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Omaha Barkalow Bros.. 1612 Farnham; Maseath Stationery Co.. 130S Farnham; McLaughlin Bros.. 240 South 14th. ' Phoenix. Ariz. The Berryhlll News Co. Sacramento, Cat Sacramento News Co., 42 K street. Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co.. West Second street South. Santa. Barbara. CaU S. Smith. San Diego, Cal. J. Dillard. San Francisco J. K. Cooper Co.. Market street; Foster & Crear. Ferry News Stand. Goldsmith Bros.. 230 Sutter; L. E. le. Talace Hotel News Stand; F. W. Pitts. 100S Market; Frank Scott. SO Ellis; N. Wheatlej- Movable News Stand, corner Mar ket and Kearney streets; Hotel St. Francis News Stand. St. Louis. Mo. E. T. Jett Book & News Company. 800 Olive street. Vfanhlnston. D. C. Ebblt House News Stand. PORTLAND. TUESDAY. MAY 8. 1905. FRUITS OF THE DIRECT PRIMARY. It seems to be agreed all around that the election last Saturday was neither a fair nor a satisfactory test ot the di rect primary. The vote was light, scarcely more than a third of the quali fied electors of Portland having, regis tered. Public interest -was languid. Pos sibly the voter did not feel that there was any crucial issue to be determined. Or possibly he did not enjoy so much as he once thought he might the novelty of taking over from the bosses the party machinery into his own hands. Or possibly he could see no great difference between the candidates themselves. Whatever the matter was, at least two-thirds of the voters of the city remained away from the primary. and permitted the remaining fraction to settle all questions. The great merit of the late primary seems to have been that everybody had an equal show, knew It, took advantage of It, and ran for office. There were good candidates and bad. Some good candidates were beaten, and some bad candidates were, it may be feared, successful. There was no power of selection beforehand. no intelli gent and discriminating." judgment on the part of some unseen tri bunal that this man could, and that man could not, stand for a nomination. The Republican ticket represents the collective desire of 8000 sovereign vot ers, instead of the individual decision of some boss and his kitchen cabinet. It Is hardly worth while to speculate 011 what the Democratic ticket represents, inasmuch as anybody could get a Dem ocratic nomination under the old sys tem and anybody can do, and has done, the same, under the new. The fault is not with the method. It is with the Democracy. "We hear from various quarters that the Republican machine did exert Its Influence in the primary and that It was more or less potent. But iro one seems to blame the machine If there was a machine or to feel that respon sibility for results can be placed any where but with the voters themselves. It is not to be supposed that any or ganization, accustomed to control the destiny of parties and .the fortunes of candidates, would supinely surrender and permit without a protest even the sovereign voter to place foot on its neck. But there are machines and ma chines, even in a direct primary. Thus ie find that every candidate from Mayor down to Councilman had a ma chine of his own, some big, some little. Some of these machines-pulled together, some .pulled apart. No fault will be found with any individual for promot ing his own candidacy "by organization, by advertisement, by systematic solici tation for votes. Indeed, he must and he should do It. The primary has prac tically abolished "the party platform. The public wants to know who the can didate is. who his friends are. and what Interests he represents, openly or se cretly. How can all this be.learned un less the candidates tell about both themselves and one another? The candidates last week spent money, some of them freely, on them selves, Instead of submitting to a cam paign assessment from a party organi zation and permitting It td be disbursed. In ways more or less subterranean, in places where It would do the most good. The expenditure was entirely legiti mate, or at least it was not corrupt. So. indeed, may the use of money by a party organization at a primary be Justifiable and necessary. So far as anybody on the outside knows, then, no money was expended improperly- last Saturday, either by candidates or by any organization. If the direct primary shall have worked that reform. It will at least have improved the morale of our politics; and that Is much. The defects in the direct primary sys tem were pointed out by a fine galaxy of our hest political talent In The Ore gonlan yesterday. The able publicists who have for some years been lampoon ing the boss and launching jeremiads against the machine seemed to think the law Is all O. K-; other disinterested citizens were not so sure about it. A few things were obvious to all. The size of the vote was disappointing. The "moral forces", were not aufftciently alive. The secret ballot Is a good thing; a fair count is another good thing. Everybody had a -show. The "newspa pers did not run things, as some had feared. Organization may be as valua ble Jn a primary as in a convention. If any fault was to be found at all. It was with the people,' and not with 'the law, -which cannot be self-acting. It th'ere were other advantages or de fects In the law. they were not indi cated by Its friends; Its enemies have nothing to say. But we can Imagine they, have as lively and intelligent an interest in the law's operation as Its supporters. The boss no doubt we shall have always -with us. If there is a way to control the action of the direct pri mary, he will find it. That xnaycbe de