THE MORNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1914. 8 ftfte (Drewmutit PORTLAND. OREGON. Entered t Portland. Oregon. Postoffice as Second-class matter. Subscription Kates Invariably In Advance. (By Mall) Dally, Sunday Included, one year Dally. Sunday Included, six month. Dally. Sunday Included, three month Dally, Sunday included, one month.. Dally, without Sunday, one year Dally, without Sunday, alz month!.. -Daily, without Sunday, three months. Dally, without Sunday, one month... Weekly, one year Sunday, one year Sunday and Weekly, one year .ts.oo . 4.25 . 2J5 . .75 . 6.O0 . 8.25 . 1.T5 . .60 . 1.50 . 2 .60 . 8.50 (BT CARRIER) Dally. Sunday Included, one year 9'?s Dally. Sunday Included, one month ' How to Remit Send Postoffice money or der, express order or personal check on our local bank. Stampe, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give postoffice addresa In tun. Including cocnty and state. a Postage Rates 13 to 16 pages. 1 cent: is lo 82 pages. 2 cents; SI to 4S pages. 3 cenis. SO to 60 pages. 4 cents; 62 to " pages a cents; 7S to 02 pages. 6 cents. Foreign post age, double rate. w Eastern Business Offices Verree & cnh, lin. New York, Brunswick building. -n cago. Steger building. Ban Francisco Oftice R. J. Bldwell Co.. Tea Market street. PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY, AUG. 8. 19U- THE COMING WAR AT SEA. Kngland having- joined France and Russia In their war with Germany and Austria, attention is turned to the relative strength of the contend ing forces at sea and stimulates spec ulation as to the probable course of naval warfare. In capital ships England is 50 per cent stronger than Germany and in pre-dreadnought battleships she is twice as strong. Assuming that Italy will join Germany and Austria when Britain declares war. the French navy alone is about equal to those of Germany's two allies combined. This leaves out of consideration the Rus sian Baltic fleet, which is so weak by comparison as to be practically at the mercy of Germany. The most obvious thing for the Brit ish fleet to do would be to cross the North Sea, meet the German fleet if it ventures forth and do battle. If victorious, the British could then blockade the German North Sea coast. Including the great ports of Wil helmshofen, Bremen and Hamburg. They could also blockade- the en trances to the Kiel canal and the Danish straits, thus shutting German commerce Into the Baltic Sea. It is possible, however, that Ger many may avoid a naval battle until she can catch England at a disadvan tage. This may have been her purpose In withdrawing her fleet through the canal to Kiel. She Is evidently mak ing the most of her opportunity to dispose of the Russian Baltic fleet first. Having taken refuge in the Baltic, her fleet could be reached only through the canal or the straits. British attack through the canal would be practically impossible, for the Germans could dispose of ships as they emerged, one by one. Were the British fleet to go through the straits, thev would have to pass through the sound, only a few miles wide, which divides Denmark from Sweden, and, though they emerged in good position for battle, would risk escape of the Germans by the short cut through the canal and a raid on the British coast before they could return to its de fense. The British would, by block ading the North Sea coast and both outlet from the Baltic, practically annihilate German ocean commerce and render the German navy useless for the time being. Germany might suffer this condi tion to last for a short time, while she destroyed the Russian fleet, ravaged the Russian coast and perhaps raided the Russian capital. She might hope in the meanwhile to destroy some of the British battleships by means of mines or torpedoes on the North Sea coast, and thus reduce the odds against her. A call for help would go from Russia to England and might tempt the latter country to send one part of its fleet through the straits into the Baltic, while the other part prevented escape through the canal. The German fleet might venture a dash from its lair when division of the enemy's forces afforded an op portunity to fight a nearly equal force. A secondary field of action would be the Mediterranean Sea. Practical ly the whole French navy is concen trated there and would need to com pine with the British squadron in those waters in order to fight the combined Austrian and Italian fleets. Victory for the British and French would enable France to transfer troops from North Africa to France unhindered and to blockade Italian and Austrian ports. Defeat for them would ray open to attack the French coast, all the French possessions in North Africa and all the British out posts in the Mediterranean. French troops would be shut in North Africa, and Italy and Austria would be free to attack Egypt, seize the Suez canal and block the gateway to India, China and Japan. England has an advantage in what is practically a double line of naval defense on her own coast. Were her dreadnought squadron beaten in the North Sea or Baltic, the German dreadnoughts would probably be so badly damaged that they would not be much more than a match for an equal number of old-style battleships, of which England has forty to Ger many's twenty. Before Germany could really command the sea and have England at her mercy, she would have to win a second and per haps a third naval battle, and after that must run the gauntlet of the British coast defenses. FOUND WANTING. Charles Baise, of Salem, seems to have shown rather less common sense in an emergency than would natural ly be expected