OREOON1AN. PORTLAND. SEP'l L.ULLR 13, 1914. PORTLAND. OREGON. Entered, at Portland. Oregon. Postofflce Second-class matter, bubscription Rates Invariably In Advance (By Mall) Dally. Sunday Included, one year ?'!)S Daily. Sunday Included, six months " Daily. Sunday Included, three months .. -f Dally, Sunday included, one month -JJ Daily, without Sunday, one year " Daily, without Sunday, six months Daily, without Sunday, three months . - a. a Daily, without Sunday, one month .J" Weekly, one year frH Sunday, one.year mSt Sunday and Weekly, one year u (By Carrier) Dally. Sunday included.one year '.'? Daily. Sunday included, one month How to Remit Send postofflce money or der, express dsder or personal check on your locaLnk. Stamps, coin or currency are si sender's risk. Give Postofflce address in Ittl.. Including county and state. Po-tage Rates 12 to 16 pages, 1 cent; H to 3: paes. -1 cents; 34 to 4S pages, 3 cents. to to tio pages. 4 cents; 62 to 16 pages, a cents; 7 to ft pages, 6 cents. Foreign post age, double rates. Eastern Business Offices Verree si c??, Iln, New York, Brunswick building. -nl" cago, Stenger building. San Francisco Office R. J. Bidwell Co.. 74a Market street- TOKTUND, SUNDAY, SEPT. 13', IH. THE GERMAN RETREAT. The real effect and importance of the German retirement from before Paris is clouded. Even London warns the British people not to at tach too much importance to the forcing back of the German right and right center, which is but a single in cident in a great campaign. The operations of the German right, under Von Kluck, with from three to five corps, may be likened in effect to the conduct of a swordsman who has advanced, thrust sharply but unsuccessfully, and recovered quick ly with a deft retreating movement. "VVhile Von Kluck was over-extended. a successfully airectea inrusi nu". his opponent in strategy might have served to cut off his army completely at a time when he could get no sup port 'from the German right center under Von Buelow-. It must not be assumed that Von Kluck thrust his military foot into a French-British trap. His purpose in advancing on a straight line from Lille to Paris was to cut off the Brit ish forces or to bottle them up at Maubeuge. Quick to see the snare, General French, the British com mander, retreated 'rapidly, fighting only rearguard actions. Von Kluck kept hammering away in the wake of the retiring allied force. Evidently it was the German plan of strategy that Von Buelow. With the German right center, should form a junction with Von Kluck immediately before Parrs and cut the allied army in two, the smashing of French co-ordination be ing of greater importance than lay ing siege to Paris. For with the allied armies intact investment of Paris would have been a dangerous and ex pensive undertaking for the Germans. But when Von Kluck, with Paris almost in sight, was ready to assail the French army which had been con4 centrated north of Paris, Von Buelow was not yet up, his forces having been delayed by rugged terrain and French resistance. Von Kluck, his lines broadly extended, was thus in danger of being cut off by an envelop ing movement and it was only his quick grasp of the situation and the magnificent co-ordination, of his army that enabled him to move his huge force to the rear, throwing out heavy rearguard elements to force suffi cient French and British deployments to give him the necessary time to pull off. During a period of five days this rearward movement has continued along the German line of communi cation toward the Meuse. There are reports that other sec tions of the German line have been falling back except on the German left center at Verdun, where the fortifications are being heavily be sieged by an immense German force which Is also seeking to make its way around the place. Breaking through at. Verdun, the Germans, with an army estimated at 350,000, mjght be able to relieve the pressure on their right and again threaten the allies with an enveloping movement which would force them, in their turn, to fall back upon Paris. Development of the next German stratagem will be awaited with deep interest. With a number of the strongest French forts In their pos session and with their well-established lines of communication advanced far into France it would not appear that the Germans are in immediate danger of being driven out of that country. Even admitting that the allies are superior in numbers, it must still be admitted that they suffer from an inferior co-ordination and that their problem must continue to be a de fensive one for some time to come. The present movement against Von KUick can be regarded aa little more thaSva tactical offensive operation. Whether the Germans will im mediately renew their cry of "On to Paris," or will be content to wait, must be seen. In this connection one important set of facts must not be overlooked. The Russians are prov ing a thorn in the German side. Aus tria has been severely beaten, except in a few engagements when rein forced by Germans. The need of more German troops on the German and Austrian frontiers is pressing. Their need at this particular time is es pecially strong. Later, when the snows of Winter set in. Nature will temporarily- congeal with frost the Jtusslan flood. Hence it may be barely possible that the Germans, having failed in their first coup de main on Paris and the allied army, will rest content with the progress they have