- 0 ' PART POUR PAGES 37 TO 48 VOL. XXIV. PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 1005. NO. 21. THE VAST WORK OF PUTTING AN OCEAN LINER IN ORDER AFTER A LONG VOYAGE 21, h 1 1 : When Mere Man Cleans House EVERYTHING TO MAKE HOME BEAUTIFUL and COMFORTABLE Furnishing- homes complete is a specialty of ours. We have studied the requirements for years and are able to suggest to every housekeeper a very easy manner of saving- considerable money. Our store has furnished in the past few years many thousands of happy homes. We have built the merit of this store on the refined character of our design and the extreme low prices. Every article is of the comfortable, serviceable and substantial kind. Despite high quality and correct styles, pur prices are always low. Let your good judgment always direct you to THE STORE THAT DOES THE BUSINESS. Our Furniture Is Reliable, No Matter How Cheap. - Estimates -Furnished on Application. Massive Iron Beds in Roman gold finish, $13.50; sale price $11.25 Reduced prices on all Iron Beds. $7.00 Beds now $5.00 $5.00 Beds now $3.50 Good, substantial Chamber Suits, for everyday use, durable and well finished: bevel-plate glass $17.50 Chiffonier in white maple or mahc&auy -fnnshffrega- " lar price $20; special this sale at $15 OF COURSE WE'LL TRUST YOU Trust you for whatever you want 5u our store. Trust you for any amount, and give you any amount of time. If you haven't tried our "Easy Pay ment" plan, you can never appre ciate the real conveniences of a credit plan. Ours is the system you have been wanting tho standard of easy payments, by which all other systems are guided. No. 3-GO-OAETS. Here's a beauty adjustable, ve lour upholstery, $13.50; now $9.50 Dining Tables, solid oak, qusx ter-sawed, finished tops, ped estal bases, extend 0 feet; regular price , WM. OADSBY & Carpets BIG BARGAINS IN OUR CAR PET DEPARTMENT AMBER VELVETS; REGULAR $1.35, THIS-VvEElC $1.15 FIRTH TAPESTRY BRUSSELS, $1.10; THIS "WEEK 95 BRUSSELS RUGS, S-3xl0-6: REGULAR $20.00; CLOSE OUT AT ... $16.50 SAMPLE RUGS, 36 INCHES, "WORTH 75c; NOW- 35 MISSION DINING-ROOM "Weathered Oak is the "wood Used. And Gadsby 's have complete jj ?ls, consisting of Extension Tables, o ro.UR'r scsvs, 'fjidebo&fus, China Cabinets Ejrtong TablcT, Motes Chairs, Library Tables and Bookcases. vYbu -will find Gadsby 's entire exhibit a most interesting one, and Gadsby's price on Mission Furni ture is extremely low, and therefore "within the reach of everyone. Three-piece Parlor Suit, consisting of sofa, arm and side chair, mahog anized frames, richly finished and covered in satin damask, choice of very pretty combination colors will be sold during this week for $17.50 Davenport Sofa Bed, exactly as shown in illustration, upholstered in A-l velours with. best quality of springs and guaranteed to keep its shape; back is adjustable, making a perfect full-sized bed. Gadsby's price this Trcek " 22.00 $30; Gadsby's 922.50 CORNER WASHINGTON Chairs -with rush tt Spanish No. 2 Buffet, -weathered oak or golden quarter-sawed, polished; size of top 44x22, sale price - $25 AND FIRST STREETS Home Queen Steel Range, guaran teed for 10 years; with reservoir as shown $32.50 "Without reservoir 927.50 Terms, $o.00 per month. We have Cook Stoves, No. S 910 Cook Stoves, No. 7, at 97.50 Folding Bed. royil oak or mahog any finished, fvitk handsome bric- . a-brac fclvejtf and Fnnch mir ror oivtop, haVecble supported springs; price . ... U.. 923.50 YOU CAN ALWAYS FIND A BARGAIN AT GADSBY'S The handsome Morris Chair illus trated above is of solid oak, or in birch, mahoganfzed, with choice - vclour cushions; special one week, at $9.50 The Ice King Refrigerators are the greatest ice savers; cleanablo and odorless, lined with charcoal, constructed in seasoned ash and oak; the shelves are adjustable and made of heavy galvanized iron, and will not mold or decay. The door is "absolutely air -tight when closed, and trimmed wtb, solid brass hardware; woodwork finished a rich and attractive golden oak. Prices range up from 99.0O lisiiil SONS Iffi WITH mingled feeling's ot dlsma7 and rlcasureablc domestic antici pation, a million American women are today face to face with the semi-annual problem of cleaning house. And as many more men, with feelings of dismay, pure and unadulterated, unsoftened by any prospect ot pleasure whatever, arc casting about foe some valid excuse to leave home until the ordeal Is over. Yet, oddly enough, the most tremendous house, cleanings in the world are done by men without the aid or consent of a single woman. And this is on board the great ocean liners. Superintendents of large institutions, such as hospitals, asylums, or hotels, turn 'helplessly to their matrons or housekeep ers