THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, JANUARY 23, 1310 1 iiiii Spi KIT rjCh ,Oroa.) t jvfTr r rrrj rvJ jxusi 'it- - n vxWi, Remarkable Pairallei Between the MagnificentFIoroitine and the Modern rmancier ' TsTjf most rccent expansion "i2 of J. Pierpont Morgan's finan- r cial resources, in securing con- irol of the Equitable Life Assurance Com fany and establishing his undisputed leader- i ship in American banking, thejremarkable ' I parallel between him and Lorenzo de Medici, equally famous for his love of power and ' passion for the. arts, has centered in the two rf great figures unprecedented interest. . i J he resemblance between them has been t shown to extend . far, beyond any ordinary -J similarity of tastes. To those who are prone to believe in the 'theories of reincarnation - ; they might almost be the same spirit, work- - ing out, its preferences, its ambitions and its 1 imperious will under conditions of social, i artistic and political exigencies of vastly dif ferent periods. . . - ; - t In minor subjects the two embodiments ' fc that omnivorous and imperious spirit dif- fer sufjieiently to make the resemblance lack absolute completeness. But: in their major ' aspects, if they do not incarnate the identical soul, they present themselves to the modern student of history as the carnal abiding place of spiritual twins. anty, tot Mercantile and the Standard la all, S1T, IMOO. .' ;' .... '.; ' v . Thar remained no single banker and no group of bankers who could dispute 'the pre-eminence of the man who controlled capital amounting: to $1,884,524,568, bealdei hla holdlnga la the National City Bank and the Naw York Trust Company o IJ4M8M71. . ' And even, that approach to money'a omnipotence haa not contented him. It la believed to be serving merely his atepplnr-stones to broader power. , . If t were humanly possible for any lndlrldual to acquire domain over a nation's art as Mr.' Morgan has smjaarMiBBasaBBssW -A jr III! V. U f MWWV ;- . ll ill ,AT? . 1 1 j.Ka 1.1---'.. .VJT 1 ' ' v I..; v.- ., : .- 'i ' ?Xy. , 5 : v si f ft ' i,n v fv (r'.l f iHE two main lines of character alon which tha I , modern Mortun a-nd Lorenio the Mairnlflcent I present absolute parallelism r leva of power , and lovo of luxury. A third, less characterise because it la somewhat less peculiarly temperamental, Is tha relentless, persistent will energy Inspiring both r&en to tha attainment of their ultimata purposes. . . To those who know J. Pierpont Morgan only by the continually ' concurrent reports of hla flhanolal activities and his mora than lavish Indulgence of hit taste for art, including, afs tha a,rt bent doea, conspicu ously splendid rifts and loans for publio (purposes, . the esthetic, instincts of tha man seem to bo always far more salient than his longings for riches. , But those who know him. Intimately have been aware that his basic aim in Ms career has been to be come tha country's foremost banket, ever since, in February, IMS, he handled tha famous Cleveland bond Issue required to replenish the treasury's gold supply. -At tha time there was much talk, in print and in private, of tha Morgan magnanimity, just as there has always been when soma fresh occasion arose when he could exercise his genius for financiering largo en terprises. But Morgan himself made no pretense to anything except rapacity -the achievement of his lifelong-ambition for leadership and power. "I won't mako any profit,- he told President Cleve land; "I want to be considered the nation's banker." Even though he profited not a millionth of 1 per cent. Is actual money, tha prestige attaching to such a reputation, in but a solitary transaction, was valuable enough to compensate' for all tha trouble. And as every, man in finance knows, the prestige ha got fed right merrily the flames of his ambition. APEX OF ACQUISITION " ' ' It was nearly fifteen years later, in December last , when that ambition of leadership was realized by his acquisition of the Equitable. It was a fitting crown to his careera grab that marked the apex of acquisi tiveness. .; ;... ;;, ;,. v v ;,;...-. . PB,IntrvnJMr years were crowded with finan cial battles jrhichaliminated practically all other , Americans who might have entertained a like purpose' c.u9. Ilka, the indomitable Harriman. by sheer fail ure of the vital energies In the atres, of the titanio , struggle; '-others, nice Thomas SY Ryan, aulttlno- rrnm ? . V?ttV,0T unending confiict wich Morgan's insatiable ambition kept unfailingly etrenuous. llorgan .survived in the modern arena, triumphant because the secret, mysterioua forces inspiring him to Ms aim a accomplishment were of the same unyieldlnK At Aha time of his capture of the Equitable he was" uwiur in control of th ijtounUln combined capital resouroes of the New York IJfe Jnntjrance Company and the -Equitable x u ri m u v . vv -,'-tr isla t'v. m 1 isri. sski - m -t -m .a.