THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTTiATTD. JANUARY 4, 1914. 3 NOW THE WOLF HOWLS DISMALLY Things Are Not What They Used ,to Be in Stock Gamblers Mecca IMPOSING WALLS M mi h i mi urn ii n i j 1' '-''cCr v.V:,vv-4t. t''Jfh v t iUGSl JLL i J. ' - ' - - - ' - THERE was a time when Wall e treat was riotously -rich and powerful. Day after day Its tem ples, big- and little, were crowded, with worshipers at the shrine of the Ticker. Its high priests felt that they ruled the Nation. Tribute was laid on their altars In such streams that it seemed the flow must be Inexhaustible and never would cease. Devotees by the thousands impoverished themselves In their mad wooing Q.f the Money Gods, but thousands of others rushed . in to take their places. And now it is all changed. Services re held in Wall street Just the same as they used to be. There Is the regu lar ceremony In the big temple and the little temples, the daily incantations and the display of the idols, but there are no worshipers. Slaves have turned scoffers. No reverenoe Is shown even to the high priests. Worst of all the people who used to abase themselves and speak only in whispers of the mighty man of the temple no longer come to the street of gold with their tribute. To many persons the term "Street of Gold" has become a mockery. They are the margin clerks, stenographers, typists, bookkeepers, board boys, etc, thrown out of work since the blight struck Wall street. There are thou sands of them. They have found it difficult to obtain employment. Once they spoke proudly of being In Wall street. Now they discover It is well to conceal the fact that they ever worked there. Employers seem to look with disfavor upon anyone who comes out of the street. It is not that the applicant may not be clever and able, but the Wall street brand Is now a taint and not a distinction. There are 1100 members of the Stock Exchange. The other day the com missions on the total business trans acted would amount to only J1.40 per member If divided equally. It Is doubt ful If there is a brokerage house in the street that has made any money In the last two years. Never has there been another such period of stagna tion. Dozens of houses have consoli dated in order to reduce expenses. Doz ens of other houses either have retired from business voluntarily or failed. One of the oldest firms, that of H. B. Hollins & Co., went Into bankruptcy in November. It was simply a case of dry rot. Once upona time, Hollins & Co. did the bulk of the buying and selling for J. IMerpont Morgan & Co. Its transactions then were enormous and its prestige the highest. When the receiver took charge he found lit tie of value aside from the office fur niture. Capital, customers ' and pres tlge had gone under the withering process which Wall street has endured so long. What is going to become" of Wall street? It has had periods of dullness, but this is not dullness from which It is suffering now, but stagnation. It has had attacks from enemies without, and within In other times, but never until now has it been unable to bring the public back to the same after a moderate period of penitence. It Is not in stocks alone that the people have ceased to speculate. The situation is almost as bad with bond brokers, grain men and In the coffee and the cotton markets. Con servative estimates place the number of persons dismissed by brokerage houses In order to retrench at from 3000 to 5000. To this total must be added the employes let go by the bank ers, lawyers, printers, supply people, restaurants, and the various other con cerns that fattened on the business of the Stock Exchange. Even the boot blacks are affected by the blight In the financial district. Uptown it Is the same. The lobster palaces, thea ters, great hotels. Jewelers, caterers, furnishers, all sorrow because Wall street is having such a hard time. There used to' be a score of broker age houses that employed from 50 to 75 persons. Now there are. few that have 25 names on the payroll. On various occasions in times of plenty one speculator, Daniel G. Reid, gave more business to the street in a few hours than has been transacted by the whole Exchange In one recent day. Men who once were big factors now are rarely heard of. A. O. Brown is an example. Five or six years ago his establish ment was the biggest In Wall street the biggest In the history of the Stock Exchange. He had thousands of cus tomers and hundreds of employes. His main office was packed with people throughout the day. There were branches In most of the big hotels. Special wires connected him with his out-of-town branches In all of the principal cities. Uptown he had night establishment where