6 THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN. PORTLAND, DECEMBER 8, 1912. (( "e" 111 N 1 fcJSSS .sir? f--... fiCRCcf HNU WIAT WILlOU HAV President Has More Than 10,000 Sweet Political idorsels to Dispense, Flavored With Salaries From $20,000 Doum Army of Office Seekers Will Have Tempting Catalogue to Choose From What the Higher Offices Are and What They Pay pit ' -i r r fi":l I 4 Ws 13 ri! ' '-WW sr O you wish office from the Presl- I dent-elect? That quadrennial horde, the grand army of office seekers, Is plan ning to besiege Princeton and, later, to Invade Washington. Excited by a subliminal belief that the Democrats will let down the civil service barriers, to some degree at least, this hungry throng will be more vo racious and more numerous than it has been In a score of years. I have just made Inquiry at the civil service commission and have as certained that President Wilson will have In his direct gift 10,839 offices unhampered by any civil service lim itations whatsoever. Of the appointees to these 9840 will have to be confirmed by the Senate, while 993 will not need the Indorse ment of that body. The salaries attached to these "Pres idential offices" are generally a half again as high as they were when a Democratic President last spread his counter and bid the faithful come 1 and share the pie. The Biggest Plana. The highest office to be awarded by the new chief executive will be the secretaryship of state, whose holder will be the third gentleman of the realm, the next, after the VIce-Pres ident, in succession to the Presidency. He will sit upon the President's right at the cabinet table, will supervise the Government's correspondence and ne gotlatlons with all foreign rulers or their representatives and with the gov ernors of our own states. He will publish all laws passed by Congress. Adjacent to his office will be an el egantly appointed anteroom where one day each week diplomatic day he will receive such foreign ambassadors and ministers as have business with our Government. His salary, like Inat of all other cabinet officers, will be $12, 000 a year. During our last Democratic adminis tration cabinet officers received but $8000 annually, and those who strove to live In high state paid out that much In house rent. Cabinet members have more social expenses than any home officials, and the wife of each must hold continual court during the social season. For this reason, only wealthy men generally care to accept the higher cabinet portfolios, such as that of State and the Treasury. There will be some perquisites at tached to each portfolio, but they will be Insignificant the one of Govern ment carriages and horses being the greatest, except In the case of the Bee retarr of the Navy, who has at his disposal the dispatch boat Dolphin, sometimes called "the Secretary's pri vate yacht." It is not Improbable that the next President will have an addi tional cabinet portfolio to confer, that of Secretary of Labor. The bill creat In it is now before Congress and is strongly backed by the labor Interests. Beat Paytasr Berth, $30,000. The biggest plum from a pecuniary standpoint In Mr. Wilson's gift will be the commission of "President and Gov ernor-General of the Philippine Is lands." who will enjoy 40.000 pesos, or $ 20,000 a year, as well as free use of the old palace In Manila formerly oc cupied by the Spanish governors-general. The next highest salary, $17,600 a year. President Wilson will confer up on each of 10 ambassadors sent to foreign capitals. Many Democrats of great wealth are already in line for those highly-prized missions, which would give them tremendous social ad vantages and excellent opportunities for travel. The greatest prize ef the 10 is the mission to London, but the recipient to be a success there must be a man of vast wealth, who can spend consid erably more than his salary for house rent alone. Our present ambassador to London. Whitelaw Reid, Is paying out of his own pocket $45,000 a year for his ambassadorial residence, Dorchester House, on Park Lane, while the Gov ernment is allowing him the $3000 yearly rental for the dingy Arst floor in Victoria street where the offices of our embassy have remained for many years. Unless he is a modern Midas, the man whom Mr. Wilson selects as Mr. Re Id's successor will suffer by contrast. An ambassador sent to a monarchy be comes part of the royal court, where he ranks next to the heir-apparent, and there are ancient and picturesque laws which hold him up as a sacred person age. Thus neither he nor his wife can be arrested for an offense or sued for debt. Wealth the Opea Sesame, Next after London, Paris and Berlin are the posts most sought after by would-be ambassadors, but at these courts also great wealth Is the open sesame to social success. Our repre sentatives in. Paris have long tried to keep up their end with other ambassa dors receiving as high as $100,000 a year In pay and allowances and furn ished with embassies that would rent for $40,000 annually. The scholarly di plomatist. Dr. Hill, suffered many em barrassments at Berlin because he was poor and unable to entertain on a lav ish scale. His scale of living was made to appear more modest by contrast with his Immediate predecessor, Charle magne Tower, who lived like a prince and whose wife was called by the Kai ser "the Von Moltke of society." The foreign missions