- - , rvsasasssj ft 3aT &&&& ft?- KwlS' " - acquired It over the capital; if a valuable patntinr were as like to Davy Crockett's cooh as a bank or a trust company, a railway or a life insurance organiza tion appeara to be with Morgan, the Morgan pre eminence in art, would already have the treasures of private collections pouring into his capacious or is It rapacious? lap. Eurone's art lovers tramhin nnw at .'mention "of hie name. " He .has the appetite, of a Oargantua, swallowing whole collections at a single gulp. To him went the . life work of & H. Wakeman. of New York, devoted to the assembling of rare and valuable American manu-' - - -. - v scripts. To him, for a million, went the -famous Hoent schol collection In Paris, Including all its carvings, statuary and furniture. ' . 1 . 1 t.. To him went Baron Oppenh elm's collection la , Cologne, with its sculptures, Ivories, bronses and Jewelry. :'.. . -,. . . . - -v.. .. , . ' To him want tha Dn Rurrv nnnnla. nalnted hv tha inimitable Kragonard for Louis XV. to Illustrate that 1 sensual monarch's liaison with the detested favorite these at the cost of another million,. 1 To him, for 15,600,000, went the enormous Rodolphe Kann collection, Includlnpr - eight Rembrandta, four Rubenses and Sx Van Pycks. , f' To him went the glorious Garland collection of porcelains, price, $600,000. t To him went countless Individual splendors of art. such as Reynolds' "Lady Del ma and Her laughters,"' for $100,000, and Raphael's "Madonna of 6t Anthony of Padua." for $600,0.00. Insatiable It is the onlyword. Yet his keenest pleasure, as his intimates know htm. Is to find himself alone in his own private Vllbrary and museun, adjoin ing his residence. In New York, and there pass hours appreciatively studying the rarities he has reserved for his exclusive delectation. At most, he admits to that fane only those who are his most congenial, ap preciative friends. . fr " ' t ' In the earlier, fiercer, less scrupulous, bloodier day tJaDaneja Journalism .-tha i It W6My Up-to-date 1 F AN American were to put in a year in Tokio or another of tne larger cities of Japan, he would be likely to account b : the heaviest penalty he nays for expatriation that ' nn which deprives him of his daily newspaper, all alive with the happenings. of his twn, his county, his state, his nation and not to assume any air of . impertinent proprietorship-"-hi8 world at large. And unless he should become well versed in the ways and means of living as it goes in modern Japan, he Would be very liable, to imagine his new neighbors as badly off as himself. Only when he achieves Japanese to the extent of reading it without a lexicon will he be able to appreciate the strictly up-to-date journalism' that titillates the Intellectual palate of the Japs. .' They may not be quite so strong on fine, ar tistic murder stories as a metropolitan American sheet, or so close to omniscience as the multifa rious corps of trained correspondents enables the American editor to, appear; but they get there fairly well. : M. Zumoto, who edits Tokio Y English news paper, the . Times, told not bo Jong ngo about jour nalism as' it is now developed in Japan, with some inside hints that would have made Mark Twain long 'for tha balmy peace of the Orient when he was journalizing in the excitable West; ' AN H, NO," he observed thoughtfully, "in Japan we never snoot up the editor. Nor do we sue m the courts for libel damages. We give no more nominal damin fnr Mhot In Japan, holding that the libel practically defeats Itsejf. And, as a- matter of fact, that is what largely hap pens, for nobody pays any attention to newspaper statements obviously inspired by malice, . .',V:. "Our law on the Subiect la n n idnnfaitlnn a H rrtnea principles or legal procedure. Yet growing opinion against them and In dally Anglo-Saxon principle that us victim and demands substantial . .. . . , j a. uiuion or caoltal In those two alone. He controlled, besides, the caiii. ! of half a dozen national banks: the Firat. th ri.?L "ie Jisiik of Commerce, the there Is a favor of tha a. llhol rtn. Infll,. .h. piAiitmi injury iu ua vi damage compensation.' Such an indifference to the "power of the press" as may enable the cultured and courteous, yet haughtv and sensitive, Japanese hero to read with equanimity the account of how he poisoned his mother-in-law would seem to augur utter powerlessness in. the press o. so. emphatically declares Mr. In V... Japan the Dress is th iiirli th naiiii,, .SI " very snarp ana enterprising reporters. Men whit? light and an the othVSdeur. thai -r ' fence 'are not. to be Interviewed ofthand. rJ.tne pre.VeerefmnUr,F! tt,arV'n"- AL T'wwuwur 10 avoia mention of the unnnuii.d He controlled seven trust Companies; th Bankers' ih.tlT-f 1?.Ci!"i Jokl Times, of '.