pended on. No real boss Is easily discouraged. MISDIRECTED UNIONISM. A local illustration of the iniquities of misdirected unionism is afforded in the case of the British steamship Ferndene, now lying idle under heavy expense in this city. The union grainhandlers who are employed by the men that own the cargo and the dock from which It Is to be shipped, in accordance with the wishes of their employers, attempted to truck the cargo from the warehouse to the "ship's tackle." This the union longshoremen, who stow the cargo on board the ship, will not permit, claiming for themselves the work of trucking across the warehouse, inspired wun the belief that they can handle their own business in a manner which best suits themselves, the shippers reserve the right to give the trucking In the warehouse to whomsoever they see fit. Exercise of this right Is resented by the union longshoremen, and as a result we are afforded the spectacle of union labor fighting union labor, and the men who pay the bills are powerless to help themselves. The charter of the Ferndene contains the usual "strike clause." and the ex pense of the delay accordingly falls on her owners. She Is a large vessel, and the loss thus occasioned amounts to about ?400 per day. For the Immediate present this loss will fall .on the owners. but In the long run It will fall on the port of Portland. The owners of the Ferndene have a large number of steamers plying to various parts of the world, and there is business enough of fering to enable them to be in a meas ure independent of a port where union labor lighting union labor causes a heavy daily loss to a disinterested party many thousand miles away. Portland, for these steamers, will in the future be a port of last resort, and the city as a whole will suffer on account of the work of a handful of men whose Inter est In the city Is slight Indeed in com parison with that of the commercial and financial interests which are being injured by their high-handed claims to the right to handle a shipper's business in a manner satisfactory to the union and not to the shipper. It seems hardly probable that the bet tcr element of the union longshoremen will sancti6n this Interference with the rights of shippers, for, if it is contin ued, It will In time compel the shippers to do what employers have done in many cities In the East that is. Join hands for self-protection, and make It possible for ' any man who can do a day's work for a day's pay to get work without a union card. The business Interests of this community aTe not -averse to union labor. They have no quarrel with the unions, and accept the wage scale uncomplainingly; but when union labor becomes so strong-headed and unreasoning that it essays to dic tate to the employer of labor Just -which particular kind of a union card such la bor shall wear, the situation becomes exasperating and cannot last long. Every obstruction that Is thrown in the way of shipping at this port Is det rlmental to our best Interests Jn all lines of trade, and we have enough to contend with in competition with neighboring ports without the necessity of creating any such artificial grlev ances as have caused the expensive tie- un of the Ferndene. This Interference with individual liberty and denial of the right of a shipper to conduct his own business as he sees fit can meet with but one result, and that is defeat for thbse who usurp a power to which they are not entitled. AN UNSEEMLY SPECTACLE. The spectacle presented by a funeral procession headed by a brass band, bearing to a felon's grave the body of- a murderer who had suffered the extreme penalfy of the law. is not one -which law-abiding citizens can be expected, to regard complacently. More plainly speaking. It Is one of which any self respecting communjty should he ashamed. Its repetition should not be permitted in any city of this state. Something less than a year ago a most coldblooded murder of the erratic type was committed in this city. A young Italian, a nard drinker and a do-naught, shot and killed a young girl whom he claimed as his sweetheart. This claim she, under the direction of her father, refused to allow. Owing to some Irregularity In the complaint or lndlctmentor arraignment, or what not, of the "Prosecuting Attorney, the case of this murderer was bitterly contested and a stay of penalty resulted, covering some months, while lawyers haggled over technicalities and sympathy of the ebullient type sprang up among the murderer's countrymen. The legal bat tle was finally fought to a finish. Every expedient known to men whose purpose is to Juggle with law to de. feat justice was worked and exhausted, and finally, last Friday, proper penalty was inflicted upon the murderer. The incident should have closed In the burial of the body of Frank Gugllelmo In the prison yard, with such simple rites as the creed that he professed provides.' This is not a matter which should be left to the decision of effervescent sym pathy that Is characteristic of 'unrea soning minds. A grave -crime the graves known to civilized life had been, committed. Passion, roused to frenzy by drink, was all that could be urged in Its extenuation. What sort of 'an example has been set to the ex citable countrymen of this man those on his own plane of life and habit and impulse by the great ado that was made In the attempt to delay and thwart justice In his case, and by the final pomp with which he was borne to the grave? Has not the effect been to laud him as a martyr? As a "poor fel low" more sinned against than sinning? As a helpless creature against whom society had lifted a red hand? As a man who was hounded to the scaffold by Implacable cruelty, rather than a criminal sent to it by the calm and Just decree of violated law? Perhaps under the law as It exists there was ,no way to .