PSRT FOUR PAGES 3 1 TO 44 VOL. XXIV. POBTLA2iD, OEEGO, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 5, 1905. NO. 10. A MESSAGE TO AMERICAN GIRLS; MRS. T. P. O'CONNOR PREACHES THE GOSPEL OF WORK, WELL DONE, FOR EVERY YOUNG WOMAN WILLIAM GADSBY & SONS Corner Washington an;d First Streets THE HOUSEFURNISHERS Largest Display of Furniture In State MISSION DINING-ROOM Weathered Oak is the wood used. And Gadsbys have complete sets, con sisting of Extension Tables, Chairs with rush or Spanish leather seats, Side boards, China Cabinets,- Serving: Tables, Morris Chairs, Library Tables and Bookcases.-You will find Gadsbys' entire exhibits, most interesting: one, and Gadsbys price on Mission Furniture is extremely low, and therefore within the reach of everyone. Cottage Dinlng-Room Suit, S pieces; chairs in either cane or wood seat; table . 6 feet long- .-. 2&30 This fine Couch upholstered in genuine leather, $42,50; during the sale.. $35,00 Same style In Chase Leather, regular $.27.00; special f 19.S0 Sixteen Vclour Couches, plain, smooth top with wood frames, upholstered in velours; small eizc, 26x74 inches, regular price $12.00; reduced to $0.00 Fifteen Tufted Couches, fringe all round, upholstered in cotton damask: reg ular $9.50, reduced to . $7.50 Tills elegant Marie Antoinette Suit, frames finished in rich dark mahogany, beautifully upholstered in silk 'damask, $25.00. In'- French imported velour. at $17.30 Office Desks Largest stock in the city to chooee from. This office Desk, solid oak, roll top, 50 inches wide Price ' $25.00 Solid Oak Extension Table - This massive Iron Bed in Roman gold finish $13.50; sale price $11.25 Reduced prices on all Iron Beds. $29.00 Beds now.. $15.00 $8.50 Beds now. .$6.75 115.00 Bed now.. $150 $6.00 Beds "now.. $-1.75 $12.50 Beds now.. $10.00 $5.00 Beds now.. $4.00 $10.00 Beds now.. 8.00 $4.50 Beds now..$3JSO Extension Table, solid Oak. 6 feet long, highly polished. 44x44-inch top .when closed; spe cial $i!5 Sideboards Special bargains in -solid Oak Side boards This one $lS-00 Some Special Bargains in CARPETS Our display of Carpets and Bugs is unsurpassed; Bristol Velvets, Oriental designs. $1.10 Burlington Tapestry Brussels. .81.00 Smith's Tapestry Brussels S0.S5 Pro-Brussels, yard wide 81.00 Extra fine Ingrains &0.S0 Union Ingrains -' $050 Cottage Ingrains $0.45 Inlaid Linoleum $1.50 Porter's Printed Linoleum $0.75 Floor Oilcloth $0.45 Brussels Rugs, 9x12 SlSO Brussels Rugs, 9x104 $10.00 Remnant Rugs at great reductions. 25 per cent Discount on Carpet Remnants. 4 If you have a" small room bring size along and we can give you a bargain in Remnants. Are You Prepared to Ac commodate Your Guests During the Fair? If not, why not? Folding Bed, royal oak or imitation mahogany finish, has cable sup ported spring; price $20.00 Bedroom Suit This fine Bedroom Suit, all hardwood finished in mahogany, white maple, or goldon ash, three pieces; spocial $24.00 I Steel Folding Couches.... Mantel Folding Beds , Steel Mantel Beds Hoey Sofa Beds Bed Couches Cabinet Folding Beds .Davenport Beds - - Upright Folding Beds Safety Folding Iron Bed.. FOR THE ATTIC Bed Mattress and Spring 7.25 ....$10.00 ; ....$12.00 , $15.00 j ....$10.00 j, $1&00 ! ....$20.00 . .. .$22J0 ' ....$45.00 I $2S.00 Your credit is rood. Select what you need and then arrange for KnKr Terms. We'll make them easy. Pictures' and prices speak louder than words when backed up by the merchandise we have it. See our show windows for prices and display. Of Course We'll Trust You Trust you for whatever you want in our store. Trust you for any amount, and give you any amount of time. If you haven't tried our "Easy Payment" plan, you can never appreciate the real con veniences of r.iit Tian. Ours is the system you have been wanting the standard of easy payments, by which all other systems are guided. WM. GADSBY. St Clair Steel Range The above cut correctly represents the . St. Clair Steel Range. Prices com mence at 527V50 and go as high as $50. according to size. We can give you a St. Clair Reliable Range, 6 holes, with high closet,-for. .$27.50 Guaranteed for ten years', briers from country must be for cash parties in town can buy one for $5.00 down and $5.00 per month. If not satisfactory, money refunded. I Folding Bed. royal oak or mahogany nnisheu. witn nanusome oric-a-brac shelves, and French mirror on top. has cable supported springs; price $22-50 Lace Curtains. Portieres Special Inducements this week- One-quarter off regular prices. Chamber Suit Good substantial Chamber Suits for everyday use. durable and well fin ished, bevel-jylate glass, at..?l&59 WILLIAM GADSBY & SONS Corner Washington and First Streets THE HOUSEFURNISHERS Largest Display of Furniture in State COMPARING the American girl and ' the English girl, the greatest dif ference I notice ia this: One does