THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN. PORTLAND. JUNE 1G, 1918. PORTLAND. OREGON. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postofflce as second-class mail matter. Subscription rates invariably in advance: (By Mall.) Iaily, Sunday included, one year $8.00 laily. Sunday included, six months 4.5 laily, Sunday included, three months.... 2.-5 latly, Sunday included, one month...... -To Daily, without Sunday.ona year 6.00 l-ally, without Sunday, six months...... 3.1:5 l)ally. without Sunday, one month HO "Weekly, on year,. l.Oo Sunday, one year 2.50 tiunuay and weekly 3.50 (By Carrier.) Ially, Sunday Included, one year .......$9.00 Dally, Sunday included, ona month...... .75 Dally, Sunday Included, three months.... 2.2" Daily, without Sunday, one year 7.80 Dally, without Sunday, three months.... 1.0.1 Dally, without Sunday, one month 6o How to Remit Send postofflco money or der, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at own er's risk. (ilve postofflce address in lull, in cluding county and state. Postage Kates 12 to 16 pages. 1 cent: 18 to 32 pages, 2 cents; 34 to 48 pares, 3 cents: SO to i pages, 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages, 5 cents; 78 to 82 pages, 6 cents. Foreign post age, double rates. Eastern Business Office VerTee. ar Conk lln, Brunswick building. New York: Verre & Conklln, Steger building, Chicago: Verree & Conklln. Free Press building. Detroit. Mich.; Can Francisco representative, R. J. Bidwell. 742 Market street." MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. 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 alao the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dis patches herein are also reserved. PORTLAND, SUNDAY, JUNE 16. 1916. GOING AHEAD WITH AIRCRAFT. News that the first member of the American Flying: Corps has won his ace accompanies reports of the great execution done by the British and French airmen on May 31. The Brit ish destroyed, drove down out of con trol or shot down with guns twenty eeven German machines and lost only one. The French brought down twenty-three and gravely damaged four teen planes, destroyed six captive bal loons and inflicted, serious loss on marching German troops with ma chine gun fire. French planes carried reconnaissance far to the rear of the German lines, and the British crossed the Rhine, bombed the railroad sta tion and a factory at Karlsruhe, dropped four tons of bombs on the railroad stations at Metz-Sablons, Kar thaus and Thionville, in the Lorraine iron region, and six tons on the Bruges docks and the Zeebrugge-Bruges canal, using- thirty-one tons of bombs in all. That indicates what Americans might have been doing. American airmen have only just begun to participate in air fighting, though we had hoped that by this time they would have taken the lead. Towards the 22,000 planes promised before July 1 we had on May 25, according to the House military com mittee, 1316 American planes in France, of which only 325 were com bat planes, and 3760 in the United States, practically all besides the 325 combat planes being training planes. What the American people are most anxious to know is how fast. the Army is being provided with combat, bomb ing and observation planes the types which do most service in the battle area. On this point only fragmentary information is obtainable. In the New York Evening Post David Lawrence says that the Curtiss plant produced over 3000 training planes last year, and in one week of May turned out 104 and in another week 110. It has now been ordered to go ahead with Bristol combat planes, for which the organization of workmen does not dif fer materially from that required to put out training craft, but had pro duced less than a dozen to the middle of May. It can produce in quantity, for it has not only made training craft until we have a surplus, but has made hydroplanes and flying boats by the score for the Navy, also fighting craft to protect the flying boats of the British Navy. The Dayton plant is turning out in' quantity the De Havi land plane, which is superior to the Bristol for fighting, but the Standard plant at Elizabeth, N. J., has not turned out a single combat plane, though it has made scores of training craft and is making hydroplanes. It is a great plant, but is slow in getting started. The Liberty motor has made good so far that all the Navy craft are equipped with it. The chief obstacle to quantity pro duction hitherto has been the frequent change of Aircraft Board decisions from one type of plane to another and the thousands of changes in parts, particularly of the Liberty motor. The plants and the organizations of skilled mechanics are there, but they have . been used to only a fraction of their capacity and much of their output has been scrapped because of changes in detail and of absurd demands for accuracy to the ten-thousandth part of an inch. It is difficult under these circumstances to hold together a body of skilled workmen, who can find other jobs with ease and the mainte nance of such an organization requires contracts which will employ them for months ahead, with the assurance of other contracts to follow. It requires that, when provision has been made to fill a contract, it shall not be can celled to make way for a new one for which preparation at great ex pense must be made anew, in doubt. too, whether that will meet the same fate. . Reorganization of the Signal Corps gives promise that the great plants which have been erected will be used to their full capacity. General Squier will hereafter devote his attention ex clusively to telegraph and other sig naling systems and apparatus; General Kenly, as director of military aero nautics, , will command the . aviation section, and John D. Ryan will have charge of aircraft production. We may expect that, when Mr. Ryan makes a decision, it will stay decided and that, having begun to make a good plane, he will not stop making it be cause General Kenly's experts have designed a better: that is, not until the new design has been perfected beyqnd risk