THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, DECE3IBER 8. 1912. Skill wd lor .$utts Ca HumanrtfelsJ War Is Being Waged Relentlessly on Illicit Dealers Who Sell "Moonshine" Butter as Product of Dairy Country Butter Must Be the Real Thing Fate of Butter Counterfeiters ?i-.i3B U,r' '-vJOsG: I i - - - . -- , fM rrmsm BY WILI-IAif ATHERTOX DU PUT. C W. RESH country butter! I"resh country butter!" Such is the cry that has rung through the streets of every city in the Nation in the past few years and back of which, in a vast number of cases, has been a monumental fraud. The householder who has heard this call and has turned his attention to the individual who was making it has been treated to a sight that has taken his mind back to the days of his boy hood in the country lanes that run be tween grassy meadows. A freckled faced boy with a wide brimmed hat, a checked shirt, one gallus and brogan shoes, ts responsible for the call. Be side him plods an old, gray mare with cockleburs In her tail. She draws a filapidated, country wagon, much be- spattered with mud. The rural atmos phere is accentuated by fresh, pine boughs that are stuck into the sides of the wagon bed, and give forth their pungent odor in this crowded city street. Truly, thinks the householder, here is a chance to get butter fresh from the farm's churn.. He investigates and finds that he can buy at a price five cents cheaper than that of his grocery store. He has made . a find and asks the boy to come that way again. As a matter of tap t he has bought oleomargarine, or "moonshine butter" as it is called , by the Government agents. Not only has he- been deceived but the law has been violated and the supposedly country boy and his em ployer has taken a chance of going to prison for their deceit. The profits are such, however, that the unscrupu lous dealer has assumed the risk. Often he has waxed wealthy. Of late he has been quite regularly, going to prison, and his fellows are getting discouraged. The "Country Batter" Game. This country wagon is but one of a dozen of its kind. Its owner has gone out among the farms to purchase his rolling stock. The horses run loose at night in a pasture that they may ac quire the cockleburs and they are never curried. It often happens that the boy is really from the country. If not- he is dressed for the part. The individual who is back of the wagon and the boys, probably began business in a corner grocery. There he handled butter and eggs. Creamery and country butter had sold for 40 cents a pond. Yet he has bought colored olemargarine for 25 cents. A tub of this olemargarine has been placed under his counter. His butter had cost him 30 cents a pound and a tub of butter was beside the oleomar margarlne. Presently he got in the habit of dipping in the oleo tub when a customer asked for butter. The con sumers rarely complained and he even tually sold colored oleo quite regularly as butter. - This oleo has been colored in the manufacture and a tax of 10 cents a pound had been paid on it On oleo that was uncolored there was a tax of but one-fourth of 1 per cent. This uncolored oleo could be bought for 15 cents a pound and a little package of coloring matter would be thrown in. Soon the dealer saw the possibilities of coloring his own. product and sav ing the tax of 10 cents. He bought one tub of colored with the internal revenue seals on it. When the oleo in this tub was all sold he mixed color into a tub of the white and placed it in the tub that had contained the yel low. - Thus he had, at a cost of 15 cents, a product that he could sell for 35 or 40. Then he saw the vision of big money. - - The corner grocery was given over. He operated his butter .business from his own home in the suburbs or from a loft in the wholesale district. He bought large quantities of the uncolored oleo. mixed it with a bit of cream or butter and with the requisite amount of col oring matter and sent forth his coun try butter wagons. He might have a dozen of them selling to only the best trade. He did an enormous business and profits were so large that he waxed wealthy. Enter the Slenth. The sale of oleomargarine is, how ever, a matter In which the Federal Government has a hand. Because colored, oleo is subject to a tax of 10 cents a pound and the uncolored is subject to a tax of one-fourth of 1 cent a pound,' the internal revenue super vises its manufacture and sale. It wants to prevent an avoidance of sale with out payment of the tax and it wants to prevent its sale under the false pre tense of being butter. There are about 1000 men In the In ternal Revenue Service, under Commis sioner Royal E. Cabell, their chief duty being to collect the tax on liquors and tobacco. Any and all these men may, however, be put on the trail of the moonshine butter people and It has happened in the past two years thit a considerable force has been working along this line and that matters have been quite merrily stirred up in. many communities. At