not find among the girls of America that false pride and dignity which the girls of tho middle classes show In England. There Is no difference In America between tho "young lady" and the "young wo man"; and I do not think the American girl Judges her sister to any extent by the standard of dress and purse. In Eng land it Is a rare thing to find a girl whose father ke?p3 a carriage and horses mak ing friends real friends, without any ele ment of patronage with girls who earn their living ia offices, or workrooms. There is a barrier o caste, based entirely on the pecuniary positions of the two. American women found out long ago that it Is woman's place to work as much an it is man's duty; and work has been a great leveler among American girls, apart from the democratic spirit which prevails generally on the other side of tho Atlantic. ' The- American girl is not so sentimental as the English girl. I do not think she delights in the love story as her English sister docs; she has other Ideals than marriage, which at least rank equal with that natural end of woman. I have no ticed that the stories which the English magazines provide practically all deal with the turbulence of true love and Eng lish writers do not seem to be able to get away from the theme except Rud yard Kipling, who Is able to write stories about animals of the Jungle and about j-pr4salc things like steam engines; his Strongest wore luueea is inueireuucut ui the love interest, and that fact alone proclaims his great genius. It is calamity that women have been so long finding out that a life without work Is Incomplete, and that for women to work Is the right and natural order of. things. Wifehood and motherhood are, of course, the natural place in life lor women to fill, but not for all women. Work of one sort or other, either as wife or mother, or in some other direction, is a necessary part of a woman's life if char acter is not to deteriorate. It has been the custom of mothers to train their daughters to regard marriage as the goal of life: those who can afford it sit at home In idleness, and wait for that con summation; the others engage In work of some kind, but only half heartedly, be cause they regard it as a "stop-gap, necessary to tide over their time of waiting. This idea, which has been cultivated and encouraged among English girls, has worked great Injury, and I think that many of the evils of society, are due to it, especially among the wealthy. Idleness is the father of mischief, and I do not won der, much as I regret, that the frivolous lives of so many women of the wealthy classes bear fruit In many kinds of vice and all kinds of unhapplness. Let women have some useful work to do like their .fathers and brothers, and we should hear Jess ox tee decadence ot society, and read lees or the acanaals of the well-to-do. Lwhich can generally be traced, to. the un- niuru auiio ut nuna wcicn luieness pro duces, instead of adding to the burdens of a woman's life, work relieves that burden, in that it keeps her -thoughts busy, and leaves no opportunity for the brooding and fretting and worrying which mar many an Idle woman's life. It Is thought by some persons that In employment there is always danger ot a woman undertaking "work which will rob her of her womanliness, and have a coarsening effect upon her character. I admit that many women workers display evidences that their work has not en couraged refinement, and the peculiar characteristics which' come under the general description of womanly charm. But the reason Is one which makes me MRS. T. P. O'COXN'OJt. admire such women workers more than ever. They are pioneers, and they are fighting a hard battle to make way for their sisters. They have not only the conditions ot their work to contend with, but they are being constantly beset by criticism and prejudice against them. What wonder, then, that their charac ters take on something of bravado, even of defiance, and that their physical beau ty is spoiled by lines and angles. I have noticed this sometimes- In. the case- of the woman Journalist, especially when ' her work Ja-OUtsIdo the lines of, fashions and cookery and invades the province ot the man Journalist at the reporting table or in. work of special investigation. She has to defy the curious glances of the orthodox, and to harden, herself against their criticism, and, as a result, makes sacrifices of characteristics which are the distinction of womanhood. Iet me give you this message for our girls: Get a right idea of work: learn an soon as you can that work and truth are the most important things in life. Don't perform your work with your thoughts wandering away upon the pros pect of a charming husband as being after all the Important thing; he will come along all right, no doubt, and he will come along all the quicker