THE -MOUSING OREGOXIAy. TUESDAY. JULY 20, 1915. xrnxmx POniLWD, OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Fostoffice as second-class matter. Subscription Rates Invariably In advance: (By Mail.) Ially, Sunday Included, one year J8.00 JJally. Sunday Included, six months 4.25 pally, Sunday Included, three montha. . 2,'Jr, Daily, Sunday included, one month..... .70 Daily, without Sunday, one yeart 6.00 Daily, without Sunday, ix months 8.25 Dally, without Sunday, three months 1.75 pally, without Sunday, one mo nth 60 Weekly, one year 1.&0 Funday, one year 2.50 Sunday and Weekly, one year 8.50 (By Carrier.) Dailr Silnrfsv InMurieH vesr fk r)0 Daily. Sunday Included, "one month..... .75 How to Kmit R.n.l TnKtnffic. manev or. der. expreas order or personal check on your ' " ' i ubdk. oiamps, coin or currency are hi sender's risk. Olve postoffice address in full. Including; county and state. rti Kates 12 to 16 pages. 1 cent; 18 to ;;2 pages. 2 cents; o4 to 43 pages, 8 cents; 50 to 60 pages, 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages, 5 rents; 78 to i'2 pages, 6 cents. For eign postage, double rates. Eastern Business Offices Veree & Conk lln. Brunswick building. New York; Verree Conklln, Steger building, Chicago; San Francisco representative, R. J. Bid well, 742 Market street. IDRTUNO, MONDAY, JULY 1, 1915. THE COLONEL'S TWENTY MINUTES. ' Colonel Roosevelt must have found ; the twenty minutes he remained In . . Portland yesterday quite an ample period to review the soldiers of Arma- ' geddon in this neck of the woods and ascertain the hopes and expectations ) of the Progressive party In Oregon. Among the leaders who. visited or con , . ferred with him there were without doubt several wise enough and sincere -enough to tell him the truth. Doubt .less the Colonel is wise enough to read he signs of the times without their ,itdvice or counsel. The Progressive party in Oregon, as It is nearly everywhere else, is com posed largely of generals. It is the generals who will speak encouraging words in the Colonel's ears. Their party allegiance they might trade if they also could trade Progressive party titles for Republican party -titles iust as imposing. But so long, as the swapping is not good they prefer to remain leaders without a host. What they can do to forestall any act by the Colonel that would ;tend to deprive them of their political heraldry we presume they will do or Tiave done. But it will be observed that ad vancing years, if they have had no other effect, have equipped Colonel Roosevelt with circumspection. In 1900 he unhesitatingly announced that "under no circumstances" would he become a candidate for Vice-President. Tet conditions caused him to change his mind. TTpon re-election as President in 1904, he declared that "under' no circumstances" would he again be a. candidate. Yet he was. .But Sunday, in Seattle, he was non committal in response to a searching Inquiry. "Tell me what the conditions will be in 1916, and I will tell you what I will do," he said. He has learned that "circumstances" alter "cases in most unexpected ways. '- But it is a cautious mind that can "Imagine the happening of anything in the next year to brighten the prospects of the Progressive party. It is plain that the votes cast for Mr. Roosevelt in 1912 were in greater part not a declaration for the formation of a new poIitical party, but the product of per sonal admiration for Colonel Roose velt and of a desire of Republicans to chastise the Republican party. The situation in Oregon is quite typical of that .In nearly every other state where the Progressive party made a show ing in 1912. ' In 1912, Mr. Roosevelt received 87.600 votes in Oregon out of a total, ,vote of 137,040. For that year regis-' 'tration figures are not Instructive or suitable for comparison because regis tration 'was well under way when the Progressive party was formed. But in 1914, although the voting population of Oregon had nearly doubled through adoption of equal suffrage, the Pro gressive registered but 7737 voters. For its candidate for Governor the Progressive party cast 6129 votes. For the Progressive candidate, for United States Senator there were cast 26,220 votes, but that total was without party ;' significance, for the candidate had supported Mr. Wilson in 1912 and was considered a Progressive only for cam- paign purposes. A more striking revelation is found in a comparison of the several party votes for Governor in 1914 with the "party votes for President in 1912. Whereas, Mr. Taft received 34.673, pMr. Withycombe, two years later, re ceived 121,037; whereas Mr. Wilson received 47,064 in 1912, Dr. Smith two years later received 94,594. Here were marked increases due not only to -the addition of the woman's vote, but to the disintegration of the Progress-stye party. As already stated, Mr. ...Roosevelt polled 37,600 votes in 1912, '.but his party's candidate for Governor received but 6129 votes two years Jater.' The vote of 1912 is not a poll of : nil the voters in Oregon who admire j-Mr. Roosevelt's forcefulness and men tal qualities. There are thousands more who hold him in respect and admiration but will not follow his leadership Into strange political by-ways. What is true in Oregon is true -elsewhere. Colonel Roosevelt must . now know this and that only the most improbable circumstances will put the breath of life into the new party. Meanwhile Colonel Roosevelt, in stead of living in doubt as to condi tions in 1916, could help create some ."very desirable conditions conditions that would secure a progressive trend to Republican policies and encourage ; the success of the Republican princi- pies which he has so long supported. THE SONS OF THJ5 REVOLUTION. As Dr. Boyd suggested in his ser mon, the Sons of the American Revo- lution stand for the