first the sleuths were not familiar with the country butter dodge. It had developed in almost all of the big cities before it was finally detected. In the end it was discovered by tracing the oleo to the consumer. When it was found that a given dealer was handling large quantities of oleo the sleuths grew suspicious -of the form in which it reached the consumer. When the country wagons were found leaving the premises of such a dealer they were followed and their vending of al- ' leged country butter was Investigated. The revenue agent, suspecting a given country wagon, would shadow it. At a household where the product was sold a call would Immediately follow and inquiry would be made as to whether or not the purchaser thought she was getting butter. The agent would tell of the suspected imposition and par chase the package from the housewife. It would be sealed with its record and sent to a Government laboratory, where it would be tested and found to be oleo. The revenue agent would follow the wagon until he had secured a score of samples. His case would be thus made absolute. Arrests would be made and, recently, many convic tions have been secured. In a certain Western community the political leader of the district made a fortune in the "country butter" bus! ness. In the city of Washington itself two dealers were sent to jail for the same sort of operation. It has been done in nearly every city in the country. It is now becoming almost as well known as the old gold brick game and consequently dangerous but it has ranked among the-, most lucrative of grafts in its time. Some Millionaire Moonshiners A revenue agent was recently In Leavensworth, Kansas, where one of the biggest Federal prisons is locatea. He remembered that a certain butter moonshiner from a certain very busy city was there Incarcerated for the sins of the past. When he had1 prev iously known this individual he had ridden in a limousine and given din ners to chorus girls. He went to see his old acquaintance, whom he found mixing mortar. He prayed most ab jectly for assistance in getting a pa role. The story of this man is spectacular. He began as the operator of a string of grocery stores in the given town. He evidently saw the light of the pos sibilities of moonshine buter. One of the stores grew into a four-story build ing. To the fourth story of that build ing there were no stairs. There was a lift and when it reached the floor in question it locked into it. The windows were barred with steel and every possible entrance was metal plated. It was a fortress that might have withstood an artillery attack. This dealer bought great quantities of oleomargarine and sold great quanti ties of alleged butter. This butter was retailed through the owner's store and wholesaled to other dealers. The business in it was enormous. The revenue agents grew suspicious and many attempts were made to get Into the fourth story but to no avail. In the end a raid was executed which called for the Bcaling ladders of a fire company and for its grappling irons in tearing the bars off the windows. When entrance was finally gained a most complete plant was found. I this plant the oleo was rechurned with certain amounts of cream and properly colored.' A most excellent Imitation of butter resulted and It had deceived the people so long that a fortune had re sulted to the operator of the scheme. Much of this money was seized by the Government In lieu of the oleo that had been sold without paying the tax. What was left Is doing the operator little good in his present place of resi dence. There are many others of his kind in similar homes for the erring. Sleuthing for tbe Manufacturer. Now, oleomargarine is an entirely wholesome and legitimate product and there are great factories engaged in its production. Animal fats and vege table oils, such as cotton seed oil, ara its chief constituents and It Is usually a by-product of the packing business in such centers as Chicago. It is con sequently made under the supervision of the Government in Its meat inspec tion work and is pretty sura to be en tirely clean and wholesome, which la more than can be said of much butter. One of the amusing features in one of these establishments is the presence of manicurist who takes care of the fingernails of all the employes whose hands come in contact with the oleo. The Government likewise holds that the nutritive value of this product is but two percent below that of butter (Concluded On Page 6.) rILLIAlt pears! Aw' ripe Punny each!" Archibald Keith, stalking .long to keep an appointment with Hiss Isabel Martin, heard the coster's raucous cry, and it awakened an im- mediate Interest within him. Archie had many fervent likes and dislikes. but If there was one edible which ap pealed to him more than another it yras a fine, luscious pear. Archie glanced at the man's barrow as It passed. The bright lights of the bop windows cast an alluring glamour over the neatly arranged rows of