10 THE 3IOKXIG OREGOMAX, SATURDAY, JAXUART 18, 1010. diht Bxm PORTLAND, OREGON. ' Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postofflce as second-class mall matter. Eubscrlption rale? Invariably In advance: (By Mall.) Tattyf Run 3ay Included, on year . . . . Paily, Sundav Included, six months... . Daily, Sunday included, three months Eaily, Sunday included, one month.. .. rM!y, without Sunday, one year. . . .. . rally, without Sunday, six months.. .. raily, without Sunday, one month Weekly, one year ........- Sunday, one year Sunday and Weekly (By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday Included, one year. . . ... Taily, Sunday included, one month. . . . Daily. Sunday included, three months. raily, without Sunday, one year T-ai!y, without Sunday, three months.. Daily, without Sunday, one month... . . 4.2.". '.- .7- . fl.00 . 8. 25 . .) . 1.00 . i:.b . 3.0O. .J3.0O .75 '. 7.f . l.!' . .63 How to Remit Fend postofflce. money cr ier, express or personal check on soar lf-cal bank. Stamps, coin or curr-;nr:y ari at own er's risk. Give postofflce address in lull, in cluding county and state. Postage Kates ia to 18 psgs, 1 cent: 38 to 31i pages, 2 cents; TI4 to ,ag.s. 3 '.er8; f0 to ri pases, 4 cents; 6- to 7 cases, o cents: "S to 82 pages, 6 cents. Foreign lost ase, double rates. Kaj.tern Buhlnrw Office Verree r Conk lln. Brunswick building. New York; Veirte & Conklln, Steger buildins. Chicago: Verree : Conklln, Free Press buiMtn;. Jvtrelt. Mich.; tan Francisco representative, R. J. Bidwell. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PKE6S. The Associated Press is exclusively enti tled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise, credited to this paper, and also, the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dis patches herein are also reserved.- PORTLAND, SATURDAY, JAN. 18. 1919. I . t FCTCRE MILITARY POLICY. Doubt as to what necessity may arise from decisions of the peace con ference and from the disturbed condi-. tion of the world has unavoidably de layed decision of the War Department and Congress on the future organiza tion of the Army. In fact some per sons question the wisdom of demobi lization in advance of the final set tlement, for there may be need of military activity on no small scale. The German army has not been fully demobilized, and might prove capable of serious resistance to execution of the allies' demand?. Tet the men who volunteered or were drafted to fight Germany consider that their work was finished when the armistice was con cluded, and they are impatient to go home. They do not relish the pros pect of being retained as an Army of Occupation or to pacify countries that fight for disputed territory or that are disturbed by Bolshevism. Under these circumstances demobilization cannot wisely be carried much farther until provision has been made for an ade quate force to perform the duty of cleaning up the final -work of the war. Hence the House military committee has agreed with Secretary Baker and General March that the present or ganization and law be continued and that consideration of a permanent Army organization be deferred to the next session of Congress. But there is dange'r of grave dis satisfaction if a large proportion of the present Army should be retained in service indefinitely for post-war work. While the President may law fully detain these men until four months after the proclamation of peace, which cannot be till the peace treaty is ratified, much better feeling would prevail If h,e were to call upon the men now In the ranks for enough volunteers to do the post-war work and were to send all others home; That course would avoid discontent arising from the employment of men to do work which they did not under take, or at least did not expect.. Adoption of a permanent policy should not be delayed beyond the first session of the new Congress, and should be the work of a special ses sion this year. While the War Depart ment and the General Staff propose a standing Army of half a million men, which is the foece proposed by the General Staff before the Hay law was passed in 1916, both are silent as to universal military training. Yet if we have learned anything from the war, it is that the general body of male citizens should have military training in order that there may be an ample reserve behind the regular Army. The draft law has served ad mirably to meet the situation in which the war found us, but it was passed for the present emergency and will expire four months after conclusion of peace. If it should expire before a new system has been provided, the Army would shrink to about 40,000 men whose time had not expired under the Hay law. By absorption into the Xational Army the Xational Guard has been practically destroyed and would need to be built up anew. The Army would not then even be back where it was at the beginning of April, 1917. At that time, although the war with Germany had been in progress for two and a half years, we were so ill prepared that we were not able, even with the excellent system of the draft and with its able admin istration by General Crowder, to put an independent American Army on the firing line until seventeen months after we declared war and only two months before hostilities ceased. In the ab sence of a trained citizenship to pro vide ample reserves for a strong first- line Army immediately on the out break of hostilities, we should be in the same position again In a future war. We might not then have allies to hold the enemy at bay until we got ready. But for the allies, we might have suffered irretrievable defeat