old traditions of .loyalty and patriotism upon which this .Republic was founded. Their fore fathers fought in the revolutionary war. The members of this society '-therefore descend from true Ameri cans if there ever were any and to them the genuine feelings of the founders have been handed down. . To the Sons of the Revolution the ' flag is still worth fighting for, be cause their fathers died for it. Their eyes see in its folds something more than a "bundle of colors." It is a symbol to them of all the grandeur of our country's history. When the Declaration of Independence was signed the men who risked "their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor" in that great deed went on record as champions of human lib erty. They made the flag stand for that ideal at Saratoga and Yorktown. For that ideal it has always stood, and the man who casts scorn upon it today scorns by his act the sacred devotion of Washington and Franklin. American liberty and the flag that - wywrbolizes it are indeed stilt worth fighting for. The doctrine that we should meekly lie down under every insult and submit to every wrong Is neither moral nor sensible.. There Is a difference as wide as' the world be tween a martial nation and a militar ist nation. We Americans were a martial nation when the embattled farmers marched to Lexington and Brandywine. Every citizen was then a potential soldier. He was strong of body, self-reliant in character, hab ituated to the use of weapons. His fearless independence was part of his martial spirit. Slaves may be consummate mili tarists, but never such warriors as our revolutionary forefathers, who were ready to die rather than suffer injus tice, and bowed their proud heads to no potentate but the Almighty. They won their rights and ours by fighting. It may happen that we must preserve them by fighting, or else lose them. Which shall we choose to do when the crisis comes? If we decide to fight how can we carry out our resolution unless we are a robust and martial Nation with the physical and moral vigor to back our stand? WHICH WILL YIELD? The. Lusitania was destroyed and her crew and passengers drowned in deliberate assertion by Germany of her superior right to ignore the public law, which requires visit and search of vessels and an opportunity for all non-combatants aboard to escape. Germany has in no wise abandoned her position in her diplomatic corre spondence with the United States, nor given any assurance of a willingness or purpose to modify her submarine policy. On the contrary, ' Germany gives notice again to the world, by her at tack on the Orduna, that her destruc tive warfare op British shipping is to continue, no matter how much the in terests and rights of neutrals may be involved. The United States has definitely af firmed the rights of American citizens to travel on British or other belliger ent merchant vessels, on lawful er rands, and has denounced any attempt at abbreviation of such rights as a clear violation of international law. The Issue is plainly drawn. Kither Germany must yield, or the United States must yield. If the United States yields, it will concede that a neutral has no rights which a belligerent may not with impunity violate. If Ger many, yields it will surrender the only effective weapon it has been, able to use against Great Britain on the seas. The next step of President Wilson, it will be seen, is full of the gravest potentialities. THE TWO PORTLANDS AGAIN. The Oregonian reprints the follow ing comparison between the Port lands of Maine and Oregon for what ever of interest it may tie in a city which faces hopefully the problems of prohibition: Portland In Maine Is a prohibition town; that is. nominally. The state Is prohibition and therefore every city in It Is supposedly prohibition : but last month It was an nounced In a New York paper that three new bars had been niwn.H I n t . city. It is a well-kaown fact that no dlfft- un, ucimi ne experienced in getttnsr any number of "nips" In Portland. Sit, day or night. In hotel, dime store nr mi-At,nH v.- corner." There were 400(5 arrests for drunk- wuiusa in Litr.1 city in JH13. Portland. Or., liaa nnw ".an it.,.., loons, anrl.of course, a proportionate number of drunks and arrests: but on January 1 1916. a new law goes into effect which will uoc mi eitry one. for Oregon has voted for prohibition, and tha two Portlands will V,eas ,dry' '"PPOsedly. as a burnt bone. hat Portland. Or, la Just now asking of Portland. Me.. Is to please let the younger city know some of Its tricks of evasion and now it can prohibit liquor and have It. Portland in Maine, it seems, takes Its prohibition philosophically, and not too seriously, while the younger Portland takes the imminence of pro hibition seriously and not too philo sophically. Through a wise provision of the state law, those citizens of Oregon who feel that they cannot yet part company with their toddy or highball, a schooner, or whatever it Is Yhat they feel they must have, are to be permitted to import a certain quan tity of liquor each month twenty four quarts of malt or two quarts of spirituous liquors. It may be a lit tle easier In Oregon than in Maine to keep the law and have liquor, too. It is doubtless true that the reason Portland in Maine has open bars and other unlawful places at which liquor is dispensed is that Portland does not want the prohibition law enforced. In Oregon it may be different. Again, it may not be. OX THE EASTERN FRONT. The present German offensive, now driving against the Russian defensive' positions in Poland and Courland, is on a vast scale far larger than the operations in Galicia. The Russians have had little time in which to or ganize to meet the . superior German concentrations. Von Hindenburg to the north of Warsaw and Von Mackensen to the