. THEL MORNING OREGOXIAX, SATURDAY,". FEBETJART 7, 12T 8 ESTABLISH ED BY HEN BY U riTTOCK. Published by The Oreg-onlan Publishing Co., 1U Wxth Street, fortland. Orefon. f i vnHiiKS- K. a. rircn . Manager. Eultor. The Oregonian is a, member of the Asso- rlatea 1'ress. me Associaicu '" exclusively entitled to the use tor publics, tlon of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper ana also the local neWa published herein All rights of republication of apeclal dispatches . herein are also reserved- - 6.00 3.i.- .60 1.00 ft. 00 Subscription Kates Invariably In Advance. (By Mail.) - I Dally. Sunday Included, one year 8. Jo Kally. Sunday Included, six months nnllv. Minri.-.v Included, three months. . Dailv. Sunday included, one month . .. Pally, without Sunday, one year Daily, without Sunday, six months. . . , Taily. without Sunday, one month. .. . Weekly, one year .. Sunday, one year.... .......... ..... (By Carrler.l , Dally. 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Bldwell. that a mere matter of 25,000,000 miles is important to an ether wave once launchecf into the infinite dis tances, yet substitution of Venus, for Mars will hardly cause a pang. Our chief Interest now is in interpreting whatever .message either planet may have for us. It is a long way from being established that we could keep up our end of an interplanetary con versation even though every physi cal obstacle Tiad been overcome. JTRIES AND LAWYERS. - One great difficulty about getting satisfactory and intelligent juries is the objection made by worth-while ' men and women to service. It is not alone that such citizens are busy with their own affairs, and -do not - want to be taken away from them even on a call to public duty; it is also true that they have -a certain repugnance to litigation and the average litigant. Most cases should never be taken 'to court; they could be, and should be. settled by adjust ment or compromise. Nothing is won' as a rule by a lawsuit, which could not have been gained other wise out of court. A judgment in money, which appears to be a sub stantial victory, may be whittled down by court costs and lawyers' fees to nothing, or to an actual loss. Henry Ford began suit; against a Chicago paper for a million dollars Carnages and got six cents. ' It was not much of a victory for Ford. It shows that there was but little, ' if any, merit to his complaint. Ford spent thousands of dollars In -the' case and required the-newspaper to do the same. This might be toler able, so far as the public is con cerned; but it is indefensible that the public should also be called upon to pay large sum mainly be cause such a trial is projected to un reasonable lengths by the technical fencings and wordy wranglings of the lawyers. We shall hear, no doubt, that the trial costs are assessed to the litigants; but they cover only a part of the costs. Why should not every dollar be charged against the un successful party? Over at Montesano two weeks have been taken in getting a jury to try the I. W. W.'s. accused of the Centralia murder. Who pays for court maintenance for all this weari - some time? Not the prosecution, nor the defense, but the public. Yet the jury should have been chosen in a day and the 'trial should not last more than two weeks. It will drag out its slow length for weeks,, and even for months. It will cost many thousand dollars and the taxpayer will foot the bill. A more efficient system would guarantee both justice and economy. The fault is not with any individ ual lawyer or judge, but with the system. They play the game accord ing to the rules.- The game is to get a juror who is not impartial, but par tial. Too often it succeeds. - The prosecution's definition of --a good juror is one who convicts; the de fense's, the other way. To that end the highways and byways - are searched for talesmen who are sus 1 ceptible to the persuasions of the one tide or the other. x . The best talent for a plastic or vacant-minded juror is one who does no read the papers. Starting from "nowhere and with nothing, where does be go, except along the lines of least resistance defined by . the smartest lawyer? A scheme of justice based on Ig norance or lack of information, if you please and not on the enlight enment which grows out of a lively and intelligent interest in human af - fairs, including the day's news, is certain to score many deplorable failures. WHERE THE MONEY WENT. From time to time congress has a demonstration of where the money went during the 'war, when it voted billions without turning a hair,.when any official vAo wanted anything was free, to dive ' his arm in the treasury up to the elbow, and when any man questioned the propriety of his doing so was silenced by a re flection on his patriotism. Represen tative Garland of Pennsylvania gave. one of these demonstrations in the house a few days ago. He called attention to an official price list of articles for sale in the army quartermaster's retail stores and showed "stocks and dies, new, from a quarter of an inch to an inch. at 123.50 a set," this being adver tised as the original price. He bought a set which he showed to the house. Then he went to a hardware store in Washington "and purchased iden tically the same set of stocks and dies made by the same people for $1.25." He obtained a receipt in which the merchant "stated that he had never sold these articles before in the history of his business, and that is a good many years, for more than J7.25." Kither the manufacturer made 200 per cent more than his normal profit or the price was mysteriously ex panded after the goods left his hands. . In either case the same methods applied all along the line to all the things which the government Dougm during inose two necuc years would go far to explain where the money went. ' ', TEXTS OR MARS? Scientists are proverbially unim aginative, as we are reminded by their rejection of the possibility that Jdr. Marconi's wireless disturbances come from Mars, on the ground that Mars is incapable of sustaining life. It probably is at least 100 degrees colder on Mars than here on earth. says Dr. 