f-ili 5 Edito Page RIAL -OF i-HE- iOUrUMAL- ? ... 1 MSSJSSMSWSSSSlSMSSSaMSMSSaSSSSaeaM J?SSnnxn THE JOURNAL AM IMDEPINDInT IIWWi. C. S. JACUOM... ; la. rtXU 4 XfBMU eoreew. (wum !, (or kiMMa Unok ta " M 4lM WtM IMIeartal MW,...H .,...,.IJI JM kwlMI OfSc UI 608 rOBKIOM ADTCSTIBtlfO MPBE81KTATIT1 f mUM lMjiali BpeeUI ATV1n , Itet Kiwi ml, e XS Xlua lmll4- j Is. Csleege. . ' 4 VakMrtpttoa Tma Tr II a asanas -' M tb Ualte Btatee. LIBiaa r eKl . . . I DAILY. ; - 'v - ,... t OM - Cm Mt.,...,...H.N I Oh SMta.......t jr ...... DAILY AK UNDAY. .... I On .OS , Threw sway idle hop! . ' com to thin own ; aid If thoa carest at all for thyself, , while It la la thy power Marcua Amelias, ;,' . 5 j ORCHARD OF THE WORLD. TATES, like men, are sometimes .V greater than they believe them ; selves to be, and the discovery . of their latent qualities it often the cat ( Oregon's friends believed that enthusiasm had exhausted itself in the contemplation of her marvelous re sources, and ' were 'eontent in the (thought that her fertility had been thoroughly exploited. s v;. ; And now comes forward Judge . Cyras' Happy, of Spokane, with, the statement that Oregon's winter apple : industry is but in its cradle period; that with development it will do more . orange did for.' California, andthat Oregon is destined to' be the orchard pf the whole world. Fine thought, and- splendid prediction; and better than belief and prophecy is the proof that Turtle Hknnv offers for the faith ' fhat is in him. i :-"- "s - , ' ' ; ' In an article published today in the magaiine section of The Sunday Journal Judge Happy gives the result of some investigation of the apple in dustry, and asserts that there is a . toe of belt around 1' the , world in which the 'winter apple if produced vn perfecfionl This tone lies between the 40th and 50th parallels of north latitude, and embraces all of Oregon, Washington and Idaho. This is a narrow strip, ; whose limited area is an everlasting guarantee against over , production . of the ; fruit;, and even within its close confines are areas on which the winter apple may not be grown with great profit. But on the favored spots orchards will be planted and will yield abundantly, with har '.: vests exceeding in value that of many wil become the most valuable in this country, because they will produce the greatest profit. ; .' ' Tutare Hibbv rmintl ta the care and rucuimv uicuivui L iiavv (iiuf California's orange groves the source of so much wealth, and compares these with the slip-shod, haphazard ' ways pf Oregon's fruit growers. But the change for the, better is notice able, and the winter apple orchard of aL :li'. v . J scientific basis, and from its limited confines to a constantly growing market will tro the finest fruit in the Mtr1f trra flt twill swM Anf im producer in the millionaire's class. .' ' Oregon Is " still richer than we ' thourht it was. ' '"' ..." ,t niu antna uu weir .. r T.TNUSUAL INTEREST at- ij iacnes tnis year to tne state 7'' "l ' campaign in Maine, where .'the chief time between -the fientih. licans and the Democrats is the 're submission of the prohibition amend- . ment to the constitution. The Demo c'crats have adopted a platform de- mandina resubmission of the amend. ment and are making their -campaign " cm the cry "Let Maine Be Honest." The contention of the Democrats is are 4ot in favor of genuine prohibi- tion: that in manv localitiea the U . of liquors is still carried on despite the law against it; and that after hav ing given prohibition a full, fair trial. , the people should now have onnor. . tunity to say whether they desire to ' continue it : If the vote should result in favor of prohibition, the question would then be regarded as settled. If it should result adversely, the state , would return to the old 'system of licensing the tale of liquors. ; j Undoubtedly, .there are. many Re publicans in Maine who would wel come the abolition of prohibition. .Yejt . it seems scarcely . probable that enough of them will scratch the party ticket to enable the Democrats to win. In the amnion of the political arooh ets Maine will go Republican, as Usual.'-" -, '''' ' , Oddly enough in South Carolina, where a somewhat similar issue has been raised,' the attitude of .the two fifties is reversed. The battle there is for and aaainst the state dispensary system. Under the leadership of Senator Tillman the Democrats are championing the system, while the Republicans are - contending for a more liberal construction of the liquor" laws. ; f ' v- ' ' 1: THE "ETON SLOUCH." TN A VIGOROUS editorial the I .'