THE SUNDAY OREGONIAX, PORTLAND, JUNE 7, 1908. 11 "If instead of a gem, or even of a flower, we could cast the gift of a lovely thought into the heart of a friend, that would be giving as the angels, I suppose, must give. "--George MacDonald. ft - r Z s k s jV v ,v:- Vv Is 1 & . : Ijif and Iftrr of Herbert. Kpnr. - Tty Pavld lunoan. IL I. Illustrated. 1. Appleton & 0., New1 York City. AV'hen the voluminous autobiography of Herbert Spencer, accepted as one of the most original and influential of modern thinkers, was published', tho reading world almost took it for granted that this was the last word of a remarkably busy life and that r.one of his intimate friends would care to write after him. But those . on the inside, so to speak, knew that about 2S years ago Spencer obtained a promise from Dr. Duncan . to write his life. The busy years Intervened and the world of thought was turned upside down, but Spencer's mind recurred to the orig inal idea of a biography and this para graph appeared in his will: I request that the said Oavtd Duncan will write a blogTaphy In one volume of mod erate size. In which shall be incorporated such biographical materials as I have .thought It beat not to use myself, together with such selected correspondence and such unpublished papers as may seem of value, and shall Include the frontispiece portrait and the profile portraits, and shall add to it a brief account of the part of my life which has passed since the date at which the autobiography concludes. Dr. Duncan has not obeyed his friend's request in confining his observations to ono volume, and the result is two hand some volumes, the first of 411 pages and the second of 441 pages. It is not too much to say that the books are most In forming, educative, and take rank among the great biographies of our decade. Dr. Duncan has edited wisely and well and in addition to presenting the scientific Spencer, he constantly allows the human one to peep out the Spencer who liked children and "plenty of outdoor games lawn tennis, bowls and quoits with bil liards in the evening." Spencer, It seems, was impressed with the truth that one's estimate of one's self is sure to err on the side of excess or defect, and he shrank from parading the more attractive and lovable aspects of his character thus permitting an ap parent Justification for the opinion that he was "all brains and no heart." It will be remembered by those who have read the book, that Spencer's "Autobiography" covered 62 years o.f the author's life. These books now under review cover the remainder, though of course the road traversed by Spencer has had to be trav ersed by Dr. Duncan. Still, a complete narrative Is evolved without weary reiter ation. In the kernel, the view given of Spen cer appears here to have been obtained from voluminous letters written by him self and those of- his friends to him. Spencer, born April 27, 1S20. was descended from French Huguenots who were driven by religious persecution from Lorraine, and their legacy to him appears to have been a fierce resistance to arbitrary au thority. His later ancestors were Wesley an Methodists who were characterized by individuality almost amounting to eccen tricity, by pugnacious tenacity In holding to their opinions and by self-assertlve-ness It was In the pleasant English town of Derby that the future philosopher first saw the light, and In the baptism and naming of Herbert Spencer the latter's father was not a man to be led by cus tom. He was keenly alive to the bearing of his non-conforming attitude on the fu ture of his son. The boy Spencer -was reared without the companionship of brothers and sisters for though four brothers and four sisters succeeded him, none of them lived more than a few days except one sister, Louisa, who died at the ace of two years and nine months. But she lived long enough to permanently disfigure him for life, as she cut him on the nose with a carving knife. The boy's surroundings must have been depressing, because of his father's continued ill health. In 1S2S, his father wrote: "I shall either from this time be tolerably com fortable In my circumstances and health, or else I shall soon be reduced by HI health to a state of wretchedness border ing on Insanity." Left much to himself, the boy Spencer contracted the habit to dwell on his own thoughts for strength, and on the Intellec tual side one of the chief results of his father's training was the habit It fos tered of ever seeking an explanation of phenomena. Instead of relying on author ity. Young Spencer shared little In games with boys of bis own age and was much with grown-up people. At first, his edu cation at his uncle's school was stormy because of his dislike for restraint, and he ran away, only to return a more de voted student. Bchool teaching first oc cupied his attention In preparing for the serious work of life, and In succession he rapidly became engineer and draughts man, author, newspaper man, scientist and philosopher. " It Is not my purpose to further specify the better known details surrounding the Spencerlan system of logic, nor Is It ne cessary to give an -exposition of the phi losophy of evolution. His biographer does not enter very deeply Into the latter sub ject. Spencer's career la remarkable when ono considers that his teaching has left deep Impress on the world of thought, and that It has made and unmade theological reputations. It ought to be an Inspiration to the youth of this age to reflect on the life lessons left by Herbert Spencer, his profound learning, his meritorious Indus try, although suffering from continued ill health, all the work of a man who did not have the advantages of a university training as we know It today. It Is worth while to note that his nicely balanced scl aaUflo mind was bitterly opposed to so cialism and that he regarded the individ ual man as the highest specialization. As for Spencer's psychological doctrine, it may be summed up as an- argument that "mental faculties and powers are ac quired by the slow modifications of living organisms influenced by environment, ex perience, heredity and selection." On page 87, volume one, of this biog raphy, appears this curious statement taken from one of Spencer's letters: Did I mention to you when In Derby last the new poet, Alexander Smith? I consider him unquestionably the poet of the age Though a Scotchman (and I have no par tiality for the race), I am strongly Inclined to rank him as the greatest I.oet since Shakespeare. I know no poetry that I read over and over again with such delight. Which goes o show that for once Spencer's earlier Judgment was defective. The years that followed did not stamp Mr. Smith as a great poet he just be longed to the . great army of Smiths. About the year 1858 It appears from a letter Spencer wrote to J. D. Hooker that the Spencer books had no adequate sale, and that their author then seriously thought of applying for a . position of foreign Consul, so that be could prose cute various literary or, more properly, scientific projects which he had been so far unable to carry out, unconsciously laying out for himself the political path followed in after yards by James Kus sell Lowell.