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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1903)
THE (TRXGON- DAILY JOURXAL, PORTLAND. SATURDAY. EVEKING, JUXE 10, 1003. THE ORjEGOIf DAILY JOURNAL c a JACKSON Boon JJourtmf Address: JOURNAL PUBLISHING COMPANY, Proprietors. THE OReaON DAILY JOURNAL, Fifth end Yamhill St., Portland, Of, CITY OFFICIAL PAPER. AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. Entered nt the Postofnee of Portland, 0:rco.:, for transmission through ths malls as second-clars irr.ttT. Postage for flnprlt copies Tor an 8, 10, or 15-raso paper. ) cent; 18 to SI pact, 3 cent; over 2S rages, i cents. TELEPHONES Business Office Or son. Main 600: Columbln. 70T.. Editorial Pooms Oregon Main CIO. SUBSCRIPTION Terms by Carrier. The Dally Journal, one year .... The Dally Journal, six months . . The Dally Journal, three months The Doll? Journal, by the week . The Semi-Wtekly Journal. ' - The ScinJWeekly Journal eight to twelve pares each Issue, all tha newa and full market reports, one year 11.60. .5.00 . 2.60 . 1.30 . .10 RATUSt Tormi by Mall. The Dally Journal, by ma.ll. one year.. $4X0 The Dally Journal, by mall, tlx months. 3. The Dally Journal, by mall, three months 1.23 The Dully Journal, by mall, on month. .50 i ' The A'etkly Journal. . i The Weekly Journal. 100 columns of read ing1 each -Issue, illustrated, full market re ports, one year, fl.00. and small Remittances should be made by drafts, postal notes, express orders . - - A - Wtr -4w- miTWr1 tfl,R.7?f57 rindf w era mi a nt rvn THE JOURNAL, P. O. Box 151. Portland. Oregoa "s iez - ' It IS easy enough to be pleas&r.t, When life flows on like a son, But the man worth while Is the man that will smllo When everything: goes dead wrong. For the' test of the heart Is trouble,' And It always comes with the years. And the smile that is worth The praises of ear th is the smile that is seen through tears. Ella Wheeler Wilcox. THE PORT OF PORTLAND COMMISSION. The contest for the control of the Port of h'oruana seema iy ne uubcu cm. v the question of .; political .expediency and " what It will (do, or can be made to do for ' politics as a business, and not particularly In the Interest. of the port and the-people who re expected to carry the burden now and during th jrears to come. Mr. Swigert and Mr. Adams are the two old members of the committee,- hold-overs--f row the - previous ' board,, both, of v whom are thoroughly cog .. nlsant of what has, been done, are thoroughly reliable and Qualified In every way for the , trust; .Besides being capable and success- ! ful msiness inert w, Swigert fc,u pieehan leal engineer and Mr. Adams a civil en 1 rlneer by education and profession, though not in practice, ana n. wouiu kh nm- . proper tours to pursue would be to elect n the chairman f theTcommlssion, one Or ' the other of these gentlemen, both of whom ;" have the "knowledge of its affairs that would ; be of gr'eat benefit at this time to the port: It. must be assumed that when Mr. Adams and 'Mr, Swigert, '.were retained on. the com mission by act of the Legislature, while the ' other members of the old commlss'lon were .dropped, that the law-makers specially con- eldered..the qualifications or tne various per ; sons who were eligible to membership of the commission,' and retained .the two i men referred to on account of thtlr fitness for , the work. ' . f In any line of business enterprise, where new men were to be; selected to' associate ' with the older headjU4ond11cXHt would in be-expected that the new men would be preferred for the executive posijlons, par ticularly if the fitness of the older members was specifically recognized, as. In the cane under consideration. It is to be hoped, for the benefit of tha port and the public interest, that the mem- bers of the commission Will view this matter from. a business standpoint, and that the contest now going on will be settled In a fair and reasonable way, with the political Interest secondary at least to that of the . puonc interest. It Is self-evident that the people of this city who are permitting themselves to be taxed every year to raise vast sums for the improvement of the river, will not view with any degree of satisfaction the possibility of this body being used for political purposes, and there aj many citizens who are now be ' ginning to take the view that this is the cause of the contest. The members of this commission, a public body, could create pub lic confidence in lio more certain way than by selecting Mr.Ad.Trt or Mr. Swigert as chairman, and this lit the reasonable and fit