when the semi-annual cleaning days roll round; but on board an ocean gray hound, which sheltera 1600 souls, the cap tain faces housecleanlng twice a month as calmly as his boat faces the mighty roller In mid-ocean. Listen, oh, ye housewives, threatened with nervous prostration at thought of cleaning your six-room flat, or your ten room suburban cottage. Head, oh, ye hus bands, cowering at the approach of paint er, paperhanger and general cleaner. This is how a man conducts his housecleanlng campaign: At 11 o'clock "Wednesday morning, Feb ruary 1. the Steamship Deutschland ran her icicle-hung bow Into the Hamburg American docks of New York harbor. At 12:3) o'clock the last of her steerage pas sengers had been discharged. At 1 o'clock a small boy, with a very large gong, tum tummlng madly, raced from end to end of the ship. From cabin and hold, from' stok ers room to hurricane deck, men heard the sound and flung down whatever they w'ere doing. In less than ten minutes the great lifeboats had been swung out over the water and back again. The first step In the housecleanlng had been taken. Two minutes later, the first officer stepped tq the captain on the bridge, saluted and reported that the boats were in good con dition, and each man had responded promptly to the signals. The captain nodded his head, the first officer shouted an Indistinguishable order through a meg aphone, and the men sped down compan ion ways. Housecleanlng had 'begun in earnest. Details of the Wort. And here are a few of the figures which this tremendous undertaking Involved: Twenty-five thousand pieces of linen to be sorted, counted, sacked, shipped to the laundry, returned, recounted and stored. Fifteen thousand pieces of silverware' to be counted, sorted and polished.- Twenty-five thousand pieces of glass- trare.-antS double that nimbsr of .dishes and cooking utensils, to pass through the liands of washers and polishers. Three hundred and ninety staterooms to be cleaned In every nook and cranny. Thirty-two bathrooms, ditto. A dining-room with a capacity of 467 persons, and another accommodating 300, to be cleaned und polished, from mahogany tables to bulging- portholes. A laJies parlor as large as four or dinary drawing-rooms, all in white and gold, to be polished to dazzling bril liancy. A solid mile of decks to be stoned to sparkling wnltcness. Another mile of rugs and carpets to be beaten. Hundred? upon hundreds of mat tresses to be aired, beaten and recov ered. Details too numerous for capitulation to be watched with jealous care. Organization the Secret. It would take a week, a month, ex claims the distracted housewife who has just heard that the paperhangers cannot come for another week. But that 13 on land. Your seagoing man brooks no delay. So it happened that at noon on Saturday, February 4, the S. S. Deutschland was pronounced fit, and was thrown open for inspection. Quarters for 1600 had been house cleaned in exactly 33 hours, or three working days. "Organization that's the secret," re marked Captain Kaempff, the man held directly responsible by the , company for every detail ot his ship. "A place for each of our 500 workers, and each worker in his place. Very simple, you see. The man who cleans brass 'does not Interfere with the man who beats rugs. One polishes brass for 33 "hours and the other btats rugs and mattresses for the same length of time. Each is a single cog- in a well-oiled machine." Organization! Splendid idea, but how can a woman organize with only a faithful "Mary," who insists upon rent ing between rug or curtain shakings to chat with "Maggie," over the fence? Or. how accomplish miracles with a handy man who tries to beat carpets and mend furniture for three distract ed housewives at once? Still, these, tips from the house-cleaning process aboard ship may help the humblest flat-dweller or the most patient or sub urbanites. Every 3Ian Knows His Duty. It is generally supposed that directly a big steamer discharges Tipr passen gers, her. force also makes a run for etinm TVl fz an prrnr. for the officers and crew have more important things' on hand. It tne boat maxes tasc 10 the pier at any time during the' morn ing, so that her passengers can be dis charged by noon, her house-cleaning starts promptly at 1 o'clock the same afternoon. It she docks late In the af ternoon or at night, the cleaning be gins at 6 o'clock the next morning. And once more, listen, oh. ye distracted housewives, leaning on such slender reeds as day-workers; and barken, oh. ye- patient husbands who came home last- nic-ht tr find that John. Henry, col ored, had 'departed without putting up. the stovepipe. House-cleaning nuurs on board, a liner run from 6 A. M. to 6 P. M., with three meals