SECTION FIVE Pa.gr es 1 to 12 Woman's Section Special Features vol.. xx:xiv PORTLAND, OREGOX, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 18, 1915. NO. 1G. 3 INDIANS WILL COME TO PORTLAND TO ATTEND THE 1915 ROSE FESTIVAL "You Can Do Better for Less on Third Street Arrangements Made by Louis W. Hill for Prominent Blackfoot Tribesmen to Participate in Junetime's Gala Event Here. atejiMiwJ Stamps I ..;-.v-.-. f Quality First" This Will Be Bed-Davenport Week at Powers High Quality Kdrpen and Kroehler Bed-Davenports Offered at Very Special Prices The Kroehler .Has Led the Way Whenever an improvement in Bed-Davenports was announced it ( was the makers of the Kroehler that made, the announcement, and in this Kroehler Bed ytou will find the very latest features brought out? by the makers. When you place this bed in yoir home you will have the satisfaction of knowing that there isn't a Bed-: Davenport made that! operates more simply than ' this one. Its Simplicity of Operation Assures Lasting Wear The more complicated anything is the more liable to go wrong in some way. The extreme simplicity with which these davenports operate greatly lessens any chance of them getting out of order. They are designed for service, and no matter whether you use it as a bed every night or one night a month, it's always ready, never out of order. Changing from a beautiful piece of parlor furniture to a comfortable bed smoothly and silently. Instead of Moving Into a Larger Flat, Move in a Kroehler When you rent a house or-an apartment your rent is based largely on the number of rooms desired. With a Kroehler you combine two rooms in one, lessening your monthly rental.. You have a handsome piece of parlor or living room furniture by day and a comfortable sleeping-room at night. It is the only piece of furni ture in your home that will give you continuous 24-hour service. $41. BO Duofold Davecnport, covered J?01 QC in Chase leather, simlilar to cut.... wOfiUJ J39.75 Long Size Bii3 - Davenport, JO O 7C oak frame,' with slat ends, special.. wOOa I 3 $55.50 Massive Colonial Bed Daven- QC port in quartered oak, 5-inch arms.. 3JOJ $107 Genuine Leather All-Upholstered Bed Davenport to sell at. . $74.50 $48.50 Roll-Arm and Post Chase Leather Bed Davenport, with rut- QQ 7ti fled front iBJitIO $72.50 Colonial Frame Leather Up holstered Duofold Bed Davenport for $59.85 I I I $lWeek The Great A-B Sanitary Gae O Has Given Satis- Ivailge faction Everywhere There are so many exclusive features in the construction of the A-B Sanitary, so many improvements over the ordinary gas range, that, when compared with others, its superiority is easily seen. It is without ques tion the most economical gas range for sale today, consuming 25 per cent less fuel by reason of the patent burners. Every part can be taken out in a moment and cleaned the same as a dish. The new automatic lighter, which requires no matches, is a feature which always pleases. Made in 30 sizes and suitable for any space. The New White Tile Models Are Wonders Specially Priced Drapery Materials 13c SWISS-White Dotted Swiss in small, medium and large dots, spe- 11. cial, ,the yard JL 1C 1 SUNDOlin Plain 50-inch Sundour in brown, green, rose and gold, sPef2Q cial, per yard 35e MADRAS Green Figured Madras, 30 inches wide, excellent 35c quality, OQ now at iJC 2.S!S CUUTAINS Nottingham, Cable Net and Madras Weave Curtains, d1 Q C extra special, the-pair tD 1,1U COMFORTS New Down, Cotton and Wool Comforts, unusual colorings, long line of grades to choose from, flJO (f from SS.50 to DJtVJJ 80c Printed Linoleums $1.50 Inlaid Linoleums A number of excellent patterns of Printed Linoleums, some of ithe best designs we have ever shorn, pat terns suitable for any purpose, laid on your floor at only, the 3fard, Consisting of the standard grades, such as Wiles, Potters and Nairns, in wood-floor, tile and checked ef fects.. Special per yard, on your floor . 