from a boy of 17 years. He and one of his friends, young Van Tassle, were bathing in the Willam ette when the latter got out of his depth and began to cry for help. In stead of proceeding efficiently to res cue him Charles started on his bicycle to carry the news to Van Tassle's family five miles away. Doubtless his intentions were excellent, but his course was unfortunate. More unfor tunate still was the fact that neither of the boys could swim. We infer tnat to have been the case. It is in credible that a boy who could swim should have acted as young Baise did in such a state of affairs. No doubt hundreds of other youths are In much the same situation as these two chums were when they en tered the Willamette River "to cool off." The hot weather of this season makes "cooling off" an indispensable process for everybody. It is necessary for health as well as comfort. Boys and young men cannot be prevented from going into the water in the rag ing heat of July and August and it is foolish to try to prevent them. The sensible thing to do is to teach them all to swim. This would of itself greatly diminish the number of Sum mer accidents. A youth who can swim does not often lose his head and begin to drown the instant his feet cease to touch bottom. Even if he can make only a few strokes that few may bring him back to safety. But there would still be accidents, though not a great many, even if every youth knew how to swim. Attacks of cramp must still be reckoned with and now and then some boy would fall into a panic and lose his self-command. In such cases he is sure to lose his life, too, unless his comrades understand how to help him. This is an art which can be taught and learned. How to be useful in emergencies should be thoroughly taught in every school. It is far more important than the geography of Polynesia. Very likely there was some little expedient in plain sight by which young Baise might have saved his comrade's life. But he did not know about it and the consequence is the death of one boy and a saddened iife for the other. The day is coming whort wo hall trv tn make our schools as useful as possible and think a great deal less of making mem comurin tv ancient tradition. WHO ARE TO RULE? The Oregon City Enterprise tells a story of a recent meeting of Wash ington County Pomona Grange, called for the purpose of discussing meas ures to come before the people next November. The Grange has m ac tive members and between ninety and one hundred were present at the sj-mposium. The consensus of opin ion is reported to have been against: The universal eight-hour law. The $1500 tax exemption. Against doing away with capital punishment. Against the tax for the unemployed. It may be assumed that the Grange, representing a large class of Oregon farmers, is becoming weary -of the chronic misuse of the referendum. Here are four measures, two of which bear heavily against the farm er and another of which is of imme diate concern to all taxpayers. Moreover, no good excuse can be offered for the presence on the ballot of the capital punishment bill. It was defeated in 1912 by a vote of 41.951 ayes and 64.57S noes. The issue was fairly tried, clearly submitted and em phatically det.eimined. Yet here the same old straw is to be threshed over again, because someone, or a group of somebodies or nobodies, is not satisfied. Well, what if they are not? Are the people to rule? Or only some of he people? THE COST. The staggering cost of war in money is indicated by the prepara tion of Germany for the conflict. The first budget presented by the Im perial Chancellor to the Reichstag calls for the immense sum of $1,250, 000,000. The English Parliament has voted a war appropriation of $525, 000,000. Undoubtedly the French and Austrian preparations are on a simi lar scale. But these sums do not represent all the investment of the nations, present and past, in the forthcoming struggle. The German empire has fr flftv vfra been building up a great fighting organization, army and navy. It has cost an lnconceivaDie sum, all procured through taxation from the toiling masses and pro ducers. Your soldier ana your sauui is. a drone in time of peace who must be fed and clothed by the busy bees of commerce and industry. But when war comes, he must still be fed and clothed, though the drone has become a maddened hornet. Few living men have seriously thought such a war as now impends to be possible. The only reason was that it would be too horrible and that tviorefnm It could not happen. But evidently it Is to happen. It is the struggle for which all the nations have been preparing. If a man lives always in the expec tation that his neighbor, who was once his enemy, may again become his enemy, and carries a loaded gun for possible use, it is certain that nnr rT later the crisis will come. So it is with nations. They have been long preparing for war. Now there is war All who have thought that the way to guarantee peace was to pre pare for war were utterly mistaKen. WILSON'S NEXT TROUBLE. President Wilson's next trouble nftar PnnBTPM has diSDOsed of the anti-trust bills will be concerned with control of the next House. If he loses ii nnwer to dictate legislation will' cease next March and will be greatly weakened at the short session beginning in December. The prospect of hi3 party's success is so extremely doubtful that he has now begun mol lifying those Democrats who are ag grieved, and the promise is held out that he will take the stump in Octo ber in some of the doubtful states. tTo nui9 tha nresent huee majority of 145 to be reduced, and he contem plates that