THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX. PORTLAND. APRIL 16. 1922 8 ESTABLISHED BY HENRY T PITTOCK. l'ubiished by Tha Oregonian Publishing Co. 13fi pixth Street, Portland. Oregon. C. A. JIOBDKX. E. B. PIPER, Manager. Editor. The Oregonian is a member of the Asso rted Press. The Associated Press is ex clusively entitle;! to the use for publication of aii news d;spatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also local news published herein. AH rights ot publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. HubscriptJon Rates Invariably In Advance. (Br Mail.) Iai!y, Sunday Included, one year. .. .$8.00 Iaily, Sunday included, six months.. 4.25 Baily, Shinday Included, three months. 2.25 IaiJy, Sunday included, one month... .75 Pally, without Sunday, one year...... 6.00 l--a!ly. without Sunday, six months... 8.25 I'aily, without Sunday, one month HO Sunday, one year ...2.50 (By Carrier.) 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The Importance to Portland ship ping of the hearing on application of section 28 of the Jones shipping law, which is to be held in June by a committee of the shipping board, can hardly be exaggerated. That seption was inserted by the senate without having been considered in committee and with little debate. It was designed to deal with a local situation on a part of the Pacific coast, but, if put in operation gen erally, would have most far-reaching effects on movement of railroad traffic, on the entire railroad rate system and on the shipping business of Pacific ports especially. In involved language the section directs that, when adequate shipping from any port is provided under the American flag, preferential import and export railroad rates shall not be given on goods carried on foreign ships. The interstate commerce commission Is given power to sus pend operation of the section when the shipping board certifies that adequate American shipping facili ties do not exist between any port and any foreign country, but the commission is required to withdraw suspension when the board certifies that shipping facilities under the American flag are adequate The board was about to-move for opera tion of the section to Pacific ports and on other coasts, but was induced to send a committee to hold an Inquiry before calling on the com mission to act. The only ports to which preferential rates are considerable in amount are those on the Pacific coast. Here the difference between the ordinary and the preferential rates is so great that foreign ships could not pay it out of their ocean rate. But the bulk of traffic moving under these rates to the Pacific coast originates so near the Atlantic or Gulf coast that the difference in rates to their ports is so small as could easily be absorbed if traffic were diverted to those coasts. Importers and exporters cannot be compelled to route their traffic by American ships, and would send it by the cheapest route. For eign lines would exert themselves to make their new routes to Gulf and Atlantic port the cheapest, and would leave Pacific ports dependent mainly on American lines, which would be relieved of the spur of direct foreign competition at those ports, while ports on the other coasts would have the advantage of added competition between foreign lines anl between them and American lines. The effect would be less frequent sailings frqm Pacific ports across the Pacific ocean. As about 80 per cent of exports from Portland is of local origin, foreign ships would still come here to carry them, but, being deprived of the opportunity to fill up their space with transcontinental freight, could not make as low rates as they now do. t That situation would bring a further danger to Portland com merce. As the only foreign-going ships from this port under the American flag are those of the ship ping board, we should have to rely on the continuance of Its line. When the subsidy passes congress, the board intends to make a great drive to sell its fleet. The ships which it now operates from Portland might then be sold to a company which would run them from some other port. One means of averting this danger would be to establish a Port land line, to buy ships and operate them in Portland's service. Failing that, the only recourse would be to ask the shipping board to move the interstate commission to suspend application of section 28 to Portland on the ground that this port no longer had adequate service under the American flag. We know from experience how difficult it is to con vince the shipping1 board of any facts that do not accord with its policy. It still believes that section 28 can be used to maintain an American merchant marine, for the principle of that section figures in its subsidy bill, but the terms in which Chair man Ijisker referred to it in his statement to the joint committee of congress imply that doubt has entered his mind. He said: It is believed by many that considerable indirect aid wilr result from the making effective of section 28 of the merchant marine act. The legislation is mandatory and its true worth can only be determined by actual trial. The shipping board is making an exhaustive investigation of the practical application of this section as a preliminary to certification to the inter state commerce commission that adequate shipping facilities are afforded by Ameri can ships. In other words, try ft on the dog, and the hearings offer Pacific porta their last chance to escape being- the dog. That prospect should spur the chamber of commerce to begin la pood season for a presentation of Portland's case In its full strength. The hearings mark the shipping board's first departure from its past practice of deciding important ques tions secretly after private hearing of the pleas' of interested parties an un-American practice) which has hftun fillrix-ri In Pni-llflnd'o riairi. ment. An opportunity is now pre sented to bring discussion of ship ping questions, as they affect ports t)i:i? now suffer from discrimination, into t!i open. This publicity cannot fail