TIIE SUNDAY OREGONIAX, rORTXAXD, JUXE 17, 1917. a TREADWELL MINE CAVE-IN RECALLS FIRST PATENT ISSUED BY ALASKAN GOVERNMENT Andrew T. Lewis, Portland, Then Clerk of Federal Court, Remembers Transfer of Rights to Valuable Holdings for $300 and Shipment of Machinery for Development Work. mum. mm )ijiuwlt..i 4 uvm y. wJ.jiLtmg-'v (P r i 1 ' ' -if ? 1 - ' . jc ' SSsv- - s I! if" J THE Treadwell mine, for years prob ably the most famous mining property in Alaska, which was damaged by a surface cave-in recently after having yielded $40,000,000 in gold, was purchased from the Government at the time Andrew T. Lewis, Portland attorney, was clerk of the District Court for the District of Alaska in 1884. Accounts of the recent disaster caused Mr. Lewis to grow reminiscent yesterday. "The Treadwell mine yes, patent to it was purchased Just after I assumed my duties as Clerk of the Court in Alaska and the money taken in for it, $375, was the first money which I re ceived for a Government patent." And Mr. Lewis was started on his story. It was July 5, 1884, that Mr. Lewis, at that time a resident of Illinois, re ceived his appointment as clerk of the United States District Court in Alaska, his appointment beinsf made by Presi dent Chester A. Arthur on the request WILHELM II CALLED ATTILA BORN 1000 YEARS AFTER TIME Ancestry of Prussian Kaiser Similar to That Which Produced Frederick the Great Article Written 29 Years Ago Prophetic of Present Events. Tn the light of developments of the past three years the following article, published in the New York Times In April, 18SS, well night entitles its author, Harold Frederic, to claim for himself the gift of prophecy. The headlines used over the article in the Times were as follows: "Prussia's Crown Prince. The Dark Figure That Frowns- in the Face of Europe. A Man Who Suggests the Sleuth-Hound. With Muscles of Steel and the Taste for Blood.") BY HAROLD FREDERIC. BERLIN. June 10. Picture to your self a young man In his 30th year, 6 feet in height, straight as an ash sapling, with finely formed, slen der limbs, narrow hips, swelling chest, and square, broad shoulders, with a smallish head on a long, full-throated jieck, held proudly upright, .nd an oval face, with an aquiline effect of profile, clear-cut, strong chin, bended nose, prominent though not high cheek bones, and good open forehead all as regular in ensemble as a Greek tri umphal arch with clear, sharp, cold, gray-blue eyes, light-brown hair close cut behind, but longer on the crown, and rising from the temples to form a sort of ridge from the parting across tthe brow, and a yellowish mustache loosely curled up at the ends, and you have such a portrait as words can paint of William. Crown Prince of Prussia and coming German Emperor. All Europe, with its thousand sons of royal houses, does not present an other such regal figure. The Kaiser who is dead and the Kaiser who is dy ing have by their photographs famil iarized all the civilized world with two striking and splendid physical ideas of a soldier who looked every inch a king. But each gained much by the ef fects of beard, of lines of care in the face, and of imposing corporeal bulk. They were impressive in the sense of a. noble old mastiff or of a huge, hon est, shaggy, deep-chested boar-hound. This young man suggests instead the notion of a perfectly bred sleuth hound, under whose smooth, delicately soft coat lie the muscles of steel, and in whose mouth sinister legacy of nature is the inherent taste of human blood. Not that his face is sullen or savage in its expression. Its habitual cast in repose is calm, self-possessed, somewhat meditative, without wrin kles either on the brow or at the ends of the mouth. The eyes, too, are grave. Intent, without being severe. And I saw this face light up the other night when William, after bidding the English Princess goodby at the station, turned and walked down the space cleared through the cheering crowds to his caxriaso with a sweet and winning of Joe Cannon. Mr. Lewis was also ap pointed Indian Commissioner and later received the honorary title of Adjutant General from the Governor of Alaska. Mr. Lewis came to Portland and from here went to Port Townsend, where -he took the steamer Idaho for Sitka. On board the same steamer were John H. ICinkead, ex-Governor of Nevada and first Governor of Alaska; M. C. Hillyer, of California, who had been appointed United States Marshal for Alaska and also held the position of ex-ofticio Surveyor-General, and B. W. Haskett, of Iowa, new United States Attorney for Alaska. With "Ward McAllister, of California, who presided as judge of the first ses sion of the District Court for Alaska, they made up the officials of the first civil government in Alaska. Aboard the same steamer was a quantity of machinery for the Alaska Treadwell