. Boston Globe comments csustic "ally on the prevalence -of the "Eton slouch" smong American boys. Says-this critic: - ,. ' ,f. ' It la a. parados, an trooy Pt this relan of Theodore 4h ntrenuona, , that It ehould have beooma th Mlfht of taah lon tor young Araerioa to alouch. Everywhere, whether In vUIaa tane or la city etreet. the real Up-to-dato youta U proclaimed y weii-oaiea alovenilncsa of bearing aa he louna ea laally alone- In hla ahouldera there la a stoop and hi walk 1 a carefully cultivated h am ble that would flU the aoul of a ufeiona hobo with envy. It la not the mloclnf Mica Nancy step of the now extinoi dude, and much lew do It resemble the swaacrln roll of the dead heavy swell of the poat bellum ported. - The dude of the early etvhtiea. when Oacar Wilde waa enthroned beneath the banner of the lily", waa effeminate la the extreme, while hla predeoeiaor, the well aaaumed - a raaacullne rlfor If ha had It not. The youth In Style to day eeeke the extreme neither of af femlnaey nor of maeoullnltyr hla atti tude Btmply la that of a heavy, drafting world wearineaav- " ' The dude or the swell wouldn't hare been caught dead with hla handa 'la his pookete. But the lathartio younr ater of tha-onrrtnt period wouldn't be found allva under any circumstance with hia handa out of his pocket. Even a the hottest daya of thla hotteet sum mer ho la not tempted from the fash ion In thla regard, but auffera hla fin gera to awelter In the fartheat deptha of hia treuaere pocketa that they may be ta etyla. ; Am a crown -for hla alouchlng figure be affecta a alouchlng bat, lta atray brim pressed straight up from hla forehead and almost aa straight downward la the back. In this carefully misshapen manner yon will eaa costliest and soft est panamaa and the coaraeat domeatle fetra wat-t.. In our democracy fashion knows no clssses. knows neither race, color nor 'condition of servitude. Th T e clock In the morning young man. with all oar national adaptlve aesa, oontrivea auceessfully to counter felt, even while on the way to polish up the handles of th big front door, th languoroua aaunter of th 10 o'clock curled darling of Eaay atreet And each wears on hla lapel a baoMlora buttoa a th symbol of their common brother hood. .. .. .. , This "stooping, slouching, shuffling, hands-in-the-pocket fashion" as the Globe describes it, is by no means unknown in Portland. ' It ia con stantly in evidence on our streets. It is a, bad babit A slouching gait be gets slouching in other things. The physical slouch is ap to Jcome a mental and'moral alouc. , The true American boy throws back hit shoul ders, lifts his feet and shows by his carriage that he respects himself. i As a guards officer once said to his men: -Try to walk at if you have t. sovereign In your pocket" Per haps yon have not all got a sovereign in your' pocket, but you thould try to look and walk at if you had, and put a little more dash into your walking and marching." v. .',r THE PEOPLE WANT TO KNOW. IF THE HOLDERS of public , franchises in Portland refuse to ' im Tar ar4 ra ,t at roa T mmmm A a vumijij w i vsa uvi eVewssaaj a v- mand for a quarterly statement of their receipts and disbursements. some action should be taken, either by the people or by the legislature. Undoubtedly a law can be enacted which will compel all these corpora tions to give the desired information, for the city .should have the right to exact it for purposes of taxation, if for no other reason. It matters little whether section 99 of the charier is or is not applicable to the holders of franchises granted before the charter went Into effect Irrespective of that section, the right to know the profits of these semi-public corporations is a necessary incident , of the power of taxation..'" . . ' ' We do not accept, however, the ex cuse that the holders of franchises granted under a former charter are not subject to the provisions of sec tion 99. We believe that the mayor's interpretation of the section it the proper one and that it will be upheld by the courts. But if not, let a law be enacted which will compel these cor porations to open their books and make known the true value of the franchises which they hold. ' ENFORCE THIS LAW. - T T EREAFTER the people whose M criminal paths have led them . to jail