-prevent this un-ce-ply display -"upon the streets of Portland last Sunday. If thie Is true, a i way should. le made atth-e first Por- J tunlty, using this caricature of jutlce ' as an object-lesson, for that purpose- There is no excuse in rational sympa thy for making a hero of a murderer. BIRDS IN THEIR LITTLE NESTS. Countless are .the schools of medicine. and to the myriad must now be added yet another, the Seattle school. This particular school, however. Is not' -distinguished by any peculiar .beliefs re garding diseases and their treatment, so much as by its conception of the ethics guiding professional conduct In affairs of a more social nature than. say. an operation for appendicitis. When Port land requested Washington physicians to subscribe to the fund for the enter tainment of visitors during the sessions of the American Medical Congress, the Seattle medicos grew very angry, and now that they have been informed that their subscriptions are not needed, the Seattle men. It appears, are angrier than ever, and "will in all probability refuse to attend the congress," the Times says. The public is not unaccustomed to see lively tilts between representatives of different schools, but In matters affecting the medical profession as whole its members usually present a united front and maintain the dignity of an honorable calling. Here, how ever, is a piece of "we won't play In your yard, we don't love you any more" business that makes the public think of pouting and unspanked chil dren. The congress Is a National affair, Washington physicians have been espe cially Invited to attend, and their sub scriptions are not needed, but they sulk, probably for no reason known to themselves even, but because they just feel like sulking. It cannot be. how ever, that this attitude is maintained by all the Seattle members of the pro fession, or indeed by the majority. There are probably some "kickers" who make a noise out of proportion to their weight. The only way to quiet these would be to have the congress meet -In Seattle, be managed by the sulkers themselves and financed by Portland. THE STATE CENSUS. Here is something that all parties in Oregon. Republicans, Democrats, Pop ulists. Prohibitionists, open-town. closed-town people every one can join In, and will be very foolish not to Join in. This numbering of the people Is not ordered to support any one man's pride or vainglory. No risk is attached to it. Just a good, common-sense jiropasitlon for all. If law Is needed for It, there It Is to Justify it, and. every good citizen, young and old. Is bound to take Inter est enough to see that his or her name goes down In th enumerator's book. Estimates of the result are wide enough apart to make It Interesting for any who may be speculatively inclined. There are no knowing ones to get ahead of their fellows. Some think Ore gon's rate of recent increase is better than Washington's. Our neighbors on Puget Sound scoff at the notion. The farmer will get a longer price the better settled Is his district. Town and coun try alike refuse to accept the idea of race suicide In Oregqn, place and peo ple are too healthy in body and mind for that. Figures will test that, among many other things. Each city and town wants to show that Its pretensions to growth are better founded than Its neighbor's. As for Portland, much is at stake. On population, and especially on rate of Increase, depends whether many of this year's visitors, seeking new homes, new business, will decide to stay, or pass on from us to pastures new. On such action hangs the verdict -whether the Fair Is to be blessing or Injury to us. Stuffing and padding returns has been heard of before of course not in Ore gon. What we want is the truth, but the whole truth. Ready response on the part of the people will make the census-taker's work easy and rapid Then let all help. One more point: Many believe that Oregon Is entitled to another Congress man. Let us put ourselves In the way to secure one.t Much may hang on that. This Is one of the times when just nurp- bers count, not character, or acquire ments. or possessions. Therefore; again. let us all see to It that every one Is counted. DRUNKENNESS IN MINORS. It is gratifying to note the successful prosecution in Corvallls of two men for giving liquor to a minor. The shocking result of debauching a lad with liquor was witnessed in the Agricultural Col lege town a few years ago, in the Geath of the intoxicated boy while resisting arrest, and that of the Town Marshal while In pursuit of his official duty In the premises. One lesson of this kind should suffice for Corvallls for many years. If not Indefinitely. The prosecu tion above noted indicates that it is still remembered by the Prosecuting Attor ney, at least. If the law covering cases of this kind was relentlessly enforced, we might reasonably hope to have an end of drunken minors on village streets', and of the recruiting of jails and the state's prison froni the ranks of young men of eighteen and twenty. This Is a phase of vice that can be controlled and prac tically stamped out. To doubt this Is to assume or admit that men In author lty In the community cannot control Us boys. The lesson of the "old farmer and his apple tree" is in evidence here. Find ing that "neither words nor grass' would cause the predatory lads to aban don their purpose of stealing his fruit the