there were private rooms for such customers from distant points as wished to be his guests while In the city. These visit ors were as much at home as If In a private club. Their host provided everything, even to, a valet. Wine was free as water. The finest of cigars were theirs to take In any quantity A $20,000 a year chef prepared their meals. By cable and special wire they could get news at any hour of the night from any quarter of the globe. While they were In bed they could get reports as to the opening of the London market. The running expenses of all the A. O. Brown establishments were far in ex cess of $1000 a day. y When the broker married a popular actress, one of his gifts to his bride was a ? 10,000 automobile. Wall street has forgotten A. O. Brown. Maybe he has not forgotten Wall street. He earns much less now than he paid to hia chef. 'Lately he has been ticket seller in one of the uptown theaters. " The whole city feels the stagnation of Wall street. In Riverside Drive nearly half the mansions have "To Let" or "For Sale" on them. Office space In the lower part of Manhattan is at a discount. Rentals In desirable struc tures In the financial district used to 1 be at the rate of from $1.50. to. $2.60 per square foot per year. Now it Is obtainable at $1 or less. There are few buildings that have 75 per cent of their space occupied. , Some have not 50 per cent. As if the situation were not bad enough so far as real estate is con cerned, one giant structure Just com pleted Is searching for tenants, another of monstrous size will soon be ready for occupancy and still another which will be the biggest In the world is un der construction and advertising for lessees. Five years ago the great of fice buildings paid big dividends. To day "there are few of them returning as much as 3 per cent on the Invest ment and a lot of then' barely pay ex penses. Greatest of all the contrasts are In the offices of the brokers. A man sat in one of the principal houses of the street for three-quarters of an hour the other day facing the stock board. His chair was the only one occupied. During all that time not a visitor en tered the room. Occasionally the ticker sputtered and then ceased. The board boy put up a quotation, and loitered about for the machine to resume op erations. The place was still but for the occasional sound of the ticker. The atmosphere was that of desolation. Formerly that office was thronged. To get a seat was a privilege. The ticker kept up a. ceaseless chatter. Nervous, well-dressed men hurried in, glanced at the board, talked In low, earnest tones with attaches, gave heir orders, watched the quotations for 10 or 15 minutes and then raced away. Pros perous, important-looking men would go occasionally to a private room, where there were drinks of all kinds and cigars at their disposal. There was a private dining-room, too, for the most favored of customers. In days of big doings on the exchange that office was in a whirl for five hours. Clerks rushed about, customers gave orders so fast and so frequent that it was hard to understand how all could b kept track of, and there was an air of high pres sure and prosperity to the whole es tablishment. There are no private barrooms In the brokerage offices now. They have been cut out along with a lot of employes. There are no private dining-rooms. The broker can afferd no such luxury. Sal aries have been reduced and economies inaugurated to an extent that Wall street never knew before. Ten thou sand-dollar men now get $1500 or $3000 and are fortunate to get that; $2500 men are glad to get $25 a week. Broad street used to be lined with taxicabs. A little after 3 o'clock would begin the hegira uptown. No one of any account would, waste his precious time in any vehicle slower than an au tomobile. There are few taxis in Broad street these days. Men who used to talk and think In millions now ride in the subway. From Cohoes, Xenia, Painted Post, Butte, Junction City, and a thousand other places men used to come to New York once or twice a year to buy goods, look at the town or Just for a vacation. Maybe they were bankers, manufactur ers, merchants or contractors. At home no one suspected they had stock-market interests. Some of them brought their -wives. In various hotels most of the brokers had branch offices. Down town and uptown the brokers had scouts bright men who saw that old customers who came to town did not stray eff and who were alert to roping In new ones. If the visitor's wife took advantage of the trip East to replenish her wardrobe, what more natural than that the scout should get the husband to play the market to pay for the out fit and the trip combined? If