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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 2, 1908)
DRAMATIC and SPORTING SECTION FOUR Pages 1 to lO v VOL. XXV J I. I PORTLAND,'' .OREGON, .' SUNDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY' 2, 1908. NO. 3. T fit F IT IFlUfTIIIRl Combination Bookcases ij " R "' " 123.0.1 Bookcase reduced to.. ..K16.50 $30.00 Bookcase reduced to...S21.00 135.00 Bookcase reduced to...J)25.00 40.00 Kookoase reduced to. . ..'10.00 $15.00 Bookcase reduced to. . .$38.50 How's This Buffet for $15.00? '. ;,lrffi'i,li,'r.iniiilli 1 This beautiful Buffet, worth; $31, half price. , $ 15.00 Sideboards, Reduced if 1- "1 " ? " -ill' T I J'JS.OO' Sideboard. $25. 0 Sideboard i.iii sidl)OHi-d S:-:r,.O0 Sideboard $4 J. Oo Sideboard f. li.OO Sideboard $30.00 Sideboard $60.00 Sideboard reduced to. reduced to. reduced to. reduced to. reduced to. reduced to. reduced to. rudoced to. . .SK15.00 . S17.50 . 20.00 . -S23.00 . .S30.00 . K35.00 ...40.00 8SO.OO $35 Steel Range, $29.00 LEADER RANGE All guaranteed' for.l'i years. Leader Ranac, with high closet and duplex trrate, spring.-balanced oven doors. Tills Is ;i lieavy. substantial and dur able val)Kv. maile uf the best quality c' ld-rolicd steel, adapted for coal or wood: oo-n thoroughly braced and boUr.l: asbestos line il throughout; elaborately nickel trimmed: seetiou plate top; Gadsbys- sp'l price 29.00 Wm. Gadsby 3 Sons CORNER 1st, AND WASHINGTON In order to curtail expense we have decided to unload our warehouse at Front and Ankeny Sts. This stock we cannotitake care of, so we offer it all at greatly reduced price si We have over 150 complete Dining room Suits in solid mahogany, early English oak, weathered oak and golden oak. We have , more than all the other retail stores combined, AND MUST UNLOAD. To the-party who may want really classic styles in high-grade goods, we can of fer inducements unattainable 'elsewhere. Some period suits of Bedroom furniture are to be closed out at 33 discount. The reductions we are making are intended to move the goods; we cannot sell them to you and hold them till you are ready. Some ains for Rooming Houses 300 Hotel Bureaus, -with mirror, two QC QC drawers and cabinet ; rcg. $9; now. . . UJi JU 590 Combination Wasbstands, in ash, QO QC 2 draAvers and cabinet; .$6.50; now.. &ZiuJ " , 150 White Granite - Toilet Sets eonsistiiisc of r Bowl,- Pitcher, covered Chamber, Soap Dish .and -Mug; regular price $2.50 . set; Q1 QC reduced now to. . & I iZu 200 White Granite Combinet covered Slop Jars, with bale; .regular, price. $1.50; 7Cn now . .... j 160 high-top Bedsteads in white or QQ flfj golden maple; regular $6; now.". . . . UJiUU 50 high-top Bedsteads in birdseye inaple; regu-' lar $15.00; reduced to make space to" 331-3 per cent below factory cost; now on OP CO sale at uOiuU 500 Dressers" in solid oak; regulai"1 0 flft $18.00; sale price....... U IZiUU 15 Dressers in Oregon fir, with full bevel mir ror, 20x24 inches; regular $12.50; QQ flfl sale price UuiUU The above are for immediate delivery; no goods held, we need the space. Morris Chairs Reduced $13 Morris Ctiair $12 Morris. Chair $13 Morris Chair $18 Morris Chair $20 Morris 'Chair $25 Morris Chair ?30. Morris Chair' reduced to. reduced to.' reduced to. reduced to. reduced to. reduced- to:" redue'ed'to. .8 7.50 .810.00 -SIS.OO -S14.50 -S16.00 -820.00 JS34.00 Ask to See Our China Closets I 1 I- Pi! f f Im ff $90.00 China Closet now. . $86.r.) China Closet .new. isi'.iw China. Closet nuw.. $00.00 China i'loset now.. $45.00 China Closet now,,, $:)7.00 ("'liina' cToset- now. . ,S.00 "'hina Closet now.. $2i.oo ('hina Closet" now. . $-'0 03 China'Closet now... . . . .S6S.OO . ...SBO.OO . . .. 850.00 -v,."40.00 ?."1 36.00 . .-. .SUS.50 SK25.04I .'