to win public support for the Portland principle of fair and equal competition. Coming when the sub sidy bill will be under discussion in congress, it cannot fail to command attention from that body. HOW NOT TO GET TOGETHER. "There has never been a time when the democratic party has . less to be ashamed of or more to be proud of," says Chairman Hull of the democratic national committee. From March 4, 1913, to March 4, 1919, the democratic party controlled both the executive and legislative branches of the government. If Mr. Hull's words are to be taken In their full, literal sense, his party had more to be ashamed of and less to be proud of -at that time than it has now, when it controls neither branch of the government. Of course, Mr. Hull did not mean to imply that, but the interpretation to which his words are fairly open should serve as a warning- against the habit Jf making broad statements that sound well but do not bear analysis, to which oratorical politicians are too disposed. Mr. Hull Is also quoted as saying: For two years after the war a small coterie of republicans engaged in a national conspiracy to discredit the Wilson administration instead of getting together with the democrats and providing poet-war legislation. In order to be effective, the "get together" spirit must be reciprocal. In order that two bodies of men get together, each should advance to ward the other. During the war the republicans made several advances to get together with the democratic administration for the purpose of effectively making war, but at every step that they made in advance, the democrats drew back a step. The most important piece of post-war w-ork was the making of a peace treaty, but Mr. Wilson treated the republican party as if It did not exist until he brought a draft league covenant back from Paris. Then he scorned its advice to make a peace I treaty first and form a league after ward. When he brought home the Versailles treaty, he refused to accept any change proposed by republicans, though they earnestly sought agreement with the demo crats on reservations. The democratic idea of getting together is that the republican party should go over bodily to the demo cratic side and indorse whatever a democratic administration proposes without offering criticism or amend ment. This is not the way in which people approach from different view points a task on which they must agree and work together.. It be tokens the "keep apart" spirit, not the "get together" spirit. HOW THE DEBTS MIGHT BE PAID. As the commission on debts of the allies has at last been confirmed and is ready for business, it must now face the question how and when to secure payment. Great Britain and possibly Belgium can begin paying interest this year, but France may be expected to say that it will pay when Germany pays reparations, Italy is in such bad financial position that it probably could not begin to pay interest for two or three years, hope of anything from Russia must be deferred to a remote future, and most of the smaller states may frankly say that nothing can be expected from them till they get on their feet. Yet these smaller states have great potential ability to meet their obli gations. Poland has rich agricul tural soil, capable of producing a great exportable surplus, has oil in Galicia and has added to its re sources of coal, iron and zinc by acquisition of part of Silesia. Czecho slovakia has 60 per cent of the in dustrial resources of the old Austro Hungarian empire, has more nearly approached balancing its - budget than any other central European state, and has statesmen of ability. The other states of the old Hapsburg dominions and the Balkan peninsula are very backward in development in consequence of misrule and wai or the constant apprehension of war The only manner in which they can provide revenue to pay interest and principal of their debts is to accept present frontiers as fixed, to cut their armies to the minimum and to concentrate their energies on In ternal development. An extreme case is that of Jugo slavia. Its debt is almost $1,000, 000,000, of which more than $57, 000,000 is due to the United States and twice that sum to Great Britain, its budget is thirty times as great as before the war, its expenses far exceed its revenue, its money unit, the dinar, has depreciated from a normal 19 cents to 1 cents, and the whole of Serbia was so ravaged during the war that the Bulgarians even carried away the tombstones. Yet its statesmen believe that it can recover, the finance minister saying: Our state possesses within its frontiers all the elements necessary for great pros perity and the means of securing a more rapid restoration than any other country which may bave suffered the same losses. Our coal, our Iron and other - mineral products, our varied agricultural produc tions, our great water power, exhaust less forests, immense river traffic, our contact with the great Industrial centers of Central Burope and the apportionment of property- among: the people all of these conditions, I am sure, will contribute to the rapid restoration of our kingdom. . There is no economic reason why we should despair of our future. To realize on all the wealth that lies in the ground requires wise and close application of both capital and labor. The Serbs, though terribly reduced in number, can provide the labor, but they must go outside their own country for capital and skilled management. When the commission inquires what adjustment of the debt it can make, Jugo-SIavia may reply that, if the United States will pro vide capital to develop its resources, it will not only pay interest on the investment but will thereby so in crease its revenue that in a few years it will begin paying interest and installments' on the principal at its debt. Its Improved prosperity would also make it a good market for American products, to which American investors in new Industries would give -preference. Similar pro positions might come from Austria, which has abundant waterpower; Roumania, which has coal, oil