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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (March 1, 1908)
DRAMATIC and SPORTING SECTION FOUR Pages 1 to lO VOL,. XXVII. PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 1, 1908. NO. 9. L 0 G AUTO TRIP airship, but Mr. Wellman's project Is at any rate practical, so far as careful ex periments have been able to niake It." GADSBY SELLS FOR LESS GADSBY PAYS NO RENT CUPID TAKES CARE OF THE HEART GADSBYS' TAKE CARE Qfthe HOME And together they will launch young folks on a pleasant journey through life on the Dignified Credit system. The question of "FIRST EXPENSE" no longer cuts any figure in matrimonial plans. Gadsby will furnish you with Furniture, Rugs, Carpets, Dishes, Stoves or Ranges on such easy terms that you will never notice the outlay. LT " M IT -rm ! i i J y J , M f JP X II H ll A M H IIH VlWr I I Ml Let us help you make a right start. "THE BEST EVER" is our motto. 'trust' and you can afford to trust us LEADER RANGE $29 SOLID OAK ARM ROCKER " 1 BOOKCASES Solid Oak Arm Rocker, with leath er cobbler seat: regular $3.50 value. Special this week SI. 95 SEE OUR WINDOWS SEE THIS COUGH FOR $7.85 This beautiful Bookcase, solid oak, glass doors and adjustable shelves: Gadsbys' price S20.00 'All are guaranteed for 10 years. Leader Range, with high closet and duplex grate, sprfng-bal-aneed oven doors. This is a heavy, substantial and durable range, made of the best quality cold-rolled steel; adapted for coal or wood ; oven thoroughly braced and bolted ; asbestos lined throughout; nickel -trim-med; section plate top- Gads bys' price $29.00 $19 PRINCESS DRESSER REDUCED TO $11.50 READ THIS $3.50 solid oak Arm Rocker reduced to .. $1.95 $1.50 Dining Chairs reduced to...... $1.00 $5.00 Parlor Tables reduced to........ S3.oO fo.OO Iron Beds reduced to .$3.75 $25.00 Sideboards reduced to.... $18.50 DID YOU READ THAT? READ THIS, TOO: -FIFTY BIRDSEYE MAPLE BEDSTEADS Full size, beautifully ligured wood; regular price for these beds is $15.00. We are going to sell them this week lor, each $6.50 RUG SPECIALS $35.00 Roval Axminster Parlor Rugs, 9x12 feet, now. ....... $25.00 $35.00 Wilton Velvet Rugs, 9x12 .$25.00 $25.00 Brussels Seamless Rugs, 9x12 ; ..$20.00 $20.00 Brussels Rugs, 9x12 S15.00 $13.00 Pro-Brussels Rugs, 9x12 $12.00 Smaller or Larger Rugs Proportionately Reduced. Ingrain Sample Rugs, all wool, one yard square .35 Brussels Sample Rugs, fringed....... $1.00 A O'OTTT'C BIG BARGAINS IN OUR . Wr.lX.Jr Kit 1 O CARPET DEPARTMENT Bromley's Velvets, with borders ........ $1.25 Burlington Brussels, with borders Sl.lO Tapestry Brussels, with borders ..v. $1.00 DunlafTs Tapestry Brussels. .90 Reversible Pro-Brussels $1.00 Brusselette Carpets, three-fourths yard wide . 550 Granite Ingrain Carpets , 50 $35 SIDEBOARD $25 GADSBYS' MORRIS CHAIR Frineess Dresser, with oval or shaped French bevel mirror; finished golden; regular $19.00 value; spl this week $11.50 : ? wis sn 1 5 --'Sk W Each piece is upholstered in No. 1 velour. with frames, springs and every detail of upholstering, as well as the covering, itself, strictly high-grade In every particular. Gadsbys' price $7.85 DON'T MISS SEEING THIS SPECIAL . ' v BED COMBINATION Consisting of Bed Springs and Mattress complete, as illustrated. Bed is made of large tubing, beautifully fancy scrolled; head and foot strongly reinforced and ornamented with large chills. An unusually at tractive, desiams. Fur- nished.