- In speaking of his rapidity In composi tion. Spencer once remarked that his best work was one page of print per hour. i Ceremonial functions had no attractions for such a scientific mind. He was once Invited to attend an at-home at which he was to meet the Emperor of Russia, and In writing to regret that he couldn't accept said: "The necessity of wearing a levee dress to which Mr. Spencer has an Insuperable objection, compels him to decline the offered pleasure." From this time on appear letters writ ten to and received from the most cele brated men and women of Spencer's ren- I eratkm, and the reader's awe deepens ; at the mention of such names as Tyndall, .' Huxley, Gladstone, Darwin, John Stuart J Mill, O. H. Lewes, "George Eliot." etc It was at one time rumored that Spencer was In love with "George Eliot," and the stories caused him great annoyance. He protested that there wasn't a word of truth in them. Spencer, although he didn't love what he called the "lower animals," had a most affectionate regard for children, and on one occasion he was Indebted to one, Mrs. W. H. Crlpps. who kindly "loaned" him two of her children for two weeks. In a letter to Robert Buchanan, the poet. Spencer wrote concerning religion: More especially I want one who has the ability to do it with sufficient intensity of feeling, to denounce the miserable hypoc risy of our religious world with Its pre tended observance of Christian principles, side by side with the abominations which It continually commits and countenances abroad. It might very well be symbolized as "The Impenitent Thief." and I should like you to nail It to the cross. A delightfully Intimate view of Spencer Is given. In a letter written by Lady Courtney, of Penwlth: My mother argued with him (Herbert Bpencer) a good deal, my father never. It is rather curious that, considering the af fection between the two men, and Mr. Spen cer's generous appreciation of my father's practical sense and genial and expansive nature, the latter never read Mr. Spencer's books. My father loved an emotion or a sentiment, and understood the concrete; but he had a rooted distrust of abstract Ideas, and not much confluence in deductions which depended ypon sustained argument-; and I can still hear him cheerily ending one of these arguments with: "Won't work. Spencer; won't work, my dear fellow." After I was grown up I remember vividly an incident illustrating Mr. Spencer's good humored acceptance of this Attitude of hla friend. My mother and I were sitting in the garden at Standiah, when Mr. Spencer came up to us with an expression half-annoyed, halt-amused on his face and said to my mother: "I could almost be angry with your husband, Mrs. Potter, did I not know him so well." "What has he done?" said my mother. Then Mr. Spencer told us how they had . been standing together near a large pond we had. of which my father was very proud, when the latter said: "I - wish. Bpencer, you would explain the main points of your philosophy to me Just short ly." To which Mr. Spencer replied:- "I have been sending you my books these 20 years back; I know you have not read them, and it is a little hard to put them all into ten minutes; however, I will try." And he be gan to expound. "Tour husband," continued Mr. Spencer, "seemed to be listening intently, as he gaxed into the water, and I thought I had at least got my friend to give his mind to my Ideas. Suddenly he exclaimed, 'I say. Spencer, are those gudgeon?' and rushed 'round the pond." Notable in the remaining pages are the references to the valuable help Spencer gave in drawing up the modern Japanese constitution, and his well-known oppo sition to the course Great Britain pursued In the Boer War. Sometimes the great philosopher spoke' In a pessimistic vein about this country to wit: "The Americans are beginning to reap the far-reaching and widely-diffused consequences of their admiration for smart prigs and the general mercan tile laxity." An unsparing critic of others. Spencer wan too ready to say that he had been "misunderstood" or "misrepresented," and he was often Irritable. On one occa sion, Tyndall, in speaking of this irrita tion, exclaimed In Spencer's presence: "He'd be a much nicer fellow If he had a good swear now and then." Spencer's democracy can be recognized from one of his spoken sentences: "Be their rank or position what it may, from Emperors and Kings downwards, those who have done nothing for their fellow men, I de cline to honor. I honor those only who have benefited mankind and as one of tbem I honor Columbus." Admittedly. Spencer would be the last man from which one could derive hope In the glory of a future life, and on this subject he wrote: "The hope that con tinually groping though in the dark may eventually discover the clue, is one I can scarcely entertain, for the reason that human intelligence appears to me incapa ble of framing any conception of the re quired kind. ... It seems to me that our best course is to submit to the limit ations Imposed by the nature of our minds, and to live as contentedly as we may in ignorance of that which lies be hind things as we know them." The, two last letters Spencer signed on earth were connected with one of the main purposes of his life the promotion of peace on earth and good will among men. His Indomitable will asserted itself to the last, and his farewell words were: "Now I take this step for the benefit of those who are to be my executors; my Intention being that after death this, my body, shall be conveyed by sea to Ports mouth." Unconsciousness succeeded, and early on the morning of December 8, 1903. Herbert Spencer died.. His biographer add3: "His end was such as his friends desired, and -he himself wished." "My Day and Got ration," "by Cha. B. Carr. A. C. McClurg & Co... Chicago, ill. A, short time ago a partial review of Colonel Carr'a "My Day and Generation" appeared in these columns and in a sea son of a little more leisure than usual it has struck ma that extracts showing the California of the "49ers .would prove of more than usual Interest in this section. Here is "Colonel Carx's description of "Billy" Ralston.