determined farmer "tried what vlr tue there was in stones," whereupon they speedily "came down from the tree andbegged the old man's pardon." This lesson of force, properly and In good time, applied, is one that parents and others in authority might recall rwlth profit to the community and the rising generation. There Is enough latent power In parental vigilance and law to put a stop to drunkenness in minors. All that Is needed Is to put jt In effect. The weekly wheat statistics, which appeared yesterday, were all favorable to higher prices, and the Chicago mar ket responded on both the July and Sep tember options. TThe American visible showed a decrease of 2.194,000 bushels, the total now standing at 26,335,000 bushels, the smallest amount at any correspondlhg date since the Letter deal In 1S9S. when it shrank to 22,528,000 bushels. World's shlpriients were prac tlcally unchanged, but quantities on -passage decreased more than 1.000.000 bushels. These bullish features may result "in strengthening the market until the arrival of new-crop wheat, but -crop condition at home and abroad arc- too good to warrant continuance of presqnt high prices for wheat .Krpe-)t for more -than a year secured j)racUcaJiyau of the supplies needed from countrie which were eager to sell at prices frera 19 to 39 cents per bushel lower than the Ullng quotations in this country. -The surplus this year and there sarely will be a surplus must accordingly be mar keted In competition with wheat from the Argentine, India andRussIa. where, regardless of price, the crop is always marketed as soon after, harvest as pos sible. A five-foot specimen pf the Columbia River sturgeon, an almost extinct spe cies of our food fishes, was caught near Falrvlew a few days ago. A dozen years ago the capture of a whole car load of monster .sturgeon w.ould not. have attracted attention, but the al most criminal wastefulness of man has so nearly exterminated the now valu able species that the catch of a large t one Is an event of considerable Interest. J jn iisn. game, ana even in lorest. prod ucts we have been taking entirely- too great an advantage of the prodigality of nature, and some of our bird, animal and fish families have already been practically exterminated and the loss can never be made good. Before It Is too late. It might be advisable for Colo nel Hawkins to secure a big sturgeon and have It mounted for future refer ence. Glowing reports of the favorable out look" for both fruit and grain are com ing from California, and a season of unusual prosperity Is predicted for our southern neighbors. This will be good news for all of us. We have, of course, enjoyed temporary advantages at the expense of California when a short crop in that state created an extra demand for Oregon' products, but the .Callfor nians are so close to us that their mis fortunes have at least a slight sympa thetic effect on all ot the Pacific jCoast States. There Is a good market for all of Oregon's products without the neces sity of unloading them on California, and we hope that the people of that state will this year have as much to sell as Oregon and Washington had last year. - An Aberdeen dispatch regarding the canning of Quinault salmon says hat reports from the East are to the effect that these flsh are finer than the Co lumbia River brand, and equal to the famous Puget Sound sockeye." The Quinaults are undoubtedly very palata ble fish, and may be equal to the Puget Sound sockeye, but the Aberdeen man who sent out the dispatch makes a strange assertion when he says they are finer than the Columbia River salmon. The royal chlnook, found only at Its best In the- Columbia River, is the -standard of excellence from which all other brands of salmon grade down ward, not upward. St. Johns is to have a bank, and there is every" reason'to believe -that. If prop erly conducted. It will be a profitable venture as well as a great convenience for the rapidly Increasing population of that thriving suburb of Portland. The size of the dinner-pail brigade is always an Indication of the degree of prosper ity that Is ehjoyed by a city, and, as St. Johns has a larger industrial army In proportion to its population than is In evidence in any other locality near Portland, the new banker Is In no dan ger of becoming lonesome. The second electrical railway to be completed under American colonial "ad ministration was finished in Manila April 10 The first was built In Ha vana in 1S99-1900. There are now forty miles of street railway In Manila a place of 200,000 Inhabitants. This- is a result of American occupation which very many of these people appreciate and which the most indifferent and stolid of the former subjects of Spain in that old-new city must regard with astonishment and a degree of satisfac tion. To all appearance the Chicago strike Is on the wane. The most that can be said is that It is . likely to cease. It cannot be held that it Is settled, or that It will be as long as professional agi tators are given the freedom of the city and spend their time and such talents. as they have cultivated In blowing a coal between labor and capital. Civil government is to be instituted in Manchuria by the Japanese, and the administrator of the province has al ready been selected. From this It ap pears that Japan has little Intention of asking China to step in and take pos session of the parlor from which the Russian spider has been chased. The dear public Is first of all a patient burden-bearer. Its prototype In the animal world Is the long-eared beast that Balaam rode. It kicks the air and brays the wind upon