'Abbott, director of the Smithsonian Institution's astrono - mical laboratory, and there is practically no water vapor surround ing the planet, a fact that precludes the possibility that Mars can sup port vegetation or any other form of food for living creatures. The thought that there may be other strange forms of beings which re quire no water or vegetation or heat is rejected incontinently. All living . things, to the chemist's mind, are made up. largely of compounds of carbon, and as every chemist on this earth knows, heat is an accelerant of chemical union. So the scientists of the Smithsonian have put Mars out of the running. Professor Lowell, who clings to his theory of the existence of canals on Mars, stands to win or lose more than any other individual if his col leagues are proved wrong. It will be a vindication worth while for this astronomer if 4t turns out that it is Mars that is signaling us. But the public, less concerned with per sonal aspects, loses nothing of ro mantic interest by the substitution of Venus as oar possible loquaaious neighbor. We have seen less of the surface of Venus, owing to Its per . sistently cloudy envelope, but this may be only a further challenge to the higher imagination. It is almost as hard to believe that beings, and vegetation necessary to sustain them, can subsist without sunshine, as to picture them in a perpetual iero tem perature; yet since Professor Ein stein has shown us that knowledge - at best is only relative we are better prepared than we were for complete revision of all the basic facts of life. Venus at least, as Dr. Abbott points out, has a distinct advantage in her relative proximity. At her nearest approach to earth, she is A FORWARD-LOOKING MAN. In the passing of E. P. Ripley, president of the. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe, whose death occurred at Santa Barbara Wednesday, one of the stalwart figures of transportation development in this country is re moved. Twenty years ago, when rail road officials generally held, to the conviction that the railroads were obliged to dabble in politics for pro tection of the industry, it was Presi dent Ripley who came out firmly against further expenditures of funds of the Sante Fe for political pur poses. , . It was a radical departure from es tablished practice. The Santa Fe controlled the affairs at the capitals of several states and it was alleged and popularly Tjelieved that lobbies maintained by the railroads had more influence in framing legisla tion than public interest. - In the states of Kansas, Texas, Oklahoma and territories of New Mexico and Arizona, it was said that the first move of prospective candidates was to gain approval of counsel fpr the railroad. t - President Ripley by his order re moved this cause bf antagonism to the railroads co far as the Santa Fe was concerned and the example was followed by other railroad executives. Likewise, he was one of the first to recognize the power for good of rail roads and the public in a proper ad ministration of the interstate com merce commission. Always aggres sive, with excepVional ability of pro gressive character, he was a great constructive force, 'from whose work the country will continue to derive benefit. to be saved, but the task is not for them alone; it is for the league. If a. war which began with class propaganda should end in national conquest, it . would , but be a repeti tion of. the history of the French revolution. . In .1793 ' Prussia' and Austria undertook, to crush, French republicanism and were beaten, and the propaganda was tarried by force of arms into all adjoining countries. The republics then established were mere dummies ruled by French satraps. So it may be if Russia': red armies push westward. ' ONE AID TO PROFITEERING. If the United States railroad ad ministration got its deserts, it would be prosecuted by the attorney-gen eral for at least being an accessory to profiteering. Shortage of " oars makes demand for lumber so keen among dealers in the middle west that they offer manufacturers bonus for delivery, and any .dealer who actually receives a carload can sell it several times; . . , The Mississippi. Valley . Lumber man tells how.it works. -A Minne apolis wholesaler had a ' carload of 100,000 lath, and sold it to a retailer. Next day the buyer sold" 'it again at a profit of 1100. The third day the second buyer sold it for another bonus of $100, and before the week ended the car bad changed bands four times, each time at a profit of 3100. . . - ' This sort of thing promises to con tinue ell Into this year, for the number of empty cars .promised is less than half the shortage, and per formance never keeps up with prom ise. The best way put- of the pre aicament would be to load every available ship and send it througli the canal. ' . anlv 25.000.000 miles away: Mars is f 0.90 00 00. One will hardly suppose Beresina and Dniester if Europe is HEREDITARY POE. FAfE TO FACE. If the Russian red army should now be thrown against Poland the war would no longer be between the bolshevists and those parties of Rus sians which seek to establish democ racy in place of terrorism. It would be a war between Russia and a hereditary enemy, which in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries contended with the czars of Muscovy for rich tracts of border land and whose king at one time was a candi date for the vacant Russian throne, to which the Romanoffs were finally elected by the nobles. Though the remnants of thearmies of Tudenitch and Denikin might join the Poles, the war would be presented to the Russian people as a struggle with foreign invaders. Although bolshevism is' outright negation of nationalism, and . pro fessedly seeks to unite the proletariat of all nations against all other classes of all nations, Trotzky has not shrunk from the inconsistency of ap peal to national sentiment when, it could be used to advantage. Making use of the fact that Denikin's troops wore, discarded Britistuunifornis and were armed and equipped