dur ing those seventeen months that we spent in preparing our first Army. Congress did not learn its lesson while the fate of democracy hung in the balance. An amendment to the draft law calling for registration for training of all boys of 19 and 20 was voted down by the Senate on March 29, 1918, while the Germans were driving toward Amiens and only a few days before Marshal Haig electrified Nie world with "the words, "We are fighting with our backs to the wall Xot until August did Congress yield to logic by subjecting all males over is and under 4b to tns arart. The prospect is that the United States will be called upon to provide an Army of Occupation for the Rhine Valley and probably for other dis turbed countries for one or two years after peace is arranged. TThis Nation may be called upon to administer and police some of the new states which are to be set up, at least until they succeed in establishing stable govern ments. Having spent less in men and money than any of the allies, we may be called upon to do the largest share of the work. As we are less open than European nations to suspicion of selfish motives, we may be selected as trustee to execute peace conferenc decrees. Aside from those considera tions, several great countries are in such a state of transition that ou Xational safety requires us to be well prepared for the gravest contingencies As wars are now fought between trained nations, our citizens must be trained, that they may be ready in stantly to do their part. If Congress were to enact a law for universal training next Summer it would act barely in time for the first class to be trained before the present drafted Army is disbanded and after the new regular Army of 500,000 men is enlisted. Experience has done away "with objection to military training on the part of all except a few radicals and cranks. The physical and moral benefits are generally admitted. The men now being discharged from the Army are recognized as better citizens for their experience, and they have not become militarists. They are first to admit that a valuable addition has been made to their education. PROVINCIAL. "In the four quarters of the globe." exclaimed Sidney Smith, a hundred ears ago, "who reads an American book, or goes to an American ptey, or looks at an American picture or statue?" Somehow we are. reminded of this famous satire on the early provincial- sm and cultural isolation of America when we see a proposal to teach noth ing but English In the public schools. There is a bill at Salem to exclude all other languages, and another bill to forbid the teaching of German. The latter is doubtless superfluous. Who outside of Germany wants to learn German? V Let us suppose that the United States excludes Spanish, and French and all the other principal languages.. Let us suppose that the patriots of France then make up their minds that their children are being educationally cor rupted by too much knowledge of English, or Italian, or Spanish, and decide that nothing but French be taught in the French schools. Let us suppose that every Latin country In Central and South America concludes that the way to keep alive the spirit and ideals of loyalty and duty to native country and to resist the spread of American or other foreign influence is to eject English and all languages but Spanish from the schools. Let us suppose, also, that Japan raises the cry of Japan for the Japanese and Japanese schools for the Japanese language. Let us suppose that all other countries follow the conspicuous example of America and cut them selves off from all outside literature and educational development through language. What then? It would be a world with every na tion for itself, and the devil of igno rance and prejudice take the hind most. Yet we are all boosting a league of nations. WHY riCTCRES ONLY? There is a .well-justified apprehen sion expressed In a letter published elsewhere today that if the new war revenue measure shall finally contain the proposed excise tax on films, ad mission prices to moving picture plays will advance once more. The old doctrine that the consumer pays the tax will find no exception herein, much as one would like to have it otherwise. The proposed tax is 5 per cent upon the amount that the exhibitor pays the producer for use of the film. This tax is apart from that imposed upon admissions, which is frankly and specifically a tax payable by the purchaser of admissions. Whatever the method of collecting the proposed excise tax, it justifies dismal forebodings for the individual who loves to sit before the screen. If collected from the producer, who Is reputed to be the greatest money-H maker in the Industry, he will likely reason that he is paying enough in income, super-income or corporation taxes. His consumer is the exhibitor who pays the producer for the privi lege of showing the film. The exhibitor will have as good an argument as the producer for not pay ing the tax out of his own pocket. whether it be levied directly against him or passed on to him by the pro ducer. The exhibitor may be expected to recoup from the theater patron. The latter is the ultimate consumer. There is nobody on whom he can un load the tax. He can either pay it or stay at home. Regardless .of the identity of the one that pays the tax there is an ele ment of unfairness in the provision. The sum paid the producer for the privilege of showing a film is not in an essentially different class from the sum paid the owner of a play for producing it In the spoken . form. Operas yield to their owners a similar Income. Baseball managements pay other