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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (March 8, 1908)
SECTION FOUR Pages 1 to lO DRAMATIC and SPORTING VOL. XXVII. PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH : 8, 1908. NO. 10. A WOMB TO WE ATTRIBUTE the wonderful success of this store to the favor and good will of the Portland women, who have always found Gadsbys' prepared to serve their needs a little better and a great deal cheaper than other- stores. We want every lady in Portland who needs home-furnishings of any description to feel that this is a woman's store. Here you will always receive careful, courteous, painstaking attention, no matter whether you buy or just look for comparison." Our purpose is to win success by deserving it, and we do not expect your trade unless we can show you that it is distinctly to your advantage to buy here Our furniture is the best, and we will sell it to you upon practically your own terms. PRICES IN PLAIN FIGURES ON EACH ARTICLE MAKE EASY BUYING. . - $50.00 PARLOR SUIT $27.00 Wf raw- IP Fs.rlor Suit, five pieces, beautifully finished in rich, dark mahogany, upholstered in verona regular price $50.00; sale price .1 $27.00 Mail Orders for the Above Must Include $2.00 Packing Charges. GREAT ' $35.00 Royal 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, 9x 12 ....... .....$15.00 $15.00 Pro-Brussels Rues 9x12 . . $12.00 Smaller or Larger Rugs Propor-V lionatelv Reduced. 11 Ingrain Sample Rugs, all wool, 1 yard square 35" Brussels Sample Rugs' fringe'd $1.00 GREAT MAJESTIC RANGE 3Xot Cbeaft - But I,cnt ExpfaslTe. Ttequires fewer repairs, uses less fuel, bakes perfectly and gives abundant hot water. The oven- is absolutely airtight; heat can be applied as needed. Water front is separate from oven, w water cannot affect temperature. Patent autt-cl inker grate is suitable for either wood or coal. Firebox is heavier than that of any Other ranjfo on the market. The Majestic has the only oven bot tom which can be guaranteed against warping. All exposed parts of malle able iron guaranted not to break under any circumstances. Me take our old ntove and allow ym all it in worth mm part pay meat for a new out, BUB I I This Beautiful Buffet, worth $30 at nearly half price lS.OO WOMEN AND CARPET SPECIALS mm 1 rawM'IK SOME BARGAINS FOR ROOMING HOUSES 300 Hotel Bureaus, with mirror, two O C Q C drawers and cabinet; reg. $9; now. Uuiuu 590 Combination Washstands, in ash, OQ QC 2 drawers and cabinet; $6.50; now.uZiUU 150 White Granite .Toilet Sets, consisting of Bowl, Pitcher, covered Chamber, Soap Dish and Mug; regular price $2.50 set; 01 OC reduced now to U I iZu 200 White Granite Combinet covered Slop Jars, with ban;- regular noV 160 high-top Bedsteads; in white or QQ rtfl golden maple; regular $6.00; now. uJellU 50 high-top Bedsteads in birdseye maple; regu larly $15.00; reduced to make space to 33 1-3 per cent below factory cost; now 00 Cfl on -sale at ,. .. UUiOU 500 Dressers in solid oak; regular 01 Q rtfl $lS.00:sale price ulZiUU 15 Dressers in Oregon fir, with full bevel mir ror, 20x24 inches; regular $12.50; QQ ff sale price .duiUU The above. are for immediate delivery; no goods held we need the space. PORTLAND $19 price $l.o0; - TCn I uu $25 PEDESTAL TABLE $12.50 GadsbyV Extension liable Special. This Handsome Pedestal Extension Tabie is offered at this extremely low irice that we may demonstrate to the buying public- our ability to undersell any furniture institution in the city 812. SO Big Carpet Bargains in Our Carpet Department. Bromley's Velvets; with borders '. . ... .....$1.25 B u r 1 i n g t on Brussels, with borders .... $1.10 Tapestry Brussels, with borders $1.00 Dunlap's Tapestry Brus sels ... ..K. . ..V 90 Reversible Pro-Brussels, per yard .......$ 1 .00 Brusselette Carpets, yard wide .'. . ... . 55 Granite Ingrain Carpets, per yard ....... 