of many changes in de tail nor until all appliances for mak ing the new craft have been provided so that manufacturers can turn to it and continue production without per ceptible diminution of output. That prospect gives promise of several thou sand American fighting and bombing planes at the front long before the present campaign ends. It gives prom is to the thousands of American air men now pinned to the earth that they will soon go up in the air to spread that terror in Germany which the mere anticipation of their coming has already inspired. Then the French women and children and the wounded soldiers in Red Cross hospitals who have been massacred by German air men will be avenged tenfold. With this comforting prospect we may as well put behind us the thought of past blunders. Charles E. Hughes may be trusted to uncover the truth as to the precise nature of those blun ders, and as to who is culpable. The public has such Implicit confidence in his fearless pursuit of wrongdoers and in bis justice to the innocent, as dem onstrated in former Investigations, that it will calmly await his report, in assurance that any errors which he may discover are "not being repeated. But it will demand that his report be published, and that every person whom he finds culpable be brought to Jus CA1CC1UATIOX DOES HOT WORK OUT. The great injury which would be done to several important industries of the Northwest by enforcement of a uniform advance of 25 per cent in freight rates goes to show th'at the means adopted to increase freight revenues was fundamentally wrong. An increase of 25 per cent in the freight revenue of railroads was de sired, but it is very doubtful whether a 25 per cent increase in freight rates would produce it. For example, there is grave danger that it would destroy the trade in loganberry juice, and, con sequently, instead of adding one fourth to the revenue from that source, would reduce it to little or nothing. As 25 per cent of the higher rate on lumber from the Pacific Coast to the Middle West would be at least several cents per hundred pounds more than an equal percentage of the lower rate from the South, diversion of busi ness from the Douglas fir belt to the yellow pine belt might result in less than 25 per cent of additional revenue. Evidently .addition of 25 per cent to railroad revenue is a far more com plex problem than is implied in raising-rates 25 per cent at a stroke of the pen. It requires consideration of the - amount' of additional . revenue which would result from a certain in crease in the rate on a certain com modity. Some commodities may yield the full 25 per cent increase in revenue, others a smaller percentage, while some may show an actual decrease. Entire mar kets may be transferred from one source of supply to another, with a general derangement of business. For example, loss of lumber trade by the Pacific Coast might cause shipments of canned goods and clothing to this section to diminish so materially that the expected revenue from that source would not be realized. Readjustment of rates to yield a certain sum in revenue is a compli cated task for traffic experts. It can not be done in a few days by a com mittee of advisers to an autocrat in Washington. The attempt to do it in that way is a foretaste of what we might expect at frequent intervals if Government operation of railroads were to become permanent. CURE FOR THE BOCHE DELUSION. Caspar Whitney's book, "Gott Mit TJns," tells what is really the work undertaken by the United States and the allies. It is to drive from the minds of the German people that which he calls "the boche delusion" that the Germans are a superior peo ple chosen by God to conquer and rule the world by force. He proves this not only by the writings of men like Bernhardt, but by the acts and words of Germans of every rank and calling seen and heard during fifteen months behind the German lines. While the Germans were victorious and boastful and, therefore, expressed their real thoughts, he talked with them not only officers but privates, not only men who had never been out side of Germany but men who had lived for years in the United States, and he found them all to be obsessed with the same delusion which is ex pressed by their rulers, preachers' and professors. The German any German, high or low believes that might is right, that Germany having the might, not only has the right, but is chosen and di rected by God to overpower and rule other nations. He believes any means justifiable to overcome resistance, his defense of any cruelty being, "He was an enemy." To his mind that justifies the murder of Edith Cavell, the mas sacre of women, children and prison ers, the destruction of towns, the breaking of treaties, the bombing of hospitals and the sinking of hospital ships. There is to be no restraint upon Germany's efforts to reach the goal of world empire. There is but one cure for such a delusion; that is defeat, so complete as to be undeniable and irremediable. Defeat can convince the German peo ple that their delusion is a delusion not all of them, for the Hohenzol- lerns and the junker, military caste may be dismissed as incurable, but the great mass of them, enough to make the incurable powerless. CARRYING HOME THE PACKAGE. It is becoming apparent that under the order of the Provost Marshal of the Army classifying store clerks as non-essential workers when within the draft age, the country is going to wit ness some sweeping changes . in the conduct of retail business. The ques tion' is fraught with many possibili ties. For example, there has been no specific ruling as to whether delivery clerks are to be included in the spirit of General Crowder's order, and since it is the policy of the Government no' to interpret its own rulings until specific cases have been submitted to it through regular channels, business men can only "play safe" while await ing the full development of the Gov ernment's course of action. Proposals to sell all goods on a non delivery basis, which are now being discussed by merchants' associations