made In gaining French strongholds. and while making a brave bluster in France, move heavy armies to East ern Prussia to prevent the Russians from getting a foothold before Win - ter shuts dow n. The great network of strategic railroads in Germany would render this an easy task. Then, in the course of two months, heavy withdrawals could be made from the east and the task of crushing France renewed. Nature is certain to play a heavy hand from this time forward and she will prove a temporary aid to the Germans. At the point of the Rus sian advance Winter sets in early. Heavy snow and aero weather will check the Russians, even though the men in the ranks are used to Winter campaigning. Their lines of com munication with distant supply bases will .be Impassable part of the Win ter, 'the problem of carrying supplies and moving artillery will be a most difficult one, and they will be operat ing against German troops that are comfortably quartered. Iff France, on the other hand, the climate is not such as to halt active military operations. The troops will suffer more or less but they will not be forced into Winter quarters. Winter intervening, the Germans may become more1 economical of men and set about the Frerfth campaign with greater patience. TRUST ETltlCS. A clinical thermometer register ing the political sagacity of doctors of medicine would probably stand at zero. Probably no action could have been taken by the State Medical As sociation that would do more to push along the "anti-dental trust bill" than the association's adoption in one day nf a resolution nnnosinor tile measure and of another resolution proposing a boycott. One paragraph or tne re port of the Friday's proceedings tells of formal opposition to the measure which proposes to change present re quirements and qualifications for the practice of dentistry and it records another formal declaration that the members of the association will not patronize advertisers not represented in the official organ of the associa tion. In other words the association is opposed to a more liberal admis sion of dentists to practice in Oregon and will bovcott any medicine, no matter how meritorious, if it Is- ad vertised in publications other than a doctor s magazine at Seattle. Tho clilpf nrenment presented against the existing Jaw defining the qualifications of dentists is mat tne act fosters a dental trust which is part and parcel of an ethical medical trust. To meet this argument the Oregon State Medical Association op poses alteration of existing law in one breath and in the next adopts trust methods to show its disapproval of medicine-advertising in non-medical mihlications. The physicians have given plausibility to the argument that a medical trust exists. A little more tolerance by physi cians of things outside an ultra-con-.rvativ code of ethics would help Lto preserve the really valuable bul- warKS mat navtr uecu cievicu p ron ac-ainst eeneral admittance of quackery to the state. Their present attitude provokes assaults that will sooner or later destroy. CUT ELECTION COST. Among the few measures on the bal lot that would reduce the cost of gov ernment, if adopted, is the amend ment to lengthen the term of certain county officers to four years. The Clerk, Treasurer, Coroner, Sheriff and Surveyor are now elected for two years. The biennial recurrence of the names of candidates for these offices on the ballot is a needless expense. As a rule re-election to a second term is conceded. The public simply bears the expense of printing names of can didates and counting ballots twice as often as necessary because' the consti tution so provides. The terms of these were fixed before the days of the recall and a short term was then better justified. Addi tional, county offices created by act of the legislature, such as those of Audi tor and School Superintendent, arfe held for four years by the incumbent- There is now no good reason why the constitutional county offices should not be placed on the same basis. Aside from the unnecessary expense involved In the short term it is pro vocative of .inefficiency. The incum bent is hardly seated before his atten tion is distracted from the duties of office by the campaign fdr re-election. County officers would perform better service if their positions were assured for four years. ( The amendment contains no jokers. It will not perpetuate in office for two more years those now in positions, but, if adopted, will extend to four years the term of county officers elect ed next November. It is a meritorious amendment. - ' ADVENTURES OF A PLAY. "Japhet in Search of a Father" nassed throutrh many vicissitudes in the old novel which delighted our grandmothers, but his adventures were tame compared to those of Mr. Shlnman's Dlav in search of an actor. The author has written a book to recount the wonderful straits and perils dire which the work of his brain had to traverse before it saw the lisrht on the stage. Its name Is "D'Arcy of the Guards," a taking ap pellation which it seems ought to have'won the favor of producers at a glance, but it did not. The play went to Sothern and to Mansfield, both of whom found griev ous faults in it. Then the harassed author, in order to advertise it more widely, turned it into a novel. This went to Macmillan, whose reader found it "clever and able," but too illy put together to satisfy her criti cal requirements. A little later the maflo-tn-nrrler