Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (May 1, 1903)
V 1 POVERTY. The people call him rich: his lands Stretch very far and very wide; , They call him rich, yet there he stands Ill-clad and bent and hollow-eyed. The people call him rich; his gold Is piled in many , a yellow heap, But he is all alone and old. And when he dies no one will weep. They call him rich, but where he dwells The floors are bare, the walls are bleak; s They call him rich; he buys and sells. But no fond fingers stroke his cheek". They call him rich; he does not know The happiness of standing where Sweet winds across the meadows blow And toss the verdant billows there. Harper's. Only a Little Singer O one knew where Dagley had come from. He turned up one day at the restaurant where I always took lunch, and after standing awkwardly at the door for a few min utes advanced to the table where I was seated. He .began talking to me as though he had known me for years, and although he was making a merry little bluff of , being entirely at his ease, embarrass ment was written all over his good natured rural countenance. It was my vacation time, and as I was a bit bored for amusement, I was immediately interested in Dagley. I - offered to show him the town, and, as I expected, he Joyfully accepted. I am sorry to say that Mr. Dagley developed a decided taste for Investigating-dance halls, beer gardens and like places. But, most of all, he liked to attend' all sorts of variety perform ances. He seemed determined to find something very, very bad. I took him to a concert hall, and he Bat quietly through the performance, merely remarking that it was not half bad. f I had expected that he would find It very bad, indeed. "Seems a pity, though, for all of them nice boys and girls to be going to the bad." "What boys and girls?" I asked, in astonishment "Why, the ones as danced and sung," he replied. "But they 'are not bad!" I exclaimed. "We-H I was always told they wasj" was his calm reply. . When Sunday came around I asked him- If he did not want to Include a visit to one of the fashionable churches In his city experiences. The flowers on the pulpit were always fine, and the music would be worth hearing. "No, I don't care for the music," and there came into his face a look of hard ness and bitterness. . ."I used to go to church, but that was before my little girl " "Have you lost her?" "Yes, lost her five years ago." "My! Look at that woman!" he ex claimed, as an elegantly attired lady swept past and .entered the church. "Never saw such fine fixings before." She was a famous singer, the Idol of the concert-going public, who, during her short visits to her native city, gra - ciousjy lent her sweet voiee to, the church where she hadworshiped as a child. When I told Dagley all this he said, the bitterness coming back Into his face: "Oh! She Is one of them singing peo ple. Is she?" "Look here," said I. "You ought to be set right in one thing, at least, and . I believe that I'll tell you a little story of an experience of my own." "It was like this: One night I was coming home rather late from the the ater. -As I turned into my street my attention was attracted to a young girl who stood at the edge of the side walk. She was crying bitterly. I was about to pass, when she turned up and looked Into my face. She was adorably pretty, and I stopped In answer to the mute appeal In her eyes. . " 'You are in trouble?' "'Oh, sir, she sobbed. I have no place to stay to-night. I-I don't know where to go.' "Well, I took her to a lodging house kept by an old lady who, I knew, would care for the girl, and paid for a room for her. She- did not seem to be used to that sort of thing, and I could not have done anything else, she was so fair and innocent Thank God, I found her that night ' "I promised to look in in the morn ing and see what could be done for her, but I hardly expected to see her again. "Well, the next morning I was met by the old lady, who told me the girl's story. She had run away from home to go on the operatic stage. It was the same old story of a few months' ; struggle and failure. Now her money was all gone, and she had "been turned out on the street on the night I found ber. - "The landlady was a motherly old sonl and was quite touched by the girl's story. We arranged that she should stay with her 'for a few days, and that I was to try to find some employment for her." "Where Is she now?" ' . - " "Singing in that church there on the corner. The girl really has a sweet, sympathetic , voice, and the choir di rector was delighted to secure her services." "Why didn't she go home?" . "Her, father told