THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, JUNE 13, 1920 ' .1 'A i unflnirCDrctrmttan Spanish economist's deduction that she subscribes herself as "Sunny," the consumer "always pays the j addressing the absent czar as "Huzy freight." as we phrase it, nor in its dear." and "My very own beloved t.TABLiMifcu bi iic.-wti .. -"v. .,,.. tht ,h ,nrk(,r is. indeed, angel." The letters orobab y are rubiished by The oregnnian publishing Co.. . jn many instances the consumer, genuine. They are said to be exact C AUMUKDfNrK'' 1 B hpek, i That which is significant is that ; transcriptions, translated tn English, Manager. Editor. ! these views of how abnormal prices of the originals now In the keeping The oregonlan is a member of the Asm- ! Came to creation are strikingly iden- of the soviet at Moscow. The soviet ccveu uIS-c -r"j! I Ucal in both Spain and AmeH ; butchered both husband and wife tion of a 1 1 new tiispatcnen creuneu iu n. t uiuitrascu wagca air; a. 11 -",v- " "v or not otherwise credited in this paper and as ever when they do not suffice to r,rhti'of Improve the plane of living For the herein are alto reserved. wage worker is still dissatisfied wltn Between his nire. and naturally so. Invariably in Advance. hin and the manufacturer the feud I continues. They are millstones of S0? orrni- to rrnsh the lust flake Of ti ters, however, stands not so much aghast at the passing of a dynasty as at the cruel conclusion to a very human and tender alliance of love. Subucripttoit Kate (By Mail.) Tidily, Sunday Included, one year J)aHv. Sundav included, six nioulhs . . Hally. Sunday Included three months, tiaily. Sunday Included, one month . . . Daily, witho.it Sunday, one year Dally, wli huut bunilay. six months . . . Daily, w ithoitl Sunday, one month . . . Weekly, one year Sunday, one year 1 By Carrier. nailv. Sunday ir.ciuileu, one year Daily. Sunday included, three months.. Daily, Sunday included. on month 10 Daifv. tthoiit Sunday, fine year 7. HO Hally, without Sunday, three months.. 11 '5 . . . . f.UMJ j.-ir, I nancial flour from the vast bulk of , l the general public, which did not sponsor their dispute but which pays, pays, pays. Governor Allen of Kansas holds it to be , a self-evident truth that the public has been abused and maltreated ' more than the tt.UO .no l.on 3.UU FOl'RTKE POINTS OF MAJDENI.Y VIRTUE. The mayor of Providence, Rhode Island, had wished on him in March, 1019. by the will of an Italian mil lionaire, the task of choosing once a year the girl in his city "who, bein 20 years old and marriageable, and which constitutes 9 1 per cent of the social body, whereas capital con In this view, as in the others, Senor Bonna also concurs. Daily, without ounday. one month "' stitutes " ',4 per cent and laDor out How lo Keniil. Send postorrice money i g per cent orner, rxpicas 01 cieim... ' local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owners risk. liive postoffice address in full, including county and atate. ro.tuse Kate. 1 to 1 pages, 1 cent: IS lo .:! panes. -1 cents; a 4 to 4S pages. 3 cents; in to 64 pags. 4 cents; t0 to SU pases, a c-tiis; to '' pages, cent.1. Koremn postage, double rates. Kaatrm Himinrn Office. Veree & Conk lin; Lirunswlck buildinK. New York; eree Conk'.iu. Stcger buildinB. Chicago: v er ree A, Conklin, Free Hicks building. De troit, Mich. San Francisco representative, ). J. indwell. ,.,.,k, tho,iov ih riihlir- la aaugmer or tne common peupie, . .'haul HowAfioc rnmmnnrlfltinn fnr her conduct and family virtues, by the unappealable decision of a commis sion appointed by the mayor." The reward is to consist of a gift of the interest of a fund of $10,000. In addition to this, the Italian eccentric has suggested that the girl be crowned with roses and named "Rosaria." All girls in" America are "daugh ters of the common people," and all who are 20 years old are marriage able." Still no one, it seems, least of all the current mayor, wants the VACATIONS. 'increased enrollment at summer schools is a sign of growing appreci ation, not only of the need of educa tion but of the value of time. Three months is a long time to loaf, when there is so much to be done. The tendency to employ all the months of the year usefully is intensified as fixity of purpose becomes more gen eral. Schoolmen know that young men and young women are more earnest than they were a few years ago. It is not fashionable any longer to be idle. Attendance on summer classes is not confined to students who for financial reasons must con sume as little time as possible in qualifying for their degree. It in cludes, according to a recent esti mate, fully as large a proportion of the well-to-do. The time will conic perhaps, when colleges will see their way through the maze of administrative obstacles to all-year education. The present sr-hnnl veiir of nine months is the relic of a time when two conditions prevailed which do not now, broadly speaking, exist when school author ities lacked the means for conducting practically continuous sessions, and when our population was so largely agricultural and so largely given to family-unit production that it was necessary to close the schools in order to harvest the crops. Now adays students come not only from the farm but from a hundred other industries, not all of which are served by vacations in the summer time. A good many will And better opportunities for earning money during the winter holidays. The four-term system has the economic advantage of giving full employment to the physical plant, of permitting those who wish to do so to complete the course in a shorter time, and of widening the opportunities of those who are working to educate them selves. It is claimed for it that it does not require a larger teaching staff in proportion to numbers of students enrolled and that vacations for members of the faculty can be arranged for by simple readjustment Of details. For the young student Italy still lies beyond the Alps, but it is more and more apparent that effort is required