-the well known but un fortunate president of the Bank of Cali fornia: The most potential man in San Francisco and on the Pacific Coast at that time was William C. Ralston, called everywhere and by everybody "Billy" RAlaton. Whatever Billy Ralston said went everywhere, and with everybody. The great capitalists, all the "get-rk'h-qulck." men, the bonanza men who had squeezed vast fortunes out of 'the Cometock lodee, and all -the Virginia City miners, laid their money and stocks at his feet to be invested or hoarded as seemed best to him. He lived ilk a Prince and was the most bountiful entertainer I have ever known. Ralston was of little figure, and quick and active in elucidating propositions, in com ing to conclusions, and in carrying measure Into effect. At our first meeting he told us, our drafts would be honored for any amount we chose to draw. "You are far from home gentlemen," he said, "and must not - be troubled about money. Draw all you want." It was a dangerous offer to make to so young a man as I then was. and it encour aged me to draw more than I otherwise would have done. California was on a gold basis, while our greenbacks were at a dis count from gold of about 40 per cent. We had to turn our money into coin, and it was a great hardship for us to get only 60 cents each for our dollars. The smallest coin recogniz-ed was the 10 cent piece, which we had to pay for a newspaper even, and noth ing was sold for less than that amount San Francisco had Just then begun to get the benefit of the vast mineral wealth which waa being developed in the mines, and to realize what It meant to her. Men poor today, tomorrow woke up to And them Belves bonanza kings with millions upon their hands, which they had no idea how to dispose of, or even take care of. In this dilemma they turned to Billy Ralston. He man.xged it all better than any one else could, but In the end it almost over whelmed hlrh. He bore the burden for some time after we came home, about six years, when we beard that one afternoon, after the bank closed, he went as was hiB custom, for a swim in the bay. He did not turn back as usual, but continued on until at last he sank out of . sight forever. Mr. Ralston' s heart and soul were bound up in San Francisco and the' Pacific Ooast, to the success and development of which he de voted his whole mind and might and strength. 'i The spirit of '49 is stirringly reflected In a description Colonel Carr gives of a meeting with California pioneers of that period: , . f To' be a Forty-Niner then was. and still is, a distinction. Being a Forty-Nlner in California is equivalent almost to a seat in the nobility, a sort of peerage, one may say. These pioneers celebrated the anniver sary of their emigration every year. Many had gone to their reward at the time of our visit, but many of them still survived. This year, lStt&, was a great event,, as it was their twentieth anniversary- Governor Yates was aaked to address Forty-Nlners. and as many of the pioneers had emigrated into Illinois he was really de'iighted to have an opportunity to appear before them. Th meeting was held In Metropolitan Hall, which was filled to its capacity by aa tine and intelligent a body of men aa I have ever seen assembled anywhere. I had heard the Governor speak upon many occasions- He was always eloquent, and I may l say brilliant, but I never heard him when h so approached sublimity aa in his ad dress to those Fcrty-Nln?rs. I wish 1 could do more than faint Justice to the splendors of that remarkable address, especially when the orator depicted the possibilities of the future development of the Pacific Coast, as in ihaginatlon he believed it would be at tained. He told how the great cities of KuroDe bad grown ud on the western coast i of that hemisphere and predicted similar development on the Pacific slope. When 'M years later. I visited Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland and Seattle It seemed to me that Governor Yates had been moved by a spirit of prophecy. But the brilliant climax of the oration came when he pictured the possibilities -of achievement in literature, art, and science among the peoples th&t were to come In that region. Toward theae ideals, if they have not been attained, the people of the Pacific Coast are rapidly advancing. Governor Yates" auditors seemed to go mad over the oration. They could not contain themselves. They rent the air with shouts, cheering the speaker to the echo. They shouted and laughed and cried as he went on, and at the close there was every possible demonstration of enthu siasm. T 4 The Under Groove, by Arthur Stringer. The McClure Company, New York City. Imagine an educated burglar touring the West and drinking In Its beauty of prairie, snow-topped mountain peaks and green-clad hills, and then obstinately longing for the rush and roar of what he calls "I'll ole Noo York." Yet that's what the hero does In this novel of the underworld, and he voices his longing in this language: "I wanted to go Bast. I began to get homesick .and peevish for New York. I wanted to snif th-e familiar old' ferry smell, to her the rush and gutter of water in the niarrowlixa slips where the piling yields and shudders against the bumping paddle boxes, to catch the metallic and familiar ttnk-a-llnk of pawl-and-racbets as the land ing floats lower to crowded dock-slips. I ached for a sight of that old crust-thrower of a town, where its skyscraper teeth bit up livto the morning smoke, and It seemed to whisper, with one eye winked: "Feed me, or I'll feed oa you." I wanted to