jllilJ ft SECTION FOUR Pages 1 to lO DRAMATIC and SPORTING VOL. XXVII. PORTLAND, OREGON, .SUNDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 'S3, 1908. NO. 8. ft real f iiriiiitere Me CONTINUES This Is the Greatest Furniture Sale in Portland Sale Continues . Monday Every . Article Reduced From 10 to 50 Per Cent Ndte the Following Prices We Guarantee to UNDERSELL Any House in Oregon. $25.00 Pedestal Table $12.50 Cottage Bedroom Suit $29.50 GADSBYS' EXTENSION TABLE SPECIAL Tbis handsome pedestal Extension Table is offered at this extremely low price thai, we may demonstrate to the buying public our ability to undersell any furniture institution in the eity. $12.50 Furnished complete as illustrated. Enameled iron bed. in apple green, white or' blue. 113. 00: spring mattress, $2.25; top mattress, $2.50: pair pillows, $1.50: dresser or chiffonier, finished in a rich golden oak color with Ben nine heavy French beveled mirror, oval shaped, $12.00; washstand to match, $4.25: rociUng chair or two plain nans, neasiae rug- oi Brussels, iof j toilet set, consisting- ol wasnoasin. pucner, soap aisn, . f9Q Cfl shaving- muf pi and combinet or chamber vessel, all of white granite, $1.50. Total., rintMS ss.oo dows axd i.oo per week, Early English Dining Suit $1 14.00 frf ' ' J j j; ; "l f i I - - M I'll -v This Karly English pining Suit, consisting of Sideboard. China Closet, Extension Tabic and fi Chairs, all in ' C1 -l yt rC solid ouk, special price, this week only . . P'A M.JJ Cottage Dining Suit $27.00 tpnsistin of sideboard, 44 inches wide. 72 inches hig-h. 18 inches deep; large double-do Ions II. i-n drawer, two silver drawers, and beveled mirror in back; price $15: 6 chairs $6 and extension tabic, fi feet Ions: when extended. $6.00. Total cost.......... IK when extended. $6.00. Total cost TKRMS fiS THE OUTFITi 5.0O DOWN AND Sl.OO PER WEEK. oor cabinet in base, one 00. . UOT CC CARPETS BIC BARGAINS IN OUR CARPET DEPT. Bromley's Velvets. with borders . . . : . . . ... . . ..$1.25 Burlington Brussels, with borders ......... $1.10 Dunlap's Tapestry Brus sels 90 Reversible Pro-Brussels..$1.00 Brusselette .Carpets, - yard wide 55 $ Granite Ingrain Carpets 50 RUG SPECIALS Axminster Rugs, 9xl2.$25.00 Royal Brussels Rugs, 9s12 ........$20.00 Imperial Pro-Brussels, 9x12 $12.00 Ingrain Hues, 9x12....$ 7.20 Smaller Rugs in proportion. WE GUARANTEE TO SAVE you money os all i' i ii chases by giving bet t;r values than, you get elsewhere " no rent to pay, that's why W E S K 1. I. V o"Ri7ifss?' LEADER RANGE m, Leader Range, with WAM !f'2 , ' higft closet and du- Ul lVvCyf 'fll , Tilev or:ite s n r I n tr 11 l LW III . -. balanced oven rinnr This is a heavy, sub stantial and durable range, made of thn best quality solid rolled steel, adaple. lor coat or wood: nsbestos lined throughout; elabo rately nickel t r i ni m e d sec tion plate top. Gadsbys' Price $29.50 NEW PHASES OE JEWEL SCANDAL Priceless Crown Gems Were but Poorly Guarded in Dublin Castle. SAFE NOT IN STRONG ROOM Cattle Driving Will Be Itcncwed on Larger Scaje in Ireland Unless Anti-Graziers Obtain Fa vorable Legislation. DUBLIN, Feb. 22.-1 Special.) The mys tery of the Dublin Castle jewels remains unsolved and as unpleasant as ever for all concerned. But the sidelights on Dublin Castle administration, the safe standing outside the - strongroom which had been built to receive it, because the door was not big enough to let it pass, and the strongroom itself, built by the Office of Works, and provided with du plicate keys for the convenience even of a messenger, are illuminating to a de gree. It has almost faded from the public memory that the regalia of Scotland, like the Dublin Castle crown jewels, mysteri ously disappeared and were discovered after the lapse of a century, in 1S18. by the persistent agitation of the question by Sir Walter Scott, who at last obtained a commission of search, when the Scottish crown, which it was thought unsafe to take to England after the Scotch union, was discovered in a huge chest, locked, bolted and buried in the crown room of Edinburg Castle. By some means the keys were lost anil every one forgot everything about the chest. Discovery of Scotch Jewels. It was generally assumed that the chest was empty and that the treasure had been secretly smuggled to London. When at last permission was given, through Sir Walter Scott's persistent and suc cessful importunity, for the chest to be opened, all the jewels were found, cov ered with the accumulated dust of more than three generations. Sir Walter Scott regarded this achievement as one of his greatest successes. Although cattle-driving has been prac tically stopped for the present, it Is stated that an arrangement has been reached among the anti-grazers in the west of Ireland to prosecute a vifjrous campaign on new and far more daring lines if legislation favorable to their in terests is not introduced early this ses sion. It is openly stated In certain parts of the west that not only