches, and in many places one-third or one fourth the number would suffice. But wherever one denomination gains a footing others must follow. The story Is familiar in every populous commu nity from the Atlantic to the Pacific One denomination builds a church in a small town and all Christian people at tend it Some small difference arises and the members of another denomina tion form a church organization of their own. At first-they rent a hall and later erect a church. They go in debt for the building, and after years of beg ging, giving entertainments, holding sociables and church fairs, the money Is at last raised and a mortgage Is burned. As the town grows other churches are added, and the debt-paying process must be repeated. A minister whose work is supposed to be the salvation of souls gives most of his time to saving the church property from sale by fore closure. That pastor who finally raises the last dollar is ranked as a more suc cessful minister than he who turns the larger numbers of men from darkness to light It would perhaps be untrue to say that some men are dissuaded from be coming Christians because the mainte nance of the church organization re quires too much of their time and money. This would seem necessarily untrue, for a man who has the Chris tian spirit in his character would be a Christian though he supported a church alone or though he never saw a church. Whatever the Lord demanded he would freely give. Yet It Is possible that the continual demand for money for church maintenance keeps some unconverted men away from church and places them outside the Influences which might lead to their conversion. A multitude of churches, where a less number would suffice, not only discour ages churchgoers but starves the preachers. Let the number of Protes tant Churches in cities be reduced one half and the salaries of the preachers doubled, and there will be a pulpit awakening which will, fill many an empty pew. It is to be expected that some one will deny the truth of this, too, for in theory no true disciple of Christ would render poorer service for $1000. a year than he would for $2000. Yet the Increased opportunities for study and travel and the lessening of outside cares Would tend to make him better fitted for the writing of master ful sermons. At any rate, if Christian people undertook vto maintain only half as many churches the preachers would give less of their time to raising money and more of it to healing sin-sick souls. But the purely material view Is a poor one at best The great question Is not whether expenses can be reduced by diminishing the number of churches, but whether more good may be done whether the world may be-made more i Christlike, more or the sick healed, more of the naked clad, and more of the imprisoned visited. . The experience of the Canadian churches will shed some light upon this question. Perhaps we shall learn that the principle "hi union there Ih strength" does not prevail In church work. "CELLAR DAMP." - The subsidence of the June freshet has left dank and damp the cellars of practically the entire business district of the city back as far as Fourth or Fifth street From the rottenness that festers in these places, secluded forever from the sunlight, ill-ventilated, dark and damp, noisome odors arise, telling of the hidden vileness beneath. "Cellar damp" is the name by which cleanly people who are wont to look well to the conditions of things about their homes from "garret to cellar" des ignate this half-stifling, unwholesome odor. Within the dark recesses from which this noisome odor arises through the gratings in the sidewalks, or so called ventilators in the walls, lie the breeding-grounds of fever germs and of many all too common disorders, more or less pronounced, that make their poison known In the human system by "that tired feeling," which too often Is the precursor of physical collapse, tem porary or permanent, as the case may be, but attended in any case by much suffering and expense to the victim. To be plain, what 13 needed in this city at present more even than surface street sweeping, street sprinkling, the extension of cement sidewalks or even a new system of collecting and dispos ing of garbage. Is a thorough inspection of cellars within what Is known as the "flood district," followed by a peremp tory order from the proper authorities to "clean up." Every cellar in this city into which water from the June freshet oozed, whether the depth was measured in inches or in feet, is now, and will be until It Is properly cleaned and disin fected, a breeding-place for a low or der of organic life known under the general name of disease germs. We are too greatly inclined to rely upon our healthful location. Incomparable cli mate and Bull Run water to give us a clean bill of health and to leave the minor details of intelligent sanitation ta take care of themselves. Civic improvement societies are worthy of commendation and encour agement, but bare telegraph poles and clean cellars are more to be desired than are poles adorned with vines or glittering with fresh paint, and cellars the unspeakable vileness of which is announced half a block away by "cellar damp" rising through street gratings. True, it may be said that these things we ought to do and not leave the other undone. Ready assent may be given to this statement, but The Oregonlan wishes to go on record here and now with the declaration that if there are not whitewash and civic pride enough to go around the cellars should be treated to these before the electric light poles, and that back yards should be made clean and sightly before the park ing which flanks