see It laugh and shake behind Its eternal whine tor more gold, its growls and. oaths against the arm of the law. I wanted to get a amff of the Kialto dust again, of the crowds by day and the lamps by night, of the bustle and stir of Broadway, with its crazy, solemn, tangled and happy-go-lucky bub bling of life. My ears seemed to ache for its street sounds. Its roar of wheels, its clatter ofhoofa, its clangor and pulse of bells. Its whine of engln-es. Its drone of power, Its show of wealth. Its rumble and roar of hunger. " 'I want It all, Dlnney" I said to that puzzled son of the Sucker State, who knew nothing of life or living beyond the range of the Hooelers. "I want it all, from the Greek peanutman with hiB barrel-oven and his little steam whistle to the flash of the afternoon sun on some wine-colored tonneau as it dips and melts away up the avenue! I want it all, from the old newswomen, and the passing street faces, and the night hawks of the tenderloin to the groups of well-built and bright-eyed girls, in velvet and feathers and furs, with muffs as big aa cash boxes, Dtnney, and bunches of vio lets ths size of a cabbage the girls who come laughing and talking down Fifth ave mi every afternoon and make me wish I'd kept out of the Under Groove.'" To be sure, jthere is no accounting for tastes especially when the person pos sessing such opinions Is a Raffles who looks upon the valuable contents of houses and banks as his own peculiar property. If he can reach them without coming in contact with a meddlesome policeman. Most of the characters In this enterpris ing novel are yeggmen, demi-monde, knockout artists, chloral drinkers, co caine users, drunkards and neurotics. Yet- the story has a certain attraction. It will arouse the most jaded novel reader to brush the) cobwebs from his memory, and to look out for what hap pens next. Raffles meets the heroine, in an origi nal manner. One evening, while In a car, he feels a hand searching his pock ets. A thief stealing from a thief! Raf fles was astonished. He looked up and saw that the daring one was a most beautiful girl so beautiful that she looked as If she had Just stepped out of a picture. But she got away with about $600. Raffles followed her to her home and discovered that she was a per son of dual personality, a mental neu rotic who was sometimes a respectable member of society, but at others men tally Irresponsible. She worked with "a third arm," a bit of Jointed and buckled mechanism which appeared to contain "her other self." The Romance of the) Reaper, by Herbert N. Oassoo. 1. Illustrated. Doubleday, Page & Co.. New York City. Surely this is the story of one trust which is "good," the International Har vester Company, which grew out of the reaping machine for cutting grain, an invention of Cyrus Hall McCormlck In the year I83L It Is proper to recall that the harvester trust was In trouble the" other day at Kansas City, where It was summoned to answer for its misdeeds, and pleaded that the price of imple ments had not been raised and that in reality such prices are lower than be fore the giant combination was effected. Be that as it may, I desire at this time to review all ilie. good things the book mentions. The style in writing the story is singularly attractive and It reads like a modern tale of the "Arabian Nights." There's no magic In evidence only the plain, unvarnished experience of Ameri can pluck and work. Mr. Casson says that the reaper was America's answer to the world's demand for democracy, particularly at a time when England was seared into abolish ing the corn laws by the proclamation that the ultimate check to. population is the lack of food. It Is remarked that If Marcus Aurellus had Invented the reaper or if the Gracchi had been inventors in stead of politicians, the story of Rome would have had a happier ending. But Rome said:" The first thing Is empire. Egypt said: The first thing is fame. Greece said: The first thing is genius. Not one of them said: The first thing la' bread. On- the old European plan snlp-snip-snlpping with a tiny hand-sickle, every bushel of wheat required three hours of a man's lifetime, Mr. Caason goes on to say. Today, on the new American plan riding on the painted chariot of a seif blndlng harvester, the price of wheat has been cut down to 10 minutes & bushel. "When I first went Into the harvest field," once said an Illinois farmer, "it took 10 men to cut and bind my grain. Now our hired girl geta on the seat of a self-binder and does the whole busi ness." . ' It must not be thought, however, that Mr. McCormick's path to glory and dol lars was easy. It was In the Fall of 1831 when the hitched four horses to his then unwieldy machine and clattered out of the barnyard Into a field of wheat, nearby. Horses, shied and pranced at the strange apparition, dogs barked and a noisy crowd of white laborers followed the reaper with boisterous enmity. For here was an invention which threatened to deprive them of the right to work the precious right to work 16 hours a day for 3 cents an hour. But McCor mlck was a fighter and the story how he and possibly 100 others worked to per fect the reaping machine as we see It on Oregon farms today Is more like a fable than real, sober truth. But It's so. The McCormlck selling agents or drum mers have sold so many of the reapers all over the world that It must be always harvest somewhere. "They are reaping the fields of Argentina In January, Upper Egypt in February. East India In March, Mexico In April, China in May, Spain In June, Iowa In July, Canada In August, Sweden In September, Norway In Octo ber, Sbuth Africa in November and Bur mah In December." It is remarkable that the quick ways of American farmers are seldom found In other countries. "A Swiss will put a big stone upon a land-roller to give It weight and then walk behind It to ride on the roller himself does not occur to him. A South German will usually take the reel oft his reaper and handle the grain by hand operating five levers is too great a tax upon his mind. An Argentinian wastes his pesos by hiring drivers one on the seat and another astride one of the hOrEes." One more view: "The whole world takes dinner at the .one long table and the reaper is now more necessary to the human race than the railway. The fear of hunger is dying out of the heartB of men and the prayer of the Christian centuries is answered: "Give us this day our dally bread, " Edgar Allan roe, by John Macy. 75 cents. Small, Maynard & Co.. Boston, Mass. Belonging to the pocketbook edition of the Beacon biographies, this critical esti mate of Edgar Allen Poe is a valuable one for Its fairness, truth and literary polish. There has been doubt expressed as to where Poe was born, but Mr. Macy affirms that the event occurred In Boston, January 19. 