and other minerals and much timber; Poland, Czecho-Slovakia, Hungary, Greece and the Baltic states. The commission has no power to accept such a proposition, but it might recommend to congress a scheme by which private American capital would take up the offer, the government obtaining a guaranty from the interested states that they would reduce their armies, keep out of war and put their finances in healthy condition. In this manner it is possible that at one stroke the United States wnnlri find emnlnvmpnt for much would nna empiovment ior mucn American capital, markets for large quantities of goods, ultimate pay ment of the debts and exercise a powerful Influence for peace by dis couraging investment in countries that maintained large armies and I pursued a policy of aggression. As in business, the only way to collect money from an insolvent state may be to put more money into it. THE COSMETIC URGE. Undoubtedly the best pun of the season, an allusion to the "cosmetic urge," owes its point to a newly growing custom. We say "newly growing" because it is not the first time it has grown. From time to time in ages past our foremothers have been wont to conceal ' their natural charms beneath layers of paste of varying shades and thick nesses. The passion for statistics "be ing a manifestation of only recent years, we do not recall just how many times as much money was spent a century ago for paint and powder as for education, but the dis parity must have been very wide. Now it is being argued again by those who take themselvess, and life, with a vast and almost painful seriousness that the civilization of the twentieth century is threatened by the Hp-stick and the powder pot. We note with what we trust is a becoming gravity that the cosmetic issue has found its way into the courts. Two teachers in Arkansas, respectively Miss Pearl Pugsley and Miss Irma Byers, were discharged by the directors of their school dis trict for violation of a rule against the use of complexion beautifiers. Miss Byers was reinstated upon promising to offend no more, but Miss Pugsley has appealed to the courts, holding that her rights as a woman have been infringed. So has arisen what has already become known as the "lipstick case," al though MissiPugsley says that she has never used paint of any kind, but only powder. She tells the court that she has always done this and that it is nobody's business but her own. The judge of a local tribunal has refused her application for a writ of mandamus, although he ad mits that the rule is unjust. Since the petitioner has previously an nounced that she will appeal to the highest court, there is a prospect of an authoritative determination of this most important question. The discovery In an ancient Egyp tian tomb of a complete set of toilet articles similar to those in use in the present day may well be considered by the, courts. . They are not bound in law by the ancient precedent, but at least they may take judicial notice of it, as showing the futility of run ning counter to the modes. The is sue is one of personal taste, which it is difficult to govern by rule, but underlying it is the question of the authority of a school board to deter mine whether the teacher shall em ploy certain prescribed, or proscribed, adjuvants to beauty or whether she may be prohibited from doing so. If the powder puff may be banished, why not a certain style of coiffure? Shall we attempt by statute or other wise to regulate the length of sleeves or the height of heels? Is the "shine" on woman's nose to be de clared more attractive, or less offen sive, than the touch of talcum how ever unskillfully applied? It is, as Miss Pugsley Intimated in her defense, a question of transcen dant importance. Private employers have tried to force the issue, with, as we remember it, but indifferent suc cess. The school teacher, as a ser vant of the community and possess ing certain rights not common to private employes, is just the person to bring the whole matter to a final and judicial determination. We hope that there may be no quibbling, no evasion of the main proposition, and that, if necessary, the case may be carried to the supreme court of the United States. Have or have not women, whether school teachers or otherwise, the plain right to paint the lily, to improve upon neglectful na ture, to subdue the glistening residue upon a too-oily cuticle, by every means that art has placed at their command? FOR WHOM DO WOMEN DRESS? Two writers in the Century Maga zine discuss the momentous question whether women dress to please men or for the pure love of decoration, the latter motive being complicated by a spirit of emulation which quite naturally merges Into desire to ob tain the approbation, if not to inspire the envy, of members of their own sex. The debate is conducted by a man and a woman. Curiously, it is the man who takes the ground that the sex instinct does not underlie the feminine penchant for doodads and folderols, while the woman insists that the modes have a basis In biology. Listen to Alexander Black, who takes what will seem to many to be the higher ground in the con troversy : I don't believe that women "dress" solely to please men, not only because they don't have to take that much trouble, not only because dress is so satisfying in itself, and because, as an art, it must always be In fluenced more than by its specialist criti cism than by its spectators, and women are the specialists; but because women have other business in life, and pleasing other women has become as important to them as pleasing men, in vast number of cases more Important. - It would appear that Mr. Black has weakened his case by resort to peculiar instances in which women as a matter of business concern find it expedient to meet the approval of others of their sex, as, we suppose, where an employed woman Is under the superintendency of another woman, or where in the business of "meeting the public" it is a public of both sexes with which she is called on to deal. When one thinks of the question