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About The Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Or.) 1862-1899 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1895)
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report C AB&OMAJTEMX PURE THE GRAND VIZIER. .HOW HE IS SELECTED BY THE SUL TAN AND INSTALLED. One of the Most Striking Scenes Connected With the Turkish Court No One Knows Who la to Be Named Until the Last Mo ment An Impressive Prayer. The ceremony of "naming" the new grand vizier is one of the most impress ive sights imaginable, and as it has seldom if , ever . been described an at- (amnf e (VITIVOIT OtTTl A lflaA Ct it TT1 JV Tint be without interest It was toward 4 o'clock on Saturday afternoon that the servants commenced to carry out from Djevad Pasha '8 rooms at the sublime porte his books, papers, pens and other private paraphernalia. This was the first intimation given to the world that the grand vizier had fallen. Shortly aft erward troops filed up the hill and lined both sides of the road from the landing stage at Sirkid jy to the doors of the porte. The news spread like fire under a wind, and by 5 o'clock all preparations were completed for the reception of the new occupant of the principal office in the empire. In the great council cham ber the scene was unique in its quiet dig nity. The room was crowded with all the high officials present and past, and though an hour or two previously none there had even guessed what was about to happen each one took his place si lently and regularly, without confusion or mistake, awaiting the advent of the still unknown chief, - At the head of the hall a small vacant space was . left, around which grouped the present ministers and those who had previously held portfolios. As each came in he paced slowly up the carpet with one short salute. As soon as he reached the end all present returned the teme na'a with a sweep of the hand to the ground, breast and forehead. This rhythmical greeting, accentuated by the movement of scarlet fezes in unison with open hands, given in silence, and in the dim, curtained light of the coun cil chamber, defies adequate description bythe pen. And then the newcomer returned the salutes separately, beginning at the left hand side, round the square of his col leagues, subordinates and superiors, and one more candidate for the vizierate was effaced, for nobody knew upon whom the choice of the sultan had fall en. Many names were whispered round, but as their owners entered the circle of greeting their chances were seen to be extinguished. One after another they followed on, till by a. process of reduc tion it became a question of only two or three, all the rest of Turkey's statesmen and all her greatest pashas having al ready trodden the carpet and taken their , seats of expectation. Then from the windows couia De seen a email proces sion winding up the ascent In front were two horsemen, be on the left a lit tle man well known to all the watchers Sheikh ul Islam, shining in the sunlight with his robes of pure white and gold. In the passing of a breath the name of Ketchuk Said fluttered round the room, ana a low mumeiiui later me new grand vizier, who had already thrice gone through the same ceremony, was standing in the center of the ministerial group. There he drew from his breast a green silk bag, and extracting from it the. imperial hatt he pressed the parch ment to his lips and forehead. The dark bearded sheikh repeated this homage to the words of his imperial master, and he hatt was handed to the evrak mu diri, or keeper of the archives, who read aloud that his imperial majesty the sul tan, knowing the devotion, well proved, of Said Pasha, intrusted to him the duties of grand vizier, and that, having full confidence in the piety of the Sheikh ul Islam, he prolonged his term of of- i : : - . n .1? . 1 best welfare of his people, and might Al mighty God bless their efforts toward that end. Then again a wave of sweep ing hands and bending heads went round, and the sheikh, in full, deep ' tones, offered up a prayer for the sultan and the empire. In a moment the coun cil chamber was transformed into a holy place, and the politicians, pashas and scribes, with upturned palms, seemed 1 .1 M Al 13 iiu iiuvo iiurguiiieu iuc u epace we worm and its vanities. It would be hard to imagine anything more striking than this prayer, amid such surroundings and ' on such an occasion. - - With it terminated the investiture. The new grand vizier adjourned to his room with his ministry for coffee and a perfunctory cabinet council, and later on .the old and new viziers and min , isters repaired to Yildiz to pay their firac nr Inst rivmpraji fcn thotr lnrri Mann, while another hatt had arrived, cbang - ing the occupant of the western wing of the porte, for Said Pasha, who has been minister for foreign affairs for nine years, was bidden to vacate his famil iar chair in favor of Turkhan Pasha. Constantinople Letter. Irvine and Stoker. Not many know how that talented Irishman, Mr. Bram Stoker, came to be associated with the fortunes of Sir Henry Irving. It was in this wise. Sir uenry, wnen on a