CITY COURI MAGAZINE SECTION. OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, ,1905. PAGES 1 TO 4. OREGON HOME OF WASHINGTON. HOW WOMEN PAVED THE WAT FORRESTORA TION OFMT. VERNON Historic Place Is Now Exactly as it Looked During the Lifetime of Great Statesman-General -Thous- i ands Visit It Annually. The bell Is lolling, the band playing "Nearer My God to Thee" and the passengers know, even before they raise their eyes to the fair sweep of Virginia's shore line, that the steamer is passing Mount Vernon. A pretty custom the tolling of the bell and the playing of the fine old hymn. A hush falls on the crowded decks, and ope " !;! ;! if. V WASHINGTON AND LAFAYETTE. From a Painting at Mount Vernon. feels the thrill of patriotism stirring the hearts of the people. But do the thousands who annually sail down the Potomac to visit the stately home of George Washington know that to a woman's initiative is due the restoration and preservation of the beautiful Mount Vernon of to-day? Away back in 1853 this home was in a rapidly deteriorating condition. John Augustine Washington, a son of Gen eral Washington's nephew, was the owner of the estate. The descendants of Washington evidently did not inherit the clear business sense of their illus trious ancestor, for in General Wash ington's time the farm yielded a hand some income. Now the fields were ly- for future generations this home of Cueral George Washington. In this connection it is interesting to know that during the ten-day annual meet of the Board of Regents in the month of May, a banquet is given to the Governor of Virginia. After the feast is ended and the toasts are drunk, the entire association conduct the Gov ernor about the house and grounds, that he may know, by personal observa tion, that the pact entered Into so long ago is being faithfully kept. It Is the custom of the ladles of the association to live at Mount Vernon during the yearly session. At this time the old home wears an air of un wonted gaiety. The kitchen gives out the most appetizing odors, and, stimu lated to unusual activity by tales of the old days, the corp of Virginia servants are anxious to show their fitness for the honor of "servin' de ladies." Even the brick oven, a relic of colonial days, Is called into use, the beautifully browned bread, pies and cakes attest ing its 'superiority. Thirty States Represented. The Mount Vernon Ladies' Associa tion is a most exclusive body. It is composed of a regent, who is president of the association, and a vice-regent from each of the States of the Union. Thirty States are now represented. The women are justly proud of the work that has been and is being accom plished, and so value their places in the council that it has become a cus tom for the office of vice-regent to de scend from mother to daughter or other near relative. When a vacancy occurs in the council the Governor of the State is invited to nominate some prominent woman; but should the name not receive the favorable consid eration of the regent and vice-regents no appointment is made until one ac ceptable to all is proposed. Miss Cunningham, the first regent, lived at Mount Vernon from 1868 to 1873, when she resigned on account of ill health. She died the following year. The present regent is Mrs. Jus tine Van Kennseiaer xownsena, or jnbw York. . During the Civil War, though in the verr midst of the conflict, Mount ver non en.a;'ed serious injury. This was mainly due to the heroism of Miss Tracy, the secretary of tne association, who took up her abode at Mount Ver- STEM INDUSTRIAL CRASH. STANDARD OIL MAGNATE PRE DICTS CRISIS AND SUGGESTS PAllATIVE MEASURES. Wn..IH H.iip Nntlnn Retrln Work Of lnet intprAnl Improvements. Ex Meiine of France Also Sounds Warning. J, H. SHANNON. That the land is the source of all real wealth, has been said by philoso phers time out of mind, and now with the urban districts draining irom xue country much of the flower of its man hood the cry is going up from the lips of legions of wise men, "Back to the Land!" All manner of colonization projects are being devised and tried for the purpose of diverting foreign immigration 'from the cities to fields and to relieve the pressure of conges tion in the over-grown centers.One !n which I jV: - 7: : . 1 Lived. u -- - i vr . . 1 I IK-, .--.....- vi. imiiiw miii. 