probability calmly, tor large majorities are unruly and not readily amenable to control, but he has good cause to fear that the scale will be turned against him. Unfavorable business conditions are ascribed to Democratic legislation, and continued high prices cause the dominant party to be blamed for dis appointed hopes. This general senti ment has done much to heal divisions among those who oppose Democracy and to unite them against it. About fifty Democratic Representatives owe their seats to divisions among oppo nents and expect to be retired at the Fall election. The President's course has produced division in his own par ty and prepared the way for its de feat in other districts. T n X AW "Vnrk he has avoided Fed eral appointments which might strengthen Tammany, out. nas iioi rrm out stronelv asalnst that or ganization. He retains in office 82 Republican postmasters whose terms ,ntra amiraH mnr than sixtv of them uav . i - to punish Senator O'Gorman for oppos ing him on canal tons, ana tne nungry nonwrata are anerrv. He permits Federal officials in New Tork to fight Tammany openly, and so hot is the indignation that a delegation of thlr tnen Vow York ReDresentatives called on him to complain that Federal of ficials were obstructing tneir renomi hut he save them no verv defi nite promise. The state organization is shot to pieces and the New Tork Sun forecasts that, in consequence of the anti-Democratic reaction and the factional quarrels, the Republicans n-tii vain at least ten seats in the House and that twelve will be doubt ful, leaving only ten surely Demo cratic Republicans expect to gain fifteen seats in that state alone. Party discord is rife in other states. cA.atni- TTiTr-henclr. who led the fitrht for amendment at tk currency bill and who forced the withdrawal of Thomas D. Jones' nomination for mem bership on the Federal Reserve Board, has won a victory in the Nebraska primaries over Secretary Bryan, a majority of the delegates to the state convention being instructed to give him a vote of confidence. There is a revolt against Mr. Bryan's intoler ance of dissent within his party, simultaneously with a reunion of Re publicans and a revival of Republican sentiment. In Texas, Thomas H. Hall, the Ad ministration candidate for Governor, who was indorsed by strong letters from the President, Mr. Bryan and Postmaster-General Burleson, has been defeated at the primaries by Mr. Ferguson, who boasts of being a 'chamn Clark Democrat and con demns Mr. Wilson's Mexican policy. These are only a few specimen states where discord reigns among the Democracy. In view of the show ing made, the Republican expectation of a minimum gain of sixty-five seats in the next House seems moderate. With the tide of public opinion run ning so strongly against the Adminis tration it would not be surprising if enough additional seats were won to insure Republican control. LOST OPPORTUNITIES. Only about 27 per cent of the til lable land in the United States Is under cultivation, and that -which is cultivated produces no more than a fraction of what it might, our metn ods of growing crops are primitive in the extreme. They waste work and exhaust the soil. When a man raises from ten acres no more than five would grow under proper tillage he throws away more than half his time, labor and invested capital. If half the hills in a cornfield are vacant something is wrong with the man who owns it. He has not learned the ele ments of good management. There is vacant land enough inside the limits of Portland to feed the city if it were tilled scientifically. The ordinary back yard will grow food for a family with some to sell under skill ful hands. The sewage of Portland would double the crops of the vicinity if it were saved and utilized. We have hardly begun as yet to tap the re sources of the earth. REAPING THE WAR HARVEST. Feverish activity in equipping emergency reserve hospitals through out Europe brings attention to the grim reality of warfare. Nothing is quite so certain as that there will be an immense harvest of wounded men to occupy these hospitals. So far as reported the toll has not been heavy. But the war is still in its sparring stages. Covering detachments and patrols have clashed for the most part with trifling losses of a few hundred. And what is a few hundred lives in such a war! But once the thing has grown into the cauldron of fury that seems in evitable, the wounded will multiply by the thousands. Vigorous young men who are now marching forward in the heyday of life and health will be stricken down by the missiles of men they have never seen, but whom, in the insanity of battle, they seek to destroy. Since the vital organs offer a smaller target space than the re mainder of the body, it follows that the number of wounded will exceed the number of killed. The small-caliber steel-jacketed projectile used by all participants is seldom fatal unless a bone or vital spot is hit. Occasion ally men hit in the head or shot through the lungs survive. If the clash continues for a number of months the harvest of wounded will mount to a frightful total. That portion of Europe not monopolized by the firing lines will be rendered into veritable hospitals. The slightly wounded, of course, will be able to return to duty after a few days or weeks at the rear. So long as there is enough of a soldier left hanging together use is made of him. He is permitted to remain out of action only long enough that the wounds may heal. Then he returns to the savage work of helping run up the casualty lists on the opposing side. RUSHING FRANCE. Germany has set out to