-in any color of enamel gold, green or white. Four feet six inches wide. . One pair of fine woven wire springs. The mattress of superior quality, with cotton top, extra heavy ticking and taped edges; entire djl O CA outfit, special for plfOJ $B6 CABINET FOLDING BED $18.00 $18.00 for a fine Cabinet Folding Bed, well fin ished in golden oak; folds twice, has tension springs and is guaran teed; half price $18.00 $5(T.OO PARLOR SDltS $27.00 GADSBYS SPECIAL 5-PIECE PARLOR SUITS $27 Parlor Suit, five pieces, beautifully finished in rich, dark mahogany, upholstered in verona; regular price $30.00; sale $27.00 French Beveled - Mirror, beautifully caived top. drawer lined for rilver- we.re; . regular price Gadsnys" price. S25.UO Made throughout of solid oak, beautifully quarter-sawed and highly poUshed: has full spring seat, and can be adjusted to five different positions; the cushions -are reversible and come In selected patterns of velour;. price. .. .87.75. WE OWN THE BUILD. ISO NO RENT TO PAY THAT'S WHY WE SELL FOR LESS $30 BUFFET $18.00 THE STORE THAT SELLS FOR LESS llLt omit jlwi tF.-g-- ' V 5 5 -oeiS5 This beautiful Buffet, worth $30. at nearly half price -SIS.OO SHEER MADNESS Competitors in New York-to-Paris Race Must Face Un- bearable Hardships. SLIGHT HOPE OF SUCCESS Man "Who Has Been Over Route De clares Cars Can Never Cover Liong Stretches of Ghast ly Desolation. IjONDON, Feb. 22. Commenting on the New Tork-to-Paris automobile race. Henry de "Windt. who was a member of the first party to make this journey, has made th following statement: "Ftollowing Princ Borghese's motor-car drive from China to Franco the Paris M&tin -was led to organize another ex pedition on the same lines, the compet ing cars in which have started on their attempt to travel by land from New York to Paris, via Alaska and Siberia. "I have made both the aforesaid Jour neys end con therefore testify that the former is a mere little pleasure trip com pared to the stupendous undertaking now in contemplation an undertaking accom plished for the first time in history by three companions and myself five years ag. Barely Escape Alive. "My object was to ascertain the feasi bility of a railway, and Paris was our point of departure. But as we barely managed to reach the Behring Strait alive by means of dog and deer sleds, after crossing 4000 miles of ghastly desolation, followed by another 20UQ miles over the roughest of sea ice, I can scarcely picture an intricate motor-car experiencing the same strain without serious mishap at an early stage of the proceedings. "But these are minor difficulties com pared with others which will confront the intrepid chauffeurs, and these I propose to enumerate briefly. "The distance we traveled from Paris to New York is, roughly speaking, 18,500 English miles, afcout half of which may be covered over fairly good roads in the United States, Europe and civilized Si beria. But Alaska and Arctic Siberia are quite another matter. Cross Unexplored Forests. "As regards the former, there is. in Winter, a sleigh track, with posthouses at Intervals, from the terminus of the White Pass Railway to Dawson City; but beyond this to the Behring Strait lie 1600 miles of precipitous mountains and dense forests, Intersected by numerous rivers, and practically unexplored. The mere idea of an automobile negotiating this region has caused much amusement in Dawson City, and no wonder! "On the other hand, the frozen River Yukon might be utilized as a road, but, as the cars have only just left New York.they may be unable to reach Northern Alaska before the thaw sets in. This fact, how over, will rfot affect the proposed crossing of Behring Strait over the ice. which I once imagined was feasible, only to find that the 47 miles between Asia and Amer ica are never completely frozen 'over. "And even, were this the case, where would a motor-car be amid the towering hummocks and deep crevasses througli which a man on foot can scarcely thread his way! Open "Leads" in Bcliring. "An avalanche of gigantic bowlders fallen from some Alpine peak somewhat resembles the frozen surface of Behring Strait, and, there being a terrific current, the "leads" or spaces of open water are often many miles wide. "But let us assume that, notwithstand ing these obstacles, the. motor-cars have safely landed on East Cape, Siberia which in my humble opinion, they will never reach except on shipboard; here there are some walrus hide huts occupied by the