which is not knew to this age or generation one re gards it in the aspect in which woman is free to make her choice, : independently of adventitious con siderations such, for example, as those of business. The issue is j whether a woman left to her own devices, and presumably possessing the wherewithal, dresses to please her fellow women or in pursuance of an instinct much older than any commercial institution. On this heading, Mrs. Charlotte Perkins Gil man makes a much clearer exposi tion. She says: The fact appears when mercenary moth ers for the sake of their daughters, or other women for personal needs, deliber ately set themselves to please men. . . . Even the wife, desiring some special in dulgence from her husband, not only pro vides the dinner he likes best, but wears the dress he likes best, if she has one. . . . A further proof remains, patent and pathetic. "Some women there are who, urged by convictions as to health, beauty or comfort, rebel aga.nst this masculine demand, and do not "dress" in the decor ative sense at a!l. What happens to them? They are let alone. -They are not danced with, not helped about. As a matter of ! dressing, the human mind is past master . d jng many gracefu, illusions over a biological fact; but the fact remains. Negative though the evidence may be, Mrs. Gilman has scored a point with her declaration that the women who do not dress "in the decorative sense" are apt to be let alone by those of the opposite sex. If it be said that this is only part of the rea son why men avoid them, that the factors which led them to eschew decoration also enter into the spirit of sex hostility, the proponents of the theory are still no better off. Doubtless the unadorned female sheds no tears over being "let alone" by the men, but this only proves that if she cared a rap for masculine opinion in this particular she would not affect a highly superior but non- decorative severity. One hesitates in the face of vol umes that have been writen upon this fundamentally momentous ques tion to venture to arbitrate between controversialists who have given the subject .as much thought as Mr. Black and Mrs. Gilman evidently have done. One can with safety commit one's self no further than the weight of the arguments, regard less of the merits of the issue, which they have presented. Purely as a de bater and we go no further than that Mrs. Gilman appears to have established her superiority. REVIVING THE PANCRATIUM. Those who are still interested in their classics may have been moved by "Strangler" Lewis' challenge to Jack Dempsey to review their read ing on the topic of the contests of ancient Greece. The Greeks had wrestling, which it would intrigue Mr. Lewis to know was called by Plutarch the most artistic and cun ning of athletic games, and they had an equivalent of our modern boxing, the rules of which were not unlike those of the ring today, but they also had a combination of the two. This was called pancratium, and it is pre sumably what Lewis proposes to re vive. The Greeks took their sports with great earnestness, as readers of history know; in boxing and wres tling and In the mingling of the two, victory was the chief object of the game. The Greeks were not pri marily spectators as the Romans afterward were and as Americans are coming to- be; the Greek idea was that athletic sports were chiefly for the benefit of the participants. Wherefore, after a time in which the pancratium flourished as an exceed ingly cruel sport its rules were modi fied by public opinion, so that it was somewhat less disabling than twen tieth-century wrestling and probably not so dangerous as a modern foot ball game. The Roman boxer employed a de vice called the caestus, consisting of leather thongs bound around the wrist and hands and weighted with iron studs, which has a modern counterpart in the horseshoe that our early-day pugilists used to be ac cused of slipping into the boxing glove. Nevertheless it can hardly be said that boxing anciently reached the state of development that now characterizes it: there are allusions-1 in the classic writings to broken ears and not broken noses, which indi cate that the Greek fought windmill fashion and did not hit out from the shoulder, from which we are able to conclude that Euradymus would have had small chance in a match with Dempsey, though he was a powerful chap and might have been able to put "Stransler" Lewis on his back. But the pancratium was nevertheless the sport of sports and was reserved for the doughtiest of athletes. Its possibilities for barbar. ism seem to have been enormous, employment of Vr. i caestus was only occasionally forbidden and fatalities sometimes resulted, notwithstanding that the death of an antagonist un less shown to be the result of acci dent disqualified for prize. The mixed match will fail as a test of the respective merits of box ing and wrestling in all probability and will degenerate into a species of rough-and-tumble such as one sees among yokels who are skilled in neither art, and rough-and-tumble never proved anything except the courage of the individuals contend ing and the amount of punishment they could stand. There is not much likelihood that the pancratium will be revived in this country, nor would there be profit in reviving it, even as a spectacle. There would be point, however, to wider indulgence In both boxing and wrestling in moderation for the good they would do in pro moting general physical develop ment. It is fine to possess the sense of power that is felt by the well-made man, but since the aver age individual is not very likely to engage in brawls a large part of the benefit of boxing and wrestling instruction comes from the all around physical training which is necessary to produce expertness in either line. The Japanese have a better con ception of the function of athletics than most Caucasians have; their much-talked-of and somewhat over estimated system of jiu-jitsu prob ably owes most of its success as an athletic regimes to the circumstance that it includes scientific