hook was accepted and .published by Herbert Stone, of Chi cago. This fact proves to tne dis cerning that it is well for authors to have more than one publishing cen ter in the country. If all books had to be brought out in New York the Monday sick headaches of the pub lishers' readers might play havoc with literature. With its prestige enhanced by Mr. Stone's acceptance, the play now be gan another tour of the stars, pursu ing a sort of milky way through the theatrical heavens. Hardly a milky way, though. Via dolorosa would be a more accurate expression to record its sorrows. In the course of its wan derings through two hemispheres Mr. Shipman's play attained to the honor of being read by Sir Henri Irving, which ought to have been suf ficient consolation to the playwright even If it never had appeared at all. But it did appdar. Robert Taber bought the acting rights after a while, Kt .'allied and lingered over it- Years passed away, . five, ten, twelve endless cycles of tjie dancing months before Mr. Taber availed himself of his purchase and produced the play in London. Long -before that happy dav Henry Miller brought it out in San Francisco with pleasing results, though only after it had been cut and slashed in a way to make the author's heart bleed. We recount these tear ful facts not only because they are Interesting in themselves, but also for the much better reason that they convey a lesson, albeit a sad one, to the aspiring young playwright. He, or she, often thinks that once the play has been accepted by a man-ap.- on trmihle is rjast and there is nothing more to do but draw royal ties nd buy automobiles. coining nniii ha more mistaken. The accept ance of a modern play merely begins its real construction. Every part of It must be examined in the light of "practical" stage work and modified if it does not come up to certain cut aad dried standards. " 'This is one reason, among many, why America produces no nrsttciass rila'vs The srenlus of the author must always yield to the stodgy notions of the "practical producer. remaps we shall some day have authors who are their own producers as Shake- I speare was and then we may see great I -.1 1 -i . ctqtrA TVl(- piay 5 OH tile AlliClK.au .r.t.. modern tendency toward simplicity in production will probably hasten this millennial time. The leading Euro pean theaters, when war cut short their work, were beginning to discard elaborate scenery and make the play depend on the acting, as it shiuld. V CAPITAL CITIES AND MEN'l The Atchinson Globe, quoted by Collier's, sagely defines a small town as "one in which a silk hat attracts as much attention as the Are depart ment." Collier's goes -on to remark that there are no more such places. The United States, therefore, has nothing but cities. With this opinion we are disposed to agree as far as conscience will permit. A strict re gard for accuracy compels us to con fess, much as we dislike to, that a few "small towns" in the Globe's sense still remain. But happily they are disappearing.- It is said of Paris that an Arab Sheik in full panoply can parade the streets without causing a single gamin to look at him twice. This spirit of cosmopolitanism much more than its art galleries and boulevards makes Paris the world's capital. In the same way any little village can, if it will, be cosmopolitan and a capi tal. A capital city is one that stands on its own feet. It serenely chooses its own way and goes it and permits every other town and every individual to do the same. There are capital men as well as cities," though they are comparatively rare. Emerson was such an one. So was Walt Whitman. Perhaps Whit man was the most truly capital per son the United States ever produced, unless Lincoln was more so. They faced the world calmly, sufficient'unto themselves, immensely tolerant' Tol erance is the supreme virtue of capi tals. Small towns never have it. Formerly, when it was difficult to, go from place to place and people were shut up forever in their little dens away from the tides of the world small towns abounded. You were apt to light upon one,, to your sorrow, wherever you put up over night. Communication has done much to abolish them. The railroad, the tele phone, the newspaper, transform the small town into the cosmopolitan cap ital. When we have good roads the transformation will be more rapid still. Good roads tap the stale eddies of life and draw their contents into the great tidal currents, while they carry refreshing billows of thought and deed into the stagnant pools. A city is a place that Is truly alive. THE HOUSE OF HAPSBURG. Since the year 1867 what was for merly the Austrian Empire has been properly styled the Dual Monarchy of Austria and Hungary. In that year the Hungarians obliged the imperial government to grant them national independence, but they remained un der the rule of Francis Joseph and naturally the two parts of the mon arcnv have many common threads of administration. The population! of Hungary, which is fairly homogeneous, c.ii o ntfio v,nrf nf 30 nno.OuO. That p A,,ct-ia lc hptprne-pnpous afinost .beyond belief. The largest element is German, numbering some nine millions. They inhabit the ancient dominions of upper and lower Austria, the borders nf DnKprnig anrl thp Adriatic Drovlnces. The Czechs and Slovaks, who are a little less than 6,000,000, possess al most the whole of Bohemia, part of vniifaiiia and half of Austrian SileSla. There