1809. The author says that tl: Celtic strain In the poet's blood accounts for his melancholy, sentlmental lsm and the magic of his poetry, while "perhaps his want of humor may be ascribed to his English mother." It is not necessary to quote at any length from events marking so many milestones of this Boston-Baltimore poet's life, for his unhappy, erratic story Is now well known but for the benefit of some young folks who seem to think that the -pursuit of literature and es pecially poetry pays, I copy one para- graph detailing the poverty ana desola tion surrounding the deathbed of Vir ginia, one of Poe's wives, the date of the occurrence being January, 1847: There was no clothing on the bed. which was only straw, but the snow-wblte coun terpane and aheeta. The weather was cold, and the sick lady had the dreadful chills that accompany the hectic fever of con sumption. She lay on the straw bed. wrapped in her husband's great-coat, and with a large tortoise-shell cat In her bosom. The wonderful cat seemed conscious of her great usefulness. The coat and the cat were the sufferer! only means of warmth, except as her husband held her hands and her mother her feet. Young Lord Straaleigh, by Robert Barr. Illustrated. D. Appleton He Co., New York. Through the columns of a weekly periodical whose sales are, in Its class, about the largest in this country, and the mention of whose name is worth about a dollar a line, so I won't name It the younger, wide-awake reading; public has become tolerably familiar, with the name of Lord Stranlelgh, a young English aristocrat who is al ways faultlessly dressed, smiling, and never passionately in love with a woman. He Is also a hero of the ultra-, rich set who often use his millions to make panics to crush the predatory rich and save victims from being gob bled up. He's new in current fiction, and very welcome to the jaded novel reader in search of something; new, with a laugh or two thrown in. Lord Stranlelgh is "it." Take him with you as a companion to the serslde for Sum mer reading. . , ' K. J.'s Mother and Some Other People, by Margaret Deland. Illultrated. 1.S0. Harper & Brothers, New York City. Mrs. Deland has recently won so much literary fame through her old Chester folk portrayed in "The Awakening of Helena Richie" and "Dr. Lavendar'a People,'? that there has been an Insistent call for more of her enjoyable "homey" tales. Her publishers' business sense has also been awakened, and the result Is the presentation in book form of these six stories which have appeared at In tervals, Borne of tbem In magazine form: "R. J.'s Mother," "The Mormon," "Many WHY PORTLAND IS ROSE CITY Frederick V. Holman Reiterates Its Superiority Over California Cities in the Matter of Climatic Advantages arid Rose Culture Last January, at the request of the man agers of the Sunset Magazine. I wrote an article on "Portland as the Rose City." I cheerfully furnished this article gratuitous ly because it was to appear in the June number of the magazine, which was to be largely a Portland number. This article was signed by me, but it is badly mutilated and changed as It appears la the June Sunset. The article as printed omits almost every allusion to the superiority of Portland for growing roses over California, and is only a part of the article I wrote. In addition, some editor of the magazine took the lib erty of Inserting a number of absurd sub heads. As the Sunset Magazine has advertised It as being my article. I ask in Justice that the article which follows, arid is the article as I wrote It. be published in The Ore gonian. FREDERICK V. HOLMAN. Portland. June 3. PORTLAND, THE ROSE CITY. PORTLAND, Oregon, has the name of "Rose City." Tho mere assump tion by it of the name would amount to nothing if it did not deserve the name, but Portland is justly en titled to the name. It Is not alone that one sees roses in Portland every where, except In the business districts; It is also because of the unusually luxuriant growth of the bushes, the number and beauty of the blooms and the long; time of blooming, usually from May to November. There are few places in the world where the fine varieties of roses reach perfection when grown in gardens, without protection. Most varieties do well In parts of England, particularly In the southern part. There are favored localities In France and in Germany, where roses grow well in the open. There are places In the Southern states where roses thrive, but the heat and the dryness often Interfere with the full develop ment and beauty of the blooms of some of the hardy varieties. The two reasons why roses reach such perfection at Portland and in almost all of Western Oregon are the soli and the climate. The ordinary soil is a rich' yellow clay, which Is one of the best soils for roses aa well as for most of the agricultural products of tho temperate zone. The successful growing of roses In the open is an In dex of such other agricultural prod ucts. But the best reason is the beau tiful, soft, mild and even climatic conditions tho conditions In which roses thrive, and which seem absolutely necessary for their perfection In growth color and fragrance. It is popularly supposed that these weather conditions are caused by the Kiro-Siwo or Japan Current, but this is not true, for thatcurrent goes far north and becomes cold, and the waters of the Pacific along North America are very cold, even as far south as Mon terey Bay. The real cause for these climatic conditions in Western Oregon, in the Winter, are the mild Bouth winds from the tropics, moisture-laden. The heat given oft by this moisture in cool ing, and particularly when it is rain ing, produces the mild temperature In Winter. This wind and also the northwest wind In Summer, being lower in temperature than the ' usual Summer