50 PRINCESS DRESSER $1 1.50 Princess 2resser. with oval or shaped French bevel mirror; finished golden: regular $19.00 value; special this week .811.50 SPECIAL CHAIR SALE This Beautiful Chair, well made of hardwood and finished golden oak; trust price $1.50: Gadsbys' price &I.OO L Radicals Do Not Conceal Sat Jsfaction in Assassination of King Carlos. DIRECT CAUSE OF DEED Dictatorship Was Brought About by Strike of Students, Which Was Carried to House of Deputies. LISBON', March ;., Via the Frontier. (Special.) Although the troubles in Port ugal which culminated in the assassina tion of the King: and Orown Prince have long been maturing, they were brought to a point by a disturbance in the ancient university town of Coimbra- The uni versity authorities some time ago. re fused to grant a degree to one of the students on the ground, it was alleged, of improper moral conduct. Thereupon the students struck as a body. The matter was carried by the Republican party to the Camara dos Deputados (House of Deputies), in this city, and led to violent scenes in the Chamber. This eventually obliged the Prime Minister to dissolve the House and establish the dictator ship. The tragic events of recent days have apparently been the revenge of as sociates of the Republican party. Portugal suffers ' from the ghosts of negro slavery in Brazil, which brought it so much wealth for two centuries, and from the far longer supremacy of the church. When Brazil fell away, the habits formed in 200 years or so remained. The climate is not a spur to energy, ex cept in the northern provinces, which are rich and Republican at any rate, in the class that makes the most money. This is the class that exports wine and sells its farm produce to the mercantile commun ity at Oporto and other towns on and near the Douro. So far south as Lisbon, Republicans are common enough. South of Lisbon one is almost in Africa. The hereditary nobility are not more ad vanced in Ideas than the kaids of Mo rocco, and are very Inferior to them in physique. They are generally Mlguelities. People Crushed by Taxes. The people are miBerably poor, crushed down with taxes direct and indirect, mild, gentle and so free from criminal pro pensities as hardly to need a police. Their intense vitality appears at fairs and re ligious processions and other church cere monies. Probably 75 or 80 per cent of them neither know how to read or write. Since the Queen brought back the re ligious orders, all the news circulating In the villages and small burghs comes through monks and priests. They give it a Mlguelist warp. Priests' sons are brought up to be teachers, for if the clergy expect the rule of celibacy they are far from think ing concubinage an infringement. As in Russia, the children of the popes be come the most determined agitators, so in Portugal the families of the priests furnish party agitators with their most active agents, and especially on the Miguelist and Republican sides. It was no surprise to hear that Silva Buitra, who climbed up on the back of the royal carriage and shot the King in the neck was a priest's son and a teacher of Latin and Portuguese literature. One can only account for the coldness of the ultra-Catholic press toward the afflicted royal family by accepting tha supposition of a Miguelist influence. La Croix contradicts the generally received version of Franco having taken no steps to provide for the King's safety on the day appointed for his return to Lisbon. La Croix has learned- that the prepara tions were extreme, but that general dis content paralyzed the troops. In a time of upheaval and sudden transformations the King was unable to break away from the narrow circle of high-born and very rich persons among whom he passed his youth. He remained to the end a man of high caste, in his affinities, though without a grain of hauteur in his bearing. English Horses Drew Landau. The Court of Portugal has chieflv in its Stables Hanoverian, or rather Lippe-Det- mold. black horses. The late King paid great attention to this department, but preferred English horses for his carriage and for the mounts of his bodyguard. When he expected a visit from the Ger man Emperor. he himself ordered' SO horses in England, "to be paid for out of the privy purse." The Emperor did not fail to notice and admire them. Those intended for the royal equipage had been well broken, and have soft mouths, which 'would have responded to a bridle made of a silk thread." These horses drew the landau in which the King and his heir met their doom. Coimbra. which is known as the "Port uguese Athens."; was formerly the cap ital of Portugal, and is finely situated on the beautiful river Mondego, which has formed the theme of many poems. The university, wThich is the only one in the kingdom, was originally founded in Lisbon in the 14th century,, but was soon -after removed to Coimbra On two occasions it was retranst'erred to Lisbon, but was permanently established at Coimbra in the 35th century. The peace able citizens of Lisbon could not endure the turbulent pranks of the Portuguese undergraduates. 