are more than 4,0u0.000 Poles dwelling in the seat of their ancient power, with three and a quarter my linna of R nt henlans. The Italians, Ser vians, Croats, Rumanians and Mag ipse nnmprniis hut thev form an appreciable fraction of the inhab- taits. Thips stranee aeelomeration of peo ples has been gradually formed in the course of a thousand years Dy tne m rlnstrv the patience and the good for tune "of the house of Hapsburg, an extraordinary line of rujfrs which has produced only two great statesmen In he course of its long nistory, unanes anrt Maria Theresa. It has made blunders Innumerable and suffered dis asters which time and again have threatened to obliterate it from fhe earth. But it has profited almost as mnph hi- dullness as by craft. The inert conservatism of the Hapsburgs has held tenaciously to everything they have ever acquired, uneir Diun ders have done them wonderfully lit tle harm and their disasters have usu-alii- Kcwf n followed bv recuperative pe riods that seem almost unaccountable. The faint beginnings of Austrian power may De traced oatu iu a territory on the south bank of the Danube, east of the Enns River, which as set apart in the year sou to guara hpripmppTip's pmnire from the en croaching Slavs. It was scarcely sixty illes from east to west, out cuuueuitru itv. tt mvsteriouslv was a vague ter ritory lying somewhere to the east ward. From this neDuious source mmmpb the name Austria, which sig nifies "eastern kingdom." This was the origin of the monarchy ana lis name. t .,iA.-a ti TTanshnres beean' their earthlv career in a castle near the junction of the Aar River with the Rhine, which was built in tne year ft hv the s-ood bishop of Strass burg. The bishop had a brother, dbot, whose son inherited tne iate castle and became the first Count HapsburgT This youth exhibited liivnrtnnt hloom those acquisitive qualities which have distinguished his descendants from tnat time iu isw became Landgrave of Upper L.or ne before he died and amassed '.-..ic in Switzerland. Thus started on its assimilative ca reer, the house of Haptsburg- grew in possessions by marriage, by inherit ance and by conquest until in the year 1218 its head, Rudolph, was powerful enough to make himself German King, or King of the Romans, as he is in differently called. In those old times the Germans found it a little difficult to distinguish themselves from the Romans, whose power they thought they had inherited. Rudolph carried on the good work by annexing Austria and Styrla to his domains. This was thp firpit ..onnectlon of the Hapsburgs with Austria and the family seat was now moved from tne Knine to tne Danube, where it has ever since re mained. Judicious marriages have been the principal means by which the Hapsburgs have grown great. They obtained -Bohemia and Hungary in this way, and though both countries were ,.notri!v lost thev were as often re gained, until finally the family hold up on them became too nrm u De looseneu. For the most part the Hapsburgs have been unlucky in war and yet the only territories they have utterly lost by wager of battle are Switzerland, Italy and part of Silesia. Other lands have been taken from them now and then but thev have usually received someV thing quite as good in exchange. Modern interest in the Hapsburgs begins with Philip, son of Maximilian, who married Ferdinand and Isabella's daughter Joanna and had two sons, Charles and Ferdinand. - Charles, the elder, turned over Austria to his brother, but in himself he united trie crowns of Spain, the Holy Roman Em pire, the Netherlands, Sardinia, Naples, Sicily and the great Spanish dominions in America. Besides all these he had innumerable other lands and titles. He came as near as anybody ever did to possessing universal dominion over Europe and the world. France and, England were the only civilized coun tries tjuite out of his grasp. At Charles' death Spain went to his son, Philip. Austria and the empire re mained with Ferdinand's offspring. Thus the house o: Hapsburg separated into two branches. The Spanish branch decayed during the 17th cen-1 tury and was Anally succeeded by the Bourbons. The Austrian branch went through the fiery ordeal of the Thirty Years war, which almost destroyed civilization in Germany. Ferdinand II. brought it on by trying to lead L1 back the German heretics to tne Jrto man fold, but his house lost hardly anything through its horrors except Alsace, which went to France in 1648 by the treaty of Westphalia. France acquired Lorraine from Maria The resa's husband, Francis Stephen, in 1736. Tne great Empress-Queen Maria Theresa was the daughter of the feeble Hapsburg Charles VI, who had no sons. To insure Maria's succession, he executed the famous Pragmatic Sanction, a settlement to which all Europe agreed and which all Europe immediately broke as soon as Charles was dead Frederick the Great of Prussia be gan the dance by grabbing Silesia. Other Kings helped themselves as ihey felt able. For a while it seemed as if Maria Theresa must lose her do minions, but she proved equal to the situation and came through her first period of warfare without sacrificing much, except, what Frederick had taken. Later she organized a league against him and barely missed putting an end to his career. This was the Seven Years' war, in which France took Maria's part, and lost North America to the British, who helped Frederick. At the close of Napoleon's wars Austria held