will, while they' are guests of the county, eat the plain but wholesome fare supplied by contract For many years . prisoners at the county jail have feasted free on meals supplied by the sheriffs of Multnomah who charged the people I7yi cents for them. ' By expert caterers, who serve many fastidious patrons, that price was said to be rather high for the tort of food poked through the bars to the jail birds; and it has not ..been jdenied that the sheriffs msde from $200 to $300 4 month profit, in feeding the prisoners. - - -;'' " ' ' A ;: " ' Before the last election, the county court announced that a change .would be mede, and that without regard to the man who wat elected tberiff the prison fare .would be supplied by coa tract. The power to do , this was granted a decade ago, but for reasons hsrdly worth considering now, was never exercised. .. ..The Journal believes ,the change a good one, and does not think Sheriff Stevens will be wise if he makes any serious, objection, to. it- It js in ac cordance with the law, and as a law officer Mr. . Stevens should be the first to see that it is made; it will, re move one fertilecause of criticism of the sheriffs office, and it will save the people two or three hundred dollars a month.: V.,.'.. v.. .'-v. ;7.-v; ' For thfs last reason, if for no ether, The Journal insists .that the law be enforced. -. ' '. ",; .' ' ,'.;."s ROOSEVELT'S LATEST AP ;. POINTER V JAMES S. HARLAN of Chicago, who has been selected by Presi dent Roosevelt as a' member of the interstate commerce commission, comes of good old Kentucky stock and has qualities that should qualify him well' for the position to which he hss been appointed. He is a son of John M. Harlan, who for nearly 30 years hss been associate justice of the United States supreme court Jus tice Harlan's three sons, James, John and Richard, have all gained distinc tion in their chosen walks of life. All of them are men of unusual stature and fine physique, and in their college days were famous members of Prince ton's football team. John Harlan has been a picturesque figure in Chicago's civic affairs and has been one of the most persistent, aggressive and un compromising foes of corruption and dishonesty, in municipal politics that that' city has ever known. James Harlan was for some time attorney general of Porto Rico, where he was intimately ; associated , with Judge Hunt,' now presiding in the land fraud prosecutions in this city. The courage, the , energy, and . the grim, bulldog tenacity which (carried yhim triumphantly through many a hard fought battle 'on the gridiron doubt less appealed strongly to our stren uous president, and influenced his se lection. They are qualities which should stand Mr. Harlan in good stead in his new position; for there is already abundant evidence that the railroads will not submit willingly to the new rate regulation law. One Lariducci,twho finds it hupps sible to resist the attractions of com bat, and whose freqnt infractions of the lew passed to safeguard the peace and dignity of the people have caused his-, arrest and imprisonment times numberless, ' dei"" f becoming a policeman. We suggest that he be sworn in, that he be sent on the cemetery walk, and that with his star and club he be given a commission to beat into sensibility the first person he finds looking for trouble. Those sociologists who ire enrich ing Rockefeller by burning the mid night oil to prove that the cost to the people of all : necessaries has nearly doubled in the past 20 years, should permit themselves to dream only "while they sleep. One of the sreatest necessaries in the world, the newspaper, has not only not increased " By Henry F. Cope. I They bind heavy burden and grievous to be borne, and lay them on men'a ahoulderai but they themselves will not move them with en of their flngera. Matt xxtlirt. . HAT a relief to discover that the . Almighty's requlr- ; ments are not the same aa those set jip by his aelf- nomlnated representative. The small man alway has a multitude of rules for ather people. Th Infinite wisdom set before man only great and broad principle for hla guidance. After all. It la a much simpler thing to do right and to live a religious life- than many would hav ua auppos. Th complexi ties are of our making. ' , ' ' Religion ha suffered from th people who hav an Itch to be regulator; they eek to escape th practice of th deed of righteousness by devotion to