60c 17 $ SO Worth of Furniture $ .00 Cash $1.00 Week $ 75 Worth of Furniture $ 7.50 Cash $1.50 Week $100 Worth of Furniture $10.00 Cash $2.00 Week $125 Worth of Furniture $12.50 Cash $2.25 Week $150 Worth of Furniture $15.00 Cash $2.50 Week $200 Worth of Furniture $20.00 Cash -$3.00 Week 9x12 Extra Heavy Seamless Brussels Rugs That Usually Sell for $18, Now Here is an offering of Seamless Brussels Rugs that is unusual. There are six exceptionally good patterns to select from in pretty colorings, and in both Oriental and small effects. Long wearing 9x12 rugs that are unusual value at the special price. $1435 3 Rooms Furnished Complete $18.7S Plank Top Library Table Only $12.35 A Library Table unusually heavy In appearance, with thick plank top, massive less and la.t ends; 44 inches in length, in either fumed or gold en quartered oak. $19.75 Tarnish Proof Brass Bed, Like Cut, to Sell at 12.65 I This handsome bed is exactly as pictured, having large 2-inch con tinuous posts, and fitted with ten filler rods ball connections join the filler rods to the posts. The bed is finished royal satin, and very rigid in construction. Ill I III!! Stamps The Most Comfortable Mattress on Earth TheSealy Guaranteed for 20 years against becoming lumpy or bunchy and sold on 30 nights' free trial. The most comfortable mattress yet produced. No tufts or tie just a great big pillow for the body. The Price - $25.00 Coat and Skirt Combination Newest for Girls. vr Bathing Suits, Retaining Low Walsted Kffeet, A.-- Patterned After C'OHtnmeM Worn In 011 til. THUKL2 is nothing newer in the line of frocks for little girls than the coat and skirt combina tion carried out in contrasting fabric. Sometimes the coat is of colored linen, over a skirt of white linen; again it may be of velvet over a ruffled lace skirl: or a coat of flowered nussv wil- low silk may be combined with a skirt f of frilled and shirred net. Children's skirts are short and flare from the belt. The little coat has straight lines, in Mandarin effect, and is usu ally sleeveless, with a lower edge cut in scallops or square tabs. Sometimes a sash of knotted velvet falls from beneath this loose, straight coat over the full skirt. One garment that has retained the low-waisted effect is the bathing suit. New models, patterned aftftr.the bath ing costumes worn this Winter in tne South have the silhouette .of little grls' frocks, with straight lines from armpit to the low-placed belt or knot ted girdle, and a skirt in two flounces, cut short enough to reveal full knick ers. Pussy willow silk, salt-water satin and fine, high-grade mohair and wor sted mixture are the favored fabrics for exclusive bathing suits, and the smartest models are of dark color with pipings; facings and sashes of bright-colored Bilk. "While the floating veil continues to be the predominant style, many closely-drawn face veils are seen on well dressed woman who adhere to conserv ative styles. The closely-adjusted veil is of sheer mesh with a small, inconspicuous vinet or allover vine pattern, or a' neat dot in cluster de sign. Larger veils which float from the hat over the shoulders are in bor der effects of the open trellis mesh, which Is entirely new. The new buttoned' boots for Spring wear fit the foot and ankle so ex quisitely that most women prefer it to a pump and silk stocking with tail ored suits and costumes that demand formality. The patent leather toe and light cloth top of the buttoned boot of the moment give it the dainty sug gestion also of a slipper and cling :ing silk stockings. VENGEANCE ON ITALY VOW Kaiser Will Punish Her by Seizing Venice If It Takes 20 Years. ' NEW YORK. April 13. A Paris ca ttle to the New York American says: What the Kaiser thinks about Italy isJ reflected in the following statement h recently made to officers in the Aus tin an Emperor's suite: "Kven if we v are crushed we shall ngver tire of telling our children In Austria, as well as in Germany, that our downfall was due to Italy. If it taKes us 10 or even 20 years, we will win back whatever we give Italy now add also seize Venice as interest." phis disclosure was made by an Aus. trtian officer who heard the K.aiser'3 voqv. Beating Fine Oriental- Rugs to Clean Them, Mistake. Shaking Floor Covering and Going Over It With Vacuum Cleaner or Carpet Sweeper Correct Method. IT is a mistake to have fine rugs vig orously beaten on cleaning day. The sharp beating with a stick as the rug hangs over a line, is injurious to the fibre, and only thick, cheap