Mining Company. "We arrived at Juneau on September 5, 1884," said Mr. Lewis. "From Juneau the steamer then steamed three miles south to a point opposite the Treadwell smile. Nothing could have been more gracious or kindly than his blonde countenance as William glanced along the rows of faces as he walked and lifted his finger to his cap in easy, pleased recognition of the cheers. Character Held Wantonly Cruel. One shudders as one pats the mild, contemplative head of the bloodhound solely because of the stories that have been told of the terrible ferocity which lurks under this sleek and gentle ex terior. In the same way you look into the face of this young heir of the Hohenzollerns and remember with wondering reservations the malignant tales which have been told of his inner nature by those who knew it best. Apparently all the women at least all the English women who have had to do with the bringing up of Prince William hold him in horror and detes tation. I have had numerous proofs of this, although I have never been able to fasten upon any specific reasons for it. Their dislike for him is based on a general conception of his character. This view is that he is utterly cold, entirely selfish, wantonly cruel, a young man without conscience or com passion, or any softening virtues what ever. That he has great abilities, they all admit; but they stop there. Heart he has none, upon their reckoning. And I am bound to say that if you look into his face with this preconceived notion of the young man's character you can find plenty of signs which seem to substantiate it. Of course the root of this profojnd antagonism to him to be found among the little group of English and Anglo German ladies in the court circles here in Berlin is his unfilial attitude to wards his mother. He has apparently never liked her at least since he has attained manhood. - The inner reasons for this estrange ment it is naturally Impossible to dis cover or determine. The outer causes or are they effects? are more ob vious. William is very deeply and thoroughly Prussian. He is a living, breathing embodiment of all the qual ities and lack of qualities which, through precisely two centuries, have brought the little mark of Branden burg jp from a puny fief, with a poor, scattered population of a. million and a half, to the state of a great king dom ruling nearly fifty millions of people and giving the law to all Europe. He is saturated with all the instincts and idas which have raised this par venu Prussia, to its present eminence, and bis character is the crown and mine, where the machinery was un loaded by means of lighters. "The only improvement at the Tread well mine at that time was a. tunnel about SO feet above the water and 100 yards back from the water line. This tunnel extended into the hill about 300 to 400 feet." Mr. Lewis said that the Treadwell mine was discovered by a man known as French Pete and later referred to as Pete Juneau. He sold his right to the mine to John Treadwell for $500. At the first term of court in the Spring or 1885 application was filed for patent on the Alaska Treadwell min, ing property and the patent was the first to be issued in the territory by the new civil government. Mr. Lewis re ceived the money for the sale. About that time, however, there was. some question raised by Government offi cials as to his right to receive money n such transactions, with the result that it was two and one-half years be fore the matter was settled and he was permitted to pay the money over to the Government Sub-Treasury. flower of these two centuries of might and ruthlessness and spoliation exalted into a creed. On the other hand, his mother is the best royal product of a totally and fundamentally different civilization. Victoria Adelaide is un questionably the broadest, most liberal and most lovable of all the Gulphs who have been born since Elector George first landed in England. Hatred Felt for KnKlnad. When I say that she is the only one of her family who at present sym pathizes wholly with Mr. Gladstone I have most simply and fully Indicated her disposition and bent of mind. Ob viously she can have but little in com mon with a son who would handle Gladstone offhand, and who avowedly hates England as the country whence has come all the constitutional non sense which nowadays limits and ham pers kingship. Out of this wide political difference between mother and son has grown a personal estrangement which every body in Berlin knows more or less about and which no doubt strongly col ors the opinions of the English circle here which have been quoted. This feud is not rendered the less bitter by the fact that the new Kaiser sides with his wife rather than with his son and heir. Prince William habitually speaks of his .mother to his associates and familiars