In various cities, coupled with numer ous plans for making schedules of delivery charges -which shall discour age- unnecessary service while they avoid discrimination against goods which the buyer could not be ex pected to carry home, involve techni cal considerations. The details aro not as simple as they may seem to the outsider. It will cost little less to deliver a shirt waist than half a sack of potatoes, but a good deal less in proportion to the value of the com modity, and still less in proportion to the profit on the- transaction. But it is desirable that delivery of extremely light and portable articles shall be penalized, regardless of their value, if worthwhile curtailments are to be effected, and it would be a hardship upon buyers to refuse to deliver bulky necessities, or to charge exorbitantly for the service. Neither the postage stamp principle nor the zone system seems to be quite applicable without modifications, and charges based either upon weight or upon value have their disadvantages. It is for these reasons that merchants, willing as they have been to co-operate in effective labor economies, have been dilatory in coming to an agreement Buyers sooner or later will be forced to accept drastic modifications of service which they have in past years come to accept too much as a matter of course. At least two privileges are practically certain to be taken from them soon. One of these is the "C. O. D." delivery of articles of small value, and the other delivery on approval, which, in a very large proportion of J cases means two calls at the residence. and the return of at least part of the articles ordered. The latter service has been particularly subject to abuse, which in turn has been the outgrowth of the practice of shopping to kill time, and also of ordering goods for the purpose of impressing acquain tances, without any real intention of keeping them. These are real abuses, which add materially to the "over head," and their suppression would go a long way toward solving a vexatious problem. A DISASTER. The heavy loss of strawberries re ported at Hood River because of in ability of growers to obtain sufficient help to harvest the crop has almost the dimensions of a tragedy. For our well-being, we need not only the staple foods which contain the "calories" upon which food lecturers place so much emphasis, but also certain other foods which contribute less tangible elements and also give zest to appetite. Among these the strawberry in its season has no superiors and few equals. It is a pity that strawberries cannot be supplied plentifully in these times of war bread and other neces sary makeshifts, for they would go far toward mitigating the hardships of a conservation diet. All those who might have gone to work in the berry .patches but re mained idle instead will have this on their conscience, and staying at home will pay an added penalty by being themselves deprived of this king of berries. , . It is much to be hoped that there will be an awakening, in time to sal vage the remainder of the Northwest fruit crop. WALT WHITMAN AS A WAR NCRSE. It is a little more than ninety-nine years since Walt Whitman was born, and in the preparations for observance of his centennial it is certain that a good many facts about the poet will be brought to light again which have not been emphasized in the past, even in the minds of his admirers. There is, for example, the circumstance that he wrote a quite formidable quantity of prose, which has been swallowed in oblivion; and in these times of war there will be deep interest in his work as a war nurse. It is not so generally appreciated as it ought to be that Whitman was highly efficient in hia work among the sick and wounded of the Civil War. and that, although he lacked special training, and was not formally attached to any staff, he probably saved a great many lives. There was at the outset of the Civil War no such preparation for the care of the unfortunate as we are witness ing now. Whitman was moved to volunteer for service by receiving news that his brother had been wounded severely at Fredericksburg and he at once started for Washington. He ar rived there after numerous adven tures, having his pocket picked and suffering other minor inconveniences, and did not reach the front until his brother, whose wounds had been ex aggerated in the reports, had re covered. Then he tarried in the hos pital camp, became greatly interested in the work there, and eventually spent nearly three years as a kind of supplemental nurse, whose efforts were no less welcome because of their irregularity. Service is better organ ized now, but personal devotion of the kind which Whitman brought to it probably -is not common. It was late in 1862, after a year and a half of war, that the poet reached the National capital. One of his biographers estimates that there were more than fifty thousand 'sick and wounded men at the capital. They occupied the public buildings at first; then overflowed into one-story wooden barracks. The capacity of the upper floors of the Patent Office was taxed to its limit; part of the Capitol was filled; every building that could be converted to the purpose was utilized. Camp diseases were leaving ineradi cable marks. There was no such thing as antiseptic surgery. Surgeons and nurses worked frantically, but many things were left undone. Such a work as now is being done by the Red Cross, the Y. M. C A. and the Knights of Columbus had not even been thought of. Most of the suffer ers were without news from home. There was no definite "welfare work," and no knowledge of the part played by psychology in promoting re covery. We would hesitate now to send our boys overseas if we dreamed that they would be subjected to conditions such as Whitman found. He himself was without money. He got a little news paper work to do and copied payroll in the office of an Army paymaster who was his friend, and supported himself with the proceeds. But he earned no more than enough for bare necessities. Every moment that' he could' spare from