the enactment of lta regulation. They seek to compound with tbeir conscience for th lust to which they yield by ex cessive restriction regarding thos for which they nav no desirs. These creators of burdens, then child ish Inventors of trivial regulations and deprlvatlona hav uoodd In turning many a heart back Into th desert. Men longing for . larger life, looking to the way of religion and seeing nothing but Innumerable and Infinitesimal legal ne gation, hav turned awayempty and disappointed. .' Heart hungry for th Inflnlt hav turned perplexed from a ohurch that aya, It you would find Ood and llf you must put your soul Into th harness that we hav been making these thousand feara, the harness of prejudice, prohlbl lona, penalties, and proscriptions; If you would be plou you must cultivate a woebegone vlaage, speak In. a. whins, and take all llf as If it were a nauseat ing doae. Thank Ood ther alwaya were thoa who would rather go empty than get into this harness. Religion must mean not restriction"!, but enlargement; not a burden but an uplift not less llf but mora. It put on a man, not a straight .jacket but tne uniform of strength end hope end per fection. It key word la not law but llf. Ita principle I not that of regula C ; A Sermon or Today V m - 1 ltl 11 J BURDENS THAT CURSE;':.-; . :''y.y': tion by aegatlea but regulation by th In price, but the cost of The Journal has been reduced over SO per cent and the value has icressed 100 per cent :v ' "-''.;.' ', :' ' ,f . San Francisco has so much eash in hand that she is forced to lend it in Naw York. We are glad that the people Cjf the Bay City regard this as a sign of prosperity; in .Portland we need all the money we can raise for the development of the city, ; .? v, . v ' a ' V : After an absence of 31 years. Pro fessor Charles H.. Frye -returned to his home! handed his wife $5,000, and said "Ask me no questions. Thirty one years.' That's the longest poker game on record.', '.- ':.';.: , t. ,' ' " '. Whenever the dispatches tell of a more than ordinarily sanguinary out rage in Russia, they close with the statement that "the cxar'e yacht, with steam up, is lying, off the palace steps. , ,. .' -.v . j .; It ia just possible 'that much of the charm of this delightfully .'cool and pleasant weather Is due , to the tem porary withdrawal of the Thaw case from the.oublie prints. - ' V : v- Sentence Sermons. We are ta be what' w are today. tittle duty' euros a lot of doubt ; The truth that does not liberate you enslave you. -- That alone, la learning which issue In llf. ., " - '-- : .- Who glvee a Mtl help find a large p!c of heaven, ; v , . " Th beat 'protest agalnat dirt ta that which la mad with a broom. Prayer la away from anxiety, .but not from activity. . v ', - Bserlng th croaa ahould not giv you a eroa bearing. - -,: . , -. , Ton cannot know) - the i kingdom of heaven If you have forgotten how to be happy. . .' 1 - ' .'. A narrow man ia the en who most easily la twisted crooked. , ,' Th Dlety that pulla dowa your fee waa prepared In th pit . ,. . Hardship often la th nam that hap- plneaa puts on bar door. , Th 'church- that do' not Invest In humanity has dividends awaiting It In havn. y.t . , ' , Thar I mas- eplrltualtty la a little song than la a week'a sighing. . . . v v. :.-. - " f It takea robre than a etaterty way to mak a aalnt,f a man. -ii f ; ,. i It'a a profltles task trying ta lay up other people treasure In heaven. , : Moving Weatward. V Prom the PhUadelphla Bulletin. Official figure ahow that immigra tion Into th Cnlted State during th last fiscal year was allghtly In excess of 1.1SS.00S. . Thla la aa Increase of not quit TSfOOS ever th yeer previous. It ahow that the movement weatward of aliens Intending to become American cltlsena. although not lessening, la not undergoing any marked acceleration. It I f urthermer to be noted that In th past yeer 11.411 appllcanta for admla alon were aent back at th expense of th ateeraahlp eompanlea which brought them over. Evidently th Inspector whose business it ta to axamln Into th qualifications of Incoming foreigner have not been Idle. Th truth probably I that th average physical standard of th alien who hav entered thla coun try recently I distinctly above that of th population from which they are drawn. development of th rightneas, th beat within. , .. - Religion, real religion In th soul of man, seeks to get Put of th narrow, gravellk pew Into th plac where Ood seems to be; th spirit of worship erlos out for th large apace, th soul swings In aubllme circles about the a tare. Reli gion cannot breath wher men crowd thick In angry debet about foolish question. It seeks to be where rustling leaves and soughing winda ar breath ing their adoration of a Ood who In- habiteth eternity, The only safe way,4 the only on along which It both happtnea and uae fulnes, la to live out th llf you hav within, to be natural, to tell th truth to yourself.