6 THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, .TTJXTC 18. 1916. TO KTr.AND. OKEGOS. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postoffice a second-class mail matter. Subscription Kates Invariably in advance: - (By Mall.) Ially, Sunday Included, one year. .$8.00 Ually, Sunday Included, six months 4.5 Iaily, BuDday included, three months... 2.23 Iaily, Sunday included, one month 75 Xatly, without Sunday, one year. ...... .,6.00 lially, without Sunday, six months .3.25 Uaily, w ithout Sunday, three months... 1.75 Daily, without Sunday, one month...... .60 Weekly, one year.... l.SO Sunday, one year...................... 2.50 Sunday and Weekly, one year ...... 3.50 (By Carrier.) IaMy, Sunday included, one year 9.00 Xaily, Sunday Included, one month 75 How to Remit Send postoffice money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give postoffice addreas In full, including coanty and state. Fmlate Kate 12 to 16 pages, 1 cent; 18 to 32 pages, i: cents; 34 to 4S pages 3 cents; V to t pages 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages, 5 cents; 78 to 82 pages. 6 cents. Foreign postage, double rates. Eastern Bnfiiness Office Verree Sk. Conk lin, Brunswick building. New York; Verree 6 Conklin, Steser building, Chicago. San Francisco representative, K. J, Bldwell, 742 Market street. PORTLAND, SCSDAY, JUNE 18. 1916. THE RUSSIAN" OFFENSIVE. Verdun has ceased to be the main focal point of the great war and his tory is now in the making on the Austro-Russian front. The Russian offensive action, which opened June 4, has continued without reaction; and what might have been dismissed as a series of local actions is now accepted as a concerted forward move by Rus sia against the Austrians. The steady progress made to the west and south indicates that the armies of the Czar have been rehabilitated, that new courage, vigor and hope have been dif fused among the millions who, less than a year ago, were driven back in broken disorder. The recent capture of Lutsk and the taking of tens of thousands of Austrian prisoners show the temper of the Russian armies. They have appeared for battle not only with inexhaustible first-line men and reserves, but with every indica tion of an ample supply of munitions. In this respect the Czar's hosts are in striking contrast to the Russian forces of a year ago, when artillery rushed back with empty caissons and Infantry retreatetl with empty belts and bandoleers. The Teuton battle line in Russia, if Ehoved back a hundred miles from its recent position, would still leave the central powers at a great advantage over Russia. Poland lies in German clutches, the Teuton line in the north extending from the extreme south western shores of the Gulf of Riga al most due east to Friedrichstadt and thence in a southerly direction to the Pripet River in the vicinity of Pinsk. Von Hindenburg has his headquarters at Kovno, which is a good 100 miles back of the firing line and Kovno. in its turn,' is on a line 100 miles east of Warsaw. So if the Russians ever get around to the task of ex pelling Von Hindenburg they must force their way under fire over sev eral hundred miles of territory. However, the present offensive is directed against the Austrians alone from the point where the Austrians take up their sectors in the Pripet marshes on south to the Roumanian border. Lemberg is thought to be one important Russian objective, together with Czernovitz farther south, which the Russians struck at during the frigid weeks of January and now ap proach once more. This is less am bitious than the Russian drive against Cracow early in the war, but then the events and course of the war have made new strategies necessary. The Russians must overcome vast barriers in order to find themselves back in the positions they once occupied. No such thought as over-running Austria probably has occurred to the Russian commanders. The great drive has the aspect of being the first stage of a concerted strategy to isolate the field of Teuton operations and ac tivity. Capture of Bukowina, inva sion of Bulgaria through Roumania, reconquest of Serbia, isolation of Tur key and the exertion of pressure on u east which will enable the launch ing of a powerful allied offensive In France such are the possibilities of the Russian drive if it. succeeds, and doubtless those are the stakes in the great game now being played. If the Russians break through from Lutzk to the .Bukowina, Bulgaria will be seriously menaced and the allied forces in Saloniki can be launched in the tasks of forcing Turkey to its knees and of later occupying Serbia. No doubt the assembling of the Ser bian army remnant of 100,000 men in Saloniki with new equipment sent from, France was one of the minute details of preparation for the great coup now In process of development. These operations, it may be as sumed, were the product of that great allied conference in Paris last Winter. No doubt Lord Kitchener was on his way to the Russian front in connec tion with this same strategy when he went down with a British cruiser. It need not be surprising if a western allied offensive develops as a second or even as a part of the present stage of the movement. Certainly there is a. connection between the events of June'in the east and the desperate ef forts of the Crown Prince to break through at Verdun and gain the ad vantages of a great moral