thing to do. provided the public interest Is to "A fellow named Cowgill, nt linker City, who makes his living by fawning on rallroud magnates" these are the words in which the Oregonian editorially describes the man who was the chief agent of the railroads in the effort to invoke the referendum against the portage road, and who, at that time, was given all the space he wanted in the columns ' of our contemporary. A PARTISAN POSTOFFICE The postofflce Investigation has brought to light two significant facts: First, that there has been wholesale corruption among some of the higher officials of the depart nent, and second, that the patronage of the deportment has been used for political pur poses on a very large scale. Corruption and practical politics usually go hand In hand so It Is not surprising to find them asso ciated In this Instance. While the sensational feature of the dls closures thus far made Is the boodling and grafting on the part of postal officials, this is perhaps in fact less. serious than the dls covery that the wRol department is per meated with polities.! Though nominally under- civil service rules, there has been regular traffic In postofB.ee patronage and it has become- the practice to make appoint ments at the request of Congressmen and other influential office-holders. In many in stances appointees who enjoyed a political "pull" have drawn salaries without doing any work whatever. ' Postal faciljties have frequently been ex tended in new district, merely for the pur pbs4 6f creating places for the proteges of prominent politicians. The whole depart ment has become honeycombe.l with politics and is fast assuming the appearance of a more adjunct to the politicnl machine of the party In power. The evils of a partisan postofflce are even greater than the corruption which ha- jfn discovered among postal officials. The Lit ter may be eradicated with... Comparative ease,'t)0t to' cleanse the department from politics Is a far greater task. It may well be questioned whether it will be accomplished as the result of the inVes Ugatlon now in progress. President Roose Velt himself will scarcely have the courage to enter upon so vast an undertaking in the face of the certain opposition of a large and influential element of the Republicans In Congress. So long as the Republicans re main in power there is little reason to hope that the administration of the postofflce -will return to a strictly non-partisan basis. The receipts of the Postofflce Department for the fiscal year ending in 1902 were about 1122,000,1uO, and for the current year they will be about ten millions more. .'These figures show the gigantic amount of busi ness transacted by the department and con vey some idea of the tremendous power which its patronage confers. It is interesting to observe how closely Kuropean governments observe the utter ances of the American press. Nothing conld be more significant of the growing power of this country in the affairs of the world. It a lili, faiu tt'bab a ova that r- ...n .1 Was In a fever of excitement .over the crit icisms uttered by American newspapers, and now Russia is equally disturbed. In no other country does the newpapers exercise .10 powerful an influence as in the United States and it Is the appreciation of this fact that leads foreign governments to study so cloBely the medium through which the American people express their views. A philosopher who has studlnd th" sub ject declares that there are exactly as many ways of being fooled by a woman as there j are women in the world. This Is very dls- ; couraging to the man who is trying to I understand the sex. I The dispatches from Martinique, report ing the renewed activity of Wont Pelee, suKgests that the volcano is growing Jealous of the recent prominence given, by the news papers to the Mississippi. The waiters' strike in Chlc.iero has re . suited in the formation of an Anti-tlptiiis League, whose members-are pledged to re frain frro,glvlnR tins to einDloves in hotels land restaurants. This unexpected retqtlla- tn,. V. . . - . 1 - , ihhi wq vwcu iuiiic luiiK litcws iUOUHK me . atrikers. OeorRe Brownell does not want to be District Attorney, for he has said so repeat edly. How grieved he will be if the Oregon delegation disregards his earnest wishes and insists upon his appointment: Mark Hannahs a-dvlce to his fellow Re publicans to "stand pat" is probably prompted by his owrr unpleasant sensations when he recently took the opposite course.' , - ' '. "' ' . j The welcome given to President , Rofsevelt . Cothcldeirt with the laundrv Btrtke in f 'hi-1 hv iw jigo, iher wjas. an epidemic of marriages, j hts return -from his Western trip.