heat, cool and temper the sun's heat, and thus give the mild and even conditions, and what I may call the moist atmosphere as compared with the dry and arid air of Califor nia. In Winter, at Portland, It is not unusual for the variations In 24 hours to be less than 10 degrees. I take from the dally meteorological report of the United States Weather Bureau for last Sunday, January 6, 1908, maximum tem perature 53 degrees, minimum temper ature 44 degrees. This Is not unusual. The' daily variation Is often 'less than five degrees. On January 1, 1908, I had more than a dozen roses in bloom In my garden. I always expect to have a few roses in my garden on Christmas and New Year's day. In May and June, of course, the tamperature Is warmer than in Winter, but Is correspondingly even. From' May to October, Inclusive, the Portland climate has no superior In the United States. It is to be expected that the climate in Oregon varies somewhat in different years. All climates do. But in Western Oregon there are always the mild and even conditions, except in occasional Winters when we have freezing weather, when the thermometer may, at times, for a few days, fall as low as 10 or 14 dern-ees above zero. . This Is an unusual Winter condition in Western Oregon. That these mild and even conditions have existed for more than 100 years is shown by the Journal of Lewis and Clark In the Winter of 1806-06. which Is the earliest record, and by the books of early travelers and residents of Oregon. There was no freezing weather in the Winter of 1805-06. Gabriel Franchere was one of the Astor party, which founded 'Astoria in 1811. He stayed In Oregon three years, most of the time at Astoria. In his "Narrative," pub lished originally In French, at Montreal, in. 1820. he says that during the three years he spent In Western Oregon the cold was rujver far below the freezing point, nor the neat la excess of 76 de grees. Dr. John McLoughlln came to the Ore gon country in 1824, and died at Oregon City in 1857. He lived at Vancouver, Washington, six miles from Portland, continuously from 1824 to 1846. He was familiar with the conditions In Western Oregon. Shortly before his death he wrote a document giving a brief sketch of his life In. the Oregon country. In this document he wrote: "In 1825, from whet I had seen of the country, I formed the conclusion from the mildness and salu brity of the climate, that this was the finest portion of North America that I had seen for the residence of civilized man." Rev. Daniel Lee came to Oregon, as a missionary, In 1834. In 1844 he, together with Rev. J. H. Frost, published a book. entitled, "Ten Years in Oregon." In this book It Is said about Western Oregon that the young grass is frequently as fresh, green, and forward "in February and March, as it is In New York on the first of May;" and also, that on the 25th of December, 1S40. he plucked a straw berry blossom near his cabin on Clat sop Plain. Governor Peter H. Burnett came to Ore gon in 1843. In letters written by him, in 1844, for publication in the New York Herald, he says of the Winter of 1843-44, that about December 1 strawberries were In bloom in what is now Washington Waters," "The House of RImmon." "A Black Drop" and "The White Feather." The most powerfully told of these is i'R. J.'s Mother," being the wooing of a widower and a boy's mother, the kernel of the plot being that the woman has not been married to the boy's father. A meddlesome old maid, for whom I entertain lasting contempt and rejoicing In the name of Miss Frances Blake, tries to stop the wedding, because of her ani mal selfishness, but she doesn't succeed. Her charactor Is skilfully drawn, so much so that the reader Is aroused to silent Indignation. "A Black Drop" ts the most pathetic tragedy of a pretty girl named Lily whose sweetheart wouldn't marry her because she had negro blood in her. All the stories have that undefinable Deland quality mark about them. Ths Happy Habit, by Joe Mitchell Chappie. The Chappie Publishing Co., Limited., Bos ton, Mass. Mr. Chappie, the next time you per petrate a book, please, please see to County (immediately west of Portland), and as early as February 20, 1844, the wild flowers were blooming on the hillsides. These have not been unusual Winter con ditions ever since. In the last week of- November, 1907, 1 saw a number of wild strawberry blos soms east of Portland. On the same day and in the same vicinity, I ate delicious cultivated strawberries grown near the same place. In the Morning Oregontan of today, January 8, 1908, there is an item saying that in Portland there was shown yesterday a branch having nine ripe red raspberries, and that the bush, grow ing In Portland, had several branches with ripe berries. While Western Oregon has the reputa tion of having an excessive amount of rain, this is a reputation it does not de serve. It is called a rainy country as compared with -the semi-desert conditions of Southern California. Tho average pre cipitation at Portland for the last 20 years is 40.4 Inches. These figures are official and have been furnished me by the cour tesy of the United States Weather Bureau at Portland. Precipitation at Portland Is less than In a great msnf cities In the Eastern States. Louisville. Ky., Washing ton, D. C, Buffalo, the city of New York, and Boston. Mass., have about the same average annual precipitation as Portland has. But Oregon escs.pes the hot Sum mers and the cold Winters of the Eastern States, and also their extreme tempera tures of heat and cold. Oregon's climate Is somewhat similar to that of Southern ISngland. It is better In everything In which Southern England's climate Is good. Oregon has more clear, fair days, less rain, and lees freezing weather than Southern England. The annual rainfall is ono of the sources of wealth of Western Oregon. It never falls. It makes the grass green most of the year. The crops. Including fruits, are relied on with unfailing certainty, and are grown without irrigation. ' It has made and maintains the great native forests, with their magnificent trees, for lumber and for beauty. It ornaments these for ests with wild flowering shrubs and bushes, such as the Oregon grape, the currant, the syrlnga, the spiraea, the dog wood, the finest of Its kind, besides the profusion