PORTLAND. ORE COX. Entered e Portland. Oregon. Portofflet Second-Clasj Matter. -- Sobscrlbtloa Batea Invariably In Advance. IBT MAIL.) Dally. Sunday Included, ona year.. Dally. Sunday Included, mix months..... Dally. Sunday Included, three montna... Dally. Sunday Included, one montn..... Dally, without Sunday, one year.. J-VJ Dally, without Sunday, six months..... Dally, without Sunday, threa montna... . Dally, without Sunday, ona montn -jj Weekly, one year 2 i0 Sunday, ona year ... Sunday and Weekly, ona year BT CARRIER.) Daily. Sunday Included, ona year. ' Dally. Sunday Included, ona montn . How t. Kemlt Send "1,mo"'T.; 4r, express order or personal check on your local bank. Sun.pi, coin " currency ra at the sender's risk. Glva postofflca addraaa in full, including county and state, t toWn-i- SS to &Sfi " .1 oP6o" 4 Tcenu. Forafan postage, double rate. -,w Eastern Ba4a Offla Verr. Conk lln New Tork. Brunswick building, cago. steger building. r. 8a Fr.m-l.co Office R. J. BldweU Co. T42 Market street. , European office No. 3 Regent street, n. W.. Loudon. BIXDAY, rK IS. 1M. rOHTLAND. TUB SEAT PARTY AND ITS CONSE QUENCES. The new party is practically sure to carry with it the Republican organiza tion in a number of states where Roosevelt men control, and by In dorsing the ticket already nominated there, to force the regular! to nom inate a new Republican ticket under another name or concede defeat. In state-: where the regulars control, the new party must name a new ticket. We may, therefore, have a chaotic condiUon, where the Republican ticket in some states will be really the Pro gressive ticket, and the Republicans will be called upon to vote under some new party name. The war begun by Bryan against Parker as temporary chairman of the Baltimore- convention presages a di vision among the Democrats, "which may prove as sharp as that existing among the Republicans. Refusal of any f the Presidential candidates to commit themselves for or against Parker is significant of their dread of antagonizing the conservative element which he represents. Bryan may lead a fight for radicalism as -elentless and careless of consequences as that made by Roosevelt. With him will be these ' who are either radicals by conviction or who believe the only hope of de feating Roosevelt Is to nominate more radical Democrat. Against him will be those who are conservative Democrats, either from conviction or selfish interest. It is hardly probable that, with three candidates in the field, any one of them could secure a majority of the electoral vote. The election would then be thrown into the present House, where the vote would be by states, each state having one vote. As has been pointed out In a previous article, the Republicans control Just half of the forty-elghi. state delegations, while the Democrats control twenty-two and two are tied. The Republican, states would probably be divided between Roosevelt and his Chicago-named op ponent, while the Democratic states might divide also on conservative and radical lines. Should party lines not be broken, no party could secure a majority and a vacancy In either of the tied states Maine and Nebraska would make an election to fill it if transcendent Importance, as the choice of President would hang upon the re sult. Should no such vacancy occur, a deadlock might ensue and the un precedented situation might arise of a President holding over until the new Congress had organized and elected his luccessor. The break-up of parties, which promises to be the consequence of the action of Roosevelt and his followers, and the grave contingencies which may arise amply fulfill the prediction of those who said, when Roosevelt was nominated for Vice-President, that he would wreck the Republican party. He may do more he may K-reck both parties. A SESSEUESS BTRIKK. The I. W. W. strike on, the North western Electric Company's dam across White Salmon River above Un derwood, Wash., has been broken, not because of any concession to alleged grievances by the employing company, but because the men, recognizing the futility and Injustice tf their action, voluntarily returned to work. The strike was purely an I. W. W. -affair and was ordered on a few hours' no tice to the contracting company a few days after agitators from the disturb ing organization had gained a foot hold in the camp.. There was no hint of dissatisfaction among the men, either as to wages or hours; the food furnished was abundant and of good quality. The men went out, fearing violence from the disturbing element if they refused, and went back when protection was assured them. This story in duplicate has been told time and again throughout the country, no section where large indus trial projects are in progress or are being undertaken having escaped from the menace and annoyance of one of these senseless strikes. Perth Amboy, New Jersey, the seat of the greatest smelting business in this country, has been within a week the scene of se rious rioting Incited by I. W. W. or ganizers. The regular labor unions are opposed to this strike, If the riot into which it developed can. be so called, and the general public has not been informed as to the nature of the grievances which the employes tf the large smelters may have. At tempts were made to destroy this very valuable plant in a spirit of pure wan tonness. Had they succeeded, not only the rioters but many workingmen, who are opposed to the strike would have been left for long perhaps altogether without employment of this kind. It is considered most unlikely that the ameltlna- lndustrv would be re vived at that point in