'The quaint costumes of the 1400 guitar-strumming students as they pass along, capless and with their long black cloaks flying in the winds, make the street scenes of the Coimbra of today quite unique. The whole atmos phere of the place is that of the Middle Ages, at all events as compared with the industrial surroundings of foreign towns. So much is it out of the world that there are no English-speaking peo ple in the district. In conntction with the political situa tion, it may be worth noting that a char ter of 20 years ago provided for the abo lition of hereditary peerages in Portu gal by a gradual process. Parliamentary suffrage for election to the other house extends to all citizens of 2t years of age who can read and write, or who pay taxes amounting to 600 reis (45 cents) a year. The illiteracy, which is so wide spread in the country, renders this man hood suffrage more nominal than- reaT. The sovereign has no veto on a bill passed twice by. both houses. Senhor Franco, the ex-dictator, was not a personality of extraordinary weight. He did not strike one as being the out standing man who was required to face the storm that a. dictatorship is sure to arouse in a civilized country, and events have proved that he did not have a suffi PORTIA MOVING TOWARD REPUBLIC ciently powerful following to guarantee his safety, in his native land for even one day: hence his hurried flight. The Republicans are in high feather, and have not concealed their joy at the murder of the King and the Crown PrincS for a moment. When they next strike the blow will be a final one against monarchy, limited or otherwise, In Portugal, and a republic will be speed ily proclaimed. It is not believed that any European power not even England will interfere with the march of events. KING CARLOS DIED POOR Even Insurance Was Assigned to Bank of Portugal. - LISBON', Feb. 29. King Carlos died practically bankrupt. Even his life in-, surance was assigned to - the Bank of Portugal as security for money he had borrowed. His total allowance from the state was $400,000 a year, on which he had to sup port several palaces, maintain them wifi royal splendor and entertain visiting monarchs on a scale befitting his rank. As a result he was always hard pressed for money. To secure the loans he was compelled to make he took out largo amounts of life insurance. He had one policy in the Equitable Life of New York for $100,000. His insurance policies he de posited with those from whom he bor rowed. He owed the Bank of Portugal $180,000. There was practically no money in the royal treasury when King Carlos was assassinated. The next day the govern ment paid the new King one month's "salary," which was due his father. Friends of the dead King deny that Carlos was recklessly extravagant and say his private life was simple and methodical. They explain his- indebted Jiess by attributing it to the great cost of the entertainments he was compelled to give and of the maintenance of his pal aces. T,he royal display forced upon him, they assert, was constantly growing more expensive and it was impossible to make the civil list appropriation meet the King's needs. Recently Carlos had tried to take out more life insurance, but he found" this practically impossible, because of the ex cessively high premiums demanded. His exceptional corpulence and the danger of assassination made him an extra haz ardous risk, according to the insurance companies. King Manuel today issuesd a decree fixing March 5 as the date of the next general election and another convoking the regular Cortes on April 29. At. the same time the decrees issued, by ex-Premier Franco for the reorganization of the House of Peers and giving the new Chamber of Deputies constituent powers are revoked. Franco's decrees augment ing the civil list and liquidating the ad vances from the treasury to the royal house also have been annulled by the King. FIEND IN FEMALE FORM GEKMAX GIRL KILLS FIANCE IN COLD BLOOD. Crime Leads to Discovery of Diabol ical Deeds of Grete Beler and Her Mother. " BBRLJX. March 7. (Special.) Grete Beier. daughter of the late burgomaster of Brand, in Silesia, is a valuable ex ample for those who maintain that there is nothing wprse in the world than a bad woman. This pretty and captivating damsel, who is only 23 years of age. called one day on an engineer named Presslcr. to whom