crush France at the very outset of the great, many-sided struggle that is now on with constantly-increasing fury. De velopments of the few hours since the French attitude became positive make it quite plain that Germany plans to rain a succession of staggering blows upon the French military resistance. It is quite possible that the German strategists have fixed Paris as their main objective. Instead of a frontal attack in force on the French-German frontier, the Germans are massing to the north with the evident intention of avoiding the heavily-fortified French frontier positions and also the concentrated French armies. This explains the vio lation of Belgium's neutrality and the invasion of Holland which invited British preparation in the war. The German strategists argued that the advantage to them of utilizing Bel gium for an advance on France would more than offset British military co operation with the French. The Ger man strategists make no secret of the fact that they rate the English military establishment lightly, the maximum force which England could send abroad at this time not exceed ing 150,000 men and these comparing most unfavorably in point of military efflciency with German or French troops. The assault at Liege and the ad vance through Belgium along the rail Paris was made in force and naturally the French will have to send an immense iorce to ueuLiniue this attack, at the same time leaving heavy forces against frontal and flanking attacks farther south. By this strategy Germany has made the fullest use of her superior mobility and larger regular establishment. By superiority of numbers, superiority of organization and superiority of mob ilization the Germans hope to prove their superiority in the tinai anaisis of war and brintr France to her knees, stripped of the powers of further se rious resistance. In the meantime Austria must take ooro nf Russia: at least of such Rus sian forces as can be mobilized im mediately for aggressive action. ine n..caian m nhllization is notoriously slow and it will be several weeks be- fn the Russians will become a ver dangerous problem on the German frontier. The present Russian distri butions constitute little more than covering troops along the frontier and v,o invasions have no consequence. Germany, of course, has not left her frontier wholly to me ausu miio, man- i much of a show of force against Poland as the demands of the French campaign win ao.mii. The withdrawal oi Austrian lurtcs to the north doubtless counts in a large measure for reported Servian successes about Belgrade. But then Servia cannot become a menace to Austria and the triple alliance may safely leave Servia for later disposal. Servia is but a minor pawn in the great European war game. Her fate depends entirety upon the struggle between her foes and her allies. War of a most acrid bitterness may be looked for in the immediate future between Germany and France. Ger many must dispose of France prompt ly, before the Bear seizes upon her own flank. Perhaps the greatest bat tle in history is now close at hand. Upon the events of the next few days the fate of France may rest. The Oregon Summer is spoiled by the dust and smoke in the air. They blot out the beautiful scenery, make everybody uncomfortable and cause disease. The dust will grow less as the roads are oiled and the fields pro tected by irrigation and clover. The smoke is a nuisance that ought not to exist. Most of it comes from fires started with criminal carelessness. Of course slashings must be burned, but the July and August smoke is mostly- caused by fires in standing timber. If you had all the money you want ed to spend and had made up your mind to build a vacation retreat for yourself what plan would you follow? Would you build a palace and sur round it with gardens, lawns and fountains? Or would you cut away a little space in the dense woods near a enM hrnnlf and hllild A Iosr hOUSe. leaving all the surroundings wild f What is a vacation home without babbling stream? One of the most actively destruc tlvs ae-nnts at work on dirt roan the wind. Tt is astonishing to see ho much material a stiff breeze will re move from a traveled highway twenty-four hours. Perhaps the roa surface suffers upon the whole much from wind in Summer as fro inin in Winter This is one reaso but not the only one, why sheltering trees are so desirable along countrj roads. Which is the more pleasure, to travel to lovely spots or sit in the shade and' look at pictures of them? One of the August magazines prints half a dozen photographs of the mid night sun seen from Northern Sweden. We dare say they show a good many of the interesting points of that phe nomenon as well as the ordinary eye could pick them oui. At any rate they are very beautiful. Should a coffee-house actually be opened at the old and unrev-erend Bottle House on Burnside street, the cause of virtue will have gained some thing worth having. The bubbling fountains on the corners did more for temperance than a dozen laws could When we have found the right road to a desirable goal why not travel it? 1- , ... ; . . TT-hrt ara Borvltlff for mis demeanors in the Los Angeles jails ...in v. nivon tVioir fraprlnm nrovided they want to go to war. The wiser ones will remain in tne i.os Angeiea Jails. The Administration rushes fever ishly to the aid of a few Americans who are temporarily short of funds to buy terrapin in Paris. But Americans threatened with death and ruin in Mexico were able tp get no response. A local Serb craves to shoot his own brother in the Austrian army. The war lust Is thicker than blood with