to reach the goal. The vacation school is at best a sop to necessity; it will be succeeded pres ently by schools conducted on the principle that every month of the jenr is a month for education. There is no sound reason why a quarter of the year, in the finest of all the sea sons, should be given to aimless play. A yiE.MOKABI.E CHICAGO CONVENTION" Candidates were among the first arrivals at the Chicago convention of the present. But ever so long ago, when the republican party lead ers assembled in the same city, on May 16, 1860, Abraham Lincoln was not in attendance. Friends came to him several days before. "Are you going up to the convention?" they asked? "Well, I don't know," drawled the rail splitter. "I'm not quite enough of a candidate to stay away, and too much of a candidate to come." It was in Springfield that Lincoln awaited the news of that conven tion. Such smatterings of gossip as came by telegraph were not suffi cient for the forming of an exact opinion as to the outcome. To the future president the outlook was du bious. "I believe I will go back to my office and practice law," was his comment as he went down the stairs. A moment later a boy rushed after him, overtaking Lincoln as he emerged from a dry goods store, where he had made some trifling household purchase for Mrs. Lincoln. "Mr. Lincoln, you're nominated!" shouted the boy. The first official message of an nouncement received by Lincoln came from John James Speed Wilson, divisional superintendent of the Illi nois and Mississippi Telegraph com pany. From convention workers came others within the hour, one reading, "We did it, glory to God!' This message was addressed tn sim pie brevity to "Abe," though tele graph clerks at Chicago added the remainder of the name before they tapped it on its way to Springfield. It was written by N.- M. Knapp of Winchester, 111. The boy who carried the first word of nomination to Lincoln was Clinton I.. Conkling, now as then a resident of Springfield. How dim and far away it all seems, this reconstructed scene that meant so much to the nation. Politics was not the complex mechanism that it is today nor were men. Personal dignities seem to have meant but little and manhood much. Imagine a half-grown boy of today bearing the tidings of pre ferment to any one of the many can didates, either at Chicago or San Francisco. with these, or knew a bird for aught I of a tolerant contempt in Germany, but scientific study or table use, or I a sentiment that Is directed toward a river save as the haunt or iooa fishes or the lane of commerce! And thus does Hilda call to Siegfried: The lady with th shell. ' The water-lady with the green hair. Calling, cried. "Siegfried!" But he laughed to hear her. Laughed in the sun And went into the woods laughing; He was happy In his heart. And he had golden hair Till the son loved him. "Siegfried I" I will call him! "Siegfried!" But he will not hear me. He could talk to birds and rivers. And he is gone. Hilda's mother, who is the assist ant professor of English at Smith college, says that the songs of her daughter are dictated by the child, and that the diction Is so simple and perfect that the verses require but little polishing, while the memory of the small author instantly detects each flaw created by the maternal amanuensis and calls for correction. Nor is the small author an abnormal child in her amusements or school studies, though given one may well believe to periods of gravely medi tative abstraction. The truth of Hilda's authorship has been accepted by the discriminating magazine edi tors, and to her friends has long since ceased to be a . wonderment. What lovely lanes are yet to be ex plored, when this graceful and un erring fancy shall ripen, none may prophesy. It Is sincerely to be hoped. task, though it has been somewhat however, that Hilda win Keep to ner simniiriori he- the atinmpir fnr the I own song, rather than follow the Italian consul-general at New York, her conquerors and their requests for reparation asserting that enforced demands and stout pressure alone will bring the Germans to the con clusion that their pledges must be kept and payment rendered. To ex press the idea, the German "enfant terrible" resorts to an old New England phrase and tells his inter viewer that the measure of "keeping their noses to the grindstone" is the prescription for the mulish pride and innate stubbornness of the Prussian. There used to be a coterie of soul ful singers, scattered now to the wings of an empty theater, who yodeled over and over the refrain that "the German people aren't respon sible." Harden- always contradicted. More than any other man his con Crude as It was, it was this work J can with only 437,000 automobiles, that caused his wife to plead with however, there should be a certain him to abandon architecture for the expansion of the benefits of w hich greater promise of authorship. He we ought to receive some part. The next wrote "Under the Greenwood foreign market, nevertheless, need Tree," published in 1872. a shilling not concern us deeply at present, shocker in paper covers. Incidentally when we are told that manufactur- it made his fortune. The editor oi era pians contemplate z.uuu.uuu su Life: The Mocker. Br Grace E. Hall. tomobiles and 425.000 trucks in 1920. and that they calculate that the . en-I the Cornhill Magazine, a Mr. Green wood, found a copy of it in an out-of-the-wav railway bookstall and. struck by the occurrence of his own j In the domestic market if it were name in the title, bought it. He later- sent for Hardy and engaged him to write a serial for the Corn hill. This developed into "Far From the Madding Crowd." the book which of all that Hardy wrote has probably had the greatest number of readers. Its success was mem orable and instantaneous. It is re called now that when this story ap tributions to the handbook of facts' peared anonymously it was attrib have established the truth of the counter claim that Germany acted in I iitarl In fiperp-p 1-Iint not