aboard the boat. Neither is there any 'discussion as to who shall clean the companlonway and who the dining saloon, who Is to palish the silverware and who to beat the rugs. The mighty ship is divided Into 'departments, and every depart ment has its head and its force of workers. The officers and sailors are responsible for the outside of the ship and the chief steward is responsible for all the cleaning of the first and second cabins, the engineer for his- de partaeat, the steerage -steward for -the receatlv eccHDied by the Lthird-claa passengers a4' the chef, for all at the culinary aestaia. Ana ivbss four bells are struck (which being In terpreted is C o'clock), every man knows where his duty lies and goes at it. High in the air, on scaffoldings built around the mighty smokestacks, paint ers are scraping off the old paint and preparing the funnels for their fresh coat. Tomorrow .they will be pointing- the hull. On the upper dcck,v and nnder the watchful eye of an officer, a'squad of brawny sailors is washing down the walls ot the deckhouses with odd-shaped brushes dripping a foamy lather. In the staterooms, the room stewards ave stripping the berths, and drawing all the water from the fauc ets. At the foot pf the companlonway of the main deck the linen steward is counting over the .soiled linen; in the dining-room the table stewards are counting the silverware; in the pantry the bellboys, stripped of their trim uniforms, are up to their elbows in dish-washing. In a fairly large com partment, overlooking the first-class dining-room, sits the head steward, a telephone at his elbow, his account books spread on his desk before him, and a line of men, with reports, filing past him. In an hour or so he will report to the captain on the exact condition of all the furnishings, the number of pieces of linen to go to the laundry, the loss through breakage to be charged up to the trip, and the thousand and one details which make the house-cleaning organization of an ocean liner a marvel to the unititiated. The man who is painting the smoke, stack docs not care what the man in the grillroom is doing. Perhaps at dinner or supper the two may meet. At present each is doing- just what he is paid to do, just what his chief officer or steward expects him to do. The officers and heads ot depart ments are by no means exempt from duty at this time. A certain number of officers patrol tne decks, in pore as well as when under way, and under them the crews work. The head stew ard and his three assistants patrol the interior of the great ship in similar fashion. Stolid-faced they may seem to keen, nervous Americans, but their capacity for "spotting" neglected or slip-shod work is marvelous. The laundry bill and the cost ot paints and supplies, such as soaps, polishes, scouring materials, etc, amounts to $1000 for each of these house-cleanings. To this must be added the wages of over 500 men, and their board and lodging. No Old Rugs. The home-maker rather prides herself, on the collection of soft old rags which she accumulates against house-cleaning days. The ship steward would regard them with scorn. Tho cleaning cloths which come from the linen-room In not less than 12 varieties are all hemmed and marked as' clearly as the table and bed linen, and like them are sent regularly to the lauijiry. Further, :for each sort of cleaning there i3 a proper towel, apd woe be unto that steward who is caught Inter changing these cloths. Elbow grease discounts strong soap pow ders in every department of the cleaning. The fundamental cleansing material is a soft green soap which is ordered by the ton about 3Q0O pounds to each cleaning. It makes a splendid lather, but does not eat the polish oft the exquisitely finished woods nor hurt the hands, while It also possesses disinfectant properties. It will dissolve equally well In hot or cold water. Scouring soaps may be used upon wood work only when absolutely necessary, notably when a, stubborn stain is found. Finger-marks must be removed with tho soft soap and rubbing alone. This, to preserve the life ot the highly polished finish. "Various patent polishes are requisitioned for the various sorts of metal. For in stance, in the grill-room alone four pol ishes are required for silver, nickel, brass and copper respectively, while a scouring powder is used on the broiler. For each of these polishes a separate and distinct sort ot cloth or waste is employed. Even a well-drilled land servant would open her eyes at the condition In which these cloths and towels are kept. The writer saw a young steward, immaculate in white linen jacket, polishing the bull's eye or glass in a port-hole with what looked like a glass towel, such as is usedVln a well organized