will cattle driving be renewed on a very extensive scale, but bands of young men win be organized to plow. up the grazing lands. Jn County Longford the attitude of those who desire the distribution of the graz ing lands is more defiant than ever, and any recent lull in Illegal actions is due entirely to the hope of early legislation to mitigate their grievance. It is prob ably th lull before the storm. In other parts of the west people openly declare that If they are disappointed the caVn paign will be renewed on a scale never equaled. Drives to Be Continued. Davjd Shcchy,' M. P.. speaking at a Nationalist meeting at Rathmore. County Meath, said that many; were assuming that cattle-driving had been a breeze that had passed over like last night's rain and that tht-y were going to have more sunshine for landlordism and gra zicrism and that it would be all easy now for the' future. It was nothing of the kind. One way' to have an end to cattle-driving was by a compulsory clause in the next land "act empowering the Kstates Commissioners to buy by compulsion all. untenanted land. Mr. Shechy believed that Mr. Birrell. the Chief Secretary, Intended to have such a clause. He did not believe that there was one member of the Irish, party, neither did he believe that there was one member of the ministry, either Mr. Birrell or . anybody else, who had the slightest belief that such a clause wouTd pass the House of Lords; and if it did not. what became of the possibility of legislation on the question? The one way in which legislation could be forced was by cattle-driving, and he would say to them that if they could not have compul sion by any other way. if they could not get compulsion by legislation, let them put on the screw themselves and keep up cattle-driving. Speaking at a United Irish I-eague meeting. Barry O'Brien referred to the "hypocrisy of the British" in the cattle driving matter. He said the English were ta- pious people, easily shocked by any crime that occurred in Ireland. He did not care to indict any people, though England reeked with crime, so long as he was not attacked: but when he was attacked, he must retaliate. There was the incident of Denshawi In Egypt. The English officer was fond of shooting when he was not engaged in tarring and feath ering one of his brother officers. Some of these officers went out in Egypt to shoot pigeons, which were the property of other people. The people tried to pro tect their property. "There was no pro tection of life and property act in force there: An officer fired at the crowd. A woman was shot, there was a struggle, one of the officers 'ran for help and. was killed, not by the people, but by the heat. The government of this country hanged four of the villagers and two were sent to the penal setirements)ne of them the husband of the woman who was wounded. Other villagers were lashed. Action of the English. Yet, in a day or two. the minister who was responsible for that would rise in the House of Commons and sanctimo niously deplore what the peasants in the West of Ireland were doing. And why were they doing it? They were doing it because they knew it was only by the aid of violence that justice could be wrung from the ' government of Ireland. That was the crime of a government which lectured Russia or Turkey and would denounce cattle-driving in Ireland. Let them notrforget about the dum-dum bul let during the time of the war' against the Afridis. It appeared that these dum dum bullets had been first used against the tribes by God-fearing, humane Brit ish; and. to crown all, when the matter of their use was being discussed, the ar gument was actually used that the Af ridis could not object, because they were not parties to the Geneva Convention. If a Connaught peasant fired such a bullet at a bullock, what an uproar there would be. Whether cattle-driving was good or bad. those criminals are not entitled to sit in judgment upon it. What was cat- ( tie-driving? It was an act of war a part of the agrarian war in Ireland. Engiand had planted a rookery in Ireland out of which these "carrion crows" with ca daverous beaks and insatiable maws flew over the land preying on- the peoplf. Professor Goldwin Smith had said that j such offei)si.-8 should not be confounded ' with ordinary crime, and he pointed out ! that in part of the country where agra rian offenses were most frequent, ordi nary crime was rarest, and a high stale of morality existed. One reason for cattle-driving was that the land act had ceased practically to be operative. It .was needful that it should go on. The landlords must be got rid of. They talked of lawlessness in Ireland. Why, the one lawless thing in Ireland was the government of England. It- had no moral sanction. Mr. Birrell, Chief Secretary for Ire land, speaking at Bristol on his Irish policy, said: "If it were not for the land, Ireland would be the most crime less country In the world. The Lords had mutilated bills and thereby imposed on the Chief Secretary a great difficulty, while there was in consequence discon tent and dissatisfaction. and sympa thizers declined-" to return a verdict against people who were charged. Then the House of Lords says to me. 