victory as well as a shortened German line. In General Brusiloff the Russians oppear to have found a leader suited to the demands of the enterprise now being carried forward. During the few days of June the name of Brusiloff has taken place with that of Petain and Von Mackensen in the popular mind. His brilliant attacks and his tenacious hitting suggest a command er who does not reckon with the cost in men, for the Russian losses must have been tremendous in pressing for ward over mile after mile of stubborn ly held territory. Brusiloff is a pop ular idol in Russia, although little had been heard of him by the world at large previous to the present offen sive. He is a cavalry officer, a vet eran of the Russo-Turkish War of 1S77, and while he is not rated as a deep student he is proving himself an able strategist and brilliant tactician. In the past Galician campaigns he commanded a wing of the Russian irmy with 300,000 men, but since then the mantle of supreme command has been given him. It is, of course, too early to estimate his genius as a com mander, but even the meager ac counts make it clear that he is ag gressive and willing to sacrifice heav ily In-order to break through. Not only has he kept pounding away, but the Russian advantages have been fol lowed up relentlessly at every point from which reports of contact have come. So far there have been no indica tions that the Germans have regarded the new Russian menace with alarm. There are no reports of German or Bavarian reinforcements from the north or south nor of the presence of Von Mackensen, past conqueror of the Russian armies, whose services might be looked to in a serious situa tion. But the action is in its early stages. If the Russian advantage per sists whence will the Teutons look for heavy reinforcements without weakening vital lines? Austria can ill afford to withdraw heavy forces from the Italian front. Drawing in of Teuton legions from southern cam paigns would advance Russian designs on the isolation of Turkey. Whether heavy forces can be withdrawn from the west, where the new British army has been assembled, is problematical. There is the possibility that the pres ent season will witness the develop ment of a highly important phase in the war; but even if the Russian plans succeed Germany will continue to hold vast territorial advantages. ' MR. BRYAN FORGETS HISTORY. Like other Democratic orators, Mr. Bryan is careless about the state ments of fact with which he supports his theories. He said at St. Louis: If President "Wilson yielded to the de mand of those who have clamored for intervention in Mexico, we would no sooner have crossed the line than the same men would tell him that the soldiers must never come out, for, my friends, annexation is the next step after Intervention has been undertaken. We intervened In Cuba in 18 98, but did not annex it; we handed it over to its own people for government. When it was torn by civil war, we again Intervened, but after putting its affairs in order we again, withdrew, leaving it to a government which the Cubans had organized in the mean time. During the Taft Administration we intervened in Nicaragua, but have not annexed that country. During the fifty years which intervened be tween our treaty with Colombia, guar anteeing free transit on the Isthmus, and the revolution in Panama, we re peatedly intervened In that country. but we have not yet annexed it. We Joined the other powers in interven tion in China in 1900, but we have not annexed one inch of Chinese territory. ine nearest approach to annexation since the Spanish War has been made by President Wilson in Haiti. He forced a protectorate on the black re public, taking charge of the custom houses and the police. The greatest act of annexation by force in our his tory was that of California and the Southwest after the Mexican War, and it was the work of the Democratic party. About the same time by a threat of war that party annexed the Oregon country. As annexers they take the medal among American parties. Not until President Cleve land scuttled from Hawaii did they begin to display any scruples about grabbing other people's territory. Either Mr. Bryan has neglected the study of American history or he is presuming upon such neglect by the American people. It will be the busi ness of the Republicans to enlighten the ..voters upon the historical facts which he has overlooked. THE DEMOCRATIC SLOGAN. The campaign slogan adopted by the Democrats, that President Wilson has kept us out of war, invites the inquiry at the outset, "What is war?' ar is not necessarily preceded "by a formal declaration; it is a series of acts of violence. Webster defines it as "the state or fact of exerting vio lence or force against another, not only against a state or other politi cally organized body." The President exerted force against Huerta at Vera Cruz and failed in his proposed purpose to compel Huerta to salute the American flag, though he succeeded in his actual purpose to assist Carranza in driving Huerta out of Mexico. Mr. Wilson exerted force against Haiti and compelled that republic to accept an American protectorate. He has recently exerted force against Santo Domingo In compelling that country to conduct its affairs as he dictated. ' He exerted force against Villa, but has failed in his purpose to capture or kill that bandit chief. Mr. Wilson has made