...20.00 :;-15.00 $30.00 Princess- Dresser Reduced to $19.50 1 Princess Dresser Jn gbiden oak. birds eye maple or mahogany. Frencli jnir ror !Sx3S, regular $30, p'i . . . S19.50 $50.00 PARLOR SUIT $27.00 m . I " fimtinmrSi f, jf?. . - ""11 : J' 4 Parlor Suit, five pieces, beautifully finished in rich, dark mahogany, upholstered in veronaiflSOT OA regular price $50; sale price ' mJJ Mall Order for the Above Moat Include 92.00 PuckinK Charges. . " ' - E OF: VV A F! GRAZING Human Beings Driven to Star vation to Make Room for Cattle. CATTLE INDUSTRY FAILS Two-Thirds of Farmers Occupy Only ' Hall Land, White the Kcst Is Given .to '. Small Number of Caitle-C.rpwers. DUBLIN, Feb. 1. (Special.) The war against tlje grazing system the ranch ing system, as it is called is not an agitation against a system that is merely continuing, but against one that Is on the increase. The latest publi cation of the Agricultural Department shows that 45 new holdings of over 200 acres had been created in 1806, the area of land used, for this purpose being 19,000 acres. This means that a number of small holdings, as a result of . eviction, had been consolidated within the year.-and 50,000 acres of land previously devoted to mixed farm ing turned into grass.' ' - The effect of this year's change in tie agricultural conditions will be bet ter appreciated by considering the question of "uneconomic holdings." for the necessary enlargement of which it is sought to acquire and divide so much of the grass lands as would be required to' make them economic. Mr. Bailey, the Chief States , Commissioner, lias defined an ' uneconomic holding as a farm of land so small in extent and so poor in quality as to be , unable to sup port the tenant without other aids to subsistence. The Agricultural Depart ment experts estimate the minimum area of an. economic holding at "about 50 statute acres of average quality, exclusive of bog and land that cannot be cultivated or reclaimed. If two farms combine in the Joint use of ma chinery and labor in working adjoin ing farms, this might reduce the eco nomic area to 3"0 acres, or even if the land be of exceptional fertility and markets good,' to 25 acres. Cattle Supplanting Men. The number o& holdings over one acre in the country was, in 1906, 515,651, and the number of these under 30 acres in extent was 351.61 5. The - Agricul tural Department - calculates that the combined area of these holdings is only 3.000,000 acres, or less than one-fourth of the total area of Ireland. Thus two thirds of the farmers occupy less than one-fourth . of the land. On the other hand, farms, of over 200 acres, which may be assumed to be grazing farms, are In" the hands of 9600 occupiers and cover an area of 4.500,000 acres. Thus there are' two great divisions of the land of Ireland, nearly equal in extent one occupied by two-thirds of the farmers whose holdings average 11 acres each and do not in any case ex tend to. 30 acres, and the other occu pied by only one-hftU of the hold ers of land, the holdings averaging 500 acres each and the minimum hold ing exceeding 200 acres. George Wyndham. M. P.. Chief Sec retary for Ireland under the last gov ernment, stated that "untenanted land of the best, or even of good, quality for grazing cajmot be brought into the market except at a price which is almost prohibitive, if it is to be used for agricultural purposes." It is well known, of course, that-the ' best land of tile country is the grazing land, and that tho land in tho occupation of the 330,000 farmers . whoso holdings aver age only 14 acres in the worst. Mr. Wyndham's evidence i quoted as of ficial testimony to what is common knowledge in Ireland. This is briefly the state of affairs as between the grazing system, with huge farms 6f the primest land, and the claims of the bulk of the farmers for holdings of moderate size with mixed farming, which will afford the means of sub sistence to the tenants. Increase of Grazing Farms. The increase, year after year, of the large or grazing farms adds to the dif ficulty and renders the situation more acute. The 50.000 acres added in 1906 to tho large grazing farms represents at least 1000 economic holdings. This newly created grass area would suf fice to enlarge 2500 uneconomic hold ings to economic holdings. The statement is sffmeiimes made that the division of the grass lands would injure the Irish cattle trade. There is no foundation whatever for such state, ments. Mixed farming produces more cattle than a purely grazing system, and" fattens the, cattle to the