toil and sleep he devoted to the patients in the hos pitals. Later, friends who had heard of his work supplied him with money, which he disbursed freely in the good cause. It is said that he made his influence felt to a greater or less ex tent upon a hundred thousand pa tients. It is interesting today to read his own theory of the value of the little- things in bringing about cures. For example, he wrote: To- many of the wounded and sick, espe cially the youngsters, there is something In personal love, caresses and the magnetic flood of sympathy and friendship that does, in Its way. more good than all the medicine In the world. I have spoken of my regular gifts of tobacco, delicacies, money, food, knick-knacks, etc.. etc. But I steadily found more than I could cure and turned the bal-a-nce In favor of cure by the means I have here alluded to in a curiously large propor tion of cases. The American soldier is full of afection and the yearning for affection. And It cornea wonderfully grateful to him to have this yearning gratified when he is laid up with painful wounds or Illness, far away from home, among strangers. Many will think this merely sentlmentallsm. but I know It is the most solid of facts. I be lieve that even the moving around among the men, or through the ward, of a hearty, healthy, clean, strong, generous-eouled per son, man or woman, full of humanity a-nd love, sending out Invisible, constant cur rents thereof, does Immense good to the sick and wounded. It will be understood, of course, that Whitman's "invisible, constant cur rents" were projected in a manner far different from that of those back parlor sentimentalists who substitute platitudes for action. He was always doing something, and that something was always practical. When he made a trip through a ward or a series of wards, it was his custom to give some trifle to each patient, even," he has said, "a sweet biscuit, a sheet of paper or a passing word of friendli ness, or but a look or a nod, if no more." There Is in another of his biographies the testimony of a soldier whose leg he saved by a bit of per sonal attention bestowed at the right time, and who did not -even learn his name until long afterward. He was not a well-paid nurse, as nurses are today, and, as has been said, his own resources were small. On a much grander scale, as to equipment and facilities and numbers, the kind of work which Whitman in augurated, and the value of which he was among the first in the whole country to sense, is being carried on today in the hospitals of this country and France. So much more is known of wound treatment and the care of the sick than was known then thar. more of our men doubtless would re cover without attention to the niceties to which Whitman and a few others gave themselves. But when one reads of efforts to preserve the morals of the wounded, it will be well to re member that it was an American poet who more than half a century ago gave impetus to the movement which has resulted in the most comprehen sive welfare scheme that the world has ever known. Whitman believed that wars are fought, in the last analysis, for the preservation of democracy. What he wrote of that war he might have said of this one: To thee, old cause! Thou peerless, passionate, good cause. Thou stern, remorseless, sweet Idea. Deathless throughout the ages, races, lands. After a strange, sad war, great war for thee (I thhile all war through time was really fought, and ever will be really fought, for thee). These chants for thee, the eternal march of thee. A RALLflNG POINT FOR RUSSIA. Every scrap of news which seeps out of Russia in these days adds force to the argument for armed interven tion by the allies in that country The people realize that they were be trayed into the hands of their enemy by the Brest-Litovsk treaty, and that the terms of that infamous document have been flagrantly violated by Ger. many. The Bolshevikl never were support ed by more than an active minority of the Russian people. Their victory was that of an organized minority over an unorganized and mainly pas sive majority. Recent events Indicate that the majority is becoming or ganized . and actively resistant, and that many supporters are falling away from the Bolshevikl, having learned how vain were their dreams. But the great mass of the Russian people re mains dumb with terror, paralyzed with mutual distrust. The terrorism of the Czar's Black Hundreds has been followed by that of the Red Guard and then by that of the Ger man soldiers. The greatest need of Russia Is a force to which the people who want to fight and work for their country's freedom and regeneration can rally in confidence that it will net betray them. They have been betrayed so often and so shamefully by their own leaders that mutual distrust has been ingrained in their minds, and pre vents development of such a force from within Russia. It must come from without. No nation is better qualified to supply such a force than the United States, for all writers who have visited Russia since the revo lution began are agreed that the peo ple look to the American form of government as the model by which they should build, American com merce as the instrument of their eco nomic revival and development and the American people as the one Na tion which seeks profit only as an incident to the benefits it confers by commerce. This attitude- of mind on the part of the Russian people warrants con fidence that if a single division of American troops were to land in Rus sia with enough surplus arms and ma terial to equip a Russian army, tens of thousands of patriotic Russians would rally to it and would soon con stitute a new army which would fight as that of the Grand Duke Nicholas fought before it was sold out. If the allies do not quickly go to the rescue of Russia, national dis integration may proceed at an accel erated pace, Germany may get so strong a hold on the country as will require far greater effort to breuk, and its resources may be used in year ly increasing quantity to prolong the war in the west. Every