its present form" if its plant were wrecked. Compe tition in this business is sharp and its establishment calls for the Investment of a very large sum of money. As estimated by the New Tork Commer cial no efficient smelter can be built at the present time for less fhan a million dollars, and as the products are sold In all the large markets of the world, much of the matte and concentrates now treated at Perth Amboy could be sent across the ocean to Swansea, Wales, where smelters which compete direct?, with the Perth Amboy plant are situated. The I. W. W. agitators do not of course understand the questions tha. underlie large industrial enterprises and encourage heavy investments. Their only purpose Is to create dis turbance in the labor world, and they find, as at Perth Amboy, an element of foreign labor that is very unre liable and easily influenced by design ing men. Too ignorant to comprehend the distinction between liberty and license they do not realize that free dom of action in this country must stop short of destroying the property or taking the goods of others, with or without the taking of, and always with a menace to, human life. They know only the rule of force backed by armed soldiers when trouble arises. The fact that they are ni checked at the first sign of disorder by bayo nets or Cossacks encourages them to a still further disregard of authority. For these and othr reasons the Jour nal quoted is of the opinion that large manufacturing concerns ara relying too much on a class of people whom they cannot handle under the luws and customs of this country and whom the L W. W. ajltators find It easy to incite to violence. FAILING TO TAKE THE BAIT. Ingenious press agents,, crafty pro moters and picturesque camp follow ers have been striving earnestly for some time past to give a world's cham pionship atmosphere to a test of fistic skill between one Jack Johnson and one Jim Flynn. The event Is sched uled for July 4 at Las'Vegc:. N. M. Sporting doctors and ' paid doctors have shouted upon Johnson's bad form and possibilities of losing, but their efforts are air too obvious of purpose. The t.ffalr is so hopelessly one-sided, in all appearances, that the press agent yarns have failed to change the public belief to that effect. For once the public has failed ' to take the bait and run with it in what has every appearance of a monumen tal bunco. The Intended victims have scented the subtle wiles of a motion picture drama devised by getr-rich-qulck promoters. .That Johnson, mas ter brute, can eliminate for a con siderable period of time Flynn's con tinuity of thought with a single im pact of his ponderous fist is doubted by few, if any. It is improbable that Flynn doubts It. Even If Flynn should win, he would get small credit for it. If widespread forecasts are to be relied upon. The possibilities of a return engagement by the two men, apparently equally matched, are tremendous from the promoter's standpoint, provided the public is not too suspicious. The public Is still gullible, but ex cessive subtlety of craft Is required to separate it from large sums of money In these days of many get-rich-quick schemes. The promoters of the John-son-Flynn affair must already realize this fact. The staging of fakes Is characteris tic in. this unwholesome "sport." It does not appear that that phase of the Immorality of prizefights is diminishing. ST. PATJI. AND WOSSX. . A lively discussion has arisen in the Eastern press as to the continuing validity of St. Paul's prohibition against women's preaching. What the apostle actually said was. ."Let your women keep silence in the churches, for it is not permitted unto them to speak, but they are commanded to be under obedience." This dictum Is con tained In his first letter to the Cor inthians. Again, in his first letter to Timothy, Paul Inserts substantially the same injunction. "Let the women learn in silence with, all subjection. But I suffer not a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence." Moreover the great apostle had a reason for his poor opin ion of woman's ability and his scorn for her rights. "For Adam," he says, "was first formed, then Eve. And Adam was not deceived, but the wom an being deceived was in the trans gression." -The latter part of this ar gument reminds one of the habitual logic and accuracy of the modern "antis." . As a matter of fact, Adam was deceived, quite as much so as Eve, but while it required all the wiles of Satan himself to beguile her, Adam was led astray without any particular difficulty by the woman. The New Tork Independent, which discusses this subject very gravely, is of the opinion that St. Paul's prohibi tion against women, had only tem porary validity. "Paul does not now forbid it," the Independent declares. "He only forbade It then," that is, in his own day. This reasoning resem bles that of the church members who wish to shirk the Lord's command to turn the other cheek and to give up our coats when anybody swindles us out of our cloaks. "He only meant it for those times." they plead. It was all very well for people to give up their coats and cloaks when they had only one or two at most, but in these days when many of us have a dozen or so it would be intolerable. The Lord could not possibly have wished such a hard command to apply to modern Christians. There is not a spark of evidence that St. Paul meant his prohibition to be merely tempo rary. It is perfectly clear, on the con trary, that he Intended It to be per manent. The argument by which he tries to clinch his command is Just as valid, or invalid, now as it ever was. If it was true In his day that Adam was "first made," it is true 'now, and if woman's being the first to eat the ap ple condemned her to silence then, why should It not now? Anybody -who seeks to base the liberty of women to talk, think and vote upon the writings of Paul is liable to get into serious dif ficulties. ' The truth of the matter Is that the apostle to the Gentiles was a misogy nist. He never married and he thought it would be a great deal better if no other men should marry.