of wild flowers. This rain makes perennial springs and never-failing streams throughout the country, including the large rivers. It makes the continuous water-powers great and small. So that the rain not only produces the crops, and the power to manufacture them Into suit able commodities, but supplies the water to transport them to the local markets, and thence to all the great ports of the world. The annual rainfall Is one of Port land's best friends. It has made Portland, more than a hundred miles from the ocean, one of the world's great ports. It is the mild Winter weather which gives Portland's rosebushes the best dor mant conditions, when they gently rest and become prepared for strong growth in the Spring and for the blooming season. Being unhurt In the Winter, they are ready for the best results In the Spring and Summer. e It Is in May and June when Portland's roses are at their best. Then the bushes are lusty with their strong Spring growth. There are the long days, and the charm ing twilight, giving the proper light and warmth. There are ths even, mild tem peratures, with the air neither too dry nor too moist. There are gentle, cooling winds, assisted by the clouds, correcting too much of heat from the sun. There are enough of the direct rays of the sun to give the proper colorings to the roses, from the purest white to the darkest red, and to develop fragrance, one of the greatest charms of the rose. These are the ordinary, the usual May and June weather conditions at Portland. They are the ideal conditions to produce perfect roses. It is then that tha residence districts of Portland are magnificent with their beau tiful roses. They adorn every home, In cluding the humblest. They are every where. They are in small groups, in great masses, and in hedges. The climbing roses cover fences, and trellises, and are against the sides of bouses, often up to the roofs. There are the riot and the blending of the colors of the roses ana tho air Is scented with their fragrance. It is a scene both beautiful and fascina ting to residents as well as to visitors and strangers. It la nature's annual fes tival at Portland. Is it to be wondered at that Portland is pleased with Itself as the Rose City? It may bo said that this is village-like, but It is homelike and Port land ts a city of homes. Again, In September and In October, comes another distinctly rose blooming time. There Is less profusion, but al most equal beauty, for some varieties do not bloom well in the Fall. But there are many varieties, as beautiful some more so as in May and June. Visitors who were present at the close of the Lewis and Clark Exposition In October. 1!05, will recall the beauty of the roses at that time. While July and August are the hottest months, the roses con tinue to bloom, although they are not the rare specimens produced earlier and later In the season. The rose is the flower of the dominant white races of the world, and It has been from the beginning. It is interwoven with their traditions. It is in their poems and In their songs from the beginning of civilization. Consciously, and at the same time unconsciously, the rose, In its per fection, quickens the beauty-love, and satisfies the beauty-hunger of every normal human being. It assists in mak ing life worth living. This explains in part the local pride and patriotism of the men, women and children of Port land. e As this article is written to show why Portland Is the Rose City, I shall not go Into the question of varieties, and of the cultivation of' roses in Portland. I shall say, however, that all varieties of roses thrive and bloom In perfection, In the open, In Portland. From the most deli cate teas to the hardiest hybrid perpet uals, the conditions in Portland are perfect- In most places in California, while tea roses do well, the air is too dry and too hot for the perfect blooming of most varieties of hybrid teas and hybrid per petuals In the open. In San Francisco and elsewhere on the coast of California from Monterey Bay north, the cold winds and fogs, in Summer, are even more deleterious than the hot and dry conditions In Southern California. It is particularly the climbing roses. It that It Isn't one of the great "uncut." The author says that these fugitive sketches tell of the first happy years when he visited among his "own peo ple" as editor of the National Magazine. The man with a grouch is warned away from this book It will make him smile In spite of himself. It Is chock full of sentiment and sketchy, laughing; humor. J. M. QUENTIN. IN LIBRARY AND WORKSHOP. "Portland" and "Hoses" are the two- mag ical words which form the text of the June number of tle Paclnc Monthly, and this city lot paid many well-deeerved compliments in skilfully worded description and artlstlo pictures. The cover represents a rose in bloom, and is- a bit of pleasant work. "Wanted Two Million Hogs." an article written by Forrest Crlseey, ts especially readable at the present time, now that Port land Is about to develop into a meat center. "Mount Hood." a new poem by Harry Murphy, haa dignified sweep with keen ap preciation of the sublimity of the subject, and "Monaghan's Brother," a railroad the hybrid teas and the hybrid perpctu als which grpw so luxuriantly And bloom so magnificently that have given to Portland the name of the Rose City. It may be thought by persons unac quainted with Portland roses that what I have written is but the enthusiasm of a Portland man. I quote from the opin ions of some experts concerning roses at Portland. Mr. E. G. Hill is one of the best pro fessional rosartans In this country. He lives at Richmond, Ind., and sells bushes to the trade only. He introduced the famous rose Richmond. He was In Fortland in June, 1903. He was so pleased that when he returned home he wrote, a long article on Portland's roses. It was published In the Weekly Florists' Review, a trade paper, to which .profes sional florists only are allowed to sub scribe. In this article, speaking of roses in and near Portland, he said: "In the first place, It seems to me that climatic conditions are all that could b desired' for growing the hybrid tea and hybrid perpetual varieties to perfection, and these conditions - are not materially different from those in the more favored, parts of England