her when she left that he never wanted to-see her again." "Well, wasn't there anybody else she could go to?" "No. There was a young man she seemed to think' a good deal of. but be turned against her, too, when she left" "I don't suppose she cares anything for him now?" "Yes, she does. There! She is com ing now." . Dagley glanced np at the girl; then he turned very white, and uttered the word "Jennie" Very softly. With a glad cry the girl sprang for ward. "Oh, John, oh, - John!" she sobbed. "Do you want me again?" "Didn't I "come after you?" "And and, father?" - "He's a-waltin' for you down at the farm." Indianapolis Sun. ...THE... 8LE of P1HE8 American Uitlanders II Who, Demand that It Be Annexed to Uncle Sam ..... ft- WHAT Is to be the final disposition of the Isles of Pines? According to the decision of Secretary of War Root Cuba Is Its guardian, but the islanders, especially the American residents, do not desire any such arrangement and want annexation to the United States. This Interesting situation Is the result of the recent Spanish-American ' war. At the end of the conflict Spain relinquished her ancient sovereignty to the island, and the nations 'wondered as to its fate. Some said It would come into the possession of the United States; others seemed to regard it as geographically "a part of Cuba. .The island was omitted from the, properly constituted boundaries of Cuba by the Piatt amendment which was ratified by Cuba, and its disposition was left to future adjustment by treaty between the United States and Cuba. Leading statesmen in Cuba have all along taken the view that the de facto government of the Isle of Pines Is only temporary, and that -until its nationality Is determined it should pay taxes to Cuba, as a part of the Province of Havana. The determination of Cuba to tax the Inhabitants of the Isle of Pines brought the situation to a crisis. The 300 Americans w&.o live on the island became defiant. They went to the alcalde, or mayor, of the principal city, and said that they would use force if necessary to prevent a tax levy by Cuba. They insisted that the country should belong to the United States, and as soon as the American flag floated over them they would pay their takes to Uncle Sam; but never to any one else. , In its independence from governmental control, the Isle of Pines has been .simply true to its traditions For more than two centuries after Co lumbus discovered It this piece of the world was the home of fleets of pirates, who preyed on the commerce of the Atlantic as far north as the Carolinas and to the southward a far as Rio Janeiro.- The population of the Isle of Pines is distinct from that of Cuba, and Is -a mixture of the native Indian, the invading Spaniard and the negro slave.' Before the advent of the Spaniard the aborigines were divided Into two classes, one owning the lands, and cultivating them by means of negro slaves, and the other a shiftless, totally savage race, which subsisted on raw fish and fruits, and. wandered, naked up and down the coasts. The Isle of Pines is about the size of Rhode Island. . It has many valuable woods and extensive quarries of marble. Famous Marqaand Raft . Thirty-eight thousand dollars was the price paid for a Persian rug at the auction sale in New York of the art collections of the late Henry G. Mar quand. The rug was woven in the fifteenth century as a gift from the Pasha of Persia to the Sultan of Tur key, for the record held by Mr. Mar quand showed that it had 'been found among the effects of the Sultan Abdul Aziz after his' death. - ' Aside from the marvelous color and texture, which Is over five hundred knots to the square inch, the feature of the rug is that the Inscriptions throughout its border, as well as arabeseques In the medallions of the design, are woven in silver thread. It- is a companion piece for the famous carpet owned by the Prince Alexis Lobanop- Rostowsky, which was shown In the Vienna Museum's ADELIITA PATTI-NICOIJI-CEDERSTBOJf. $ .' c.'v" As a Child Patti Prevented POVERTY MADE -w""" S Great Diva Stood on a I H PR Q I N Ci I HaI1 Tab, nd sag IlEtflY OlllVl Her Great Wealth and ftrjHB promise of $5,000 per night has proven sufficient temptation to cause Mme. Adellna Patti, Baroness of Cederstrom, to agree to leave her home In Sweden and her castle of Cralg-y-nos in Wales, In the near future and revisit this country, During the few months she will be in America it is estimated that the great diva will increase a fortune already amounting to several millions by at least half a million more. For over forty years Patti's marvelous voice has thrilled hundreds of audiences