visit to uuDiin, was invited to a supper party, and during the course of the evening was induced to recite in his thrilling way "The Dream of Eugene Aram. " One of his auditors, a young man with a brilliant reputation at Trinity college, was so af fected by the tragedian's delivery that he burst into tears. Henry Irving asked the. young man to call on him the next morning, and then and there made him an offer, which was accepted to the nm tual advantage of both. The young man was Mr. Bram Stoker. London Corre spondent . One Good Deed. Mrs. De Ruffe If you ever did any good in this wide world, I'd like to know what it is. Mr. De Ruffle Well, for one thing, saved you from dying an old maid. London Quiver. EXPERT HOTEL ROBBER. Be Relieved Schuyler Colfax of m Baft Foil of Securities. "Did you ever hear of Charley Holt, the prince of hotel thieves?" said Detect ive James McDevitt " Well, I had two encounters with that gentleman here in Washington. My first experience was brief and devoid of sensational incident "A guest in an up town hotel awoke one night and saw a man going through his clothes. He gave chase to the rob ber, who dropped his booty, consisting of a watch and several hundred dollars, in the hallway. "He managed to outrun his pursuer and reached -his room on an upper floor unseen. The hotel people sent for me, and after searching the register and making some inquiries I went straight to Holt's room and put him under ar rest He accompanied me to headquar ters without a murmur, but as we had no proof against him he was let go, with a warning never to show up again at the capital. "He staid away three years, bnt trie next time he came he did a, job of no less magnitude than to rob the vice president of the United States, Schuyler Colfax, of $125,000 in bonds and se curities. The robbery occurred at Worm ley's hotel, between 5 and 6 o'clock, on the evening of Feb. 22, 1869. I had been to Alexandria that day and heard of the affair as soon as I reached the city, about 9 p.m. The first thing I did was to go to a restaurant keeper and ask him if any crooked people were in town. He replied that there was a party in the badger line at a place on Tenth street, near the old gas office. In company with the chief of police I went to the house and asked of. the landlady if she had any strangers stopping there. She said yes, and on telling her our business she admitted us into the parlor, where a good looking young man was walking the floor, apparently in a nervous con dition. "Before we could say a word he re marked : 'I know who you are after. Charley Holt has stolen a lot of bonds belonging to the vice president He told me so himself and said he was nearly scared to death when he found whose property he had taken. You'll find the stuff in the express office, for he boxed it all up and shipped it to' Philadelphia this evening. "Here was a revelation to take a man's breath away. I never dreamed of making such a swift capture. We went to the express and got the securities right enough without any trouble. It would have been an easy matter to get Holt, but Mr. Colfax, for some reason, vetoed the proposition to catch him, and he went scot free of that particular crime. The fellow; who told me was a crook, but had nothing to do with the transaction, and in consideration of the 'give away was allowed to leave the city with a warning." Washington Post A LUCKY SNEEZE. It Came Just In Time to Make M. X. a Spanish Minister. The writer of "Secrets In Spain" tells in the pages of The New Review how ministers were sometimes made under the regime of Queen Isabella of Spain. Perhaps the most remarkable instance is that of a man who was made minister for sneezing. The story is as follows : M. X bad gone one day to pay a casual visit to one of his friends. To his surprise he found his friend very much occupied. "Excuse me," said he, "but I am very busy today. But if yon have nothing to do come along with me." "Where are yon going?" "I have been summoned to the palace. " They set off together. At the palace one was conducted to the presence of the queen, while the other waited in the anteroom. There was a lengthy sitting in the queen's cabinet, a new ministry being in course of for mation. It was very cold and drafty in the an teroom, and the man who was waiting began to grow very impatient, as he felt a cold in the head coming on. "Whom shall we appoint to the exchequer? Whom to the Fomerto? Whom to the war department?" asked the queen. Gradually after much discussion the ministry was built up bit by bit There was now only the colonial minister to be appointed. "I must have a colo nial minister, " said the queen. "Whom shall we appoint colonial minister?" No one could be thought of. All at once a loud sneeze was heard in the anteroom. "Who is that sneezing in the anteroom?" asked the queen. "M. X" "M. X. 1 The very man the very man for the colonial minister ! Tell M. X to come in." That is how M. X became colonial minister for having sneezed. Keep Their Secrete Well. The French keep the secrets of their ammunition wonderfully. Their powder gives excellent results, but its composi tion is still unknown, and