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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1912)
TrtlS UK&liUfJ JiUNUAY JOURNAL, rOLilL,Inu, SUNDAY MOKN1NO, JULY 'ii, 10 LB 66 JD r D IG "r - , : A Development of the fBig Brother'; Move ment in Which-Mrs.-William K. Yanfebilt 'and "Other Prominent New York Women Are Interested hn HE Big Sister Organization" is . I "a. movement to "enlist your per- V sonal interest in behalf of unfor tunate girls (particularly those tdming before the children's court), and also small children brought before the court because of improper guardianship." Concisely put, this is the platform of a movement begun some six months ago by Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt, who for a num ber of years has been devoting a great deal of her attention to welfare work, including the erection of large blocks of flats especially adapted to the needs of tuberculosis suflcrers. Associated with Mrs. Vanderbit are some of the foremost women of New York. iff. 'VI And they have been giving not only money, but their own time and attention, to putting the title of their organization into' actual prac tice. A most significant sign of the times it xis, when the sex that but a few years ago was wont to shun the erring as if they had been lepers is now willing to go into the humblest of homes to reclaim the ones who are going astray. Eminently successful is the work, too, because its practicability nas been froveai py a similar organization the Big Brother M nutment which is nenn beinr conducted in utiii,.tun imt uimn tv tji. of the nation. "- - '""" " " ' :" EEVER slnoe the Big Brother Movement was founded, sbout seven years ago. It has been followed closely by Mrs. Vanderbilt, who has herself often attended the children's court, ex tending aid, in the quietest manner, to many an un fortunate. More recently, she determined that the best man. tier of assisting her own sex would be to found an organization similar to that conducted by the men. This she did. Mrs. Willard Tarker, Jr., was chosen treasurer, and an executive committee, composed of Mrs. Louis S. Morris, Mrs. William May Wright and Mrs. Willard D. Straight was selected. All of these women, as well as many others who are giving their time and money to the work, are thoroughly well oft la this worlds gooda. And that is why, very often, their efforts are effective. A wayward girl who would be disposed) to resent advice from ordinary sources is naturally Impressed when she is approached by a woman of such standing. Her ambition U aroused. She feels that if it is worth their while to reclaim her, It is worth her own while to be reclaimed. What is more, perhaps, she comes to realize that It Is possible lor her to lead an honest and respectable life, and this Is no small matter to one who may have been exposed to the biting criticisms of a gossipy neighborhood. HOW THEY WORK A better Idea of the manner In which the work Is conducted may be gained from the 'Suggestions to Big Sisters" than in almost any other way. They tell what the women are to do, and ow they are to do It Tet there is another factor the woman who finds the girls to be aided. Hhe is Mrs. Madeleine W. Evans, a thoroughly experienced court investigator, who at tends most of the sessions of the children's court. Like the representative of the Big Brother Movement Roy F, Parsons, she is recognized by the Judicial authorities, who, In many cases, are willing to turn children over-to her on probation. Sometimes, when the offenses are not serious, girls are placed in her charge wlthdut being arraigned, a "Some of ur-best work. In my opinion, Is done in this way," said Mrs. Evans recently. "We have gained a great deal If we can keep a girl's name off the court records'. Very often It saves her from being a marked person in her neighborhoods and any one can appre ciate what that means. "For the same reason, a great deal of our work bas to be conducted as quietly as possible. Fre quently, indeed, we assist families to move from one part of the city to another, so that a girl who has been the subject of comment In a neighborhood can get a fresh start. "For those who cannot be assisted in their homes, we have a country house on Long Island. It Is on the estate of William K. Vanderbilt, Jr.. at Little TCecltrann lTnanief-qTiiTe a ntimtier or gins to uve In quietness and seclusion, until they have time to get cn.tneir leet again, ana Degin a new me. ai aoou as possible we secure positions for them, and then the Big Sisters keep in touch with them, to aid and encourage them in keeping away from, their old asso ciations, ii'-,.,. i - i aananni asaanananaaniai enem ill i m uwmw .v m s j . r ii m m t as .w .nv as i' tv a a w - ; Mm m x 111 LSI - ' W IS '77 'ii t y. v, ai i i i ii uai i ilia i r .n m' v ib p mi j mVAKi , V i -IlllHilH.ll "It la not unusual for the girls to beoome greatly attached to the Btgrsisterg, ana wo have 'any number of touching letters from those who have been enabled to become self-respecting and self-supporting. "In the great majority of cases, we find, the girls are not naturally wicked; they have simply been the victims of wayward associates. Once they are brought to see where they are heading, and receive personal comfort