diet, deep breathing exercises, plenty of sleep, abundance of fresh air and general moderation in habits. These are In deed the desiderata of any system of athletics, and the extent to which they are promoted is the measure of the benefits derived by those who in dulge in them. We can see no particular objec tion to putting Lewis and Dempsey in a ring or, better yet, a pit -and letting them go at one another, with or without caestus, and it will not aggrieve us much if they battle to a Kilkenny finish; there is at least a suspicion that Lewis and Dempsey press agents are behind the whole dispute. But we do need a revival of interest in non-professional ath letics, in both boxing and wrestling, and in particular In the general sys tem of right exercise and sound liv ing that amateur athletics promotes. We are in danger of degenerating Into a nation of spectators, such as the Romans were, and we need more of the spirit of the Greeks, who played their own games. The refusal of an important group of members of the French Academy of Sciences to join in a courteous reception to Professor Albert Ein- stein and their threat to break up the meeting if he were permitted to engage in the discussion of a purely scientific topic will be regarded in this country as an extreme example of chauvinism hardly warranted by Einstein's record and certainly not justified by the subject which he was scneauiea to eiuciaate. it is remembered that Frenchmen en- tered a recent prize contest which brought out numerous explanations of Einstein's celebrated "theory," and it is pretty generally admitted that mathematics is not a science capable of being influenced by na tional boundaries. The incident is a reminder, however, of the attitude of certain Americans not long ago toward the reception of Dr. Lorenz on the ground that he was an Aus trian, and is further suggestive of the expediency of abolishing war, the after effects of which are nearly as demoralizing as the destruction wrought on actual biAUtfCieids. AN ECHO FROM THE PAST. The controversy now raging in London between Lord Knutsford and Miss Elizabeth Robins, the play wright, over the decision of the Lon don hospital to close its doors to women students sounds on this side of the ocean like a muffled echo from the distant past. It Is true that the first woman graduate of a medi cal school in the United States re ceived her diploma only seventy three years ago -and that many pro fessional colleges of this country were closed to women long after that, but we have a right to all the feeling of self-righteousness that we are able to extract from our pre eminence. We have made a marked advance since then. The number of women physicians in the United States in 1880 was less than 2500;. in 1910 there were nearly 14,000; the census figures for 1920, which have not yet been published, in all prob ability will show a still further im portant increase. We are therefore in a position to listen to the arguments with an ap praising air -of superiority, - having heard all of them during the early stages of the campaign in America. Lord Knutsford says, first, that male students are much more sensitive than women are, that it would be highly subversive of morale and dis cipline, for example, for a woman physician to be placed in a position of authority over a man who though her senior in years might be her junior in medical experience, and third, that many men positively could not survive the shock of being cured of disease by a woman. Es pecial stress is placed on a class of cases in which the factor of sex em barrassment is peculiarly involved. From an issue whether women shall be admitted as students in a particular institution the discussion has extended to the fitness of women in general to practice medicine. Lord Knutsford appears to have dug a pit for himself to fall into when he raised the question of sex- embar rassment. Miss Robins counters ef fectively with the suggestion that women who have been compelled to have recourse to men physicians for centuries ought to be the ones to be consulted now, and that in any event nothing in the proposal to extend medical education to women affects the right of members of either sex to choose their own medical atten dants. Lord Knutsford reserves what is perhaps his weakest argument for the last. He says that colleges that admit women will not attract the class of male students who excel at football. Here in the United States, where we know that the male stu dent rather enjoys a chance to ex hibit his athletic prowess before the co-eds, we think there should be a ready answer to that. The entire dis cussion in other respects is reminis cent of the files of the American magazines in the early fifties, about which time Rush Medical college was being roundly censured for hav ing granted a diploma to Emily Blackwell, whose sister, Elizabeth, only a few years previously had achieved the distinction of being the first woman to be graduated from a medical college in the United States. THE DRIVE FOR BOOKS. We are fortunate in our way that sundry drives for books have pre ceded that which now has as its object the recoupment of the supply of the Portland public library, because- i-previous occasions have fur nished opportunity for the cleaning out of garret and the riddance of old rubbish, which, curiously enough, has never seemed worth while until the time came for people to give it away. However much we may now feel sorry for the recipients of those early bounties, we are reminded that Providence moves in a mysterious way its wonders to perform. The new demand for a better class of reading matter, made insistent by conditions over which public libra rians have little or no control, comes at a time when owners' of books presumably have only to reflect which, among a number of excellent ones, they can the most easily spare It is a fact of interest that al though the library is in theory primarily a repository of books, and its fundamental purpose is the plac ing of the book in the hands of peo pie who want to