by the British, he hurled denunciations at British invaders. He has formed alliances with the nationalists . of India, Egypt, Persia and Afghanis tan, promising aid in delivering them from the British yoiae. By placing Brusiloff at the head of the red army he hopes to stir the pride of Russia, for Brusiloff won Russia's last vic tories over Germany and Austria.,, ' This policy implies that the- Ger man officers, who have been all powerful in direction of the red armies, according to reports brought from- Moscow by enemies of the soviet, have, either lost their influ ence or have fallen in with Trotzky's new plans, though by so doing they expose their own country to danger of a red invasion. Thence may spring another paradox aid by Ger many to Poland In repelling the reds, since Poland is the barrier between Russia and Germany though Ger many is as desirous of absorbing Poland as it was in 1915. , .As Ger man troops, once admitted to Poland, would not readily .depart, the latter may rather dispense with their aid than accept the risk it would imply. The reported disagreement be tween France and Britain as to the wisdom of allied help to .Poland in a campaign against the reds creates an emergency to meet which com pletion of the league of nations should be hastened. France would help Poland, Britain refuses, though the new republic could hardly with stand the bolshevist rush. The reds now have the largest standing army in Europe, and captures from Deni kin and Kolchak must have left It well Vequipped. with artillery and tanks. If it should sweep over Poland, the smoldering spartaclst spirit in Germany would take fire, and the conflagration might easily spread southward through Czecho slovakia, Hungary and Austria and westward into France. It behooves the allies to keep- it .west "of the HONORS FOB SONG WRITERS; The French government takes a long step toward official recognition of the psychological element in morale which, 'indeed, is perhaps 9 per cent psychology by its award of a cross of the Legion of Honor to Louis Bosquet, author of the song, Quand Madelon,". which it is ad mitted by officers of all branches of the ' service had a strong held on the men of the army during the dark days of the war, and led them to re double their efforts', when failure seemed to confront them.. Yet "Made lon" was no more a "war. song," in the heroio sense t)f the. term, than was our own "Hot Time" of the Spanish war. Half a dozen songs of the Civil war had as much right to the definition. "Tipperary," .which fired the English in the sad, early days of the war, owed its popularity to the same indefinable quality not to exalted poetry, or even to a noble musical strain. The literary Oritic. and the master composer alike would have agreed that none of the.sfings mentioned including "Madelon" -was worth a straw. Yet all served a high purpose;' "Maryland" did not win the Civil war for the Confeder ates, and neither did "Dixie," but they made it harder for the. other side to win, and they buoyed tip the fighting men. Yet one was indif ferent verse and the other was frankly designed as just a "coon song" when it was written. ' ,. If the United States government, which Is not inclined to bestow military honors for non-military per formances, were asked to match the action of the French, it might be forced to hesitate a moment, but it would not need to rail in a jury of highbrows to help It to decide. Its hesitation would be due wholly to some slight difference of opinion whether "Over There," or "Hail, Hail, the Gang's All Here!" did the most to cheer up the boys from this side of the water while they -were making the world safe for democ racy. "The Star Spangled Banner" itself did no more than either one of these in the way of maintaining morale." The point as to a morale- sustaining song ia that it must catch the fancy of the men, and if he does that, nothing else matters. The sol dier, who in a great war is the best possible specimen of the average of all the men of the nation, may not be a critic, but he knows what he likes. The song writer to deserve a war cross must meet this test only. Incidentally, it is a curious fact that few of the soldiers of the A. E. F. who learned to whistle the refrain of "Madelon" brought, home with them a very clear idea of what the song was all about. There is a singular lack of adequate transla tions in geneaal circulation. Prob ably the same thing was true of the French when they took up "Tippe rary" at the point where the .Brit ish all but dropped it.' But the of ficial anthems of the nations were feeble by comparison , with a few chance compositions in their power to arouse the 'fighting spirit or save the weary marcher front fatigue. tlat his whole course during the last year was iounded on a grievous error of judgment and thus surrender to his political opponents with an elec tion at hand. . It has now become impossible for him to use the treaty as a campaign issue: on the contrarv. political necessity compels him to. aeprive the republicans of the op portunity so to use it , -Yet Lord Grey, cannot . be held guilty of any breach of diplomatic propriety in writing a letter to the leading newspaper of his own coun try calmly analyzing the attitude of the two countries toward the treaty' ana eacn other. He is surely free to discuss American politics with Britons, and if his writings are cabled across the ocean and republished in American newspapers, that is no af fair of his; it is merely a piece of newspaper enterprise. If the cir cumstances .had been different. thought of the political embarrass ment he might cause Mr. Wilson might have restrained him, 'but after having cdoled his heels for three months on the doorstep of the White House he may be excused for having Deen a little thoughtless. Moreover. Mr. Wilson himself sup- ptiea iora . urey with a precedent When the president found the ItSilian delegates at the peace conference un yielding on the subject of Fiume and Dalmatia, he appealed over their heads to the Italian people. He thus aroused the indignation