yel tow fruit. Certainly they were re markably fine pears and extremely cheap. Archie's mouth watered Archie looked at his watch. The ap pointment was timed for eight-ten punctually, outside Baskell's corner (hop. It was now two minutes past 8, and Baskell's but three or four minutes' walk. Tes, he would just have time to reach the rendezvous before Isabel turned up. He strode back to the barrow and purchased a pear. Then he hastened on toward Baskell's, the pear in his hand. And then he met Percy Locke. Of course he would meet some one he knew! It was just his luck! He was ft man who rather prided, himself on his fastidious deportment. In the of fice he was a recognized authority on etiquette. "Cheer-ho!" observed Locke rather wanly. Clearly Locke was at a bit of a loose end. "Been buying pears, old Aian?" he remarked, evidently desirous of leading up to conversation. "Looks like It!" admitted Archie shortly. "Doing anything particular?" queried Locke wistfully. "Yes; fearfully busy!" said Archie. "Can t stop a minute! So-long!" He hurried on, glad to have escaped, yet resentful of Locke. Dash it all! What did Locke a married man, too want to go mooning about the street for? He and Locke, who were employed In the same office, had been pals at one time, and that circumstance rather in creased Archie's annoyance. A man who used to be a pal ought to have better tact! There had been no violent quarrel to sever their friendship. After two or three years of close acquaintanceship Locke had got himself married, and Archie had become engaged, and so, as is the way of the world in such mat ters, they Just drifted apart. Archie had met Mrs. Locke ft nice little woman, he thought, and rather too good, if anything, for Locke. He had Introduced Miss Martin to Locke, too, and Locke had congratulated him very warmly on his choice. Archie looked at his watch again as he reached Baskell's corner. It was Just seven minutes past eight. He had three minutes in which to consume his pear. Baskell's corner Itself was brilliantly Illuminated by arc lamps and offered no concealment to a man who desired to consume edibles In secrecy. But on one side of the corner there ran a dark little side street, a promising place for privacy. Up this side street strolled Archie and waited only till he was in the outer darkness beyond the arc lamps before his teeth met In the pear's melting tissue. He had only taken his second bite,. for the assimiliation of a juicy pear is a matter for extreme care to a man who values his ties and waistcoats, when Miss Martin put in an appearance under the fizzing electric lamps. She was early a good two minutes early. Acbie, his mouth full of luscious pear, stared at her in dismay. Then he glanced tentatively at the fruit in his band. Should he throw it away forth with and go forward to greet her? But it was the finest William he had ever tasted. To waste it would be a sin. "No, I'll finish It," thought Archie. "After all It's her fault for being early." So while Miss Martin gazed with much interest at the contents of Bas kell's window Archie, a score of yards away in the darkness, was disposing of his pear as quickly as possible. There was still a good half to finish when suddenly he ceased munching, for Locke had appeared beneath the arc light and was talking to Miss Martin. "Awful cheek," muttered Archie un reasonably, with his mouth full of pear. In order to curtail the Interview as soon as possible he recommenced his attack on the William, relishing its flavor to the utmost and yet keeping an aggressive eye on Locke and Miss Martin earnestly. At first she hesitated, glancing along the crowded thoroughfare as though In search of Archie. Then, she nodded, and this seemed to please Locke so much that he half made a movement toward taking her arm. Archie finished the last mouthful with one convulsive gulp, and then took out his handkedchief to wipe his lips and fingers. It was an operation which needed thoroughness; and when, preparatory to striding along to inter rupt the interview, he looked again under tbe arc lamps Locke and Miss Martin had vanished. "Well, that's a nice thing!" he ex claimed blankly. It occurred to him that they might be looking for him just around the corner, and he hastened into the thor oughfare. He was just in time to see the couple clambering onto a bus as it jolted forward. Archie was a young man very much in love, and so jealousy was his im mediate emotion. 