read them, as a matter of fact it is the book-purchasing fund that in every emergency is the first to be attacked. It ia mostly forgotten that certain- items of "overhead" are commonly a fixed if not a rising obligation. Salaries increase, though slowly, and the physical appurtenances of the library respond to the law of supply and demand; the cost of the book, in which are involved all the factors of a more expensive system of pub lication, including the rewards of authorship, increases disproportion ately to the growth of book-purchas--ing funds. It is not generally known, for illustration, that the average outlay for a single book in a library the size of that in Portland has increased from about 85 cents in 1915 to about $1-30 in 1922. We do not know why it should be so, and we have our own suspicions that cer tain publishers may be guilty of profiteering, but the fact remains that out of a depleted fund it be comes necessary to replenish supplies upon which is imposed an added burden of 50 per cent or more. The data thus presented are ger mane as illuminating a topic of interest to those who wonder why a public institution should be reduced to the extremity of an appeal for private aid in carrying out an estab lished public function. But the fact stands out that a period of "hard times" in the library operates not only to retard new and necessary purchases for current needs, but that it also allows old stocks to run down. The phenomenon is not peculiar to Portland, although the situation here is particularly acute. It is the old story that a gallon measure cannot be filled with a quart of material a problem that it takes no mathemati cian to solve. The scope of library work mean while widens almost immeasurably. period usiness in library history when its bu was only to cater to the taste exclu sively of the elect. Its educational possibilities were perhaps not even dreamed of by Benjamin Franklin, who was a pioneer in the dissemina tion of education through popular ization of books. The reading habit grows upon the stuff it feeds on: it is our own fault if we have invited a Frankenstein monster into our midst, but a fault for which there is small reason for apology. The result has on the whole been good. . The demand for reading matter, fostered by the library itself in the first instance and accentuated by in creased cost of books, which in turn has depleted library supplies, has created a kind of endless chain, or vicious circle. Either the demand must be met or a good deal of the excellent work that has been done in the past must go for naught. It is not so well known as it ought to be that library patrons are doing serious reading nowadays. "Fic tion" although it does not connote the disparaging Implication of only a few years ago represents a con stantly declining proportion of the whole. Science, particularly in this age of the development of the auto mobile and the radio, engages the attention of its millions. Poetry is more read than it used to be, under the emotional stimulus of the war; the breaking up of nations is re sponded to by a large call for works on history and political economy; the Inquiring minds of people who never until recently asked the rea son for anything that came to pass are waiting to be fed; entertainment becomes the least of the motives of reading where once it was the first. The student rather than the idler is the patron of the library of today a fact of significance to those who may,be planning how best they can aid in the general scheme of uplift out of the means at their command. Recent donations to the library shelves reflect, we think, an im proved conception of the real need of the time. We wonder at the man who can persuade himself to part with his copy of the. life of John Marshall, but the thing has been done. Classics like the "Education of Henry Adams" came in. "The Gay-Dombeys" is representative of a class of not too ancient literature that is in high demand. We are not so much surprised by the inclusion of Kyne's "Pride of Paloma" when we reflect that there is a -large class of books that are worth reading once but that thereupon exhaust their value for the individual and fulfill, their highest' mission only by being passed along. That there should be a repeated and insistent demand for Lorna Doone while undoubtedly this fine old story reposes neglected on many a shelf is only an illustra tion of the unequal distribution of the kind of wealth that counts. We think it creditable to the good taste of the reading people that no less than 200 copies of "David Copper field" are necessary to fill ordinary requirements, or that some 20 copies lof the "Outline of History", find a waiting list that will still be waiting six months or' so from now. For books like Van Loan's "History of Mankind" the demand is avid. Louisa M. Alcott is still read, the classics of a generation ago vie with the best sellers of the day and promise to outlast them. The newly estab lished inter-relation of public library and public school has helped to ere ate the situation out of which the drive for books has arisen. It is better, in the new conception of the function of the book, that the volume should wear out than rust out, and it is to this sentiment in those who do not acquire books merely for the pleasure of physical possession that the library drive par ticularly appeala Perhaps discouraged by wet weather and poor attendance in sev eral years, but ambitious and hope ful, the directors -of the Gresham fair this year set the opening day for August 7. For years the Southwest Washington fair has led the season with a- date a week or two later and has had good weather and the sue cess good weather carries. Septem ber generally is a rainy month, yet its dates are crowded. The date claimed by the Oregon state fair is in the last week, running into Oc tober, and it has had a measure of good weather, but not enough. August here essentially is a dry month of sunshine, and its merits should be considered by fair, man agements. A little dust beats