of Premier Orlando, .who went straight home. called upon the chamber of deputies tor a vote of confidence and got it with a vim. On that occasion Mr. Wilson flung all to the winds except the one purpose of gaining his point. Lord Grey did not appeal over the presidents head to the American people. He addressed himself to his own people, but through a medium which would surely reach Americans. Far more weighty considerations than Mr. Wilson's feelings or polit ical exigencies may well have decided Lord Grey, if any breach of etiquette were involved, to take the risk. He saw Europe slipping into chaos for lack of .the aid. which America could and was willing to give. He' saw the good relations between the two coun tries which must be the mainstay of the league endangered by con troversy in which many harsh things were said. He knew that a candid, friendly -definition of the real posi tion of each country toward the other would remove all -basis for misun derstanding and would open the way for- American participation in the treaty and membership in the league and would bring the two nations Into harmonious Working. He cared more for these things than for the wound ed vanity or for the anger at a thwarted apurpose of an obstinate man. ' Confident in the approval of future generations in both countries. he could safely brave that one man's wrath. " . ; IS THE JURY SYSTEM A FAILURE T A. woman is seeking her decree' be cause her husband has a habit of ex pressing himself too freely about the quality of her folks, dead and alive. There are times, probably, in the lives of most, husbands when they want to do just that, and do it, and if their wives are not' equal to the proper come back they ought to get their divorces. Lack of statistics, Why Are Mem 'Ckoiei Because They Are Merely Ignorant? Pendleton Tribune. The jury system, as a system, is safeguard of liberty, but its operation is sometimes both a farce and a sham. If any person of ordinary sense can give any reason why the law should permit the- qualification or men wno do not read the newspapers and who are either so stupid or so ignorant .as to know nothing of such a crime as that which occurred at Centralia on armistice day, the explanation, will be orsrinal if not interesting. In any important trial, especially of a criminal nature, the object of the lawyers seems to. be' not to secure Intelligent man with sound judgment and a broad sense of justice, . but to secure men who are of lethargic mind and who profess to know nothing of the matter to be tried, Such men are never good jurymen for either the state or the defendant. In most instances they will be led by- some mentally alert man on the panel and who is there ' because there seemed no way to prevent his sitting. It. is the clear-minded jurymen who are keen In conception, who read the papers and who think, who dominate substantially every panel of jurymen Invariably a few such men are ac cepted by both sides or they are called at a period of the examination when challenges have been exhausted and the lawyers are helpless. The performance now in ' progress at Montesano, Wash., where the court is endeavoring to secure 12 men to try the men accused of the, Centralia crime, is a case in point, crreat num bars of jurymen have been called, ex amined and either . excused or chal lenged. Probably both the state and the defendant would have been quite as well off to have taken the first 12 men who entered the jury box. The more intelligent a man is the fairer he, will be, under, most conditions. If widely read, and highly intelligent, he will be. able to weigh evidence find reach a just verdict more easily than a man who is accustomed to loose thinking nd who finds it diffi cult to carry the facts deduced in a trjaV to the end. The .hackneyed questions propound ed by lawyers really reach only the surface. Fifty questions might be asked without touching the real sen tlment.of the juryman under exam ination. If he has read nothing of an important and much-discussed crime, he ought to be rejected. If he has read of It, the only vital question is whether or not .Bis reading and con versation has brought a. fixed opinion to. his mind. If he still possesses an open mind he is a good juryman, re rerardless of what he may have heard or read, and probably ar better one than as though he had never heard of the case. i The most reasonable question com monly asked jurymen is this; If you were on trial at this time, and a man were called to the jury box whose mind was in the same state as your mind is now.' would you feel that you would secure a fair hearing, a just verdict at his hands?" If the answer iB'"yes," and the man under examina tion is known to be an upright man, he will be- a fair juryman, and the state and defendant may properly accept him. .' - The habit of long examination and of endeavor to badger talesmen into some statement which can be used to eliminate them from the jury is caus ing the best men to hesitate and to seek excuse from jury duty. The best. the most capatle, the most thoughtful of citizens ought to be in the courts to assist in arriving at justice. The state. will be compelled to act soon to protect itself.. The jury sys however, shows they are few or they m's J"erinff- " mnst be suiter in sueiiue. . Oregon's prize blooded dairy cattle and great dairy farms obtain recog nition of their merits through an ar ticle by Sydney B. Vincent, of the Portland Chamber of Commerce, In the Western Milk Dealer and Dairy man. In fact, Oregon is shown to have gone beyond the point of being a great butter and cheese state; it breeds blooded dairy cattle for sale all over the country. - - Alleging an enormous waste of print paper by executive departments of the government. Senator Smoot declares the treasury department alone used 758,896 pounds of paper for printing and distributing 25, 066, 000 copies of democratic speeches. The senator is too severe. It was only trying to. keep the home fires burning. k :. WAS LORD GREY JUSTIFIED? If President Wilson wanted to cut off any possibility .that Viscount Grey would write a letter depriving him of any excuse to accept the Lodge reservations to the German treaty, all that he need have done was to- receive Grey and thus for mally recognize .him as British am bassador. . " Grey would then have been bound by all the restraints of diplomatic usage. He would have been debarred from discussing the relations of the two countries with- any persons except the president and secretary of state,: and would have been obliged to keep his communi cations with them secret until they consented to publication. Grey might then have informed the president that the British government did not object to the reservations, but the president might have withheld that Information from the senate, and might have held the democratic sen ators in line by cultivating their hon est belief that reservations would be death to the treaty. .'