four wars, two of which against Mexican factions have failed. His only successful wars have been against the diminutive re publics of Haiti and Santo Domingo. But these are not the only wars in which the United States has been en gaged under Mr. AVilson's Adminis tration. A state of war does not necessarily Involve resistance by one party to the violence of another, for Webster defines it as "the state or fact of exerting violence or force against another"; he says nothing about the exertion of opposing force by that other. Nor does war involve formal hostilities by one nation as a whole against another, for Webster says: As commonly classified, war between na tions or states la a public or international war. and this is called a perfect war when between whele states, and imperfect war when limited as to places, persons and things. All of the factions which have been carrying on war against each other in Mexico have at the same time made war on the United States by habitual) ly killing, maiming, imprisoning or robbing American citizens throughout the three years during which Mr. Wil son has been President. The United States made spasmodic retaliation against Huerta and is now making it against Villa, but the followers of Carranza and Zapata have made a one-sided war against us, in which we have not struck back except when our troops were treacherously attacked at Parral. This has been an "imperfect war, limited as to places, persons and things," but it has been war, never theless. Any unlawful attack by the armed forces of one country, or by the concerted action of its citizens with the countenance of its govern ment, upon the citizens and property of another, is war. It can- be taken, out of that category only when the offending country promptly disavows the act, punishes the perpetrators and makes amends to the offended nation. That course was taken by our Govern ment, when mobs murdered .Italians and Chinese. Applying the same definition of war, Germany made war on the United States during the year when submarines were killing American citizens and destroying their property at sea. Mr. Wilson's failure to re taliate and the limitation of his oppo sition to written protests make it none the less war. This one-sided war be gan with the killing of American pas sengers on the steamer Falaba, con tinued with the murder of hundreds on the Lusitania and other ships, and did not end until the Sussex and sev eral more ships carrying . Americans were torpedoed. Mr. Wilson inducer Germany to stop this war by saying in effect, after Germany had struck us repeatedly: "If you strike again, we are very likely to strike back." Nothing has yet been done to alter the fact that during the entire period of German attacks on American citi zens Germany was making war on the United States without resistance on our part. The German government has defended and assumed responsi bility for those attacks. It has of fered to compensate the-injured, but has not disavowed the acts nor pun ished their perpetrators. It has sim ply ceased to attack the United States through its citizens. Apologists for the Wilson Adminis tration probably refer to the Euro pean war when they boast that it has kept us out of war, but theit boasts are false. They may refer to the fact that Mr. Wilson has not intervened by armed force throughout Mexico, but there too their boast is false. He has retaliated ineffectively against our weakest enemies, but hag pursued a policy of non-resistance towards the strong. He has valiantly committed acts of aggression against . weak state like Haiti, but he has cowered before the might of Germany and of Carranza. Had he been a Quaker, had this been a Quaker nation and had he consistently followed the pol icy of non-resistance, he might have defended it as a matter of principle, but his interventions twice in Mexico and in Haiti and Santo Domingo de prive him of this defense. There are also limits to the non-resistance even of a Quaker. It is related that a stal wart member of that sect once visited a British warship and was accosted by a little whipper-snapper of an of ficer with the question: "If I were to slap your face, would you strike back?" The Quaker replied: "I would not strike thee, but I would shove thee overboard." Mr. Wilson has not even threatened to shove any Ger mans or Carranzistas overboard. THE SCRAWNY BOOK CROP. 'Literature is unable to look back upon a prolific or profitable year. The black twelve months of 1915 yielded a relatively small crop of books, and not any in the small crop stands out conspicuously as a work of art. No great poem, great novel or great drama fell from the pen of genius, and unless great virtue has escaped detection there is little to Indicate a single American book produced dur ing that period which will outlive its own jday and generation. The Bookman goes somewhat mournfully over the figures for the year, which have been compiled after some little delay. The falling off, as compared with 1914, reaches a total of 2276 books, which is an extensive library. The total output was 9734, the smallest in years. Historical books, inspired by the war and bearing upon that conflict, took something of a spurt, the gain over the preceding year being 2 04. But any history of current 'events written in the present hour must lack both perspective and facts. It can hardly find a place on