occasion but It bends Its back and plods on stupidly, even contentedly. Public tributes Sunday to the mem ory of Schiller In various cities of this country are but further evidence of the hold his work has on Christendom. Of Germany's great poet It may be said': "To live In the hearts of men Is not to die." Jt Is not often that a man who dies at the end of a rope has the post humous honor of a brass band at- the head of his funeral procession. There Is comfort In the thought that Gugllel mo "didn't enjoy the music. If the platforms" of the two Mayor alty candidates are to be respectively "what's right." we shall have to fall back on the one who can give the most satisfactory definition and interpreta tion of "what's right." A discriminating public will receive with undisguised satisfaction Nan Pat terson's decision not to go on the stage. But hold. May not her refusal to ac cept 31500 a week be only a clever press agent's yarn? Portland has no orders for the rail way conductors ot the United States as sembled today within her gates. They have a clear track wherever they wish to move, and are In no danger of collls- Ions. Mr. Merrill will not support Judge Williams; bat he would have been en thusiastic for Albee. So he says. Just where were the "moral forces" In the late campaign, anyway? Schiller celebrations show that the public .considers itself safe in honori-ng. a poet who" has Iseca- dead 1M years." Japan held that tfcere are two 31 nds of strict neutrality British and Freach. NOTE AfiDJOMMENT. ; One evil result from the President's hunting trip Is already apparent. A terrier called Skip Is being taken to Washington, and- Skip Is being "men tioned In dispatches" with appalling fre quency. If he keeps up hi3 popularity at the White House there will be a flood of stories about the dog, and Skip' will become as tiresome as Kermlt and Archie used to be. Young" Rockefeller Is too sick, to con duct his celebrated Bible class, so the scales that weigh the Rockefeller -good oecds against the bad will drop a little more to the bad end. The California woman who was en gaged for nearly It years, married for one year and Is now divorced, must have lost hcr sense of proportion, As the President emerges from the wilderness. Chicago quiets down. We hereby swear off r Nan Patterson. Pat 'Crowe. Equitable Hyde. Dr. 0ler. Lawson the Frenzied. RoJestvcn8k. John Sullivan. Hereafter each time any of these per sons is mentioned in this column we shall contribute 1 cent to some charitable or ganization. A girl likes to be surrounded by suitors, but the Sultan of Morocco probably feels just the other way about -it. French. British and German envoys are visiting him, not that they love the Sultan much, but hate each other more. And a girl gives but her hand, whereas the Sultan may quite possibly have to give his head. Mexico City is flowers; Chicago a having a battle of battle of brickbats. Dr. Chapman asks. "Are wages slavery?' Never mind If It Is. golden fetters are not ' so bad,' and nobody Is forced to accept wages against his will. Hcrreros have again checked the march of civilization in South Africa by killing a number of Germans who were trying to kill them. "At dinner the President win appear in the conventional frock." says an ac count, of the return oU the Roosevelt hunting party. So frock coats are con ventional at dinners In Colorado. Punch maintains its reputation by offer ing the British public this paragraph: There Is one kind of rat that -we never find deserting a sinking ship that is. not fn Rus sia. That Is the Autocrat. To which we respond. "Drat It." (See the joke "d rat It?") A Norwegian waiter, who works four days a week from S A. M. to 12:30 P. M carried a pedometer and found that he took almost lOT.WQ steps eacn day. He calculated, according " to the story, he walks more than 700) miles -a. year.'Prob ably he will now begin to And his work very tiring. The knowledge that 100,000 steps must be taken in a day is enough to quell the stoutest heart. Under the head of "Today's Amuse ments" the Anacoada Standard publishes the following list: Roosevelt AVild West Show. Positively last appearance this season. Togo "and Rojestvensky (216th consecutive performance) In "Never Touched Me." Spectacular and realistic diorama, "The Battle of Chicago." continuous performance. Hourly Hyde-Alexander .et-tos for the championship of the Equitable. Nan Patterson in "Durance Vile. Johann Hoch in "Is Multi-Marriage a Fait ure ?" Mae Wood in "Letters of Marque and Re prlsal." By the way. this must not be consid cred a violation of the "swear-off, higher In the column. A New York woman has just obtained a divorce from her seventh husband. She was married at H. IS. 21, 23, 24, 27 and 32. If she keeps up this lick she will be able to celebrate a- wedding anniversary every day in the year. Have you been "took?" not graphed, but censused. photo- It must be a great comfort -to the de parted Schiller to know that wreaths of flowers arc being placed upon his statues. Eggs ar,e classified as ncw-lald eggs, strictly fresh ranch eggs, fresh eggs and just plain eggs.. So there Is absolute neutrality, strict neutrality and just plain neutrality. Advertisers announce, their intentron ot putting up an "automatic clock." Jevver see a clock that wasn't, automatic? Some naval architect should design a battleship like a doughnut, so that all the straight shots would pass through harmlessly. Bombs are so common in Russia that we believe they must be used Instead of doorknobs for setting hens. WEX J. Essays or Little BoTjuIc Milwaukee Sentinel. POLICEMEN, policemen