the sidewalks is set with a profusion of rose bushes. Let the basements In which "cellar damp" Is being generated and from which it Is being diffused upon the air of downtown districts be thoroughly drained of stagnant water, ventilated as far as possible and treated with a liberal dressing of lime. Whitewashed walls, a generous sprinkling of lime upon basement floors after the muck and ooze of the waters have been re moved, and a deposit of chloride of lime in dark corners, would speedily abate the odor of "cellar damp" that offends the nostrils of those who pass along our -business streets. It is a condition, not a theory, that confronts us here a condition that will continue to prevail only through official negl'gence, indi vidual carelessness or public indiffer ence. THE POWER OF AN ORATOR. It Is clear from the detailed reports of the St. Eouls Convention that Bryan was easily the supreme orator of the occasion. It Is the testimony of ene mies as well as friends that he dis played rare power over a vast and tu multuous audience. Bryan Is the great est convention orator of our time. Wal ter Wellman, in the New York Herald, confesses that Bryan was splendid In his last hours. The brilliant John Sharp Williams tried to mouth epi grams through a megaphone, but Bry an, aMnan of fine physique, handsome face and trumpet voice, is a born ora tor. Chairman Williams could not still the tumult of the convention; but when Bryan took the platform, the moment he raised his hand the tumult was stilled. Why? Because everybody wanted to hear him talk. That great assembly recognized the difference be tween a man who was an orator and a. man who was a mere perfunctory talker. When Bryan raised his match less voice the great audience felt and acknowledged the power of the orator. As an apostle to the multitude, Bryan Is without an equal in our country. This supreme talent is the source of all his success, and does not deserve to be treated with contempt He is not a statesman, nor a scholar, but he Is a born orator of remarkable ability, and his political foes can affordto admire his great natural talents. Mr. Bryan is a man of upright personal character, and his financial errors are due largely to his imperfect education, but his ora torical talents are so superior that his political foes can afford to award them praise. Such men as Mr. Bryan, who have been matchless orators but not statesmen, have not heen rare in his tory. Burke was surely the greatest statesman who prosecuted Warren Hastings, but Sheridan, a comparative ly cheap man, was the greatest orator of that famous trial, for he was an actor by profession and knew how to bring to his service "elocution's artful aid." Lord Chatham owed the largest part of hi3 Influence to his power of voice ana his magnetic manner. Fox was a great debater; Burke was always able4 but never eloquent; the younger Pitt was ame and pleasing, but never elo quent, like hi3 great father. English and American history is full of exam ples of men of great 'oratorical talents who have never risen to the level of statesmen. Fisher Ames is remembered only by his speech In favor of the Jay treaty. Thomas Corwin is recalled only oy nis speecn against the Mexican War. Sargent S. Prentiss has nothing but an oratorical fame. The great magnetic orators of our country have seldom been statesmen. Henry Clay was both an orator and a statesman, but Web ster was jiot an orator In the sense that Clay was an orator; he impressed tne reason or nis audience, but not their Imagination, as did Clay. The great orators of this country have been men, like Bryan, who did not rise i to the level of statesmanship. Patrick Henry and James Otis were the oratorl- caj, forces of our Revolution but they were not Its statesmen. Orators do not count for much in great civic affairs; as witness what a failure Castelar was in Spain. Oratory is useful to anarch ists .because It Is Inflammatory, but ora tors are useless to good government be ca,useevery popular orator Is presump tively an anarchist or a demagogue. NOVELS AND THE "SILLY SEASON." This Is the sweet o the year that has been nicknamed the "silly season," be cause the public ha? sense enough to abandon the polemics of Fall and Win ter days and to content Itself with tales Of the sea serpent, the giant goose berry and other matters that pertain more closely to our every-day life than the art of a- dead painter or the lack of art of a living author. True, this year the aftermath of two National Conven tions and the "purple patches" in the war news from Manchuria have served to distract attention from the serious affairs of life, but there are signs that July will kill the remaining interest in matters of such purely academic inter est There is Just now a lull in the roar ing of our million presses. The torrent of new books is abated, and the gasp ing reader Is given a moment to recover breath before the sluicegates are lifted for the Fall trade. In England last year 1859 new novels were published more than five every day. While the exact figures for America are not avail able, we know that a country of double the population is certain to have beaten that record by hundreds and hundreds. As these innumerable volumes are bunched together in the Fall and Spring seasons. It Is no wonder that when the torrent is at Its height no reader, au thor or critic has time to do anything but skim and skip. When the blessed silly season comes there Is a little rest Novels are then published rarely, and only when there is some unusual bait to entice the public mouse between the covers of the publisher's trap. A novel that really is a novel, or one