as "the English woman." He ostentatiously addresses her in Ger man, although he knows English per fectly, and she has always made a point of having her children speak English In the family circle. An old acquaintance of mine who was at San Remo a fortnight ago told me something which he saw with his own eye3. It was Sunday morning, and the imperial family were starting from the front door of the little English Villa Zirio to go to the chapel on the es planade to attend Anglican service. Prince William and his mother came out of the door together ahead of the others. As they stepped outside she made a movement as if to take his arm. He drew away, said something to her in a low tone of voice and walked down the broad graveled path alone in front of her and the rest. It transpired later in the day that what ho said to her was in. substance this: "I am here as the personal rep resentative of my grandfather, the German Kaiser. That being the case, it is fitting that I should take prece dence. There is nobody who could prop erly walk before me except my grand mother, the Kaiserin Augusta." Will Overrun Europe. Propheey. This anecdote does not reveal a nice boy. But, after all. when a young man stands upon the threshold of an im perial career, and we all know that it is a mere matter of months before he will be the autocratic master of 2,000. 000 armed men, it isn't of so much im portance whether he is nice or not. The real question Is, What will he do? The most common answer is that he will overrun Europe. One of the really great essays of the decade. Taine's re cent study of Napoleon, has its basis in the idea that the Corsican marvel was a freak of heredity a strange posthumous brother of the medieval mercenary soldiers of Italy. It seems very probable that some future Taine, a century hence, perhaps, will write to show that William II of Prussia and the German empire was a mysterious belated survival of the ante-medieval Goths and Vandals an Attlla born a thousand and more years after his time. The young man Is practically all Ger man in blood. It Is true that his mother is called English, but as a matter of fact one has to go back among her an cestors to Shakespeare's time to find a strain of anything but Teutonic blood in the Guelphs. It is true also that his great-grandmother was a daughter of the Czar Paul. But it happens that the Roman offs have scarcely a trace of . Tartar blood in their veins, so steadily have all their males for 10 generations mar ried German wives. William of True Hobenmollem Type. Prince William is, in truth, as purely North German by heredity, as wholly a product of Wend and Saxon and Goth and Boruissian intermixture as can be found. One may call him, indeed, a culmination of the Hohenzollern type of soldier-statesman, reached curiously enough by the same crossing of blood which produced Frederick the Great. The mother of that wonderful warrior was also a Guelph Sophie Dorothea a sister of George I. It Is passing strange that when a century and a half later a Hohenzol lern Crown Prince next again takes a wife from the Brunswick house the eld est son should again be marked by na ture for a world-fighter. Why this re sult should follow Is not clear. Whatever else the Guelphs may be, they distinctly are not a military fam ily. With the doubtful exceptions of the Dukes of York and: Cumberland, the race has neyer produced a soldier who could do more than avoid tripping over his sabre and. falling oil the saddle at a trot. Yet when a Sophie Dorothea or a Victoria Adelaide is wedded by a Frederick William of Hohenzollern, lo, and behold; the issue is a born captain of men. Blinarek Desirous) of Fence. But even a second Frederick or Napoleon cannot stand Europe on its head, it may be urged, unless he has a great, compact and unanimous mass of people at his back who are willing to place their fortunes, their peace and their lives unreservedly t in his hand, and Prince Bismarck has Insisted all along upon nothing more tenaciously than that the German nation wants peace. This is all true enough. Bis marck is a patriot in the truest Euro pean sense of the word. He does want peace. His dearest wish is to live to see the empire which he so greatly helped to form grow homogenous and self-sustaining, expand its manufac tures and its commerce, develop re sources at home and markets abroad and be able comfortably to bear the vast burden imposed upon it by the necessity of being hourly ready to de fend its existence. Ever since 1871 since its foundation, in fact the German Empire has made all sorts of sacrifices, some of them difficult and repugnant, in the interest of peace. Bismarck has gone on adding to the German army year after year, until today it numbers more than twice the armed host represented here in the historic victorious