south, according to late reports, have forced back the Russian lines. Should these .German armies continue to ad vance, the Russian hold of Warsaw becomes a hazardous one. Undoubtedly the Russians, if they fail to check the Teutons north and south of Warsaw, will retire to the east, rather than suffer any consider able Russian force to be encircled there. Warsaw itself is strongly for tified and has withstood one deter mined attack by the Germans. It is quite significant that late dis patches from the Russian front men tion the presence of heavy Russo French artillery, thus indicating that the Russians are receiving needed as sistance from their allies, the French. Some days ago reports from the Ser bian front mentioned the presence of British troops. No doubt they consist of heavy artillery organizations, of which the Serbians are greatly in need. Now would appear to be the time for a general advance by the allies in France and Belgium, but indications are that the allies are still unable to bring on a general offensive that might relieve the pressure on the Russians. Russia will in all probability lose Warsaw, and retiring east, attempt to keep her army intact. Time fights with the Russians, and the capture of Warsaw unaccompanied by heavy losses in men and munitions might Indeed be a barren victory for the Kaiser. Withal Germany is able to concen trate enormous forces on the east front and yet to hold her positions in the west. It is the most conducive demonstration yet made, of German resourcefulness and preparedness. There Is a disposition on part of certain Oregon newspapers and politicians to make any kind of disposition of those Oregon & California Railroad lands, just so the action Is not In accordance with Former-Oovernor West s views on the subject. Salem Capital Journal. We rather think Congress will dis pose of the lands in its own fashion, without reference to the views of ex Governor West and perhaps of sundry other citizens who have ideas on the subject. But it is well enough not to forget that the railroad lands are still railroad lands, for the Supreme Court has confirmed the title to the grant of the original grantee, subject to certain conditions of sale. It may be surmised that the railroad company will not be altogether silent as to the manner in which the lands shall finally be dis'posed of. CALLTORNLV'g PART. An aggrieved citizen, who has Just returned from a month's tour of Cali fornia, with incidental visits to the San Francisco and San Diego exposi tions, writes to complain in this wise: One may go from one end of California to the other ana he will hear no good word for Oregon from California people. He may hear nythlng bad. Indeed. The truth is that he hears nothing at all. California utterly ignores us. What does the. Oregon visitor ex pect California to do more than it lias done? Oregon has been given a prom inent place at San Francisco, and it has a full opportunity to proclaim its own. many merits from its own house top on the exposition grounds. If Oregon falls, it will be Oregon's own fault. To get the California viewpoint, it Is to be considered that It has invested S20.000.000 or more In the San Fran cisco Fair, and a somewhat smaller sum at San Diego. California will not get Its millions back, except In the world's appreciation and good will. California seems content with its re ward, .perhaps because it must be. California has played a great and generous role in its magnificent ex position. It deserves well of all Amer ica, for it has done for America what ought to have been done by America celebrated fittingly the comple tion of a great American enterprise, the Panama Canal. WHY BIRDS MIGRATE. The migration of birds Is'one of the great nasteries of the world. Bryant was moved to compose one of his sweetest poems by the sight of a flock of waterfowl wending herr flight "mid falling dew" to some far-off land. A solitary bird in advance ot the great army of the air reminded him of the soul which must, in the same way. pursue its flight through the unknown depths- of space whither? Some scientists connect the annual migration of the birds with the glacial period. In that remote age the land of the northern regions was covered Aith ice and such inhabitants, human and sub-human, as had not perished in the great catastrophe were driven to the tropics. The climate at the equator and thereabouts may then have bev?n not unlike a northern Spring and in the course of thousands of years the birds became habituated to that atmospheric condition. In the lapse of time the glaciers began to recede northward and temperate con ditions followed them, while at the same time the tropical regions grew so much warmer that the birds found them uncomfortable for at least part of the year. But with the advent of Winter In their new home they were constrained to seek the south again. This theory makes migration depend upon a search for temperate climatic condi tions. Just as flies move automati cally toward a lighted window in a dark room so the hirds, without con scious psychism, collect and depart southward when frosts sear the Au tumn leaves, returning again with the sun in Spring. This makes the migra tory instinct a sort of "troplsrh." It Is purely mechanical, depending on the environing conditions. Make the proper combination of metal and acid and an electric current will flow along the connecting wlje. In the same way a proper combination of conditions sets up the migratory tropism in birds. There is really no more mystery about it than in almost everything else around us. The fact of the matter is that the commonest things resolve into mysteries the mo ment we begin really to think about them. We understand how events happen, but not why. OCR LATEST MOBILIZATION. Mobilization of our inventors to de vise new