managements for their rights in players. There is perhaps no paid amusement that does not have its middleman. Inasmuch as Government revenues must be provided there can be little complaint when all in the same class are taxed alike and no class is singled out for excessive burden bearing. But in this instance the amusement of the masses is taxed and the others are left untouched. Dis. crimination of any kind produces dis satisfaction. tor our own part we should accept with equanimity a high tax on problem plays and sex dramas, spoken or pictured. There are others who equally abhor slap-stick comedy. In either of such cases there would be a semblance of argument for the law also much complaint over Its enforcement. In this case, wherein the law says that the pictured play shall pay an extra tax but the spoken play shall pot, there is no logic what ever. SELLING OCR OWN GOODS. The new foreign trade policy of the United States will need to take account of Franklin's maxim that one who wants a job well done should attend to it himself. The Department of Commerce has just called attention to the practice of Americans of entrust ing the sale of their goods to foreign ers. This error of judgment would not be so glaring if it had been con fined to engaging as agents the na tionals of the country in which busi ness was sought. It appears, for ex ample, that the representatives of American firms in Latin-American states have been largely Europeans. In Argentina recently it was found that 62 per cent of the selling agencies for American goods were neithe Americans nor Argentinans. Indeed before the war they were chiefly Ger mans, hich probably accounts for the fact that our trade prospered no more it did. The reason why this, practice was tolerated will be found in the relative insularity of American manufacturers and in their lack of concern for for eign markets. For more than forty years succeeding the Civil War they were extremely busy with projects for internal development. The habit of first creating home demand by pro cesses of advertising and salesman ship which are peculiarly American and then filling it did not tend to develop knowledge of how to cater to the wants of others who might have stubborn notions of their own. Our foreign trade omissions have been many. Failure to conform to the cus toms of prospective customers is con spicuous among these. Americans have been notoriously neglectful of foreign languages. Our dependence upon foreign agents has made us the victim of trade sabotage in various forms. It is no longer a secret that our foreign agents, particularly the Germanj, have delib erately sacrificed us. This is. quite clear to the Department of Commerce, which is now warning the country against permitting an undesirable con dition to continue Indefinitely. The lesson to younger men would seem to be that if foreign trade offers an inviting national prospect they should educate themselves systematic ally for it, as they would for any other profession. Knowledge of lan guages, of peoples and of trade prac tices, as well as of goods, is going to be absolutely necessary. The new salesmanship will be highly technical in its requirements. It is all the more attractive, however, for that reason. because tho unfit are sure to be weeded out in the competition, and the rewards will be larger In propor- ion to those who take themselves and their work in all seriousness. OCR DtTT. The Oregonian has from a valued reader at Corvallis the following letter: I am a. Republican and hare read and taken The Oregonian for years. I have also taken the Thrice-a-Week World for many ears, and I want to protest against The Oregonian linking up with the World for its European news. Most of us would prefer something from Europe that is not fulsome praise of W ilson. Surely there must be other news agencies aside from those con- rolled by the World and the Times. Most of us feel that their news Is partisan and colored. By the same mail The Oregonian has from Bandon the following sharp rebuke from an old subscriber: The Oregonian would serve its country and satisfy Its readers far more if It would not criticise the Wilson Administration in Us time of trouble. Then The Oregonian must not ques tion or discuss critically the acts of the President and his Administration at any time. For we very much fear that the Presidential troubles are to multiply, rather than diminish, for the remaining period .of his second term. It would afford a great chance .for academic debate, in the public forums of Bandon and elsewhere, as to what might have happened to America and to the world if the right of free speech, in Congress and out, and the liberty of the press had been with drawn from April 7, 1917, when we entered the war, until now. Let us formulate the text: Resolved. That the second clause of the first amendment to the Constitution of the United States be suspended for the period of any war, to the end that the President may assume all power, including the priv ileges and prerogatives and duties of Con gress, without cavil or rebuke, or complaint or suggestion from any citizen or newspaper. or institution. For the Instruction and enlighten merit of the world at large as to the whole duty of man and the press, we should like to assign a stff reporter to De present, aunng ine aetiDerauons. WITH GOOD GRACE. The spirit in which President Xor- man It. Stern, of the Trans-Oceanic Commercial Corporation, a newly or ganized subsidiary of the Distillers' Securities Corporation, approaches the issue of accomplished National prohi bition will commend itself to those whq like a