and she has passed from one-triumph to another, adding, year by year, to the fortune which she started to lay by in the earlier days of her career. And what could be more striking than the contrast between the picture of the Patti of to-day scoring a last triumphal tour at 60 and the picture of the little girl who, at the age of 7 years, stood on a table In a concert hall and sang trashy songs to a commonplace audience? Little did the parents of the child Patti dream, when her first earnings in thlsway actually saved the family from starvation, that the cultivation of her mar velous voice would In after years be the means of earning vast fortunes. And now, with all her sixty years upon her. It is said that the voice of the . diva retains most, I nt all, of Its original melody, and even at this Jate day has the power to earn about half a million dollars within the short limits of a six months' engagement. . . . ' . The contract under which Patti comes to this country is an Ironclad one. She Is to sing at sixty concerts; is not to appear more, than ten times In any one month. At the conclusion of each concert she Is to receive $5,000. She is to get, in addition, 50 per cent of the bx office money in excess "of $7,500. A conservative estimate places the average receipts at $10,000 a perform ance; therefore, Patti's total Income for each concert will, in round numbers, amount to about $6,200 and her grossreceipts for the entire tour will mount np to, $375,000. , The balance of the bpx otSee receipts will reach another $100,000, so that it is no exaggeration to place the earning capacity of Patti's voice during her forthcoming tour at the half-million mark. During the two hours of the performance the divine Adellna will be upon the stage from a half to . three-quarters of an hour possibly an average of Jhirty five minutes: This means that, all told, she will sing for Just thirty-five hours, or at the rate of $10,000 an hour. v Patti, the child of Italian parents, was born in Spain, In 1843. Her first appearance before an English audience took place when she was 18 years old, at the Italian Theater, in Covent Garden, In "La Sonnambula. For twenty years she toured Europe and then. In 1881, came to 'America. For three years she traveled from city to city. In a triumphal tour. During this and subsequent tours Patti received $5,000 a night. A tour made to South America In 1889 was conducted on the same basis, with the additional agree ment to a share of the gross receipts when they amounted to over $10,000, When the great Auc.torlum at C. cago Vvas formally opened in 1889 Patti received $4,000 for singing "Home,"Sweet Home," .' Patti married the Marquis de Cans. ; a French nobleman, , in 186S, but the matrimonial venture was an unhappy one and divorce followed in a few years. ' Her second husband was Signor Nlcolinl, the tenor. More recently Patti married the Baron Cederstrom, a. member of the Swedish nobility, several years her junior. The union Is said to be a happy ona. : ISLE OF PINES FARMHOUSE exhibition In 1889. The Rostowsky rug was. supposed to he without a paraj)el In the world, but this carpet, the most highly valued among the tex tile treasures of Mr. Marquand,. con tains positive internal evidence that it was made Upon the same looms and In the same period, and doubtless for the same purpose as that of Prince Loba now, which also passed Into the pos session of Its present owner directly from the Seraglio in Constantinople. So far as can be ascertained this car pet is. the highest class oriental fabric now in existence In this country. What Bothers Him. "Dls ole worl' Is bright enough," says Brother Dickey,, "ter blaze de pathway ter denext; but de trouble is, de next worl' is blazln' fer some er us most oncomf ortable already!" At lanta Constitution. BARON CEDERSTROM. 1 .OUR j 1 Immigrant CnHE remarkable prosperity I which this country Is b . blessed has the effect of brl ing to our shores hordes of Iminigr; in ever increasing numbers. Last V the army of Immigrants numbel over 648,000 an increase of 160 over the year before and the pred year will probably see a onsidem increase In the voluntary evils yearly set out from the old world! better their conditions In the new The great port of entry for tli thousands is New York, and here Government assumes Jurisdiction o the aliens as goon as their steal has been passed at quarantine. spectors-go aboard from the reve cutters down the bay and obtain manifests of a Heft passengers, wh the steamship companies must sum' These manifests must show: name, age. sex,, whether married single, calling "or occupation, whetl