machines of offense and de fense in war may prove to be a most Important movement. Should such men as Mr. Edison direct their in ventive genius into the channels of military research, we almost tremble to think of the results. In the field of Invention our American scientists have held the lead for some decades, finding their inspiration and impetus in economic and industrial necessity. Now should grim Mars call them un der his spell, what wonderful devices of slaughter may w not look for? Evolving engines of war ought to prove rather a simple problem to the inventor of a thousand wanders such as have sprung from the fertile brain of Mr. Edison. The makers of our great industrial and commercial con trivances ought to have no dlficulty constructing guns that would out range the 4 3-centimeter monsters of the Germans. Nor should they have to give a great deal of thought to the problem of perfecting a submarine that will outdo the German terror of the seas. However, such Is the diversity and subtlety of American inventive genius that, should attention be directed in tensely into military and naval fields, we may expect something different from mere bulk in guns. The Amer ican inventor is nothing if not original in his methods. Very often he is startling. So -we may expect Mr. Edison, should he enter In earnest upon this new work, to busy himself with some strange new device for coping with modern machines of war. Possibly he can devise an instrument for detecting the presence of subma rines, even when they are submerged, so that vessels may evade them before they reach the 'range of torpedo fire. Perhaps, even, a device can be per fected for exploding or sinking sub marines by the sending out of sub marine electrical or chemical waves. Certainly the field Is a tremendous one, and there Is no endeavor Into which the energies of our Inventive men can be directed with greater value to America, these troublous days. While noting with satisfaction the casual efforts to interest our men of inventive brains in these warlike problems, we are nevertheless struck by the lack of any broad attempt to solve the problems of American de fenselessness a defense le 8 sness which, in a manner, surpasses that of Belgium at the time she was overrun by Germany. Even the most casual ob server must have observed the chang ing viewpoint of the great American public toward National insurance. But this new attitude, this general awakening from fancied security and provincialism, has not yet found ex pression in any concerted effort to do something. Naval, military and Administration circles seem strangely dormant except for occasional alarm Ing utterances on the general situa tion. It would seem that at least we might have had a board of great men to wrestle with these problems and seek .to find a solution a solution peculiarly fitted to our needs. By this it is not meant that a. board of Army officers should have been turned loose on the problem. Army thought usually manages to renter about the idea of increasing tho army by a. few units so as to give a few files to officers anxiously marking time for . promotion. Rather, there should be at work these days a board of broad-gauge men, with a leaven ing of Army officers to provide the tactical data, for the purpose of de termining Just what we need in the way of military force. Inasmuch as our economic life is such that a large standing Army Is out of the question, the way to pro vide a sufficient reserve force seems to be the real problem for such' a board. How to raise a million men. armed and equipped, on brief notice; how to recruit to war strength In short order the units now organized; how to render the organized militia more effective and available for Im mediate service In any part of the world; how to weld tho forces we now possess and such forces as we shall acquire Into larger units of di visions and corps in short, the hun dred and one details of military pre paredness which we have completely neglected all these things ere mut ters for the biggest minds In the coun try at this time. Needless to soy, nothing of the sort is being done. We hear that the War Department is working on some sort of a plan, but we know In advance what form War Department plans will take a few more units and files for the Army. It is, indeed, pleasing to note the efforts to Interest our Inventors and scientific men. But this movement should be carried farther and there should be some broad-gauge effort to thresh out both military and naval problems, so that our necessities along these lines may be presented before the American people, public sentiment awakened and Congress forced to give heed. The New York Evening Sun Is racking its brains over this sum: "A man buys a pair of shoes for $3.50. sells them' to B for J2 and then buys another pair for S3. 50. How much loes he lose?" This problem is one of the sly sort devilish sly. like Joey Bagstock. It omits to say that the man had a year's wear out of his first pair before selling them, so that he really lost nothing but is 12 ahead at the expense of the wretched B. A contemporary observes that "the Balkan states have no quarrel with Germany." which Is true in the same sense that Odysseus" men In the cave had no quarrel with the Cyclops who ate one of them every night. The Balkan states are predestinated to ab sorption by the Pan-Germanlsts. whose empire, if they can have their way. will extend from the Baltic to India without a break. A revised estimate of New York's population makes it five and a quar ter millions. Some rooters are cha grined at the figure. They thought It should be six millions. But New York has people enough in all conscience, such as they are. It might be the part of wisdom back there to cease mul tiplying scrubs for a while and pay some attention to