-, The president's Inability to re ceive Grey kept the latter in Wash ington, ostensibly doing nothing,, but actually by no means idle. As an unreceived ambassador, he was free to mix with the people, and to learn the opinions of leading statesmen on the relations of this country to his own." He evidently made good use of the opportunity to convey an ac curate statement of the condition of public opinion to his government. He also remained- free, subject to the approval of his government, to en lighten British public opinion through th newspapers, of his own country. Mr. Wilson's anger on reading Grey's letter to the London Times was natural, for it wiped out his whole case for opposing reservations and left him in the impossible posi tion of the one obstacle to the peace for which he had been most earnest- j ly striving. But the only possible! escape from that position is to admit j There is a man lying critically ill If he is not dead in a local hospital from a shot in the back while run ning from a policeman. Comment is unnecessary except to advise ' that when a policeman cries "Halt!" one would better stop right there. . Robbing Standard Oil company filling stations seems to have become a popular sport with the holdup men. Just possible that they are philan thropically trying to reduce the amount of John D.'s income tax. Labor purposes to go into the cam paign officially and in the open this year. Yet individuals in the sacred enclosures of the' ballot booths will vote as usual as they see fit. Portland looks good to eastern concerns seeking more business. It's like adding drops to a bucket already full, but the? Portland business bucket never slops over. "Foch joins Immortals,"; H&d line. Not so serious as it sounds. The allied generalissimo is still In good health, but has been admitted to the French academy. New York city is now to institute one-way traffic in Fifth avenue. ' If they can stand It in Fifth avenue, we ought to be able to stand it in Alder and Stark streets. . The usual'' contesting .delegations will go to Chicago from South Car olina this year, with the distinction that both are of mixed colors. . Two days will .be' enough for -the rose festival this" year, if there, are any flowers left after the bouquets are showered on the Shrlners.- -t A Eugene bootblack has returned to Greece with a. fortune of, 310,000 gained by shining shoes. - He should- cut quite a shine back home. . LACK OF TRAINING IS COSTLY Hiatory Full of -Incident to Show Value of Military Preparedness. PORTLAND, Feb. 6. (To the Edi tor.) A, B. Cousins in his letter of January 31 lauding the untrained sol dier has evidently never read the his tory of our wars.-. George -Washington- Bald after the disastrous battle of "Camden "What we need is a good army, not a large one." Our military historian, General Upton, says that the untrained -soldier has caused an enormous- and unnecessary loss of life and treasure in all our armed struggles. " " , ' Upton says -"that statesmen often fall into the error that numbers con stitute1 strength and points to the war of 1812, when we employed 527, 654 troops against 82,502 for the British.- Upton again says that 6000 well trained British troops baffled all our attempts at the, invasion of Canada and destroyed our plans of conquest of that country. We would have ended the civil war In six months with a well trained army and have saved thousand of lives and millions in money.- .. Well trained American troops can not be excelled by the best armies in Europe, but in all our wars victory has been almost snatched away by the conduct of untrained troops. The faithful Upton reminds us that in all our wars we have outnumbered the enemy, but that battles are not always lost on the field of battle, but more often beneath the dome of the capltol. If I am right I believ.e General Persh ing said that .he hopes no American general would be compelled, to lead untrained soldiers into battle again. Mr. Cousins is wrong about the ability of the 'untrained soldier be he American or of any other nation ality. John Adams said that "national defense is one of the cardinal duties of a statesman, and if England had listened to General Roberts and we had listened to Theodore Roosevelt there might have been no blood bath In Europe. J. E. R. Those Who Come and Go. "In a few weeks we will begin our Investigation of the feasibility ol re moving one of the railroad tracks from the Deschutes canyon and using the material to build a railroad from Bend into the Klamath country, states Roy W. Ritner. With I. N. Day of Portland and Denton Bnrdick of Redmond. Mr. Ritner composes special commission appointed by the legislature to make a study of this scheme for developing southeastern Oregon. The idea? Is said to have had Its inceDtion with Mr. Day, who was appointed by Governor Olcott on the commission. Mr. Ritner being tne ap pointee of W T. Vinton, president of the senate, and Mr. BurdicK tne ap pointee of Speaker Jones of the house. This commission, which will devote considerable time during the spring and summer to investigation, is ai rected to submit a report of Us find lngs to' the 1921 session of the legis lature. ' There are now