because of any similarity of style, but because who has been so good as to set down fourteen points of virtue which he believes the donor would approve if he were alive. In his opinion the young woman who would deserve the prize must be: Strong, true, just, kind, reverent, humble, dutiful, ami able, prudent, faithful, patient, cheer ful, decorous and (If possible) discreet. It Is a formidable array, and re calls a similar custom in medieval times, of crowning each year the young woman of a village whom the people regarded as most nearly ap proaching the ideal. It was aban doned because it always degenerated nto an affair of mere log-rolling, in which the virtues of reverence, hu mility and kindness were too apt to be outweighed by other qualities which do not appear in the present list. Under any method that frail humanity would be able to devise. the violet would have small chance in competition with the sunflower. It will be presumed that the interest on $10,000 will furnish greater in centive for the exercise of strength than for practice of truth, amiability or decorum. The difficulty is not that the prescribed virtues are not possessed by many young women of Providence, or other cities, but that by their very nature they elude dis covery. Nor shall we grieve for Providence if the gift is permitted to escheat. No girl who can qualify for the prize will be in need of it. Others do not deserve it. And Providence will be spared a lot of campaigning in which all the womanly virtues, including (if possible) discretion, would certainly be cast to the winds. motley and bells of modern "new verse." In their simplicity of struc ture her own poems do, indeed, re semble those of the modern school. But they have the merit, lacking in the latter, of presenting images that are cameo-clear and iridescent with the play of comprehensible fancy. And that is much more than may be said of Amy Lowell, who wrote the preface to Hilda's book of fairy songs. I'd liken life unto a maiden fair Who in the springtime garlands her fair brow With wreaths of blossoms, twining In her hair The tender buds most beautiful; tire output could be sold in ten days J ana "ow , , ...... Adnrnpil she frmea with hasket over flowing. With gifts from verdant shrub and plant and vine. Proffering each a bloom: and all unknowing. reached a hand toward one to call it mine: But quickly life drew back. and. bending kindly Held out to me another flower in stead. And. humbled, I . accepted alowly. blindly. But all my rapture in the gift was dead. THE WORLD OVER. There are times when the perplex ities of the people, dizzy and dis mayed by the vortex of events that whirl too swiftly for instant analysis, appear to thwart solution. But con temporary opinions, at first chaotic and at cross-purpose, gradually shape parallel courses and establish, through the logic of an adequate study and understanding, the true conception of cause and effect. It is incidental to this observation that one finds a Portland merchant and a Spanish economist, with the world between them, coinciding in views upon the hieh cost of living a phrase that is trite ami vexatious, but that may no bo dropped until it is thoroughly moribund. And both the merchant and the senor hold this concept in common that for every increase of production costs the manufacturer has doubled or trebled that actual advance ere the goods are relayed to the consumer. Neither will accept the statement that labor's demands have, as they were granted. created more than a portion of the burden under which the public weaves a weary course, and of which labor bears its proportional share These opinions, aired for reflec tion, are significant in that they comprise an identical view, though voiced in different tongues and in widely separated nations, of an eco nomic tumor that is common to all countries. The Portland merchant. returned from a survey of the great manufacturing centers of the east, declared his conviction that manu facturers have taken advantage of each increase in wages paid to craftsmen to elevate further and be yond Just proportion the figure that is astoundingly printed on the price tag. He added, as his opinion, that merchants are finally aroused to the deception and that, in testimony to their indignation, the manufacturers are receiving cancellations from mercantile firms in every section of America. The Spanish observer, Senor Jose - Carlos Bonna. in distant Madrid, re marks that while labor gains by aug mented daily wages, in its successful demands of the employer, that worthy spends few moments in re gret but sets at once to work upon a revised price list of his commodities which, eventually, retrieves from the worker all that has been granted him and considerably more. Senor Bonna, even as the Portland mer chant, has noted that an increase of 20 points in 100, created by a wage concession, is swollen to 50 points on the basis of this pretext and is there fore more than doubled when the consumer reaches for his wallet. KAI I.TS OF THE TAX SVSTKM. Just when everybody who is for tunate or unfortunate enough to have a taxable income is gathering together the money to pay his quar terly installment, the glaring faults of the present tax system once more attract attention. Corporations have to make long, complex reports which require the services of experts, and they do not know until the govern ment clerks have checked their re ports what amount they will ulti mately have to pay. They may not get this information for many months. They must accumulate largo sums to pay at stated periods, to the embarrassment of their busi ness. The net result is that much money is kept idle for long periods, either in preparation to pay taxes or to meet demands for deficiency pay ments. When each quarterly payment is made the government pays off treasury certificates and boasts of having reduced debt, but in a week or two it borrows again in anticipa tion of the next payment. All of this waste of stationery. clerk hire, time of everybody