some of those south Europeans. As soon as Villa has taken a few lessons in geography he may be ex pected to join in the Continental war His talent is wasted in Mexico. Prince Bonaparte is anxious to en list in the French army. Where have we heard that name before in connec tion with the French army? The Frenchman certainly appre ciates a joke. The 100,000 Germans in France are to be herded across the Spanish border. Shortage of fuel may throw Paris into darkness. With American tour ists leaving they w-ill not need the lights, anyway. It really is too bad those gadding Americans are shut off from scatter ing American dollars throughout Europe. The Czar forbids Russian sailors from drinking. What will he blame it onto with Vodka done away with? If the Kaiser should win there wouldn't be room in the same world with him and the Monroe Doctrine. About time for the Czar to receive some of those "I regret to reportsky" messages from his field marshals. If It be true that the world loves a good fighter, the world's affections are to be hopelessly divided. With the oil output curtailed old John D. must again be conjuring up visions of the poorhouse. The trail of the victorious armies will be marked by the empty meat cans from America. But where are the female regiments to uphold the equality of the sex in that European war? Portlanders in Europe will have stories to tell when they get home. Moratoriums are needed, but the great necessity will be crematoriums. Belgian forces may enter the con flict. A mere drop in the bucket. Casualty lists from the deer-hunting zones should be along soon. Shade of Napoleon to Shade of Al exander: "Pretty warm, Alex." Let everyone take up that "Swat the forest fires" slogan. The American eagle has the dove of peace under his wing. "Happy" Hogan's ultimatum to McCredie is on ice. Hostilities at East First and Hal sey are slackening. Great thing to be an American just now. Hear the British Lion roar! FOR BOOTH OR CHAMBERLAIN f Basis on Which the Senatorial Inane la to Be Decided. Eugene Register. A number of Democratic newspapers and politicians are attempting to make political capital out of the fact that Mr. Booth is a successful business man. They dare not attack his character or his personal life, because they know that both are above reproach. There fore, they adopt the only alternative that is left them and attack him be cause he has made a success of his business. It is a contemptible plan, and savors of the methods of the I. W. W. The issues in the Senatorial cam paign in Oregon this Fall are in no sense personal ones. R. A. Booth, the candidate of the Republican party, is a clean, upright and highly capable man who, if he is elected, will serve his state with great honor and credit. He has the qualities that will enable him to become a power in the United States Senate and to make the influence of Oregon felt at the National capital. George E. Chamberlain, at present the senior Senator from Oregon and the nominee of the Democratic party for re-election, Is a pleasant gentleman whose ability is above the average The issues in this campaign are those of principles not of men. Mr. Booth stands for the rights ft the Oregon producer, as against the foreigner who would invade his markets and under sell him In his own territory. He stands for the Oregon laborer and against competition with the products of cheap foreign labor that, If permit ted to continue, must inevitably result in lowering the American wage scale. He stands for the protection of tho Oregon dairyman from the cheap but ter of New Zealand and the Oregon poultryman from cheap and inferior eggs from China He stands for the protection of the Oregon lumberman from competition with the cheaper product of Canada. In a word. Mr. Booth, as the candi date of the Republican party for United States Senator, puts the welfare of the American producers and American laboring men above the welfare of the producers and the laborers of foreign countries. He believes that our prob lem is to look after ourselves, letting torelgners look after their own inter ests. He does not believe in reducing the profits of Oregon farmers and the wages of Oregon laboring men in or der to open up new markets and make better times for New Zealand and China and Argentina and Canada. Mr. Chamberlain stands for free trade with the world. As the candi date of the Democratic party, he be lieves in unrestricted competition with every nation. He believos that Chinese eggs should be permitted to enter this country free, flooding the Oregon mar kets and reducing the profits of the Oregon poultryman He believes that New Zealand butter should be admitted to the United States free of duty to de moralize the Oregon butter market and cut down the prices received by the Oregon dairyman. He belleveR in ad mitting Canadian lumber free to the detriment of the Oregon lumberman. As Democratic Senator from Oregon, he voted for the Underwood tariff law that has brought all these things about. As a Democrat, Mr. Chamberlain has a tender solicitude for the foreigner that outweighs consideration for the home producer. These are the issues in the Senatorial campaign this Fall, and It Is to avoid them that Democratic newspapers and politicians are turning to abuse of Mr. Booth. WK WILL GET MUCH NEW TRADE European War Will Not Be Without Benefit to United Statea. PORTLAND. Aug. 4. (To the Editor.) The pessimists pretend to see future distress for the United States. Undoubt edly we shall have some difficulty in selling to European countries engaged In the war and our markets there will be restricted