- "I say, therefore, to the unmarried and wid ows," he writes in the same letter to the Corinthians, from which we quoted a moment ago, "it is good for them if they abide, even as I." In other -words, he counsels celibacy. Not only did he dislike women as a sex, but he believed that it would be an excellent thing for the human race to cease to propagate Itself so that the world would be depopulated. This, In his opinion, was the easiest and speed. lest way of eradicating sin. As long as men continued to be born he be lieved that the larger part of them, by far the larger part, would end their career in the lake of Are and brim stone. Hence it would be infinitely better for them never to be born at all. We can understand, therefore, why he looked upon marriage as so undesira- ble even apart from his unconquerable dislike of women. This dislike did not include all women, for he had a num ber of warm friends of that sex, but. taken as a class, he could not. away with them..- The thought of hearing them talk In public was especially hateful to him. No doubt there were excuses for his unchlvalrlc feeling. The women of the ancient world were not very well educated as a rule. This waa notably the case In Greece and more in Cor inth, perhaps, than in other Greek cit ies. Corinth was notoriously . given over to luxury and the women among the little band of Christians there were forever falling from grace and back sliding to heathenism. Probably not one of them could tell how far it was from Athens to Sparta, or work a sum In the rule of three. They were empty-headed, vapid, giddy creatures, on the same intellectual and moral plane ah a woman of the modern self-styled aristocracy. Who would want to see one of the latter mount a pulpit, fol lowed by her poodle dog, and begin to hold forth?. It was a certain kind of woman, we perceive, whom St.' Paul forbade to preach, namely, the woman with 'an empty head and a slippery tongue. The Greeks never permitted their females to go to school or take any part In public life. They were confined to the "home" as closely as they are In modern Turkey, and naturally became nothing better than insipid simpletons. Pericles, who was one of the best of the Greeks, could not stand it to pass an evening with his silly butterfly of a wife.. He chose Instead to visit As pasla, who had some sense even if she was deficient In virtue. Socrates was another Greek whose wife was nothing but a tribulation to him. ' She could scold, but she could not think. So he shunned her society and talked philosophy- with the boys on the street corner. Who can blame St. Paul for not wanting to hear sermons from such women as Xanthippe? And we must remember that she was an Athenian and probably far superior to the women of Corinth whom the apos. tie had particularly in mind when he wrote his letter. Had Paul enjoyed the privilege of knowing a woman like Dr. Anna Shaw or Mrs. Carrie Chap man Catt is it conceivable that he would have refused to sit under their preaching? No, indeed. He would have relished the opportunity highly for Paul, with' all his idiosyncrasies, was a man of sound sense and culti vated mind. He was a woman hater, as we have said, but we must bear in mind that it was women of the simple ton, doll-baby type whom he hated. Had he happened to meet a sensible woman he would have altered his views of the sex. But, unhappily, the ancient world afforded him no such piece of good fortune. He fell in with a kind-hearted saint or two in the course of his wanderings, but there is nothing to show that they were su perior to their sisters as far as intelli gence Is concerned. ' TTJVrvATTNn OUB MURDERERS. Let us put aside mawkish sentimen tality and idealistic theory and con alder the death penalty calmly in the light of facts that experience has de veloped. Murder Is the result of an unbal anced condition of mind. There can be no exceptions to this rule. Every murderer, fully examined, reveals the stigmata of mental unsoundness. Even If the murder Is committed under the so-called unwritten law, the perpetra tor is victim of intense emotionalism fostered, it is unfortunately true, by environment and precedent which sweep aside his powers of Inhibition. Murders by criminals are due to moral degeneracy in one of its several stages and all types of murderers may be readily classified by the alienist.. While it Is true that any murderer is mentally unstable. It does not fol low, of course, that Insanity can right ly be pleaded in mitigation. The law refuses to throw down the bars to the multitude of the psycho neuroses that are first cousin to insanity. It insists upon insanity as a -positive condition of Inability to adjust one's self to sur roundings. Men suffering from tem porary lapses of the Intricate human mind are more often than not re garded at the bar as normal human beings. And it is in this category that most of our murderers are found and with whom there is but one ef fective deterrent strong inhibitions provided by outside agencies. Fear of death is the greatest of these deter rents, if not the only real effective one. - - . Take, for