their dyna mite shells for the navy and field artil lery have not yet been imitated by any other country. The best French naval experts believe that only quick firing guns, using high explosive shells will be of any use in the next naval engage ment They contend that these shells will abolish armor, as armor tends to increase the effect of bursting shelL The first thing our new government will have to do will be to provide our navy with quick firing guns and shells that shall be effectual. It is not denied that in both these particulars the French at the present moment are far ahead of us. Saturday Review. Horseless Vehicle Not New. "Talk about these horseless vehicles," said Uncle Si. "I seen 'em long agtx," "Why, pal" began Aunt Mandy. "Oh, but I did. Don't yon remember the ole ox cart we rode to our weddin in?" Indianapolis Journal Only 27 per cent of the capital of this country is owned by men holding be tween $100,000 worth and $1,000,000 worth of nroperty. IMPERIAL MILLIONS By JULIA? HAWTHOBKE. ICopyrlght, 1881. by American Press Associa tion. CHAPTER IV. THE MAN OF DESTINY. The box waa full of jewel. In a small private room in the palace of the Tuileries, in Paris, two men wwe sittinsr. One. a voung gentlemau about five and twenty years of age, ocenpiad a desk near the window that looked out upon a broad, inclosed court, where a sentinel, in blue coat and ml pegtop trousers, was pacing his beat. There was a quantity of papers on the desk, and the young gentleman was writing a summary of the contents of these on the backs of them and filing them awav. A light snow was falling outside and melt ing as it fell, for the winter of eighteen hundred and sixty-nine was still linger ing in the first months of eighteen hun dred and seventy. ' The other personage in the room was a man of mature years. He was barely of middle height, but his figure was com pact, and his shoulders broad and thick. His face, somewhat fleshy about the jaws, and of a dull complexion, had an aquiline nose, a carefully waxed mus tache and a pointed imperial. The eyes were wide apart, and the heavy UJf drooping over them gave them a som nolent aspect; yet, examining them more intentively, you would perceive that they were eyes that nothing escaped watchful, penetrating, impenetrable eyes. For the rest this countenance bore the marks of anxiety and ill health; there were heavy lines beneath the eyes, the forehead was furrowed and the hail was thin on its conical summit. Withal both face and figure had a certain dig nity and power as to one accustomed tc being nnquestioningly obeyed. The man wore a black broadcloth coat, a white waistcoat and gray trousers. Diagonally across his breast lay a broad, blue sash, He was leaning back in his chair smok ing a cigarette, and seemingly plunged in meditation. A knock came at the door. The younger man rose, walked to the doot and opened it. After a brief colloquy he- turned and said in French: "Sire, there is a person here who desires an au dience. He says" "What name, Raoul?" interrupted the other. "Solange, sire." "Very good. He comes by appoint ment Let him enter. And you, my dear Raoul, will take your place behind the thin partition during the interview. I hope to be able to trust this man, but it will be necessary to take precaution." . The young man bowed, at the same time throwing open the door to admit the visitor, and himself passing out and closing it behind him. The newcomei on entering made a military salute, and then stood, cap in hand, with his eyes fixed on the inscrutable visage before him. He was near fifty years of age, of vigorous physique, with a thick, mus cular neck, black hair cropped short, heavy black eyebrows and a fierce mus tache. He was plainly clad, but though his dress was that of a civilian he had the bearing of a soldier. "Captain Maurice Solange," said the gentleman with the cigarette, "you and I became acquainted some years since at the battle of Solferino. You were then a private in the Twenty-third regiment I had lost my aid-de-camp, and intrust ed yon with a dispatch to General Ton taine, on our left wing. On your way to him you were wounded in the breast with a rifle ball. You delivered the dis patch, however, and returned with his answer. In handing it to me yon fell from loss of blood. I had you taken tc my tent and placed in charge of my best surgeons. On your recovery you were promoted to be corporal." Captain Solange bowed low. "You remember it, sire?" "Oh, very welL I also remember that on several subsequent occasions I com mitted to you the execution of or ders involving danger and demanding prudence, faithfulness and courage. 