- Don't call yourself ylle worm of th dust whan you beltev yoa ar a, fairly decent cltlsen, and don't do for a portrait or th church window type when you know that you belong with th tricky traders In th tmpla If w but knew it ther 1 enough good In every on of ua waiting ex pression both to keep us busy and to mak up, and mora than make up for our deficiencies In thos virtues w nvy. ' Many a man 1 sighing because h eannot be Saint Anthony who ia do ing a great deal more good in th world by Just going on with ' his yry-day business or blacksmith) or merchant. tlv out your present beet; that la what th world needa; It will lead to the thing yt betur. ,. '. . ' Honest plain, straight equar dealing ha it increment in religion as well as In buslnes. . If you want to be a better man th almpl. easy, and only way la to mak th moat or th good you al ready hat; setting busy th virtue w posses w soon find ourselves blest with thoa w had admired afar off, but perplexing our hearts with th burden some restriction manufactured by others. vn th good w hav beoome 111, ...... : ' As a matttar ' ' fact' men wha ar rich In haraetr seldom hav tlm for moral Inventory; they atmply go on liv ing their beat, neither knowing nor ear ing whether men think they ar wealthy or bankrupt In th thing within. No man ever lose any of hie, virtue by eying little about them. If la only the man who ha a email stock who seta It all la the window, . ' - THE REAL WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST By Jam Creelman. In Pearson's afaf- aslne for BeDtember. Just 10 ye re ago William Randolph Hearst, a tall, blue-eyed, excessively shy youth, newly dismissed from Harvard university, acquired the 8nn Franolao Kxaminer aa a girt rrom nia millionaire father, a senator of the United 8tata. 81 nee that tlm Mr. Hearst bas swept over th. urfc of American journal lam. changing Its manner and methods. If ' not Ha moral, until today be owna eight newapapera, with a combined dally circulation of I. OOD, 080 copies, and per sonally controla a political movement powerful enough to twlat one of th great political partle from It normal ora-ahlsatlon axis. Why writ about Mr. Heeratat ell? win not lsnore him. hla exulting sen- eatlonallsm and hi proprietary pollt'aT - Because on might well attempt to ignore, me weather. , ' . , , , Xearst a livtaa loroe. ' - Mr. Hearat is not a fore In prospect nut a lore in being; and. whether w Ilk hln or not whether w regard him as the honest and unselflah spokesman or oppressed and discontented million, or "a shallow and Indaeent demaa-oa-u.' playing upon th paaalon of th people ror to mere gratification f "a low and vulgar Instinct for notoriety." it 1 not to be denied that, he has com to play a tremendous part hi n affair of the American peopl. . , H baa lhrested llt.OOo.OOS In hla newspaper, and It coda him tlt.6ee,00S a year to aupport them, vry dollar of which, and more, too, he get baok from th public. Without th support af th business men who advertla la hla pub lication and furnish many million' of his Inoom. h would be bankrupt In six months, in spit of his wealth. . Born la Baa rraaelsoo, . ' William Randolph Hearst waa bora In San Franeleco, in lttl, went to th pub lic school and. then entered Harvard unlvrlty. . ,'' He waa tall, 'strong, pal, amlllng, bashful, but mad fo practical Joke. He was n Indifferent student, although b showed ability whenever h chose to concentrate on any subject But b had an Incurable levity, a feverish love for pranka.' ....... s He became th business mans gar of th student paper. Th Lampoon, and mad money o rapidly that th tu dent had to hav frequent baaaueta to keep the surplus down. When Orover Cleveland waa eleated president Mr. Hearst hired many band or music, nought wagon load of boar. et off firework In .all direction and ralaed such a red-blaslng, ar-pllttlna. rip-roaring, all-night racat a to oan dallx old Cambridge and almost caused his expulsion from Harvard. It waa th first outburst of that Hearatlan genius for fireworks, braae band and hurrah ing apeetacularlty which ha atartled and entertained th country ao . many, many time since. An unappreciated practical lok re sulted In Mr. Hearst's auspenston by th Harvard faculty, and h want back to Ban Franclaoo aa ahy, gentle aad amll lng aa ever. . , ...y Wanted a aTwpape Senator Hearst eyed hi talL hand- om eon gravely and stroked hi grar Mara. - ) - . - - . "My boy, he said. "X assam that you are not content ta live simply as a rich man'a eon. but that you want to get out and do something for your self." 