good loser. Incidentally, it sfin striking contrast to that of the rreconcilables who are now trying to foment discord with statements as ab surd as that our returning soldiers will bitterly resent having been "betrayed" while they were fighting to make the world safe for democracy. Mr. Stern's prediction that the' coun try will be surprised at the complete utilization of the plants for purposes permissible in a prohibition country is in line with the experience of com munities which have previously gone dry" without bringing the house of industry down upon their heads. We doubt, iHwever, whether the surprise element will be as great as Mr. Stern believes. There is a strong undercur rent of confidence that the transition from non-productive to productive in dustry will be accomplished without disturbance. It has come to pass be fore and it will come to pass again. The day for frightening people with the bogie of empty stores and armies, of unemployed as the result of elimi nating liquor-drinking has gone by. It is equally improbable that any ap preciable number of people will be persuaded that our boys in France think that they were fighting to make the country safe for John Barleycorn. Such a conception would be an insult to the soldier, if it were taken seri ously. But it is not. MAKING THE KDiDERGARTEX LSEFUL. Apostles of utility will commend the Connecticut genius who devised the scheme for combining the practical with the theoretical in kindergarten work and whose work is described in a report of the farm bureau of that state to the United States Department ot Agriculture. Connecticut kinder gartens in the rural districts were a mighty factor in increasing food pro duction in 1918 as the result of the substitution of seed testing for cutting paper dolls and weaving baskets. But the happiest phase of the scheme, it will be conceded, was that this prac tical exercise was made the vehicle for education in several important branches. Seed testing, as every farmer knows, is a slow and tedious propess.' It takes time, and patience to go through with the motions necessary to discover the percentage of germination in the seed required for a ten or twenty-ace field, besides the simple but bulky appara tus for which there is not always room in the farmhouse kitchen. .The hand that holds the plowhandle does not easily lend itself to finer operations. The result has been, in practical ex perience, that a good many farmers who admit the superiority of tested seed put off the task until it is too late, and then plant haphazard as they have always done. But when seed testing ! made a lesson in drawing, arithmetic, geome try, botany and biology for children with deft fingers and active Tiands, it is no longer drudgery. This has been proved in Connecticut. There the farmer takes his selected ears to the schoolhouse and the children first tag and number them. Ten grains are picked from each ear and put in en velopes numbered to correspond with the ears. Sheets of blotting paper are ruled into squares, which are divided with double lines into numbered groups of ten. The grains are then moistened, another blotter is placed over them, and the whole is labeled. In the second stflge of the process the children are employed in identify ing, counting and listing the grains which have germinated. . When the upper blotter is lifted, each fertile grain will show a little white curled stem, which if it had been planted would have grown a stalk of corn. If nine grains germinated, the corre sponding ear is tagged 90 per cent. which is practically perfect, as seed corn runs. If the rate of germination is less than 70 per cent, the ear from which the seed came Is rejected, or in a season of great scarcity is re served for a planting of double the usual number of seeds to a hill. Teachers probably have not over estimated the educational advantages of the new plan. For beginners, the picking of the needs from the ear is a lesson in addition, multiplication and division. The ruling of the blotters leads to simple demonstrations of the equality of angles and sides of squares. The simple lessons ' in botany and biology are obvious. . There are exer cises in writing and In percentage, too. and there is practice In making records painstakingly. The value of this kindergarten help to the farmer has been shown by data gathered by the farm bureau. The campaign was the result of the dis covery that home-grown corn of the 1917 crop possessed exceptionally low germinating power. As the result of planting from this crop, there was danger of a real food calamity. . In one instance 700 samples taken from the 1918 crop were found to have only 30 per cent germinating power. In one county, the average of samples submitted was as low as 10 per cent. What this would have meant to the food supply of the country if it had been permitted to continue will be plain to any thoughtful observer. It will be conceded that the chief value of the work, however, lies be yond the lessons in the "common branches" which it contains. Thenor mal child is receptive to the appeal of useful work. To be employed at a task which makes him a real partner in industry is in itselCan Inspiration, which does not admit comparison with the making of futile little thing3 which are created only to be destroyed. It is said that the seed tested by Connecti cut kindergarten children last season brought the farmers of the state J 15. 