'For your successful performance of these duties you were promoted to be sergeant and finally captain. From year to year I have not lost sight of you. My uncle and myself have found no better serv ants than among those who have sprung, like yon, from the ranks. I now desire yon to afford me a reason for bestowing upon yon the Cross of the Legion oi Honor. Would you care to possess it?" "My emperor, my one happiness" is tc serve yon. My one grief, that I Cannot serve you enough." "Ah, a pretty compliment! In return I have a compliment for you. In France are thirty million Frenchmen. Of these thirty million I have chosen one man whom, for a certain important duty, I can trust most implicitly. Who is that man, Captain Solange?" The captain stood erect and expanded his chest "Sire, that man is myself!" The emperor twisted his mustache to conceal a faint smile. The bluff soldier, in his artless vanity, had no notion of criticising the parvenu character of an empire which was compelled to intrust some of its most vital secrets to its hum blest subjects. But as the world now knows France early in 1870 was "danc ing on a volcano." De Morney, the as tute statesman, to whom a mission of confidence might have been intrusted, was dead; some say he was the half brother of Napoleon. Prince Bonaparte had just shot Victor Noir. The growing prominence of Gambetta, the lampoons of Rochefort, indicated the rise of Lib eralism. Napoleon saw his danger; he was ill in body, but his brain was busy with intrigues. A plebiscite was in contemplation to juggle Frenchmen and foreign nations into the belief that the empire was secure. He perceived that war was inevitable and he waa feelinjr 1 " his way to an alliance with Austria. A successful war might retrieve every thing; but meanwhile the edifice that he talked of "crowning" was crumbling. He feared the mob of Paris, and the gambler's instincts in him led him on. "Too are, lerhaps, aware, said the emperor, "tnat in a tew montns u ranee may be drawn into a great war one of the most important in its issues or our generation?" "With Prussia, sire? Ahi an! l nave prayed for it! And you permit, me to" "My brave Solange," interrupted the other, shaking his head, with a smile, "1 know that a man like you likes nothing so well as to risk his life on the battle field. Bat it is not this that I now ask of youi When war breaks out you will be on the other side or the ocean tnree thousand miles away." The soldier's enthusiastic look faded. He shrugged his shoulders deprecat- "There are other paths to glory," con tinued Napoleon kindly. "Come nearer. You are a soldier and you know that the fortuue of war -is uncertain. France who can tell may fail to accom plish" "Impossible, sire!" exclaimed the other, boldly. "France will conquer! She must! "Let us hope so. If our army were composed entirely of men like you, there would indeed be no question of it. Bat some of our most dangerous enemies are not among those who will confront us on the field." "If you know of any such, my em peror, arrest them and order them to be shot! - Ma foil Taereis powder and ball enough for traitors, at all events! "That may come afterward, mon ami. For the moment, it is expedient to ap pear blind to disloyalty, in order to in duce it more fully to betray itself. Meanwhile, it is the part of wisdom to so act that nothing that may happen shall rmd us unprepared. Many a vic tory. Captain Solange, has been lost through not having . sufficiently antici pated the possibilities and occasion oi defeat." "Well, I am but a soldier," said So lange, "my business is to obey tirders. After all, you are the emperor!" Napoleon sighed. "Yes, it is a singu lar thing, this being an emperor," he muttered, half to himself. "In order to maintain your place at the summit of the pyramid you must suffer the pyra mid itself to be undermined. Let us re turn to business, my brave Solange," he went on in another tone. "As for the war, I must have faith in my star, as did my uncle before me. If, like him, 1 am destined to fall at last well, all things come to an end! At least Ger many shall know that she has an enemy!'' "The good God preserve you and France, my emperor," said the other de voutly. "And now to business," repeated Na poleon. "If France receives a check il may be desirable that I retire for a sea son. But it is not my purpose to wear out my life chained to a lonely rock in the ocean, as the greatest of men was forced to d6. I mean to go to a place whence -1 can again return either I oi my descendants with treasure and power to re-establish my fortunes. For France, if she is to fall, will not long re main prostrate; and though, perhaps, she may for a time turn to anarchy or re publicanism, yet in the end she will turn again to the man whose name is -asso ciated with her greatest glory. Mean while I shall retire to a country which has before been hospitable to me, and whom France herself assisted in her houi of need. I shall go to the United States of America." "Ah! America! That is a long way off," murmured the soldier. - "America and France will hereafter share the dominion of the world," re sumed the emperor. "As for England, 1 do not trust her. It is not to her interest that I should prevail; nor can St. Helena ever be forgotten. And before 1 go if, indeed, destiny decides that I must go 1 shall prepare the way by sending to the United States in advance treasure suffi cient to meet whatever needs may arise. And it is this treasure, mon ami, which I wish you to take charge of and forth with convey to its destination." Solange lifted his heavy eyebrows. "Well, truly, that is not so much pi an undertaking, my