rugs, with substantial cotton woven backs will sta.nd the treatment. Whacking with the end of the stick is especially inimical. to silk Oriental rugs or the soft, beautifully woven rugs which are used as couch covers. Such rugs should be well shaken and cleaned with a vacuum cleaner, or a good carpet sweeper, and once a year should be sent to a professional clean er, vho will repair any rents . or frayed places and clean them by a special process which brightens the colors without injuring the fiber. , Never wipe off expensive rugs with soap and water, or sprinkle wet tea leaves over them, an old-fashioned cleaning-day teustom which may have improved the terrible, flowered carpet of the Victorian period by softening and fading its strenuous colors, but which will do more harm than good to the soft tones of a real Oriental rug 'or an Axminster of modern, sub dued coloring. If you must wipe oft the rugs with something, use a cloth wrung out in turpentine, but beware of ammonia on soft-hued floor cover ings. A new rug or carpet should not be be swept with a broom. Use a carpet sweeper for several weeks, until the pile becomes "set." Old-fashioned housekeepers may tell you to sweep the new rug briskly to "remove . the fuzz." What you really will be doing, will be to sweep cut some of the nap and probably injure the surface of the rug. If you must sweep, however, be careful to move the broom with the pilo of the fabric and not against it. Rugs should never be tacked down. If, in certain places in the room. thej are likely to be rolled back or pushed about, attach bits of black tape with snap-fasteners at the ends of the rug, under ihe fringe, and twin snap fasteners to bits if black tape may be tacked to the floor. The rugs then may be taken up easily on sweeping day, and the small tacks which hold the b'ts of tap to the floor will not cause much injury even to a hard woyd surface. KISS COSTS $250, 3 MONTHS New Yorker Convicted of Paying At tention to Girl 5Io Didn't Know. NEW YORK. April 13. A kiss will cost Charles Helde, of Williams Bridge, $250. And he will have three months to think it over In the White Plains Jail. This penalty was imposed by Justice Morschauser, after a jury found Helde guilty of assault In the third degree. Miss Elizabeth Murphy, whom Helde had never seen before he met her on the Hartsdale road, charged he threw his arms about her and kissed her. He is married.' '.I ... - - W- V- -- -VH- - - -v - ',ifk-i. A ,t' - - - ' . . - "J - -,' - t mZm Sncfc3S7 Gmte WZf? 7s'sp Z - Ma,. 2 Ms.HMf .-V fti V-' 4 S3' .. ' ' 1 nrmn II A I m I , 1 1 1 1 H ! ! 1 1 A ITWT o NK of the special attractions of the Panama-Pacific Exposition will be brought to Portland as a feature of the Rose Festival, in the visit of the Blackfeet Indians from Glacier National Park, who are to- be sent by Louis W. Hill, president of the Great Northern. The arrangement was made at the instance of Lloyd McDowell, publicity agent for the Kose Festival, who, for several seasons, was with Mr. Hill in the work of exploiting the Glacier Na tional Tark. The Indians have been sent to the exposition in !an Fran cisco for a year. It will be arranged for the party to leave the exposition for a time, and several other members of the tribe will come to Portland from Glacier National Pak. Morr to Be Here Than at Fair. The party, of Indians in Portland will probably be larger even than the party at the .San Francisco Exposition. The Blackfeet Indians visited Port land a few years ago under the aus pices of the Great Northern, and were one of the features of greatest attrac tion at the Rose Festival. This year the preparations for their visit re to be even more elaborate than before. Tepees for the tribe will be erected near the Festival center and every day of the Festival the Indians will par ticipate in the entertainments of the day. Mr. Hill is sending them here at his own expense. Fromlnrnt Tribesmen In Party. Among the prominent Indians who will be in the party are: Chief White Call, head of the tribe; Three Bears, the oldest living member of the tribe; Fish Wolf Robe, the dancer who orig inated the Indian tango, which is mak ing a hit at the exposition: Lazy Boy. a famous