'k -' . 1 , That's right, fathar." -1 hav great ranch propertle which you might develop. T- Th young man shook his head vigor- Uly. i. . . "Mlnasr "i- t: :-' Another emphatic heke of the head, "What do you want?" . I want th San Francisco Examiner." "Great Ood!" cried th aenator, throw ing up hla handa . "Haven't - I ,pnt money enough on that paper already? I took It for a bad debt and tt'a a aur loser. " Instead . of - holding It - for my own son. I've bean aavlng It t give to aa namy." ' CHvea the Taaira. In th nd Senator Hearst reluctant ly surrendered his own Judgment that a newspaper was an Interesting gam but a "damned poor business,'- and hi on became th proprietor and editor of th San Francisco Examiner, - Ban Francisco a ml led at th notion that th long-legged, oft-volcd, frivo lous youth, whose gorgeous cravat were th wonder of th city, and who personal escapade had provoked th frown of even that liberal community. waa to aaeume th dignities and re- aponslbllulea of editorship. It waa a publle joke. - - . ;. But nan yranciico waa mistaken, Mr. Hearst threw himself Into th work of reconstructing his newapaper with a vigor, intelligence and oourag. that astonished everybody. H brought to hi task a personality hitherto unexpected-. - H attacked abuaea, pro claimed radical democracy, Introduced a sort of typographical violence In the make-up of hia paper and smashed all journalistic tadltlons. Makes First Saeeees. Th circulation of th Examiner In creased by leap " and bouada. Mr. Hearat - stuck to hi - task, working hardsr thaa any of his subordinates, seldom leaving the offloe before mid night . He mad the members of hi ataff hia ehum and ahowered present on, them. He courted the applause of th crowd and Invited th opposition of th hated railroad despotism and lta el Ilea. H .championed labor unlonlam. H vn got on of hi woman writers to pretend to faint In th trt and be taken In an ambulane to a hospital in order to tell th atory of her terrible experlenoe and expose th Inefficiency and corruption of th publi hospital arvlc; ' Fottaaa Znherited. Befor Mr. Hearat had hpant 1780,000 In hla new venture th Examiner, had been converted from a newapaper wreck Into a profitable bualnea and a recog nised power on the Paclflo coaat Then the humorou emtio faded from th face of San Francisco, and the tall young edifor with th pal blu eye and al most femlnln amil waa denounced as a clever but unacrupuloua natlonal lat , i ., i , When Senator Hearat died In lttl he bequeathed hi fortune to hla widow. It has been commonly supposed that hi possessions were worth 140,000,000, and soms eetlmate hav been a high aa 180,000,000; Th truth 1 that tb tatat left by Senator Hearst waa worta about tlT.000,000. i ; Mr. Hearet wanted to own a newa paper In New York. San Francisco had grown too small for him. Hla dealr to buret Into the metropolla became an overpowering paaalon. . ' Thar can b no doubt that at thla tlm Mr. Hearst had no dealr lthr for nolltlcalleaderahlD or for publlo office. Th exoltement and romaoo of newapaper Ufa aatlsfled him. He avoided political attachment and reveled In the society of newspapermen. His bashful nesa waa extreme and h shrank from pereonal publicity. It la hard to recegnls th nervously demur W. It Hearst of thoss day In the WILLIAM RANDOLPH HXiSIT Wffllam Randolph Hearst and His Sort. whoa nam Is printed In big type sev eral time a day In hla own newapapera and screamed from the very housetop by his agent. - He earn to New Tor a in lit ana bought th Morning Journal, a cheap and amusing though aomawhat dis creditable sheet published by Albert Puliuer. He paid 1110.000 for- th psper. but befor h reached tb climax of hi activities h invested more than $7,000,000 In this atngl nterprl, with lta various editions. , At first