grading up the herd. Tha Constitutions! rights of American cit izens should protect them on our borders and to with them throughout tha world, and every American citizen residing or having property In any foreign country ta entitled to and must be given the full protection ot the United States Government, both for him self and his property. From the Democratic National platform of 1012. An expression that has a peculiar relevancy to affairs Mexican and other affairs international just now. Anthony Comstock'a views upon purity are worthless because he knows nothing about it. His mind is a mass of putridity and he therefore always sees something indecent where normal eyes discern nothing but beauty. His dictum that the statues at San Fran cisco should be draped Is the gib berish of a senile imbecile. Time has come to let the women do the work In certain lines in England and Germany, and the mortality rield assures their retention when peace shall have come. This is real eman cipation as opposed to the Pankhurst article. A man east of the mountains has Just sold his crop of wheat at 90 cents. He refused $1.40 last Fall. His comfort Is that he docs not hjive to buy gasoline for the automobile ho did not buy with the difference. Things are getting worse In Great Britain. Government has stopped treating and putting it on the slate. These were inalienable rights, along with wlfebeating and othe diversions. Charge it to the Germans. Very likely German plotters brought on the Remington strike and another disaffection of the Welsh miners. Any thing that interrupts progress of the Allies must be of Teutonic origin. Can a National committee of laun drymen order buttons replaced on shirts and the saw-teeth removed from collars? If not, for why these gath erings? When will the chronicler of local events cease to say a young man "has accepted a position." when all the youth did waa to grab the Job? The Austrian submarine Is some thing to be considered at last. Ital ians will not think It a Joke now that they lose a large warship. Growers are beginning to advertise for hoppickera and offer SO cents. That is not enough, but it Is all the picker will get. President Wilson did something that many less-paid men will not Imi tate. He worked through his vaca tion. A row In a meeting now and then Informs tho public that Anthony Cora stock is still alive and on the Job. If Lloyd George mixes In and uses the proper language with the Welsh men, he will end the strike. Long-distance forecasting no rain for a month. Do not waste the Bull Run water. What can you expect during July but warm weather 7 European War Primer By Natloaal Geographical Society. Wlndau. whence an attack of a Ger man squadron was reported as being repulsed tl.e other day. la Russia's At lantic City, tho place where tha ltui sian family of moderate Income goes to spend the vacation period. Before the outbreak of the war it- had suc ceeded' in winning quite a reputation as a bathing resort, and increasing numbers of Summer-wearied business men from Petrograd found their way each year to its strand. Besides its profits from seasonal visitors. Windau also enjoyed a considerable commerce with other ports upon the Baltic. Riga, the first commercial harbor of the Baltic provinces, lies 110 miles away, west-southwest. Libau, tha Rus sian naval station, now held by the Uer m&n Invaders, lies about 70 miles to the south, and la a point about midway between Windau and Menu-I. W lndau la connected with Kiga and Milau by rail. It is situated on tha River Win dau. on a coast exposed to sea attacks. It has a population of 10.000. few of whom are Russian. The harbor of Windau In a conven ient one for Russian blockade runners, laden with goodsfrom Swedish ports. It Is free from Ice almost all the year around and its peace-time trade had reached tome Importance. The annual Imports of Windau have totaled as high as Jt. 000. 000. while it has exported warea In amounts varying between $5.000,000 and $12,000,000 a year, (drains, timber and other agricultural produce have made up the bulk of Its exports, and its imports have been largely man ufactured goods. Windau la an old Lettish town. Its eppcaranre tCMliflea to its age. which Is underscored for the rare visitor by its entire lack of those modern con veniences that make present-day city life worth living. And Itlga. Just 10 miles away, is probably the moat mod ern city In all Russia. Most Interest ing of Its relics Is the old castle of Windau. built In i:90. In Revat. the remaining Russian naval station upon the Baltic Sea. the T.ar possesses a strong, convenient war harbor, doubly protected by its deeply indented bay and by Us posi tion upon the narrowa of the Gulf of Finland. The development of Reval as a great naval base Is a matter of recent years, iteval has always been more or leas fortified, but Its present formidable works date from the decision of the Russian admiralty that Libau was too near the German bordera to be depend able aa the first naval base of the em pire upon the Baltic. Libau waa main tained aa an Important base; ita de fenses were made aa strong aa pos sible; Its shipyards and military fac tories were built up; but Iteval. secure in ita fastness In Russian waters, be came headquarters of Russian naval strength In the west. Reval ia also the capital of the gov ernment of Eiithonia. It lies upon tho Bay of Reval. a deep, roomy Inlet of the Gulf of Finland. The seaport is about 230 ml lea wct-soulhwet of Pet rograd, with which city It la connected by a well-built trunk line railway. By night express Reval la 11 hours from l'ctrograd and IS hours by water; thus reinforcements and supplies could be quic' ly thrown Into this important base in case of need. Riga lira nearly 200 miles due south of Reval. Botli coasts along the Gulf of Finland are Irregular and the narrows are well adapted to defensive purpose a. Helaingfors. Finland's great seaport. Is Just opposite to Reval. with which It carries on a considerable trade. Reval has been Important both aa a rommer clal.and as a fortified harbor ever since western civilization penetrated to It ai)d to ita Interland. It did an annual aggregate trade before the outbreak of hoatilitlea of well over $ 30.000. 