is men that wares brass but tons blue coats & says Move on. now, & every month thay go to git tbare pay at the city hall. -When I git big I think I will be a police man, all you have to do If you are a po liceman Is to stand on the corner or else help a pritty gurl across the street, then when It 13 nlte you walk along and'try all the doara on your beet, and if a burglar shoots you in the head when you are try ing the door the paper will print your picter and say A noble hero who died doing his duty. Sum times you git a chance to arrest a man that lias a jag. and if he has any munny maybe he will give you a nlsc tip for taking calr ot him, but of course you can't keep the Up. you give Jt back and say No, I am -nearly doing my duty. when thare is a great crime and every body wants to find out about It thay look In the paper and see what the police .are doing. The police doant always find the man, hut thay offer a big prize and sum other people And the man, and then every one says Its pretty hard to fool the police. our cheet Is the be"st policeman I know, he runs this town pritty slick, there Is no crime here hardly. & just think how near Chicago Is. too! I know our cheet pritty well. & It 1 ever git In trubbel he wont arrest me. will you. cheet? the first policeman was Cain, he took his club & told Abel to move on. and Abel said When I git reddy, & Cain -cracked his skull and said The law must be respeck- ted. then Adam came and said Whare Is Abel, and Cain said I doant know, and when he lied the Lord took away his star & told him to move on himself, and Cain kept moving on till he died. Mistook tho "Under Dog. Burlington Free Press. Chaplain Bradford, ot- Illinois, who prayed that President Roosevelt might be delivered out of the paw of the bear, evi dently docs not know the man. Chap lain Bradford should have prayed tar the bear. - CROWN PRINCE AND BETROTHED : c Character of German Emperor's Heir and t the- Dacfces Cecilia. Whom He Will Marry la Jane. Marquise de Fontenoy In Independent. Of nations It has often been asserted that those are happiest which have no history. The same may be said of princes, and that is why so little Is known abroad, or even at home, of the Kaiser's heir apparent. His Afe thus far has been singularly uneventful and has been sig nalized by none of those romances which too frequently, developing into scandals, play so Important a role In the annals of European royalty. For the tales ot his Infatuation for certain actresses owe their origin to the fertile Imagination ot the press agents ot these ladles, and equally- fanciful and groundless are the stories, widely circulated In America ac cording to which he Is said to have lost his heart to a young girl whom he met at a country house where he spent a single day -when In England. What with : his rank, his courteous, unaffected man ners, devoid of all self-consciousness, and even modest, and his sunny disposi tion, which causes him to look at the bright side of everything In life, he natu rally finds favor In the eyes of the wom en, to whom, young and old. his attitude In characterized by a sort of boyish chiv alry and deference, and he he lsbut 23 finds them all charming. But only two women can ever boast of having held his affections namely his mother, the Empress, whom he regarded as his feminine Ideal until he met the other. namely, his fiancee. Duchess Cecilia. Yet with all that he Is neither a milk sop nor a prig. Adept In all athletic sports, he Is as fond of mischievous pranks as most young fellows of his age. and has paid the penalty for them, when bo In the shape of spankings admin istered by the august yet muscular right hand of his imperial father, and since he has attained manhood, by "stubenar rest" that Is to say. confinement to his quarters. But the offenses for which he has been thus punished have been very trivial and of a character to attract rather than to prejudice people against the young Frince. consisting, as a rule, or some laughable practical joke or some daring and oven foolhardy equestrian feat. On one occasion- It was for riding his horse up and down a great flight ot marble stairs In the Park ot the Palace ot Sans-Souct at Potsdam, while at an other time It was for winning a race over the most dangerous steeplechase course in Germany. He Is passionately fond of horses, and possesses over them, as over dogs and other animals, a curious Influ ence, which enables him to teach them all sorts of tricks. Indeed, when still a boy, his trick ponies and dogs were the chief features of the very successful amateur circus entertainments which he was wont to give with his brothers and some young friends at Potsdam. Being a Hohenzollern and destined to Inherit at his father's death, along with the Imperial crown, the stipreme com mand of the German army, which In time of peace numbers half a million and In war no less than 3.000.000 highly trained soldiers, it Is needless to say that the Crown Prince is. like his father, grand father and great-grandfather, before everything els a soldier by inclination. tradition, -nd education. At present he is doing duty as Major of the magnificent regiment of the Gardes du Corps at Potsdnm. being very popular with both his follow officer and men. He has been spared none of the terribly hard work and even drudgery that fall to the share cf every 3Uhaltern rcglmcptal officer of tne ucrman army. indeed, his tasks have bpen even more arduous than theirs, since his studies have, covered so far wider a range. It may be taken for granted that on his marriage he will, like his father on a similar occasion 