fhe hegemony of Europe, but the troubles of 1848 shook her power. At that time began the rivalry with Prussia which resulted in her overthrow at Koijiggratz and her expulsion from the German Con federation. ThIS was in 1866. Austria's present alliance with Prus sia was negotiated by Bismarck, who went to Vienna in 1879 and concluded the treaty. Th(s united Prussia and Austria" against France and Russia, who were subsequently joined by Eng- land. Italy joined the dual alliance when France opposed her aspirations ill Tunis, but, as current events show, her adherence was not very strong. Her true affiliations are with the triple entente. , GERMAN PUBLIC WORK. Before the pending war began lt devastating course Germany had be come an object lesson to all the world In many kinds of municipal work. VYe suppose these afctivitips will now be cut off in order that the war lords may prance up and down the world at the rear of their corps, but they are worth remembering and will no doubt be resumed when sanity re turns to the European populations. William H. Dawson has published a book (Longmans, Green & Co.) which describes "Municipal Life and Government In Germany" when it waw in full progress. Readers need not be reminded that Germany has car ried state and municipal socialism farther than any other country in the world. .In spite of its tendency to governmental absolutism, it has done wonders for the welfare of its people. Mr. Dawson does not argue over the comparative advantages of public and prlvate"municipal enterprises, govern ment ownership and so on. He mere ly sets out the facts and allows the reader to form his own opinions. His general conclusion is that in such in stances as waterworks, light and power, tramways and abattoirs, mu nicipal activity, as far as.Germany is concerned, has been a great success. THE DAMAGE TO LUMBER, A corresppndent, whose communi cation is published in another column, attemnts to catechise The Oregonian in regard to our recent discussion, of the tariff. He appears to imagine that a Portland mtliman's statements that the Underwood tariff has had a mosH injurious effect on the lumber indus try are disproved by the fact that lum ber exports from Portland to foreign ports have greatly increased in the last few months. He has overlooked the very important fact that in foreign trade our lumbermen can use foreign ships at practically the same low freight as the Canadians pay. In coastwise trade our lumbermen are compelled to use American-built ships at high rates, while their Canadian competitors can use British ships. American lumbermen employing white labor have been placed in direct competition, without protection, with British Columbia lumbermen employ ing Asiatic labor. Under what a great handicap they are thus placed we showed in an article published on June 28 entitled, "Our Gift to Can ada." The British Columbia scale of wages is lower all along the line than that paid in this country and the mill man's other expenses in that province are lower. Since the Underwood law was passed there has been a great In crease in the number of shingle mills in .'operation in British Columbia, many of which arerunning night and daj-, and imports from that province to the United States have enormously increased. These facets are easily reconciled with the increase in exports by sea to British possessions. Just as the mill man we quoted a few days ago said, it is better to turn some of his lumber Into cash at a loss than to let it lie in the yard. He might then lose less than he would sink in overhead charges were he to close his mill. Aside from the direct effect of the tariff on the lumber industry, there is an indirect effect due to the tariffs depressing influence on business gen erally. The Underwood "tariff has cut down the business and the profits of the dairyman, the woolgrower and others and has reduced their buying power. All our industries are inter dependent and an Injury to one is felt by all. We have not upheld the theory that Canada rejected reciprocity on ac count of Champ Clark's verbosity alone. That was one of several causes. There is a large protected in terest in the Eastern and Pacific prov inces which opposed competition with American manufactures. There is a growing spirit of nationality in Can ada which was suspicious of reciproc ity as a prelude to annexation. Mr. Clark's and Mr. Taft's ill-advised speeches gave the protected interests a fine opportunity to wave the Union Jack and stir up patriotism and preju dice in their own interest. Had reci procity been adopted some Oregon in terests would probably have gained, while others would have lost, but the general result would have been good. But there is a wide difference between a give-and-take arrangement and the present situation, which is "all give and no take." The depression which has prevailed In this country is partly due to world wide causes, felt in other countries as well as this; partly to special causes peculiar to this country alone. These special causes no sooner became ap parent in the shape of the "empty dinner pail" than we began calling attention to them without regard to exigencies of partisan politics. Had The Oregonian been actuated by parti san motives in discussing public af fairs it would not have supported the currency law- before as well as after its passage, nor the income tax law, nor the anti-trust bills. We have crit icised the tariff