-would NNo wonder! Men musi.flnd some means to probably have been" more" gratifying to him tt their Unen washed. I If they had only-been voters. f :-V V; .. - ; -'I IN FAMOUS SERMON FROM THE BIBLE. , x BRIDLE THE TON OUE. ", (A Little Member, but a Powerful Instrument of Much Good and Great Harm.) ' v ,, James 111. " ;""' ;, ' , . My brethren, be pot many masters, knowing that we ahall .- '7 .' , Receive the greater condemnation. For In many things we offend alL If any man offend not In word, the same ' . ' - IS A PERFECT 'MAN, And able to bridle the whole body. "' ' Behold, we put bite In the horses mouths, , ' " THAT THEM MAT OBEY U8; And we turn about their whole body. Behold also the ships, which though they Be so great, and are 'driven of fierce winds, Yet are they turned about with a very small helm, Whithersoever the governor llsteth. Even so the tongue la a little member, And boasteth great things. BeholtLyhow great a matter a little fire klndleth! AND THE TONGUE IS A FIRE, A WORLD OF INIQUITY. Fo Is the tongue among our members, . i - That It deflleth the whole body, And aetteth on fire the course of nature: AND IT IS SET ON FIRE OF HELL, . For every kind of beasts, . And of birda, And of serpents. And of things In the sea la tamed. And hath been tamed of mankind: BUT THE. TONGUE NO MAN CAN TAME. IT IS AN UNRULY EVIL, FULL OF DEADLY f OISON. Therewith bless weGod, evert the Father; And therewith curse we men, , WHICH ARE MADE AFTER THE SIMILITUDE OF GOD. Out of the aame mouth proceedeth blessing and cursing. My brethren, these things ought not so to be. DOTH A FOUNTAIN SEND FORTH AT THE SAME PLACE SWEET WATER AND BITTER T Can a fig tree, my brethren, bear olive berries T Either a vine, figs? So can no fountain both yield salt water and fresh. WHO IS A WISE MAN And endued with knowledge among you? Let him shew out of a good conversation His works with meekness of wisdom. Bat if ye have bitter envying and strife in your hearts, GLORY NOT, AND LIE NOT AGAIN8T THE TRUTH. This wisdom descendeth not from above, but IS EARTHLY. SENSUAL, DEVILISH. For where envying and strife Is, there is confusion AND EVERY EVIL WORK. But the wisdom that; is from above , Is first pure. Then peaceable, gentle. And easy to be lntreated. Full of mercy and good fruits, Without partiality, and Without hypocrisy. AND THE FRUIT OF RIGHTEOUSNESS IS SOWN IN PEACE OF THEM THAT MAKE PEACE. ONE MAN'S GOOD WORK. For upward of six weeks a low-voiced, quiet -mannered man has sat at the desk lh the big room In the northwest comer of the fourth floor of the Postofflce Department Building, at Washlngon, D. C. That desk was formerlly presided over by August W. Machen, recently arrested, charged With having accepted a bribe In connec tion with a contract for supplying articles for the use of the free delivery division of the Postofflce Department... The guiet man who has, directed the business of that, branch of the service since Machen Was suspended, a month before his arrest, is Martin C. Fosnes, Postofnee Inspector, with a dozen years of service to his credit. Mr. Fosnes Is char acteristically Norwegian. He is of medium height and rather spare build, with the thin face, high cheek bones and Bquare Jeftv of men of his race. He has a shock of light -brown hair, tinged with gray; a thick, reddish mustache covering a firm mouth,, and blue eyes, deep set under bushy eyebrows. He is 62 years old, but doesn't look it by 10 years.. He was born In Norway and came to this country with bis parents when he waa 16. They settled near Winona, Minn where the young man followed farming until he entered the government service at the age of 30. Young Fosnes attracted the attention of William Wlndom, then the central figure in Minnesota public life, through whose influence he waa appointed a special agent In the pension bureau. He served in this capacity for 10 years, nearly all the time In the Middle West. He made such a good record that he was then transferred to the Inspection corps of the Postofflce Department. In his 12 years pt service aa Inspector he has done about everything, such an officer has to do lrt the course of his regular fluty." 