example, the man who is moved to violence under the "unwrit ten" law. If he is well poised men tally his strong emotions will not sweep him into the way of murder. But if he Is not well balanced, as an unbelievable number of men are not, then precedent has paved the way for him and fails to bolster up his faltering sanity. He knows" there is every likelihood of escape and ends by constituting himself Judge, Jury and executioner of his victim. - Suppose this same man realized, as the result of his experience of life, that such an act meant his own elimi nation. How strong an inhibition would that prove to him? The tide of his aroused emotions would be stemmed, in many instances, by the powerful basic instinct of self-preservation. His instability of character, his temporary loss of balance, would bt modified. And so fear of death has bee" gauged as the great deterrent to men whose balance is capable of being toppled into murderous Impulses. It cannot always serve,' because in some forms of murder society all but gives passive approval, while in others the perpetrators have been lost to every restraining Influence. Just why we should continue in existence these hapless creatures who yield to mur derous impulses is not quite clear out side the realm of simpering senti ment. If liberated what reason is there to believe they "will not repro duce their unstable kind to carry murder Into a succeeding generation? Caging them up for life leaves them no opportunity for carrying out a use ful, wholesome life, and takes away their only remaining value service In strengthening the deterrent against similar acts by their kind. EOGGED-OFF LANDS. There Is a large area of logged-off lands in the Pacific Northwest that awaits clearing in the Interest of agri. culture. ' Of this area Oregon claims a goodly share. That such lands when properly brought under the plow are more than ordinarily productive, is a fact that has been fully established in many sections by farms thus reclaimed that yield most excellent returns In fruits, grasses, grains and vegetables. The first cost of these- lands is small as compared with that of open or pral. rle lands. The cost of clearing them varies according to circumstances and to the means employed. Labor with the mattock, the shovel and the torch, according to pioneer methods of clear ing brush or grubbing land Is not con. sldered in clearing these logged-off lands, though in some Instance farms of considerable area have been cleared In this manner, a few acres a year, by the sturdy farmer and his growing sons. - ' ' - This process, however, is at best a slow one and one likely to discourage boys with farm work. Other methods are -those of the stump-puller, char pitting, the use of dynamite and blast ing powder, all of which may be em ployed by the settler himself. Whatever method of clearing is pur. sued, however, the land thus ocened t agriculture is of the. very best. It Is enriched by untold years or leai-moia. and later by the ash and charcoal from the first tract; whatever method is used in clearing. Is. always a factor in getting rid of the waste of the forest flora. That millions of acres of land now uncultivated will be added to the cultivated area within the next quar ter or third of a century Is certain. Of course, this means that homes will dot these now desolate wastes; that orchards will thrive and grain and grasses will yield a large surplus to agriculture; that stock raising will be revived and dairying will flourish, both as side lines in farming and as inde pendent industries over vast stretches of these now blackened and profitless lands. Road building must accompany. If It does not In a measure precede, the clearing of these lands and the estab lishment of homes thereon. Without this the Isolation of many of the fine tracts of land is complete and the pros pect for home-building and community growth remote; with roads and mar ket assured, the investment of thou sands of acres of these lands becomes a matter of relatively a few years. MRS. HAWTHORNE. The death of Mrs.' Rachel Louise Hawthorne severs another link be tween an early era of Oregon's his tory and the present. The name of Dr. Hawthonie Is identical with the first effort mads in the Pacific Northwest to segregate and care for the Insane. Prior to this effort, the relatively few Insane of "regon Ter ritory were confined in solitude and wretchedness by their terrified friends or relatives in rooms or cabins rudely constructed for . that purpose. The establishment of the insane asylum in East Portland, first as a p:'vate ven ture and afterward as merged into the State Asylum was the work of Dr. Hawthorne and his companion physi cian. Dr. Loryea. The story is a familiar one and whether is is regarded as a philan thropy, a professional venture or a business enterprise, or all three com bined, as it probably was. Its establish ment reflects- credit upon the name of Hawthorne and Its management laid the foundation of the ample fortune that he left at his death to his wide- but now deceased. Mrs. Hawthorne was of strong men tality and of pronounced views upon matters of public and private philan thropies. Family sorrows and bodily Infirmities pressed heavily upon her In her later years, but she remained to her last a woman of steadfast pur pose and strong personality. ' She leaves many friends, who knowing her good qualities of mind and heart sympathized with her in her many sorrows and bodily infirmities and who mourn her death, as the break ing of a strong link between East Portland, past and present. A PROBLEM IX LAND-CLEARING. One of the