0"0. thus taking the position of t.hird rank among the Baltic ports of Russia. Spir its, grains, animals, flax, butter, wool, hemp, timber and game birds are Ita principal articles of export. Ita Im ports are cotton., coal, petroleum and manufactured wares. Reval manufac tures some machinery and considerable ber and adds to the balance sheet of Ita profits by a regular influx of Sum mer bathera. Ita population before the war waa about 70.000. of whom more than half were Eathoniana and nearl 30 per cent Germans. Since the loss of Libau to the Germans this population has probably Increased by a number of worl: ;rs for the development of naval yards to take the place of those lost to the enemy. During recent yeara Iteval has becoma well acquainted with Its battleships, for a squadron of cruis ers, battleships and destroyera has generally been held there. Moreover, target practice has been held In the offing every Summer, the great guna pointing toward Finland. . The city Is divided Into two parts Domberg. or Cathedral Hill, and that part of the town upon the beach. The lover and the upper towns have thrlr own administrations. The crag upon which tho upper town la built was oc cupied in the early middle ages by an Ksthonian fort. Lindanlsoa. Valdemar II. King of the Danes, credited with being the founder of Reval. built a church and a strong castle here in L!l. Dansa merclianta came, settled hero and builded a flourishing trade. Early In the 14th century it waa rortificd and since then It has withstood many slegea and bombardments both by sea and by land. Ita fanciful old battle ments, its meandering. war-worn, weather-beaten atreets. Its battered citadel and donjon, which the cannon shot of Swedes and Russians searched and scarred its centuries-old buildings. Its ancient archives and many other testimonials of the past, make the quaint old city and the modern deadly stronghold of unusual Interest to the peaceful tourist. THOlKHTS SOLELY OF IMMVIDl AL laflueare of Foale Derlaloa Wom anhood Ignored by yanpat hlaera. PORTLAND. July IS (To the Edi tor.) Allow me to congratulate you on the clarity of vision shown In your editorial on "Society and Sympathy." Although greatly respecting Judge Gatena. the writer believes that his Judgment In tho Fowle case was biased by women who. thinking pitifully of the Individual, failed to comprehend tho far-reaching Influence of aucH a decision on the womanhood of Oregon. Similar Instances have been recorded In the newspapers until one marvels at the pains taken for the conservation of the unfit, while so little attention Is paid to the welfare of the hardwork ing, self-respecting women and men. If the cold-blooded killing of a day old child ran be condoned because done by a woman. It Is easy to understand the complacency with which society viewed the murderer who helped her paramour pa:k their vlctlm'a body in a trunk. In accepting equal political privi leges tho women of Oregon should be willing to accept equal responsibilities. If they desire a single standard of morality It would be well not to make that standard lower than the one gen erally accepted l.v the men. MRS. SARAH HI.VDS WILDER. 1S95 Thjrourn avenue. Hunt for New I too ma. Boston Transcript. Owens My landlord has ordered me out because I cannot pay my rent. Bowens Glad I met you. So has mine. Let's change quarters. Safety Flrat ana Ure. ICxchnnge. Safety So Jack Is engaged. Is he? And la Fanny the bride-to-be? First No; she ia the tried-to-be. DOXT SPRAY FOR FIRE BLIGHT Radical Treatnseat Necessary, ?)i Secretary of State Hoard. PORTLAND. July IS (To the Edi tor.) In The Oregonian. July II there was published an article by Francis E. Black wood-West, under tho heading, "Apple Tree Blight and Its Cure De scribed." which ia likely to cause great damage and losa to fruitgrowers If Ignored by those who know tho errors It contains At the present time the disease commonly called fire blight or Par blight la spreading rapidly through the Willamette Valley, and as fruitgrowers In this Valley are not fa miliar with tho disease anil few of them know how to deal with It. the published statement that the disease can bo checked by immediate apraylng and finally eradicated by Spring spray ing la likely to do very great Injury. In hia article Mr. lilack wood-West has combined tha descriptions of two wholly different and distinct diseases.' fire blight and leaf bllrtit. Fire blight Is caused by the bacillus imvlovoruj and U a bacterial disease. The leaf blight, which he appears to have as sumed to be IdentUl with tire blight. Is caused by a fungous organism, tiypnehnus ochrolencus tNonok). Tho flrM five paragraphs of Mr. Blarkwood Wesi's article are taken practically verbatim from the book. "Diseases of Cultivated Plants and Trees." bv George-AIassee. pages SIS and ll!. and are In the book shown to be based upon Cornell University Experiment Station Bulletin. No. 236. by II. II. Wbetxel. This book does rot. however, suggest any treatment or remedy for fire blight. The sixth, paragraph cf Mr. Black-wood-Weat'a article Is probably orig inal. On pages 392 and SSI of Massees "Dcaaes of Cultivated 1" I an is and Trees" there Is a description of tho fungous disease, Hjporhnus ochrolen cus (Noack). which causes a leaf blight on apple, pear, quince, plum and other orchard fruits. Puragrnp'i.s seven and eight of Mr. IUark wood-West's article