next most sought are usually Vienna, where so cial life is always gay, and Rome. I where there is always a considerable American colony. Fewer aspirants hanker after St. Petersburg because of the objectionable climate, but Tokio Is in great demand, as living in Japan is very cheap, while the surroundings are picturesque. Unlike his ambassadors to other countries, those whom Mr. Wilson selects for Japan and Turkey will have official residences furnished them free by the Government and will be able to save a considerable share of their yearly $17,500. But- the mis sions to Turkey and Mexico will not be comfortable until local turbulence ceases In those countries. Like all of the others named, our embassy in Bra sil pays $17,500 a year, much of which can be saved, as the social life in Rio has been rather dull since the days of the empire. The climate there is also bad In Summer, when most of the dip lomats have to take Summer homes In Petropolls. In the mountains. Seven ministers sent abroad by Pres ident Wilson will receive $12,000, and an even two dozen will draw $10,000. The only other envoy on his list will be minister-resident to the negro re public of Liberia, who is always a col ored man. He receives $5000 a rear. Once the Biggest Prises. The two most tempting morsels upon the Presidential pie counter used to be, as Judged from the standpoint of remuneration, the offices of Consul General to Liverpool and of United States District Attorney in New York City, each of which in lavish fees yield ed more than the salary then enjoyed by the President himself. But both of these offices have now been removed entirely from the fee basis, the former paying $8000 and the latter $10,000 In flat salary. Nor are Consular berths any longer npon the pie counter, strlct- y speaking. Like those for West Point and Annapolis, candidates for these po sitions, as well as for secretaryships In the diplomatic service, are now annoint. ed to take examinations, which Include international law, diplomacy and for eign languages. Young mn who pass these tests are sent to a training school in Washington, whence they pass to the lower positions of their class in the the foreign service, and gradually work their way upward. Mr. Wilson's plethoric prize package will contain commissions also for four Philippine Commissioners, at $15,000 a year; the Collector of Customs at New York, $12,000. and a list of $10,000 of flees several Interstate Commerce Commissioners, as their seven - year terms expire; the United States District Attorney at Chicago, who receives the same as that at New York, and the Solicitor-General, who is the chief as sistant and understudy of the Attorney- General. Next come the $8000 offices that of Governor of Porto Rico, who, too, gets free use of a palace; the Treasurer of the United States at Wash- ngton; the Assistant United States Treasurer, Surveyor of Customs, Naval Officer of Customs and General Ap praisers of Merchandise, all at New York; the Collectors of Customs at Philadelphia and Boston, and the Post masters of New York, Chicago, Phila delphia and Boston, and an- Assistant Attorney-General, wno gets $7500. And there are the $7000 berths which go to Federal Circuit Judges as vacancies oc cur, and the Treasurer of the Philip-, III ic f mil in 1 S&rdlzi. I I a 5 II I' ..oihwfc'JSi, ft ' !ZL-&m 'ii 'woe i A v 7 ii a nf Hii-hlT H- in nit 111 m'm " - -. . ... . i ..x ........ . - - y - - -ii-i tit -- 11 i. T"TiTM IBifh i 'itt mint figfe2Sr m to pine Islands, four Collectors of Cus toms, nine Appraisers of Merchandise and an assistant to the Attorney-Gen eraX Paying $6000 annually are the places of the Federal District Judges as they become vacant, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the Supervising Architect of the Treasury and the Post masters of 28 cities. Fixtures In Office. Such are the "big plums" paying over $5000. The list does not include chiefs and high officials of technical and scientific bureaus, who are appointed because of superior knowledge in their specialties. Such officers are gener ally regarded by officialdom as fixtures and political neuters. By far the biggest group of patronage offices to be disposed of by President Wilson will be nearly 8000 "Preslden tial postofflces." Over 350 will pay $3000 or more, while over E00 will yield from $2500 to $3000, about 1000 from $2000 to $2500, and the remainder from $1000 to $2000. These are the first, second and third-class FostmasterB, who must be confirmed by the Senate. All of the tens of thousands of the fourth-class are now In the classified service, and can be reached only through competitive examination, after the Incumbent dies or misbehaves. When Mr. Roosevelt came to the White House all fourth-class Postmastershlps were political plums. He placed part them, and President Taft the re mainder. under the civil service. The next largest groups of "presiden tial" office-holders are 225 officials of the land office, who draw from $1200 to $4000; the nearly 200 customs offi cers, who unciuamg lees) get any- here from $1500 to $12,000; the 82 United States district attorneys, who draw from $3500 to $10,000. and-the equal number of United States mar shals, whose offices yield from $3000 to $5000. General ExMss Expected. Many of these berths, especially among the higher offices, are "term po sitions, and Mr. Wilson will not have