con cerned, interest, could be saved if the income tax was simplified and made to apply alike to personal and cor porate incomes, and if a tax on sale to consumers were substituted for the excess profi.s tax. This tax would be no more difficult to collect than the present tax on luxuries. drugs, toilet articles, railroad and theater tickets and soft drinks. The objection that it would tax the poor man is the veriest buncombe. The poor man pays the excess profits tax half a dozen times over in the shape of exorbitant prices, and those prices are sustained by the restriction on production that the tax causes. Only one tax would be paid on final sales, the buyer would know its amount and the seller could not add a profit on it, as he does with the excess prof- us tax. Everybody, rich and poor would pay it, and as the rich would buy more than the poor, they would pay more. It could be made lighter on necessaries than on luxuries, on small sales than on large ones, so that the rich would pay more in pro portion to their purchases. An advantage to the government would be that such a tax would keep a steady now of money into the treasury all the time, and the con t'mual borrowing from Peter to pay Paul would stop, together with in terest on these loans. SONGS OF SEVEN. Elder folk, attaining the perfect pearl of understanding, have always known that to children only is the province of fairyland open, with never a sentry to turn the young adventurer Dack toward the gray plains of the commonplace. In Northampton. Mass., dwells little maid who talks with flowers and fairies, and to such accompani ment or musical rhythm, and rare but simple beauty of phrase and concept, tnat tne wisely wearied edi tors of magazines and publishers of books, their eyes dancing behind great horn-rimmed glasses, have vowed: "Here is a poet of spring, and sunshine, and buttercups, and childhood!" And forthwith they have penned checks in her name and sped them to Northampton, and asked her please to dream again and send an other poem. She talks with fairies, as it were, but is dowered also with that strange facility of genius, which permits the translation of dreams. When she was seven she sang: The wartime letters of the ill fated Russian rulers, husband and wife, as they are now appearing in the press, are far more interesting for their revelation of royalty's marital felicity than for the occa sional political flickers they cast upon events that have entered his tory. As all the world knows, the monk Rasputin was an evil genius of the house of Romanoff and a tremendous tool of both destiny and the German empire. References to this man, therefore, in the letters of the czarina to the czar, lose their edge for lack of surprise. But the possessors of firesides will linger re flectively upon the very human fact that the czarina signed her missives, "Ever your own old Wify," with the same gently naive affection that an elderly matron from Peoria. Ill would employ In a missive to nur There is nothing new or novel in the j husband sojourning in Chicago. Again cannot see fairies. I dream them. There is no fairy ran hide from me; keep on dreaming till 1 find him: There you are. Primrose! I see you. Black V ing ! No truer formula was ever written. as all the elder world knows, though having lost touch with childhood it cannot follow the rule. But here and there, in the chronicled lives of dreamers, one finds that beauty in art and letters came to blessed being. and remained to garland memory with fame, because impractical men and women chose to "keep on dream ing" until they gave expression to the haunting melodies within their souls. Some portion of the fief of childhood remained to them in per-1 petuity. Though fame came often late they were thrice paid in the possession of crystalline, undimmed visions of colors beyond the spectrum of the humdrum. "Poems by a Little Girl," just from the presses of an eastern publishing house, is a compilation of rhymeless verses created by Hilda Conklin, the nine-year-old daughter of the assist ant professor of English at Smith college, Northampton, and its five score poems were written belief is, difficult between the ages of four and the present. Yet the correct ness of the claim to authorship has been established beyond dispute. In a day when youthful prodigies are more to the fore than ever they were, when bulbous-browed savants of seven toy with the classics or higher calculus, it is as refreshing as a hill spring to find precocity- turned for once toward the weaving. in dewy verse, of such thoughts as children think. To Hilda the blos soms of the garden have quaint and human personalities, the tree-toads are her troubadours, and the chick adee beyond the windowpane is the elfin purveyor of a lullaby. Some th.ng of the witchingly fantastic imagery of the little girl's verse may be sensed from the "Moon Song." written when she was maturely six years old: There Is a tar that runs very fast. That goes pulling the moon Through the tops of the poplars. It 1 nil In slivor. The tall star; The moon rolls goldenly along Out of breath. Mr. Moon, does he make you hurry? Or in the childish roma'nee. blend of woodsy vacations and remem bered folk tales, that breathes the lonely plaint for that lost playmate of fancy, Siegfried, who "could talk to birds and rivers.'