are taken from pages 392 and SSI of tho book just mentioned, but with omissions which wholly change the meaning and make Mr. Blackwood West's statement, as published, false and dangeroua. On page SSI the book clearly points out the distinction be tween fire blight and the leaf bllKht In question so far as appearances go. The book states as a distinctive character istic of the leaf bltght that at a certain stage tho leaves fall away, leaving tho twigs naked. Mr. Black wood-Went states that "In flro blight the leaves that are dead usually stind erect or fall away and leave the twlga naked." The first part of his stat-ment is correct and follow the book, but he omits tho intervening portion from the book, which states that it is the leaf blight which -au. s the leaves to fall away and leave the twigs nnked. As a matter of fact, leave which have died from fire blight usually hang on tenaciously. In t!ie 1m paragraph of his article Mr. Blackwood-West says: It Is well known that this paras ie. being entirely superficial upon the tiCm and not depending urxn spores to spread thk di'iw can b checked Immediately bv pravinc' snd flna:iy eradicated by spraying again In tho early Spring. In Brasll and Ausualta this d ,-. has been well checked and r radicated. He makes this statement clearly aa applying to fire blight. The book be fore mentioned sny.i of the leaf blight before named: It Is considered that the parasite, being entirely superficial upon tha twigs, and de pending but to a slight degree upon spores mfu'd bn checked and destroyed by sura Ing In tha Spring. It la possible that fire blight occurs In Australia, but there la good author ity for stating It has never been found outside of North America. Fire blight does damage to the ex tent of millions of dollars per year in the United States. Our most able plant pathologists have studied the disease with great care. They are agreed that tho disease cannot bo prevented, checked materially nor cured by any kind of spraying. The man who ex pects to cure the disease by spraying will allow his own orchard to go to ruin and spread the dlaease to the or chards of his neighbors. The fire blight was found In Jackson County. Ortgon. about eight years a:o and some of the orchardista lost nearly all of their trees because they thought spraying would prevent the spread of the disease. By vigorous enforcement of the laws In that county at an ex pense to the county of about $15,000 per year and a coyt of several times that much to growers, the disease has been checked and Is now doing com paratively little damage, whereas without tho thorough and systematic light which has been made the very valuable pear industry of that county would before this have been ruined, and the apple Industry would have been mo.t severely crippled. The following recommendations for treatment of this disease are condensed from Bulletin No. 272 of Cornell I'ni verslty on "Fire Bllrnt of Pears. Ap ples. Quinces, etc.." and from circular bulletin No. 7 of the Oregon Arrlcul tural College on "Fire Blight of Pear and Apple." Cut out all casea of holdover can kera whenever they appear, cutting well Into healthy tissues. Disinfect the tools used and the wounds with cor rosive sublimate solution, one part to 1000 of water, equivalent to one tablet to a pint of water. When cutting off diseased limbs, cut at least a foot be low where tho Injury shows. Burn all wood cut away. During tho growing season Inspect every tree at least once a week. Break out and burn all blos som spurs that show disease. Hub ofr as fast as they appear all water sprouts and shoots that appear on the trunk and main limbs of tho trees. Cut out as fast as they appear all blighted twics. disinfecting too and wounds with corrosive sublimate solution and burning the cuttlnes. At this time of tho year one should look with suspicion upon twigs which are dying buck from tho tlj- nn.l on fruit spurs which have died and to which the blackened fruit adheres. Cankera from which there la an ooie are to be suspected. Anyone who sus pects the presence of fire blight and la not familiar with the dLsraso should at once send specimens of the diseased twlga or branches to the Oregon Ag ricultural Collete. Corvallls. Any per son who discovers the disease In a lo cality In which It has not before been found should at once notify the county horticultural Inspector of hia county. The treea most likely to be affei-tfed are quince, pear, hawthorn, apple and mountain ash. All treea whose fruit Is like that of the apple are subject to the disease, and It is said that some varie ties of plums nnd apricots are occa sionally attacked. Fuller Information about this diaease can be obtained from the tireeon At rlcultural College and from the t'nited states Department of Agriculture Washington. D. C. H. M. WILLIAMSON. Secretary State Board o( Horticulture, lawyers la Portland. AIKLIE. Or.. July 18. (To the Edi tor.) Will ou give me. tbrouch the columns of The Oregonian. 