two railroads in the canyon and negotiations have been on for several months between them concerning the abandonment of one of the lines: "It was reported that the thermom eter showed 67 degrees below zero at Madras, but that was guesswork it was only about 40 degrees below, states J..M. King, the new judge of Jefferson county, who was in Port land yesterday. Also .we- had 40 inches of snow, so the intense cold couldn't do much damage to what was in the ground. The snow insures good crops and it looks like a bumper year for us. -There' is every reason to believe that The Dalles-California highway will .be completed across Jefferson connty this year, a matter of 60 miles. -A contract will soon be let from Madras to the Deschutes county line, and from Madras north to the county line the highway route will be surveyed and contracts let within a few months. The entire highway work should be finished be fore the end of the year. We've lost all this winter on road work for, with the exception of two weeks, there could have been construction going on all the time had contracts been let. We will spend about J22,000 on market roads in 1920. . , As a taxpayer. I'll be hit with our proposed $500,000 road bond issue in Jackson county," confesses W. H. Gore, banker and orchardist, of Med- ford, "but good roads are a real in vestment. Anticipating that the bonds will carry at the May election, prepa rations are now being made for put- mg s.100,000 of it on the road from Medford to Jacksonville, the county seat, and then on into the Applegate country and, with the assistance of the forestry people,- we hope to see the road built to the California line. This road would tie in with the road along the Klamath river, which the government wants, and for which California will spend a few million dollars when that state is able to ell Its road bonds. Jackson county will put another big chunk of money on the Green Mountain road to Klam ath Falls, and a. quarter of a million on the Crater Lake road." When G. J. Gessling of Tacoma registered at the Hotel Portland yes terday afternoon he was Informed that he would have to wait a few hours before he could be accommo dated. "I helped build this hotel." declared Mr... Gessling, as an argu ment for being taken care of. "Well." replied Clerk John J. O'Brien, "why didn't you build on a few more rooms? We could use 'em." . . When anyone starts talking of eroplanes, D. E: Stewart of Knappa becomes interested. Mr. Stewart, who conducts a lumber mill in that town, contends . that . the aeroplane la the coming thing, and he has even gone to the point of speculating how the irships can be used in logging opera tions in the forests of Oregon. Monument, Or., from which point Cecil Sweek registers at the Imperial, asn t much population, but once pon a time the vote from Monument ecinct settled the election of a United States senator. It turned the tide for Jonathan Bourne wiren he rst went before the people and en abled him to nose out Harry M. Cake. Harmony. By Grut E. Hall. Whence comes the wondrous harmony thit trllla from human throats. And whence the honeyed melody In wild bird's thrilling notes? Who taught the crystal brook to aing? The eagle fierce to scream? Who gave a language to each thing in life's gigantic scheme? The ruffed grouse has his special drum, the coyote's call we hear. The Bob-White s tone Is never glum he speaks in accents dear; O, who can doubt that angels sing In choni3 of the sky, ,.. , Wlien we from every living thing hear music passing by? TRAILED MEN ARE PRO.TECTIOJS Foe May Not AlwJ. Oblige by Walt- Ins; Until Defease Is Perfected. mr x-n Veb 6. (To the Ed itor.) Mr. Cousins' sta"8"" '"..I"! to military training that we ntve won" ouwars with untrained .n" and that "our volunteers have Always delivered the goods'' reflect He simrgly complaisant concep tions of the average American. The fact, are that our volunteer sys em sul.. f.n.ir and we have had fo resort to conscription in ou. thr 5 ,t that we were not able o them until we put trained men in the f ield During our mmiuii""-' ---- -- . , phaMpn au over untrainea arn..o "?"-r--r..n , the 13 colonies oy n.eio "-""--, Rritish regulars, due to the short Britisn "gum . -.:-,ai con- igntea policy v.. gress OI eniisiniB --- -- - months, which gave our officers in sufficient time to train mthe men There was not a year from 177 to .! r rmv did not outnumber the' British armies on this continent, and during the whole war w actually used 395. 31.8 men i British.- The war of 1812 was won on the sea. and our land operations were one succession of disgraceful aeieai for our untrained armies. of the Mexican war was a glor ous jne. due to tha ract mat our ...i... weri our mainstay, anu m few volunteers who participated were given a training of from four to ight months on the border. The first year of our civil war was another record of defeats for .ourt .Vn.,,ri,?.",'! armies, ana it was i ""''" . , V Pope, HallecK ana uraui. imu time to train their men that we Degun to win battles. In the Spanish war only three volunteer regiments par ticipated in battle;' one of , these ignomlnlously laid down under fire; another was led into a trap by their ,,nir.inA colonel and might have been annihilated but for the prompt action of a squadron or regular i..nni rovalrv: tne tnira uimin guished-itself by doing what they were'ordereo to ao. Our last srreat war was certainly nnt wnn with untrained men: a few there were in the front Itnes, but the 7..if mnioritv were civen from four to eight months of hard training be fore being sent overseas. Will our next war be with an enemy nhllirln enoireh to irive us six or eight months In which to train our army, or will we have allies who are prepared "to hold on until we can get ready? Should we not give our men this training In time of peace, and not wait until we are hard pressed to do what we should have done before hand? A. BARNES. Mom Truth Than Poetry. r s J. Maatsraa, PAY NOT CAVSE OP RETIREMENT "Six in thousand lield weak- minded," says a headline. Obviously wrong. There