greatly after the war. It is time to cheer up some as we will not go out of business. The pessimists for get that England. France and Oermany are the great manufacturing nations of Europe. Their shops and stores will bo closed and great disorganization prevail for a long time. With our com petitors doing no business we will have South America, China, Spain. Sweden. Norway and other noncombat- ant countries to supply. These people will not be broke and we shall sell to them because the others cannot. In other words this Is where this country and Japan will reap bene fits. We shall have profound sympathy for the millions of sufferers dragged Into a useless war. but we should not be too pessimistic. Tho other markets must buy somewhere and will buy of us. ROBERT C. WRIGHT. On the Proposed A. M. E. Church. NEWBERG, Or., Aug. 3. (To the Editor.) I have read the account of the controversy between the residents of Halsey street and the congregation of the A. M. E. Church with much inter est and have been expecting to see something from the clergymen of your city in defense of these people and their rights. So far I have seen nothing ot the sort and in view of tho fact that all Christian churches are regularly taxed for the support of negro missions, there seems a consiaeratiie aniereiico uc tween theory and practice. It Is to be hoped there will be no further call ror funds for these missions as, if the negro Is unfit to occupy a house of worship In the neighborhood of whites, it is also unfitting for the whites to go amons them proclaiming a religion that, in this case, is so completely iorgoiien. The race question is of no personal in terest to me as I am a oerman-Amer- ican. I believe in commun juam-e uuu I doubt if heaven will be satisfactorily arranged tor tnese uuiniy iicupio r"" are providing amusement ior tne un believer by their present performance. A. jvx. r . You anil George Washington. Bernard L. Bell in the Atlantic. You and your great-great-grand father are not very different the one from the other, save in accidents. You may not eat with your knife as George Washington did; you wear neither knee breeches nor a powdered wig; when you get a fever you are not bleu: you write your s apove tne line, tuu um ov that they look llKe aeiormea lb . yuu think- and talk in the patois of the highly organized society of the 12th century, not in the vernacular of rural Virginia in the 18th century. But. after all you and uolonei wasn- ine-ton are about the same in all points essential to humanity. The same pas- ions rule you; the same neexis impel you; the same sort of mental and pnys ical equipment reacted In him upon his environment and reacts in you upon your environment. The only difference between this age ana any ubh uisi im gone before is a difference In acci dents, a difference in environments. The great, essential things of life are the same in ail generations. Ten Million Bees Invade London. London Cable to Chicago Inter-Ocean. Bees were much in evidence near London bridge recently. There were in nno.OOO of them bound for a beo farm at Buret, Suffolk, to begin with; thoro were also some others, heaithy LnffHeh specimens, close by, a couple of dogen f which for a rew giorioun minutos may be said to havo "made thing hum." On the bumpy Journey tteroag jjonaen bridge to the train for Holmweod tho box containing a hivo broke and sud denly every one won In a hurry, Eventually the carman unci h, pareals clerk tackled tli remaining bees and put them In a boj, bul the few thai escaped did wondera, and perspiring traveler! fled an from an unsaan ter for. Then and Now The Revenue Cutler Service. THEN". NOW. One hundred a n d Today 42 armed twenty-four y e a r s, cutters, tugs and ago today George, launches, manned by Washington signed; mi officers and en the Congressional act, listed men, are scour which established themg the seas as Uncle United States Rev-, Sam's -watchdogs of enu Cutter Service. Ill the sea." The ina thus became the firstjority are stationed maritime force o the(along the coast of the American Republic, United Statea ready Fifteen montha later) to steam where duty there were ten rev-, calls. One may .e enue cutters afloat., going to sea to blow officered by veterans! up a derelict that lias of the old Contl-I became dangerous to nental Navy. These navigation . another vessels co n stltutedjsearching a ship for the only armed furcesmuggled goods or ex afloat belonging to amlntng her sailing the United States forlpapers; while a third the folio wing aixljnay be on the way to years. Their duties, suppress mutiny or were to patrol thejpli-acy or to enforce coast, extending in, neutrality laws of those daya f r o m, American ports. The Maine to Georgia, to, revenue cutter of prcvent sumggllng,! fleer la empowered to and to enforce the, enforce nearly every few maritime lawsllaw bearing upon the existing In the Unltcdmarkime interests States. Organised un-jThey protect the seal der the Treasury De-. fisheries of Alaska, partment. It re-land patrol the coast mained In the dlscre-!in search of vessels in tion of the Presldent distress during the ... anH , 1. tn u a r 1 Wl n f - mnnlhl i ii I under the Navy, der a recent regula Fighting French prl-ltion they patrol tne vateers In 1798. thejtransatlantic lane of revenue cutters cap- travel to warn all tured 18 of the 22!essels of any nation prizes taken by thejof the danger of float -United Status. In the ing Iceberg, such as War of ISIS they the one that sank the captured the first Titanic. They enforce prire ship and fought. quarantine regula gallantly throughouttlons; they