considera tion of war strategy as well as friend ship for Russia demands that the al lies act, and act soon. NO LANGCAr.K FOR IT. Dr. William Wallace Campbell' statement that "it is utterly impos sible to give the faintest conception in lay terms of Einstein's theory of relativity," coupled with the declara tion that if Einstein is right we shall have to modify all our "known knowl edge" of the universe, would seem te call for a change in our system of education. An announcement which Dr. Boothroyd sets down as the most remarkable in the history of the hu man race cannot be explained to iu because we have not been prepared to receive it. The perturbations of the orbit of Mercury, even the law of gravitation itself, may be in the bal ance. Substantiation of the Einstein theory will "modify every conception now current regarding the universe." All this may come to pass right under our noses, while we remain in the dark. The scientists in our midst arc as Stanley in darkest Africa. We lack mutual knowledge of a language tn which to convey momentous thoughts. The language will be acquired, of course, although by degrees. In this instance it will be a language of higher mathematics, which it would seem that we have too greatly neglected. Perhaps it was with a sense of the bearing of this study upon our future that Professor Edwin Bidwell Wilson, of the Massachusetts Institute, of Technology, urged recently in the course of a lecture in Boston that teachers abandon the practice of di viding mathematic courses into arbi trary strata, which the Boston Tran script remarks may "very well suit the hierarchical divisions of the curric ulum, but which may or may not bear any relation to the actual needs of the case." This is illustrated by the separate grooves reserved for arithmetic, algebra and calculus, which Professor Wilson would greatly mod ify, if he did not disregard them. Pro fessor Wilson has cited with approval the following from the preface to a book called "Calculus Made Easy," by Silvanus P. Thompson, an English writer on physics and engineering: Some calculus tricks are quite easy. Some are enormously difficult. The- fools who write the textbooks of advanced mathematics I take the trouble to show you how easy the easy calculations are. On the contrary, they seem to desire to Impress you with their tremendous cleverness by going about it in the most difficult way. Being myself a remarkably stupid fellow I have had to unteach myself the difficulties. and now beg to present to my fellow fools the psrts that are not hard. Master these thoroughly, and the rest will follow. What one fool can do another can. Professor Wilson goes on to say, as quoted by the Transcript, that "all problems involving rates of change of quantities, except possibly the sim plest problems, require for their solu tion, and even for their statement, a knowledge of the calculus." This takes in . so many matters involving phe nomena with which we are confronted daily that it would seem to be a prime requisite for the youth of the future who expects to deal with problems of gas engine pressure and the improve ment of airplanes. Professor Wilson also makes a plea for the throwing open of certain parts of trigonometry to the lower students at least those parts which would aid them in un derstanding the problems which they are called upon to solve. If most persons are right In sup posing that the world is now enter ing upon an era in which science is to have fuller swing than it ever has had before, it is clear that something will be required to make mathemati cal studies more comprehensible and more popular to the average student. There is wrong psychology about the system which lets it be taken for granted that mathematics is dull and higher mathematics all but impossible of achievement, yet that is the feeling which the beginner in arithmetic has when he comes in contact with upper classmen. While we are humanizing the classics, upon which much stress Is being placed in certain quarters, it might be yell also to humanize our mathematics. The reflection will not cease troubling us that the perpetual drouth between the co-ers of the text books on mathematics is in part at least the fault of the teachers. We are now, perhaps, about to pay the penalty for our past omissions. Everything that we thought we knew about the universe may be changed some night, when the astronomers have finished extending the calcula tions for which they laid the founda tion at Baker and at Goldendale the other day. But they will not be able to tell us about it. because the lan guage which is spoken and understood by the laity contains no words for it A somewhat similar situation must have prevailed when the l.atin mis sionaries first began to teach our Norse ancestors the rudiments of theology and philosophy. If the Ein stein theory of relativity is confirmed, it is going to cause a mighty reform in mathematics teaching, to say noth ing of its effect upon our conception of the universe. The Food Administration Is citing with approval the example set by 100 women of Oklahoma City, Okla., who have just completed the financing of a co-operative plan for marketing the surplus from war gardens. The plan will be followed with profit by cities not provided with other co-operative markets, but its most interesting fea ture is a Liberty kitchen, where it is proposed to can and preserve all pro duce which would not be sold in time to escape deterioration. A kind of circle, but not a vicious one, is estab lished. The kitchen will be main tained from the proceeds of a "wagon tax" on the market gardeners, and the proceeds of the canned produce will be used to defray the original cost of the market building and to meet other expenses. A modern canning equipment will be Installed and there will be accommodations for fifty cook ing classes of women. Oregon, how ever, will continue to hold the ago on the wheeze about folks who sell what they can and can what they can't, which is said to have been born in Astoria some forty years ago. Six million garments