problems In clearing our cut-over lands Is the disposition of the roots and small trees and brush, and it would seemthat the logical way to get rid of these Is by the use of some sort of a machine for pulling them from the ground and hauling them Into convenient piles for burning. For this purpose what is known as a stump puller Is usually resorted to, such ma chines being operated by horse or steam power. The most of the pullers on this market are built to work by horse power, and those who have paid the closest ' attention to the subject are of the opinion that there is too much loss of time and too great risk in having the horse or horses step over the cable, as must be done. A horse will not step oyer a cable at a height of two feet and keep up a steady pull. So at each round it is necessary to ungear and allow the cable to fall, then pass the horse over and take a fresh start. This takes a good deal of time, eating up about one-half of the power. It is, therefore, expensive to use the horse-power machines. Those run by steam power are, however, also open to many objections, on? of the chief being the securing of water to run it, and also the expense of cutting the fuel. Aside from these objections as to power, all of the machines on the market have more or less short comings as to strength. All of them are. strong enough In spots, so to speak, but you can hardly find one of these, machines in practical use that does not frequently break down, some being weak in one place and others in another. And none of them is just the right thing when i. comes to speed. The same speed cannot always be maintained. On a stump ten Inches in diameter, say, there Is naturally a hard pull, and It must be made at a slow speed; In pulling roots the speed should be somewhat faster, and In Jerking in brush it can be still faster but there must be no Jerking, just a jteady pull. None of the machines now offered can be thrown from one gear to an other with the quickness needed to make it a money-maker, say to change from 1000 feet a minute down to twenty-five feet. But the logical machine should be adapted to even great., t changes than that made Instantly by a mere twist of the hand. It would seem that gasoline Is the logical fuel to use, the engine to be placed on skids, self-moving, and arranged to' handle three cables, easy of adjustment from one speed to another. The horse power should be about twice what you ex pect to call upon the machine for. The puller Itself should be made very strong fully three times as strong as a scientific calculation calls for. Breakdowns are very expensive while the work Is going on, and anything that will keep these down to the mini mum is cheap in the end. - It will be said that a machine so constructed would cost more than the average land-clearer could pay. There are various answers to that objection. The first is that a low-priced stump puller Is always dear In the end; one That would run day in and day out, month after month and year after year, without loss of ' time by break downs,' one that would "yank" out anything it was hooked to, would be cheap at any reasonable cost, even three or ffur times the price of a cheap and easily broken one. - But the final answer Is that the stump puller should be a community owned machine. No ordinary land owner has use for such a. machine more than a few weeks In a year; his co-owners and neighbors should so ar range as to keep It running practically all the time. And if the machine Is properly constructed, as the machine of the future must be, one neighbor hood would not wear It out, and it could be sold to another. With the proper sort of community-owned ma chine land-clearing will not only be shorn of some of its terrors, but the cost will be reduced 110 or $15 an acre.- One of our prominent land owners. one who has made a close study of charpittlng and other clearing, is now centering his attention on a machine built along the lines mentioned, and that he will at least go several steps forward there is no doubt. But it may be some of the present manufacturers . will change their tactics from a cheap machine which they aver any man wrltn a. fo.w acres of land can afford to own, to one of vast power and easily- changed gear, with gasoline power, which will be offered to large owners and communities at a fair value. , , SUMMER READING. When a person speaks of Summer reading he is usually supposed to mean something more insipid than or dinary trash. There is a special kind of fiction which is believed to be ex pressly adapted to the state of the human intelligence in wan weather. The action Is slow and languorous. The morality tastes like stewed dried apples. The sentiment flows with the gentle viscosity of tepid molasses. There are -certain fixed rules which writers of Summer novels must ob serve with the stricte.t rigor if they hope to see their productions sell well. One of the rules is that no hammock or sea shore novel must ever stir the reader's mind to activity. There must be no appeals te the intelligence. The conscience must te lulled to a soft and voluptuous slumber. The plot. If it exists, must be one that is known by long acquaintance and frequent use to be dull enough to woo clumber in tho middle of the afternoon and the literary style must he of that mild and saccharine kind which soothes the nerves without nauseating the stom ach. The Summer novel is, like our Federal Constitution, a thing of checks and balances. It must be sweet but not cloying, silly but not idiotic, sentimental but not impassioned. We can perceive from these re .uirements what a difficult art it is to compose an Ideal work of Summer fiction. Difficult as the art may ve It does not surpass the powers of thousands of our young women. If anybody thinks of denying that th- American people are artistic by nature he is In vited to behold the affluent stream of Summer fiction whicu pourt from the great publishing houses of the metrop olis. There is scarcely a graduate from any high school In the country who does not feel perfectly competent to write a hammock novel which shall become a best seller as soon as it leaver the press. Just what the num ber of our great mistre.