000 in addition to that which was re served for home use. But the return in greater crops must have been enor mous. It was play-work, but it was highly profitable. We think its edu cational force was not lost on the grownups. It is hastening the happy day when every farmer will realize that inferior seed is dear seed at any price. Vilhjalmur Stefansson, returning from the Arctic regions with the mes sage that there ts a great herding country in the Far North and that the musk ox, with careful manage ment, may become one of the world's great sources of meat supply,' is only telling us about an old-time friend. We need only to go back to the Pleistocene period to find records of his presence in Kentucky and other points farther north in the United States, and also in Europe and Asia. He is a true member of the family Bovidae and scientists think that he is entitled to have a subfamily divi sion to himself. " He so much re sembles a large sheep that he is by some regarded as. a "woolly cow," which is the way Stefansson prefers to view him, in view of the assertion that the meat is almost precisely like beef and the yield per carcass about the same as that from a range cow. The value of the ox rests upon its ability to convert a hitherto neglected supply of forage Into food for hu mankind. Why the sentimentalities about Ar thur Davis? lie was a bank clerk, handling other people's money. He took it. and kept it until caught. His outward show of repentance dates only from the first day in custody. There are thousands of bahk clerks who re spect the trust placed in them and do not fall. A "boy" who is a husband and father and sidesteps the arrival of another is old enough to take punish ment. Let him do it under a good man who was also a bank clerk in his youth. There has been no fighting for two months, but the casualty list still drags along. If the war had continued for another year, the surviving veter ans might have died of old age before they learned "officially what had be come of their missing comrades. Caprlcornus and wife held the boards today at Lincoln High, with Dr. Mor row and Editor Gage attending. All things considered, the milk goat is the most profitable animal, and if more people owned them the mortality among infants would diminish. The Clearing-house is financing the plan, and it is worth attention. Tears ago John B. Gough and Father Mathew were the apostles of temper ance. If this country had followed their advice it now would not be going into absolute prohibition, which is something different from temperance. Temperance is a virtue, but prohibi tion has become a necessity. Vigilance is up to the pedestrian on a crowded crossing, yet it would seem some of it should apply to the driver to avoid accident. All down town intersections cannot be supplied with traffic officers, and if responsi bility is to lie. more of it should at tach to the driver. Chicago has forgotten already that the conviction of Haywood' and his companions branded the I. W. W. as a criminal conspiracy, for it gave members of that conspiracy full free dom to spout lawlessness. . The 25,000 ahlpyarders going on strike in Seattle next week will lose probably 1150,000 a day in wages while the strike lasts, and that is much money even for Seattle. The Crown Prince who used to be says he will commit suicide before arrest. Not if they "sick" a Burns or a Pink on him, however. The man who sells his liberty bond is not enough financier to know its real value, and must depend on the integrity of the buyer. It looks as though the first work of the peace conference will be to form a bread line instead of a peace league. ' The rattling of wooden shoes In the Dutch kingdom is not revolution. The Hollander is too thrifty to revolute. Weather folk say "Moderate to strong southerly winds." That's the stuff. Good-bye. "flu!" Wasco Is not a big town, but it shows a big Idea In quarantining itself to all comers. If Lenlne Is . In Spain, there are troublous times ahead for King Al fonso. Milwaukee no more is famous. Wis consin ratified yesterday. Those Who Come and Go. Seventy-five nervous candidates for the Ancient Arabia Order of the Mystic Shrine, otherwise known as the "Cheete Knife," because of the emblem used by the Red Top Masons, heard the tigers and lions roaring as they snuggled into bed at the Multnomah last night. Ear lier in the evening they were served a banquet in the dining-room, where they were entertained by a dancer who may or may not have been Imported from the desert. Later the novitiates were placed In solitary confinement and caused to meditate. They will be Riven a breakfast of raw meal this morning and will then have to fast until they have crossed the hot sands. They will be refreshed with the waters of Zem-Zem about midnight, after which they can wear a fe like rcg'Iar fellows. Calvin Hellig.returned to Portland yesterday after a prolonged visit to Tacoma. where he baa been Interested In the amusement game around Camp Lewis. The military headquarters cloeed down everything some time ago and among others affected was Mr. Hellig, who had a contract for han dling the Liberty Theater. There has been dissatisfaction among showmen for months over the situation at Camp Lewis, but Mr. Heilig says the Army people are willing to do the right thing If only someone will come along and tell them A few months in the East was enough for George H. Stephenson. He left here several months ago after clos ing up his business, "determined to live for the rest of his life in Boston. It did not take long for Boston's attrac tiveness to wear off. so yesterday, ac companied by his wife, he landed back at the Benson and was greeted by his friends with the "I-told-you-so" salu tation. Charles R. Baker, business agent in advance of the fan Carlo Opera Com pany, is at the Multnomah while com pleting arrangements for the early ap pearance of his stars in Portland. Opera is the one thing in the play business that the movies have not been able to Imitate. Mr. Baker is not wor ried about mechanical competition dur ing his lifetime. Lientenant Harold Grady, who used to teach dancing in Portland, is now eeriously 111 in a military camp in Cali fornia. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Grady, his parents, passed through Portland yes terday on their way to his bedside. They reside at La Grande. . . F. S. Lang, a stove manufacturer of Seattle, and his son. A. L. Lang, are installing a new range in the kitchen of the Hotel Portland. The range is 22 feet in length, which will give elbow room for several chefs to operate at once. . Among those at the Imperial who are here on fraternal business are Mcrt Kiddle, of Island City, who wants to attend the Shrine, and M. A. Rickard. an automobile dealer, of Corvallis, who is taking the Scottish Rite. R. I Davenport. Herbert Cohen and F. Pcrrett, all in uniform and all from the spruce country of Toledo, Lincoln County, came up to take the Scottish Kite yesteerdny. They are at the Benson. D. C. Patterson and James IT. Nich ols, both of Baker, are at the Benson. They are taking the Shrine, now being exemplified in Portland on a "Victory" class Ralph H. BurnMde. president of the est Coast lumbermen's Association arrived at the Benson yesterday from Raymond, Wash. With himMs Howard Jayne. Hans Pedereon, of Seattle, a con tractor well known on the Pacific Coast and who had the building of the Auditorium in Portland, is at the Im perial. , C. C. Clark, former member of the Oregon Legislature, is at the Imperial. His home is at Arlington. Mr. Clark has been looking around the State house at Salem. State Senator F. G. Barnes, of the Washington Legislature, passed through Portland yesterday on his way home from Olympia. He resides at . Silver Lake. Judge W. D. Barnes, of BenfJ. accom panied by bis wife, is at. the Imperial. The Judge is here to Me that the Shrine ceremonial Is a success. Charles S. Springer, business man ager of the Gazette-Times, of Corvallis, Is among the out-of-town Shriners reg istered at the Multnomah. ... Per Lee Wclty, an Insurance man of Seattle, is at the Hotel Portland, ac companied by Mrs. Welty. W. IC Fellman, who is In the furni ture business In Astoria, is at the Ben son with Mrs. Kellman. ... Harvey Beckwith, member of the In dustrial Accident Commission, came down from Salem yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. C. Herron. of Centralis. Wash., are among the arrivals at the Perkjns. eOTII C. A. C. HAPPY DCT HOMESICK Boys la Good Health and Spirits, Bat Would Like to Return. PORTLAND, Jan. 17. (To the Ed itor.) It may be of interest to the friends of the 69th C. A.C. to hear that on December 16 they were still at Lus sac France a small village not far from Bordeaux. They were all in good health and aside from the discomforts of continued rain and mud were in good spirits, though anxious to return home. They had turned in their gas masks and "tin hats," along with the big guns, tractors and a part of the motorcyclcs. On their journey over they landed at Avenmouth. England, thence by rail to Southampton, where they "rest camped for a day before crossing the channel to Havre. . En route to Southern France they had a taste of the famous "Hommes 4C. Chevaux 2" stylo or cars. The Oregonian is much appreciated and every letter begs for more. "All the Oregon boys are crazy about Th Oregonians." one writes, "and by the second day they are worn out. We don't care if the news is a month old. it's home." MOTHER. Maanvfaetnre ( Mirrors. OCKAS PARK. Wash., Jan. 16. (To the Editor.) Please tell me what to use beaides quicksilver In making a looking-glass of plate glass or tell me where I can get the Information. Also how to apply mixture. J. F. MASON. Modern processes of making mirrors are based upon causing a deposit of metallic silver on the glass. They are intricate but within the ability of a careful man. The New Standard For mulary (Hiss and Ebert) contains a description of an approved method. In which silver nitrate is the principal In gredient used. It contains too much detail to give here. It may be sug gested that it would be cheaper and more satisfactory to purchase a mir ror outright than to procure measur ing, weighing and mixing appliances, ingredients and formula for one small Job. WHY IFLl'EZA IS IN HOSPITALS Cases Admitted mmd Cared for From Sense of Public Duty. , PORTLAND. JaTu 17. (To the Edi tor.) In The Oregonian January IS relating to the action of the council on the use of marks to combat influenza, it occurs to me that unintentionally an Injustice was done to the targe de nominational hospitals of Portland In tho publication of Dr. R. C. Coffey's statement at the meeting of the City and County Medical Society, namely, "that as a result of systematic mask ing not a solitary raie of Influenza had developed In the Tortland Surgical Hos pital, whereas the other hospitals were full of it." Dr. Coffey's statement Is not chal lenged, and It Is very much to hla credit that he has kept his private hospital open to all his clients without harm to them and without break lushis own service. In full Justice, however, to the large city hospitals, like St. Vincent's and the Good Samaritan and others which have borne the burden of the epidemic. It is only rlcht to state that by the systematic closing of their doors and the wearing of masks they could likewise have prevented any cases de veloping