half-savage Tchuktchas, where we found a squalid shelter for five weary weeks. r "Between this and Sredni-Kolymsk, a tiny settlement of half-starved natives and political exiles, there are 2000 miles of rugged sea ice (no dog sled could follow the coast) with a few walrus hide huts at intervals of 150 to 200 miles, where we were able to; obtain a little seal meat and nothing else. "Yet the announcement has cheerfully been made that 900 kilometers (or about 600 miles) will be the longest strfetch the cars will have to cover without' a fresh supply of petrol! ' . Cannot Secure Supplies. "As a matter of fact, they will'not find petrol or anything else between Behring Strait and the town of Yakutsk (a dis tance of 4000 Knglish. miles), which we covered with dogs and reindeer, encoun tering, perhaps, a dozen -tumble-down shelters and less than 100 miserable na tives throughout the Journey. The 2000 miles from the Arctic Ocean to Yakutsk lay chiefly over fairly level country which, however,' can only be crossed in midwinter on account of numberless swamps, lakes and rivers. "Here another difficulty will be the Verkoyansk Mountains, the only - pass across which is an almost perpendicular ice slope. In Switzerland It would entail ropes and ice. axes. Here we experienced a temperature of 78 degrees below zero. What effect T.ould this have upon petrol! Must Resort to Boats. "In Springtime the overflows of the great Lena river and its tributaries con verts Yakutsk into an island, and the place is unapproachable on every side for several hundred miles. : From Yakutsk to Irkutsk is another 2000 miles, and there is only one road, the river, so dense are the, forests on either side: "So much for a few of the difficulties we had to overcome in accomplishing' a journey which for all the gold in London I would not attempt again. I may add that we nearly perished of starvation near Tehaun Bay, on the Siberian coast, and that for three months afterward we subsisted on seal or walrus meat often eaten raw. Our only fuel was the scanty driftwood washed up In Summer by the waves. As for supplies, nothing whatever was procurable between Yakutsk and Nome City, in Alaska a distance of over m miles. "But the whole scheme is, in my opin ion, so fantactlo that it scarcely repays serious dJscussLe. Many people ridicule CAPTURES A ICMIXOCS OWL t Bird Soon Dies ' and the Light - Ceases to Shine. " LONDON, Feb. 22. A dying specimen of the luminous owls whose appearance in Norfolk has caused so much discussion recently is reported to have been caught at Hellesdon, near Norwich. Unfortun ately, with its death the luminosity vanished. Edward Cannell. an engineer at Helles don asylum, states that when In his garden early in the morning he saw in the dark something shlnging on the top of a high grass bank. The shining object fluttered across the path and got Into a grape vine. ' Mr. Cannell managed t capture It, and then discovered It was an owl. In appearance It was an ordinary barn owl, but it wi.s bright and luminous. He carried the bird indoors carefully. It died, however, before breakfast, and the luminosity vanished. As Mr. Cannell remarked. "Its light had gone out." Mr. Cannell is positive that the ird was luminous when he caught it. The luminosity, he said, seemed -phosphoreJ cent in nature. He had seen scores of owla about the spot, but never saw s luminous bird before. Much incredulity has been expressed as to the luminosity of the birds, but Sir Thomas Digby Pigott, who is an author ity on birds, is quite satisfied as to the truth of the reports published. FISO JEWELS OF PHJUMOH DISCOVERY MAY THROW LIGHT OX HISTORY. Seti II Was Ruler' of Exodus, Ac cording to. Scientific Disclos sures Made In Egypt. LONDON, Feb. 22. Enormous interest has been aroused by the .announcement of the discovery In Egypt of the jewels of the wife of Seti II, who was prob ably the Pharaoh of the "Exodus." Drj Wallis Budge, of the British Museum,' and other