'the namea of tho two lawyers that you consider to be the leading lawyers of Portland? SI T.SCR1RKK. There are many thoroughly compe tent and reliable lawyers In Portland. It would be singularly out of place for Tho Oregonian to express an opinion on their respectivo qualifications or ! volume of practice. Ctaarohea la Corvallla. PORTLAND. July 1. (To the Edl- J tor.) Kindly Inform me If there are I Christian and Congregational churches at Corvallls. and which has the largest membership. . READER. Both denominations have churches In i Corvallls. Wo are not advised as to '. membership. Twenty-Five Year Aro Prom The Oregonian of July SO. ISShi. London. Wlnfleld Scott, ton cf the General, la In 1inJoii, on Ms way home from Russia. Scott thinks that any railway organization that may he undertaken In Caucasus or in Siberia will be made a monopoly by the Rus sian government. Phoenix. Aria. July 17. Ooneral Nel son A. Miles, accompanied by an aide-de-camp, arrived here today to consult with Governor WolfUy In reference to the Indian depredations and troubles on the border. The General leaves tor Nniralea in the morning, where he will meet the Governor of Sonora. He de clines to speak of Indian affairs or of the Presidential candidacy. The dispatch from Salein in The Ore gonian Friday concerning a farmer he lnr killed by a wild hog was a little mixed. It was the hog that died. The brute was an enormous specimen of th porcine tribe run wild, and had been the terror of the nelshborhood. and the plucky farmer lay in wait for bint after risht and killed the animal after a hard tussle. The annual convention of Sheriffs cf Oregon Is to be held at Salem Mond. Sheriff Crnlsan haa letters from manv officers, stating their intention to he present. Jack rmp.ey gave an athletic ex hibition at Rrotherhood Park. St. Ixuis. on the Fourth, which proved anvthlng' but a success. There was a slim at tendance Pempsey and Gorman put on the gloves and went at it hammer and tongs. The sparring had con tinued about ten minutes when a police sergeant appeared. Peinpi-ey at once broke away and beiran pounding a sand bag under a shed. This fare,, was kept up for some little time, hut the crowd soon tired of this and soon meandered sadly away. Manager William neShellcy, of the Ca.lno Theater, has gone East. Georse S. Downing, superintendent or the penitentiary at Salem. as In the city esteiday buying supplies. Mr?. Charles Walter St-!j?on. grand daughter of Lyman Beecher. and Grace Kllery Channlng. crandnieco of tho famous I'nltarlan mlnlsier. have be n engaged by Charles Frohnian to write a play for him. to he produced at the Lyceum Theater next Winter. Otto Goldschmldt 1 busily encaged In writing a life of his wife, the late Jenny Linri. The "Centenary Orchestra" will ren der some choice pieces in the Centenary Church this evening. Articles of incorporation were yes terday filed with the clerk of "the County Court by the Boston ilioe t Leather Couioanv by K. A. Forbes. 1. A. McCrnm. W. V. S;..-ncer. Kuaune Protz. man. F rank I'ekiim. A. P. I e Ijn. L. L. MrArlhur. B. A. Oake. J. l. Cook and C. N. Wait, Messrs. Cook and Oakes have been appointed to receive sub scriptions for stock. Half a Century Ago Prom The Oreson:n of July ;0. :i6i Throuah the kindness of tha O. S. N. Co. their best boats and cara. on the lino of the Columbia River, have been reserved for a special trip in honor of the distinguished visitors to our state Speaker Colfax. Lieutenant -Governor Bross. Mr. Bowles and Mr. Richardson. The latest information from Eastern papers In relation to the new Missouri constitution seems to establish the fact of Ita adoption by at least 6000 ma jority. Passengers who arrived at Washing ton on June 15. by the train from Fair, fax Courthouse, reported that the rebels had destroyed the monuments erected last week upon the Bull Hun battle fields. General Gamble's men. who built the monuments. threatened to leave no vestla of civilization for 20 square miles. New- York. July S Inquiries at tho White House thi.i evening elicited the fact that the health of the President Is now worse than at any other time during the period of his present Illness. Surgeon-tjeneral Fames has been called In to consult with Dr. Burroughs. Washington. The money order office system Is to be Increased to 40 of.ices; principally In the Western states. Measures have been taKen to extend the system to the Pacific Coast. The result of the experiment so fjr Is satisfactory to the Post office depart ment. Washington. July 7. All the con demned conspirators sentenced to bo hanged were executed today. Mrs. Sur ra It was supported on the way to tho gallows by two military officers. Next to her followed Payne. Harrold and Ataerott. It Is said Payne last night made a statement exonerating Mra. Surratt but Ih.yill died together. "nctvrecBi I'ark Mouthful." CLNTRALIA. Wash.. July IS. (Tn tho Editor.) Kindly comment on tho Phrase "t'etween each mouthful." ued In a news Item In The Oregonian re cently. This use of the word between has become very common in speakinc. but la rarely found in print: although It must be confessed that Shakespearo used it In thia manner, and the Liter ary Ingest also gives it approval: but It seems absurd to have it followed by a singular noun. REAPER. The expression may be considered per missible on the assumption that It la an abbreviation of "between each mouthful and the next." But. In any event, usaae Is niperlor to analytical conception of a w ord a meaning, and usage fully Just If iex the expression. Case of ormaaly. PORTLAND. July IS. (To the Edi tor.) To settle a dispute and in the Interest of fair flay. please state whether or not a dispatch to the State Department from Liverpool quoted the captain of the American ship Norman dy as denying that a tierman subma rine used hia vessel aa a shield before torpedoing the cierman merchantman Leo. MARTIN DCDEL. The story told by the crew of the Normandy was denied by the captain. (rrnai Pay at Fair. lORTLANP. July IS. (To the Edi tor.) Kindly Inform roo Jut when "German day" or "German week" Is at the San Francisco Kxposition. ADULT READER. August S. Mr. Retailer, Co-Operate You believe In newspaper adver tising, do you not. Mr. Storekeeper? Very well then, let the manufac turers who sell your goods know It. Tell them that if they advertlxe In this newspaper It means business for you. Tell them you push newspaper advertised gooda because there Is demand for lh-m that you can see and feel. You are closer to the people ot this city than yoor manufacturer ts. The latter w ill be glad to get your views he Is as anxious to sell gooda aa you are.