and encouragement, the whole course of their lives is changed. ; "We feel. Indeed, that we can work most effectively with the girls under 15. who are brought to the chil dren's court- While we have no age limit, most of our efforts are concentrated on them. Occasionally, "otheroiingr'wTDtrtiS a "referred :'"ttf'" ui.'" atid " w endeavor to do the best we can for them; but. In the" long. run. the surest method of. securing lasting re forms Is to begin before the damage has been too jjj aJj trtlg wOrR. II JS Wo poroni element mai ..counts most. With ths girls as with tho boys, sym- pihy"Ti":tninostff self-help. ' What tha Big Brother Movement bas already accomplished has demonitrated this". Between April 1, 111. and March 3), 1912, there were 847 men who looked after one or more boys. , As s, result, 211 youths wers placed In good positions, 309 were sent to summer camps, and 41 needy ones were placed tn homes In the coun try. - All told, 1S7 cases were handled, with a total of 2028 Investigations. This Is the result of the move ment started aevea jears Rgoiy JBarnest iC Coulter, then a clerk In the chlldrenra court, nnd later a mem ber of tjhe law firm of Coulter, Bond & McKlnney. From the start the movement attracted the sup port of some of the most Influential men of New York, Odlcf font AI BOUT fifty years hence, when politics shall hive taken on aspects ' none of us living today dare forecast, there may be a convention in Chicago. 111., of Wichita, Kaj., or Buffalo, N. Y., or some other vast metropo lis of that new era, at which a great, despairing leader will arise and cry out : , "Shall this powerful nation, with its 300, 000,000 of people, quail before its ancient destiny and bow democracy's proud head to the effete lands of Europe by abandoning its traditional loy alty to the gold standard in favor of this rare and unprocurable medium of exchange, platinum? Is our immense reserve of gold, the worshiped wealth of the ages, nothing more than pitiful dross? Shall we ruin our gold mining industry in order that the most treasured, most ductile, most beautiful of metals shall be arbitrarily reduced to the shameful office of making pans to wash the supper dishes in?" Which, allowing for oratorical hyperbole, is precisely what we may possibly do, some time or other, if gold keeps on becoming very much more common, and platinum should become somewhat less rare than it is now. Already the goldsmith's art has, to an " ap preciable extent, been transferred to a platinum basis and for only one reason in the world besides the circumstance thaj the new metal happens to be so rare that gold is dross by comparison. As for intrinsic merits, gold never had. any notable superiority over metals infinitely more obtainable; but- the only time iron money was minted was when old Lycurgus, in Sparta, used' it wjth the .deliberate purpose of destroying the value of all -uuuey.-&-a ,meaiura., o-exchange N OWADATS, when the society reporter spills superlatives over the Wedding gifts of some famous heiress, leading place Is gives the jewelry with platinum Settings, Jewelers will ' IIP " T:r ill . AV y r ' and at present the officers are: President, flYanklln C. Hoyt of the children's court; vice presidents, Luther H. Lewis and Robert L. Gerry; chairman ot executive committee, . Earnest L. Coulter; secretary, Charles A. Taussig; treasurer, Francis J. DanfortU; directors, the Rev. Wilton Merle Smith, I. D., Louis de F. Downer, J. Van Beuren Mitchell, Nicholas Dan forth Walter T. Dlack, Charles L. Inslee, C. Robert Langenbacher, J. Beaumont Spencer, Charles F. Po wllson, Horace H. Shoemaker, William B. Osgood Field, Frank Wi Pearsall, John H. Prall arid Peter O. Gerry. What stands out above all other things In con nection with the movement Is ihe record of efficiency as measured by the small number of relapses on the part of those who have been taken In charge by the Big Brothers During the entire year ending Octo ber 1, 1U, there were but 90 out of the 219S boys who had been cared for who were returned to the children's court This Is a percentage of 98 on the reform side of the ledger. $3.84 SAVES A LAO .1. i And this Is accomplished at an average expendi ture of 82.84 for each boy aided. For this amount, per Individual, three boys' clubs are maintained In the several summer camps are conduoted, to which are sent,,raore than 300 youtJi,; an office Is inaln,tl!0L.to which over 120O boys call, voluntarily, for guidance. In a twelvemonth; a eourt inspeetlon service Is pro vided, and temporary financial assistance Is granted when necessary. Certainly there can be no lack of economy charged against the Big Brother management Tet of course, a large amount of the service Is performed Individually by those enrolled as Big Brothers. One man, in particular, has had as many as ninety boys under Jils -cre-t a-41mv-w4th -only the partial assistance of a friend. He earns his living, too; but he loves the work for boys above all other things, and is never so, happy as when entertaining a crowd of youngsters. Good Enough Aow 2' 'v. - say that an appreciable utility Inheres In the use of platinum as a background or bedding for diamond or pearl; but a better reason is that like the cowrie shells the early savages used as cash-, ft is somewhat hard to get and, therefore, much more expensive. It.has Alwaja-beea JiArtt-.la.gatibut-Oiiara fcave- been times, and they only a few years ago, wnen wealth and beauty would have been Insulted by the gift of a complete toilet set In platinum, such as now only the wealthiest of the millionaires Would dream' ot assembling for a bride. "Huhl" the mother of today's bride would have - . .