'He "has spied on letter carriers and clerks suspected of rifling the mails. He has chased train robbers and postofflce burglars; has followed' the more peaceful pursuit of checking up the accounts of postmasters, and later directed other Inspectors who did these things. It is said that, in all his service, he never asked for an assignment, never refused one, nor even hinted that any task was distasteful to him. At the beginning of the first McKinley administration, back in 1897, Joseph L. Bristow of Kansas was made Fourth Assistant Postmaster-General. The inspection division was under his Jurisdiction, and the ' reports of the 50 or more Inspectors passed through his hands. Among them were those of Inspector Fosnes. -There was a certain quality about them that Bristow liked. They were direct and to the point, and there was no point in a case he investigated that was left to the imagination. He had a way of getting at facts without allowing.his mind or his reports to -be hampered by a mass of irrelevant detail. With characteristic determination he stuck to a case until he had cleared up any mystery there might be connected with it. And his concluflions were about right in every ease, so ihia superior offlcerf 'say. Mr. Fosnes' work cannot be said to be characterized by brilliancy, but more by a clear power of analysis and an ability to "bone" on a case and study It In every phase In, the en deavor to reach a solution. The methods pursued by Fosnes strongly -attracted Bristow. They were like his own in many respects, and he therefore pushed Fosnes to the front in order to test his ability in an executive position. During the Spanish-Amef lean' war he was assigned to temporary charge of the Chicago division. Then he was sent to Philadelphia In permanent charge of that division. While In the Quaker City he was given several, important and complicated cases to Investigate, and did his work so well that, Mr Bristow knew he had a man on whom he could depend and who could be trusted With almost .any. duty in his line. Just about this time the investigation dt Cuban postal accounts was ordered, and Bristow was assigned to take charge of- it. Inspector Fosnes was the first man selected to assist him. The history of the Cuban frauds is well known and need not be repeated here. At the conclusion of the investigation. It became necessary to name some one as acting director of posts,' and Inspector Fosnes was assigned to that duty, which he discharged with his usual ability and faith fulness. ' - Mr. Fosnes returned from Cuba somewhat broken in health, the result of an attack of yellow fever, and was ordered by his doctors to a bracing climate. He did not want to loaf and asked for an assignment that, might meet the requirements of his health, and he was therefore sent to St. Paul, in charge of the northwestern division. He stayed there until about two months ago, when he Was called to Washington to again assist his chief In unearthing frauds. . He waa put In charge of the Investigation of the free delivery service, over which August w. Machen had supervision. For a time Machen was allowed to continue in service. Then Fosnes asked that Machen be .relieved in order that he might have full control of all the papers and documents In the bureau. Machen was suspended Indefinitely, and within a month was arrested on a charge of bribery, the case having been worked Up by Inspector Mayer, under Fosnes' orders. ' r One thing that strikes a person who attempts to Interview Mr. Fosnes Is his extreme modesty. At no time has he claimed any credit for MS ,w6rk m Cuba, nor ' in the present investigation. He prefers to let that speak for itself. Neither .does he -rive out any more information than he intends to. He is courteous -and willing to answer questions, but when the answers are dissected they are found to contain little . in formation that might make a sensation. As a matter e-f fact, he would rather keep in the background, and let others make public the results of the work he does so diligently and quickly. Since Mr. Machen's arrest there has been considerable talk about Fosnes being made chief of the free delivery service, but that appointment has been deferred by common consent until the conclusion of the work he Is now doing, and doing' well. - THE SOCIALISTIC WA VE 'WJ. e'v 1 , The Commercial.: West, that weU-kown 1 llshlng a aeries of articles ahowinf the ei Minneapolis publication, contained In, a re- travagancea and waste of the various mu cent issue the following Interesting comment nlcipal-owned propositions of England. ; I on "Socialisms . ., 1 . - , shows how the little Clty.pf Cardiff, for In "The - Irrltatlona- iti- connection -with ' the stands,'- has conducted various enterprise coal strike naturally caused a great many capitalised ' at : 283.J1, (Iightlg, bathH people, to bs quickly converted to the So. markets and cemetery) at a net loss for th 4-lallstic plan of government operation of tha year ending March ti 1901, of f 8,578. In th compulsion In their conversion,' which now J turlng suburb of London, which Includes r being removed, win leave tha converts very (Victoria docks, and has a 1 population iX loosely. bound to their Socialistic faith.