'Carrying on!" he puffed. "Carrying on under my very eyes, though they didn't know I was looking! Upon my word, it s a bit. too thick! You ask a girl to meet you, and when she turns up a married man a married man. mark you! comes along and persuades her to go off with him!" Waking to action, Archie mounted the next bus that came along and fol lowed In the wake of Locke and Miss Martin. They were seated side by side on top of the vehicle. He could see them still talking animatedly, and a fiery imagi nation painted in the words they were probably saying to each other. Then Archie remembered how evi dent had been Locke's admiration on introduction to Miss Martin. Now he came to think of It. they had been wonderfully friendly on the three or four subsequent occasions upon which they had met. And now this climax had come along! Archie's bus presently rumbled past the other vehicle. Archie turned In his seat to watch the guilty pair. It Irri tated him all the more that they did not look a bit guilty. When some 50 yards separated the vehicles the back bus stopped. Archie, leaning over the rails, saw Miss Martin and Locke descend and botii went Into a shop. I Archie clattered down the steps of his vehicle, but found it impossible to dismount, for .threatening traffic jos tled along behind the bus, like sharks in the wake of a ship. Another 50 yards had been traversed before Archie was able to gain the pavement and hasten back. He was Just in time to see the cou ple he was shadowing mount another bus. Locke was carrying a great mass of flowers, but he gave them into Miss Martin's hands when they reached the top of the conveyance. Wildly Archie signaled to the con ductor. "Full inside and on top!" shouted that official Inexorably. And so Locke and Miss Martin were borne from Archie's sight and he stood staring blankly after the bus till It had vanished In tbe mosaic of traffic. It was an enraged Archie who per ambulated blindly through the streets for the next hour. At one moment he was resolving never to see again the fair but false face of Miss Martin. In the next minute he was determining to seek her out and demand an explan ation of her conduct. 1 It was this latter decision which pre vailed when he turned his footsteps toward the road in which Miss Martin resided. He took up his station on the footpath opposite to her dwelling and disposed himself to "keeping under ob servation" with all the zeal of a newly joined policeman anxious to win his spurs. At last his vigilance was rewarded. Round the corner and up the road there advanced the figures of Locke and Miss Martin. As Archie had expected, the fellow was actually, having the ef frontery to escort her to her homel All Archie's smoldering jealousy blazed into passion at the sight. He strode across the street and faced them with infuriated countenance. "What does this mean?" he shouted. "Sneaking off with each other behind my back! At least you thought you were sneaking off out I saw you! Aren't you ashamed of yourselves? Locke and Miss Martin were dis mayed to silence by the fierce outburst "It was my fault said Locke, re covering his power of speech by de grees. "I I asked Miss Martin to come with me. I didn't know she was wait ing for you when I asked her.' "I didn't know it would- upset you like this!" confessed Miss Martin tear- BULWARK OF BALKANS (COXTSTTJED FROM PAGE S.) great mosques and a hundred smaller ones, today the Muezzin calling the faithful to prayer chants his "Alleh-el-Allah" only from the slender minaret of the Banyabashl Djamia. Friday is market day in Sofia. It is the best day to get acquainted with the Bulgarians, and as you may imagine, it is much safer to market with them than it Is to fight them. Friday is the day you will see them dressed in their best bibs and tuckers, for it is a day of visiting and small talk, as well as a day of trade and barter, and what nation will not dress in its best to go visiting? From seven in the morning until one In the afternoon it seems that the entire town acts as if celebrating a victory in the field. Farmers' carts, wooden-wheeled ' and ponderous, line the street curbs. There is a hum and bustle about tbe place, and the kaleido scopic elfect of the colorful garbs of tbe different nationalities hints of scenes much nearer the edge of the Orient. Since long before daylight peasants from the surrounding countryside have been arriving on foot and in bullock carts. By noon the square surrounding the great mosque resounds with the monotonous drone of a myriad insects which have settled about the edges of a giant sugar lump. Turkish women in baggy yellow bloomers and slippers shaped like a sled-runner, squat along the curb or even In the middle of the sidewalks, selling embroideries. Bul garian wool growers from' the moun tains. In heavy sheepskin coats which they wear the wrong side out in Sum mer and the right side out in winter to distinguish the seasons are dispos ing of their produce to the wholesale merchants of the city by the cartload. Strings of puny pack animals laden with wood divide the crowd under pro test as they pass through from time to time, their little hoofs spattering n the dust like dropping shrapnel. Now and again a group of Bulgarian beau ties, dressed in all the nnery at their command, with lavender sunshades which seem unnecessary in view of their dusky complexions, chatter their way through the throng, followed per sistently by a couple of Bulgarian Beau Brummels, also attired in the