the ven ture happened to succeed, the visitor would want to press his luck. If he lost, he was likely to try to recover his losses by more play. Any way the game went the scout and the broker won. Gentlemen from Cohoes, Xenia, if " - if. , oJ - ? r - ' Painted Post. Butte, Junction City and the thousand other places still come t New York, but few of them are led to Wall street. Somehow the whole coun try seems to be possessed of the notion that Wall street is rotten. Maybe It Is the cumulative effect of a hundred muck-raking articles printed In maga zines. Maybe the multitude of scandals connected with railroad and industrial corporations have sunk home. Maybe the adage of one of a certain specela being born every minute Is not so true now as it used to be. Do not think for a moment that the out-of-town business men made up the list of Wall street's principal votaries. There was better picking among the supposedly well-informed, supposedly conservative merchants of New York than the out-ef-town territory afford ed. Thousands of business men of New York who rarely went to Wall street were the steadiest of players. Men who had enterprises that yielded handsome profits to them yearly kept the tele phone busy every day getting messages from or sending messages to brokerage offices. Hundreds of business men who were Blow in paying their regular bills always found- a way to meet calls for margins. A fair proportion of the failures In New York was due more te stock-market losses of the men at the head of the firms than to general trade conditions or legitimate causes. Wall street pooh-poohs the Idea that (Concluded on Page 8.) SAYI did you ever make up your mind not to do any more tipping? And have you noticed how quick ly you're forced to take the make-up off? In a big town nowadays tipping is as necessary as a traf f io cop. Only by the aid of one or both can you make any progress or get anywhere. And the battle cry In each case is "hands up?" It's so In this country today that before a thoughtful man cushion caroms through the merry-go-round doors of a swell hotel he has to leave his pocketbook on the sidewalk If he doesn't want to lose it. On the other side, across the big pona, ii a notei employe does you a little favor and you slip him tuppence ha'penny or a pfenning he will smile back at you and be much obliged for five minutes. But in this country if you tip any body with a couple of pennies the chances aro you'll wake up in the nearest hospital and find a kind-hearted but not very pictorial nurse lean ing over you and whispering, "keep callum, now, keep cool and calluml xne aoctor says you will recover everything except your watch If he can find- a small piece of the medulla oblongata which was removed from the northeastern part of your bean when the bellboy soaked you with the Ice pitcher!" It takes a brave man to save his money these days. Hep Hardy is one of those reckless tlptossers. He thinks that all silver money should have a smooth surface, thereby making It easier to slip a coin to a waiter. He is what the laurajeans would call a pepper box of prodigality. Hep hands out backsheesh like an absent-minded farmer sowing grain. Hep's trail through a big town looks as though the cashier of a five and ten cent store was walking to the bank and had a hole in the canvas bag. When Hep starts out to pound a pub lic road wtlh his rowdy-cart all the waiters in every hash foundry within sound of his siren fall flat on their races and yell, "Hallelujah! pay day Is here again." Peaches and I dined with Hep at the Saint Astorvllt Hotel night before last. Hep likes to dine there because the waiters are French and when he tries to aay "Good evening!" In their native tongue he insults them so bitterly he has to sprinkle the room with tip money In order to square himself. Hep loves to squeeze into a French cafe, grab a French merfu card, and in a confidential tone give an order like this to the French waiter: "Avec le bcaucoup pomme de terre. Donnez moi de l'eau chaude; Je vais me raser. Avec get a move on you!" Xn a French hour and a half the .French waiter hurries back with eorqe VHobdrt. X i Wa 7WMw P T Z 4c r - "" - vc ; k i 1 culinary melodrama wherein each swallow is a thrill and every new course a climax, and Hep, believing It is all due - to his knowledge of the French language, swells up with pride' and begins to toss money Into the air. Hep doesn't know it, but while he's spilling that Schenectady French all over the tablecloth the waiter is get ting a stone bruise on his palate from holding back his Parisian laughter.' Hep would wrinkle his map with anger if he heard me, but I've been present when he has blurted out some