the privilege of filling them until the Republican Incumbents' terms expire.' But from the great majority of the en- mnm Ft i w m 4 Mim Ik 1 Iff IMl r?4 trr:- v tire catalogue of more than 10,000 pat-1 39 years of the republic the annual re- ronage offices there will be, curing movais oi "presiaentiai" otiicera con next Spring, such an exodus as has not been seen since McKlnley succeeded Cleveland, 16 years ago. There being no change of party, thousands of men in these positions "held over" from Ma Klnley to Roosevelt, and thousands more from Roosevelt to Taft. Mr. Wilson now faces the harassing ordeal under which every President has smarted upon entering office. Washing ton described bis correspondence with office-seekers as "an almost insupport able burden" and added that they ne cessitated his hardening his heart. John Quincy Adams complained of their "cor morant appetite for office" and uttered the jeremiad that one-half the mem bers of Congress were seeking such favors for friends. Yet during the first firmed by the Senate averaged less than three a year. So when Jackson came in and turned out 2000 office holders. 600 of whom had been con firmed by the Senate, there was a great commotion throughout the capital. A War Department clerk "cut his throat from ear to ear, from the mere terror of being dismissed," while among the many other recorded " "tragical effects" of Old Hickory's ax wielding was that befalling a State Department clerk who went "raving distracted." "Others are said to be threatened with the same calamity," wrote the excited scribe who reported this first applica tion of the spoils system." Office seeking now began with a vim. for after Jackson had set the example his successors were by no means shy about turning out the appointees of their predecessors. Some say that the new system caused the untimely end of William Henry Harrison Just after his inauguration that he was really harassed to death by office seekers. "I am like a man so busy In letting rooms in one end of the house that he cannot stop to put out the fire that is burning in the other," complained Lin coln of the ravenous horde which de manded the precious moments which be wanted to devote to war prepara tions. These Presidents were delugod with requests for petty clerkships, as well as responsible offices, and the first relief did not come until Grant's time, when was passed the first civil service act establishing permanent tenures for subordinates a system which was strengthened under Arthur, Cleveland and later Presidents until now, when about 80 per cent of all Government employes enter the service through competitive examinations. But during this process of rounding up division chiefs and their clerical subordinates in the civil service fold the "Presidential" offices have grown to be greater in numbers than the en tire army of officers and employes of those early days when the "spoils sys tem" was at its height. Thus President Wilson's legitimate patronage list of high officials con tains five times as many offices as those vacated by clerks and officers together when Jackson "turned the , rascals out" I (Copyright 1912, by John Elfreth Watklns.) SLEUTHING FOR BUTTER (CONTINUED FROM PACE 8.) and that it is therefore well that should be widely used, particularly by DeoDle who cannot afford butter and who are undernourished because there is no cheaper product to take its nlace. Now these animal and vegetable oils, wlien pure, are white, like lard. Th law prohibits the use of any artificial coloring matter without payment of the tax. If the manufacturers could Bnd a vegetable oil from which to make oleo the natural color of which would produce a yellow product, they would be able to make it look like butter and which would still not be artificially colored and which would not be taxed under the law. There was a certain manufacturer who gave the internal revenue people a great deal of trouble by putting out a product which had the color oi Dut ter, but in which there seemed to be no artificial coloring matter. This dealer claimed that his product got its yellow color from the oils mat went into it. and therefore could not be classed as artificially colored and could only be taxed one-fourth of 1 per cent Instead of 10 cents a pound. The agents knew that the butter was being col ored, but they were stumped to know how. For weeks ther examined all the ma terial that went into the factory ana found no coloring matter. Likewise did their chemists analyze the yellow ontput without being able to find any artificial coloring. One of the most successful agents in the service was assigned to the task of determining how the nroduct got Its color and whether the law was being violated. ThlR fltrent fniind a nlace of vantage on the roof of a building that adjoined the factory. For days he noted every man who entered the factory and every package that was delivered there. Other agents shadowed theBe people and these packages. Still nothing was found that might result in me coiorea oleo. Whil. the asrent lav on the housetop. dav after dav. he noted that the vice- president of the .company called regu larly every morning in nis auiomouue. The weather was pleasantly cool and the vice-president wore nis overcoat. Then the weather turned warm ana the vlca-nrenident still wore his over coat when he entered the factory. That nv.rnnftt n a