within their doors. These hos pitals were full of influenza cases be cause they chose voluntarily to admit them In order to do their duty to the city and prevent the wanton loss of life. What would have happened to the public if all the hospitals had closed thelr dor" to thoee afflicted with this scourge? Many more lives would have been sacrificed and the spread of the epidemic would have been greater, with an ever-Increasing mortality in its wake. In order to meet the emergency, the management of the Good Samaritan Hospital and the Sisters of St. Vincent's opened wide their doors and took In everyone who applied, without regard to caste, creed or color, rich und poor alike. The physicians and surgeons on the staff of these hospitals immediately followed the example of the hospitals and gave up indefinitely their private medical and surgical practice as con ducted in tho hospitals, treating only emergency cases of surgery and influ enza. In the course of their ministra tions to public needs because of this epidemic, at least 20 of the Ulsters and 66 nurses of St. Vincent's Hospital, not less than 50 nurses in the Good Samar itan and the usual quota of physicians and students were stricken with very virulent forms of the disease. Of these quite a few diel. The public, is singularly apathetic to tho scourge that Is raging today and drawing such a heavy toll of our citi zenship. They would run to the bills and valleys if It were the plague or cholera, and yet the present epidemic is worse than any pest that ever in vaded the world. It is no respecter of persons and smites the just and tho unjdst alike, and only those who help themselves are relatively safe from at tack. Public officials should take heed of the warning of professional men. who alone must work out the prob lems of defense and protection not yet fully understood In this disease. The medical profession will undoubtedly solve the problem, just as it has that of smallpox, yellow fever, diphtheria and typhoid. Some diseases, like cholera and ty phoid, aro water-borne and. because water can be sterilized completely, these diseases can be prevented. The germ of Influenza Is. however, air-borne and carried In droplets from the nose and mouth In the act of sneezing and cough ing. Thus the air around us becomes contaminated. The air cannot bo ster ilized like water, but devices can be used which would have the same effect as sterilization. The mask is such- a device, acting as a screen or trap to prevent the transmission of infected droplets from the nose and mouth of one person to another, the mouth and nose being the only channels of infec tion. We ehould Join hands with the director-general and use every rational means to blot out this scource. KEX.NKTH A. J. MACKKNZ1E. ant i, r. a. c. PORTLAND, Jan. 16. (To the Edi tor.) I have twice seen the 49th ". A. -. listed for early convoy and once saw It among others expected to arrive at Newport News on January 2. Ac cording to a letter received, they wero at Bordeaux on December 11 waiting embarkation orders, with rumor that they might be home for Christmas. Have you any Information as to whether they have yet sailed? They left from Newport News does it fol low that they will return to that port? Also, will they be demobilized at Port Stevens? Is the 49th part of a division? If so. what division? Is it possinle that any of the troops ordered home would be transferred .to Russia? Or are there no troops being atided to those already there? SOLDIER S WIFE. Up to January 15 the regiment had not been listed as having sailed. It is probable but net assured that they will be returned to Newport News. Its men from this seoiion will be de mobilized at Fort Stevens. It is no part of a division. No additions are being made to the force in Russia at present. innt la Infantry. OREGON CITV. Or.. Jan. 16. (To the Editor.) 1) Where is Company 1. 109th Infantry. (C) Is it listed for re turn? (3) Could we get them home sooner on account of sickness, and where would we write? A SOLDIER'S SISTER. (1) Is in the 2th Division. Army of occupation, last reported at Heudi court, France. (2) No. (3) It is highly Improbable. The soldier would have to make attempts to effect release by taking the matter up with his commanding officer. Tou can only aid by sending him data and affidavits. Waereaboats of Soldier. PORTLAND. Or.. Jan. 17. (To the tor.) Where could I learn the where abouts of a soldier, who. In 1915. was stationed at the Presidio at San Fran cisco with Company E. 16th Infantry, and was transferred to Company l. 12th Infantry, In 1916. and sent to I'l Paso, Texas. I am sure that if alive this man is still with the United States Army and It Is important that I lo cate him. LUCIA SAWYER. The 16th Infantry is with the First Division, In Germany. You might ad dress the commander and at the same time send Inquiry to the Adiutant GeneraL United States Army, Wash ington. D. C. MILITARY QtrnSTIOXS AN SWERED IN SUNDAY OHKUOXI . The Oregonian will publish Sunday another rage of answers to inquiries concerning troop movemente. divisional assign ments, pay allotmcnts. soldiers' Insurance and other matters per taining to the United StatesArmy. Persons who find answers to their questions In The Sunday Oregonian should know that this page is printed on Friday and that press dispatches published Saturday and Sunday may give additional Information concern ing particular units or organiza tions. Questions received later than Friday noon cannot be answered in The Sunday Oregonian. In Other Days. Trrentr-Ave Year Ago. From The Oregonian. January 1. 