-. " " ' - . :" - D. SYrat'oAr:; YfnJtrtt'r; Stjser i roxtp 4t'K$e,4tfc. "Bt'f . 'Barters In a great many cases, the employment problem Is that which most demands attention, And, accord ing to the court Investigator, Mr. Parsons, it is often solved by the good common sense of the average business man. "The boy himself Is the main thing, from the way most of them regard the situation," said Mr. Parsons, reoently. "They want bright, active, ambitious young fellows, and the lad himself Is his best rec ommendation if he fllla their requirements. . The past Is never as much a consideration as the present snd they seldom have cause to regret their judgments. "What is better than recommendations, perhaps, Is the fact that the boys are constantly being stlmu lsted to do their best Not only do they have the friendship of their Big Brothers, but they become in terested In the clubs that are maintained for them. There Is a club night once a week, gymnasium classes and the like. "Again, for such boys as cannot be cared for else where,, we have a farm at Stockton, on the Delaware river, near Trenton, N. J. A complete change of environment, good bousing and toealthy food rllt work ' wonders with youngsters who would seem hopeless while under the Influence of their city associations.. "In fact we got the farm as the result ot the efforts of one of our Big Brothers to reform a.Ud whom i e'wttFcall BilKHT was a wild one, at first ; he lived In 'Hell's Kitchen,' where it la right to steal,., but a Tsfri to be caugh't " When he came Into court he was hardened to his fate. But a Big Brother was assigned to his case, and seemed to make gome progress. He took care of BUI every Sunday from 9 A.M. to 1 P. M. Tet one day a week was plainly not enough, and Thursday evening was added to Bill's civilized Itinerary. Ithelped a lot. And as Bill was getting another square meal a week, he began to pick up. ' "StiHHt was apparenthat-if any lasttngr changS was to be effected, BUI would have to be reaoued from 'Hell's Kitchen.' The problem was solved when a friend of the general secretary gave us the farm, and other friends looked to the furnishings. One of said when she Inspected the presents twenty-five years ago. "Pity they didn't send me some good, honest tin baking pans and coffee pots. The metal would have cost nearly as much." A dozen years ago and these are, official figures no more than 400 ounces troy of platinum were mined In the United States, and nearly all the rest of the world's supply came from the Ural mountains, tn Russia, as it does still. It was worth the paltry sum of 260O little more than 6 an ounce, and that at a time when Its importance In electricity for the manufacture of incandescent bulbs was fully appreciated. But note how craftily everything that can possibly become money is studied throughout the world. Russia, potentially rich In Its practical monopoly of the rare metal, had already begun to mint its plat inum In a special form of. coinage, which called for high' values In small weight and compass. Weight for weight, the value fcf these coins was midway between those In silver andgold. a very useful compromise for small pieceslike a 5-ruble coin, which, worth I2.55V4 In American money, would be a cumbersome cart wheel in silver, smaller than a losable dime In gold. But the platinum, worth then about one-fourth its weight In gold, gave a coin between a quarter and a half dollar, with legal tender value slightly above $2.50 almost Ideal in Its relation between bulk and, purchasing power. Any one today who happens to have Ave rubles In .platinum, minted on the basis of ten or fifteen years ago, possesses an Intrinsic cash asset of about $23. The Increase has been nearly 900 per cent Gold now Is worth $20 to $21 per ounce troy; platinum is quoted at $66 to $S7 per ounce, almost three times as much. Yet the world's output has multiplied in direct s proportion to the enhancement of the value, a remark able phenomenon, an.d In surprising defiance of the : rule that Increased quantities are attended by lessened values. Russia n'y ,donl hn''i'fhli ,! ptinun?sprlce "single" notch higSer'during its brief history of leaping values. It Is on the sound, unfail ing basis of supply and demand,- with tfce demand " steadily so fs!r ahead bt the increased supply that the clamoring world is rwtlllng to pay always higher rates to get its coveted slender quota. la the United States alone,- as estimated, by leading Setnt, or jfurntner Camp of rie. SUGGESTIONS TO BIG SISTERS Don't patronlza. Tou may know mor about virtu, but tht girl It probiblr a bttr xprt on .tamputloa X , Call on the girl la her nemo. Tou cannot anter Into real " rmpathy wUh her until you know tht lift. tht tht air aha breather Vet acquainted with her fathei and mother. Tn battla ' It half won when you have gained the aonfldenea ot tha parents. By coming to know the family rou aaa often how them how to help tht girl, and yoa help them, too. Bee what ran be don to Improvo home condition. Tha lack of real horn Ufa' la generally tht oanaa ot tbt glrl'a troubla. -. ..