able to read or write, nationality, 1 residence, seaport for landing In United States, final destination in United States, whether having a tic through to such destination, . whet the immigrant has. paid his own ri sage, or "whether-It has been paid RUSSIAN JEWS JUST other persons, Or by any' corporation, society or government, whether in pos session of money, and If so whether upward of $30, whether going to Join a relative, and If so what relative and his name and address, whether ever before in the United States whether a polygamlst, whether under contract, expressed or Implied, to perform labor in the United-States, the immigrant's condition of health, and whether de formed or crippled, and if so from what cause. The census is a search ing one and the questions must be all answered. , - ' At Uli Island. When the steamship reaches "her pier the Inspectors discharge such lm micrnnts as they may deem It neces sary to examine usually not over 15 or 20, says a writer in the world's Work. All the rest are transferred to barges and taken to Ellis . Island. There on the main floor of the big im migration, building they are divided into groups, according to the mani fests, and " separated. Each Immi grant is questioned to see if his an swers tally with the manifests. If they do not he is detained' for "spe? cial inquiry" by boards of four lnspee tors, who decide all questionable cases. ' - Only the Secretary of the Treasury can overrule their decision. The Immi grants are kept in a big detention room until the railway agents take them to Board trains to their final des tination. ' One of those who recently came over to become one of us was Florlo Vln cenzo, who hailed from Palermo, Italy. He was 14 years old and -traveled light. When he opened his cheap paper va lise it was apparently empty, save for a pah of discredited and disreputable old shoesT Florlo bowed, cap in hand, and his white teeth flashed as he suavely smiled; "I am a poor man, nobleman, seeking my fortune," There was an odor that the old In spector knew. . He picked np one of the old shoes and extracted from It a creased and crumpled hunk of Bologna sausage. The other shoe was v stuffed with a soft, sticky and aggressively fragrant mass of Italian cheese. These articles and a sum of Italian money equivalent to about $1.80, and the clothes he stood in, formed the basis on which Florlo expected to rear his fortune. Another Immigrant, Pietro Vladllli, was gray-haired, round shouldered and weazened, He, too had come to make bis fortune. His nppedlmented con? Isted of a canvass valise, lined with paper and containing two striped cot? ton shirts, one neckerchief of yellow pilk, a black hat, a waistcoat, two hairs of hose, one pint of olive oil and half a peck of hard bread biscuit ; At "the examination the immigrants are asked to show their money, which, after being counted and a record made of It, Is restored to them. - In one re cent year the French led all the others, with an average of $39.37. The- He brews stood at the foot of the list, bringing an average of $8.58. After the French came the Italians from Northern Italy, with $23 53 per capita; Bohemians and Moravians were next, with $22.78; Scandinavians next, with $18.16, and the Irish next with $17.10, Next to the Hebrew the Italians from Southern , Mly were lowest, with1 an average of $8.67, At the battery an employment bureau is conducted for the benefit of the lmr migrants by the German Society of the City of New York, and the Irish Immigrant Society, and here from ent Exi lian fThe the are of por toor era de- to ul- fcd- ny 00; ia. id ly. in- It tai le- et- py- es- -ARRIVED AT NEW YORK TO BEGIN LIFE ANEW. sentlal was sure to be lacking from the table. The New York Press tells how the head of the house effected a cure. One day the family were seated at the table and the bell was rung as usual. The maid hurried to the dining room. .. , . ... ' , "Maria," said Mr. Jenkinson, "just run and fetch the big, step-ladder down from the attic and bring It here." Maria, who had been disturbed at her dinner, gave a grunt of dissatis faction, but ran up the three flights of stairs to fetch down the ladder. In about five minutes she returned to the room, panting with her exertion. "Now," said Mr. Jenkinspn7 "put It up at that end of the room and climb to the top." Maria did as she was told, although she wondered what it all meant. When she was at the top of the ladder, Mr. Jenkinson quietly observed: "Maria, you have now got a better view than we have; just look around and , tell us if you can see any salt on he table. My wife and I could not find it." OBSTACLE