review of 1871, yet he has never been insincere in his dec larations that this increase of military force was made solely as an end to peace. Not only was he sincere, but he was right. Under the Kaiser who was buried last wek the Germany - army was in its magnitude a guarantee of peace, and it is no less so today under the noble, broad and enlightened Kaiser who is so painfully and man fully striving to do his duty to the German nation and the world from within his sick chamber at Charlotten burg. Military Spirit Kills City. But nobody with eyes in his head could have passed the week just ended in Berlin without recognizing that if a firebrand comes to the throne the ma terials are close-crowded upon him for a terrible conflagration. Although the great bulk of the military visitors who thronged to the funeral have gone home again or back to their posts, I still have the sensation of being a lone some civilian in the center of a gigantic armed camp. Even now, when I go downstairs in this hotel to eat my dinner, one-half the men at the tables are officers in uniform. The elevator boy touches his cap to me with a military salute. The waiters when they receive my order turn on their heels like fusiliers under the eye of a drill sergeant. The mil itary spirit pervades everything and everybody. The stranger in Berlin insensibly finds himself memorizing the signifi cance of the various colors in collars, epaulet straps and cap bands, instead of the species of trees, the different kinds of beer or the good restaurants, as he would in London, Vienna or Paris. The soldier in Berlin la as familiar and commonplace and ubiquitous a fact as the negro in Charleston. The offi cer is as plentiful and as easily mas terful in his assumption of proprietor ship over all things as the politician in front of the Delevan House in Al bany during the legislative season. Army Ready for Fighting Kaiser. What this means is that the army here in Germany will utterly swamp what organized pacific instincts there are in the empire the moment a young fighting Kaiser draws his sword and cries out: "Who will follow me?" The fact of the existence of Bismarck's colossal army will magnify itself In the popular mind, the spirit in which he built up, the peaceful intent, the patriotic aim, will all vanish like steam on a lamp chimney. The iron chancellor has done mar vels toward creating a manufacturing, trading, money-making Germany, with new great vested interests in peace and a new large business class whose con cern is to promote commerce and pre serve quiet. But to do this he has side by side to create a much more numerous and important class whose profession it Is to fight and whose entire material concern it is to pro mote warfare and to open a swift cur rent of promotion and honor. This second class this military class is all-powerful In all the upper middle" and higher grades of society. Little of provocation, of the popular appeals to national feeling, would make it master of nine-tenths of the German people. Kaiser William II, in the glamour of his youthful distinction of face and figure, of his deep Teutonic prejudices, of his all-controlling belief in himself and his race and his destiny, could hurl a practically united Ger many east, west or south a month after he had ascended the Hohenzollern throne. The whole German nation from Basle to Konigsberg would rjse to his enthusiastic support. Every young man from Thorn to Coblenz would burn to ride with him for conquest and glory. This is not a pleasant or humane conclusion, but it Is a necessary one. The lesson taught by Prussia's success, by the rise of the Hohenzollern dynasty, is an object lesson in blood and Iron which has not been lost on any German mind. Every youth, from the humblest field laborer In Thur lngia to the Crown Prince who waits upon the doorsill of Imperial power, has that lesson ingrained In every fiber of his being. That is why this young heir to the German imperial dignity has seemed to me better worth study ing than anything else in Berlin. Company H Auxiliary to Meet. Company H Auxiliary, Third Ore gon, will meet at 2 o'clock Tuesday aft ernoon on the eighth floor of Lipman, Wolfe & Company's store. . All mem bers are urged to attend. FUNNY INCIDENTS RELIEVE LIFE OF NIGHT NURSE ON DUTY IN HOSPITAL IN EUROPE Patient Dips Into Epsom Salts for Sngar Supposedly Sleeping Men in Dark Ward Room Imitate Howling Cats to Nurse's Discomfiture Weird Thing to Be Alone With Man Who Has Fits, Says Miss Lanyon. BT EDITH E. LANTON. THE NAVAL HOSPITAL.. March 7. We are leading a very busy life at the hospital at present, as we are under-staffed with nurses and rather overstocked with patients. I am on night duty on my pet surgical landings. "B" and "C. As we are only two night nurses Instead of the usual