--j of this kind of fiction is nobody seems to know precisely t it must be very large. Every family contains at least one genius of thU variety nd many ar blessed with two. Few men shine in the production. of the genuine va riety of Summer fiction. The art sue. ceeds best in the han;.. of women and the qualifications which fit one of the fair sex to produce a mar -et conquer. lng hammock novel are so well known that there is but little need to re count them. She must be a young girl so that her mental rieture of the various passions shall not have been blurred by reality. She must have a mind unspoiled by education and a hand which has never demeaned itself to help mother do out a washing or mend little : brother's trousers. The perfect Summer novelist -o like her books, soft, soothing -and silly. Why this sort of literature is as sumed to be ideally adapted for Sum mer reading we do not understand precisely. As far as we have been able to observe a person who has any com mon sense in Winter seldom loses all of It in Summer. He retains at least enough to enjoy books which exhibit traces of intelligence. If it be ex plained that what Is called "Summer reading is intended to rest the mind we reply that rest does not flow from folly. The books which best relax a mind that possesses enough ability to get tired are thoso which say some thing amusing or stimulating in an original way. The only type of mind which could possibly enjoy a ham mock novel .is one which is too feeble ever to grow wea,ry through exertion. Nor do we understand why it is so commonly assumed th.U nobody wants to read anything.bljt noveli In Sum mer. Why should a person who rel ishes history ' suddenly lose all his taste for It as soon as the sun ap proaches the Summer solstice? If a person enjoys books of travel in De cember why should they nauseate him in July? Is it really true that a per son who likes to follow the advance of scientific knowledge ceases to care anything for It as soon rt the weather grows warm? In out opinion the title "Summer reading" is a misleading one. People who like to read vapid books in Summer want the same kind in Winter, and those who enjoy sane literature when the weather is cold retain the game taste when it is warm. Apparently .the Portland Public Li brary holds opinions on this subject which are not unlike those of The Oregonian. It has prepared a list of novels for general reading which is not changed with the seasons. The same books which are good at Christ mas are supposed to be good in Au gust. Dickens does not lose his savor as the thermometer rises, .icott tells a story Just as well at one time of the year as at another. The library list Includes "a hundred good novels." The reader will note with satisfaction that it does not pretend to name "the one hundred best novels." What is really best In the realm of fiction is a ques tion upon which we may dispute for ever, but there Is substantial agree ment among intelligent people as to what Is good. Readers ought not to be prejudiced against the library list because It includes "classics.". The common belief that "classic" books are invariably dry and wearisome is an er ror. Dullness is not a prerequisite to literary fame. The novt's which have stood the test 6f time have done so because they were inter-ting more than for any other reason. It Is not their stupidity which saves the. a from oblivion but their wit and humor, their plot, character drawing and lively ac- tlon. George Meredith's novels are the only ones in the library list which can by any twist of ingenuity be called "hard reading" an the fact that his are difficult does not In crease their merit by any j :ans. As a rule the great novels are quite as easy to understand as .the silly ones. Often they are easier since stu. pldlty Is apt to make greater drafts than wit on one's intelligence. Good books are far more enjoyable than foolish ones, from the very fact that they exercise the mind. The best va cation for the body is not obtained by lying in bed for a month and, on the same principle, the best rest for the brain comes with a change of activity not with a lapse into coma. The Oregonian for once was the vic tm nf misnlaced confidence in Orearon weather. . It predicted, with a show of certainty, that the powers of the air would be mindful of the infirmities and crenerously regardful of the antlcl- narlnne anrt rnmfort Of the Pioneers by granting a fair and balmy June day for their annual reunion. This esti mate was predicated partly upon me fact that only the week before the rain had fallen at intervals day after day Tne fiHnw And its merry- makers, the logical conclusion being that as rain was needed, tve younger folk could stand wnat inconvenience nnn.A . ,an.hini. hAttpr than the older folk who came to the pioneer lesuvai. jvna 10 ana oejium, it . lest rain of the year fell In the after noon of pioneer day! . The Oregonian protests its 'good intentions in this unfortunate prognosis of bright skies onrt .aim.. v.Aroa fnp Tiitia