TO THE BURGLARS. Flat Hcpses a Humanizing Element in Domestic Life, Sociologists who study criminal life In large cities say that an electric light Is as good as a policemen, the presumption being that crime is a creature of darkness. The flat build ing Is now coming in for some study on the same lines. Certain kinds of crime, at least, are almost impossible in the modern skyscraplpg apartment building. "Porch climbing" Is almost a lost art, and ordinary cases of house breaking are rarely reported from these socialistic domiciles. Men who follow the profession of burglary find many discouragements In plying their calling In a modern "Sat build ing. Surreptitious" entry Is practically BOARDING TRAIN FOR THE WEST. Imposslbte. ";entlehiari .rgiKt who enter In the broad light of day must pass the Scrutiny of the attend ant at the door and the1 elevator boy, and the tenure of these functionaries in their jobs depends partly on their ability to keep undesirable characters out of the building, says a correspond ent of the Pittsburg Dispatch. Then there is the fixed rule that packages cannot be delivered or taken out of the front door. This makes it awk ward for the burglar to leave with his plunder,, necessitating as It does em barrassing explanations and delays, in leaving the premises. A police cap tain said that most of the thefts com mitted in apartment houses are to be traced to servants and that these were few in number. Family rows in apart ment houses, be also says, are rarer than in separate dwellings. .Flat dwellers seem to fall in with the un written laws of neighbors' rights more quickly than those who live in indi vidual family houses Quarrels are heard more easily through walls than across lots Hence, against their wills sometimes, wives and uusbands keep their tongues between their teeth, and during this enforced period of self-restraint recover their tempers. " As a civilizing and refining agent the flat no doubt does many other things which will suggest themselves to dwellers therein. The observations are given forth because this phase, of modern city life shows Itself more prominently in New York than else where. She Had Her Wish. , . A little girl who had noticed on vari ous houses about the city the cards by which the board of health announces the presence of contagious disease, asked her mother what they meant. Her mother explained, and the child said, regretfully, "-We never have any thing like that on our house:" "You would "not want it, would you?" said the mother. "Yes, I would!" replied the little glrL decidedly. , Some weeks afterward the little girl was taken sick with chicken-pox, but was not confined to her bed. On Sun day morning the mother noticed that people passing on their way to church turned to gaze at the house and always went away laughing. Her curiosity was aroused, and she wentto the front par lor to Investigate. In each of the front windows was a large placard made, evidently, by the little daughter from the side of 8 pasteboard box. On the cards she had printed: I HAVE GOT CHICKEN-POX BAD. Where Miscegenation Is Prohibited. A marriage between whites and per sons of negro descent are prohibited and punishable in Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Dela ware, District of Columbia, piorlda, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Nebraska, Nevada, North Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia hd West Virginia. Marriages between whites and Indians ae void in Arizona, Nevada, North Carolina, Oregon and South Carolina. Marriages between whites and Chinese are VQl4 in Arizona, California, Nevada, Orer gon and. Utah. What a surprising number f trager dies happen in the bible in which the principal was not a "society leader!". There Is nothing In a name unless It Is well advertised. mmvfsntiort A late British investigation has shown that 13 per cent of manganese makes iron practically non-magnetic. Alloys more magnetic than commer cial iron may be produced with nickel, silicon and aluminum. A recent series of experiments made in Germany on the vibrations set up in gun barrels bythe effects of firing, in dicates another allowance that the ex pert marksman should make for the individual peculiarities of his rifle. The shock of firing sets the particles of the gun barrel oscillating in elliptic curves. producing deflections of the barrel. The periods of vibration in different barrels vary between between one twenty fifth and one fivebundredth of a sec ond, and the experiments indicate that a small-bore gun is to be .pre ferred to one of large caliber because the bullet can leave its muzzle before