patrnird the war. They fought; the cossta of four In the Mexican War ;Southcrn statea which one of the cutters ac-jwere suffering under 'companled the naval an epidemic of yellow expedition ag alnst'tever in inej Paraguiiy In 1S58. penetrate to the Arctic During the Civil War regions lo bring suc they fought with thelcor to stranded whal Navy and helped to! Ing ships. It was In maintain the block-! lS7- that a cutter ade of Southern ports.iraced through U'OO In the spanlsh-Amer-imiles of Ice packs to lean War revenue rescue whalers frozen cutter accompanledlin at Point Barrow Dewey Into Manllaibefora thay starved to Bay. while the crew death. For this ex of another won Con-plolt Congresa passed gressioual medals for a resolution of thsnks. its spectacular rescue! of Ensign Bagley'sf helpless torpedoboatl at Cardenas. Cuba. PHILANTHROPY OK GUUDAT NATH'V. Wealth of Which We Are nlvratlnu Oumelvea Could He Uard at Home. ASHLAND, Or., Aug. 3 (To the Editor.) What is the sense of giving up the Philippines? Or what rational argument is advanced by the purists for such a move? From Australia to KamscRatka there Is a string of islands fencing in the whole Asiatic con tinent, and all belonging to our rivals except the Philippines, which are our only gateway to the mainland. If we abandon these they would be divided between England, Germany and Japan before the sun went down. Thin what would become of our Asiatic trade? We would have to do business with the continent by "sufferance" which would be rather galling to our pride, and the twenty millions our Govern ment paid for them would be tossed overboard. Can you explain so we can under stand It, how psychology so Influences commerce us to make business good when facts prove differently? If busi ness is good now, then with the great crops assured, it should be twice as good. Booms always come In July or August, if at all. and when the crops are shown to be big. Twenty per cent more business fail ures, $88,000,000 gold gone to Europe thus far this year; prospects of $2". 000,000 more to be sent to Colombia; JjOO.000.000 already driven into Can ada and elsewhere In the past two or three years, the promise of the Admin istration that the United States will not make any claims on Mexico cer tainly this money could have helped towards prosperity. It could build a sea wall on each side of the Missis sippi River from St. Louis to the gulf, dredge a channel 30 feet deep and til. In enough backing to provide farms for thousands of poor families, and then have enough left to do the same with the Ohio River. Capital has not shown its teeth yet. If it does there may be a different story. It's only extreme loyalty to the country that has held capitalists In leash, but we must not forget that the National Government can go only Just so far. For instance, mere are nmu to be three billions of English money invested In this country. Germany and France have as much more. Do you suppose they would consent to sit su pinely down and swallow everything when thero are so many other chances for investment in the world? What would happen if they decided to with draw and sell all their securities for what they could get? The world has grown so small In re cent years that when one nation suf fers others do. I don't know much about psychology unless it is spelled shy-collegey. R D. RILEY. AS WE AMERICANS ABE SF.E London Spectator CHra InillfTerrnrp to Clothes Inariaata Trail. London Cor. New York Times. Under the title "American Men and American Women," the Spectator takes up the cudgels in defense of the former against the frequent remark, recently revived by a French woman visitor to the United States, that Uncle Sam's sons compare unfavorably In looks and general appearance with Columbia's daughters. The Spectator saya: "If a Frenchwoman thinks that tho visible dispiirity between the clothes of American women and those of Ameri can men betokens some moral or social inferiority In the men resentment be comes almost an obligation on English men, who know her misapprehension. "The American man does not care about his clothes, not being a mere malo bird which requires the better plumage. He Is not a 'dude' and so buys a suit for J1S or $20 a suit that Is turned out from standardized pat terns more quickly even than a cheap motorcar and with a seam let out here and a hitch taken in there It does verv well. "It is this sort of economy which enables him to pay $150 or $200 for the new gowns for his wife or daughter without turning a hair. "The American woman, after a tre mendous burst of culture or amuse ment, frequently collapses Into a state of stagnation at an ago when she would not vet be reckoned old Dy tngnsn standards. The American man, on his side, having made up his mind to dls nenHB with intellectual and sartorial honors, is remarkable, first, for his optimism? and secondly, for his busi ness versatility. His optimism and versatllltv are the only particular ex- nresslons of his courage. He is never down-hearted if his business has gone to pot for the time being, he tells himself that his wife will be wear ing the bost gowns In the city In a year's time, and, If he fails utterly and Is sold up, he turns to another business with the energy of a boy and, perhaps, makes a second fortune quicker than he lost the first. "He rides, hunts nnd plays games, when he can find tho time, with tho same lest and pluok. He need not bother about his clothos." If e Csa't Har "la Currant Opinion, If a HoHentet Isufht a Hpusntst ti TO tnlh et ta tnt oeuld tetter, Ought the Bsltestal 1st To be isuahl t say "Ruht" Or "aauiihl," of