-which he is editor, Asior. tne Jkquuawe, Uie FlfUi Avenue, the Guar- mn K' Aeani, or Asaka,- that .1 . -. a ... - , ., -j - vfj v a cents per : month, wita Immense , circulattons. The Asa hi alone has a circulation, of 250,000. ', "- t The' Journalists themselves manage to-i scratch aiorigr' comfortably enough on their salaries. ; An edl-; torlal writer of the first class on a Tokio paper is paid from 800 to 600 yen per month, which is as. much as, so many dollars amount to here.. . A yen is 60 cents, but Its purchasing power In Japan Is equal . to $1 in the United States. A local or city editor Is paid from 200 to 400 yen per month, andVreportera' wages are in fair proportion, with everybody hustling to cinch better jobs, Just the same aa they do in New. York and Akron, Ohio. . .. . . .. . , ' "The Intellectual level of Japanese'- Journalism," explained Mr. Zumoto, "is high, very high. , Editors and editorial writers, as evolved-under Japan's, half : century -of Journalism, are now either university ; men or experts who have risen through sheer ability. ; m "Our interviewers do not carry their Insistence so tar as is aone in America, although we have some : very sharp and enterprising reporters. Men of prom- , as tney , ;. jialist whom they do not know intimately a letter of Huiuaiiiiiun ironi some sponsor Who 'shall be ample -guarantee for a faithful report of their utterances. "Our greatest interviewers are those few distln- : grulshed men of the profession who never need such. ' He" H m ' : At a letter and rarely publish what they are told. Such -men are Pokutoml, editor of the Kokumi, a morning dally in Tokio; Ikebe. editor of the Tokio Asahi, and .Chikami, of the Tokio Nichl-Nichi. , They are on Inti mate terms with those who are highest in our polltl- . cal' affairs and, of course, nave the " discretion and sense of responsibility that entitle them to Inner facts and important confidences." - ' Japan has its fakea and Us scoops,' like the Jour nalism of all the world; and sometlmea a scoop is 'too trus to be good, because the suspicious Japs sus- pect it is too good to be true. r -. - r ThaV happened aeven years Ago, when one -of Toklo's yellowest journals had a clear, sure scoop, : two months in advance, , on the alliance impending ; between Oreat Britain and Japan. Did it print the scoop? Why, it printed it from front page to back and worked both ends down into the middle. , ., It cut out cash advertising to get it all inl And the Japs of Tokio, when they read it, simply remarked to one another! . "ft Busk Tull Bee! Our honorable Journalistlo grandmother Is having' another fit" ; - of the Medici tn Klorene tse basty notations of s . character and grafts "would have been Instantly identt--. fled with the dominant figure of the, powerful Lorenso, after his emergence from the mass of cabals and as-, ' sassins' plots through which he had to fight his way 'to an even higher emlnsnce Uian Morgan boasts. . Those were the days In Italy when politics preoeded .'financiering as (he desirable means to , the end of ' . ambition. The publle. purse was open to the tyrant who could command the public government.. , -' Lorenso de't Medlol, Inheriting genius as great as ' has been displayed by Morgan, and fertune and posl- v tlon far greater than Morgan began with, displayed earlier his fondness for luxury and art, but on the ' same scale of munificence exhibited 'by this modern Midas.' ' -. .'"''..: , :- . - .". Vv V: . - Morgan had to acquire wealth to Indulge his tastes.' Lorehio da' Medici Inherited It under two guises. One was the Immense, hoard accumulated by his famous -,- , grandfather, Costmo de' Medici. . The other was the - publlo strong box' at his disposal could be keep his . power. ' ; -...." 1 .'.-v.,.;;- ,; v.. . - , lie kept it, and having devoted his talents te surrounding himself with, the ' most , distinguished -, writers and the most brilliant artists of his period, to the neglect of his commercial affairs, unhesitatingly dipped into the publlo funds foas many thousands as . he happened on occasion .to 'require, " ;." V , . 1 . CULTIVATED CULTURE , His' gorgeous villa' a, Flesols-was the assembly 4 ' place of the wit and poetry of Florence and, indeed. of cultured Italy. ' He made only modest pretense to . being a gourmet, Just as Morgan today betrays no ' unusual fondness for the refinements, of the cuisine. But, as Morgan one passion of the senses is for good "... tobacco $125 piece Is the price of his inseparable clgaiwao Lorenio relished and prided himself Upon - ' his wines, the hallmark of tha gentleman of hla era. k, He'wroteto Marslllo Ficlno: . . ' V ; "v , .."'Coms to me.