of his French Idioms with the ossified accent, and It's a scream, I notify you. On one memorable occasion he or dered lamb chops and a baked potato In French. The waiter bowed, said. "Qui, M'sieu!" and brought him a bowl soup and the morning of vegetable paper. That's how good that lad's French is poor nut. . As a matter of fact Hep knows ex actly nine ordinary Frrfnch words. In cluding n'eat-ce pas and aveo plaJelr but he has memorized the name of j So when Hep exhausts his nine or dinary words he begins to use up the streets. He rushes, regardless of Epeed limits, all over the city of Paris. Out to Vaugirard, over to the Batignolles, to Cllchy, by Rues and side streets to th'e eastern Boulevard Beaumarchals and St. Denis, then across lots to the western Boulevard des Italiens, then Into the high and off through j the Place de la Concorde, around corners one one wheel into the Champs-Elysees and on and on with the muffler off lt'a Immense I -- However, as I was saying some time ago, Peaches and I dined with Hep and he handed us a few lessons in the gentle pastime of tipping, he surely did. From the very moment we entered the aristocratic beanery he began the giving of alms. The attendant at the revolving doors Imprisoned a nice old lady in cell No. 3, and keep her there, cut off from communication with the world, while he waited for Hep to dig In his Jeans for the customary quarter. A hall-boy paging a missing hus band, stopped short as he saw our party approaching, arranged his face in imi tation of a Spanish mackerel, saluted Has and received 10 cents for his trou ble. ' Battling Bill, the house detective, loomed bulklly in our pathway, and without warning suddenly stooped down to pick up a pin. Hep did a hoodah over the tame Cop's feet, and when they both came smilingly to the surface Battling Bill clutched a 50 cent piece In his Westphalia, and the procession moved on. Then from some dark resess or niche in the wall something In brass buttons and with a whisk broom in its hand darted out like a pickerel and pointed the whisk broom, at Hep. The latter pointed a quarter at the something in brass buttons, whereupon the brass buttons and the whisk broom and the quarter darted away again, thereby bringing to a conclusion the incident of the pickerel. ' As we approached the coatroom the girl in charge was seen to close her eyes In prayer. She didn't open them again until after Hep had explained to her that if she spent the money he gave her for a new hat sne wouldn't have to give It to the income-tax gatherers. Whereupon she was glad and showed her gum-chewing instruments. Then she glanced at the inside of my hat to see if it was expensive and sighed deeply as we passed on. At the door of the souproom we were met by Effendl Bey, the head waiter. Hep whispered something to Effendl, but the Bey wasn't listening He was looking at Hep's hand, which he knew must contain money. It always did. Hep gave Effendl a flash at a treasury note. With the swiftness of thought the money changed hands, whereupon Effendl Bey began to hum, "In my harem my dinkly little harem!" and turned us over to Murad Pasha, one of his lieutenants. Murad Pasha led us to a table and stood there counting the spoons until Hep could find another pocket contain ing money. Then Murad Pasha, clutching his share of the plunder, with many bows and obeisances, faded out of our lives, and Giovanni Handsandf esti, the omni bus, began to splash water Into our glasses. ' Hep got rid of Giovanni by staking him to enough money to enable his lit. tie brother Angelo to get through col lege, and thereafter for a period ot 10 or 15 minutes Hep was permitted to breathe quietly through his nose, and his pocketbook enjoyed a much-needed rest. Soon, however, another coughing fit came on and bis struggles for breath were pitiful. One of, Effendl Bey's lieutenants, made up to look like. Ivan the Terrible, rode up to our table to inquire if waiter had taken our order. Hep told him no, but Ivan couldn't believe it Ivan was firm in his disbelief until Hep gave him money, then he saw the light and went Joyously away from there. Presently a waiter arrived who in some other incarnation must have been a pirate on the Spanish Main. He had a chin which was divided against Itself, and a forehead which was retreating hurriedly on the fourth speed. One look at Captain Kldd and I knew that Hep's desire to die poor but popu lar would be realized. All the time the Captain was taking our order he was sizing us up and hop ing In Portuguese that Hep's eyesight wasn't good so he could short-change him. Finally the deadly Rover of the Seas decided to give us our food first and (Concluded on Page 8.)