--The more than 275,000, the Socialists cami UnUed States Is a poor soil for Socialistic control of the town council folio wlfi thej principles Individual enterprise isithe? key great dock strike of 1890. The Socialistic! to our industrial advancement, and this fact council first established a .works' 'depart 4 a great majority of the people of tjia cdiun ment' to do ltll borough work- by 'direct em- try will doubtless always bear In mind, re- pIoymenL', Employment was supplied re-l fusing therefor to ever go far with Social- J gardlesa of the cost, a new 100,000 hospital! istio scnemes wnicn restrict originality, en-1 being at once atarted as a means of Increaa terprlse .and initiative, and lead to Inef- ling the opportunities for employment. OnM flciency and waste. : V " union labor waa employed, the - elght-houiH " v . 4 ' - day was adopted, and the union Scale with . "England during th last . few years, has to per cent Increase ' became the borough been experimenting with various Socialistic scale, -j . - . , ,',.? m- schemes, but the experimenta, though Inter ; ' j '.? ''' ,' . ,! . ''" estlng. will hardly lnsplra In the American --Housing schemes"" wire "neir tn "order, people a desire to do likewise. ; ! ..' ' Twenty-Seven dwellings were built and oe- "Here are aome of the articles which 4 cupled by employes of the Borough Corpora jrocates: of j. municipal-ownershlp-hava-led tlonwhoTald only nominal rent. They got certain British municipalities to acquire or electria lighting at Id. per week, half what establish: ..r-4. :,-r. it cost tha borough. .. . A law was passed Turkish baths, owned by the cities of granting liberal pensions to , city laborers Leamington and Harrogate.' after short service. Th evening sessions of "Municipal lectures, established In Olas- th council were attended by great audience! gow, in addition to that city's ownership of of borough employes who wer. admitted water works and car lines.' ; even to the floor of th council chanr to "Fireworks displays, given at municipal express their demands. Th cost by'Harrogate, . ..r,. -Jin expenditure grew from 13,000 to "Laundries, LlverpooL ' 00o, and the rates of taxation became morA Bhares in snip canai, Manchester. than doubled. The manufacturing enter- 'Municipal Palace,' Glasgow. . y prises of the borough were required to pay "Business premises for renting, soon to be art unusual part of the Increased taxes. , erected by Sheffield.' .. ' ; ,-, : ,. ' '""it "Rabbit warren. Torquay, ... ' -But this plan of taking from the rlch lo "Oyster fishery. Colchester. give to the poor had Its drawbacks. Rents "Sterilised milk, supplied by St Helen's, were raised from 13 to 20 per cent: manu4 "Crematorium, H1L facturers considered going elsewhere, and; c. irw, uonouwr win -woesier. i nnaiiy , the labor , people who were not city employes became envloua of those In the employ of the, city, who were notoriously, lasy and getting 20 per cent more than the union scale of wages. The disgust of taxi, payers reached a climax when a bill wai proposed for various public works to cost Doncaster conducts Its own races. "Golf , links, Bournemouth. "Hotels, Bradford and LlverpooL ' "Docks and harbor, Bristol, "One castle, Nottingham. "Local universities, Birmingham and Not' tlngham, with Liverpool to establish one In ;not Jess than 3,696,000, Including ' 1,675, the near fufure. , " 1 1 00: If ore workmen's 4wniiinM. - t. "Municipal organ, with salaried organist, j payers banded. Into a defensive orranliattns. Liverpool. and ended the Socialist realm, which i.e . ' ... however, a learaev of-l.oo.fton nrnanM... "The London Times has lately" been pub-I obligations." Jackson. ."---" TODAY. yV TALLEST GERMAN SOLDIER. I love this age of energy and forcer ' The German armv la ..ihr-rf Ex Dec t an tlv I greet each pregnant hour, lrmirahi ... - - . ... c'iui ui tin Boiaiers, Emerging from the All-Creative source, but very few. if any. can nnm"w1hln Supreme with promise, Imminent with jnche of tht aitltude of the one , power. v .1 all the many branches of th' flfM.n The strident whistle and the clanging bell, . The man who enlov iMd rti.Hr.W 1- The noise of gongs, the rush of motored I poral Tapplicoff. and In hbi stocking feet h things I registers six feet and nin tnohmm :Th. in Are but the prophet voices which foretell corporal finds that his extreme hM,h A time when Thought may use unfettered rdr4wi hlm rar wore attentjon than hA w,ng. - Innate modestr : thinks necessarv. 