.' Could talk to birds and rivers how very, very long ago it was that grown-ups talked DOING JISTICB TO 1ABOB. Statistics need interpretation as well as assembling, as is shown by analysis of statements recently made that labor throughout the country is only 50 to 60 per cent efficient. Dr. John Whyte, of the department of research of the National Associa tion of Credit Men. on the basis of an extensive questionnaire addressed to manufacturers, declares that the estimate is. "clearly an overstate ment," It is conceded that there was a considerable slump in effi ciency just after the war, but there Is noteworthy improvement of con ditions. A few employers are be ginning to report that efficiency is higher than before. The average ratio of labor efficiency is found to be 73 per cent of pre-war times. But here the returns will bear further dissection. Conscious slack ing is not the factor that it was once declared to be. There is some in competency, which is a different matter as entering into our appraisal of the spirit of the man on the job. because this is due to change in per sonnel, rather than to lower rela tive output by individuals. On ac count of scarcity of highly-trained men for a certain job, to illustrate. It is frequently necessary to employ workers less well trained. The skilled artisans may be producing as much as ever, but the apparent average is reduced by dilution. It is no one's fault, where good faith is shown- to exist. The fact that Improvement is progressive indicates that in a good many instances men are actually doing their best. More than 10 per cent of those who replied to the questionnaire said that the old labor was as efficient as ever, but that new labor was less efficient. The latter statement is by no means surprising. Even more significant is the statement that only 6 per cent reported decreased pro duction in March, 1920, by compari son with December, 1919, while one- third reported an increase. If the rate of improvement continues, we shall know that we have passed the turning point. We can put up with a certain amount of excusable lack of skill, due to absence of oppor tunity for training, if we know that the heart of the worker is in the right place. It would seem from Dr. Whyte's report that there is rela tively little organized determination to "go slow," and that men are be ginning to realize that to hold the advantages they have gained they must make a reasonable effort to furnish a quid pro quo. concord during the war and will act in concord thereafter, when she shapes again her world relationships. In concord and contempt, rather and this should be remembered un til, if the day ever dawns, Harden's homeland brings proof of the birth of a liberal and lofty spirit. INCREASING SUICIDE. We need someone to interpret for us the significance of the report of the Save-a-Life league, which finds that suicide is on the increase in the United States. Mere statistics! are not satisfying. To the careless assumption that the suicide is moved to despair over the outlook, the fig ures answer that more people kill themselves in summer, when the skies are fair, than in winter, when they are dark; that the rate of self destruction is higher in times of prosperity than in years of panic: that peace intensifies it and war does not. The analogy continues with the showing that the proportion of women among suicides is growing steadily; as constantly as the lot of women as a whole improves, as wider opportunities are open to them, as sex discriminations are abolished. More than one-third of the total number reported in 1919 were women the highest proportion known since collection of data on the subject was begun The child suicide problem is even more perplexing. Youngsters who cannot have reached the age of mor bid introspection are taking their lives to escape what? We are not less humane In our treatment of children than we were a century ago, when child suicide was un known. It does not answer the ques tion to speak of the "spirit of the time." When psychiatrists confess them selves bewildered, what shall the layman do? The issue eludes both science and common sense. The Save-a-Life league does not even scratch the surface of the ground in its report. Only to set down the figures is only to add to the burden of our perplexities. ' it was believed no other living au thor was capable of writing it. This was in 1874. Only seventeen years before this, when Eliot's "Sad For tunes of the Rev. Amos Barton" and "Mr. Gilfil's Love Story" appeared in a single volume, Thackeray praised the book in the belief that its author was a man and that no woman could have' so well succeeded as a novelist. But Hardy soon emerged from anonymity. "The Return of the Native," an unpleasant, if a pow erful, story, came in 1878, and is still regarded by many critics as his masterpiece That the Hardy vogue should have continued to the present day is in part a refutation of the often-ex pressed notion that people in the complex state of twentieth century society have no time to read long novels, particularly those containing long and trosy descriptions of wood land scenery. Without consciously pandering to any class, for Hardy was above that, he found a wide following among those inclined to ward fatalism. Nothing in Hardy's fundamental makeup prepared him to believe that as a man sows he shall reap. Circumstances he re garded as uncontrollable. The fates he invoked are as unjust as possible. His characters are cften punished for the sins of others, as he conceived it to be true that events come to pass in life. This is his realism. Though the fallacy be ever so ap parent, his craftsmanship is so skill ful that he carries the reader with im. There is nothing to be said s to the morals of the Hardy cult. ndoubtedly he has been sincere. We would not wish to censor him. It is even possible that his gloomy pictures may exercise a beneficent nfluence. But they should be con templated with mental reserve. It would be a sad world if the isolated sketches of it that Hardy has given s were true pictures or It as a whole. available. It Is significant that the automo bile makers do not regard the fuel problem as a permanently obstruc tive factor. Yet while we are deal- j ing with startling figures, it is inter esting to note that manufacturers themselves estimate the probable waste of gasoline by needless or un economic use at 3,000,000 gallons a day for the United States. This is considerably more than a billion gal lons a year. Perhaps the real point of saturation win be found here; it may be that expansion will cease for want of motor fuel some time be fore we cease to find new economic uses for automobiles. It