are more democrats in the country than that At least one of the 170 rooms re served at San,' Francisco will be "sacred," else it, will not be a proper headquarters. Military statistics show that six in a thousand are weak-minded, and everybody knows his six. Good news: Rain and increasing southerlY winds. As usual, April weather again here in February, . ' ., ' ... Asr" Limited In Application. PORTLAND. Feb. 6. (To the Edi tor.) The Oregonian has had, occa sion to mention Australia, and Australian, several times recently, and each time the wosd "Anzac" has been used in the headline, giving the erroneous impression that all Austra lians are "Ansacs. it wouia De an- surd to use the word "doughboy' when referriner to all Americans, sol diers and ordinary civilians alike, and the nosition is exactly the same. The word "Anzac coined from the capital letters, "Australian, New Zealand Army Corps" i3 revered In Aus tralia, and its use is barred unless reference is made to tne reai Anzacs -the soldiers who rougni at uain- poli. Even the troops that left Aus tralia with the first contingent, the third lot. and all after the third, are never referred to as "Anzacs in Aus tralia The use of the word is re oorvfHl for those brave Australians and New -Zealanders who made his tnrv at "the landing" (April 25, 1915). Australians are usually referred to as "AuSSieS, "Uorn-siorKB, ana yio sui- diers generally as "ootg ' Tiroihourne. Australia, but not an "Anzac." ' Burar of Rare Coins. . PORTLAND, Feb. 6. (To the Ed itor ) I believe you have quit quoting the value of old coins, but could you kindly give the name of some reliable coin collector? Have some old gold dollars and half dollars, also 'silver dollar of 1853. A READER. New York Stamp, & Coin Co., New York City. J Common Feminine Pursuit ' Kansas City Journal' 'In ' Borneo," ' remarked Georgette, "women do the pearl fishing." "Don't-they everywhere?" demanded Tricotitie, ,v A slip of a girl is Miss Helen A. Courtney, but she knows more about fire-fighting apparatus than the average fireman, for It is her busi ness to sell engines, chemicals, hook and ladders and the rest of the equip ment to cities. She is at the Multnomah. P. E. Larson, a merchant of Alle gheny, in Coos county, is at the Mult- omah with his family. Allegheny is on Millicoma- river, about a score of miles northeast of Marshfield. There is good fishing and hunting in the vicinity and it is a dandy summer camping place. Coming "outside" to shop ate Mr. and Mrs. J. H. .Wheeler and family of PeterBberg, Alaska. . Mr. Wheeler Ib a business man- and will return north in a few days while the family re mains in Portland for a few weeks. They are at the Hotel Washington. To attend the millinery openings in Portland and get an idea of what will be the mode in headgear for Easter, Mrs. Lissa Hanna of Kelso, Wash., ia registered at the- Hotel Washington. Mrs. Hanna is in . the business at Kelso. Having brought her husband to a local hospital for treatment. . Mrs. David A. Broughel of Walla Walla. Wash., is registered at the Hotel Washington. With Mrs. Broughel Is her sister. Miss Anna Fitzgerald, also ofthe metropolisof the wheat belt. Ben Kuppenbender of Tillamook, sometimes known as "the big cheeHe" of that locality, because he is the president of the association and is better than six feet tall, is at Jhe Multnomah for a few days. .. Lieutenant-Colonel M. J. Mayhew of the British forces registered at the Benson yesterday from London. Eng land, where the. pound sterling Is much more highly esteemed than In Wall street. Leo J. Falk. manager of the Owyhee hotel, at Boise, Is -visiting at the Hotel Portland. The hotel takes its name from the river, ind the river Is more In Oregon than in Idaho. One of the mainstays of Seaside, aside from the summer tourist crop, in th local box factory which E. S. Prouty directs. Mr. Prauty Is regis tered at the Hotel Oregon. J. S. Delaney, president of the War- renton Investment company or As toria, motored to the Multnomah yes terday, showing that the lower Co lumbia river highway is giving service. Genre-e McKay, well-known retired stockman of Fossil, has been ill at the Perkins, but is now on the mend. He was threatened with pneumonia. Leslie E. Wood, who'edrts a dairy magazine and does aavemsmg ior some of the Important interests or Puget sound, is at the Multnomah. A C. Peterson, who manages the California Packing corporation of Dallas, Or., is at the Multnomah. Manufacturer of berry boxes an veneer boxes is O. L. Zentner of Ban don, who arrived at the Multnomah yesterday.' J. H. Dunlap, who Vuns a big mill at Llttell, Wash., is at the Hotel Port land. - f' , . I - ' Cyrua Townucnd Drady Sueoessful as Writer Before Leaving Priesthood. PORTLAND, Feb. 8. (To the Edl- or.) In an editorial appreciation ot the late Cyrus Townsend Brady The Oregonian says "He resigned from the hurch . . . because he louna it mpossible as a clergyman to earn a ufficient salary to support a family." Mav I call your attention to tne fact that nearly all of his bookH were written while he was still acting as priest in the performance, of his parish duties? During the time he wrote most of tho books which sland to his credit he was rector of Trinity church, Toledo, O.; St. George's church, Kansas City, and Ascension church, Mount Vernon, N. Y. The reason for his resignation at Mount Vernon, his last parish, was wholly different from the one you ascribe. During alj this time we were ac quaintances and friends. Dr. Brady held, his priesthood in too high an estimation ever to lay it aside. And during the last five years of non parochial life he was constantly In the church's service preaching and ministering where overburdened clergy needed assistance. THOMAS JENKINS.