, ' J1 v v ' . ' .... V., 7 1 t 'i MAGAZINE: SECTION THREE U N DAY rOis. ' II wr . a ffTt ,cr rTlrtM THDPP II -mmmmmmmdamm. , n ,. l-...-r... - ' i.ii. i-ti f . , I , - , y . . ' , PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 4, 1907 i 4o 'T., V., ,S ' t l I V TTERIE 5 NCLEi EATHl 5 after gantzt against forty years, fierceness, nations On wealthy men . vjith America out promise cto us turntng tse that has of dollars fr On the tret service, machinery these, and the Hard fought. In many line of battle been has failed another , parently squelched band warriors have strike somewhere else. In Louisiana' s ing guns fired; and wars men like Pierre G. T. BeOufe gard -V AvSpT V. foe worthy their metal; men already rolling in wealth fought to maintain the lottery, because they liked the game; at least one United States senator cast his lot with the recahitrants, and at times popular senti ment in a considerable portion of the coun try has favored them. Millions have been twirled as if mere bagatelles; an army has been raised to win a nation's battles, and in return there has been asked and received only a lottery charter. There have been suicides, people have been driven insane. But the final skirmish has come, and it has cost King Lottery a big sum of money to keep out of jail. That, and his promise to never again engage in the game of chance. FINES aggregating $284,000, imposed upon a number of citizens, including several millionaires, at Mobile, Ala., in June, meant moro than mere business and social embarrassment to those individuals. They meant the final ileath-blow to the old Louisiana State Lottery, which had really not uwu ai an wnen driven oui 01 Louisiana in 1SU4. but had kept up its operations elsewhere. And that it was finally dead for sure was made certain by the handing over of all its para phernalia to the government by tho Honduras Lottery Company, the surrendering of its char ter in the only country where it could operate and the notifying of its 6000 agents that their Bervicea would be no longer needed. J. 'I BBS .N .at. .if. '4c ..;!. !. ,.:, KmiMincF. of J',, julp a . -K in in l in i- n u i him i .iiik 0 ', v ,. ijier t n i Jini rein by lottery moans. 'tZIhen Clmrles T. Howard, back in the 7J(?xS?TBtjted his little lottery, he had no no- And that by the mem- the fact that the secret Lottery game, so rich that lpation, waa nns, waa1 the There it waa so success- , and although speople for his tho Louisi- 'ha city. i No pirate enterprise was it in thoso days. , aiVHv the L nuisinna Legislature accepted the :1SC f0o f $500,000 a year, whieh was turned Ithe school fund. Cii yig names were used to give an air of re- Thn A. Morris, Z. h. Simmons and C. H. ky. Then Charles T. Howard, tho real of Jie concern, was eminently respectable. rid to make its standing entirely unques- le, the promoters engnged Generals Early laurcgard, two prominent Confederate of- it salaries of $10,000 each, to superintend But in reality the money was void as the sentiment in New Orleans in favor of the lottery that the tho lottery company once brought against the postmaster general, claim- damages for withholding the use of Congress had littlo power oyer the tho ono or two laws passed to re- it were largely inoDerative. The charter given the company by the Leg- ature distinctly provided that upon ita expira- on, m 1903, it should not bo renewed. Yet the ompany applied for another charter. Everything possible was done to get local sympathy in tho fight against the nation. For instance, when New Orleans was threatened with a yellow-feyer epidemic the lottery company fur nished tho Board of Health with means to en force quarantine; when the Mississippi river, overflowing, threatened destruction to the city, tho lottery company met the emergency. It sought to enlist business interests by tj tablishing sugar refineries and business houses', and it offered to give $1,250,000 a year to the state for the renewal of the charter. But the bait was refused. i j i iaDuious gains nowara ana nis inenas Lj5!jlJ made from the start, but the charitable Jlissis- hospitals, and few could see anything wrong in his method of making money; But after awhile the public realized that tho Louisiana State Lottery's monthly receipts could be no less than $4,000,000, while not more than 60 per cent, was paid out in prizes. This indicated thit the lottery owners were making over $1,000, 000 a month clear gain. Even then the Postofficc Department had its eye on the lottery. Inadequate laws, however, prevented action by the government, and so it was the state of Louisiana that put tho lottery out of business or thoueht it did. It was all done by a simple act refusing a charter and declaring tho lottery an enemy to , 'A VS. United States notably the two known as tho Pistnal Swamp Lottery and tho Louisville Lot ' tery but they never reached great proportions. . ,lhe lo"ey ldea w by no means he d tho we,farp of , stlltC ftthough it had paid in disrepute by many of tho best people early $13i0o0(000 illto thc state treasury, and paid as in t.hf hittf. ni.ntnrv I hiro worn nhurnhoa which . ..1..,.. , , , . , r, 7 x , much more to individual beneiactions. Charles T. Howard died shortly before this .1 were glad, enough to get the aid of tho lottery f' use the lottery in securjng funds to build new ' f . .. churches. Charitable institutions, hospitals and publio amusements were wont to raise a few thousands now and then by a big lottery. Even when the law frowned on the practice there were special action of the state he was spared the sight of his widow, returning, heartbroken, to her old Mississippi village. Now came the boy Frank T. Howard upon the stage of the lottery drama. He had plenty -(CONTINUED ON INSID PAGE.) M , 1 iiwimnDi wii umi.i mi- v mtm m hjijw m,w unw Uitvw ft So quietly do the secret service men work that, sprung as the great coup was right under the noses of the public, there was scarcely any noise made about it, and the intensely dramatic sidelights on the great closing scene were known to few. Two years were required to enact this clos ing scene. It had its beginning when one John T. Dickey was arrested by secret service men at Wilmington, Del, charged with selling lottery tickets shipped to him from San Francisco. Curiously enough, the sleuths who made the arrest learned that while these tickets were ship ped from California there was right there at Wilmington, on the banks of the peaceful Dela ware, the biggest printery for lottery tickets in the world. From here it was not difficult to follow clues leading to another printing plan', at Mobile, Ala., where lists of lottery prize winners were being printed ; and then the tracing of the, incubus to its Honduras lair, and its final vanquishment. But that story will be the more appreciated if one becomes familiar with the earlier stages of the war, from its incipiency at New Orleans back in the sixties. Even before that monumental scheme there had been attempts to start a big lottery in the . 1 . 0 iyt St i Where re J?tee5 o tte Z&s lottery 7Zefat tf&j-ebuxctf is i -.ill 5 ' x th