is an en gaging topic for speculation, and the incentive for finding a substitute for gasoline will be intensified by the showing that the "pleasure car" of a few years ago has justified itself by its ability to put into the economic structure as much actual value as it is taking out of it . THE GOOD GERMAN NETTLE. Maximilian .Harden, who scored and scolded Germany from within when less privileged persons would have been removed to the celestial choir, still scolds. He has won the right, and none will gainsay him. A fearless, trenchant speaker and au thor when kaiserism was in the saddle, ready to ride roughshod over all opposition, it was not to be fancied that, his predictions fulfilled by the defeat of his nation, he would stay his lively tongue from the moot subject of the aftermath. From Harden the allies learned many an abiding truth concerning German character, and profited thereby. That the Germans themselves did not profit was due ' to the elemental complacency with which they re garded all criticism of their habits of thought and methods of attain ment. Speaking in Copenhagen, with the fluent and cynic sarcasm of which he is master, and which etches like acid, Harden recently observed that the allies were far too gentle and lackadaisical in their enforcement of the pledges exacted by arms. Such treatment of hi3 conquered country men, said Harden, betrayed a genu ine paucity of understanding on the part of the allies, to whom not even four years of strife had made fa miliar the German psychology. Your genuine German, continued Harden, in dilation of his topic, is in the world of flesh a counterpart to the nettle in plant life. Even children know that the approach to a nettle must be bold, determined and ag gressive. Grasp the maleficent plant swiftly and firmly and its power to sting perishes with the crushed 'and infinitesimal spines. But dandle it, toy with it, treat it with tenderness, and it leaves the weal of its irra tional rancor. So Harden says of the German people: If you treat them, collectively or Indi vidually, with consideration. If you handle them gingerly, you are certain of burning your fingers, but grasp them firmly and you are quite safe. They have learned to love an Iron hand and they do not oare even for the proverbial velvet glove to con ceal it- THOMAS HARDY AT EIGHTY Like his contemporary, William Frcnd de Morgan, Thomas Hardy laid the foundation for authorship in a field as far removed as possible from literature. De Morgan was a potter until he found that he could write. But he waited until he was sixty-three, while Ha.dy had a sen sible wife who appreciated his genius and who early urged him to abandon his nrofession of architect for the field that certainly was much more to his liking and that was afterward to make him one of the most widely ad of the authors of his day. One will discover by the simple expert ment of trying to borrow "Tess of the D'Urbervilles," "Far From the Madrliner Crowd." "The Return of the Native" or "The Mayor of Caster bridge" from his own public library that Hardy's novels are being read and in America, now. As to his verse, of which he has written two fair-sized volumes and which he pre ferred to his prose, there is a dif ferent story to tell. It is as a realistic novelist, who did not need the device of the happy ending to hold his pub lic, that his name is most secure Hardy was born in a little village in Dorsetshire, in tne counirysme that had been his lifelong home. He won when only twenty-three years old a prize for an essay on "Colored Brick and Terra Cotta Architecture. The impress of his early studies and associations is left on his writings. Two architects appear in the first novel he wrote, and there Is another in "A Laodicean," a novel that is regarded as largely biographical considerable portion of several of his works is taken up with description of architectural detail, but his early profession is mon manifest in what Professor I helps calls his eye fo the precision of form than in th technical minutiae with which som of his pages abound. Having framed a pattern, he is likely to follow it rather closely. His descriptions of nature, tedious as they are to some ought not to be skimmed by those who read philosophically. They are more than mere descriptions. At least they form a background, some times of contrast but more often of allegory. The inevitableness of nat ural processes is depicted in them. Fate pursues the individual as it does the tree. Man is no greater than the leaf on the bush. The happy ending is no more to be assumed in the one instance than in the other. Nature is inexorable. Hardy is not always pleasant, but he Is impelling. In the century that produced a dozen great English novelists including Dickens, Reade, Kingsley, fhackeray, the Bronte sisters and Disraeli he was a commanding figure. He stopped writing novels at sixty, when he was three years younger than was De Morgan at the beginning of his ca reer. In "Judo the Obscure" it is hardly probabp. that he had ex hausted his material. A rare sense of self-repressioi may have gov erned him in setting an example that in the case of Hardy may have re sulted in a loss to the public, but that could be followed with advan tage by-others who linge superfluous on the literary stage. Something of chance entered into his success. His first article for gen eral publication was entitled "How I Built Myself a House." It encour aged him to think that he could write, but it had no other value. A story called "The Poor Man and the I.ady" was submitted to George Meredith and elicited the latter's ad vice that it be entirely reconstructed. His first novel. "Desperate Reme dies, was a rcarsome tning, now The principle of benevolent aid to purely scientific research, such as may involve great expenditure of the time of learned men without def inite promise of immediate reward is not vitiated by the suggestion that the appropriation by congress of $250,000 to promote the discovery of a substitute