that Is to be sold at a low price, or. one with col ored Illustrations such are the allure ments to catch readers, perhaps buyers would be more accurate, In the Sum mer. And the mention of illustrations recalls that the readers and the critics two distinct classes, the members of one not necessarily belonging to the other are making use of their breath ing spell to discuss the value of pic tures to novels. In the discussion it is observable that the poor artist is the one upon whom readers, writers and critics all "Jump with both feet" an expression that a recent pretentious work notes with ap proval and greets as a permanent addi tion to the language. In the chorus of literary hammers there is not a single inharmonious note. The artist gets it every time. It is not much wonder, however, for the illustrations of most novels care little for the text or the spirit of the story, and in many in stances utterly Incompetent artists are employed by the publishers. When o good man is given the commission It not infrequently happens that the story has the appearance of relative Import ance to the pictures that a catalogue Of the artist's works might possess. Such is the work of Christy, for exam ple. In his illustrations to "Her In finite Variety" he has made several slips, due to carelessness, as Miss" Gil der points out in the current number of the Critic. One of the heroines 13 de picted In different gowns, although she had no time to change her dress if the action of the story be considered. A "little brown turban" in the story be comes a "large, white sailor hat" In the picture, but then Mr. Christy undoubt edly knows more than the author about the dress of women. Miss Glider men tions also the Illustrations of "The American Prisoner." Mr. Shepperson, "whose frontispiece represents the hero ine lying 'where the grass made pleas ant cushions amid the granite boulders,' in his eagerness caught the word 'cush iongland has depicted the young woman in a bathrobe on a heap of fluffy pil lows." W. L. Alden, discussing the same subject In the latest copy of the New York. Times' Saturday Review, tells of one artist that drew a full rigged ship to represent a schooner, and of another that showed a naval battle in which three ships were sailing in three different directions before three different winds. Such slips are amusing, but there is, as a rule, more to be said against the illustrations than that they are inac curate in detail. In most Instances the Illustrator falls to catch the spirit of the characters, and while this does not matter much In the yearly 1S50 volumes of drivel, it Is enough to spoil the re maining nine that possess more merits than an absence of bad grammar. On the whole, it may be said that illustra tions may help a bad but harm a good novel. THE DEGENERACY OF THE POTATO. The menace of drouth is over the po tato crop in this section, and the good housewife Joins her lamentations to those of the grower at the sorry pros pect Last year, as Is well remembered, was an off year for potatoes In the Willamette Valley. Not that there was a great scarcity of potatoes, but the quality of those offered was not flrst class, and, owing to an increased de mand for shipping as well as for home consumption, prices were high, adding to the unsatisfactory situation so far as consumers were concerned. In fact, during the past year, for the first time in the history of farming In Oregon, good potatoes have been practically un known In this market, Growers were warned early in the season by those in authority agricul turally speaking that the disappoint ment in the quality and quantity of the potato crop last year was due to the fact ihat change of seed was necessary if the best results In potato culture were to be obtained. It was cited that even the reliable old "Burbank," which In former years turned out from each hill a full quota of large, smooth tub ers, white and sound, had literally "run out" by being seeded over and over again upon the same ground, and ex change of seed potatoes with neighbors living some distance apart, or, better still, importing potatoes for planting from an entirely different section of the country, was strongly urged. This ad vice was followed to a considerable ex tent by progressive fanners In various sections, and the hope of the grower and housekeeper for a good crop of good potatoes would no doubt have "been realized this year but for the long "dry spell." Potatoes, next to bread, are regarded I as the staff of life in American homes. 1 Dietarians oppose their use three times a day as unheal thful; assert that their nutritive qualities are absurdly dispro portionate to their bulk; that they are I indigestible to children, student and Others who lead sedentarv Hv nn1 are. valuable only as they occupy "stomach room," or. In other words, help to fill the stomachs of laboring men. Notwithstanding all of this and much more, they hold their place on the daily bill of fare In nine-tenths of American homes, and If from any cause they are omitted the Inquiry 'Where are the potatoes?" goes round the board. This being true, a potato crop short In quantity and inferior in quality be comes a matter of general hardship. Our local market Is at present almost distressingly bare of potatoes that are fit to eat The residue of last year's crop Inferior in quality in the first place is now shriveled, dry and un palatable. Some at least of the new crop that has come up from California to meet an imperious demand are wormy and generally worthless. The long absence of rain has retarded the growth of Orgon potatoes and the mar ket has been, up to thl3 time, practi cally