- t If the girl la not In arhool or at work, the flrat thing t do la to get her back Into tcbool, If poelbl., A Big Slater -can do wonder In arouelng a girl' ambition. If tht family ned her help, get her a petition l good turroundlnga. ' Find ant where the girl tpenda her crenlnga. Voet el them pend them In the ttreet. It It your buatntag to provide a better place more attraetlra, not to yoa. but to tha girl. ; . W"' W B latereatej In a glrl'a miereata. Take her to ft tonoarl ; !4 ' r- tr to a good, clean thow. Try to eneouragt tht habit of reading; gtva or loan htr a book ot magaslaa. -wjf When you have learned to know the girl, have hair charqh or settlement elub, or place her lit a T. W. C. A. educational claM. Find out whether ha attends Sunday tohool or church, -and take her with yon to your own. . " Invite her to your own home, and make her feel that she Is welcome. It will ptrhaps be a ntw revelation of "homo" to her. ., , Get her to writ to ytra eaee to er-whller aard-arways-aniwer promptly. - :. If you are away from town daring the summer, keep, to touch with her and aea that b get a few weeks' vacation In tha country. -' : Above alt remember that you art a BIO SLSTXH. and . bt patient rympathetlo and tactful. - ' - ' . Do It MOW. Now la tho critical Uma when tha girl seeds help. If you believe that a girl unaided eanae always ever com tho tendency ot unfortunatt environments, ef be happy and good without 'the thing which mak for happlneaa and goodneaa, you concur tn the Big Bute Jatt oae thin more, pieaio report occasionally the eon anion anil progress ot the girl or family under you guidance. " ;r them gave 11000 "torioms BdrsesVcdwsTTjfts "n chlikens to put on It Another added 84000 to provtd' lor-a -well, a "topograpWiar lUrvey lhal'may: oe'lh forerunner of a manual training school, and the lika." It was on April 24, 1911, that the first boy went t the farm. In the person of Bill. A capable superln tendent In the person of Edward MacDonald, a grad uate at Good Will Farm, Hinckley, Me., was secured but, even with his salary and that of a farmer, th cost of maintaining twenty boys at the place for oji year does not exceed f 5000. For $175 one lad can b assured ot a comfortable home for a twelvemonth i For the city boys tho several summer camps affor Ideal outings, and the good they do may be lnferre from the fact that the lads gain from three to aixt pounds during their outings of from two to eight wek The principal camps are at Groton, Mass., and la .Dele ware county. New York. , Jewelers, we now use 6000 ounces tor ornameo' formerly made exolusively of gold; and only conjee ture can surmise how much greater la the utlllsatl of the newly precious metal In the manufacture Incandescent lamps and crucibles for laborato purposes, where It Is employed extensively because i its Immunity against acids. , . ,f4 Of course, no monetary expert would dream 4i ing a platinum standard of coinage under existlr. conditions, notwithstanding shrewd Russia's promt employment of the output of its own mines for thu very use. The drawback Is platinum's , relatlv scarcity. It takes now more than $6)0,000,000 tn gol ' for the specie circulation of the United States alon 1 and all the platinum mined in the world wouldn't e our millionaires have more than a small 'pocket piece each to play with, if this Country were to mak it the standard medium of exchange. But th astounding rise in Its intrinsic value, combined wit the fact that It Is indispensable in' so important a Industry as electrio lighting, may bring about explo rations for deposits, and improvements In methods c extraction, which, combined, could possibly furals volume enough to meet the exigencies of the world. coinage. IDEAL FOR DIAMONDS Meanwhile, jewelry has been absolutely 4omlnat by the pallid stranger, first because it is now so valu able, and, next, because goldsmiths, who sr artist after all, have found in platinum their ideal frart. for the diamond, king of gems. Two-thirds of all t; more pretentious diamond settings now manufactui. in the United States are In pure platinum; and gold, 1 that supremely important field, Is now nearly as se lected as silver. The Jewelers' reason Is that the c-. mond calls for a neutral-color background to set for: its brilliancy to perfection. Years ago that .one so' slderation led to the extensive use of sliver In pr erence to gold for diamond settings. But It was tu; ;that silver would Insist on tarnishing, and at lent:' gold, undesirable as it was, became the main - - pendente -of the craft- . "VV' ' .V If will go to Europe snd study the !tl'. Jewelry put out there -you wilt find that it Urni almost like the old sllvsr, wbldii antiquarians trea., ae aiamyl-n i tt fa?-i-h-r--dl;dJ j.. value for the sake of assuring a white beKi-u. the proud diamond. That la because the United . is the only country which demand it pUuouM ; best, free from the alloys which. In ;Curopen t debase the platinum settings until If' f guarantee of giving ths perfect gervlce t!iir t ' mands of them i "v