SO. and humbly acknowledges that it was for this-once the victim or mispiacea con fidence. ' A FAMILIAR SLOGAN AND ITS MESSAGE Mr. William C. Brown,- president of the New Tork Central an I Hudson River Railroad, Is the originator of that oft-repeated slogan, "Back to the Farm." It was no empty cry with him, as under it he launched a cam paign for the repopulatlon of the de serted farms throughout the interior of New York that has brought forth excellent results, in that much aban doned acreage is being refilled and many deserted farm houses have been restored to a habitable condition and are alive with family life. . Figuring from census reports as well as from personal observation, Mr. Brown finds that during the last ten years the acreage devoteti to agricul ture in the UrJted States has increased 23 per cent and agricultural products 30 per cent, while consumption of agricultural products during the same period has Increased SO per cent. In other wordsr the lnwrease in consump tion is almost three-times as great as the increase In acreage and almost twice as great as the increase in pro duction! This is certalrl" an alarm ing presentment of the rapidity with which consumption of the products of the farm is overtaking production. In this view the Blogan "Back to the Farm" finds added emphasis. Not by blindly moving but upon uncultivated areas and bringing thei slowly and toilsomely under cultivation, but by a purposeful, intelligent and, to an ex tent at least, a return to farming as a means of livelihood and of produc ing each year an increase in the sur plus products of the land. While admitting that the Agricul tural Bureau at Washington has ren dered the farmers great assistance, Mr. Brown says that the hope of our coun try Is in our agricultural colleges. since the territory is too wide for any one institution cover. Specifying he says: Such lnatltutlona aa the agricultural cot lesea of Illlnoia. Wisconsin, Iowa and that at Cornell have done wonderful work and each year they are equipping young men and women for the task of taking hold of land long since worked to death and re juvenating It and reaping from it big and marketable crops. That la what we must look forward to. Every year, I am glad to say, the classes In the agricultural col leges are fuller and each year the acope of the work la broadened, and when graduat ing day comes a splendid corps of men and women go forth to scientifically treat old and worn out soil and under their ex Derienced hands crive It life and a produc ing power far beyond the fondest dreama of the farmer of the old school. I pin my faith to the farmer. That is, the farmer who really and scientifically farms.- V hen ha rnmu into hia own city dwellers will reap the benefit as well as the tiller of the soil. Iu this view we may well regard with pride and hope the lagge class of graduates sent out from the Oregon State Agricultural College last week a replica in constantly Increasing numbers of preceding years. Not be cause we have in Oregon any number of abandoned farms or indeed any farms of that class to rejuvenate, but because many of our still occupied but long and unscientifically tilled farms badly need the intelligence of applied agriculture to bring back their wasted powers of production, while large areas of land still in a state of nature lie idle, awaiting well directed indus try to make them yield their quota to the surplus o' agricultural products required to feed the masses who live and toil in other lines, at prices which their industry will enable them to meet, without exactions that leave them nothing for the proverbial rainy day fund. The response to the slogan "Back to the Farm" by men with bare hands and without knowledge of the details of farming, and of women who. lack strength and energy that are neces sary requirements in the successful Wife of a successful farmer, will add neither to the happiness nor comfort of those who answer the call; nor yet will it increase the desired surplus of agricultural products. Intelligent farming, together ith economy, courage and persistence, may be depended upon to create the need ed balance between supply and demand that must be reached if the cost of living is to be i educed, ora?ven if it Is prevented from going higher. "Main strength and awkwardness," formerly supposed to be sufficient to 'make a man a successful farmer, are now wholly Inadequate to meet the demands of the agricultural situation. Farming has become a science and only to the extent that It Is so recog nized will the slogan "Back'' to the Farm" call to happiness and . pros perity on the land those who- elSsay it and at the same time offer a degree of relief to the masses who foil in other occupations from the high cost of living. The Democratic candidates are as prone as the Republicans to claim more delegates In the aggregate than there will be in the convention. The surplus probably represents the num ber of those who have promised their votes to more than one man. Delegates Coe and McCusker were separated on the verge of a .test of flstio, skill. Somebody's always spoil ing something. A detailed account by rounds would have made an interest ing addition to the convention reports. While Americans are . holding tumultuous conventions, the Chinese National Assembly "comports itself with strict propriety," as though It were experienced at legislation. The world already Is rushing in ad vance orders on Oregon's choice apple crop. Next thing there'll be a wait ing list of eager buyers. - The visit of the battleship Oregon to Portland will be a climax to the attractions of