permanent shelves, unless as an ex ample of how crude our views hap pened to be during the hours history was being moulded. The history of today will remain for future gen erations. Books of every other sort fell away in number. Religion and theology dropped from 1038 to 800. Education suffered a loss of 31; applied science and tech nology records a. deficit of 206 over 1914. Even law books dropped 100 per cent, while works of fiction fell from 1053 to 919. This might be forgiven if someone had written a great drama or novel or poem. A falling off in. the number of books might be interpreted as a hopeful sign, if the quality advanced. There are so many needless books printed by ambitious writers at ' pri vate expense that mere numbers need mean nothing. But when numbers fall and quality lags also, then the dedaction is not amiss that there is a deep-lying cause, and the cause is not difficult- to guess. It is the same cause that delays the progress of civ ilization in every other gentle field of endeavor these dark days. IS THE STAGE BEING SET? From the malodorous environs of Mexico come dismal rumblings. Noth ing new or unusual from that source; but Mexico's distracted affairs are ex citing an exceptional interest in Wash ington and there are evidences of a show of fight on the part of the Ad ministration. Carranza is to receive a note that, Judging from advance no tices, will make his venerable whis kers readjust themselves in emotion al ringlets. It was held up until the Wilson nomination had been an nounced and the campaign launched. It may go forward this week; possibly today. Just why it has been held up we are not permitted to know. Car ranza presented his demands for with drawal of American troops some weeks ago. But there are political af fairs In the United States as well as in Mexico. Carranza has been forced to wait. How is the sudden show of concern over Mexico to be explained? Three years of watchful waiting and spine less diplomacy have marked the Wil son course. Mexican affairs have been meddled in and muddled. We have presented ultimatums and delivered threats, taking sides first with one bandit leader, then with another. Wil son maaf personal war on the one man who showed any evidences of be. ing able to control the Mexican popu lace, Victoriano Huerta. American troops were landed at Vera Cruz un der a fire which claimed the lives of a score of American fighting men. But instead of going into Mexico City and settling the Mexican tumult once and for all the forces were withdrawn on one pretext and another. The Bryan Wilson A-B-C mediation farce was made use of to prevent one crisis. Thereafter the Administration dealt warily with Mexico, seeking to restore order and industry by high-flown diplomatic sermons. When the safety of American citizens, who have been slain ruthlessly by the hundreds, de manded harsh words, disregard of these demands by the Mexicans was not followed up by show of force or insistence. When the Wilson meddling in Mex ico reached the stage of interfering as between brawling bandits and the smiles of the Administration were centered upon Carranza as against the erstwhile pet Villa, bandit contempt for American impotence culminated in the series of raids into American territory which have not ceased. Goaded by the attack on Columbus and the restlessness of the American people, a puny force was assembled and the first tangible action taken. Expeditions were directed against Villa with instructions to run him to J earth. Of course, our troops must not enter towns nor must they proceed south of a given point. - Now the displeasure of the Admin istration shifts to Carranza. A diplo matic Jolt has been prepared for that proud Latin-American which is cal culated to put him into a fighting mood. We told him a few weeks ago that the American troops would not tarry long in Mexico. Now we are telling him that these troops will stay until the United States feels disposed to withdraw them. Incidentally, a fresh- crop of alarming stories is per- mitted to emanate from Mexico. It is safe to assume that conditions in Mexico- are about the same as they have been for the past two or three years. With utter chaos prevailing, conditions could not get any worse. As for killing and threatening Amer ican citizens, that has been a daily pastime of the Mexicans for the past three or four years. So what is the significance of this sudden alarm and concern at Washington, this sudden fever of preparation for "eventual ities"? Admitting that drastic action in Mexico is the one hope of solving the Mexican problem. Is the Admin istration Just awakened to the fact? Or is intervention in Mexico, for which the stage, from outward appearances, is now being set, going to provide an important part of the - Democratic campaign? If so, the country will not be fooled nor will it accept intervention at this hour as being anything more than the bloody climax of a series of fool hardy blunders. EVERBEARING STRAWBERRIES. Some of the Utah strawberry grow ers are meeting with phenomenal sue. cess with a new variety of everbearing strawberries, which bear continuously from early May until the vines are killed by the Autumn frosts. It is said that one grower in the vicinity of Brlgham City set an eighth of an acre to this berry in May of last year and between the dates of the first bearing in July and the last in No