finish, which, except in a few " places, the grazing does not and cannot do. The grazing system is, except in a few places, unsuitcd to Irish conditions. It is now admitted by all sides .that The conversion of Irish tillage land into grass. land was a mistake, and the cf forts of statesmen profess to Be. direct ed to restore such lands to tl plough. In Ireland the cropped area ia only one-sixth of the grass land.' The small farming .of Belgium raises more, cattle to the acre than tn grazing lands of Ireland, and tho cattle yield more meat per head, and of better quality. That this Is not due to the difficulties of cli mole or soil Is proved In tho case of France. . Grazing Not a Success. Ireland is the only country iu Kuropa in which the number of milch cows do not exceed the number of other cattle. In Denmark and Austria the number of cows is one-fourth more than that of the other cattle, in Holland and Bel gium and France it is one-third more. In Ireland the number of cows Is less than half that of the other cattle. This shows the prevalence of mixed farming in other countries and the use of most of their grass for dairying. Official statistics show that the cat tle trade can he carried on successfully with small holdings and mixed farming. Ireland, as compared with the rest of Europe, Is a land apart The percen. tage of its area devoted to pasture is twice that of Great Britain, three times that of any other European country and ten times that of Denmark. Yet the stock t the acre is less than that' of other European countries. The'propor tion of cattle to the population, when compared., with , other countries is alarming. There is nothing like it in Europe. "To find a parallel the inquirer would have1 to visit the undeveloped1 countries of the New World or Australasia.- Even Canada and the United States do not exhibit such an excess of cattle "over population as Ireland does. It is estimated that less than a quar ter of a million Irish cattle are slaugh tered in Ireland every year. About three-quarters of a million are export, ed to Great Britain. The cattle ex ported are not. as might be thought, mainly fat cattle, but stores. Ireland parts with half Its store cattle every year to the enrh hment of the British farmer and the impoverishing of Ire land. . Between these lines may be read some of the causes of the great ranch ing war in Ireland. Make Ixjot of ttiflcs;. ' BOMBAY, Feb. 1. (Special.) For a Pathan, there is' no more inspiring object- of robbery than a government rifle. The boldness and skill they cs crcise In the pursuit of the fascinating Weapon are well illustrated- in an ex ploit at Karachi, where a sentry of the One Hundred and Fifth Mahratta Light Infantry, who "was on duty over the regimental magazine, ras attacked by three Pathans. He was knocked down with a blow from a stick, and before he could recover himself his rifle and bayonet were stolen. By the time an alarm had been given the thieves had got well away with the weapons. GIVE PLAYS ON TRAINS Theater Xext Luxury on Long-Distance Journeys. PARIS, Fob. 1. (Special.) An enter prising group of bankers, at the head of whom is a great theatrical amateur,: has met to discuss a new plan to provldo amusement for travelers in trains on long-distance journeys. . Their idea is to add a theater car to every fast express, so that travelers going at night from Paris to the Riviera, for instance, In stead of sleeping in their berths," could book a stall in the theater car and at tend a performance. The ear would be so arranged as to resemble a small thea ter, with stalls to accommodate 50 or 60 passengers, and a stage would be erect ed at one end. The orchestra, it is proposed; shall be limited to a piano, a cornet, a piston apd a flute. - The performance is to be a continuous one, or broken up into sev eral scries, for which stalls could also be booked in advance. The railway com panies may object that the scheme does not look practical, .but neither did res taurant or sleeping cars when they were first suggested. As the bankers in question have un limited funds to draw upon, they might make a trial,, and it is quite within tho possibilities of the near future to hear Riviera travelers tell of the enjoyment they derived from the performance iu the "rapide" by M. Coquelln or Madame Sarah Bernhardt. RENT PROBLEM IN BOMBAY Charges Threaten to Kxcccd Those 'in Sew York. BOMBAY, Feb. 1. (Special.) For some weeks back the housing'qucstion in Bom bay has been becoming more and more acute, and the government lias at last taken an important step towards Its solu tion. 