to the girl who is found capable and energetic at her work than the pampered idler. Why do men marry waitresses and other women, who work? It 13 because they see them day after day, working briskly and hap pily and usefully; and that attracts men even more than beauty or good birth. Work first, and then, marriage if that is your lot. Some women, of course are re sponsible for the oversight and training of girl workers; and I would ask them to cultivate patience and tact in order-, that they may get the best work. This is the method I myself adopt in dtraling with my servants,- and I pride myself that I have trained out some very good" workers. I helieve In giving them extra responsibility as soon as they are fit to undertake It, until they are able to under take work which the average servant is not capable of. I tell them what I would tell every worker, that work well done Is the only work worth doing. The American girl? she is the most wonderful girl in all the world. When she grows to maturity she Is a woman, and h her proud title she scorns the name of lady she is one of nature's no blewomen, the grandest title she may e'er hope to bear. (Copyright 1905 Cen tral News and Press Exchange.) BES3IE O'CONNOR. New Estimate of Washington Father of Country Under Review . by Portland Schoolgirl. This essay Is from the last number ot The j Troubadour, "orsan" at tha Portland -Academy atudenU. Presumably, it waa written br Mar guerite Hume, daughter of Wilson T. Hume, editor-in-chief of the publication. Its genial wit commends it: SINCE February contains the tiirtbday of the Father of bis Country, o doubt a sketch of his lite, accurately pre sented, would be of some Interest. Let us begin with the incident of the destruction of Mr. Washington's favor ite cherry tree. Many valuable lessons can be drawn from this. We may ob tain a good idea of Mr. Washington's character from this little story. It is evident, that he had a large store of pa tience. If he had not, he- would never have given the youthful George a hatchet. It takes a very patient man to stand a small-boy-and-a-hatchet combi nation. Another point to notice is Mr. Washington's lack of foresight. When a boy and a hatchet get together there Is (usually "something doing." But George would probably have made a great fuss if he had not received the hatchet he had get his heart upon. Mr. Washington revealed his kindness ot heart in gratifying his son's desires. Then the cherry tree. We are inclined to think that this, being Mr. Washing ton's favorite, was a Royal Ann. A man of his wisdom would naturally havo chosen this variety. But the evidence points ia andtker direction. George's hatchet, being merely a toy one, could not have done much damage' to a full sized, large-trunked Royal Ann. The Kentish cherry tree, on the other hand. Is much smaller In limb. So we must conclude that Mr. Washington ate his cherries in pies, and thus was quite right In preferring the Kentish variety ot this fruit Nothing is told as to the methods George used In accomplishing his task. But in his action after the crime anoth er trait of his character is revealed. Did he hasten to take flight, and remove himself from the dangerous vicinity? J No. We see from this that he was un used to crime. This was proDaniy ms first offense. He was stunned by the deed he had done, and lost that quick ness of action that later characterized him. Then we see his father approach ing the fatal spot. George, no doubt, felt a quaking in his boots, but realized that his father had seen him there, and that he could not dodge the grandfather of our country forever. Even in these youthful days be exhibited the strategical skill that -lie fully revealed in later years. Mr. Washington showed that he had great observation by noticing the tree and inquiring about it at once. He also paid tribute, unconsciously, to George's early wisdom by asking him for Infor mation a Bout the Incident. George evl- dently had as much of a reputation for knowing ail about wnat was going on an as boy now-a-days does. The small boy then, as now. rushed to the spot of great est excitement. So Mr. Washington asked his son who did the deed. Eaihcr, I cannot tell a lies- I Id It with my little ' hatchet," was the oft quoted reply. This Is well worth quoting, as we shall see when we consider it closely. First let us notice the dignity of the lad. "Father," he said. Not "pa," nor "papa," nor 'pop," nor "dad," but "father." This shows, also, that he had a keen Idea of the fitness of "things. Pos siblyor. rather, probably at other times he descended to some of the less dignified epithets before mentioned. But never at a time like this would any other word have done. He seems to have bad a true feeling for effects. George's regard for his reputation for veracity was truly