'Coward! Scoundrel! Why don't you enforce the law?' I say in reply, 'Why don't you pass the measures?' " 1 E WHEELS BY S WIRELES POWER DIM GREAT SPENDTHRIFT AUTHOR HAD XO IDEA OP SAV ING MOSEY, Novelist Who Recently Died in Pov erty Spent Small Fortune on Her Pet Dogs. v LONDON. Feb. 22. (Special.) A few years ago no one would have thought it possible that (Juida would end her days, old, destitute and half - forgotten, in an Italian., village. That she did so was nobody's fault but her own. In the '70s her novels had an Immense sale, and she was a popular personage in a small but by no means obscure section of London society. Ouida did not make as much money by her books as many less popular writers have done, but had she made twice as much the end would have been the same. Whether she was In funds or whether she was within measurable distance of star vation, she was constitutionally incapa ble of keeping money by her. When she had a great deal of it she lived as if she lied been a Monte Cristo. When she was reduced to her last ?2f she would give 'a dinner to beggars. She spent enough on dogs to keep several families, and was so solicitous for the starving mongrels of the streets as for her own choice pets. In spite of .her ex travagances and her comical blunders. 6he had a fertile imagination and the knack of. telling h'cr slory effectively. Specialist Able to Transmit Energy for Starting Ma chinery at Distance. OPENS NEW POSSIBILITIES Apparatus Started by Tcleiiicchan ism, However, Must Have Mo- tor of Its Own to Con tinue in Motion. , PARIS, Feb. 22. (Special.) Tclcmn chanism, a new word for tha wireless transmission of electric power, had barely been invfnted when an ingenious South ern -Frenchman made use of it to extract from a banker and other capitalists at Marseilles a huge sum of money by pre tending to have constructed a practical apparatus for moving machines, cars, ships, etc.. at a distance by wireless electric power. The ;ame, while it has made its victims feel very ridiculous, has. nevertheless, brought out a statement from M. Branly. a noted specialist, to the effect tiiat telemechanism -of a very curious kind indeed has been proved to be possible. Machinery, for example, can be started at a distance by means of a certain device, though it cannot be kept going by the same power that started it. M. Branly saj's that action can be com manded but not kept up. Tims, for in- j stance, by means of telemechanism, or wireiess electric transmission, lie could light a lamp at a distance and set going an electric motor. The lamp or the motor, however, must be supplied with a cur rent of its own to continue working. M. Branly simply opens or closes the circuit by wireless transmission. Tele-: mechanism turns on the commutator, which sets the current going in a certain direction, or stops it. As it is, it must be confessed that this discovery is of exceptional importance. M. Branly is not yet prepared to say in how many ways It can he applied, but one can see at once the utility it might have tn turning on railway signals, light ing or putting out at the touch of a button the electric lamps in a whole city, and various other useful purposes to which it might be put. Indeed, guns might be fired or torpedoes exploded at a distance as easily as lumps are lighted. ARSENIC IN FRENCH WINE Bevcrnge Said to Contain Poison Used ns Spray. PARIS. Feb. 22. (Special.) Most of the members of the Paris Academy of Medi cine were stirred out of their quiet humor by a. discussion of wine and arsenic, brought forward at their last meeting by Dr. Cazeneuve. The distinguished pro fessor of the faculty of Lyons called at tention to the fact that within recent years wine-growers in France had got into the habit of using arsenlate of lead as a radical means of destroying insects and mildew on the vines. The arsenic contained in the mixture destroys the in sects, it is true. but. according to the doctor's statements, traces of -both arsenic and lead are found in the wine derived from such vineyards. The percentage is not great something like one-thousandth of a milligramme per liter yet ho iiryued that this was suffi cient in the long-run to poison anyone's stomach. This at uncc aroused an ani mated discussion. Some questioned the fact that so small a portion of arsenic or lead could have an effect on the constitu tion, -find others took sides with Professor Cazeneuve. In conclusion, the academy decided to hold a special meeting to dis cuss the matter. The idea that French wines might be declared poisonous substances seems to have come like a thunderbolt on the learned assembly. It is reassuring to add, however, that only the very cheap wines seem to be exposed to the danger such wines as are commonly