law because it Mas emptied the dinner pail. FETROGRAD. The great plain which includes Cen tral Russia, Western Prussia and the Eastern slopes of Sweden is terminated at the borders of Siberia by the Ural Mountains and on thewest by the Scandinavian chain. It is a flat land, marshy over vast areas and plenti fully- cmnnlflari with shallow lakes. . . ,t - .. hr(. of these ln- lan(J waters whose ievel lies scarcely above the sea. They are so numer ous in Eastern Prussia that they im pede the progress of invading armies. In Russia toward the coast of the Baltic they attain an expanse like that of Lake Ladoga, whose longest dimen sion is more than a hundred hiles. The plain is an inclement region un kindly to the human race. In Winter freezing winds cover the lakes amd rivers with ice two and three feet thick. In the Fall damp airs from the Baltic unsettle the health of the Inhabitants. The hot Summers are hardly tempered by the marshy wa ters. Winter begins in November and its icy grasp is not relaxed until the end of April. The average length of the Winters at Petrograd Is 14 7 days, during which the Neva needs no bridge bur the ice. The Gulf of Finland penetrates the Russian plain almost to the shore of Lake Ladoga. 'Between them is a narrow peninsula along whose south ern flows the Neva River, which joins the lake to the gulf. The stream has low shores and its course is obstructed by many islands. When westeriy w"nds prevail the waters of the Baltic are driveji inland and overflow the site of Petrograd. A rise ot twelve feet submerges all the less aristocratic Quarters of the city. By way of these desolate stretches the trade of Russia has passed toward the west from time immemorial. It was the only course by which it could avoid the lofty moun tains and impassable rivers which sep arated the primitive land of the Mus covites from civilization and luxury. At the point where the Neva leaves Lake Ladoga the Russian traders had a fortress before Peter the Great was born. The Swedes built a fort nearer the Gulf of Finland while the Livon ians defended .their rights with a fort ress at Narva still further to the west. Among these, competing merchants many a battle was waged which his tory never heard of or lang ago for got,"At the beginning of the 18th century the Swedes, then ruled by the adventurous and reckless Charles XII., had overrun tie whole territory be tween Lake Ladoga and the Baltic. Thia blocked the advance of Russia and barred the ambitions of Peter the Great, who longed to force hjs country into the comity of European nations and teach the Russians the civilization of Western lands. He himself had traveled in those countries and knew by experience how superior they were in the arts to his own barbarlous do minions. Hating traditional customs, he assembled his high-born boyars and with his own hand cut off their flowing beards and mustaches. He broke the authority of the orthodox Greek Patriarch and replaced his re ligious absolutism by the more man ageable absolutism of the Holy Synod, .which was willing to receive the de crees of the Almighty through the mouth of the Czar. Peter , with his impatient zeal for change and prog ress, forsook the polsonoiis fanatic ism and immovable conservatism of the ancient capital. Moscow stood to his imagination for that hoary and unyielding past which it was the pur pose of his life to conquer. And since he could make no impression upon Moscow's traditionalism he resolved to shake its dust from his feet and leave it to its idols. Fired with this purpose he drove out the Swedes and founded a new city on the Neva in the path of the old historic trade movements of the empire, looking away from static Asia toward mobile and enlightened Europe. City build ing, is a simple business for an abso lute monarch. Peter began his capital by erecting a fortress and a cathedral. To populate its marshy and unhealthy he brought in thousands of unhappy peasants by military force. But hjs enterprise begun in violence and fos tered by absolutism survived his death. His successors, inspired more or less by the same ambitions, enlarged and; beautified the new capital. In the first part of the 19th century the Neva was spanned by three great bridges named from west to east, Nicholas, Trinity and Alexander, which are connected on the right shore by an embankment of stone. The center of Petrograd is the admiralty building south of the Neva at about the middle of the embankment. Three canals, leading from the Neva on the eat and returning to it on' the west, form half circles about this building and three great boulevards, or Prospects, radi ate from it southward. The easter most, the Neva Prospekt, is Petro grad's most pretentious street. Here are the principal shops and the pal aces of the mighty. It runs in a straight line southeast for 3200 yards to the Moscow station and then bends toward the upper course of the Neva, which it touches after 1650 yards more. The architecture of Petrograd is imitative and for the most part bad. Its museums contain many good pic tures but they are painfully exotic. The university on Vasillevskiy Island has 4000 students, but thgir work is hampered and often blighted by ty rannous police supervision. Outwardly Petrograd has done great things for education, has even a university and an agricultural college for women. But inwardly "its offer ings are apples of Sodom. With its population of a million