21 years ago. be promoted to a Colonelcy. - Whereas Emperor William at the time of his birth stood sixth in the line ot succession to the throne of England. there are today some 30 lives or more be tween the latter and the German Crown WHY BIGELOW FELL. Friend of Milwaukee Bank President Tells How It Happened. C. L. Pierce. Jr.. In Chicago Tribune. Frank G. Bigclow was a humanitarian ot the broader type. He has "made" more young business men than any man In the Middle West. He loved young men. He loved children. Never yet have T heard of a worthy- young man In business trouble being turned away by him. His smile would give a gleam of welcome and hope to the humblest of those seeking his aid. and with the smile would go the help needed. It is said in Milwaukee that he has started a thousand young men In busi ness and that not one of them has failed. It was not alone his financial help which made them invincible. It was his im plicit confidence, his counsel, the grip of lils hand, the gleam of his eyes, the op timism radiating from him, which forced the faltering ones on to success. Tou must know all this to appreciate his downfall and how-it carrte. I have never forgotten my first meeting him. He was a young man then, already- rising in the bank In which he had begun as messenger; a young man of whom Milwaukee was proud. He came In upon us at a church lawn party; his wife was beside him, a plain little woman, every Inch a mother, and between the two, all hand-in-hand, were three little brown babies In blue gingham dresses. I was a boy then, and that father endeared him self to every youngster there. He under stood . us, our games and ways, our likes and dislikes, and we knew that he loved us. every tow-haired rascal of the crowd. The youngest of those three brown babies, his oldest boy, Is the one who has caused his father's downfall. As a young ster he was a dare-devil, the leader of the gang, the "King of Boyvllle." As a young man he sowed his wild oats and he sowed them thick and plentiful; but though the oats were wild they were clean there was no rust on them. The father's heart bled. but It never hardened against his boy. Mayhap, as Is the way with hearts, it softened a bit with the bleeding. As often as the boy would fall the father would pick him up, would start hlra with a clean slate. He had done It for other boys. Could he do less for his own? And the boy became a man and put his boyish ways behind him; but he was still master ful, still the leader ot the gang. He took dips Into the stock market and won. He invested in manufacturing enterprises and won. He bought -wheat and won. Last week in Milwaukee they talked ot Gordon BIgelow as a broker who "had arrived." Through It all the father had helped him. but he had not guided. The boy was not that sort. He worked on his own initiative. The father saw his success, his level judgment, hl3 foresight, his almost Intuitive knowledge of the game. He loved the boy this boy who had made his heart bleed, and he was growing proud of him, No one knows the rest no one but the father and son, and perhaps the gentle little woman who had been the wife of one. the mother of the other, the com panion of them both. The supreme mo ment came. The son was playing a big game. Failure was imminent for him. success probable It a stay could be se cured. So this man who loved boys, this man who had made possible the business suc cess of 1M0 young men. this man who had never In hla life refused a half-way worthy request for help, stooped to save the boy whe had most hurt hlra, the boy whom, perhaps, he most loved. The law can have no pity, can make no exceptions; but you who judge this man. veiaember the ether side; remember that tnere are thOHMnds ef us today -whose hearts are Weeding for the. man we loved, for tblf maai who has" stood by us ta r heurs of trouble; remember tills, and be ebariUWes Prince, whose rights thereto, although remote, nevertheless txist, as the senjOr ot the great-grandchildren of the late Queen Victoria- Perhaps It Is due to this that he Is able to speak English without the slightest trace of a foreign accent. Thta, however, and his seat In the saddle, are all that there Is of She Anglo-Saxon In his composition, and his leanings toward Great Britain are far less pro nounced than those ot his father, who,. In certain respects gives striking evidence ot the English blood that comes to him through his mother. Crown Prince William's Inclinations are rather in In direction of Austria, of Hungary- and of Russia, which Is likewise the trend of the present policy of the Kaiser. That his union" with Duchess Cecilia Is a love match pure and simple, differ ing in this respect from most royal mar riages, which arc so often based on po litical and dynastic consideration?, rather than on those of Inclination, Is known at every court of Europe. For although the matrimonial alliances between the reigning houses ot Hohenzollern and Mecklenburg have always turned out most happily, and the name or Queen Louise, who wa3 a Mecklenburg Princess and the great-great-grandmother of both the Crown Prince and his fiancee, is still revered throughout Germany as that of the heroine of the War of Liberation, yet It is notorious- that his parents had formed other plans with regard to his future. For while the young Duchess Is charming and everything that the Em peror and Empress could desire as a con sort for their son, yet the relations or her mother, the Grand Duchess Anastasia. with the court of Berlin havo always been somewhat strained. By birth a Princess of the reigning house of