'Sir George Clark, tho -governor, has invited the principal public oodles of the 'city to confer1 on a scheme for rem edying the existing difficulties, and in do ing so has laid down .a few leading-principles for their tuidance. ? It is pointed -out that "adequate pro vision, for the accommodation " of the wealthy 'classes who require Jiouses, either in the Fort or on Malabar Hill ami its vicinity, is.no longer available. Tho re sult hus -bean a rise of rents in recent years that threatens, if it continue un checked, to render Bombay as a. place of residence more expensive than New York, having regard tu the nature of the house accommodation provided in tho two ciiies. "Simultaneously; a marked increase has occurred in tire rent .paid by clerks and other members' of -tho less . wealthy class, who' are now reduced '"to- great straits In ! their endeavor to house themselves at a reasonable rate within rtacli . of their daily . objective, -it is impossible at present to admit that . the rents paid by either of these classes are such' as might reasonably be expected for a' town of less than 1.000,000 inhabitants, -occupying au island 11 muVs bv,:leneth." ' "... TRY A NEW ANESTHETIC Physician Performs- - Kcmarkablc Operation With Tropa-Cocaine. CALCUTTA. Fob. 1. (Special.) A strik ing operation has been performed in the Calcutta Medical College Hospital by Major Stevens on a patient who had been suffering from plephantiasftv The re markable feature of trm operation was that it was done without chloroform, the patient remaining. conscious all the while. This is the first time that, an operation of so serious a nature without chloroform has been performed In India. The method consists in injecting into the spine a solu tion of a derivative of cocaine, called trona-cocaine, before the operation. Within ten minutes of ' In lection the lower extremities and a-portion of the trunk become anaesthetized, the upper portion remaining perfectly normal. The patient, therefore, does not feel the pain of operation at all. In the present case, when half the operation .had been gone through, the patient asked: "When win you b'-gin. doctor?" He was smoking a cigarette all the time. This method is specially vs. I liable In operations where tho patient has a weak heart and chloroform is dangerous. JUMPS FROM GREAT ARCH French Suicide May " He a Mem ber of Nobility. PARIS. Feb. 1. (Special.) Foi some time past persons who Intended to com mit suicide by throwing themselves from a great height had avoided the Arc dc Triomphe, which was at one time their favorite resort. This apparent neglect has now been made up by a well-dressed man, who succeeded in climbing to the top and throwing himself down over one of the sides before the guard was aware of anything. He v'as, of course, instantly killed, but what excited curiosity was the fact that his underclothes contained traces of hav ing been marked with a ducal coronet. There was absolutely nothing to indi cate his identity. The police think that he may have been a person reduced to poverty who had accepted the clothes he wore as a charitable gift and that this accounts for the attempt to remove the marks. MAY ROOSEVELT GO TO ENGLAND Expected That He Will Visit . London at End of His Administration. TRIP -PURELY PRIVATE ONE American Colony Greatly Pleased AVIth Decision of King Kdward to Becoino Guest at Residence of Ambassador Kcid. LONDON, Feb. 1. (Special.) There is every probability that - President Roosevelt will pass some' weeks in England in the Spring of next year, when his term- of office will have ex-, pirod. The President of the United States has been anxious to visit this country for some years past, but, of course, this was impossible so long as the reins of