vember he sold 787 quarts, which brought $73.46. That would be at the rate of $587.68 an acre; but re member the plants were not set until May, and consequently the May and June crops were missed. As the second and third years are the best periods for bearing of straw- i berry plants, It can be seen that this new variety gives great promise, for had this experimental patch been planted the year before, so that a full season's crop could have been har vested, the yield would have been well up to $1000 an acre. As the ripened berries come along slowly and steadily for several months, it would seem that the labor of picking would be less expensive than where that Job has to be accomplished within a couple of weeks or so. Perhaps some of our Oregon grow ers have tried this new plant, but if so not much publicity has been given to the experiment. It would seem that it Would be important for the growers in sections from which large shipments are made, and from the growers who cater to the Portland markets, to give it a thorough trial, j for if it will do anything like as welliCnPrIes E- Hughes will introduce no as In Utah, and the berry is as choice as it is said to be, there ought to be good money in the everbearing for the growers. DEATH-CH-UIBER VERSE. Our hero-worshipping instinct is ever on the lookout for possible Bun yans, and a slight impulse from be hind the bars is sufficient to set us all crying "Eureka" with tremendous enthusiasm. It is not to be wondered at, there fore,, that when Dr. Arthur Warren Waite, sentenced to die July 10 for the murder of his father-in-law, be gins to produce enormous quantities of poetry in the Tombs and Sing Sing, public attention should be caught in stantly, public curiosity whetted and public fancy begin to cast a web of literary hero-worship around him. In announcing that Dr. Waite's prison-produced poems will be pub lished probably "after July 10," so that the public, may gain some idea of the "finer side of his nature," the brother of the condemned man indi cates an excellent practical grasp of human psychology. In announcing furthermore that Dr. Waite had never written any poetry before he entered the Tombs, nor had he expressed the slightest in terest in writing it. his brother mani fests this grasp of practical psychol ogy still more definitely. The conditions are perfect for the creation of a successful popular idol in contemporary verse the type of idol winch represents the quickest and largest returns in royalties from publishers. Reading such of the verses them selves as have been given out for pub lication, one may be inclined to doubt if all those elements actually exist outside of the advance notices pre sented by the condemned man's brother. If Dr. Waite actually never did at tempt to write poetry before, and never showed the slightest interest in the composition of poetry, his achieve ments iu the present case are marvel ous and call for explanation by those who understand the workings of the occult, rather than those whose line is the study of literature. - Knowledge of poetical technique and the demands of both rhyme and rhythm shown in such verses as the following appears to be too well grasped for the poem to De the pro duction of a man who never wrote poetry or showed any interest in writ ing it: i The nightingale will sing between The daylight and the dark; The moon will kiss the cypress Queen, And paint and shadow-mark; At dewy mom the grass will shine. Until the sun's too strong. And then the meadowlark will wake And till the world with song. Throughout a series of verses by Dr. Waite published in the New York Times, when his prison-inspired poeti cal talents first began to be called to public notice, runs the same indica tion of a good working knowledge of rhythm, rhyme and stanza structure. The error's are too few to indicate anything else than the work of an amateur who has schooled himself well in the verse-writing craft. The verses themselves give the reader the impression of the writings of a man who is well read in the standard poets so well read in them that their modes of expression and their devices of imagery flow more or less trippingly from his pen;. -. He has a poem to himself, presum-1 ably air apostrophe of his soul to his body, in which the voices of his mas ters seem to echo faintly- through the coarser and less finely trained lyric of his own construction. The first stanza suffices to give an idea of his method. And thou art dead, dear comrade, . t In whom I dwelt a time. With whom 1 strolled through star-klsaed bowers Of fraprant Jessamine! And thou wert weak, O comrade, Thvself in self did fail. And now the stars are turned to tears. And sobs the nightingale. Another poem, a nocturne, bears an inescapable reminiscence of Gray's elegy. In both stanza structure and mode of expression: The fields contract. The world la dipped in night. A gentle hush, like snowflakes falls around. And here and there the marshland lights a light. An Incandescent secret held in pound. Another poem, moralizing upon his life and deeds and using them as a warning to others. Is a weird con-These glomerate of the influences apparently of Fitzgerald's "Rubaiyat," of Swln-1 burne's philosophical poems and of Emerson: So gentle moves the Image unto death. It's passing scarce of note, (rows less and less. And all Is dark except the living breath Unseen to eye is