emperor" said he, "though, to be sure, gold weighs a good deal. Are there many boxes of it? "Only one, captain, and that does not contain gold," replied Napoleon, with a smile. "Moreover, it is not so large but that you may lift it with one hand. See there it stands in the corner. "That! Why,8ire,itisbutabandbox!' exclaimed Solange, following the direc tion of" Napoleon's finger. "Surely, nei ther courage nor address is required tc carry such a thing to its destination. Cannot the mails take it? "Brine: it out and nlace it on this table. said the emperor, still smiting. Solange obeyed. The box was of a size to be easily carried in the arms. It was of oak, with a plain exterior; but it was strongly put together, the framework of steel, painted to resemble wood. Napoleon put a key in the lock and opened it. Solange peeped in and saw some folds of woolen cloth. The emperor lifted them up.: Perhaps.no spectacle more remarkable was ever offered to the eyes of man. The box was full of jewels. Precious stones of inestimable value lay packed together, like so many walnuts in a bunch. There were single gems worth a year's pay of a division of an army. They were all separated from their settings and bore no distinguishing mark except their un common size. Heaped closely together in this manner, the splendor and brill iance of their hues was in great measure disguised, and they might have been mistaken for tinted crystals or even bits of glass. Indeed, it was difficult for the mind to conceive of such a concentration of wealth. A single handful of the con tents of ,this box would be enough to make a man rich for life. There was not one that was not of royal magnifi cence. Where had they all come from? That is a question that doubtless never can be answered. Napoleon the First, in his campaign, had an eye to the pe cuniary future of his dynasty, and he must have helped himself with a free hand whenever opportunity offered. Could those stones have spoken, they might have told tales that would make the enchanted valley of Sinbad and Alad din's palace seem tame. There were a few superb rings in the collection, but otherwise, as has been stated, all were naked. TO Bl OOVHHUXD.( TBS tTPKIGHT MAN. There is certainly some slight' feeling ol humiliation in being bent down and ob liged to creep along fdr fear of a snap in the spinal column. It is such a plain show ot decreptitude that we feel embarrassed. It is seen every day when lumbago takes a good hold on a stitch in the back. There is very little sympathy for one in such a plight, for it is so well known that St. Jacobs Oil will cure it promptly and that neglect is ine cause oi so mucn aisaDiiuy. Why not keep the remedy always on hand and prevent such discomfort. 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Railway nd Great Northern Railway to Montana points, 8t. Paul, Minneapolis, Omaha, St. Louts, Chi cago and East. Address nearest agent, u. J. Donavan, Gen. Aet. I SSaaa, II Dn.,l.nH I T R. Ci IsTaBaVaasa' II Tens, Gen. Agt., Seattle Wash.; C.ChDixon.Gen. Agt.,8pokne,Wash. Na leeplng and dining cars; bHflet-library car iamby toarist sleepers; new eqaipment. FRAZER AXLE CREASE BEST IN THE WORLD Its wearing quaiiuea are wwuiny,""! outlasting two bpxe i of any other brand. Fit from Animal Oils. OUT THIS GBNUDf K. ifD mis RV flRKOON AND . . . . n nam. .Atn.lta WASHINGTON MERCHANTS' ana uvauvn ihwmui i A SURE CURE FORPILES Edttn Hies known by moirtor. like tJV2! fartZu? ttohin when warm. This form and BluuLBitad. in or Protradong Piles yield atoDce to DR. BO-3AN-RW S rit-K. rn . , which J, directly on irU affected, absorb. "Vi; H. P. N. TJ. No. 617-8. F. N. U. No. 694 -JIf.-V!ll;UJrirk ""!!!T!?FTn7r.ir ati rior caiiO uunta nncnt; mjl cloc rw In time. Bold by drogglsta. 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FOR PRACTICAL PURPOSES. to find the word wanted. to ascertain the pronunciation. to trace the growth of a word. to learn what a word means. Publishers, Spriniffield, Mass. HERCULES Engines CAS and GASOLINE NOTED FOR simplicity; STRENGTH, ECONOMY AND SUPERIOR WORKMANSHIP In Every Detail. These engines are acknowledged by expert en gineers to be worthy of highest commendation for simplicity, high-grade material and superior workmanship. They develop the full actna) horse power, and ran without an Electric Spark Battery; the system of Ignition is simple, inexpensive-and reliable. For pumping outfits for irrigating pnrposes no better engine can be found on the Pacific Coast. For hoisting oh t fits for mines they have me with highest approval. For intermittent power their economy t i? questioned. fMIIME . WINES MANUFACTURED BY- PALMER REY TYPE FOUNDRY , Cor. Front and Alder See., PORTLAND. - OREGON. Send for catalogne. DR. GUM'S IMPROVED UVER PIUS A MILD PHYSIO. mm tpit.t. pnn a rmsR. A raaremimt oi the bowois each day la necessary for health, These piUs supply what the system lacks to make it regular. They ear Headache, brirhtsn the j- yea, ana clear iDe uomptexioci oer loan ouameu) They neither tripe nor sieken. To oonvtnoe Too, i Ids will mail sam' oars. BOSANKO MED. OO, Philadelphia, Ft. iMamao orainu posiotcto. worn eves ST