Mr. Hearst's New Tork paper was bright enterprising, full of clear picture and striking cartoons, aaucy, but without malic or rurnaniam. it caught th fancy of th crowd and woa friend. Its raw and abualv politics were developed later on. ,. The Bryan ftasapalgn, ' : Mr. Hearat's great' opportunity eame In 1816, when Mr. Bryan waa n6mtnated for president. . Th - New Tork pre waa bitterly anUgonletlc ta th free Uvr movement and all- lta' eoneomlt anta and the great eastern newapapera bolted th Democratic ticket - .. Mr. Hearat waa not a free silver man and aever has been, but he at one took up with th abandoned Democratic can and a campaign for 'Mr. Bryan which aatonind tb country ay it daah and brilliant audaetty. H hired th ablest writer h - could get 'and pant money In a way te mak th rich- eat New Tork newapaper proprietor gasp. His" expenditures war so lavisn that th aalariea af newspaper men on moat of th rival Journals war raised to keep them from Mr. Hearat; and th present large - tncomee or Amenoaa newspaper men are ta soma extant due te the paoe which he haa sat - v . . : Vat With Byeta, . It was In the long struggle, to arouse the United States to armed Interference with the cruel aad bloody rule efMSpeln in Cuba that Mr. Hearat showed th terrlno power af naatlonal Journallem backed by wealth. Hla frantlo and vulgar method of attracting attention to his newspaper disgusted eonsarvatlv Joumallata; but underlying th scream ing headlines and 'erasy llluatrationa there was a not of moral rntnea that ateadlly mad ltlf fait. The Journal did thing. It proclaimed Itself aa the protagonist of "th journalism that acta" . - . Mr. Hearat was not eontent merelv to print. aewa; he felt t to b a proper part of Journallem to mak nw. ' The- Treeing of Evangaiina cianero waa a tremendous advertisement for hla pewspapera. - maatagta Zaetdaat Frederick Ramlngton. - the . famous artist was cent to Cuba, with inatrue- tiona to remain tne re until tn war -gan. . After a few day Mr. Remington wird: -. a. Kvrything 1 quiet. Thar I no troubl hare. Ther will he no -war. I wlah ta return. -,t, ' - Th answer ha got: 'I ; -Pleass remain. Ton furnlah th ale- turea and I'll furnlah the war.. - ,v. ,., .. w. R. HEARST. The outbreak of th Spanish-American war found Mr.. Hearat In a - atate of proud eostaey. He had woa hla cam paign and the McKlnley administration had been forced Into war. Hla newapa per broke Into a new madne of big type and red-Ink appeals to publle paa alon. He apant 1800,000 abov ordinary expenee In covering th new of th short campaign. He went to Cuba him aelf and mad note of the fighting under fir. .",., - : Show Ke Vaartottam.' ' . When Admiral Camera was preparing to move with a powarrut fleet to attack Admiral Dewey In Manila " bay, two American monitor with It-Inch rifles were ateamlng aaroaa th Paclflo to tb Philippines. It waa a critical Situation. Had Camera's fleet reached Manila bay before the arrival of the alow monitors, Dewey might hav been overwhelmed. In that exciting and perllou pour Mr. Hearst aent thla remarkable message to hi London representative: , - - "Dear Mr. Creelman I wish you would at once make preparatlona ao that In eaa th Spanish fleet actually atarts for Manila w can buy some big English steamer at th eaatern end of th Med iterranean and take her to aom part of th Sue oanal wher w can than sink her and obatruct the paaaage of the Spanish warships. This must be done If th Amertcsn monitor sent from San Franclaoo hav not reached Dewey and he ahould b placed In a Critical position by th approach of Camera' fleet I understand that If a British veaaet wer taken Into th canal and sunk under th circumstances outlined above, the Brtt- Ish government would not allow her to be blown up to clear a passage, and It might tak time enough to raise her to put Dewey In a eafe position. - Yours yry truly, . W. R. HEARST." Camera' fleet entered th Sue canal on It way. to attack Dewey but the Inking of a teamer to obatruct th channel waa averted by th abandon ment of th expedition and tb return f th Bpanlah fleet ... - . AM the BreaideaUal ejuanajga ef. 11(1 ... 