bare of them. As a climax to this situation, all that are offered small, of medium size, wormy and shriveled command prices tnat have turned a common article of dally food Into a luxury. There is no help for this, thouch ther is still hope that rain may fall in time to benefit the late crop. But so far as It is true that the potato Is degenerat ingrunning back to the acrid, dry and unpalatable tuber from which It sprang through lack of care in selecting seed and soils, rotation of crops, proper cul tivation or what not Its degeneracy can be stopped. The question is one that is serious enough to engage the attention of agricultural scientists and set the most easygoing farmer to think ing. The annual meeting of the Chautau qua Assembly at Gladstone Park has become the occasion of the Summer outing of many families. It combines the pleasures of camping dear to those who do not have to work around camp amusements that are unexceptionable as to morals; life in the open air for a fortnight, which is a tonic with which no medicine can compare In efficacy; the renewal of old friendships and the formation of new acquaintances, and, last but not least, an opportunity for study and literary development that could come in no other way to very many who attend the meeting. The weather of the past few days so pleas ing to the farmeir has proved a disap pointment to many campers on the grounds, but those who are well equipped with tents and other conven iences for camp life have suffered but little discomfort, and are cheerful in the hope that this week will bring fine weather. The financial success of the meeting depends somewhat upon the fulfillment of this hope. Its popular success was assured when its remarka bly fine programme was published. Low fares across the Atlantic seem to encourage travel in both directions. The steamship Teutonic, which sailed from New York last Thursday, was obliged to leave behind over 150 steer age passengers after filling her second cabin accommodations with passen gers who had originally purchased steerage tickets, but were will ing to pay the adVance In order to get across the Atlantic by that particular steamer. The rate from New York to Europe Is now 15, compared with $10 from Europe tcNew York. If all that Is being printed about the class of peo ple coming info this country Is true,, it Is undoubtedly much easier for the outward-bounders to raise the $15 than it is for the Incoming throng to get hold of the necessary $10. The United States can probably get along very well with out the presence of many of the people who are moving out under a $15 rate, and If the steamship companies restore the rate and shut out some of the $10 passengers, they will never be missed. There are now six Presidential tickets In the field. Debs and Handford, of the Social Democratic ticket, were the first out, their nomination taking place two months ago, which is long enough to make the present announcement of their candidacy an item of news to the vast majority of American' citizens, who took little or jio Interest in it in the first place. The Prohibitionists were second In the field with Swallow and Carroll as standard-bearers, while later the nominees of the Populists at Springfield and the Socialist Labor party in New York Joined the proces sion of candidates. These, with the regular Republican and Democratic nominations, complete the list of Pres idential tickets up to date. When it Is remembered that out of a total vote of 13,901,556 in 1900 all but 333,597 were cast for the Republican arid Democratic electors, it is easy to estimate the small figure that the four minor parties will cut when the grand tally Is made up In November. The Leavenworth Times predicts that Paul Morton will find even the arduous duties of a Cabinet official easy as com pared with his recently attempted work of adjusting freight rates so that they would be satisfactory to the Kansas shipper. Perplexed and hotly besieged, traffic agents of transcontinental roads running to and through Spokane and other inland points and on to Pacific shipping ports, will doubtless apprpeci ate the force of this remark and sigh that there was only one Cabinet posi tion to which our strenuous President could transport a man whose strenuous life contains an invitation to come up higher. Though the State of Oregon Is strong ly Republican and every county in the state now shows a Republican majority, the Democrats have succeeded in elect ing quite a number of their candidates for county offices. There are 33 coun ties, each with a full set of county offi cers. The Democrats have 16 County Judges, 13 County Clerks, 15 Sheriffs, 7 Treasurers, 7 School Superintendents, 11 Assessors, 8 Surveyors and 5 Coro ners. Each county has two Commission ers, and out of the 66 14 are Democrats. Only ten of the counties have Record ers, as separate officers, and only one of these Is a Democrat. Now Is the time to spray hops. Ne cessity for spraying and exact figures as to the expense are set forth on an other page by an experienced grower of Polk County. Whether prompted by the purely selfish motive of gain or by pride and public spirit to maintain Ore gon's reputation, spraying should not be neglected. Last week's ralna have given pests of the hop a good start Public Opinion mentions "I H. Amos, of Connecticut," as one of the candi dates for Vice-President on the Prohi bition ticket This Is a blow to our local pride. - - N0TB.ANDJ0"MMENTf Served Hlm'RIgnt. ! The following are curious plays 'on deifies and the abbreviations of states In which they are located: Where does Seattle Wash? - In a Topeka Kan. What did Jackson Miss? A