Egyptologists in London have, already received news confirming the find. "The discovery of thes jewels," said an. expert yesterday, "is of the greatest im portance, and it is a further triumph for Theodore M. Davis, the American mil lionaire who is backing the excavations In the "Valley of the Kings, near Thebes, and also for B.R. Ayrton, the English Egyptologist, whose recent luck has earned for him the name of 'the king finder.' , "The excavations in this valley are be ing directed by Mr. Quibell, for the Egyptian government service des an tiquities, with the greatest care. These jewels will not come to England, neither is there any present possibility of their leaving Egypt. They will be removed to the Cairo museum. "The importance of the find lies in this, that, authough the actual mummy of the Queen has not been found, the bracelets of heavy gold, . the huge earrings, tho elaborately worked rings, and possibly the crown worn by all the Egyptian queens, together with a host of accessories, will have their story to tell of her life and history. They may even set at rest, the claims that Rameses II was the Pharaoh of , the 'Exodus,' and enthrone Seti II, and the1 Queen whose Jewels are now found as the rulers with whom Moses talked, who had his upbringing, 'who knew not Joseph," who suffered the plagues, and were "prominent figures in one of the most vivid chapters of tho Bible. "Valuable, agairo is the find In this, that extremely little is known of tho wife of Seti II. Of Seti himself we have some particulars. He it was who seized the great obelisks at Heliopolls known as Cleopatra's Needles one of which is on the Thames embankment. " BRITISH BOOM ON DcCLINE Business for January Shows an Im mense Falling Off. ' LONDON, Feb. 29. (Special.) The great British "boom,"' which began in 1904, and which continued till the end of 1907, has ended, and is now being fol lowed by a decline. Evidence of the turn in the tide is afforded by the first Board of trade return dealing with the imports and exports of the present year. There is a round decline of $20,000,000 in the January imports as compared with the corresponding month of last year a fall-ing-off of 6.88 per cent, while, on ttie other side of the account, the exports and Te-exports are together over 13, 750,000 lass than 12 months ago. In the case of the imports, mare than half the fall is accounted for under the head of articles wholly or mainly manu factured, which are J12,000,ori0. Metals alone show a reduction of j,O00,00O, to ward which tin and copper, mainly owing to lower priceSi contribute respectively .600,000 and $1,300,000. Nearly all the other items have run down, including leather, which has fallen J1,1"0:000. Tim decrease in raw materials amounts to $9,450,000, textile materials other than cot ton and "wool, figuring for as much as $5.600.0110. . Kngland received a larger quantity uf wheat from the United States. Chile, Australia and Canada, but less from Russia, Roumania, Argentine and. India. The United States sent more wheat meal and less maize, and a smaller quantity of the latter cereal also came from Russia, Roumania and Argentine. ROME APPLAUDS AMERICAN Daughter of Emma Nevada Tri umphs in Opera. PARIS, Feb. 22. Parisians are delight ed at the success achieved in Rome by Mignon Nevada, daughter of Emma Ne vada, the famous American songstress,1 who was so vastly popular here. Mignon Nevada's future was foreseen when at the age of 14, at a reception given by Lady Campbell Clark, she sang some operatic selections with such spirit that her mother determined the should be an opera singer. Miss Alys Lorraine is another young American songstress with an assuredly successful future. She has a pure voire of sympathetic quality, and has been singing at private receptions with great success. Miss Lorraine has just received an advantageous offer to sing at the Monte Carlo opera-house during the sea- the idea of reaohing the Jfortn roia or j