office were in his hands. The last jcx-Presidcnt of tho United States to visit this country was General Grant, when a semi-official welcome was accorded him. It is understood, however, that nothing In this nature will tak-i place on this occasion, the visit being regarded as . purely a pri vate one. The American colony in ixmdon is loudly 'proclaiming Us satisfaction at the announcement that tho King is to visit their Ambassador at West'. Park, the country scat. which Mr. Whitelaw Relu rents from I.ord Lucas. ' The news was immediately communicated to President' Roosevelt, and it is under stood that hu has sinco replied In terms which leave no doubt as to his own great pleasure at learning of the signal honor conferred on the representative of the United States in England. ADMITS GUILT FOR FRIEND Confederate Confesses Murder to Save Chief Culprit. PARIS. Feb. 1. (Special.) Very sin gular is the manner In which an Indi vidual who has bctn guilty of murder has been detected. An old widow had fccen killed and her premises r-bbc..i. Suspicion haying fallen on a particula' man, he had been arrested, and, whuc is more, had actually confessed that he had done tho deed. In spite of his con fession, the judicial authorities had the' Iiouso and grounds of a friend of his searched, the idea being that he mlijiit have been an accomplice. A fowl which had belonged to the w idow was found there, and soon after ward a blood-stained garment was dis-, covered. The friend was confronted with the prisoner, and ended by admit ting that he was the chief culprit, as it was he who had murdered the widow. ? When the prisoner was asked why he had confessed to having killed the poor woman, ho explained that lie had done this to 'save 'his friend, as the latter had a family of six children. LYNCH LAW IM RUSSIA Fxaperatcd Peasantry AVreok. Ven geance for ISeign of Crime. ROSTOFF-ON-DON. Feb. 1. (Spe cial.) Russia's terrible epidemic of crime has led the exasperated peasant to take the law into his own hands, and lynching is now as common as it is in the United States. Lynching aro announced from all' quart'.-rs. In De cember at Novinomtkaytt, a village in the Kuban district. a savage mob butchered a band of thieves and then pillaged and burned their houses. At Novopokrovskayu, in the same district, a mobof 400 persons, mostly youths, captured 12 suspected thieves, whom they beat mercilessly until they had killed them all. Next day the 12 were buried in one grave, In the pres ence of all the villagers. The scene at the grave was made heart-rending by the lamentations of the dead men's relatives. ISLANDS HAVE BIG TRADE Commerce of the Bahrcins Amounts to $15,000,000 a Year. BOMBAY, Feb. 1. (.Special.) The report on the trade of the Ruhrein Islands by the political agent at Manamah shows a remarkable increase of 20 per cent in commerce. The two or three little towns on tho Bahrein Islands carry on a trade which last year reached a volume of over 1.".000,W. - Pearls represent the largest item. Lat year Bahrein exported pearis to the value of nearly $4.3"'.t" to India, as well as over JI.nOu.i" 'o the adjacent mainland of Turkish Arabia. The imports uf Bali rein reached a value, of $S.0X.X"3. of which half was obtained from India nnd nearly ail the rest from Arabia and Persia. Bah rein bought nothing from Russia, and only $.V'.0C) worth of goods from Germany, but part of tho imports from India un doubtedly -consisted of German goods transhipped at Bombay. SIX VICTIMS OF TIGER Ferocious Beast Terrifies Entire District in India. BOMBAY, feb. 1. (Special.) For some time the neighborhood of Vlckarabad his suffered terribly from a man-eattng tiger. Within the last three months he has car ried off five or six victims, one being a woman. Something akin to a panic pre vails at Pudoor, a place about five ndles from Vlckarabad. and the tipror's' lair is supposed to be in the thick jungle close by. Mr. Pendlebtiry. son of the agent and manager of the Nizam's Guaranteed State Railway, was out recently in that district, and ho shot a tiger which was said at t Ike time to bo the one required, but the re port of fresii victims dispelled that idea.