height of Slavonic fashion. There are Greeks in white accordion-pleated skirts, Kurds in round alpaca caps, foreign army offi cers In variegated uniforms. Characteristics of Bulgara. But you will be particularly inter ested in the Bulgars themselves. Com placent and comparatively uncommuni cative, a look of sturdy determination characterizes their features. From their very appearance they constitute a nation that is not to be trifled with. They seem only to tolerate the Turk in their midst and It is evident from their treatment of him that, they hate and despise him with a bitterness in born and centuries old. And you do not wonder that they make good sol diers. They are well-knit and strong and inured to hardship. They place implicit confidence In their leaders, and patience, perseverance and endurance are theirs to a remarkable degree. Un like the usual run of Southern races they are phlegmatio and taciturn; they are thrifty, yet markedly adverse even to the slightest display of wealth. Deliberately and unostentatiously the Bulgarians have been preparing for a possible war against Turkey for the past 15 years. Confident of themselves, they have hoped for the time when war might be declared upon a sufficient ex cuse before -the powers could step be tween. They ached to square accounts with the Mohammedans and clean the slate of five centuries of oppression. At last that time has come and the Bulgarians will not be satisfied until they see the Turk, a bruised and bleed ing menace to civilization, pushed off the map of Europe, cowed and cornered beyond the Bosphorus. No medal of gold, no laurel wreath would appease the aspirations of Czar Ferdinand half so much as to be permitted to snatch with his own hand the Star and Cres cent of Islam from the Mosque of St Sophia. Beyond a shadow of a doubt Bul garia Is the bulwark of the Balkans. (Copyright by Blair Jaekel, 1912.) fully. "You see. when Mr. Locke begged me to come with him I" "Begged you to come with him!" ex claimed Archie. "All right! That set tles it! I've done with her done with her for good and all! See? You can meet her every evening in future for all I care! Take her on buses and buy flowers for her I don't care! I've ut terly done with her!" Wrathfully Archie turned and strode away. Locke and Miss Martin stood staring at each other in consternation. Then Locke went hurrying after Archie's vanishing form. "I say, old man," he called soberly, "you're jumping to conclusions, you know. If you'll let me explain" "There can't be any explanation," said Archie shortly over his shoulder. "But there Is!" protested Locke. "Look here!" .exclaimed Archie, halt ing again. "It's no good trying to gammon me! Didn't I see with my own eyes what happened? While she was waiting for me you came up and per suaded her to go off gallivanting with you instead! Buying her flowers! I saw you!" "Did you notice Just now that she wasn't carrying them any longer?" queried Locke. "Or were you too er excited?" "Forgotten them somewhere, I sup pose?" sneered Archie. "Or left 'em somewhere, so's I shouldn't suspect" ' "They weren't forgotten," said Locke, "but they were left somewhere." "Ah!" cried out Archie. "Thought as much." "They were left," continued Locke steadily, "with my wife." "Left with your wife?" echoed Archie. "Yes. You see, old man, my wife's been" his voice faltered momentarily "been a bit queer lately. Pretty bad, the doctor said; but she's better now. And, you see, we we haven t made many acquaintances somehow. And to night a fancy came on her that we were lonely sort or people, witn nu friends. So I I went out to try and find some one I knew to take home with me to try to cheer her up. 1 meant to ask you, but you said you were in a hurry." 'Well?" asked Archie in a low voice. Next I saw Miss Martin standing under some electric lights, and I went across to her and asked her to come and try and cheer my wife up a bit She hesitated a bit at first, but at last she agreed, and she came with me and cheered my wife up like 1 o'clock! Miss Martin's a brick, old man, and you're a. luckv fellow." "Yes. pointed out Archie, "isut wny didn't you send for me?" Well. Miss Martin said she was sure you wouldn't mind very much when you knew why she hadn't kept the appoint ment You see, we naa no iaea you were looking on all the time, as you seem to have been. And I was in a bit of a hurry, too. You see. Id been longer finding some one than I thought I d be. There was a snop passea earlier in the evening, and it had a stunning lot of flowers, and I wanted to buy some there for the wife before the shop closed. That was why we didn't wait" "Old man," stammered Archie, put ting out his hand, "I apologize! See you in the morning. Must run back now. I can just catch a glimpse of Isa bel waiting by her gate." And next morning Archie's first words to Locke were: "Old man, we're both coming round to see you and your wife tonight." (Copyright. 1912.) frr?-ffi tafybi!i jfJ -kSz-. Vry