155t. Hastings. Nela. This city was visited by a will-defined earthquake ttoct this afternoon. Tacoma. Fifty thousand dollars was raised today for the Interstate Pair Association, which was Incorporated here to carry out the project of holding in Tacoma next Fall a big exposition to be participated in by Washington, luaho. Montana. Oregon. British Colum bia and Alaska. Captain Farenholt. lighthouse in spector for this district, baa returned from a visit to Astoria and sayts tho weather has been so atomy there that a number of ships were unaUJ to so to sea. Careful Inquiry on the East Side fails to Indicate the prevalence of diph theria, to any treat extent. Fifty Tears Ago. From The Oregonian. January IS. IStX . Paris. The public newspapers report that the conference on the Eastern dif ficulty adopted a conciliatory resolu tion. All Indications are that Greece is bent on war. Washington. I. C. Reports for Jan uary from internal revenue bid fair to reach 3.000.0i0; from customs. $16. 000.000. New Tork. A number of gentlemen last evening organized a general asso ciation of engineers of America. Branches are to bo established in every slate in tho Union. The city authorities of Albany are taking measures to prevent smallpox. WHO W ILL PAT THE FILM TAX f r.lron Mitt tan Raise If Revenue BUI raise. . PORTLAND. Or.. Jan. 17. (To tho Editor.) Can you not make an effort to stop the proposal of Congress to add an excise tax that will raise the admission price of moving picture shows? l"ou will note that there Is no at tempt to put any more tax on theater or opera tickets. But they are going to try and put a tax on the movies that will make us "mo le fans" pay 1 cent to 5 cents more on each admission. I think every moving-picture patron and that means everybody worth, while as far as I am concerned should protest to Senator Simmons and his associates on the conference com mittee, before whom the new revenue bill is pending, about this film rental tax. It is a tax upon each moving pic ture production, and is in addition to the 10 per cent tax now being collected. It really means that the public will bo forced to pay 20 per cent instead of 10 per cent as heretofore. And the peonle who go to the opera and the legitimate will still get away with a 10 per cent tax. which is plenty. I hope ou will give this some pub licity, as I ilo not believe tho movlne. picture patrons ehould pay more than tneir share. 11. HUNTER, to; Hull street. liOD'S GOOD MAX. When be could not give a dollir He Kindly gave a dime. And he smiled a cheery greeting As he said. "Some other time Perhaps 1 can do better I should like to pay it all Mv interest Is with you. j Though my principal is smai:. He could not feed the multitude. Hut helped his fellow men Who stumbled to his threshold To arise and try again; And althoucn his load was heavy On life's hiarhway till the last. He tried to bear the burdens of struggling ones he passed. And tho racced little urchin. And the orphaned little maid. Teartul. smiled and pressed the hand That on their heads he laid; And leaden clrj'ls ktcw silver To the widow, lone and ill. When his arm. though overburdened. Gently led her up the hill. Who goes about his modest way. And simply does his best To make the. path less stony For the footsteps of the rest. Though himself be bruised and shaken. Is a fragment of God's plan. Is a prince amonc the princely Yea. a king, la God's good man! MARY AGNES KELLT. JI I KR IGETTE LOGIC Tes, Woodrow's gone across the foam to aid Democracy, And yet. there are right here at home such abject slaves as we! He is a tyrant! (All men are.) Too long have men held sway. We've hitched our wagon to a star and now we'll have our say! We're just as capable to rule as any stupid male- That e'er threw spitballs In a school or spent the night in jail. And now to prove that we are fit to govern in our land We'll burn thore rpeeches Wnoiirew made. Slave-slstcrs. lend a hand, must admit our mental power. This act of ours will learn 'em tho' they may fay real smart things, were smart enough to lurn 'em! JULIA REESE OSBORN. Men That 1 25 1 la Infantry. PORTLAND, Jan. 17. (To the Ed itor.) Kindly tell me what division a man is in who is with Company K. 125th Infantry, also when they are ex pected to return and about where they are now. A READER. XEWBERG, Or.. Jan. 15. (To the Editor.) (1) In what important en gagements has Company L. 125th In fantry, been? (2) Near what place are they now lo cated? (3) Have you information regarding; their return? . M. W. The 125th Infantry Is a part of the 32d Division. Army of Occupation, with last announced headquarters atRengs dorf, Germany. It need not be expect ed home for many months. The divis ion was in the fighting at Chateau Thierry and the Meuse-Argonne seckor. Base Hospital 32. Kvecnatlon Hoar-Hal 27. PORTLAND. Jan. 17. (To the Eal tor. ) fl) Where is Base Hospital 33 located? (2) Have you any Information regarding Evacuation Hospital 27 and its location? (I) When will the last troops be sent home? . (1) It was last reported at Con trexeville. France. (2) We have not. (3) No one knows the answer to your question, if taken literally. If you refer to the hospital units. It may be said there is prospect that they will be sent back before many months elapse, some already being started. Indemnity raid by France la 1S71. WALV1LLE. Wash.. Jan. 15. To the Editor.) What was the amount that. Oermanv made France pay In the War of 1S70-1? CONSTANT READER. Germany exacted s.n indemnity of 5.000.000,000 francs. Ths actual coit of the war to Germany was a little more than half that amount; the remainder was punitive.