'mat mmmttuitr Vlln -I onse The Kitchen as it was a Hundred Ypars ing unfilled and useless, and the house and outbuildings were showing signs of the passing of the years. The glory of that splendid home was departing. A Woman's Work. To the great credit of John Augus tine Washington it is related that he refused absolutely to consider proposi tions advanced by private companies and individuals to purchase the estate, to be converted later into a pleasure resort. Think of the desecration a vaudeville performance on that magni ficent stretch of lawn, waiters bearing their burdens of food and drink through those stately halls, the daily uproar of irreverent crowds. And then came Miss Ann Pamela Cunningham, of South Carolina. She - visited Mount Vernon in 1853 and was shocked and grieved at the fate in store for the historic spot. She con ceived the plan of rousing the women of her beloved southland to the true state of affairs and enlisting their co operation in the raising of a fund of $200,000, the price asked for the house outbuildings, wharfage, garden and some two hundred acies of farmlands. So she went to work, and it must be remembered that fifty years ago it took nos small amount of bravery for a woman to inaugurate and carryon a undertaking of such magnitude! Bu' after five years of effort the whol of the $200,000 was in hand. It wa found impracticable to confine the propaganda to the Southern States, so the North was invited to assist, which she did in generous measure. At the close of 1858 the Mount Ver non estate was purchased and the tit'e passed to the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association of the Union. Freed from Taxation. A charter was secured from the State of Virginia, granting exemption from taxation, the association in return binding itself to the task of restoring to its original condition and preserving non, accompanied by only a few serv ants. Miss Cunningham, the regent, was prohibited from crossing the mili tary lines and could not join her. For four long years Miss Tracy remained at the lonely home, managing the estate and guarding the buildings. The plan of the rehabilitation of Mount Vernon, by returning to its rooms the original furnishings, or arti- I :f ' si fi5a:i''.'.l'' ire J. D. ROCKEFELLER AND HIS NEW WIG. feature of the ominous flow of people to the cities is the phenomenal develop ment of manufactures. There may come a time when manufactures will so overbalance agriculture that there will not be enough basic wealth pro duced to afford a profitable market fori fllie factory-mnde goods. Wlien the industrial situation shall become so unbalanced, a commercial crash of stupendous magnitude must ensue. As Helpless Babes. Then the . city-trained men who know not how to make bread-out of the soil will clamor for work, curse the economic condition of the period, denounce the state, threaten the re public with nil sorts of fantastic theo- les, and there will be acute friction between the few rich and the multi tude of poor. Gradually men will drift back to the land and learn to make their living with the plow and reaper and a sntlsfactory equilibrium between agriculture and manufactures will once more be reached. Before this result is attained, there wil! be intense suffering. Families that are in comfortable circumstances will know the meaning of misery, and families now affluent will full into beggary. All this is not a dream. Men of clearest vision see it coming. Rockefeller's Prophecy of Panic It is what Mr. John D. Rockefeller sees when he predicts, as he did in a recent interview "an industrial crisis of world-wide extent and unprece dented severity." Mr. Rockefeller says the' crisis will be brought on by overproduction in all lines. The Standard Oil magnate f f -( ' I I I J . ' r impends will be precipitated by over production of manufactured goods. He snys "Consumption must have Its bounds, and so with the consumption of manufactured articles. When la man has filled all bis requirements in clothea and furniture a mere lowering of prices, which is all that mechanical improvements generally mean nowa days, can no longer attract him. Therefore, when the output is not re strained the market necessarily . be comes choked." Mr. Rockefeller is specific as to the time when the crash is to occur. It Is likely that he errs iiuthis, because pre dictions as to periods of depression and readjustment are seldom fulfilled as to dates. Crises as a rule come un expected and the immediate reason is most apt to be due to over-expansion of credit, and overproduction of secur ities than to actual overproduction of goods; but when to the cause of over expanded credits is added overproduc tion ef manufactures - and a lop-sided industrial system, recovering from the crash 1b more difficult Day of Distress Near. The richest man in America is posi tive, however, that the crash will come about 1907 year after next and so sure is he that the trouble is on its way, that he is already weaving a plan to provide work for those who will be thrown out of employment. and thus ameliorate the panic. lie is certain 'that the number of men who will need help will be about 7,000, 000, and when is added to those men the number of dependents, the total is ap palling. Mr. 