treed from its distxeaa. Perhaps the Breath lent mo has served God well. For some must chow the false, compared In true And, too perhaps that s why I beard him tell That in that Breath I found my own life. too. My own life found and may It live through Death To full in humble servitude before xuose soul whose wrongs are righted by rhe Breath Which gives and takes and bolta the little door. The greatest hue and cry of the readers through his poetry, when it shall all be given to them, probably will be on the trail of indications pro and con as to his sanity. In this point findings will differ widely at last, it Is probable, and per haps, if the vogue for Dr. Waite spreads sufficiently, little Hamlet-mad-Hamlet sane circles will be formed within the discussion, each drawing its texts and proofs from his work. On tHte surface, the principal things apparent in the work are profound egotism and apparent absence of any kind of remorse for his crime. He is as calm in his writings as though he had been found guilty in Oregon in stead of a capital-punishment state, but calmness can hardly be taken into consideration as an indication one way or another as to his sanity. The strongest position of those who adopt the Hamlet-mad theory no doubt will be the manifest egotism of the man and the self-Justification that pervades his verses, as, for example. the stanza quoted above: "Perhaps the Breath lent me has served God well." While few of the stanzas are poor and none of them can be called great poetry-, the whole collection might serve to give Dr. Waite a fairly secure temporary place on the "Minor Poet's" The best auspices under which the condemned man's verses are coming out before the world is the tradl tonally Imagination-gripping circum stances under which they are said to have been produced WnlSKERS AND PRESIDENTS. If one will take the trouble to check over or visualize the faces of American Presidents he will observe that Mr. innovation when he takes up h,ls of ficial abode at the White House next March. Whiskers have been a favorite adornment of Presidents, and particu. larly of Presidents who served in the past half century. A total of thirteen chief executives have reveled in these swaying trysting places of the gentle winds and they have .worn them In many styles and cuts. No one, it is true, heretofore has taken into the White House the particular style of hirsute appendage Mr. Hughes boasts, although several have had whiskers in greater profusion and luxuriance. John Quincy Adams was the first man with a facial fringe to move to the White House. He had them on the sides. Van Buren had a striking growth and Zachary Taylor wore side whiskers. However, Abraham Lincoln was the first President to cover his chin with hair. Garfield and Harrison carried full beards about with them while Grant and Hayes concealed the lower part of their faces under ample hairy x coverings. President Arthur, following a style which became popu lar In his time, adopted side whiskers, Cleveland, Roosevelt and Taft . wero content with hair on their upper Hps. Nor must the value of whlskrs be underestimated, particularly whiskers of the Hughes type. They are food and drink for the caricaturists, and it is foreordained that the Hughes whis kers will supplant the Roosevelt teeth in the popular fancy. Leave that to the cartoonists, who are forever seek ing marked facial characteristics and strong effects. It is a stupid and clumsy ink artist who cannot express the Hughes whiskers in five or six bold, well-delivered strokes of a stub drawing pen. VACATION DAYS. Politics, Mexico, the great war and other current topics of vital interest are beginning to lose their intimate interest Just at this season. Fagged by the year's work and excitements the average man's mind is turning to the mountains, the fields, the trout streams, the seashore and the other alluring realms of vacation time. This is the season tjhen the average busy man will tell you of his pet plan to break away from the world one day and spend a whole year in seclusion Of course, after he has 6pent a couple of weeks in rural haunts he will feel altogether different about it. A few weeks close to nature have a wonder ful effect as a tonic. Work and nor mal associations are seen again in their true light. It "ought to be asy to decide upon a vacation in Oregon. But it is not. There are so many tempting vacation places so near at hand that the aver age person finds difficulty in making up his mind. Seashore, mountains, tempting country retreats, scenic roads, all present their conflicting ap peals. Even when one has decided on the particular kind of vacation, the particular place to go remains a dif ficult problem. Fishermen, for ex ample, have a hundred favored haunts to pick from. The streams of South era and Central Oregon are famed far and near for their bounteous yields of speckled beauties. Along with the fishing goes matchless mountain scen ery with ideal environs for a week or two under canvas close to rugged na- 1 ture. These streams may be reached by train or auto, even by streetcar. Those who seek the restful and in vigorating seashore have a number of beaches to choose from. A few hours' run by train or auto lands the Port lander -011 the shores of the Pacific. There accommodations are to. be found suited to the tastes and circumstances of all.' It has been said and