and Central Germany, where roses grow and luxuriate most satisfactorily. "Having seen at Benjamin Cant's, In England, some of as ittte La France as could be desired, I was quite surprised to find this famous os& variety growing and blooming in our own Northwest, even better than at Mr. Card's or at any other place that I have visited In Europe." And speaking of the roses grown by W. S. SIbson. at his home In one of the sub urbs of Portland, Mr. Hill wrote: "Mr. SIbson succeeds in growing t" almost perfection varieties that require the greatest skill and care to do even moderately well In other favored loca tions sorts that do not thrive under any but the most favored conditions." And speaking of Ulrtch Brunner he said: "This vsrlety cannot bo equaled a grown at Portland by even the mot skillful culture under glass In the east ern part of the United States." Mr. Hill. In his article, further said: "A word about porch and cllmhlns; roses- in this same section. Mme. Alfred Carriere Is unquestionably the first on the list. This rose is a marvel and qulta fills the Ideal of a climbing variety, such a wealth of blooms and every flower perfect. One of the sights that I shall never forget was the fine bush adorning the house of Frederick V. Holman, at Portland. Fortune's yellow, white and yellow, literally covers his porch and wall, as well as their own foliage, with their great wealth of bloom." In closing his article Mr. Hill men tioned the Lewis and Clark Exposition, which was subsequently held In Portland In 1905, and iald: "It would be well If the florists could hold our National meeting in Portland at that time. It would give the profes sion a fine outing; they would see the finest rose blooms that America can pro duce; they could measure up the possi bilities of our great and glorious country as In no other way." In 1905 Mr. Hill made another trip to Europe. August 2. 1905, he wrote me saying that he wished to verify his opin ion of Portland's climate and other con ditions for the growing of roses In com parison with tho conditions existing, in Great Britain and on the continent of Europe. I Alex Dickson & Sons, Limited, of Ncw townards, Ireland, are noted as being among the greatest rose-growers and originators in the world. Many of tha roses of recent years have been origi nated by them. In the Summer of 1903 I sent them photographs of the climbing roses, Mme. Alfred Carriere and For tune's Yellow, In bloom In my garden. In a letter to me of August 27, 1903, they wrote: "Your plants of Mme. Alfred Carriere and Fortune's Yellow must have presented a wonderful sight when in full bloom. Such specimens it would be Im possible to grow in this climate." And yet Ireland grows roses as well as in any part of the British Islands. A half-tone of this photograph of For tune's Yellow was printed in The Gar den, a well-known English horticultural paper. In its Issue of April 2. 1904. Un derneath this half-tone was printed .the legend: "This rose flowers in warm cor ners of our southern counties. A plant In a sunny nook in a Berkshire garden is quite a success." .Fortune's Yellow 5s the true name of the rose, nicknamed In California "Gold of Ophlr," "San Rafael Rose," "Requa Rose" and "Beauty of Glazenwood," and possibly some other names. - Prior to 1902 there were many rose bushes growing In Portland gardens. There were a few amateur rosarians who had fine collections, and an occasional rose show was held in Portland. In De cember, 1901, I wrote an article, which was published in The Sunday Oregonian. suggesting and urging the planting of large numbers of rosebushes to make Portland beautiful for the Lewis and Clark Exposition in 1905. and for all time; and thus to give and to establish for Portland the name of the Rose City. The idea met with popular approval. Since then tens of thousands of rose bushes have been planted in Portland. Instead of lessening, the enthusiasm has Increased, until now there is hardly a garden or a front yard in Portland In which there are not roses growing, most of them being very choice varieties. Tha professional florists have assisted, and, in the Fall of each year, one can purehaso in Portland strong, dormant bushes of the choice new roses of that year's In troduction In Europe, as well as the best of the well-known varieties. No city in the United States has a more beautiful situation than Portland. It lies in a valley with high hills on th west, giving it a beautiful background. The Willamette River runs through Its center. To the east, to the north and to the south. In the distance, are the Cas cade Mountains, with their sublime. snow-clad peaks visible at Portland every clear day. Its people have a pride In their city. In its beauty, and in Its sur roundings. Portland Is proud of Its name. Rose City. The name betokens not only the delightful climatic condi tions,, particularly In the Summertime, but a people who, In this commercial age, are taking time to make Portland a home city a city beautiful. The grow ing of roses in Portland is not a fashion nor a fad of Its people. It Is a manifes tation of their pride in and of their love for their city. FREDERICK V. HOLMAN. story, told by M. B. Wells, has a human interest well developed. C. E. S. Wood writes attractively on "Portland's Feast of Roses." Hie article Is valuable for Its reminiscent vein. New books received: "The Victory." a collection of popular Sunday school songs edited by Charles H. Gabriel, 20 cents; and "Social Plans for Young People." by Chris tian F. Reisner, 7 cents (Jennings i lra ham, Cincinnati, CO. "Cowboy Lyrics," by P.obert V. carr (W. B. Conkey Co., Chi-' cago). "Stories of the Struggle." by Morris Wlnchevsky (C. H. Kerr Co.). "Materials and Methods of Flotlon." by Clayton Ham ilton (Baker 4 Taylor Co.). A graceful acknowledgment of the work Charles F. Warwick, ex-Mayor of Philadel phia, has accomplished In the literary world was made recently at a complimentary din ner tendered him by his many political and other friends in that city. Each guest was preuented with a copy of Mr. Warwick's "Danton and the French Revolution" In a special souvenir edition, handsomely bound and boxed, ehowing Mr. Warwick's portrait on the cover. Every copy wan signed by the author and was inscribed with the name of the recipient.