and.a half the capital has four large theaters, two for vaudeville and onera, one for for eign and the fourth for native plays The orthodoxy of the city is unim peachable. Of the population 85 per cent are members of the Greek Church, 10 per cent .are Protestants and most of tne remainder Roman Ctstholies. With this exemplary piety it exhibits an Illegitimate birth rate of one in four and death rate which In some quarters carries off every other child born into the world. Infectious diseases, due to filth and poverty, ac count for half the mortality. Some lums are never free from cholera ex cept in the coldest weather. On Vasi llevskiy Island in convenient proxim ity to the university Is the fortress of Peter and Paul, now the Russian state dungeon. Around these two typical Russian Institutions dwell a miserable throng of "educated prole tarians," university graduates to whom life offers no vocation but incendiary talk. It Is from this barbaric capital that the Czar has dispatched his hordes to Inundate Europe. Senator Stone rapped the wasteful ness of Congress when the Senate was discussing an appropriation for drag ging th channels of the Alaskan coast hi ordffr to locate the sharp pinnacles of rock which can be located In no other way and which have caused many shipwrecks. The appropriation was cut out in conference, whereat the Oregon and Washington Senators protested. Mr. Stone remarked to Senator Lane: I was aolna t say to the Senator from Oregon that there would be this consolation followlna the failure of this appropriation that, it the sDirlt of liberality in erecting monumeirts and memorial tablets which has prevailed here of late continues, after a disaster in these waters and a large number of men. women and children have been drowned, he might .probably get $200,000 ap propriated for a monument. That is the usual Congressional programme stint money for llfesav lng, but spend It lavishly on monu ments after lives are lost. The co-operative canneries which have failed were weakest at the mar keting end. They usually obtained plenty of fruit and put it up properly, but they couldnof) dispose of their product. Salesmanship Is the most difficult art in the realm of business. It requires an adeptness seldom found in rural communities. The new or ganization among the fruit mon prom ises to solve a perplexing problem ami bring prosperity to thousands of homes. In the siege of 1870 Frenchmen fled to Paris from the surrounding country, several hundred thousand In all. Now everybody Is leaving It. thereby showing the best of sense. If there is to be another siege Its mis eries will fall, mainly upon fighting men. Almost 1.500.000 non-combatants have already fled. More will follow. Perhaps the result of the siege, if there is to be one, will als differ from that of the former. The Turkish Ambassador, on being asked sharply if he had been cor rectly quoted in his insulting remarks, on the United States, promptly re plied that he, had. Whereat Secre tary' Bryan announced that the, inci dent was closed. More diplomatic backing "and filling. Peace at this time would be a mis fortune, inasmuch as it would leave the countries with an array of bitter enmities which would bode 111 for the future. Peace will look better and better to them as time passes. Great Britain and Germany jolt the popular idea of the efficacy of prayer. The former does not want peace until the latter is humbled, and 8he(ln turn scouts the proposition until France is ground into the dust. French captives have nubscribed to the German Red Cross which treated them with great kindness. It there was more of that spirit in the world and less of the other, we'd be havlnfe no war. A French laundress has been- com plimented for bravery on the firing line. But we still are without news that the suffragettes are forming a regiment to prove their equal rights. Two more German Major-Generals killed. Major-Generals would do well to take advantage of the privilege of keeping well to the rear, since hostile bullets are not respecters of rank. The 'Astrlan officers who deserted their battalions en masse are in striking contrast with the British of ficers, who have to be cursed into ly ing down at the firing halts. A German corps is commanded by General von Deneckendorff und von Hindenburg. Wonder If "he is able to muster double pay on the strength of it. Bryan sees the end of militarism In the present conflict. It hasn't been long since he was saying tint another great war was out of the question. A Dallas preacher is to retolve from his congregation the eggs laid on Sunday. But what will become of the hens that lay on this tlayT a. h French tell it. the whole Ger man army is on the run. and as the Germans tell it, one ot tneir aavance guards has been drawn back. vm wants Carranza to direct us to move our troops out of Vera Cruz. Possibly Villa feels they might be in the way of his next coup. We should think that our State Department would at least have slapped that flippant Turk on the wrist. It is xtrmel difficult to make heads or tails of the present military situation in France. If Turkey Joins Roumanla, Greece and Bulgaria stand ready to leap In. Checkmated! We have been expecting to hear that the war has sent up the cost of text books. No doubt the Teuton right wing would be glad of an armistice of rest. No military genius has yet come Into view above the military horizon. The Austrians surpass the