'Rockefeller thinks this vast army of unemployed should be set to work by the government on in ternal improvements, the building of new roads, improvement of old ones. dredging of streams, irrliratlncr In nil. etc. He ays; Vast Plan of Construction. "There is pnoneh labor todnr npodprl on the public highways to employ all tne iaie or surplus moor ror a century. The improvement of the roads, the dredoiiiK streams, and esnocinllv nf the Mississippi, where annually mill ions oi aamage is oone oy tne over flow, the irrigation of nrid lnnris. thn preservation of forests and thf drnin. age of the swamps are the great pub lic promems tnat snouid be occupying the public mind. Municipal, state and national laws should be enacted now for the building of roads, so that when the industrial storm comes it will not be too late to breast it" Q THE TARIFF PROBLEM. REVISION AND ANTI-REVISION SENTIMENTS IN WASHINGTON. Speaker Cannon between Two Fires Question to be a Live One During the Next Session of Congress. It is rather amusing to those who are on the Inside of the political arena in Washington to observe the manner In which discussions of the tariff are conducted throughout the country. In an academic way the theories of the tariff are talked over. But to the men on whom the real work of revising the tariff would devolve there are very dif ferent considerations to Influence them. They openly declare that the tariff ought to be revised, but they say the danger to business interests would be so great that they fear undertaking it They insist that a struggle over the schedules would last six months, and that during that time the business in terests would be suffering stagnation that would afflict the country very sorely. This view Is scouted by the revision ists as one that has no standing with men who believe In doing things. They claim that if such considerations are to prevail there never could be a re vision of the tariff. i So Easy To Revise. Not long ago the difficulties In agreeing upon changes in the Dingley over the revision of the tariff. He de clared that it would be an easy job As Simple as Can Be. "What would you do . with th tariff?" he was asked. "Why," he replied, "It's as simple a can be. AH you have to do is to lower the tariff on woolen goods and to maka a big reduction In the shoe schedules. Practically that would satisfy every one, and if you did no more the coun try would be pleased." The Illinois representative was In formed that he had been preceded by a member from Massachusetts who thought that all that would be neces sary would lie to put coal, hides and wool on the free list "Hides on the free list!" exclaimed the Illinois speaker. "Not while I have the strength to stay here to fight it." "Now you see what an easy thing It Is to revise the tariff." said the speaker "If I was God," again remarked the speaker in his quaint style, "I would make some changes In the tariff. I would put them Into effect before any body knew what they were to be made. Then there would be no unsettling of business and at least some people would be happy." Question an Absorbing One. What alarms so nwuiy prominent protectionists Is whnt they claim 1 the danger of unsettling the business conditions of the country. The the oretical adjustment of the tariff ac cording to the principles of protecttoft PV. w, From the WashlngtonPosf "Ordinarily my experience has been that bears were not greatly flur ried when I suddenly came upon them." Theodore Roosevelt in Scribe tier s for October. OLD FASHIONED GARDEN' AT MOUNT VERNON. cles similar in design and construction, is generally understood. But every woman should know and remember that to the loyal, patriotic women of the land belongs the credit of saving from ruin and obliteration the fine old home of the Father of his country. does not stand alone as a prophet of impending evil. Essentially the same prediction Is made by Senator Jules Melinc, once premier of France, and a man of keen perception, penetration and of broad understanding. This etateman says that the crisis which JULES MELINE, It makes no difference whether Mr. Rockefeller be, right or wrong in his forecast of a gathering storm, his plan for the employment of surplus labor i3 a practical and profitable one and ins enumeration of road building, riv