much mud. The experiment by the Gresham people will be an innova tion for the better. There will be no lack of exhibit "stuff." Several sittings of criminal assizes in British Columbia have been can celed this spring for lack of business. The sureness of swift punishment across the line is a deterrent of crime and emphasizes the contrast this side of it. The reported organization of a suspender trust reminds us that the world still needs a suspender button that won't come off. Let the In ventor of one that really does what is promised for it name his own price. Tfia business men who are blam ing hard times on the lateness of Easter will not be comforted by re flecting that the next six Easters occur in April. It is up to them to readjust themselves to the inevitable facts. We are fortunate, as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle intimates, that the heavenly law forbids the angels to butt in on mundane affairs. But we would like a tip from St. Peter on how he manages to enforce it so well. We sometimes wish that Sir Arthur had come over in his capac ity of Sherlock Holmes. The crime wave calls for a master mind and there are a lot of questions that we think Sherlock could answer more intelligently than the spirits do. It is an intriguing thought that the Genoa conference is being held at the place where Columbus was born. Here's hoping that when it comes to new discoveries Genoa is able to come back. The ex-kaiser, now said to have become a prohibitionist, will not, however, be welcomed to the ranks of the drys who still believe in hoo- doos. Once in a while a condemned man contrives to "cheat the gallows." But what, as the old song has it. is he going to say to St. Peter at the sate 1 We still have not forgotten the pe The Listening Post. Br DeWItt Harry. In these days of wireless phone and marvels of the air ihere seems to be no limit to the possibilities. Humor ists and comic artists have profited enormously- and many are the unique ideas that they have suggested. In terest is increasing in somewhat the same way a snowball gains Pise by being pushed through the new snow. It ODcns ud unlimited vistas of what may be. The day cannot be sol far distant when almost everyone will Ige equipped with a set ot receiv ers arid in instant commuMeation with certain sources of information for guidance or other reasons. The experience of a deaf man may come In very appropos here. This man, while not completely deaf, was growing harder and harder of hearing. Most of us think of those who have any of their senses im paired as unfortunates. Fur years his difficulty in hearing had been growing, but it had been so gradual that he had not noticed the change. He lived in an atmosphere of quiet and had learned to like it. His deaf ness did not seem a severe trial and he got along all right with his daily tasks and managed to communicate with his friends and enjoy life. But there came a time when his wife prevailed on him to purchase an audiphone. It immediately corrected his hearing to near-normal, but it was a punishing experience for the deaf man. He never knew how hard some of his friends walked over the tiles in the corridors as they ap proached the office, and he could not work for the noise. The clatter of foosteps and of typewriters and the clamor of voices were like thunder and nearly drove him distracted. He could not think clearly, he who had been accustomed to live in a world of quiet. 1 The sudden transition was too much, the cars, the traffic, all the many clamors were too much. He threw his ear sets away and once again was content; he had learned to prefer his world of quiet. Not all the crops of spring are flow ers. For Instance, there's the can vasser crop, extra flourishing this particular year. Hordes of them flock to the residence districts like song birds returning after a winter migration1. The canvassers' songs are of horse-radish and hominy, vacuum cleaners and electric irons, stocks and bonds, corsets and stockings, magazines arid books, and go on, ad infinitum. Not a one but offers a wonderful bargain. And they are of every style of persistence from the easily handled to the stubborn who Insert heavy-toed boots in doorways. And then there are the men after work, or who say they are chasing it. The man who comes, armed with a pair of shears, and offers to prune the rose bushes. The one who comes with a four-day growth of beard and wants odd Jobs. The men who follow the wood and coal wagons and seem to make a fair living handling fuel from the curb to the basement win dow. And Just the bums, the discon solate ones with the hard-luck tales, the standard type of moocher. This winter undoubtedly has been a hard one for many men who have not had steady work, but many housewife will tell the world that it has been a strenuous winter for those who have to answer the doorbells. Chinese youngsters seem to absorb American languge, customs and edu cation to a perfectly marvelous de gree. Many of them, students in our schools and universities, make envl able records, and as a general rule they seem hard-working, sincere and bright. Their adoption of American dress and the ease with which they act in a fashion as truly of this coun try as If they were Caucasians is astonishing. At a cafe the other night was a Chinese party and the girlg were the life of the evening. Dainty oriental maids, their wearing of American clothes seemed the most natural thing possible. If anything they looked just a whit more attractive than did the white American girls nearby. And their dancing, why it must have made all the young fel lows who saw long to make their acquaintance. Here's a joke that nearly fell flat. Swiss cheese is the subject matter and, of course, the holes, or lack of them, the feature. A restaurant programmed individ ual imported Swiss cheeses, and the daring patron decided, inasmuch as he had a fondness for the delicacy, to take a chance. The chetse came, looked fine, tasted fine, but was hole less. Then came the inspiration to have some fun. So the diner