noble. Knowing that no one would have believed that a tree could be cut down with the Inslghtficant looklng little toy hatchet he even then was holding In hl3 hand, he took special .pains to mention the weapon. In this same phase we see his boyish pride In muscular accomplishments. Emphasiz ing the size of his weap'on, as he does, seems to bring into notice the greatness of his achievement in cutting anything with It. "I did it." What simplicity and truth is expressed In these three word3! How much more effective than a halting, stammering excuse! There was much of. the artist in little George. He must have had some inkling of how this confession would surprise and please his father. -This leads us to believe that Georgewas not always so candid as this. But that ho was even then a good Judge of human nature is evident. ' We can almost see the proud face of the father, and the noble, self-sacrificing expression of the son as the admission. "I cannot tell a lie," fell from George's lips. Here we see George's liking . for plain, straight-forward words. He might have said.. "My conscience will not per mit me to prevaricate." But he didn't. It has always seemed to me ' that George did not deserve all the praise that he got for his action. There is noth ing especially praiseworthy in merely telling the truth. Both before and after George's time, many people have told the truth about doing worse things than this, and have not become renowned for it. It is when a person does not tell the truth that it becomes noticeable. Bnt Mr. Washington evidently did not hold this opinion, . as his praises of his son show us. Can yon not Imagine George In his father's arms, mda&estly receiv ing forgiveness and approval, while rain ing tears of Joy on Mr. Washington's clean collar? With this touching scene the Incident Is closed. George did many other things . when he grew up. They are sometimes heard of, but this Is the most important .of his deeds, and much of his fame rests upon this charming little story. Is There Gold on the, Seashore The R&ad 3f Inea la South. Africa an. Object LeMon for the Pacific Coast. are the most extensive gold mines opened up in modern times'. The ore bodies were condemned during the first workings by many old California miners, because the formation was new to them and not well understood. However, -the yield of gold steadily increased, And some of the best mining engineers of the world made exhaustive studies of the formations. In the end the theory was generally ac cepted that these vast gold deposits were formed -on the seashore, from the eroded washings of mountains, rich in auriferous quartz lodes. Subsequent vo.lcanlc forces, it Is presumed, elevated this ancient sea beach several thousand' feet above the present sea level. The gravel beds and beach shingle ore found undisturbed, much the same as originally deposited, but are now hard conglomerate, requiring dyna mite to break up the gravel beds and crushing In stamp mills to obtain, the gold, which is as fine as flour, and the yield 13 rro.000,000 to mooo.x yearly. No very extensive marine gold deposits have yet been found on this continent. Gold Bluff and Port Orford attracted some attention many years ago. hut no volcanic action had elevated the beach, and miners could not follow the paying sands Into the sea. Cape Nome is the most extensive seashore deposit yet mined for gold on the Pacific Coast. Some attention is now being given to the Valley of- the Sacramento, which, most of the geological works published . in lata years describe as once having been the bed of a great interior sea. That sea washed the foot of the Sierra. Nevada Mountains, and Its bed Is composed of the washings therein of the debris of the eroded mountains. Several hundredsVof millions of gold that did not reach this Interior sea has been recovered by miners on the slope and deep-worn water courses of the Sierras. That would seem to be an extensive unprospected field, favora bly situated for seashore deposits of gold being found -In paying bodies. If development work should be started on that line the results will be watched by many old California miners with deep interest. These now grizzled relicts of '4i and 'SO had no means then of reaching below these water levels, and' wth them, died out much of that indomitable spirit of doing all that man may tore in devel oping the unknown, when gold .was the prize aimed at.. Sensible Woman. - ' . Atchison Globe. ' . An Atchison woman once broke oft an engagement with a young man because, he wrote her such long letters' she"- had' to pay 2 cents extra postage on every one. The Common Lot. Atchi3on Globel , . An Atchison man got it goingand-. corn ing: When he was.married he bbughttiis wife's trousseau, and how his daughters are marrying;. and'he is buying- theirs. . ,r. t