-1rou shall not sup worse, and per- . y chanee you shall drink better. : For the palm of good wlhe I am ready to , contend, even with Pico himself." : There, installed in the-'Flesole villa,, above cellars .stocked, with the .rarest f vintages and amid statuary, 'paintings and looka which, like Morgan, he had'as- - sembled from, every source - available in his . time, Ixirenso do Medici played the Maecenas role to all the v arts, and turned a very pretty sonnet himself When 1 ever his muse caught a pleasing Inspiration, yj:' ''. Not only was his palace .the , resort of the Ulus . trleul, but it became their veritable school. Mlchel- angelo there 'flrst essayed the chisel under Lorsnso's generous encouragement: the "Morgan te" of Pico deUa Mlrandola had there its first reading.'. , , Inspired by no philanthropy such as creates the beneficent autocrat, but rather by the artist's longing to surround himself with a whole world of comforts, 'luxuries and refinements, he did In his generation for the people of Florence what Morgan now doea In aft for popular education, both at home and abroad. Under his sway, industry, commerce, publlo works, art generally and publio education advanced with giant ctens. Unlike Morgan, he wa.s acting on a little stage, and his energies could expend themselves on a wider diversity of matters. But, like Morgan, his eminence was ultimately so assured that the entire world of - power and culture came to pay to him the tribute of , deference and. admiration. ? ' i - The verdict passed upon Lorenso s de' Medici by Oulcciatdlni would not bi so wholly1 unfitted to Mor ' gan, if a composite could be taken nowadays ef all ' that Is thought of him by enemies and friends: "If Florence. was to have a tyrant, she could never have found abetter or , more, pleasant one.'' : ' Yet one would be more certain of De' Medici than Morgan. 1 , " Curious Facts (- AN ADA'S available water powers represent a com. '' blned energy which, if maintained by steam force , generated from coal, would involve an annual coal consumption of 5l2,l6S,SS tons.' t; - t On an average a man requires 1100 rounds -of food . per annum, a woman . 1200 pounds, ind a child 100 i pounds. ...',' - .'".'".-'. 1 i., . ... v. " 'i' - v Bled eight feet from the ground a rubber-yielding x tree of fifteen Inches diameter gives three pints of . liquid. , " Boys over 14 and girls over 12 are legally entitled to get married without the consent of their parents , or guardians In Scotland. . Just closed, the Yarmouth and Lowestoft herring season has yielded 800,000,000 herring, which sold for .$5,000,000. - , v There are five admirals of the fleet, thirteen ad mirals twenty-two vice admirals and fifty-five rear edmirel8Con the active list of the British navy. ., . In Oermany marriages by. any foreign consular Officer are strictly prohibited except where there are special treaty stipulations. . ' In Ceylon the manufacture of salt is a government monopoly, and yielded, in 1808, 1,760,661' rupees - ($588,860) to the revenue. - . The London General Omnibus Company find that the average profit on a motor bus In London is $3t fier month, while on a horse bus there is an average . oss of $13.60. . - . . ."..",.' ' .. , Prison rations in England give 61 2-tth ounces of food daily to the prisoners doing hard labpr, but only 46 4-6th dunces in the case of a (prisoner doing light labor. . i ." . . ..,.' On a ride of 1250 mlle,'at an average of 44 miles dally, a Russian cavalry offlner lost only pounds In weight, while his horse nearly twenty years old lost 45 pounds.. One day eighty miles were covered. ' v : A; Curious Moss THE material so closely resembling horsehair, which - I is extensively used for stufflfig carriage cushions, . 'is not horsehair at all, but a curious kind of moss which grows in Alabama and Louisiana. The : moss la gathered mostly by negroes, and after a. tre l atrtmwi . it, is allowed to rest for seven years, during which time :tbe moss .renews Itself.''' -.' s,.w:--'-' v-ii.:A';'..'t....';. Cypcesw moss is preferred, as it is the longest apd .most tenacious of all the varieties. After the moje is gathered it Is placed in. a sunny spot and left to the ac tion of the wind and weather for a month. At the end of .that time the grayish bark-peels off, leaving the hair almost clean. It is then sold tp the plantation store keeper or country groceryman for from one to two cents a pound, according to quality, . : The next move is to send the material td New Orleans or other cities to manufacture. After the moss reaches the factory it Is subject to the action of the wssher, which la a large cylindrical arrangement, with a wheel Inside which pulls the moss hither and thither and lashes , it through a vat of boiling water and soap until the stuff is cleaned, 1 Then it is hung out upon the rocks to dry. This done, It is put into the dusher a fan-mill which entirely re moves all the dust that may have survived the washing process. As a result the moss comes Into the factory u yellow in-ctjor and goes out inky black. The article is then made ftito. bales and marked according to quality. The highest grade van hardly, be distinguished from the finest fcorseaaor. .. .,.,' . . : i ,