TurkB as military sprlnten War bulletin: The Russians have been licked at Lyck. Mother's real vacation begins to morrow.. Back to school! Western Verse THE PIONEERS. (Dedicated to Rev. Thomas M. Hams dell, a pioneer of 144, who ha seen Oregon In all stages of development. Mr. Rumsdell has assisted In laylog the foundations of the state as teacher, minister and judge, and has had much to do with bringing this commonwealth to its present splendid solidity. Ripened by experience, and tilled with the con sciousness of work well and conscien tiously done.' he still lives to enjoy what he helped to sow. Ha Uvea at Eaavt Twenty-fourth and Madlaon streets, Portland, Or., In the SJa year of his age. His mind la still active, and he indulges the advantage of a good edu cation by writing on social and thao. logical subjects.) They streamed through the pasaoa. They im from afar; On, their foreheads the light Of Hesperian star. They splashed the bright waters Of rivers unnamed By the fear-hauntod Jungle Their campflres flamed. They gored the gray strata. And reft them of spoil. And sowed the first seeds ' In the heart of the soil. The swing of their stride. And the crunch of.thelr feet. Where each mile was a nieasur Of misery and heat, "Tere as strong, were as bold. And aa clear was each aye As the Norse chieftain's were When the sea winds were high. Burned black in the boat Of the desert, and cursed O'er the waterless void By the devils of thirst; Beneath them the rustle Of paperlsh grass: Above them a sky That was blistering brass. Around them forever The mirage and the glare On their lip and their palates The parch of the air. With the dust of the hoof. And the grit of the tire. That burned in the nostrils I A torturing fire. Vet on. ana still on! By the uncharted way: And on, and still on! To the close of the day. , Though behind them was horn. And the graves of the dead; And the corn anil the cane Were, all stately of head. Though the cool melons rlpenad, Half hid tn their vines. And the green was as deep As a forest of pines; Yet on, and Mill on! Where the blue bases lie; And on. and still on. T'ward the low-bending sky. For this wag the breed. With the square. Iron chin; Of the dangerous laugh, And the tawny, white skin. . . Of the eye. flashing bright. And the deep sunken cheek: Of the strong arm that lifts up A comrade grown weak. For their fathers came down To the ocean In ships. With the slogan of "Liberty" Hot on their lips. And they launched them away On the ocean's wild track. For they fled from the dungeon. The stake, and the rack, enfettered their hands, And unbattered their brawn: Thy were free as the trade winds That watted them on. Arid their children have slashed them A place for their feet Where the storms and the floods And the dark forests meet. They have gathered the grapes Of a blistering vine; And have trodden the must That was bitter as brln. They have mastered their foes On the shore and the plain. And have nursed of the wolf In the lairs of pain. To fhe green, sunny vales. . Where the silence Is deep, And the purples of Fancy Haunt forest and steep. Where the waters go laughing With songs to the sea: And the twilight is tender On valley and tree They came with their prayer. And tjeir stoutness of heart; And they nowed of their souls What cart never depart. And they built by the fountains As pure as a maid When she muses of love In the dim forest shads. And they cleft the sweet cedar. And planted the corn; And they reared up the myrtle ' I nmhprpil the thom. They builded their temples. And hallowed i " With the fear, and the praise. And the worship of'Qod. They have loved, they hav4 woosd. And their vows have been said; They have crooned by their crsdlea. And wept ior tncir . But they're gone from the land. And we see tHem no more. Like the foam that was heaped on th wave-beaten shors. Their cabins are crushed By the weisrht ot tne snows. In their crumbling chlmnaya mi ...... u,llw irrnWH. ' We fain would dwell with tham. But they are not here; Thev have folded their tenta t .ik a the true nloneer. By their ashes we follow The way they have gone. For In lands of the sunset They're still moving on. OUT FITCH PHStM. "SMOKE IUM.V WTieTi I fill my good old brier And settle down to rest. While my thoughts mount metier. higher, "Jo thf regions of the bleit, iM-numi fnrirotten come to cheer me; Softly, ah! they flutter near me! Boyhoods laugh of carefree pleasure Fondly, O. my fancy hears Captain Kldd's piratic treasurs. Crusoe's lale again appears: With the smoke's upcurllng rings Mounts my soul and sings and ilnga Thus 1 wonder why the post Sang of ravens and "Lenora Whv he let his fancy go It On the liara i-iuioniau Why his melancholy muse Drooped and fluttered with the bluaa. , There Is mingled Joy and terror In the chiming of tha Bells . But what wail of sorrow In the tale the "Raven tells. rerched above the poets door With his croak of "never mora. . . ,, have been a reason Why he nourished such a "grouch." Should you ask me. I should seise on Bad tobacco In his pouch "Only that and nothing more If the reason' I explore. If he had (O. how delightful!). Just imagine Allen Poo With a good old mellow plpeft.l Of "Stag" or "Tuxedo, Then that melancholy fowl Had never vexed his classic soul (1,'kvoh There's a comfort when you're weary. A solace rare and ripe: There's Joy forevsr chesrir , A good old friendly pipe. Qeo H. Kaade. Portland. Or.