Indian warrior; Medicine Owl, the medicine man of the tribe; Eagle Calf, interpreter and tribal dancer, and Feather Breast, leader of the singing society of the Indians. Since their last visit to Portland the Indians have been sent to New York and other important Eastern cities to advertise the Glacier National Park, and they would have gone abroad this year had It not been for the outbreak of the war in Europe. SONG SAVES CHILDREN Teacher Leads Young Folk Away From Sulphur Fumes. PHILADELPHIA, April 10. The cool headedness of a teacher saved the lives of 50 children, ranging in ages from 4 to 14 years. Scenting the fumes of burning sulphur, she suggested a song. While their minds thus were distracted she led them to the street in saiety. The teacher is Miss Lillian May Ap pleby, superintendent of the Northern Horn for Friendless Children. A quan tity of sulphur in the basement caught fire while Miss Appleby was instruct ing a class which included children of the kindergarten department. Realizing that her charges were in danger of suf focation, the teacher got them all sing ing a march tune. Then, beating time to the music, she calmly led them out of the building. Muddy Koads Motive for Suicide. SIOUX FALLS, S. D., April 14. A a investigation of the suicide of Jorgen Lehne, 37 years old, son of M. J. Lehne, a pioneer Union County farmer, indi cated that the only motive for the sui cide was that, because of the muddy roads, his sweetheart could not make him a visit. . . "AS s Indian Tan?o a J&siama Jn: OREGON FAIR BUILDING IS PRAISED BY PAPER Editorial Says Home Relief From Marble Statues and Pillars, While Stu dent Maids Cook So Well Crowd's Are Attracted to Lunch-Room. THE artistic beauty of the Oregon building at th Panama-Pacific Exposition is commented on fa vorably by an editorial in the San Francisco Star, April 3. The Star says that to enter the building is like going into the sweet, cool shadows of the forest. The editorial follows: "A lecture on Art. a little time ago, interested In and discoursing upon ex position effects, is reported to have criticised the Oregon building as out of ha -rnony with the color scheme. That, to me, is riding a hobby to death. As soon find fault with the earth, the trees, the sky, because they cannot be done over in the tints of Mohammedan temples and Persian pottery. "A wanderer stood within the broad colonnade of Oregon, picking at the bark of the magnificent pine columns: " "It was a great piece of work,' he said; 'it must have taken a real artist a long time.' 'Oh, it did,' said the state guard ad dressed, 'years, and years before this Exposition was thought of.' " 'Mm-m-m who was the artist?' " 'God.' was the reply. "When eyes g'ow weary, as they will, of even the equisite ivory tints of the travertine marbles in th briliance of our sky and air, it is like going, into the sweet, cool shadows of the forest to wander into the hospitable home of our neighbor. The beauty of its in terior finishings and furnishings in native woods will get into the heart of a Nature lover. And to complete th; Illusion, there is always a big fire or a little one as the day or time of day, demands, in the huge place with Its ample hearth giving out odors like the brush heap or campfire. "Among a multitude of things. I would call attention to the myrtle wood which, in finished pieces of fur niture. Is like the satin-wood of the Islands, finer-textured than the bird's eye maple or the orange wood. And one other item, about the lunchroom: we call it the lunchroom since the break fast and dinner are sacred to Orego nlans; luncheon which is a cooked meal with salad, vegetable and desnert. la open to the public. Ion't think you scent an advertisement worked in: the Interesting thing about it is educa tional and worthy attention. The whole culinary establishment is carried on by the young women of the state's Agri cultural College under direction of their Instructor in the domestic sci ence department. They get credit marks for efficiency the same an in other school work. So satisfactory srrt results, the instructor has Ix-en obliged to place cards on 'lie tables requesting no tips: 'These young women are not serving for money." "