Elk week. Were ail railroad contractors like M. J. Heney,, there would t? a stam pede to work for them. Bryan has packed hisNpress pencil and unsheathed his scalplng-knife. Aren't we ever going to hear the last of these Thaws! A new party will be wholly ex-parte. Scraps and Jingles By Leone Caaa Baer. Well, you'd expect a leap year to have a little more Spring in it, now wouldn't you? - T fiction deteriorating?" "Esther" writes to ask. Certainly not stnee the campaign started. Every son of Adam cherishes a desire to own his own latch key. a It's a wise man who knows his own station in these days of crowded street cars. Definition of impossibility an ugly baby. www It was a plagiarist, I'll bet, who first said: . "Second thoughts are best." e Not affected by climate a woman's age. Extravagance took a taxlcab to look after a streetcar. Hele-hth of gallantry kissing a woman who has eaten onions. www r,...vhlnr In' connection with the business of a tailor is done at a fit ting time. Market report says: ' "Indigo looks blue." -KVn.tit.ia AnAKn't vinit a. lot of us be cause we do nothing to Invite her in. "Lunatic dies at the age of 98," reads a headline, which brings to mind the old proverb: "Cracked vessels last longest." -.. (With Apologies to Mother Goose.) Hiccupy, hicoupy, hock, I love the season of Bock. So fill your glass ' And let it pass. Hiccupy, hiccupy, hock. . Bibulous gent in jail appropriately tried to cut his Jug. Jug-ular vein. e - The greatest architect of air castles is T. O. Morrow. In the fine art of politics Theodore progresses fast. For in each new endeavor . He still goes beyond the last. "We want justice. How long shall w havn to wait?" is the unfortunately chosen slogan of the striking waiters in New York. ' BT ANNIE BODY AN ATHLETE. When the seats In the car. All close packed are Each morn as I ride Into town Some nice man I find. "With manners moat kind Gets up and lets me sit down. In feigned surprise, I smile Into his eyes, ... And as he bows and raises his hat, I know Just the same Every strap-hanging dame Mentally calls me a designing cat. Though I'm way a-paat twenty I've graces a-plenty And charm the essential that pays Hand-painted eyes And looks that are wise . . . Stand no chance with my modest weighs, I smile at 'em tender As their seats they surrender, And sit enthroned at my ease. And the strap-hanging damas Can call me bad names For Into a seat every time I can squeeze. (P s. For I weigh 250 pounds, and I'd Just like to see the shrimp who won't give me a seat when I get In a car. I d knock his block off, and he knows It, too,. Just to show him what kind of a lady I am.) Man has Invented an organ without a stop. Huh, the Lord beat him to it when he gave the organ of speech to woman. . Mexican politician and his allies bar ricaded themselves in a booth and tossed out of a window the dead body of a delegate sent to interview tnem . the opposition party. Now, in a United States political convention this would be Illegal. Political Vaudeville By Dean Collins. The daily paper Bald to me: "The talk of bolting Is no more. And silence has come down on those Whom they have run the roller o'er; The great convention will, proceed Unto its close with tact and speed. Now all things are as they should be." The daily paper said to me. Unto my inner self I sighed. After the paper I had read; "Hearken, my soul. Didst get the drift Of what the daily paper said? If wild confusion reign no more Upon the great convention floor. Soon will the big show end and roll The curtain down," I told my soul. I wept into my coffee cup: "It was a bully show, indeed. I hate to see things smoothing out And moving with unhampered speed. Too soon, if things proceed so fast 'Twill be a mem'ry of the past. I hate to see the show wind up," I sobbed into myycoffee cup. My soul, in accents sad, replied: "I liked the turmoil and the fuss; I liked to see the roller roll. And calmly smear away the muss. To hear the groans and cries for help. Hear Heney paw the air and yelp. I hate to see the big show close," Thus my sad soul proclaimed its woes. The daily papers spake once more: "Cheer up, the show is but begun. See the big dust toward Baltimore, Kicked up by Bryan, on the run. Chicago's turn, indeed, may quit. But Baltimore's will follow it. And we. shall Joy our spirits still . O'er the continuous vaudeville. Portland, June 22. Onions Uoueht From Indiana. Eugene Register. A family arrived yesterday from Indiana and they were typical Hoosiers. Among other things they carried as luccaxe were two five-gallon, Bquare coll oil cans with the tops cut out and wire balls for carrying, filled with screen Winter onions with the tops Just Ketting ready to go to seed. The lady of the party "'lowed they mightn't have any onions like these in Oregon," and they brought them start along with them. They will locate in Eugene, Commencement Days. When the Hurly-burly's Done. Roscoe Gllmore Stott, In Judge. CREDITS. Three broken hearts (since mended), 23 badly-used text-books, 1 sheepish skin. , 10 lil-aeserved testimonials. 1 thesis tnever read by anybody), 5 Latin words S German Idioms. 10 French oaths (for dally use), 1 prospective job at tea per, 26 pennants oc brilliant hue, 1 fraternity pin. And , . Sixty-eight cents In real cash. DEBITS. . One lost heart. . . $2U to bookstore, '. J10 to college registrar, 10 notes of thanks, r ' $3 to my roommate, JD0 to my Latin tutor. J3 to my German tutor, $1.5 to my French helper, . -. ' $25 to employment agency, 2d pennanta for exchanged onea, - $10 borrowed from friend Therefore I cry. Does an education pay!