she was engaged, and. having induced him to- blindfold his eyes and open his mouth, on the pretext that she bad brought him a surprise from the fair, placed a revolver between his teeth and blew out his brains. She then se creted among his papers a forged will, in which he was made to bequeath to her his entire prossessions. The trial of Grete's mother, who was this week sentenced to two years' penal servitude for subornation, threw some in teresting sidelights on the utterly repro bate character of the daughter, besides showing what strange secrets the respect able house-front of a highly esteemed burgomaster ran hide. Tt appeared that both during and long before her engage ment to Presslcr, the girl had, with the connivance of her mother, carried on a liaison with a merchant named Merker. To facilitate their meetings, the pair had hired a room in the little town of Brand, which, nevertheless, seems not to have had the slightest suspicion that Fraulein Beier was anything but a demure and well-behaved young woman. As a result of her relations with Merker the girl gave birth to three children all of whom it is believed she at once murdered. The burgomaster was much trusted by the inhabitants of the town, and one of them confided to his keeping a small safe containing a savings bank book, with a credit of $1000. and other valuables. The enterprising Grete procured a duplicate key to the safe, abstracted the book, forged a recepit, and drew every penny out of the bank. When the theft was dis covered, she and her mother attempted to fix the guilt on another woman, stat ing the exact spot in her house in which the key of the safe would be found. It came out in the trial, however, that It had been placed there through their in strumentality. Frau Beier further at tempted to persuade one of the witnesses to say that she had overheara the woman In question admit the committal of the theft. The most interesting point brought out, however, was that the girl had written to Merker on a scrap of paper that was smuggled out of the jail, sewed up in a blouse, telling him to go in disguise to the principal witness against her, render her unconscious with chloroiorm, and then murder her. ' It was also shown that on the evening after the killing of Pressler she joined a party of merry makers at Freiberg and telephoned home that she was' enjoying herself so much that she would not return till the last train. Merker and Frau Beier are now both serving sentences. Grete has yet to stand trial. BONUS FOR EACH CHILD Increases in Australian l-'amiUcs 3fean Tax Exemption. SYDNEY, N. S. W., March 7. (Special.) The increase of population in the com monwealth is notoriously slow, and the legislators of Western Australia, where the inhabitants number only two to the square mile, have determined to take a leaf out of the book of the French. With a view to encouraging- bigger families, an amendment has been inserted in the" income tax bill by the State Legislative assembly giving an exemption of $M for every rhlld up to the number of five in the family of the taxpayer. Five chil dren is eridntly the limit which the Legislature intends to countenance In any one household, . . SCOTTISH BILL IS E English Liberals Send Land Measure to Lords for Second -Time. PEERS OPPOSED TO POLICY! Prime Minister Asks Commons tl: Set Aside Time for Consideration j or Legislation Providing for . Dual Ownership. -i; I3NDO.N". March 7. Special.) Th Liberal government has taken the first step in the war against the House of Lords, and the fight is likely to be car-i tied to a finish at the present session of Parliament. The struggle began when the Prime Minister moved his resolution asking the House to agrco to the alloca tion of two days or three if amendments are made in committee to the small land holders (Scotland) bill and of a similar amount of time to the land values (Scot land) bill. These two bills, which passed through the House of Commons last ses sion and met with an unhappy- fate in the House of Lords, are to be reintro duced in precisely the same form as that in which thoy left the Commons, and to be carried through all their stages in the brief time allotted to them. Then they are to be sent up once more to the upper chamber, with an invitation to the peers to pass, reject or amend them. Minister Outlines Campaign. Such is the part of the government plan of campaign against the second chain-; ber, and so much was frankly