from the United States Army are to be "reclaimed." and the announcement is of more than ordinary interest because this is the first time in the history of our Army that the thing has been done. Hereto fore partly wornout clothing has gone incontinently into the rag bag. But the vastness of our present organiza tion has made need of economy more imperative and its measure more ap parent. It is one of the valuable les sons we have learned from our allies, who wasted on a large scale in the early months of the war. Our Gov ernment is wise In taking the step in time, and modern facilities for textile work are so complete that by tho time the salvage of soldiers' clothing is thorough there will be no way by which the ordinary individual will be able to identify them as "second hand." Arrangements are being niadft by the German states for the division ot captured territory, but there is still force in the adage that a bird in the hand is worth two In the bush, with the addition that after getting him in your hand you must keep him there. The dry states look with perfect equanimity on the renewed efforts to make National prohibition a war measure without waiting for the states to ratify the Constitutional amend ment. They do not see why people should want to drink, anyway. Austria having "liberated" the Poles, will now proceed to point out to them the inestimable privilege which is theirs of Joining the armies of the central powers or taking the conse quences of refusing to do so. It is all right to rejoice over the prospect of good crops, provided we do not let our optimism unduly in crease our appetites. Whatever the surplus, it must be reserved for our soldiers and our allies. It is proposed to amend "Give until it hurts" to "Give until it exhilarates." But it reads all right either way. the whole thought of the sentence being comprehended in the one word, "Give The chaps who have failed to volun teer for fear they wouldn't be sent to France will all step forward, of course, when they read of our plans to send across an Army of 8.000.000 men. Any way they are looked at. the rulings of Provost-Marshal Crowder seem to contain mighty little comfort for the fellows who married in the hope of escaping the draft. A convict at Salem serving a life term repudiates relationship to Ad miral von Tirpitz. There are depths to which even a life-termer will not sink, it seems. George Creel Is not the only former expounder of Socialist theories who has seen the light since the Bolshevikl began making unrestrained radicalism unpopular. The Red Cross proposes to show that junk is nothing else than matter out of place. There are few commodities that cannot be put to'some good use nowadays. Judging from the size of the wood piles this season, the coal-saving movement Is already well under way. Now that the new star is growing dimmer, we are almost convinced that it was the Kaiser's star, after all. Even a leaky iron teakettle may be melted into a shell that will kill a Hun. Henry Ford has. decided to run for the Senate by Christmas, instead. LIFE AND SERVICE OF MRS. HENRY L. PITTOCK Early Days la Iortlaari Ideat Irlcatloa With Jlssy Charitable aad Phllaa- hrople Prajerta Hrr rlelpfalaras aad Kisdsraa Istrrral la W omra'a I atom aad . alldrra's Home Other I srfsl Activities. MARRIED At the residence of the brlde"s father, on the "Oth Inst., by R-v. c s. Kingsley. Mr. Henry L. Plttock and Miss Oeorslana M. Burton, all of this city. (From The Oregonian. June 2J. lsuO.) rpiKl'S simply was chronicled In the 1 fifty-eight years ago. the wedding of the young printer and publisher and the comely girl who had consented to cast her lot for life with him. There was no other reference to the event. It was characteristic both of him and her, then and always after, that they should be reluctant to obtrude their affairs upon the public notice. The union of Georglana Burton and Henry Tittock took place at the Burton home near Sixth and Jefferson streets. The bridesmaid was Sarah Abrams. then soon to marry H. A. Hogue, a well known citizen, and the groomsman was George T. Myers, a rising young busi ness man who played afterward a large part in the commercial life of city and state. Mrs. Hogue. who lives in good health at the Nortonia. has sprightly memories of those early days in Port land. The Abramses and the Kurtona were next door neighbors and Georgi ana and Sarah were students at the old Portland Academy and Female Semi nary, an institution which was the alma mater of many Portland and Oregon boys and girls. "I can rememfcer vividly how Oeorgi ana looked then," said Mrs. Hogue. the other day, "a handsome and vivacious girl, simple and frank In manner and outspoken in speech, and exceedingly popular with a large circle. She was not quite sixteen when she was married. But those were the days of early de velopment and early marriages and Oeorgiana was quite a mature woman." Sarah Abrams was married in 1861. and the friendship between Mrs. Hogue and Mrs. Plttock continued throughout all the Intervening years. Probably It will not be amiss to say something of the pioneer environ ment of Mrs. Plttock. The Portland Academy, located on the block west of the Ladd home (Jefferson. Columbia. Sixth and Broadway), was under the fostering care of the Methodist Church, which had much to do with the begin nings of Oregon. The principal during Mrs. Pittock's days of pupilship was Dr. C. S. Kingsley, who performed the marriage ceremony, and in the student body was represented practically every family of consequence In the town. The academy was In the suburbs, bordering the woods. The population was but a few thousand: yet Portland was the metropolis of the entire Pacific North west, and, therefore, its commercial, political, social and educational center. The business district ranged along Front and First streets, and the dwell ings of the residents were scattered ahout an area now pretty completely covered by large buildings. It may be recalled that The Oregonian was printed at that time at First and Morrison streets. The young