warm day aroused sus picion. Noticing it, the special agent thought that it seemed to ne worn a. bit stiffly. Now there is a certain vegetable oil, palm oil, which is very intensely yel low. A small amount of It will suf lce to give the yellow tint to a great vat of oleo. Being a vegetable on, iixe the others that eo Into the oleo, ii is almost impossible for the chemists to Hetcnt it it Ik. however, classified as coloring matter under the law, and Its use la prohibited. Th. mrnt decided that the vice-: president was smuggling palm oil into the factory under his overcoat ana the oleo was being colored with thisj nalm oiL Next morning the internal revenue man met the arriving automo bile of the official, nlacea tnai genne man nnrior arrest and found a large can, built to the body and containing calm oiL under eacn arm. mo vice- president Is now in prison. Seeking the Retailer. Of course the greater number of vio lators sell oleo for butter only as an Incident to their business. Every small grocer is tempted to do it, and many fail. The Internal revenue men are able to trace all purchases of oleo to the various dealers, and when those purchases are of any gTeat size it is their duty to determine - whether or not It is being properly sola. With a record of the purchasers of quantities of oleo in hand, two agents may go into a given city. They dress as mechanics ana enter a suspected nlace. One makes a purcnase, while the other looks on and then the sec ond man makes a purchase with the first as witness. They both ask for; butter. When given its prices they prot'est and ask if there is not cheaper butter. This is the merchant's oppor tunity to sell oleo. At any rate he will probably sell a cheaper product. These products are scientifically ex amined and may be found to be oleo. The case is pretty good, but to make it sure some of the people in the neighborhood are Induced to make sim ilar purchases. So is the evidence made conclusive and then a case is brought against the dealer. A great deal of this Illicit sale of oleo has, however, gone on for a great many years. There is about one-tenth as much oleo as butter used. In the cities, however, the percentage is much greater, and most of this moonshine Is sold as butter. Many people have eaten it for years without ever know ing the deception. One reformed deal er told a revenue agent a joke on him self. He had given up the illicit sale of oleo when the campaign against it began to get warm. He had a certain good customer to whom he had been selling oleo as butter for two years. When he decided to reform he sent her, with her next order, the best butter he had. She did not like it when It came to her table and called the dealer up and accused him of hav ing sold her oleo. Next to the corner groceryroan the individual who has been mosi tempted to enter the moonshine butter business has been the dairyman. Here is a man who has been making 50 pounds of tutter a week and selling it at 35 cents a pound. He learns of the psiibilitles of oleo, and has his plant ready built and is skilled in butter-making. He buys a 60-pound tub of oleo and churns it with his butter. The next week he has 100 pounds of butter for sale at 5 cents, and has added $10 prorit to his business. The amount of oleo pur chased increases, and his output and profit does the same. Eventually the evenue agents follow the trail of the large purchases of oleo and the dairy man goes to Jail. The possibilities of this deception are infinite. There was, for instance, the fiscal agent for a certain large institu tion. Instead of buying butter for this institution, he bought oleo, mixed in the coloring matter in his own base ment ami kii'jcKed own tno diT'erer.c between the cost of oleo and butter. Bu't the oleo was traced to tlui base ment of his luxuriously appointed ome and he went to the penitentiary. Hotels and restaurants and lunch rooms are often found to be remiss In this respect. They color the goods for their own use. But this is still a viola, tiun of the law which prohibits its col oring even In a family whero boarders are kept It is hinted that tbcro is many a housewife who buys oleo, stirs n a bit of color, and knocks down the difference in price on her husband, and he eats the moonshine without sus picion. This Is within the pale of the law, and the housewife may not be proceeded against. The Government appreciates the faot that oleomargarine is being taxed for o other reason than to Drotect the but ter business, and that it is the only food product of the United States that has ever been taxed for such a pur pose, liquor -and tobacco coming under the headings of luxuries and being as sessed on a different basis. The pure food people, the Internal Revenue and the Committee' on Agri culture of the House of Representa tives have recommended a nominal tax and a provision that would allow the use of coloring matter, but require that all oleo be put up In sealed and labeled packages that made it impos sible that it should reach the consumer as anything other than what It really is. This would remove deception and make it possible to get this food prod uct on the market at about half the price of butter. The reputable manu facturers likewise favor this arrange ment, and it Is probable that legisla tion to this end will be enacted in the present session of Congress. (Copyright. 1912. by TV. A. Du PuyJ