1. made the butt Of many a 1ok nernetratMt n Too long the drudgery of earth has been , his shorter companions. ' A barrier 'twlxt mart and his own mind. -; , T.if6 htM i. recomnensa for i.im hAv.. Remove the stone, and, lo! the Christ within? f0r he Is greatly admired by the Kaiser, who ror e is mere, ana , wnoeo evea. ,.u frequently calls upon him for special duties "na- ' - . . I which bring With them a measure of r,io.- The great Inventor 1s the modern Priest: ure, and relief from the routine of arm He paves the pathway to a higher goal. I life. Once from tne gnna 01 enaiess ton rweasea, 1 Tannllenfr rniy h.- fh. t,i. t w" vw,m uw .w.eoniMtfly1n, lhfl KaiMr on his trip to Rbmej- wnere me tail soiaier attracted mucn atten tlon among the comparatively small soldiers of Italy., ;,.:', .. ,(. " And all the restless rush, this strain and strife, This noise and glare is but the fanfar'ade That ushers In the more majestic life, When Faith will walk with Science un afraid. ' I feel the strong vibrations of the earth. I sense the coming of an hour Sublime, I ranean. 8ILK8 MADE BY A FISH. . Silk Is obtained from the shellfish known as the pinna, which la found In the Medlter. J This shellfish has the power And bless the star that watched above my I spinning viscid silk which in Sicily ii,-th Unto, a rearular and very handsome And let me live in this important time. I The silk Is spun hy he shellfish in the first I Ella Wleeler Wcox. Instance for the purpose of attaching Itself to the rocks. It is able to guide the delicate Medlter. f power ofA IsmacjO fabj6. JL. THE "FUNNY" NEWSPAPER MEN. A crystal stream, -All swiftly flowing, A. big staadd tree Above it growing. A bank of green, A Jug of rye, A bed of mint, . A place to He. Aft old tin cup,' A chunk 1f Ice, An hour of ease 'And paradise. ' Detroit Journal, fllamets to the proper place and there glue them fast, and if they are cut away it can reproduce them. The materia! when gath rered (which Is done at low tide). Is washed I in soap and water, dried, straightened, and carded, one pound of the coarse filament yielding about three ounces of fine thread, which, when spun, , Is a lovely burnished golden .brown color, First Kid Is he in love wld her? Second Kid Sure. I seen him gib her al- HIS REMEDY. Recently aJiotelkeeper of Nyltrla in Hun gary, was Informed by his guests that it, was lmp6sslble for them to sleep on ac count of the coftcms Which "Wire kept up In the lower part of the building until a very la.te. hour. ! and that thev would be much most ae wnoie core ot, a appie.-t. W)U1S oblI)red to hlnl , he would Provide tr ?u'uu ue'"" l" 1 " orry "f age conatlrting a nightcap, some cotton 'T do, and I'm glad of It. although my - Drtnted notice, which rea4 membership compels me to take a few M fou0ws: 'If. the musicians make too chances. .. ' u a . "In what wayr !. 1.1. .v- ...... .v I had to quit looking at the gas meter L,, ,.. wn nvw vnnr fn nr '. h. and weighing my Ice." Washington Star. L. .n ...... ..i.i.i ,. , , yuar Will Iflll MLBkWU 1, J UU1U1L1.T. AM. I J Ethel I offered Ferdy a penny for his thoughts. . . nioitji wen, 1 u never let you do any shopping for me! Puck. -WON'T HELP SOCIALI8T ARGUMENT. Recent developments In the postofflce de partment serve' to remind the advocates "of government control of transportation and production Industries that they never have beert able to bolster their argument by any THE CYNICAL REFLECTIONS OF A I BACHELOR. There Is no reward for lost love; because nobody wants its return. - The birds that fly the strongest don't have the. finest plumage. To a woman, the next handsomest people after herself "are her children. . ' When a woman Is going to tshurch it Is a sign She Is dressed In her best You could never, make , a woman believe . reference to ' the one' - bualnwaav. uril.K h. government does' control, the postal business. that H tn anK-don't have nice crlnkley Louisville Courier-Journal. hair. New York Press, It is Impossible for liny man to be true to himself by deceiving oth ord-Herald. ' Old Roue Young man, I have graduated from the school of experience. ':"' : , ' Young one--FrOm the result, I would be THE HARDER LOT. White Horse I hate to eat dry hay. Brown Horse Cheer up. Think , of the Chicago Reo-": willing to bet that lt .was a night school,- poor people who have to eat health' food Princeton Tiger 'Chicago Dally News,",, A -TV