couple lived suc cessively at Sixth and Jefferson, then near Third and Morrison, and then at Fourth and Salmon, and then at the handsome cottage newly erected on the block bounded by Washington, Stark. West Park and Tenth stre ts. Young Plttock. with his clear vision of the long future, had bought that property in 1856 for $300, and he had It cleared at a cost of $100. lie It remembered that It wns covered with a heavy forest growth, and that even when his house was built, and the young husband and wife, with their first child, were domi ciled therein, the place was to be reached only by a path through the trees. Imagine the time. If you can. when the moving, bustling, hurrying metro politan Washington street was but a trail to a pioneer home! But so It was. Mr. and Mrs. Plttock got Into tht-ir modest residence In 1861. and there they lived for many years, and there all their children except the first (nine tn number) were born. Later they built, and occupied, a larger dwelling on the same block. Both houses gave way in time to the expanding movement of the city's Industrial and commercial growth: yet they lived there in peace and happi 'ness. for exactly half a century, first beyond the city's outskirts, then in a populous residential district, and finally In the very heart of a great clfy. They gave up with reluctance a home site which they had established for life, and moved four years ago to another new home on Imperial Heights, west of the city, and once more in the virgin woods. A great business block now tenants the Plttock home block. m m m Asked If she could recall the names of the pupils of the late '50s at Portland Academy, Mrs. Hogue gave a few who were in the intimate circle of herself and Mrs. Plttock. "I have In mind." she said. "Sarah Klizabeth Davis, who became Mrs. John Marshall, still living, and a lifelong friend of Mrs. Plttock; Anna Davis (Mrs. Fuller). Delia Davis (Mrs. Will lam Rraden), Samuel Moreland, William Deardorff and Caltha Cotton (how could I fail to remember the budding romance of these two. watched by us all until their marriage?), Llbby Clay, Mary Royal. Rebecca Jane Greer. Leonard Powell, and many, many more." James McCown, of The Oregonian. an old-time student of Portland Academy, recalls other names, including Lizzie Couch (Mrs. Dr. Gllsan). Nancy Carter iMrs. U F. (.rover). Sallle Dobbins (Mrs. George T. Myers). Kosa Frazer Mrs. M. S. Burrell). Fletcher Royal. Willian Moreland, F. O. McCown. Thomas H. Brents and others. Herein is perhaps the keynote of Mrs. Pittock's character her fidelity to friends and to prlnciplea for among those early-day associates were those whose companionship and intimacy she courted and retained till her death. It is significant, too. that among those other associates who Joined her in her philanthropic enterprises still appear many of the same names that were there in the beginning, unless removed by death or other unavoidable circum stance. Thus we are led naturally to origin of the Ladies Relief Society as long ago as 1867. She was one of the founders of that admirable institution, which was the legitimate outgrowth of the unorganized activities of good women in various charities for months and even years prior to that time. On March 20. 1867, the Ladies' Relief So ciety began its legal existence. Prom inent In the Initial work were the Couch, Lewis and Flanders families and Mrs. Plttock. On July 12. 1871. the Children's Home was founded. The first letterhead of the home bears the name of Mrs. Amory Holbrook as presi dent. Mrs. Plttock was a member of the advisory board. Others active in the work at that time, and a little later I some of them continuously to the present, though others nave passed on were Mrs. Rosa Burrell. Mrs. Theodore Wygant. Mrs. Cleveland Rockwell, Mrs. C. A. Dolph. Mrs. H. Thielsen. Mrs. K. G. Hughes. Mrs. Julius Loewenberg, Mrs. D. P. Thompson, Mrs. A. J. Meier, Mrs. P. J. Mann. Mrs. J. P. Morey. What an honor roll of names distinguished for charity, kindliness and motherliness. What a galaxy of good women, devoted to family and not less concerned about the welfare of children unhappily bereft of the care of parents. The Children's Home is one of the beautiful charities of Portland. It has had an uninterrupted career for more than half a century of usefulness and service. It has done its great work without noise or sensation. Hundreds and thousands of homeless children have found there love, thought fulness, rai ment, food, education and Christian in struction. The inspiration for its worthy deeds was the abounding benevolence aud motherly feeling of such, women. as Mrs. Plttock. They gave the institution always not only their constant personal supervision. but they provided ite finances, seldom calling on the state and not even disturbing the general public by appeals for assistance. T have been associated with Mrs. Plttock In the management of the Chil dren's Home for many, many years.'' said Mrs. A. J. Meier yesterday. "She was one of the best women that ever lived: and he had besides great energy, sound Judgment and strong will. Ve relied on her. and she was never wrong. She was always peaceful and peaceable, but very strong in finding the right way and taking it. What a kind heart and great soul she had:" "It was a privilege to be associated with Mrs. Plttock." said Mrs. D. P. Thompson. "I saw some things about her beautiful character which were per haps denied to others who were not with her in her daily benevolent and charitable work, which took up so much of her life. It happened fre quently that a distant relative or family acquaintance of some child in the home would express a willingness to care for htm or her. If the child could be sent. Frequently such invitations came from, the distant East, and the matter of rail road transportation was a great prob lem, since there was no fund for such purposes. Inevitably In euch cases. Mrs. Plttock would say that we ought not to go outside the board for subscriptions and she would offer to provide a liberal share of the necessary