proved that one of small means is able to spend the Summer at the seashore for a smaller outlay than Is required to remain in the city. Thousands take advantage of this opportunity, spend ing the Summer months in tents and cottages and returning to the cities in the Fall as brown as Indians and vig orous as aborigines. For the vacationist with an auto mobile at command the opportunities are limitless. Not even Switzerland offers greater scenic wealth and one may drive for weeks on passable roads devouring the most wonderful nat ural pictures ever- devised by prodigal nature. The automobile vacation party- is able, too, to run the whole gamut of vacation Joys seashore, mountains. trout streams, choice hunting grounds. things may be combined in a single routing of one week, It Is the combination vacation. In fact, that is coming to be more and more popular in Oregon. Most of the beaches are accessible to good fishing haunts. All are handy to the moun tains. The head of the family going from Portland for the week's end with his family takes creel and rod and finds ample time and opportunity for their employment during his brief stay at the seashore. The man who craves a vigorous vacation with gun and rod can find no honest excuse for leaving his family behind, since there are Innumerable points where the family is able to rusticate at a com fortable base of operations in woods or mountains. Vacation has grown to be a uni versally recognized institution. Time was when dour slaves of toil and duty regarded this gentle surcease from economic slavery as a device of molly coddles and weaklings. But the man who used to boast that he had never taken a vacation and never would, is a rara avis these days. He has learned that the human engine requires a rest from vibration at least once each year. It has been established to his satis faction that he does better work after having banked his engines for a couple of weeks in the heat of Sum mer and that the same rule applies to those employed by him. Business houses generally recognize vacations as a necessity, and arrange their vaca tion schedules as regularly and as sedulously . as they strike their trial balances. Getting the most out of this brief rift in the year's toil and turmoil is a duty' not to be takea lightly. Remain ing in normal haunts may commend Itself to those who are not inclined to be robust and vigorous, but any such Inclination should be put aside as a waste of valuable time. Life in the open air offers the one real stimulus to the wearied human mechanism and augments the laying by of a new stock of vital energy. The person who has not learned to make use of vaca tion days and mopes about town won dering what to do with his time, misses one of the choicest morsels of exist ence and loses an opportunity to lengthen his mortal days. General Pershing was warned by the Mexican commander that if he moved farther into Mexico the Mexican army would attack him. The threat doubt less was of the Mexican variety and based on knowledge that the Amerl cans had positive orders from Wash ington to mark time until the conven tions shaped up. County Commissioner Holman rec ommends a free public mending serv ice for automobllists who meet with punctures on the Columbia Highway. Great idea. And in order to install the system properly he should have an other set of $1500 efficiency experts. A man was arrested for striking the Janitor. Such improvidence. Be kind to the Janitor, the bootblack and the waiter and they may let you ride home In their high-powered touring cars. The Army appropriation bills have not yet been acted upon by Congress. And there is no certainty that they will be with the particular kind of a Con gress the country now has. Of course, it must be admitted that some little jngenuity must be exercised to line up the tonsorial vote for Hughes and Fairbanks. A hybrid potato that tastes like a antaloupe has been grown. It should make amends for the cantaloupe that tastes like a potato. But after the Russians have rushed the Austrians out of Russia, Von Hln- Aatnburg may send a couple of Ger mans down to rush them back again. The Italian Cabinet is a complete failure. Wherein the Italians have lit tle on us. Theirs quit. We change ours next March. Thirty-six women fainted when Rev. Billy Sunday preached to a congrega tion of women at St. Louis. The power of true art. It will take a real patriot to march in a preparedness parade on the Fourth, if the thermometer .holds its own. A war with Mexico has one allure ment. Mexico is the one nation on earth we can whip at the present time. It certainly does begin to look as if we were going to have Mexico as a part o the Democratic campaign.. Cheaper cuts of meat are becoming popular. Whereupon they are certain to "become the most expensive. ' The Democratic platform asserts big achievements for the Administration. Literary achievements, yes. . What's a mere bank president com pared with the inside attendant at a cold-storage plant? The Colonel persists that he is out of politics. But he'll try to come back again some day. Mysterious ruins have been found in Colorado. Possibly the Democratic platform of 1912. Get used to the term President Hughes, for that's what it is going to be. And Bryan's services as a reporter were not in very high demand this time. However, the Russians have not yet renewed their cry of "On to