er improvement irrigation, forest pres ervation vand swamp draining, as the truly great national problems is phil osophic. The work needs to be done, and eventunlly 1t must be done, if the United States Is to progress. Waste Is national loss waste by flood and drought as well a? wnste by fire. Every acre of land should be made to pay. The government promotes re search and experimentation in agri culture, with a view to increasing the effectiveness of tillage; there is no reason why it should not give counte nance and support to reclamation of and and the enchancement of the fer tility of land already under culture. It is the land the farm, which is the pedestal of the republic. There should be no effort to mini mize the worth of manufactures- processes that work up the raw prod ucts of the earth into serviceable forms. The ores from which are ob tained the metals of commerce are as much a product of the land as corn, wheat and cotton not as Drlmarilv Important, but quite as necessary to man In his present hlchly organized socinl state. It is difficult to draw 'the line between some of the basic manufactures and agriculture, for the Iron furnaces and steel mills build the railroads and bridges which give farmers a short-cut to markets. French Statesman Also Predicts Panic. But the point is, that where manu factures develop out of proportion to the growth cf agriculture, the world Is being turned wrong side up. Mr. Meiine In declaring that the overpro duction of manufactures will lead to an industrial crash, says; "There Is room for everyone under the sun, but on condition of sharing up the good things of the earth, instead of concen trating upon one department of activity." schedules were Illustrated by rep esentatives who called on Speaker Cannon. It happened that one day a prominent Massachusetts member called to Impress the speaker with the easy manner in which the tariff might be revised. "You Bee," declared the Massachu setts member, "we all make too much over the difficulties in revising the tariff. It would really be very sim ple. We would only have to put hides, wool and coal on the free list and the country would Ibe practically satisfied. We might do more, but that would really be enough. There could be no difficulty in coining to an agreement on that merely a matter of a few weeks." The speaker listened Intently" as he always does listen to advice. ' But trailing on the heels of the Massachu setts member came a representative from Illinois who also wanted to re vise the tariff. He started in the same ns his predecessor. He thought there was altogether too much fuss made is having very little effect on them. In fact the protectionists do not even care to discuss that phase of the ques tion. A revision of the tariff with the declared purpose to simply lower the schedules they say would have the same effect on the country that they claim would follow an attack on the tariff principles by the free-trad--ors. They claim that merchants would not buy goods when lower tariff rates might still further reduce the price they would have to pay. That condi tions lasting six months they fear would upset all business conditions. They sny It might mean panic But they are likely to have their views very forcibly contested by the tariff revslonlsts next winter. The re vlsionlstsfind the men who believe In the principles of reciprocity are band ing together to give battle in the halls of Congress. The citadel is now dis tinctly iu the control of the stand pat ters and It Is to be seen what power the revisionists will develop in contest ing their ascendancy. Every reader of this paper should have this book. Cut off the coupon and mail to us with $i.$o. By' Eugene P. Lyle, Jr. Published August 1st Illustrated by Ernest Haskell The 18TH THOUSAND ' ALREADY ' All Bookstores, 1.50 Missourian The romantic adventure, of John Dinwiddle Drlscoll (nicknamed "The Storm Centre at the Court of Maximilian In Mexico, where his secret mission comes into conflict with that of the beautiful Jacqueline. The best romantic American novel of re cent years. "Ha$ what to few of it clrtu potiett, the element of reality', wrought by infinite paint of detail, veriitmiltude,tuggetion." St. Louis Republic. "A remarKable flr$t book, of epic breadth, carried through vn- K , twervingly. DOtJBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. 133-137 Et 16th St, New York. s A brilliant ttory." N. Y. Times Saturday Review. JTA, . "js- cP "There it no more dramatic period in hittory, and the ZoV dk &y . ttory bean every evidence of careful and painstaking a.Jc "jP .d.-N. Y. Globe. yJK&J S' , a '.frtw