admitted j by the Prime Minister during the course of a very remarkable speech, though Sir' Henry Campbell-Bannerman naturally declared, with much vehemence, that the' bills were also intended to pass on their! own merits, and represented the "settled I opinion" of the House of Commons and of a majority of the Scottish people. The speech was a remarkable one, because; the Prime Minister, who stumped the; lowlands of Scotland throughout the Au-'j tumn recess in a vain effort to klnule anger against the Lords, admitted that the peers had not had a reasonable time j In which to discuss these two measure i in the closing hours of last session. He,: therefore, wished to give them a more1 adequate opportunity. The Peers will, doubtless, accept the Premier's invitation, and subject the two bills to the searching investigation which they require, but which they have not had in either House of Parliament, and which they manifestly are not to be vouchsafed In the House of Commons under the terms of the Prime Minister's resolution. JCo one denies the magnitude of the interests concerned, or the far-reaching and even revolutionary, character of tho principles which those bills embody. An effort was. indeed, made by ministerial, speakers to show that the land, bill had been thor oughly examined in grand committee. But grand committee is no real substitute for committee of the whole House on a highly contentious bill, and tho closure was ap plied to it during its passage through grand committee, just as rigorously as it was applied to other Government meas ures which were debated in committee of the whole House. Calls Proposed Law Vicious. Moreover, it is notorious that on this Scottish land bill the government is di vided against itself, whilo no ono has spoken with such merciless irony of its contradictory principles as Lord Ro.cebery, who was for long tho acknowledged mouthpiece of Scottish Liberalism, and tho chosen leader of those who now dis own him. . If the House of Isol ds is to ie, he said in one of his last speeches on this subject, "it could die in no better cause than in resisting to tho last the introduc tion of a system so vicious, so pregnant with malignant possibilities, as that con tained in the Scottish small landholders' bill." For that bill proposes to introduce the dual ownership which is being got rid of in Ireland at a cost of scores of millions of pounds, and a long series of agrarian outrages: it establishes a land commission to fix judicial rents for small holders, and. Instead of giving powers to the county councils and popularly elected authorities aa does tho Knglish act It places the. whole working of the bill in the hands of a central board, paid and situated in the Scottish capital. It is expected that if the present govern ment is in office a year hence the Prime Minister will bring In a guillotine resolu tion, reducing the time to be spent on a reintroduced bill from two to three days to one day. Tho fight promises to be ex ceedingly hot. BALLOON RIDE IN STORM Woman's Graphic Description of Wild Trip in Air. LONDON'. Feb. 29. The Hon. Mrs. Assheton - Harbord, who. accompanied by J. F. Pollock, left Battersea in the balloon Vaikyre on Friday night in an attempt to win the Northcliffo challenge cup. landed, after six and a half hours, in a forest near Verdun, about 3K miles from London, as the crow flics. "At 10:30 we encountered a violent squall," says Mrs. Assheton-Harbord, in the course of a thrilling narrative of their voyage, "ami the car swayed to such an extent that we had to hold on to avoid being thrown out." It took 51 minutes to cross the chan nel from Dungeness to Boulogne, and subsequently strong vertical currents of air caused the balloon to shoot alter nately upward and downward very rapidly.- "There was a good deal of "sheet light ning, and the car and neck of the bal loon seemed illuminated as if by elec tric lights," says the woman. "At 2 o'clock we encountered a terrific snow storm, 'which half-tilled the balloon." The balloon later shot up to an alti tude of S000 feet, and then descended rapidly, craflring down on some trees with great force. The envelope of the balloon' was torn, and all the scientific instruments carried were qmashed. and the aeronauts were compelled to get out of the balloon as best they could and wait in pitchy dark ness till dawn, when they found them selves at the village of Ilandlomonl, near Verdui " , ' OF SCQRD