four, we are not exactly "bored because we have nothing to do." There is also a night sister and a staff nurse, but we are running about all night long. The patients are very kind and help ful. I believe there is no limit to what they would do for one. I find a cup of hot coffee waiting for me when I go on duty at 8:30 every night; one of the patients makes it for me out of his own coffee. Afterwards he always washes up the cups and leaves things shipshape. In the morning ha sets the breakfast trays for me. Another patient, a boy of 18, helps me to make the bed of a helpless pa tient who cannot get up. This boy Is as deft and helpful as any nurse I ever saw. We changed the sheets on his bed yesterday with great, celerity. The men were laughing this morning about a piece they saw in a funny pa per about a V. A. T. nurse who went and shook a man who was fast asleep and said, "Wake up, wake up, I want to give you a sleeping draught." "Wrong; Man Awakened for Tea, I never did that, but I shook the wrong man and woke him up this morning to give him an early cup of tea. and then meanly gave it to the right man! Yesterday morning I gave a man a cup of tea and he promptly upset It in bed and had to have the sheets changed. He had his leg in a splint, and the end of the splint tripped up the cup. Another man downstairs gratefully accepted some and then came back and said with bulging eyes, "That tea tastes awful, nurse!" I Investigated and discovered that he had added two heaping teaspoonfuls of "Mag.-Sulph." (the pet hospital name for epsom salts) to it, in mistake for sugar. I was busy making out little choice doses for several victims, and the glass jar was standing on the dresser. We did laugh at him. Numeral Is Lost. When I was dressed in uniform and all ready to take the train the day I came back to the hospital, to my horror I found one of the brass nu merals had disappeared off the shoul der of my coat. The "1" had gone and left me belonging to detachment "0" instead of detachment "10." - We all looked in vain. I had just had it pressed at the tailor's and rushed over there to see If it was lost there. After some groveling on the floor the tailor discovered it and I was complete and correct once more. Had I gone without it I should have received a severe rep rimand. I wore my veil ail undetected, and in consequence arrived with a smutless nose. We are of course on rations here just as usual. We seem to have enough and our appetites are exeedingly good after our hard day's, or rather night's, work. We live all upside down, we night nurses, and have dinner at 8 A. M. and breakfast at 8 P. M. It seems very queer until one gets adjusted to it. The sleeping, or rather lack of sleep ing, is the worst part of the whole affair. It is so difficult to sleep in broad daylight. I am writing this between 3 and 4 in the morning the night nurses' leis ure time. At 4 o'clock we have tea and between half past and 5 o'clock we go down and cut bread and butter for a solid hour. Solid bread and butter. IN no one respect perhaps are the advantages possessed by the expert player at auction over the average player more apparent than in his abil ity to gauge the value or his hand. The expert can recognize at a glance wheth er his hand is worth a bid and. if so. whether it calls for a no-trump or a suit bid. Not so. however, the average player, and one of the chief difficulties experienced by such player bears upon this one thing. It can readily be seen, therefore, that it is of the greatest im portance that there be some definite rule or scale of values to guide him in his decision. To Wilbur C. Whitehead, author of "Whitehead's Conventions at Auction," and a close student of the game, be longs the distinction of having formu lated such scale of values and so help ful is it found that it promises to go down to history side by side with the "Des Chapelles Coup." "Foster's Eleven Rule," "Robertson's Fourteen Rule" and other well-known Inventions of well-known and brilliant players. While no one claims that the system is infal lible or will get the maximum out of every hand, any more than one can claim perfection regarding any rule or guide of life, it is nevertheless claimed for it that it accomplishes this result in by far the greater number of cases and should therefore be brought to the attention of every student and player of the game. The system, it may be explained, has been arrived at only after careful re search and analysis covering a period of many months, together with the comparison of countless numbers of rubber scores and hands on which It was found there was appreciable varia tion In score because of the different policies adopted by the different play ers with regard to the bid. The system has been adopted by the Knickerbocker Club, of- New York, and a