drunk by the French workmen themselves, who are no better for them, as Dr. Cazeneuve has citd statistics showing that a large per centage of laborers in the south of France have .been suffering from lead and arsenic poisoning. ROBBERS GAG TRAIN CREW Then Loot Mallear on Hungarian Railway. VIENNA. Feb. 22. (Special.) A daring robbery in a train occurred on the Hun garian State Railway. According to a telegram from Orsova, the train was at tacked at the Karansebe station, when the guards were seating the passengers, of whom there were 400. The robbers gagged and bound the conductor and soific of the. railway attendants, entered the mail van and abstracted eight mail bags besides all that they could lay hands on. The affair was over in three minutes. When the gagged conductor and the oth ers were found the theives were far away. Active pursuit by the gendarmes had hitherto been wit he t result. FORMS TEAM OF PARSONS English Clergymen Are Out for Football Honors. LONDON. Feb. 22 (Special.) The phrase "muscular Christianity" is not as fashion able as it- was in the days when Tom Brown was at Oxford, but the spirit which it expressed is evidently not ex tinct. The Morning Leader reports that a Lancashire curate has organized a foot ball team of parsons, who are now dis playing their prowess on Saturday after noons. The curate himself whose place, it seems, is at center is described as a "nippy and efficient' pivot." It is hoped that the movement which has begun among the curates will extend to thii higher clergy, and perhaps in time churclr and cbapel may fight out their differences on some classic football ground. "FAUST" FOR BERNHARDT Rival Authors Complete Same Play for ' Great Actress. PARIS. Feb. 15. Sarah Bcrnhnr.lt is now in the peculiar position of having two "Fausts" on her hands. Resort to the law courts probably will be neces sary to get the matter straightened out. About ten years ago M. Rostand started to write a drama based on Goethe's masterpiece, and Bernhardt promised to produce it as soon as it was finished. The work hung fire so long, however, that even Rostand's friends surrendered all hope of ever seeing it finished. In the meantime another "Faust" was written by Henry Bataillc. Mme. Bern hardt, who had pined for a quarter of a century to appear in the role of Dr. K.aust; immediately secured the rights in the now piece and began prepara tions for its production. She even had the author modify the principal role o as 1o glvo U still greater prominence. Magnificent scen ery and costumes were ordered, a-nd it was Intended to give the first perform ance early in the Spring. In the midst of the preparations, M. Rostand suddenly announced that his own "Faust" finally was completed, and suggested to Bernhardt that she keep her promise given ten years before. Bernhardt, it is said, was so delight ed at having a chance to produce a new Rostand play that she abruptlv informed M. Bataillle his "Faust" would have to wait. Bataillle says he will not wait. At present neither side is yielding. LABOR MEN IN PARLIAMENT Need New Tarty to Accomplish Ef fective Work. LONDON. Feb. 22. (Special.) The de termination of trade unionists to estab lish a labor party in parliament, inde pendent of both the old-established parties, was one with which nobody could seriously quarrel. Not only is it per fectly legitimate for working men to desire-to be represented in parliament by working men. but their special interests cannot be adequately represented by any body else. As long, however, as par liamentary candidates have to bear the. heavy cost of elections, and members when returned to parliament are not paid for their services, it is obvious that work ingmen. if they are to be represented by men of their own class, must firvd the money to pay for returning them and maintaining them while they are engaged at Westminster. If the funds for this purpose are to be contributed by trade unions, it necessarily follows that the candidates cannot stand avowedly as Liberals or Conservatives, since the trade unions are not political " organizations, audi may be expected to contain many men of both political parties, each of which would object to the union funds being used in support of a parliamentary candidate on the other side. From the nature of the case, there fore, special labor representation in par liament necessarily involves the creation of an "independent" labor party. Tourist Crop Keeps Up. LONDON, " Feb. 22. (Special.) News from Queenstown goes to show that an unprecedented . rush of ' visitors from America is. expected this year and that, in fact, thj movement is already in progress. The Baltic and the Mauretania have come over full of passengers and a booking authority, adverting to the enor mous forward booking in America, says it looks' as "if all New York would cross the Atlantic this year." This statement dors not accord with the reports ot thn widespread disastrous effects of tlia financial crisis in America; '