what aught t be taught lief? H (a heat and t-at H gotUslst (at B taiight b a JiiiHanlol aatt. should the testes li bet if the Uatteatsl M gas and teat at tbe Hetteatat teetesf Little Editorials on Business Three Functions of an Ad. 1 An Eastern manufMtuiwT who had never ailvcrtisetl lii product 10 tlio onsumer hits earned and paid his ttockholden 10 to 13 per cent every year. The busiiK'ss liiis grown steadily and now has reached the point where larger concerns are feeling 1 1 competition. "Up to this point we have been advertised by our friends." aid the muiiut'actiirer, "but now onr ene mies are advertising us to our deal ers by pointing out the fact that we are not advertising onr goods to the consumer. "All 1 know about advertising is what I have read about it. Some of our eompetilors have grown faster than we have; therefore, ad-. ertisini: must be a good thing. "I am stronuly of the opinion that we ought to tell more people about the merits of our (OOW, hut I want to know where it is going to land M before 1 make the start." Ho had read of the miracles wrought by advertising eertain po tential specialties when they were sprung on tfie publin the first time, lie wanted to duplicate these suc cesses with something startling, clever or sensational and opined that two or three ails would turn the triek. The first advertisement of vacu um cleaners, automobile atarters, and other new labor-saving devices brought a large volume of business simply because they gave the news about an article designed to meet a want hitherto unsupplied. Hut this prospective advertiser manufactures an article used daily by every member of the family. It is a trade-marked line and there are probably .in other concerns en gaged in making similar lines, of varying degrees of excellence. The advertising of a commodity must be continuous to be effective. The campaign should cover an en tire season, a full year or longer. Such advertising is cumulative. It gathers strength as it progresses. An advertisement can do only three things: First Attract attention. Second Create desire. Third Force action. These three things must be dona over and over again before tho ad vertiser can hope to divert the at tention of the consumer from nther lines on which the demand and reputation ha-s been established by good advertising. The advertising that continuoui lv performs all three of these func tions serves its purpose in helping the advertiser sell his goods at a profit. Twenty-Five Year Ago From The Ori gonian of August f. l$s. Spokane Falls. W. T. Aug. 4. All of the business and part of the resi dence portion of Spokane burned to night In two hours. Not a grocery, dry goods or provision store Is left. All the banks were burned. The Northern Pacific depot nnd freight-houses were swept away and everything north to the river and from Lincoln to Wash ington streets was destroyed. The Ite vlew was saved. A meeting of the Multtioman urivina Association will be held at the White House at 8 o'clock this evening for th purpose of considering the advisability of giving another race within a few weeks. Country roads are In a terrible con dition, in many places the dust being four to eight Inches In depth. Mrs. D. W. Williams, one of the old est residents of the city, died on Satur day at the age of 95 years. Sh. was for many years a member of the Bap tist Church. Captain M. Sebree. inspector of the Thirteenth Lighthouse District, has been relieved and ordered to Wash ington. Colonel Marshall McDonald, of the United States Fish Commission, ar rived here Saturday on a tour of In spection, accompanied by George H. 11. Moore. Mrs. Edward Holinan will leave for Oysterville tomorrow morning to visit nor two sons. JAIL lilAltn IS A llt;s sll.I.I.H Jollrt Attendant Says He Wret the .Novel. "Ilnee In WJ Man." Jollet (lit.) Dispatch to Chicago Trlbunr. Max Erxleberi, a guard In the Illi nois State Penitentiary here, making $70 a month as an overseer on tho "nan farm, asserted today that he l "Larry Evans." the mysterious author of "Once to F.very Man." a beat seller, and scores of short stories which have been published In almost every big magazine In the country. Krxleben said he Is making more than $ I a year by his writing. He is uneducated. He was an attendant at the Kankakee State Hospital for the Insane. He said he worked there and In the Jollet prison merely for Information to em body In his writings. Sale of Honors V r. Letter to the London Spectator. It may Interest many readers at the moment to be assured that the attain ment of honors by corrupt means Is no modern Invention, witness the fol lowing cogent postcript from a letter of the celebrated "Steenle" (Duke of Buckingham', to his majesty King James I. printed In Oalrymple's Me morials: "Here Is a gentleman called Sir Francis Leake, who hath likewise a Philosopher's stone; 'tis worth but Eight Thousand; he will give it me If you will make him a baron; I will. If you command not the contrary, hava his patent ready to sign when I com down. He Is of good religion, well born and hath a good estate. I pray you burn this letter." A Husband's Diplomacy. Boston Transcript. Mrs. Eve Can't afford to let me (o to the seashore? Why not: My board thero wouldn't cost much more than It does here. Eve I admit that, my love, but think of all the money I d have to spend en tertaining myself In your absence. Three Fish In One Trip, tllrmlngham (Ala.) Ace-Herald. "How many fish, havo you caught uncle" oskxii the passer-by. "Waal," resiled, tha ffd darky, thoughtfully. "o( Ah eotelt ill hvah one Ah'm afteh. an ma', AU'U hab three.' 4