comparison of bids as used by them with those of players not using the system shows decided advantages in its favor. One of its claims to recognition is that It serves as a guide not only as to the original bid. but as to how many times if at all a player may rebid. It also guides one's partner as to the ex pediency of an assist and is helpful re garding the double. It applies equally to a no-trump and a suit bid. Players find it easier as a rule to de tect a suit bid than a no-trump bid. the rules for the first being more definite and specific than those given for the no-trump. They read somewhat as fol lows: Declare a suit if holding five or more cards in the suit with ace or king at the top (preferably another honor) and at least one quick outside trick. By a quick trick is meant a trick on the first or second round of the suit and the card to insure the trick must be ace or well-guarded king. The hand should reasonably assure at least four tricks. A suit of ace. jack and three small cards is usually good for three and sometimes four tricks If that suit be the trump suit, so such suit if further strengthened by a quick outside trick justifies a one-trick bid. The longer the trump suit the less imperative the out side trick, though many conservative bidders absolutely rrfuse to bid a suit, lacking outside assistance, no matter too! We cut enough for ISO men. and feel tired and slippery when we have finished, slippery with butter. The navy rejoices in butter, not mar gerine. on its bread. I believe the army hospitals use margarine. One of my patients got a second In jury yesterday by gallantly going to the rescue of a woman who could not start up the engine of her motorcar. He warmed It up for her and U un kindly back-fired and fractured his wrist. It has been frightfully painful in the night, and I have had to prop It up with pillows. His original in juries were In the leg and a frightful scalp wound. Portland Snpplien Appreciated. The hospital bags from Portland have been keenly appreciated. One of the men who got one is paralyzed and cannot write a' letter of thanks, but the other man, whose trouble is in the spine, is writing himself. He has al ready composed and torn up three let ters. I have, as usual, distinguished myself by doing several foolish things whilst on duty. Last night I accidentally filled the kettle with milk instead of water, it having been misleadlngly left In the water can. I was very annoyed, as milk is scarce, and a cup of hot milk Is very acceptable to a man who cannot sleep. I had to borrow it from another ward. I have to make the rounds of 12 wards, and en route go up and down four flights of granite steps. Another night I lost the ward's pet dishcloth down the sluice. That I replaced with out explanation. Surgeon's Dug Asrreeabte. The house surgeon's dog is keeping me company and Is lying here in front of the fire. He makes himself very agreeable In the hopes that he will get a biscuit. He Is more agreeable than the house surgeon, who is a sub Lieutenant, "attached." R. N. I must say he makes a festive appearance in his naval uniform, all over buttons and stripes. He rather fancies himself, too. my word. We have to call him "Sir," and appear verjf worms in his presence. I am sleepy. It does seem too bad that when the time comes that I may sleep, I cannot. I get very few hours' sleep in the daytime. It Is so fright fully noisy. The day nurses think it is very hard if they cannot make a noise at the hostel when they are off duty. As I say, "noise is their luxury, but sleep is our necessity." Poor things! They must be prepared to give up lux uries in war time. I know I am man aging on short rations of sleep. Talking of rations, we were all re lieved to find that soupbones were not counted in our meat rations; they do weigh so heavy. The ex-Portuguese Consul at Hamburg says that bone tickets are Issued for making soup there, but the bone must afterwards be returned to the authorities. Glad that I'm not there. Clams Are Oil-Soaked. I have spoken before of the remark ably good catches -of German sub marines we have been making off this coast. As a proof of the truth of this I may say that the mussels are so soaked in petrol that they are inedible. When a submarine is destroyed, as a rule, just a big patch of oil spreads over the surface of -the sea to show where it was. This oil comes in with the tide and the shellfish evidently greedily devour it. It gives them a most horrible flavor, and if any unwary person boils them hoping for an ap petizing meal, such a smell of petrol pervades ' the house that no one at tempts to taste them. One would have thought the mussel would have died from a surfeit of petrol, but he seems to flourish on it. Probably chuckles gleefully in his dying moments in the how long and strong the