Russia, the Grand Duchess Is more Muscovite than Teuton In her sympathies. She has taken no pains to conceal hcr distaste for everything pertaining to the land of her adoption, spending as much as pos sible of her life abroad, with the result that she has remained extremely unpopu lar In Germany. Moreover, her Intense worldllness was not of a nature to com mend hcr to the goodwill 6f either the Kaiser or the Kaiserin. .Fortunately, how ever, she left tne education of her daugh ters entirely in the hands of a most ac complished English governess. Miss Mary Jvlng. and. thanks to this, the young Duchess, while she has much of her mother's grace, elegance and brilliancy, has inherited none of her prejudices. The Crown. Prince met her at a hall, and. exceedingly fond of dancing, found in her not only an "almost divine waltz es'the expression Is his. not mine but also a most witty conversationalist. He fell head over cars In lave with her. and though the political and dynastic - ad vantages of the match were obvious and the young Princess quickly won the heart-i of the Emperor and Empress, yet they hesitated on account of her mother from giving their consent until their son practically forced their hand by himself publicly announcing ho engagement. Like the Crown Prince, the future Kaiserin Is tall and willowsy. fair-haired and brown eyed, speaking English without an ac cent, levoted to outdoor sports, warm hearted, unaffected and possessed of that consideration for the feelings of others which Is the most gracious and fascinat ing of all forms of courtesy. Although hpr mother has remained an adherent of the national Orthodox Church of Russia. Duchess Cecilia has been brought up as a Lutheran, and as she is said to possess no little of that strength of character for which so many of the Princesses of the House of Mecklenburg, notably the late Duchess of Orleans whom the French revolutionists of ISIS declared to be the one "man" of the Orleans family have , been famed, and has. moreover, inherited the sunny disposition of her great-grandmother. Grand Duchess Alexandrine, there Is every reason to believe that the marriage will prove a hlcssing to the House of Hohenzollern and to the Ger man nation. NEW LAW AGAINST TIPS. Wisconsin Legislature Takes Action. Governor Signs Bill. "MADISON. Wis.. May S. The dread blow has fallen, and the waiters and waitresses, porters and bootblacks, cab drivers and messenger boys and several other classes ot employes are In mourn ing. They are no longer to enjoy the profitable pleasure of the "tip." What was known as the anti-graft bill be came a law today, when Governor La Follette affixed his signature to the measure prohibiting employes from re questing or accepting any gratuities, and also prohibiting everybody from giving or offering any gift or tip whatever to any agents, servants or employes. Made a Misdemeanor. It la really a hard blow dealt by the governors pen. If the general under standing ot the law is correct. While the bill was originally aimed at the, prac tice of paying commissions to employes of large stores or corporations whose In fluences went a great way In the pur chase of goods, it also Is contended that it applies to the practice of "tipping." A violation of the law la made a mis demeanor, punishable by a fine of not less than J10 nor more than $500. or a fine and Imprisonment for a year. Walters and porters and bootblacks and barbers are in a fine stew lest the law shall stop them from accepting the nick els and dimes proffered by the generous public. They fall to understand how it can be anybody's business, much less that of the state, whether they gather in a few dollars a week from people who want to give their money away. But the law Is plain enough. It provides that who ever corruptly gives, offers or promises to an agent, employe or servant any gift or gratuity with Intent to Influence his action In relation to his employer's busi ness or any . agent or employe who re quests or accepts such gift or gratuity Is guilty of a violation of the law Full or Perplexity. Now the question that is perplexing the porters, waiters and barbers Is whether a "tip," accepted by them from a cus tomer is corruptly given, as' described in the law. The barber wants to know how he is to tell whether a customer is going to "tip" him until he gets out of the chair and reaches Into his pocket. The porter who carries a trunk up or down a flight of stairs for a traveling salesman Is anxious to know If the sales man expects to Influence him after tho job is done and he has his "tip." Berlin Eats "Horse 3Icat. From a Consular Report. There Is in the Griefswalterstrasse, Eer. lin, a regularly Installed horse slaughter house which Is under careful police su pervision, with a veterinary surgeon In attendance to see that no animal Is killed the flesh of which would be, by reason of disease or other cause, unfit for hu man food. In 1S53 the whole number ot horses killed in Berlin for meat was 7257. In 1900 the number had Increased to 10.S15 and In 1S01 to about 13,000. Estimating that an average-sized horse will yield 230 pounds of edible' flesh, there was derived from this source last year about 3.960.000 pounds of meat, which was sold for consuroptldn'rn 64 shops which are specially licensed for that purpose. An Early Preference. Upplncott's. Teddy hated the dark, and his mother was trying to cure htea of his fear. "Now. Teddy," she said as she tucked hlra in for the' night, "yeu know; who to always with you even In "the. dark-". . . '"Well, T 'don't want a man. T"whL a womaai" was his astoslehlmg xeiiy.