amount, and thus the money was always raised. She was a good, generous, wise, competent, helpful and useful woman. Not many will ever know the many kindnesses she performed on her own account for needy Individuals, and only the women who worked with her understand the full measure of her service to the sev eral Institutions with which she was so long identified the Children's Home (Ladies' Relief Society), old Peoples Home. Unitarian Church. Woman' Union, and others." Thirty-one years ago. a group of Portland women conceived the Idea of establishing a home for wage-earning girla and women strangers in the city, who could not easily find and pav for & suitable domicile. Mrs. Pittock w as one of the originators of the project, and its final relization is the fine establish ment (Martha Washington Home) at the corner of Tenth and Montgomery streets, where about 50 women live In comfort and even refinement, at very small cost. So great Is the present suc cess of this excellent undertaking that there were forty more applications for admittance in the month of May than could be accommodated. The first loca tion was at Fifteenth and Flanders streets, the site of the original Chil dren's Home. In time these quarters were outgrown, and otherwise became unsuitable, and a new location, with a more commodious establishment, was sought and found. The Interest of Mrs. Plttock in the Woman's Union, its man agement and Its work, was unfailing. She was its fourth president and she was from the first a member of its board. Her unusual energy and tact and her clear insight Into practical problems made her entirely acceptable as the one woman to be the chairman of the finance committee; and this place, she long occupied, discharging Its duties faithfully and cheerfully. "I remember an incident In the affaire of the union some years ago that shows the sensible bent of Mrs. I'ittock'a mind." said Mrs. J. 15. Comstock. presi dent of the union, yesterday. "The union had a mortgage debt of J.'.OOO and it was a source of great worry to the ladies. Times were not good, and it was not easy to pay the Interest, to say nothing of the principal, and to meet current obligations besides. Mrs. Plt tock took hold of the troublesome affair with characteristic resolution to find a solution. She did. with the aid of other active women. She got the rate of in terest reduced from eight- to six per cent and raised the money to pay ail hut $lli0 of the principal: and she got through an amendment to the by-laws providing that when the balance should be paid as it was no mortgage should ever again be placed against the prop erty of the organization." The Woman's Union was perhaps first In the thought and solicitude of Mrs, Pittock. not excepting even the Chil dren's Home, which for so many years received so great a part of her capable helpfulness. Four years ago. she ltist the robust health which had been her fortunate endowment during many years. She sought then to give way to others: but "we could not and would not hear of it." said Mrs. Comstock. "I told her that she need do no work, but we wanted to have her with tie whenever she could come, so as to get the benefit of her counsel and the con tagion of her wholesome and wonderful spirit." As to the Children's Home, "t insisted on her staying on the board.'" said Mrs. Thompson. "Whenever any thing came up which normally would go to Mrs. Pittock. I agreed to take, care of It- So would others have done." I.ast August the Portland Woman's Union abandoned its old quarters and occupied the Martha Washington Home. On October 20. 1917, there was a public reception marking the formal opening of the institution. It may be of interest to note the personnel of the women in terested in that notable reception, as disclosed by the newspaper announce ments of the event. Here it is: Mrs. J. Tl. Comstock. the president, will be assisted by Mrs. Henrv K. Jones. Mrs. P. .1. Mann. Mrs. H. I.. Pillock. Mrs. ". It. Tenipleton. Mrs. Klllolt K. Corbelt. Mia. Adnlph A. D kum. Presiding at the tea table xv 111 be Mrs, Jacob Kanim, Mrs. Mary H. Steers. Mra, Klizabeth Hamilton. Mrs. Helen 1-aiid ir bett. Mrs. Thomas I.. Eliot. Mrs. H. V. Cor bet! and Mrs. Frederick Essert. Mrs. A. J. Meier will prcsuio over the, basket Into which the voluntary sliver of ferings will be dropped. There were others, too. prominent in the social and philanthropic world, who had a place at the reception: but it is Intended herein to indicate by name, only part of those who have been the mainstays of the union, most of them for many years. Mrs. Pittock was present at the func tion. It was a happy day for her. not withstanding her long illness and feeble health.. An existent photograph shows her seated in the center of an attentive group, flanked on one side by her devoted friends and fellow- servitors In every good cause Mrs. 1. J. Mann and Mrs. Henry K. Jones while in the background were others of those whose names appear above. It was Mrs. Pit tock's last appearance at any formal public occasion. Put it must have been with her a grateful thought that she should have been able to witness the actual consummation of many years' labor of herself, and others equally un selfish and Capable, in the dedication of the Martha Washington Home, and that -so many of the fine women who had o long served with her on the board of the union should have been able also to take part in the ceremonies. Mrs. Pittock was a life-long member of the Unitarian Church, and there are many there, too. to testify to her willingness to perform her part, and more, in the religious life of the city. - The purpose of this article has been to make record of the public and semi public work of a good and useful woman, who has ended her work, and gone forward. Of her family life, and of the countless little deeds that made up the cum total of her character, and of the desolation of a home created by her death, and of the fifty-tight years of constant companionship with her husband, now finally broken by her death. It is not intended to write; ncr is it needful.