1 drew near. Mr. Bryan sent a message to Mr. Hearat asking blm to start a news paper in Chicago, where . the radical, thed th regular. Democracy was with out a party organ. "I'll do it.", aald Mr. Hearst, "if th party leaders will recognise th fact that rn doing It for the party aake and not for money." . .. Mr. Hearst's representatives went ta . Washington, and received aaaurancea from Chairman Jonea and other mem- , bers of th Democratic national oonv mlttee that -if Mr. Hearst would print a newspaper tn Chicago It would- b re garded a a direct contribution te th party causa That vary day Mr. Hearst wa elected president of the national association of Democratic clubs. That was the real entrance ef Mn, Hearat Into practical polltlca. He ap- pointed hla Washington correspondent. Max F. Ihmaen, secretary ef th leagued clubs, and ever since that time th or ganisation haa been. In a ense, hi per sonal property, aupported and absolutely ". controlled by him. In the eecond Bryan . campaign theae cluba acquired an en rolled membership of nearly 8,000,000. , ' . ' , Satraaee la rellWoa. , - Within 14 hour after Mr. Hearat had received word . from - th Democ ratio leader, costly presses were, on their way - to Chicago, aad on the day Mr. Bryan waa nominated the Chicago American appeared. Since that - tune , Mr. Hearat ha established dally news papers In Boston and Loe Angeles. - H also own th Cosmopolitan Mag-e aslne, which eoet him 8800.000 and paya about 170.000 a year. He 'owna, too, Hearat'a Home and American - Farm, another profltabl publication! end Mo tor, a periodical devoted to th autotao bile Jnteraata '" - ;.: ':.. - It I a gnat mistake to suppee that ' Mr. Hearst I a vain auid ' Incompetent " rich man managed by a band of elever employ an ambition, plus a cheek book. Ther I no keener mind or stronger will tn th country. It may ha tha! be ha misused hla abilities aad his wealth that la a queetlon about which people do not agree bat a dose-range study extending over many year reveal - him a th real master, th Inspiration and th administrative genius ef his , ay stem of newapaper and political aganctM. '. . : , , . , ' '- , Appeale te Crowd. ;.,. But th crowd like glaring publicity. It takea the ellence ef th rich man or corporation for evidence of self -conscious guilt and applauds th brav erusaders who . hammer . them tn , the . newepapers and on the etump. i ; Mr. Hearat pays 1111.00 a year for . the servloee ef three men In his New York offlo. That 1 axaetly th sum which the United State pay for the services of President Roosevelt and the -nine members of hi cabinet ' The high eat salary paid by Mr. Hearat la 881.000, th next 840,000 and the next 180,000. Besides this he ha five assistant who receive 880.000 a year each. Thla makea 8121,000 a year for eight captain : of yellow Journalism, Juat 8100,000 mor .. than th total Income of th president and hla whol cabinet : . - . ' ;. , ' .... Xla Big FayyoU. ' " ' "I ' Wltn more than 10 editors and hun dreds of political agent working out hla instruction and with 1,000.000 . cople of hla newspaper drifting over th fac of oclty vry day. It might b supposed that Mr. Hearat Uvea In a . tat of - perpetual exoltement. Th truth la that be Is the moat placid of human and find plenty ef tlm for .. play. It ia hardtq..bellv that thla smooth-faced, aoft-apoken and tranquil young man of 48 year who ldlea In th restaurant, loll amiably tn automo bllea, and generally atudie th Amii- '. can people from the standpoint of th vaudeville theatre, le th master-mind of a movement that keep a large part of th nation In an uproar. - ' It haa been said that Mr. Hearat spent mor than 81.000,000 In that attempt to be nominated for president . The fact I that outside of th aalariea and ordl nary expenaes of hla regular employ, he paid out not more than 8180,000-; practically all for printing, fireworks.1 hall hire, banners, badges, fnuslo and transportation. : He spent ,Sa much for Mr, Bryan. '-.''."'-.'""'"'; ' ' Oampalga f ot Kayoa, ''"i V Mr. Hearst's campaign for mayor of New York wa carried on without th aupport of any political party. Ha wa nominated -by petition,, the ar rangement being made 4y hla tern-; ployee. and he paid hla own expenaes. Mr. Odell, the New York - Republican leader, Informed Mr. Hearat' represen tative, when an attempt wa mad to unit th Republlcane, Hearatitea and the Citiaens' union on a mayoralty "ban-, dldata, that a legitimate campaign, sup ported by disciplined orgnlaatlon math- ods, would cost, without a dollar for bribery, at leaat 8400,000. Mr. Hearat' had no party and a mere pretense of -organisation, known aa th Municipal Ownership league, yt h earn' within a . OonUauad aa Page stoyjay - -t