the deflection of the barrel has be come considerable. Among the many Interesting discov eries yot Dr. Sven Hedin in Central Asia is a singular oscillation In the position of the lake of Kara-koshun, or Lop-noh This lake seems as rest less as some rivers that change their beds, but the cause of its movements is a secular change in the level of the desert. In the midst of whlqb it lies, bordered by vegetation. At present the lake Is retreating northward from the place where Prjevalsky found it, and creeping . toward Its ancient bed, where It Is known to have lalnin the third century of the Christian era; and as It slowly moves, the vegetation, the animals and the fishermen with their reed huts follow Its shores northward. Dr. Hedin believes- that after reaching the northern part of the deBert the lake returns southward, the period of oscillation being 1,000 years or more. The precious pearl is produced, at least in many cases, by the presence of a minute parasite in the shell-secreting mantle of the pearl-oyster and other mollusks from which pearls are obtained. A spherical sac forms around the. parasite, which becomes a nucleus about which the substance of the gem is gradually built up in con centric layers. Sometimes the para site remains at the center of the pearl, and sometimes it migrates from the sac before It has become hopelessly imprisoned. Reasoning upon ' these . facts. Dr. H. Lyster Jameson, to whose efforts the discovery of some of -them is due, suggests, the possibility of the artificial production of market able pearls by infecting beds of pearl oysters, with the particular species of parasites that are known to attack such mollusks with the effects above described. ' ; 1 the body changes that take place as we grow old, Metchnikoff and other physiologists suppose that an impor tant part is taken by the phagocytes, or devouring cells. Some years ago it was made to appear that some of these cells are color eaters, and that they whiten the hair by ' seizing the pigment grains and conveying them Into the skin or out of the organism. On further study the theory has been evolved that old age itself Is due to phagocytes that destroy the nerve cells. -The nerve-eating cells have been found in the brains of many old people and old mammals, as well as in persons suffering from nervous dis ease, but In no, case have they been known to reach such development or to have so nearly taken the place of the nerve cells as in the brain of a parroquet that died at the groat age of eighty-one, after some years of fee bleness and senility." ' A Narrow Escape. . An amusing wedding incident oc curred recently In a country village. The bride, evidently anxious at the near approach of the ceremony hour, sent the bridesmaids (one of ""whom was the young man's sister) on tq await her at the church. This action nearly-lost her her husband. When the bridesmaids reached the church they observed the punctual brides groom patiently waiting at the chanr eel steps. The lonely misery of his position touched their hearts, and in? stead of waiting In the porch for the heroine of the day, they good-natured? iy walked down the aisle and stood, beside him in silent sympathy- Where? upon the organist openetj the proceed? Ings, the clergyman, began the ser? lylce, and the bridegroom was nearly united in matrimony to ni own sisiep before any one had the presence of mind to utter a word of warning. The momentous question, "WJH thou have this woman?" had been reached, when the bride opportunely appeared, and, after explanations and apologies, the ceremony was begun again. Where He Fell Down, "Tell me what people read and I will tell you what they are," said the self confessed philosopher. "Well, there's my wife," rejoined the dyspeptic party. "She s forever read ing cook books. Now, what Is she?" "Why, a cook of course," replied the philosophy dispenser. "That's where the spokes rattle In your wheels," said the other. "She only thinks she Is." One on the Custom Oflicer. The great actress had just returned from abroad. '!Miss," said the custom officer, stern ly, f'you must tell me what are lu those franks." f'Oh, nonsense!" replied, the great ac ress. carelessly. , . But I Insist" "Well. . I told you nonsense. They are filled wUh love letters." professional Jealousy, -J stand at the Tiead of my bus?? nets," remarked the professor of phrenology, "while you sit at tuo foot" "Too have said It," rejoined the Chiropodist "But just the uuc. the language of the corn is more forcible than the . lingo of phrenological humps." The smaller a man's vocabulary, :he more oaths he finds necessary to AlOCf.