Roston Mass. , , What does Dallas Tex? . ', A Pittsburg Pa. What made Chicago HI? A Manila P. I. What brings Portland Ore? A Little Rock Ark. Nashville News. And what did the Judge do? Fined Nash ville Tenn. Paul Kruger. t ;f Facing upright the fiercest blast. He knew not how to bend; The oak, uprooted, falls at last. Unyielding to the end. Judge" Parker now gives a negatlyejtto all requests from photographers. - July, no matter who preaches or be seeches. It's the peaches to the beaches. The Dowager Empress of China believes In the evil eye. And probably the evil. I also. Pretty soon the Russian ships In the Red Sea will be getting themselves dis liked. Citizens of Pe EH are about to incor porate the town. The name might also be incorporated into Pell. We sincerely hope Admiral Togo is not dead. Because if he is, all the papers will be saying he has went It's wonderful how the Liberty Bell re tains its popularity, considering the amount of poetry It provokes. A Seattle man thinks he owns helL That's nothing lots of people up there act as If they'd bought the town. From the outcry In Seattle one would think that fault had been found with the booze supply instead of with the milk. Each sex of grief has got Its part, J Each sometimes seems a glutton; For woman often breaks her heart. And man his collar button. The story from Spokane about the so called "French ball" should bring a num ber of Spokane wives post-haste from the seaside. Lives of strikers all remind us f, We can Join the striking rank. And. departing, leave behind us Just a plain, unnoticed blank. Fltzslmmons has been arrested for steal ing a lion. After taming so many puglllststlc lions, FItz probably thought a change would be pleasant Since reading about Judge Parker's be ing photographed in his bathing suit, sev eral women have begun to think It a shame that the President must be a man. There are some persons that are not worth listening to. Their only reason for talking Is that they'd burst with their own emptiness if they didn't say some thing. Even if the Japanese get licked In fight ing, they have made their reputations as unrivalled In the burking of news. It's a cold day that a scrap of information gets abroad unless it is to Japanese interests to have it known. The following amusing error in the Poat Intelligencer, was dug up by the Seattle Argus: The boat was christened by little Miss Nata lie Fisher, daughter of the late Major Evan Thomas, who was killed In a gallant flght with Modoc Indians 31 years ago, and In honor of whose memory the vessel was named. The little girl she's only 6 Is one of the prettiest of joungstera. Denials of press reports are. becoming altogether to common. Numbers of per sons lately have denied that they were dead, and now Senator Daniel denies that he Is ill, although his friends have all been reading that his condition was seri ous. A Parisian woman complains that men are losing all sense of gallantry, because a stranger whom she mistakenly battered with her umbrella was not courteous enough to conceal his surprise and feeling of mortification. In the circumstances, it would have required an unusually pollto Parisian to present a countenance show ing unmixed gratification at being singled out for a beating. Cecil Rhodes rests in the Matoppos, his dreams of empire forgotten. Paul Kruger is to rest in the land to which he trekked when the darkness of Africa was un broken beyond the Vaal. Their struggles over, the two strong men are at peace In the "great spaces washed in sun." To extend what Kipling said of one "living, they were the land, and dead, their souls shall be Its soul." Consul Ayme, who is stationed at the Brazilian port of Para, makes an interest ing report on yerba mate, which Is much used in South America as a substitute for tea and coffee. "Yerba mate," says Mr. Ayme, "has a peculiar, bitter, smoky taste, which is usually considered unpleasant" In view of this recommendation there should be a great market in the United States for tea. If a thing only tastes bad enough, you can persuade the great American public to use nothing else. People will think It's doing them good. Julius Chambers, who writes a New York letter for a syndicate of newspapers, has made an Important discovery. When J. Plerp. Morgan landed In New York the other day, he had what might be described as a rum look about the legs. It took several minutes for Mr. Chambers to per ceive the cause of the rummines. At last he noticed that Mr. Morgan's trousers were creased at the sides, instead of at the back and front This, it appears, is the latest London fad, and Mr. Morgan's tailor had pressed the great man's trousers in accordance with the latest eccentricity. As Dr. Brougher came over with Mr. Morgan In the Baltic, we shall await with interest a view of his legs in church this morning. When we are told how the President spent the night on the Long Island shore, "with the sky for his tent," and how he cooked his breakfast in the morning, and recognize that the campaign is fairly on, and that Judge Parker will have to do something more picturesque than moke a shivering plunge into the Hudson every morning. Camping out as the President does, Is a certain way to obtain pic turesque effects. Every city-bred man that has missed his store camping kit and burnt his fingers in his efforts to get an egg into a pan and fry it, will at once hail the President as a man capable of holding any office. Itlooks as if Judge Parker might make more use of his cattle. Why can't he get up at 4:30 to milk the cows? That would Impress the city people even more than cooking a camp, breakfast. WEXFORD JONES, :A. &"