pantry. In. her Ignorance she Inquired whether It was not a waste ot good toweling. The head steward stepped to the lad's side and came back with the square of linen. It would put .many a housewife's glass towel to shame, yet he had been polishing port-holes with this one towel for 15 minutes. A special permit is- reauired to gainj.ac cess 'to a liner while the house-cleaning processes are in progress, but tho home maker who Is fortunate enough to witness the work will carry away one very strong impression, and that is the absence of dust. Tills Is largely due to the fact that little or no dust Is afloat while at sea, but naturally with EOjne 1600 souls aboard, some dust must be. raised in cabins and staterooms. This is minimized by the careful cleaning which the boat receives each day before passengers are up and about. An- idle or dilatory man should never seek a position as steward, for, lit erally, there is no rest for the steward at sea or in port, and the' broom and the dust cloth are on his coat-of-arms. Cleaning the Staterooms. "When the boat Is eleared of passengers and the hour for house-cleaning has ar rived, the work starts at A and goes along systematically until Z is Teached, the different crews ot stewards and sailors work independently, yet simultaneously. For Instance, the staterooms are divided into groups of ten, each group being given over to the care of one steward and a helper. The first thing done Is to draw off every drop of water which may have remained in the tanks or reservoirs above the washstand, and to make the entire washing apparatus sanitarily clean and dry. Then the berths are stripped of linen and bedding, and the mattress slips or covers are all taken off and sent down to the foot of the companlonway on the main deck, where they are received by the linen steward and his five assistants. Their duty is to sort and count the linen and pack it Into two hnndred or more bags, ready tor the laundry. From amidships comes another lot ot linen the bath tow els. From day to day these have been gathered up In the bathrooms and carried to a compact drying-room, where they have been hung -upon racks or arms to dry, thus preventing mold or rust. For an ordinary voyage, in the first cabin a!oner 270 Turkish towels, as large as single sheets, are required, and TOO smaller ones. In the meantime, the room steward has gone back to the rooms under his care, and is stripping them of all hangings, rugs, mattresses, etc., which furnjirfilngs are' taken en "the upper deck to he-beaten. air4 aad cteaaed. .While than, ara the woodwork i'rom floor to ceilings la washed down and polished, and every bit of nickel, marble ors brass is gone over thoroughly. By the time the boat is thrown open to visitors, every stateroom Is In perfect order. As soon as the staterooms are finished, the various passageways connecting them are cleaned by tho same stewards, while still another set of stewards takes charge of the bathrooms. From the latter, all tho wooden gratings are removed to the deck and 'thero scrubbed to snowy white- ncss with sand, suds and brick. In the great dining saloon, the 72 stew ards assigned to the dining-room are working like proverbial beavers. First, the dark green felt table covers are rolled like carpets to the center of the long nar row tables, and great wicker baskets, lined with heavy cotton flannel or felt, are brought in from the pantry. Into these is dumped the flat silverware which has been kept in drawers, two to each table "When" the silver has been carried away, the hangings come down to fee beaten and laid away with the table covers until the boat turns its nose ones more toward the sea, for, be it -known, that a large liner has its shore furnish ings as well as Its sea toggery. ."When every inch ot the woodwork has been polished to the highest point of brilliancy, when portholes gleam and tables yield up a reflection, forth from the lockers come finer hangings for the windows, and table covers of similar fabric and color, trimmed with rich bands of embroidery and fringe. All this Is done- because a ship In port, after the house-cleaning, is on dress parade. Tourists from all over the country make the rounds of the docka visiting the mighty grayhounds of the sea. It is one of the finest advertise ments a rfilp can secure, for no one can go aboard without registering a vow to save up dollars or pennies,, according to his station in life, for an ocean voyage. "While part of the saloon stewards have been polishing woodwork and brass in the dining-room, another shift has been en gaged in the pantry polishing silver. Un der the direction of the pantry steward, the helpers, Including the bell-boys, have been washing and polishing glassware and dishes, and storing them away In great racks, there to remain until the first meal of the voyage is served. No meals are served in the first cabin saloon while the ship is in port, except to the captain and his official staff. Down In the Steerage.