called the waitress ancrinformed her that she had brought no holes with bis cheese. The waitress, plainly taken unawares, took her troubles to an other girl, and after they bad dis cussed the matter for a while the two went into conference with the head waitress, and she went in search of the manager, who brought in the original package and proved that ths cheese came .from Switzerland. And the nearby diners looked their dis gust at the inoffensive one who had caused so much trouble, . and the cheese-eater felt bad for he had not meant to cause such a stir by- his simple little impulse. Two boys of about 8 years of age. who evidently believe in signs, were on the Twenty-third-street street car the other noon. They walked out to the front of the car to get off. There they stood, waiting for the motorman to open the door, as block after block was passed. Finally they came back through the car and complained to the con ductor that the motorman wouldn't let them off and that they were now way beyond their street. The con ductor inquired If the youngsters had asked the motorman to let them off. "No," they replied, and pointing to the sign "No talking to the motor man" got off, leaving the passen gers in feales of laughter. Herb Sichel, who uses tite grass hooks On his escutcheon, never passes up "a chance. He had a neat little display of men's chapeaux in dove tones and delicate shades for Easter wear; but he puKcd them out of the window. Now the window, with ap propriate lettered cards, contains on raincoat and four umbrellas, the proper accoutrements for the male lCaater earada . Defiance. Br Grace K. Mall. Let no man say to you that you shall fail: Fling back Mb words and prove they are but Hex! Although your spirit falter aye. and quail You shall not lose until your cour age dies; So -long as you are brave enough to try. The flame of strength within you ca not die. If sometimes you shall feel the fatiil urge To let your grip grow looite upon life's reliiH. Lash every energy with scorn and merge Your forces in a drive anaiiiKt jour pa ins; Let no one have the chance to pass and say You are a weakling, wrecked along the way. Let no man laugh and say you've lost your hold " You're judged hy what you Beem in actual view; Within his heart he, too, may be les bold A thousand times than he may seem to you; The man who takes the upper sphere is he Who fights each day a stronger man to be. Whatever be the place that now ll his, Be sure he fought to be the man he if. NATt BK'S TO.MC. When affairs of life are pressing sore. And the world seem" going- bad; When those you thought were friends prove false. And the heart of you la sad. Haw you ever spent a day In ths woods. Away from the hurrying throng. With nothing of noise but ths bab bling brook. Or the trill of some woodblrd's song? Have you felt the pine leaves under- - foot. Caught J.he odor of fir and balm. Heard the sound of wind In the tree tops tall. That brings a soothing calm? Have you noted the call of mountain quail; Watched the woodpecker tap a tree. Or heard the bum, as over your head Flew a wandering honey bee? Have you smelled the smell of ban tire smoke As it curled up through the sir. Or the ravishing odor of ooffee and ham. As it steamed and alxxled there? And then at last, your hunger ap peased. Have you stretched yourself on the grass. And gazed at the sky through leaf boughs, , As elowly the moments passed? Have you felt the peace of the wide, wide space; The arch of the sky, so broad. Lifting your soul into closer touch With nature and nature's God? Oh, say! Have you spent a day In the woods When the heart of you was sad? If you have, then I know at the end of that day. The heart of you was glad! GKACE PADDOCK EDOERTON. WHAT TO DO WITH EINSTKIXI What we going to do with brother Einstein? . All the world he'stlltlng up askew. Relatively speaking, he's deliberately seeking To smash and build the universe anew. Sober little planets that have plodded Round the heavens thoughtfully and slow Now are being vigorously prodded. And they're looking worried as they go. What we going to do with brother Einstein? He has gone and speeded up the moon. Relatively stated, with poetic glimmer freighted. It will visit us at morning, night and noon. Lovers must step out now, swiftly, surely, For the moon comes, sips and comes again. She will no more linger round de murely. Dallying for love-sick maids and men. EARL E. 6TANARD. SPRING MORMJIO, the joy of the dawning, when Oh, April is young! When the soft, wet wind of the south Is sweet. When the sun from his pathway the rain cloud has flung. And folds a new world In the Joy of his heat. As a beggar, beseeching, prays largess of gold. So the buds hold their palme for the coin of the sun And the snowdrop and crocus, their treasures unfold. Through the web of enchantment his maglo has spun. And the seed of old sorrow baa mouldered away. With the flower of Faith springing .fair from the shell: And I open my heart to the Joy of Life s day. While the soul of all beauty sing "all shall be well!" MARY ALETHEA WOODWARD. THIXGS ABOVE." Set vour affections on things above, not on things on the earth. A lift of wings, And earthly things Are lost among the cloud's white spray; And, speeding fast. 1 find at last My home. In a star-sprinkled way. The lights draw near And half In fear. I touch the harbor of my star; And down the street. Swift spirit feet Tell me that here my loved ones are! Soft, tender light! Fast fading night! Glad body, thrilled with strange, sweet love The Master near With kindly cheer; Uii"inlng Joy In "things above": MARY ALETHEA WOODWARD. LOOK AROISIJ. How many people plod along. And never hear the birds In song. Or, Joyous, lift the listless eye To' catch the pictures in the sky. They never stop at close of day To watch the sunset fires at play. Or rise and drink the wine of mors Or see a day when It Is born. O friends, awake to sight and sound. And heed the glories all around; The world would have a different Ionic ou would read from nature's bona. A. UUifJUtaw. )