suit. The scale of values as given by Whitehead will enable one to determine definitely whether or not such suit should be bid. The rules set down for the no-trump bid are rather more vague and leave more to the individual judgment than those given for the suit bid and in consequence many players often fall down helplessly in this respect, repeat edly passing up hands which in reality warrant a no-trump bid and with aver age assistance from one's partner would result in a good score. The bor der line between a no-trump bid and a pass is indeed often very slight, easily recognizable, as has been stated, by the expert player, but a constant source of doubt and confusion to the player of moderate ability. The majority of text-books give something like the following for the no-trump bid: Declare no trumps when holding three protected suits (protection mean ing aces, kings and queens or their equivalents) if holding a queen above the average. There are often hands, however, which do not contain just these cards, but are in all respects well protected, and herein lies the source of confusion. Take, for Instance, the two following hands, hands which the dealer received upon two separate deals. The first: Hearts, ace. 6. 2; clubs, K, Q, 4, 3; diamonds. Q. J. &, 2; spades, 9. 7. The second: Hearts, 6, 4. clubs. A, J. 2; diamonds, K. J, 10, 5; spades, K. D, 7, 3. Almost all players would recognize the first as a no-trumper; the hand contains an ace. a king, queen in one suit and a queen, jack in another. It is therefore a queen above the aver age and the strength is divided among there suits. Concerning the second hand, how ever, many players would find them selves in doubt. While, to be sure, it contains three protected suits, it not only is not a queen above the average, but in reality it does not contain a queen. More times than not perhaps such hand would be passed up by the average player, yet it. too, is a no trumper. with possibilities almost as great, with average assistance from the partner, for a good score as the first. To correct deficiencies arising from Imperfect valuations and to enable players to know absolutely whether or not their hand is worth a bid. is the object aimed at by Whitehead in his formula. Using his own words, the system consists in establishing a scale of values by means of which the value of one card or combination of cards may be translated into the values of an other card or combinations of cards. Just as we translate a dollar's worth of one commodity into 60 cents' worth of this and 40 cents' worth of some thing else. He further asserts that the absolute values in the game as dis tinguished from those that are only contingent are the aces, kings and queens. Aces he counts as whole or sure tricks, kings as half tricks and queens as quarter tricks. To aces he assigns the relative value of 4, to kings, which are half the value of sees. 2: to queens, which are quarter of the value. 1. It must of course be understood that pan to think what a sell it will be for those who Intend to eat him. None of my patients are quite as hard to manage as one who is under the charge of another night nurse I know. He is an Australian and a very fine fellow, but when at the front he waa caught in a trench when a shell ex ploded nearby and buried him alive. He could not make anyone hear him and was there for three days before they discovered him and dug him out. Now he is in the hospital with a nervous breakdown, poor fellow, and sometimes has fits in the night. In these fits he lives through all the agony again of being buried alive and tries so frantic ally to get out that it taxes seven men to hold him. It is a very weird thing to be alone in the night with a man who has fits. Of course the other patients would fly to our assistance, but some of them would take a lot of waking. I have been giving each man a sweet after his medicine, or a cvp of tea after it. and now. just like children, they beg for doses of medicine so they can have a sweetie. One ward was awfully funny tonight when I went in about an hour after the lights were turned out at 9 o'clock. AH was peace and I was congratulating myself on them being such good boys when a gentle "mew" came from a corner bed. Immediately a chorus of "miouws"came. one from every bed. It was like a cat show broken loose. I finally fled, with my fingers in my ears, and they did laugh. Another favorite thing to do when you say "good night" and turn the light out is for one man to reply po litely, "good night, nurse" pause then another polite voice says, "good night. nurse," and you reply, "good night." They keep this up until you have said good night to each man in the ward separately. Waking Patients Hard Task. Getting them up in the morning is one of the heaviest duties of a night nurse. Most