- cocexsATiosr Aa Ylew4 a Marln. Stationing marine. In Uealltlr rrf outside the dry zone h. hae a big Increase in re-enlistments. They don't cotton to ua TsnViw down In Haytl. If you go to spend yrmr Hherty ashore. Yon had bettr take along a hwky ma tey. Or you'll finish (as the Frenrfc aa' a la mora. But when ence you've fnn- t way arrows the pla7. An the exercise has pot yon kins' het. And you want to aay. "TTre hipin.! there'll be some Hodden, open. For tho Demon ain't bean raasnd from Haytl yet! , It Is mlrtty dull around the CVna' station. You will soon get awful weanr of the sights. And it ain't a very prudent oerupa. tlon To go batHn" 'round the baaeh on darkish nlchts. But when In the shado If ninety ar hundred Which will happen every other nnsr and then An it keeps on getrfn' hotter, an' you do not care for water. There's a chance to get a drink, or elfcht or ten. a I don't hanker for a home In Pntr Guinna, VHiefe you stumtle over Unman oa the street. Where your three-a-day consist of friod banant, And the cr-ntlpedr-s are fr-lsleta 'round your fret. I have seen a lot o' countries nn my crulxes. And them Is Jimt about the very worst. Hut I wish that T wrs hound (here, for I nxvor yet hnve fnumt there Any lin-k o' hsndv mnns to Mink a thirst! s s lie el It. .Maybe Sir Oliver Lorfce hm mm over hern to brine some sort or super, natural help to his senatorial nimiw sake. as Tlie I.eirlMnllve Mmlf. There will he no pork barrel thl. year, and no wnnder, with baron at a dollar a pound! s An Awful Trmptatlan. We fear that tho axsertlon timt ahlsky may he Inxueil to flu" pa tients will not ilo a great deal toanrd cherklnor the pren,l of the epidemic (l opyrlsht hT The Hell MM,r1l.-nt. In- ) In Other Days. Overlooked by Enumerator. HOLY ROSARY HOSPITAL, Onta rio, Or., Feb. 4. (To the Editor.) No census taker has approached me or my roommate, Mr. Brown, and 1 don't believe there has been one at the hospital. There are 22 sisters here and the hospital is full of pa tients. J. J. CART WRIGHT. Twenty-five Years Aan. From Ths Orrgnnlsn of Fohrusry 7. Rev. James C. Head, ex -Ta pi 1st preacher, was yesterday rancht In tlia net of robbing the First National bank of East Portland, lie had hound and taetted the cashier and only the time ly arrival of a citizen thwarted lha robbery. The State Hortlrultur.il society ses sion opened yesterday In peppery fashion, with a lot of discussion over reorganization. The S2d aemi-annual commencement exercises of the Porthind high m h"ol will be held in the assembly hall Fri day afternoon and evening. The first meeting of ttie council In ita new elccant quarters tonk plaea yesterday under depresNlni; circum stances, as Mayor Frank was (oo III to be present Fifty Years Abo. Frem The Oreffotilsn of ! lrtiarv 17. Chicago Omaha dinpHtchrs ay re ports from Forts Fettrrnmn and l.nr smle Indicate that Indians to tha number of about 400 are assembling on the Powder river. A resident In the northern part of the city reports that the Indians liv ing there, maddened by bad whisky, have become a serious annoyance. Receipts of the Portland Library as sociation for the year were $:i;in.R5 and expenditures ;i !)?!. There ara 31X0 volumes of which 57 were add ed during the year. Colonel T. J. Dyer has received ap pointment from Governor Wood us pilot commissioner to succeed Captain John H. Couch, deceased. Poor But Proud Hrfrnee. London ltllBhty. The Judge "So you claim ou robbed that dolicatesaen store because you were starving? Why didn't you take something to eat, Instead of stealing all the rash out of tho retls- ter"? The Accused "'Cause Im a proua man. Judce. an'. I make It a rule to pay for everything I rat." Today's Dances "Frightful' Say Teachers of Bygone Art The rustling of crinoline blended with the soft strains of waltz music when the Washington Guards, Company B of the OrcRon .volunteer militia, gave a Fourth of July bail in Oro Fino hall, on July 4, 1867, in old Portland. The beaux and bellfs of another gen eration followed the steps of the lancers and the waltz. Nowadays most of the dancing is done in hotel dining rooms. "Modern dancing? - Painful," say Mrs. Nina C. Larowe, "AP C. Carter, and other dancing mentors of a generation ago. "Now, in oua day ." . . Tomorrow's Sunday Oregonian tells their opinions in a story by De Witt Harry. Portia Come to Judgment There was the woman with hair bleached to conceal its grayness and face rouged and powdered to fill in the wrinkles; there was the colored girl, charged with stealing a coat fpom a department store; there were the two -women in fine fur coats whose eyes were bright and hard. Case by case the magis trate disposed of them, showing that quality of mercy for which the first Portia pleaded. Her name is Jean Norris, and she i the first woman magistrate. In a court room that echoes testimony of guilt, she still holds' faith in womankind, says H. C. Norris in the Sun day Oregonian. ,..., "AaPart I Can't Play; Getting Old So says Clara Morris, whose Camille and Miss Multon caused men to raise their hats and thehr canes and women to wave their handkerchiefs aloft when the curtain rose for the call. Clara Morris is 72, but she is sure she will never grow old. Her reminiscencces are related by Ada Patterson for the benefit of readers of tomorrow's big Sunday Oregonian. The Dunraven and the Santce "Can I take my boots off, cap tain?" The seaman came of a respectable family,' and he didn't want to die with hie boots on. But he and his comrades pulled through, though the Dunraven was lost Practically all of the American offi cers and men at Queenstown volunteered for the Santee when she was fitted out as the Yank "mystery ship.".. They torpedoed her, the Germans did; but she got back to Queenstown, afur belligerently cruising around for a periscope that never came up. Did Lincoln's Assassin Really Escape? R. D. Craig and J. Harley Craig of Oklahoma City, Okla., say they lived with him in El Keno. A story by Clive Marshall, with a rare old painting and masterpiece of a cartoon, discuss the death of Booth in the Sun day Oregonian. - The Very Young. Girl-e-W. E. Hill is at it again. And the very young girl, when she reads the back page of the magazine section of The Sunday Oregonian, is going to find something that hits her or some of her friends. All the News of All the World THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN A