The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, June 28, 1908, Page 27, Image 27

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    THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL; PORTLAND," SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 28, 18C8.
HDDLERAT FOUR; FAMOUS AT: FOURTEEN
Recently Gave Hxs Services to the Soclctv of American Women in London, and Who Is to Make His First Voyage Hitter -This Autumn
5
Ehtertainis Stc:
L
By Curtis Brown.. , '
ONDON. June 88. When same nice
American college girl comes over
to England for a post-graduate
maii-a aa . V. n Vuait a f hk Art.
! ' city of American. Women In Lon
' tW, on funds raised by the recent ben- '
1 eflt concert under the American ambaa
sudor's auspices, she ought to send a
I wreath to Mischa -Elman. whose free
! services chiefly contributed to make the
concert a success.
. Probably, however, the young man
! doesn't much care about wreaths. Al
though at the age of 17 he Is, perhaps,
the greatest living violinist, he looks
as little like the traditional musician
he of long hair and poetic pallor as he -does
like an Infant prodigy. He has a .
i lolly, big, round face; comfortable ,
! hands quite free from any reproaoh of
: being taper-fingered; short, wavy, thick
I brown hair of the stand-up-on-end kind, -I
broad shoulders, deep chest, and a pair -
of legs evidently man to stana on ana
not merely for the support of trousers.
He abominates knickerbockers and.
Eton collars, and wont into long trous- -ers
at the first possible moment, refus--Ing
utterly to be an Infant phenomenon,
and ' wishing to be looked on as a
f rown-up man who had no use for pret
f ways and delicate health, but wanted,
three big meals-a day and lots of hearty
outdoor fun, just as If. ha were not a
genius. i
Coming! to America.
As Elman makes his first trip to '
America this autumn, and as he Is eV.
different from the ordinary run of '
wunAarlrtn1i. " it msd 1IV.lv that
tt would bet of Interest to American
readers to get soma stories of the boy's
earliest manifestations of genius, and .
to this end Daniel Mayer, who Is - to ,
musicians In England pretty much what
Charles Frohman Is to actors In Amer
ica, was persuaded to produce Elman's
father, for purposes of catechism. The
senior Elman la not' yet-fully inured to
drawing-rooms, and has only lately be-
f un to realise that London's conven- i
ions of dress are worth bothering with, ,
but no one can talk with him long with
out realising , that . he is a good, sound
father, who doesnt . propose to be a
hanger-on. and who' would -be quite
capable of administering a spanking If
he thought duty demanded It.
A) though so muchr has been - written
about Mischa Elman, It has been most
ly In the way of -comment and praise,' '.
and almost nothing has been known of
the boy's beginnings as a musician. The
tory as extricated from the senior El
man with some help from an Interpre-
ter, proves uncommonly Interesting.'
5 -' ' . i
I f .V - I , . ' -'
- A .;es V- n . 1 .:h i
I -l , v- Sg-'mf ...P THE H0Uc5E IN WHICH MTrCHA.
X '" mr0Jt 'mp ' m -As "
- i Hi7WRV .f tt.'.. "-I . . i.. ...'" tt.v"'.'A V.- ,1
til' i "
I ... fevr '
' i-.'j. ' i"'1"- .... I
U r sr - I
"o?
ipera- V lt , ) ! f i It I
that V - ' o ? I
K it A "
V S
i'w'ND HIS JIiSTBIO..
When Mischa was born the father "Pr heVot he .'hT'MTfTh; other Instrument, blfrger than the one
was a Jewish village schoolmaster in ,oai, j caught him at It one day, and he had destroyed. The second day he
the llttl Rusotan town of Talnoja decided to get him a quarter-violin. I had It, he rushed out Into the street to
down near Odessa. Ma had mini fame thought he would be happy, but he only meet me as I was coming home, and
f !?, !". . , , m ' looked at It and said It waa not a fiddle ajd, 'I can play your "Waltx Clicquot."
In the village as a violinist, and Mme. ,t aU and M soon a, my bM,M. was That was the name of a little waits I
felman wa i the daughter of a violinist, turned he tore off the strings and "! ' play Of course I would not
. U."1V? not,c' M. Elman, ,maBhed the wood into little bits. We believe it. but he seised me by the hand .
that when Mischa was 18 months old. were very poor and I was angry. He nd' dragged me into the house, and
I could always stop him from crying by Ba,a he wanted a real fiddle and would -"nre enough, he played the waits almost
playing to him on my fiddle. He used , not have anything else. - W ithout mistake, and in surprising
to sit up motionless, and seemed -to be . . rythm. I could not believe my ears, for
fascinated by the music. When he was Start., ,pnllr it seemed incredible that a boy of 4
4 he wanted to have my violin, Of nea , r pur. , without Instruction should be able to
?,Vrt- L?Wil,iUVIII?Jf-,t ' "erned to have such an extraor- pl waits on the violin after having
out he got hla mother to let him have - , . , , . had It only two days. . We had a vll-
It one day when I was away, and what ny ear for music that I at last de- lBgt oreheitra of 1 " ,nd I took him.
did he do but begin to move his fingers cided to'save money and buy him an- round-to play with them. Instead of
LROSE eytinge, her home life IN PORT-
LAND Ske Was Once Great Star of American Stage
and carried 'von' before It. and In Its I nave debated within myself whether
i
Bv Bessie Gulnean Stone.
WENT to see Boss Eytinge, the ac- Prffnt ,orm i "omewhatAnKllcised. I would go on when the time came, or
. A ...j Alia- iicaiiiw 1 vaiv vnw - a uiii t iia intra I rV TO Trl V room tTId
tress, tho other day. A I. entered tongue were all stars of the long past lock myself In. Many time th Wi
the boarding house and waited, yesterdays Booth. Barrett, MeCullough, ager has had to fairly push me from
.mi. the maid took my card," I John Drew, Barrymore, and others the wings onto the stage. But the mo
V! ?-IV. e.n.. . lowly ?L . thi" lUf.l VklL1. L" .." ards I was a dlf-
iuukbu w hm " " w - nnw nnemiDii mil ouun 111 iu ucijik, idiviii ueinr. Rni mv ifD.. wnM
down the stairs a woman, and I knew time has not tarnished. a thing of the past, until the next night.
i..e. ah. annka that this was -ne or nose .yun s nri a o not regret tne agonies I t
lVn h JKt t -o't know. 8nZ"cJco 1 ! J2, ."". n.ntly o? account
nose xujrviuso. "..- Bl lna OJC1 v;aiu.umia mnairtj. in-o ima. n aoowea mat I had terr
I had never seen her before. It must time It was a stock houae and John Mc- ment. end no woman who lacks
, .iihtls sixth sense. ;uiiougn wm if mnr. xwt us a gooa actress.
...... ih t Kvtlnxe came iresn rrom ner eastern
ifea Mta P.rt.
weV7 SSmb h, T eou id still speak arid the French of Porte St Matin's melo- Among the other partlI , her
bV'undtwlthhf was that of "Leah" ! ,. French
7. m" L,Vn . .n'laree dark eyes hearted Callfornians war bewl
Cf,P.Unnever dlT nor robf In Its spontaneity, .accustomed
-a mass or sort snow-wnrve hearted callfornians was bewildering drama of that name.
if v fnmniAXion - anu iiiikv as -t - ...
whth time can never dim. nor rob or m its "?"n?";":' .Zl-.iZm.:?? lo play 11,18 Prt because she believed
She used to like
'HS''KmSE ofr'th. mIgfcMwltch! The piee'e w.,' so" sucieisf ul thaT it h rembled the heroine, and on. of
rob Rose Eytinge of pe magic wiicn ; op WMk8 an the rules of Rose Eytinge's stage career
J - - - . a , .it J. .
vvmi in was in at a woman mnf nnnan 1 n 11
-- - v- MfirvHik IV ua
- . ' 1 JB w' vr uo QV KUUU a. (J LIBB9.
Anv attempt to descrihe ner wouio ,.i. v Her nttt r f ir... -.
be futile. Mere words cannot ao ner x-iayea wiw iim anc, ","7." , .' ""7'""'
Justice. It Is not the outward seem- w ,, .i,uwn Melanle." also an adaptation from the
fng of the woman which can be de- When the play was finally w thdrawn Prencn. she lhen ,tarred for omt) tma
ery of her P"2a"ty'mvrn proceeding, e
has swayed audiences, moving inem m those davs for a stock house,
lauahter or to tears at her will. . , " days, tor a stock house.
"0Mntlv"RV."tSatt ffgtffi- Si T' ?r ."V'W.ln the tragedy of Vr-
Some
0" Misclia Elmaa WL.
Many Narrow Escapes in His Care;r
cited that the first thing he d;d was
fall flat over the piano stool. He al;'
Informed Mlynarakl that he was . 7
months old and that he had rlayej f
violin five and a half years, fie did r. t
know at nil what he was doing or aa J -log."
- .
goon afterward. Professor Aur be
came interested In the boy,' and1 vs no
Jews were permitted to come to live in
Bt. Petersburg except such as were
born there, the professor had to get so
cial permission from the csar in ordor
that his protege might come to th
Russian metropolis for the finishing of
' his musical education a point that waa
reached at the mature age of 14. After
' that the boy set forth Into the world,
and the rest Is history.
Expect Narrow Escape. '
' The El mans have a superstition that
Mischa la bound to have some narrow
escape on his way to America, for every
big new chapter In his career has been
thus opened. On his way to St. Petere-
, burg from Odessa, the third-class com
partment was desperately crowded, and
Elman pere set forth at the first stop,
ping place to see If he could not find
another carriage. He at last arranged
for an empty compartment and hurried
back to get the boy. But the little fel
low was so sound asleep that he could
not be awakened and it seemed best to
leave him where he was. Almost im
mediately afterward there was a col
lision and the compartment that waa to
have been taken was smashed to bits.
Tbs next step was when Mischa left
fit. Petersburg to make his- debut in
Berlin. The night - before the concert
the cas In his hotel bedroom wus only
partialis turned off, i and the boy was
so nearly suffocated that the doctors
had to work on him till 11:30 the next
morning to bring him around. Ha was
due to plav before the critics at noon,
and Insisted on going, although he was
scarcely able to stand. He arrived only
20 minutes late, played four nieces and
oe!ng frightened, he not only clayed then fainted, but woke next day to find
this waits much better than before, but himself famous.
aiso anotner little waits that he had , ,. -
heard me play. The trouble was that QltS Hand, '
thereafter he always wanted to play
with the .orchestra. - Of course, after The next event was his London debut,
coSld1 bcSan t0 tech h,m " WU M 1 nd way hither he cut a great
"When he was 4 H, Princess tTrusoff. a"n hu hsnd wUh He inslst-
who was the great lady of the neighbor- 6 on Playing, however, although hla
hood and owned most of the land about hand wns much stitched and patched,
SMrfebSSInS Uhouh la,n" co" him much
aaid he had been sent by the princess P'n- Now hla father wonders what
to glvs lessons to Mischa. When he wU1 happen to him on the way to Araer.
found that hla pupil was to be a 4-year- lc- . , .....
old baby who, could scarcely speak he Aside from his strange gift of being
was very angry and went away asfsst'ab'e to Interpret the great masters of
as ever he could.- But a few days later music by a kind of Instinct, Elman Is a
the princess asked Mischa to come and normal, hearty,,, healthy boy, of good
Dlav for her and I took one lltHa nrch. habits, fond of bicycling and with a
tra along. But th result was much keen taate for chess. Although he has
grief to me, for she at once wanted to never studied the piano, he is a mora
adopt my little boy and pay for hla than ordinarily good - pianist, playing
mimical alnraMnn mil Mn him ,n o. apparently by instinct. He has written
a gentleman. Her only condition waa a Pa eal ' music, too, and wants to
na q anown m m composer some uay.
To
thst he should leave the faith of
fathers and become a Christian,
this I felt I could not consent.
In Great Britain city debts are be
coming enormous, even when due al
lowance is made for the extensive In
vestments of public money In property
Becomes Excited. :
'Fortunately though, the princess was of a kind not owned by municipalities
not altogether ene-rv .nil uiiii in America. Sheffield has , a bonded
not altogether anirjr, and assisted us debt of over 48 ooo.OOO, above Its sink
somewhat in taking the boy to Odessa, ing fund, and Leeds owes $62,000,000.
when he was Stt. He was taken to The bonded debt of Liverpool is over
MlvT.nr.wt -mhn w. h. um.A $72,000,000 and Birmingham owes $82.-
MiynarsKi. wno waa at the head of the ooO.OOO. Glasgow's debt Is $86,000,000.
Conservatoire there. Mischa was so ex- Cleveland Leader.
FISHERMEN BLESS THE SEA
Quaint Custom Han Jed Down for Ages
BUSHELS. June . One
of the dignitary turns seawards and spreading
t
season at Europe's "queen of on. behalf 5f all those that go down
watering pieces," Oatend, Is the to the sea In ships. As he ceases, the
annual ceremony of blessing the
Taking place early In July, It
forms a fitting overture to the grand
performance provided by tbe European
aristocracy that frequent the famous
Belgian; resort during , the succeeding
summer months.
The ceremony is one of the many
cannon on the opposite side of the
harbor the fog guns that are used as
harbor guides In bad weather thunder
forth confirming reply to the bene
diction. The bands and choirsters then
lead off a hymn of thanksgiving and
ths proceedings terminate.
This blessing of the sea dates from
firobably the 17th century; at any rate,
oeal records show the carpenters and
popular manifestations of the church Joiners accounts were rendered at that
of Rome, "arranged to suit local con- H"" for the erection of stagings snd
dltions. After high mass at the prln- Platforms and barriers on the sea front
cipal local church dignified by the '"T J? nd these indications are
name of cathedral a procession Is supported by certain other' evidence,
formed outside. This procession is com- A"'8, fremony comes at the time of
posed by the most conglomerate ele- tna local fair, and while most of the
ri v menu, iKHiin uw usual monsters ana V " ,
rVlSCVtlL' priests there are hundreds of fisher- rfolk used to -'know it before Ostend
s.t folk and their children. The nrem- Be to the ranK of a fashionable re.
1 I , r . . . . S' .nrtl havA InannAA .
wnman. one Knows tnai inimci
Ively the moment she enters a room.
Her charm lies in her voice, her man
ner, her grace rather , tmr
btnation or incse iuihb.
whole Is the actress, the woman.
Visions of the Drama.
As we sat In the boarding house par
ELKA.N
AMD
AITER.
Tom Keene playing opposite. Boss ginus."
Eytinge made especial mention of Vlo- Rose Eytinge's life, however has not
getin. the scenic artist In , his rday. one ft' &?gU5?
of the best in his line. She thinks the stage, more than fifty years ago, she
stage of today is not to be compared was young, poor, alone and Inordinately
to the stage of forty or fifty years ago. ambitious. She lived In one little room
In those days, she said, the resources nd made all her stage and street
were marvelous. The productions now- ciotnes herself. She told me that ones
GALVESTON IMMIGRATION
MOVEMENT -Finding Jots for New
Izers appear to gather up every -fam
ily In the poorer quarters of the town.
Then, by way of making them realize
their great good fortune, 'the young
sters are either dressed as some saint
or else they are allowed to carry a
banner or a candle (at high noon), or.
to support one oi tne corners or
sort) have disappeared, this one hai
remained. Efforts are being made to
have the ceremony performed afloat
and to render It, In Its essential de
tails, of a more ' distinctly maritime
chaiacter; for it Is felt that, at pres
ent, the. ceremony does not fully war
rant lis specuie title. Tne aeneral
I 0f a, fin.- m y.-i.ai; nut. aiiv general
portable platform carrying a highly- Je""g tnat au tne reauy marine
painted and gilded statue of the virgin &tturfJ;"UCB. 5? Jne Vrtiem of fisher
Dt tne - numerous saints -of r"' ri.JL'"s . " . m
or of one of the - numerous
the sea. A Dsrty of fishermen in every
day clothes is perhaps the most orig-
as we sat in tne uoiu... adays ar- too ultra modern: too hi- when she had been cast for a more than
lor and I-listened to her, gradually the Mrra; the antique effects are lost sight ordinarily - Important part she sat ud
atlff uDholstered furniture faded away, of, and the result Is, that mediocrity " thenight before sewing and study-
V ... inart a vast theatre' filled prevails. - , - lng. When she went down to the the-
and I saw Instead, a vast tneatre iineu v Rom Eyttng,a nM piayed many parts atre for the final rehearsal she was so
with a waiting, breathless audience, i and naa ajways. been a success. tired and worn out she could scarcely
could see the hundreds of electric she will tell you this with all the "Peak, and so blind she Could not see
lights, hear the soft, subdued musks, frankness of a child. "I had no first the lines In the1' prompt book.1' After
mall the perfumes of flowers and. feel success, because I was always a sue- "he went home, the manager, fearing
v- nnt- f rnrini. And mm" Teanlta this calm . ananrnnr. sne would be A. failure that nl.hl
then, from out the wings stepped cahn- which in another woman would be vatelv told her understudy to be pre
lv and confidently the woman they had egregious self praise. Rose Eytinge Is pared to A take the part. Fortunately
Her s is rather the In- Rose Eytinge knew nothing about this new-comers,' it has been asked, "bo . caslenally.
them In -the hollow of her born consciousness of the real artist arrangement, and to the surprise of the dissatisfied In the west andl drift back working for the most part at meager
ie magio of her marvelous .the' genius. " , . " company read her lines that night with to the eastern settlements of thalrnwn '7?fh--lf- credited wth having saved
art' And yet, Rose Eytln ge 'has'W hu- unu-ual brilliancy, despite her fatigue, ".i"!. f" " . F fl.fe inc their arrival In KAnsas
Inge, and that, by the way, man side. too. She confesses that never which hnw that. no matter what her on"tyr , t City. , -
been waiting (or; the beautiful woman not an egotist.
who held them
hand by the
compelling art
l: .. . I ...
Is the way she best likes to be spoken In all her long career as an actress did Physical Idling her mentality always The plan has been effective for so - The-movement has not yet attracted
of with no prefix whatever. Is not a she go on the stage witnout nearly ay- uummairo iu . snort a time tnai aurriclent - data to the serious attention of the unions,
ntage name, but, as she expresses It, Ing of stage fright beforehand. "I used According to her one of the reasons answer the question poaitivelf have not possibly because It is not on an ex-
Is the name she was born with, ana tne to stann in tne wings, waiting ror my ," aramas or todav so accumuiatea. aim, the experience tensive scale. In one irtBtance It wa
name with which she was baptised, it cue, witn my Knees Knocking together in oecause tne managers dare
was originally .of Hollandise extraction and my teeth chattering. Many a time n put before the public the living
ul c-, uay mo, lne parts
are simply glossed over, like sugar on
a cake, the motives underlying them
are so much stronger than the written
ages of the saints of the sea should
be preserved, while the foreign or pure-
lnal part of the whole cortege except ;"V,? mlnV nU8;ilC be eliminated,
that there are too few of them.. Aftr In "hort It Is desired to rnako the bles-
C A ' T? ' T? passing through the town the whole !inC r.,",r . man s festival,
ltizens Away from Lonjestion of East &FS23i pe"bia;n: thftn 'oclety funotlon-
... . v . ., (J warps. , ticions ajiiornia liiacKDiras.
$100 and has sent for his oldest daugh- If one has the luck to keep abreast 4 , .
ter from Russia. M. B . an iron worker. Of the head' of the procession and to Los Angeles Correspondent, Ban Fran-
on $12 a week saved $110 and now has emerge at the seafront with it, the Cisco Chronicle.. .
taken a small farm. . sight will not readily be forgotten. On Thousands of savage blackbirds Infeit
So it goes down the list with only inewbea'ih, Vlou,n.dl' of ,n !? c,tjr nd Jn om" .or the suburbs
two discouraging entries one man who ffshlonsble toilets and In rough fustian, they are so bold and vicious that dogs
was implicated in a theft and left tn count mingling with the sailor, the are kept on the jump avoiding them,
town; and another who is listed as an marchioness. with the fishwife. In the men on bicycles are sometimes chased
undesirable citizen working only oe- J"", "H",u, vv, ft :5: "IW ,5"". : peuestriana pecxea on
By H. J. Haskell. '
HE so-called movement -to divert
Jewish . lmmlgratlog - from New
Tork .to ; the .- gulf yport has at
tracted -wide, attention. Tha
. doubt has been as to, the feasi
bility of the plan. "Would , not tho
T
TS WOM A TSJS TMFTJ JKKflR OTSJ
X X XJ-H VV Xil 1 X-d XJ jf X XX O' I UUU X X. XJJX1 L""H,fr'i n" grown. In brief.
W
HEN one hears many women In vancement, .furnish names that meant )M,
re be ouranlvaa mn..
t atlvely speaking, we all wear, more or
SKiuruiiy.. a mask which serves
of one of the most Important distribu
tion centers for i the Galveston move
ment is Instructive. Of approximately
1,000 Immigrants who landed In Gal
veston In the six months following
the establishing of the Jewish Immi-
f rants' Informs tkm bureau, July 1,
07, about 10 per cent were sent to
Kansas City, where they came under
the care of the United Jewish Charities
and of Jacob BJlllkopf. superintendent.
An lnatviauai record of each of these
But 14 of the Immigrant", "aft and steani yachts with a big mail tha heads If they happen under trees
wutti, uui.oiu uumiiu. iu iiia-a vwa wiicit? liidv .1 tl lltsaia. . LXlv DiraS USU-
ground. On a bright day and wltt allv fight in pairs.
the whole place beflagged and dec- if a man with a very light hat comes
orated, the sight Is a striking one. along they swoop down, beat It wlt
' When the clergy- reach the platform their wings and claw at It with the rage
bearing - a communion table, and the of wounded eagles. Frequently they
procession forms up In an Irregular aim their sharp beaks at the victim's
square around It, there is a little serv- eyes and he has difficulty In defending
Ice, the central point of which Is the himself. The. painful yelping of ror-
blesslng of the four cardinal points of nered canines attracts flocks of thd
the compass by the bishop. Then this birds and then the aur flies.
polite society ; of the present . nTIlf. conceal our real feelings tear that 00 Prson has been kept by him. It
hna.Hn.- of thlr wlnnina- -1 IV. "IT. ' ' r," kwht ana wtiat a reveatlon w" nr nece-nary to lurnish boara
day boasting of their winning
at cards,
have spent over bridge
iting or their, winning tho,,, 0f tke Pilgrim mothers PhlUis wouW brmide The o vwh5 TS? longer ti
,, of the hours they Wheatley and rfannah Daston, the he- J the" veland aTOr thi! coa? of
ent over Drldgs and rolnes , ol coloniar days jn the j Psons dlence-could a search light be turned Positions
of Mercy Warren,
than a week - at an Individual
$S and' $6. Within that time
were almost invariably found.
x.! ur..tiinff4A. . . . .v... miiL its .umea f... . . : . - .........
other games, of the cocktail, and cham--VheV of th
pagne they, are able to drink, of their many others.
rnortai words would be verified again
wunu n nuf ana an the men
found possible to place a cornice worker
in a union -shop with the acquiescence
of the union's business agent. It was
pointed out to him that the new-comer
would orooauiv oecome surricientiy
proficient within a few weeks to earn 1
the union scale. As soon as he should;,
reach that point the man promised to
take out a card. Tne agent took the
position that it was better to encourage
such a man to enter the union than;
fores him into the ranks of the non
union forces. Therefore he consented
that; he should work In the shop on -probation.
Before the expiration of
the period allotted, the Immigrant was
able to Join the union.-
Apparently tne immigrants aivenoa
WHERE DEMOCRACY IS THE
WEAKEST By Sir H.Wrixon,M. P.
T Is surprising how many abuse trated of late In the United States.
the public put up with quietly under t11h18Y ahop merchant waa convlctM
several
eymentf vaudevnie Perfoanc ;MWho
of the money : they , have won at tne uU)d the honor of suggesting and urg- wirTr't - t i j , i . .
races, of the cigarettes -'they have lng the Declaration of Independence? ""'WW " fortlana.
.moked. and "f their ft.yMlf.Sffi -o Rose Eytinge. after .busy,
sorts of modern dissipations, one nat- er o( another. liar letters to her hus- brilliant career filled with more suc-
u rally asks the . question, "Are all band and to her son while they were cesses than is ordinarily vouchsafed to
women filling their proper mission In on the other side of the trackless ocean th. ,,nt nt ' ' Tucn"area to
the wqrldr' v - deserve to be written in letters of gold lor of one woman, has come to
The chronicles of fsshlonable society and handed idown through all coming Portland to spend her declining days,
are filled with the doings and the say- generations as the embodiment of the h, As tho sun of her life sinks alowiv
Inra f women of the pretentious class filahest and noblest nrinciDles for the .... " . . 'f
that are so frivolous and silly that one guidance of men. , ' , - l", . uen west sne can look hack
ployment uncertain.
11 the public put up with quietly under t11h1BYw . Bop merchant waa c
. . - - . In England : and aentenoetl In
1 a res people a government. m months' Imprisonment for buying up a
crisis when the masses aro roused the goods in one locality and combining
Its strength is Irresistible, but In itn,oti,ers to bring about an artificial
to -the west through Galveston are not the dally rounds of - politics tha In passing sentence, the iuf!r !,,
eastward. At least tnat party In power seaks to avoid dlfflcul-The aam law that protects the cro
.SSLyStfrE!!; SOi: and to make a. few -enemies a. Prieior. of marchandlaTOJe. M.
rise In the nrice.
Mr HilHVnnr . a-nln. rf.lfr M.ta.r1 11 lat that 1 jihi.i. i mi.. J"" sain.
found $75 Jobs for hrs-400 charsea fn' fa the Kansas
... rvu...uua - w.iv iubi iiui a. auivji ui inwno wiiw iia.o v'. . . - , . est - SJSO In tha rnni.m. . .,,1.1 .
w?."t h0.0. no't Veen U u aSLSJ a.' .n"ntn JL-kJS: c ' own Industry and keep what jb?- 5 .Hi ?X
by the financial depression ss the esstnew arrivals will not be satisfied withAhe can lawfully make by It is an In-clJ nV' '.'"h"ce
All sorts of occunatlona ara renra- tha Annnt-tunlHaa.orrerMl In tha west. Ulllsible orlnclole. but this Drlnclnle la TV? ? . merchant! Ise coming to mr-
sented among lmmlgranu. There rr As ft Is they are rapidly being trans- distorted out. of all semblance of Its R " l' n,B " ffe5?J lie".J'T ,1" ,'
tailors, shoemakers, bricklayers, tin-: formed Into Americans. The great true self , by the - operation of trusts. iSI..?? purpose- of enriching the In-.-.-
- . . aiavuw in Va atUUIB lU3 I
egai limits."
There
to
ow
Wealth, education and favorable op- Darrah 'and many others of Revolution-
portunlty have been the environments ary tame can never be erased from
nf name, neonle all the days of their nages of. history. -
lives, and yet they have never dlseov- . Epoch succeeding epoch, has furnished
4K.I, pnAar . 1 ttA inhrt. ThSV : tha finmoa nf American liArnln.. whn
have never sought to learn their true made a deep Impress upon the age In ew York Telegraph.. The blow wss
estate or tne worit uoo mienaea mem wntcn tney uvea
lanorant of the ' language and to the old common law of England ami
wun. tneir low standard or living, were or America.
Jew
----- - ' m " - ni; a Va . . UI IliqU IIIVV aT. II 1V7 1 IVBt HO. A U jivai ma mm v aavaa. f, m f Vfvwa,ava IV V UOl O,
n'r'i b'ack.8m,tu". butchera, bookkeep- social service of-the organised Jewish combines, corners and all the other j
TJL'amv golden west she can look back P"ib1?. mfnave been provided with cess is self-evident .If these Rus.latt - These .methods are crimes according '
blushes' to think that people born to The Immortal names of Anne Fltz-. ana give again In her mind the trl- many cases, however this h nroved
nobler purposes should fall so far below hugh. AngelicaVrooman. Mary Hagi- umphs, 'the glories, aye, and tho heart- Impossible and they have taten what?
the po.sibriItlespf their privileges dor n. Anna Warner,. Esther B.Lydla 'PT " ever offered. At present the UUorT aVe
--xfflti&!r:' Ma ' ssin?e.ththeiyEp ssr&Ft.T?.
i . T'i.LXl. ""'- I?ln.kB,u.tle. young $ig and even $20 a week. " Of t?he 88
nm siii t swakn-r aiisaii w nil tin I ii KTisn rMnnrt- aaAa. i a. . A . a , K . . ,
ered their proper exalted spheres. They the names of American heroines who jble position of editorial writer on the were receiving wages under $10 a week
to do. , They hush the ohldings of con
tiey know or. care
and who -wrnta their one Of the hardest she was aver m1)
names on the rolls of fame beside the upon to bear, but Rose Kytlnge is not
Hence by subscribing to some popular most illustrious men of our country. a woman who sinks under adversities.
charity about wnicn tne
They did not achieve Imperishable m matter how they rend and tear her
nothing, - names by Idleness or dallying with soul.-- f ' - , :
They never give any of their time to vices. They' were up and doing Inces- "Ifwe all took this line from the
the actual work of redeeming unfortu- santly striving for better things and Lord's prayer," she said to me as, we
nate humanity, or to knowing for them- higher places than leadership in fash- Parted. " 'Thy will, not my will be done.
selves that their contributions to char- lonable .society. - It never occurred to Wi may say It with our lips, but all the
Ity are wisely expended. They care only any maiden or matron of the olden " tim. our rebellious hearts are crying
for uninterrupted-hours of ease and time that the horse fairs and races were out My will, oh Lord, not thy will he
elfish gratifications of their cAprices. places where -they should appear in done. When we learn to bow our heads
With the many workers In the fields gorgeous costumes or, enter the lists of . with patience - and resignation' and
of literature, philanthropy, education, rivals for the favor of men addicted to truthfully say. 'Thy will then will
religion and politics, there are few such gaming or the turf. -.-; -. come the knowledge of the higher and
names as Aspasla, Cornelia, Hortensla They Cast their influence on the side better things of life, and a fuller, more
and others of ancient Greece and Rome, of morality and religion and won many complete understanding of love, which
We can not, with all our boasted ad- laurels in the higher realms of society. Is the- bast thfng in tho world. 1
' '...-.-.-.., t '. - - - . '. . - - - 1 ' . :. ; - ' V ' . ' . . ' ' -- , ' ' ' - v . f . ":" r - . ' '' ' -l
'-'.. " ' ' ' .'I ',. : - . I ."... "..''.''''';'. . ', 'V :.. ' ',''.. "
plumped down Into tha west Into Kan- English courts are clear In their con.
sas City,-for Instance with no one to damnation, as crimes, of combinations
look after them, they would starve for against -tho freedom of trad and in
a few days and -then would drift Into dustry, as they ' "discourage labor and
the ranks of unskilled labor with tha restrain - oereons from attl
i, s . cnances against tneir err rising.
.iu w hit, vnaiiu . vi RnuiMuuH oi oinrr iwruns to pfi wnat nrica tn.
hich
four were malting $r5 or inortTtfii ti- chac'. t0 "i about with a View to ' " J ' """"r0" xnm
improving tneir conainon. rirst.tney Merchants were sent to Jail in Enac
ts no doubt that the rienntJi
accurculatlon of wealth in a few han
The old decisions of the ???,s '?dan?fr-,.ftn,i naturally ao. t
pryeent buch a strained app;icat!'n
the principle that a man should he al
lowed to keep what ha han earned.
in a tnorouphly modurn rt
with $5.60' as the minimum
were getting Detween tl
tmnm being $20.
With est livelihood and out it in tha nn.. last thing tiiought of la the I
Organisation of other persons to set what triee thev r"",cuulr classes ria-nting
- - . . . ,r 7.- villi, v. in. io i iv-t-vi ui'jcmiiia . .. r. . i o.i. x in. snd a nunarea years aao lor mainrac
TTnlta4 Jewish Oharlttea in l-- - - ri. tm r.Mi . .v. i.kt ... . . . r . . v ""-pr.ii
i.ih.. Vli . "i f'V'i" Y w ?r "'".'j tices, which are trivial compared with
w kn in?IniP- There is of the Jewish organization which those which have been openly perpe
W. a., for instance. . son rim a leer wha ourht In he tinnlftntpd hv tha nnhlln . 1 " v
begin
for l
selves, active lnterewt.i di-mui
some concession, the publln s'tv;
clamoring for be' ter w-iires. th f-iii.
Of th slate calliner fur the runif.)
of rent, special lin.lusf rf se-fc' I
dulgence 'these and pril Onr i' -aucn
these will prevau i; -r
easy-going wuy of poinn.ir .n -i
over what may be tha trui it.'.-- i
"Aren't, you getting on the poojile as a l -;..
iiifre i no ci'nu.i
arrived July . 1, 107. He is - worklna- niaht schools.-, And then thev
In a packing-house for $ a week. Since to look for a better Job. superintendent
his arrival he has saved 1175 anif h A canmaker. who in Russia had made all rlnht?"
sent for his family in Russia. N.. P.. , only a few dollars a -month when he "Yes." was the reply, "only I have penjent enmisli to
a tailor, is making $1$ a week, haa could get work, was started In Kansas heard that Cohen, who isn't any better rights of th puhlio
savea lies ano .expects to send for. his City at $10 a-week, which soon was capmaker than 1. is retttna- 118. When their na ins defy
lamny. t. t- , a. taoorer in a Junk yard Taisefl to 1J. - That was opulence ana
at $9 a week. hss sent more than $100 he lived with the Joy of a millionaire
to Russia. , M. O.,. who arrived August until he made a'dlacovery. i Then he
, out of his salary of $10.60 a week went to Mr. Ullltkopf with a grievanc.
as a sash and door maker, baa saved "What's the matter?" Inquired the
Yl:
Bhall I be getting $18?" self-interest.
That discontent was the evidence of oonre of Hn sfot .
the Russian capmaker's' : Americanlxn- Is tht lr pwr l i i
tlon. - And that is one 'of. the fruits caili4lif-Is demoiri.
of ths Galveston movement. im.u;ia and j.in a. .j.