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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (May 3, 1908)
SECTION FOUR Pages 1 to 12 DRAMATIC and SPORTING VOL. XXVII. PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNINQ, MAY 3. 1903. NO. 18. " imiuiuiaiuilMuaaMUHUMI Gadsby sells it for less and guarantees absolute satisfaction nriirrrvnn -iw iniininrinTinnmreiMiM untwi ninniMnaMTWiiw mam 1 : : ' T 'n roanj!! :itmiiiiiTifflirMniniitiaMriiti I I merits. INVESTIGATE and SEE FOR YOURSELF . S88 Buy Your Refrigerator Now msm Heavy, substantial cabinet, charcoal packed and lined with galvanized iron, removable metal shelves and other sanitary improvements; has most perfect scientific cold air cir culation. Cabinet is made in golden oak finish. White enamel inside. Made along new lines; a great econ omizer of ice. Is thoroughly guar anteed in every particular. Rang ing, in price from $8.00 to $50.00. $35 Range $29. Leader Range All are guaranteed for ten years. Leader Range, with high closet and duplex grate, spring-balanced oven doors. This Is a heavy, substantial and durable range, made or the best quality cold-rolled steel; adapted for coal or wood; oven thoroughly braced and bolted; asbestos-lined through out; nickel-trimmed; section plate top. Qadsbys' price S29.00 Solid Oak Sideboard :;v fETia shift. Iff: French beVeled mirror, beautifully carved top, drawer lined for silver ware; regular price $25.00: Gads bys' price S15.00 EE US before you purchase Homefurnishings and let us figure your bill. We'll prove to you the fact that. "Gadsby sells for less," gives better grade of goods, a more easier plan of payment than is offered by any other store in the cityv S These are facts and are more convincing than a whole train of argu ments. INVESTIGATE and SEE FOR YOURSELF GREAT RUG AND CARPET SPECIALS $35.00 Royal Axminster Parlor Ruga, 9x12 feet..$25.00 $35.00 Wilton Velvet Rugs, 9x12 ; $25.00 $25.00 Brussels Seamless Rugs, 9x12......... .$20.00 $20.00 Brussels Rugs, 9x12. .$15.00 $15.00 Pro-Bruss&ls Rugs 9x12... $12.00 Smaller or Larger Rugs proportionately reduced. Ingrain Sample Rugs, all wool, 1-yard square 35 Brussels Sample Rugs, fringed $1.00 Big Carpet Bargains in Our Carpet Department. Bromley's Velvets, with borders... $1.25 Burlington Brussels, with borders ..$1.10 Tapestry Brussels, with borders $1.00 Dunlap's Tapestry Brussels ,"T..90 Reversible Pro-Brussels, per yard. $1.00 Brusselette Carpets, yard wide 55 Granite Ingrain Carpets, per yard. ; 50 $50 Parlor Suit $27 Parlor Suit, five pieces, beautiful ly finished rich, dark mahogany, upholstered in verona regular price $50.00; sale price. $27.00 Mail orders for the above must , include $2.00 packing charges. jt r Jill 'l', 0TJ i in I. I mJ J PRICES IN PLAIN FIGURES ON EACH ARTICLE MAKE BUYING EASY EXTRA SPECIAL SEE THIS COUCH $7.85 Extra Special See This Rocker $3.50 This Large Arm Rocker, mahogany finish, upholstered in beautiful two toned velours; Bells regularly for $8.00; extra special. . S3.50 No mail orders received on this Rocker. We make this special price to bring people to our store. Couch is upholstered in two-tone velours; beautiful greens, red and browns. Extra special ..$7.85 $2.50 FOR THIS GOLDEN . OAK DIXIKG CHAIR Tou will find It else where marked at $3.50 or higher. It Is made of selected oak, golden finish, with boxed cane seat. The picture shows the exact design. There are scores of dlning chair bargains In all grades and finishes. Gadsbys' Model Kitchen Cabinet ii With half the work and much less than half the number of steps, you can keep your kitchen as neat as a ship's galley if you own a Gadsby Model Kitchen Cabinet, just like cut. This Cab inet is capable of holding every thing a woman needs in prepar ing a meal. A place for every thing and all within your reach. It is over 7 feet high and the base is 28x42 inches Gadsby's Price $12.50 Bargains in Rockers We have the largest and finest as sortment of Porch and Lawn Furni ture in the city. This large, com fortable Rocker ..' $3.50 SHOWS TSARINA SIGHTS OFLOflDOH English Queen Takes Dowager Empress of Russia Out Motoring. LIKE ORDINARY TOURISTS Koyal SlBtera visit Famous Show Palaces f City, Including Re pository of J. Plerpont Morgan' Art Treasure. LONDON, May 2. (Special.) Qnen Alexandra took her slater, the Dowa ger Empress of Russia, about London to see the sights during: her visit Just as If they were a pair of ordinary tourists. The two evidently enjoy each other's company extremely. The Tsarina has seen more of London and the surrounding: country while Jaunt Ins; with the Queen of England in the royal automobile than In her state visits hedged round with etiquette. They motored from Windsor to Lord Rosebery's beautiful Mentmore estate, an easy run, which came to him with his wife, Hannah Rothschild. It is one of a croup of Rothschild country prop erties magnificently kept up. Another day they went to the Earl's place at Epsom, close to the Derby course; the Durdans, where they had lunch with Lord Rosebery, who is such a favorite with the English royal fam ily that it is rather surprising that the peer-widower did .not become the King's son-in-law. The-Queen and Empress had also been to tea with him In the characteristic house he built himself In Berkeley Square, Just as they were entertained by J. Pler pont Morgan when they went to view his art treasures. The same interest which the royal sisters showed In the Morgan curios, pictures, manuscripts, and brlc-a-brao was manifested by them during the hour or two they spent in the British Museum, that goal of so many Ameri can travelers and students. Most of the time was passed in the manuscript room over the autographs of former Kings of England and their kin. Among the exhibits over which they lingered longest were the copybooks of some of these royal personages. SOUND KNELL OF CAMERA Latest PhotogTapbic Plates Need No Apparatus or Lens. LONDON. April 25. Photographers will soon be able to dispense with cameras. As a result of a wonderful Invention of Professor Lippmann It will be possible, after merely exposing a plate before the object to be photographed, to obtain, on developing It, a more lifelike representa tion than can possibly be produced by present-day methods. For many months Professor Lippmann, who Is already famous as the Inventor of the only direct process of color photo graphy which gives perfect results, has been at work on his new Invention at the research laboratory of the Paris univer sity In the Sorbonne. Great difficulty has been, and Is still, experienced in the manufacture of the wonderful plates, which are at present largely made by hand. The plate Is, In reality, an Immense honeycomb with tiny holes, about 15,000 microscopic lenses being packed In each square Inch of It. These tiny lenses, each separated from the surrounding ones by a black or opaque substance, produce each Its own little photograph on the portion of sen sitive film Immediately behind It. The human eye, however, has the most extraordinary power of adapting itself to circumstances, and when the devel oped plate Is examined one point only of each small image Is seen by the eye, the sum total of these points forming a ster eoscopic picture. Professor Lippmann Is modest In his claims for the new invention, owing to the fact that such difficulty Is at present experienced In making the plates, but when once these can be turned out on a commercial scale the art of photography will be completely revolutionized. The photographer of the future will carry his plates in little boxes, and, plac ing them In front of anything he wishes to take, remove the lid or shutter from, the box, and then develop them In the ordinary way. THINKS THEM UPLIFTING Mme. Anna Gould Gives Views on International Marriages. PARIS, April 25. Mme. Anna Gould's Ideas on International marriages were printed today In the Journal, the Naples correspondent of which quotes her as fol lows: "France represents the height of ele gance to Americans. We love aristoc racies because we have none at home. In America the wife spends freely what the husband earns; In France the reverse Is true. European marriages raise Ameri cans above their ordinary life. We look for our Ideal on the continent. In the French people we have all that is lack ing In ourselves, but we are often sur prised to find we have admired exactly what is wanting In the objects of out admiration." At Naples It Is assiduously reported that Mme. Gould and Prince Helie de 6agan will be married soon In Florence. Mme. Gould has deposited $100,000 in the Bank of Naples. She brought all her Jewels, automobiles, and a mountain of baggage. FINE HANDEL HARPSICHORD Work of Art Made by Andreas Kuc kers in 1614. LONDON, April 25. A new Scottish ex pedition to the Antarctic Is being jilanned by Dr. William S. Bruce of the Scottish Oceanographical laboratory, who returned from a Journey to the Arctic last Summer Dr. Bruce proposes to follow and extend the deep sea Investigations made by the Scotia in the South Atlantic, Weddell, and Blscoe seas, and to attempt to cross the Antarctic continent.