for gasoline, recently asked for by a Minnesota member, is not needed. If there is anywhere in the land an industrial chemist ho has not had the subject in mind e is a curiosity, and if there is a concern interested in motor trans portation that wouJd not foster such discovery its name is not known. A man with so much as the glimmer of a good idea probably would have o difficulty in obtaining backing. The rewards certainly would be large nough to the successful, since it seems to be less a question of price than of obtaining any satisfactory ubstance promising development on sufficiently large scale. It is one epartment in which the govern ment might well save its money and rust in private initiative to see the business through. Harden discourses further to the i Interesting chiefly for the . light it cxiuie cactu xie cues toe existence 1 cast on me writers loriuaiive stage. A LCXt'RY OF YESTKRDAY. It is capable of proof, as J. George Frederick shows in an informative review or tne automobile situation in the Review of Reviews, that the au tomobile no longer deserves to be classified as a mere luxury, or even as chiefly an instrument of self-in dulgence. One needs only to study the amazing figures which Mr. Fred erck presents to be convinced that this is so. "The economic aspect of the automobile industry admittedly educes costs, annihilates time and supplements other facilities of trans portation." To the extent that this process dominates industry it un doubtedly is sound; there is little doubt that it largely does so. The attitude of the public toward self transportation has undergone a com plete change in less than two decades The opinion will be confirmed by the most cursory observation that "the greatest demand for cars will in creasingly come from those who make beneficial use" of them. One fact alone, culled from a mass o data bearing on the subject, is il iuminative. t orty-nve per cent o automobiles, for example, are sold to farmers and small town inhabitants. Here the claim that the motor make two minutes grow where only one grew before is least likely to be dis puted. In the small town and in th rural regions transportation is an obvious ingredient of time economy, The same thing is perhaps equally, if not so obviously, true of motor transportation in general. When will the point of saturation be reached? To ask the question is to open the whole economic issue. To appraise our absorptive capacity for precious stones, of which American are now said to own two-thirds of the supply of the world, would tn volve less intricate calculation. Motor transportation depends for its con tinued expansion on its ability to jus tify itself as a necessity. "Service is the watchword of the time, an service means something more in th vocabulary of society at large tha the hurried satisfaction of a whim Even in its recreation aspects, it pos sibly is true that the automobil "provides the incentive for men to work harder to produce other goods, It is declared on erood authoritv that aDDrOlimatHl V 9ft noe' Panl ftf no a- 1 senger cars are employed at least part time for some business purpose. Present inadequacy of railroad trans portation gives the automobile a chance to shine. Motor busses and private automobiles have leaped into the breach In every failure of con ventional transportation, caused by strikes or other causes, to function. In a single city in New Jersey, for example, more than 30,000 passen gers were carried by automobile busses in 1919. The relation of the motor car to freight hauling is appreciated by few persons. There are about 800.000 truoks in the country, hauling 3,600, 000 tons a day. or about 15 per cent of the total haulage of the country. Railway transportation is obviously cheaper in transit, but for short hauls the difference is largely re duced by terminal charges in the case of railways, and by the fact that unloading, motor hauling and other costs are entailed, and much time is lost. Up to seventy-five miles, door to-door delivery may be cheaper, all things considered. The number of horses released for use on farms rep resents the tillage of 15,000,000 acres more than otherwise would be culti vated. The total number of cars now in use in the United States, about 7, 750,000, is approximately one car for every thirteen inhabitants, by com parison with one for every 2182 per sons in Europe. Here we are in danger of drawing unwarranted con clusions; it is unsafe to count too much on Europe's absorptive power in our time. With 449,000.000 Life passed upon her way and others, choosing. Stretched forth a hand to grasi that selfsame flower. Eut she in obduration most confusing. The other blooms gave out from hour to hour; It was as though she said emphatic ally: "I give more than you ask, ofttimes, and yet Because but one rare bloom you seem to see. I must be blamed; while you in vain regret Gaze on the gifts I leave, and grieving view The single bud that could not be your own. Although perhaps could Truth explain to you The one I left might for that loss atone. But all along the way I heard the cry Of disappointment as the maiden passed. Giving her gifts so freely going by. W ithholding that one longed for to the last: And gazing on the blossoms she be stowed, v Yet knowing she was deaf to plead ing voice. she seemed a scornful mocker on the road. For few indeed were given of their choice: And though we oft compare our gifts and say Perhaps she knew which one be came us best. Still flow our tears for what she took away. When she passed by. ignoring our request. Whether or not it is true, as stated hat $250,000,000 worth of treasure has been recovered from the bottom of the sea since the war ended, treas ure hunting will continue to chal- enge the attention of inventors and adventurers as it has done since the beginning of time. There Is ev dence, too. that practical men are at work, and that with the mechanical facilities of a modern age a good deal will be accomplished that would hardly have been dreamed of a third or a century ago. Two inventions alone, both made by Americans, promise to revolutionize salvage One is a diving apparatus making it possible to descend to previously im possible depths and the other an oxy acetylene torch that can be operated under water and used for cutting holes in the sides of submerged ves sels. Yet no invention can overcome the perils of the sea and new chap icrs vi ueiprivauon ana heroism are HRely to be written when the details of the search become known. A life on the ocean still holds possibilities enough to satisfy the hardiest and the most venturesome. In an item about a whisky burg lary, the age of the burglar is given as seventy-two years. If his loot i only half as old as he is there are a lot of people who will think it was well worth taking a long chance to get. Blasco Ibanez, who spent a few- days in Mexico, is satisfied that th country will soon settle its own in ternal problems. But there are peo pie who have lived there all thei lives who are not so sure of it. The fact that the cow that sold for $30,000 recently was bought by a man named Pabst has given ris to a wild rumor that her milk ma be valuable for something besides casein and butterfat. THb; TOILER. Have you ever been just weary. Just tired and all fagged, out. Sick and disgusted with scheming. And wondering what it's all about. This looking and longing and search ing. Working and toiling for gold. Just to build up a quiet retreat For shelter, when you ve grown old? I've worked, I've toiled and I've striven. At times been almost counted out. I've looked for some years for one thing. But sometimes I've been ready to doubt That I'll ever find this gold-stuff. That all of us hanker for. This stuff that causes such heart ache, With its glittering, shimmering lure. Some of us are born in riches And never know sorrow or care: While others at birth begin striving. To gain just a part of their share. Some of us wear our silks and satins. Others wear nothing but rags; A few have the cream of the nations. And the rest get only the dregs. Somehow I've dreamed of a future. Resplendent and blessed with the sun. When J could be quits with this scheming. And my striving for ever be done: But now must 1 give up my dreaming. Must 1 walk with defeat as a pal. With nothing to see in the future. Just a miserable, weather-stained hull? But somehow. I can't cease my striv ing. And somehow I ever can smile, And look far over the horizon. And content for many a mile. For I've love to strive along with me. And that can't be bought with gold. So perhaps some day all my day dreams. Slay come true, be I ever so old. PATRICIA J. EVANS. ' r ' . : . r, Excluding those who contemplated a bit of profiteering in streetcar tickets, the rush for books was a not discomforting assurance that people have not wholly lost their sense of thrift. We are now at the time of year when the girl who wears a filmy gown and a fur neck piece is not altogether a joke. Both garments are justified by this kind of June. A federal judge has found that radical literature is only "dull." Which is probably the reason why those who have read it are doing the least worrying about it. Fourteen thousand tons of sugar is about a quarter of a pound per cap ita for the people of the United States. It is not as imposing as it sounds. Soon the business statisticians will be able to stop puzzling us with talk about "replacement values." There will be nothing to replace things with. The celluloid collar movement has small chance so long as the Parisian ivory industry continues to absorb most of the raw materials of celluloid. TIIK UIMiKR. There's a demon who sleeps with his heurl nn in v heart. And his slumber is light as the leaf S of a willow, y For he wakes at a touch which is soft as that leaf When, moved by a zephyr, it kisses the billow. There's an angel who steals like a vision of God Half seen and half felt through the odorous gloom Where Conscience sits writing a won derful book With a magical pen in a mystical room. And the demon lies still when the angel is near. As still as the grass for a century dead: As still as the stones which are put at a grave. Th stone at the foot and the stone at the head. Then Conscience and Fancy and Ro mance and Joy, And Beauty and Truth and the Mother of Love. Looped round with white lotus and sweet-breathing gul. Through the halls of my spirit ma jestically move. Then the demon springs up in the strength of his mane. And kindles my he-rt with a con suming fire: And always a hag chatters close at his side. The hideous, horrible soul of desire. GUY FITCH PHELPS. The man with the hoe was brother to the ox only twenty-one years ago. We wonder what Professor Mark- ham would think of him now. Long live the dandelion wine in dustry or at least until the dande lions in our lawns have been exter minated by the booze hunters. The time has gone by when any body can ' promise the support of "labor" to any ticket and deliver the goods. Four deaths from heat prostration in Chicago emphasize again the beauties of Oregon as a summer resort. Still one wouldn't care to live in New Zealand, just for the privilege Europeans getting along as best they , of buying sugar at 8 cents. TO TH K SLAVES OK THE IDEAL. Arise, ye servants, and defend the gods Whom ye in honor claim to worship, as With hearts now saddened by the turn of fate. And hope ' expiring swiftly in your breasts Ye cow'r before the broken, mold'rlng shrine O priests and priestesses who yet hold dear The sacredness of Beauty s altar fires. The solemn grandeur of Contentment's halls. Tha lnftv mafestv of Nature's realms. I Arise! unsheath thy tarnished, rusted swords Those mighty swords which have turned red with age And not with blood. Throw off the binding cords Of inert laxness. and with ardent hearts. Souls flaming with a vow to -ecreats A gleaming rhrine to Art and noble SOU1S. -Vvf. v Go forth tnd gather gems. The jew- . els of e . God's goodness hidden lie. in spots F , unknown. p - LOIS SMITH. - . 5 ;