Berlin!" He is a lucky chap who arranged to take his vacation early this year. The sun certainly is making amends for all past derelictions. Remember that delightful blizzard w had last Winter? And the favorite sons have gone back- to the ice plant. What became of Champ Clark's houn" dog this time? Has the equator wandered up this way by mistake? A real Fourth sounds like old times again. Why not arbitrate this weather mat ter? But it's hotter than this in Mexico. Do your Christmas shopping early. Gleams Through the Mist By Dtsa Collins. BALLADE OF THE WOOD ROGER. Past the last sign about "Lots for Sale." Out where the carlinea don't even, run. There's a stream that's gleaming in wooded vale That was blest by the Lord when the world was begun; And nobody knows of a fairer one In all of the countries high and low; And woe is me. as the day is done. I hear It call and I cannot go. You seek it out by a hidden trail. O'er mosses dappled and. gold and . dun; . Tour guide Is the timorous, slinking quail. Tour heralds the deer that before you run; There lie no terrors for you to shun In the magical wood where the still streams flow; And out of the dusk, when the day is done. I hear It call-rand I cannot go. There's a rift of sunlight on mosses pale. It dances like fire where the ripples run; And the lazy trout In his coat of mall Flashes his Jewels against the sun; In all of my dreamlngs there is none That catches hold of my fancy so; I see it oft when the day Is done; I hear it call and I cannot go. L'EXVOL Paradise for the weariest one Who would flee from the city of work and woe; And evermore, as the day Is done. I hear it call and I cannot go. "Sir," said the Courteous Office Boy, looking over my shoulder as I drove the last tack into the foregoing pome, "since when did you begin to take such a lively interest in municipal -affairs? "Meaning what' I said, blowing the file dust off the last rhyme. "I have read no further "than the title, but seeing that it dealt with the 'Wood Hunger." I naturally presumed that- you .were offering another ex planation of the probable reason why the thousand cords vanished from the municipal pile " said the C. O. B.. but he got no further, tor I sprang upon him and gagged him with a dactyl. Ol'Il OTHER CHEEK. "Bou B.,'" the poetical purist, who was allowed to come lightly contrib blng into our colyum last Tuesday, be cause of his striking fecundity In the matter of rhymes for Tillamook, fetches a wallop at us on our grammar, but we are of such a forgiving nature that we will not explain to him that we saw It In the proof but were too Indolent to correct it, and we will not even assert that our friend the compos itor was to blame for he wasn't. Just to show "Bou" that our other cheek Is available at all times, we al low him to get by once more with the following on: THOSE VICES. This writing verses Is a vice; I like It; The poet class Is far from nice: ' I like it; It makes your thoughts go very wrong; Tour breath grow short, youij, wind grow long; It makes your hair grow wild and strong; I like it. CONCERT ING NAMES. I went Into a toyshop where all the dolls had names; And there I saw both Lloyd and Ruth, Elizabeth and James. Celestine, Jack and Mary Jane; and this thing me annoyed; When I asked the clerk to sell me Ruth, she said: "I'll celluloid." W. K. BELT, Newport, Or. OUTRAGE DEPLORED. To fhe Editor: Please correct your correspondent's version of the marriage of Miss Lemon. This ballad is very old, as I knew it In my early youth in this form: Miss Lemon, she, with air so free. She married Archibald Sneezer; Now she "can sneeze whene er she please And he's a Lemon-squeezer. I leave It to you and the public if this isn't far more interesting, as his tory, and far better poetry. It's an outrage that anyone, should be allowed to plagarize from an old treasure of this sort with impunity. As Tennyson says, half a truth is rotten business. A. W. NICHOLSON." THE SHORTEST POME. Finis Idleman, which we suspicion is a pseudonym in parti sent In as the ul timate in short pomes a period with the explanatory reading: Period , Wearied. And we were. Too wearied to resent the poor rhyme he sawed off for us. We were almost ready to call the shortest pome contest ended and begin hanging the Iron crosses for we have received by actual count 442 shortest pome contributions since the contest started, which Is about 435 more than we expected. We were, as we said, about ready to call it closed and begin doling out the decorations, when this same Finis Idle man and Tom Thumb, alias "R. G. A.." and Albert Moran came through with, a request that we print a whole column of the shortest pomes, from the be ginning of the contest to the end. so that the whole wide world could mark the process of diminution toward the vanishing point. We are appalled by the boldness of this request. We are so appalled that we are obliged to postpone for a few craen more the handing out of honors to the winners in he great contest. IN THE GARIrK.N". In the Canterbury bell. Swooning 'neath her honey trpe.ll. Blinded by the pollen dust. Crusted with its golden crtfst. Snores the drunken bumble bA; Circe's willing victim be. Swooning: 'neath the honey spell Of tbe Canterbury bell. NAMES IS NAMES, Tilden. on a darkened street A robber robbed, as robbers will; The thief upon the docket sheet Was listed tha: "He robbed Til." V the