people slightly resent being waked up to be washed at or before 6 A. M. in the pitchy darkness. Then the flare of the gas dazzles their eyes, poor dears. They really bear up well under the infliction. The ones who are well enough to get up and get washed and make their own beds and go down stairs to breakfast are the worst. They can all sleep like tops at getting-up time. No stern threats as to "no break fast" no vain repetition of the late ness of the hour disturbs their slum bers. If you say emphatically: "You have only seven minutes to dress and make your bed," a cheerful voice will reply, "I always do it in four minutes, nurse." Then as a last resort you say, sadly: "Well, I shall be blamed if you are late" that man absolutely shoots out of bed in a second and dresses like fury to be down in time. Under no cir cumstances will they see the nurses blamed for anything. They suffer hor ribly if our stern matron reproves us In their presence (which she quite fre quently does!!!) Red Cross nursing is a strenuous life, but it has its compensations. April 26. P. S. This letter was written weeks ajro. but was stopped by the censor on its Journey west. He informed me on returning it that I must procure a per mit from the War Office before sending any more letters for publication. After some delay and a good deal of correspondence I now have the permit safe and sound and hope to send letters from time to time as I have done in the past. During this time of waiting for the permit I have been so busy in the hos pital that I should have had no time to write in any case. We are all rejoicing that America Is now one of our allies. The Stars and Stripes is a very popular flag and is to be seen flying everywhere. the cards so rated as to value must be so held as to warrant the values; that is. they must be accompanied by a suf ficient number of other cards of the same suit as to invest them with trick taking possibilities. A singleton king or an imperfectly guarded queen could not be so rated. Jacks and tens are given no values save as they are in combination with one or more higher honors of the same suit. A king in sequence with its ace Is equal in trick -taking possibilities to the ace and is therefore given the same value as the ace. So an ace. king together have the value of 8. Also, if queen be in sequence with its king. It is as capable of taking a trick as the king and is therefore given the value of the king. So king, queen together count as 4. Certain combinations, in other words, are given certain values according to the special cards compos ing the combinatxns. I give below a table of values applying to combina tions, which the student should so fa miliarize him with as to be able to recognize and estimate the valine of at a glance: AK, AQJorKQJ are worth 8. A Q 10. A J 10 or K Q 10 are worth 6. A Q are worth 5. . A J or K Q are worth 4. K J 10 are worth 3. K J or Q J are worth 2. Going back to the values given to the three highest cards, it follows that if aces are worth 4, kings 2 and queens 1. each suit has a value of 7 and. there being four suits in the pack, the total values are 28. Very well, as there are four players, the average value of each player's hand is 7. When, therefore, a player's hand has a value In excess of 7, his hand is above the average and worth what is known as a free bid. If the values so held belong to one suit, the suit should be bid, provided of course the suit also contains length. If the values so held are distributed among three or possibly all four suits, no-trump should be bid. provided, in this case. It is not a better spade or heart bid. This phase of the question I need not dwell upon, as I have re peatedly set forth the importance of bidding a major suit, when the hand justifies the bid. rather than no-trumps. though the hand also Justifies the no trump, save when one holds a hundred aces. Now let us look again at the two hands previously given: In the first the values total 10. 4 for the ace. 4 for king queen together, 2 for queen, jack to gether. These values being distrib uted among three suits, the hand is an undoubted no-trumper. In the second the values total 9: 4 for ace, 3 for king, jack, 10, 2 for queen, jack. The strength in this hand also being divided among three suits, it also is an undoubted no trumper. I will continue this subject rn con nection with the rebid and the assist in the next issue. RIVER FISHERMAN DROWNS Body of Man Who JFell From Boat Off Fort Canby Xot Recovered. ASTORIA. Or.. June 16. (Special.) Gust Winntck, a fisherman. was drowned about 8 o'clock last night by falling from his boat in the lower har bor off Fort Canby. The body has not been recovered-- Winnlck was a native of Finland. 30 years of age and unmarried. He waa employed by the Columbia River Packers' Association,