- The cleaning of the steerage is a much simpler process but none the less thor ough. The furnishings are primitive in their simplicity. During the voyage each steerage passenger has Hseen provided with a mattress, of course, but stout bur lap, stuffed with a peculiar variety ot dried sea-grass, a pair of blankets - and a pillow with a coveror slip ot blue and white checked linen. He provides his own dishes, knives and forks. The steerage stewad has only six help-, ers, but as no carpets are tiTbe cleaned, and tho finish the steerage aver, 17i.: painted iron tr wood, the amewtaC- fin ishing rfynnrsd is. IrinnlteryKg-: t I3 required In cither Atne'. ifcrscrorAeed: cabin. The first thing doae iia.Md blanket away to be cleaned- and fihip ha pillow cas2s- to the laundry. Kew mat tresses are provided tor each trip. - "When everything that could be Injured by water has been removed, the. hose, throwing a mighty stream of water, . is brought into play. It is a sight worth watching; those six brawny men, bare legged, strong-armed, flashing the water in and out, from crevice to cranny, until tho paint gleams and glistens even on a dull day. .Later the walls and ironwork are gone over by hand, but that first sluicing is by all odcLi the most pictur esque feature ot the great housecleanlng. With the Scrub Brush. To give an idea of the strict -discipline which reigns on board ship during the housecleanlng period, the same force of. men scrub both the passageway between the galley and the pantry, and the galley and the pantry themselves. "When- they, are cleaning the passageway, they may, and do, remove their shoes and stockings, swing their great brooms in perfect rhythm and singing in time to the move ment. But when they enter either the pantry or the kitchen, they must put on their shoes before they scour the floor. Tho seamen and deck crewy scrub not only the decks, but the outer walls of the cabins. The brushes used for this, pur pose have long handles with soft, hairy bristles crowded injo a back not more than four inches square. Strong soap suds are used for washing down tho white, paint, and the men work in gangs of six or ten, swinging- their brushes with a regular, not ungraceful movement and covering the great stretches of woodwork in remarkably quick time. This much of the housecleanlng the privileged guest may see provided, of course, that he dons a rainproof coat and an old hat, for the hard-pressed force proves no respecter of persons. Great floods of water are directed In the most unexpected fashion down companionways and through the steerage. Towels are brandished in every direction. Brooms, long-handled brushes and dustpans inter cept footsteps, go where you will. And on every side Is that concentrated energy which bespeaks the fact that the great boat must be ready on time for inspeq tlon. In the Hold. Other parts pf the ship, unseen but not unheard, are undergoing a terrific-cleaning. Burly men are working in the hold, clearing it out for fresh consignments of baggage and freight. And In the depth3 of the ship, a trifle below the level of the water-line, the mighty engines, now silent and pulseless, are being overhauled, polished, oiled and coaxed into good hs mor for another record-breaking trip across the Atlantic. Here the chief- engi neer presides over his large staff of assis tants, including 2S0 stokers and coalpass ers. "While they are In port their duties are comparatively light, but not one f these men Idles, for the engine and boiler rooms, on which the boat's fame rests, are cleaned as carefully, nay, as delicate ly as Mlladl Dainty's boudoir. Yet, with all this routine of labor, it must not be thought that the stewards and seamen are dissatisfied with their loil The larger proportion of employe.3 aboard the boat who were interviewed on tbfa occasion seemed rather bawildered by the question. "Would you not like to spend your time ashore?" The invariable reply was, "Tonight after 61 go and see some friends. Their boat is their home. Land repre sents ll(tle to them, and their sentiment seems to crystallize on their floating home. Many of them have held the sazae position ever since the ocean grayhound has been in commission. A-'word- of ,ad miratioH.for their work, o'r for the con dition in "which their department is oub. inspires their confidence and. Interest, whereas the slightest .exj-rosekm of com hi tee rat Ion arouses their. suspicion. (Copy right, IMG.). , ANNA S. RICHARDSON.