The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, March 13, 1910, SECTION FOUR, Image 47

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    SECTION FOUR
Pages 1 to 12
REAL ESTATE
AND DRAMATIC
VOL. XXIX.
PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCIJ 13, 1910.
NO. 11
yT Wii-Gaisly $k Sows:
We place on sale over three hundred choice sample pieces of Furniture, consisting of Dining Suits, Par
lor Suits, Bedroom- Suits, Odd Dressers, Chiffoniers, Dressing . Tables, Easy , Chairs, Rockers, Settees
Sideboards and Extension Tables. Now is your opportunity to buy good furniture for less money than
at any other time of the year and on easy terms. Sale commences Monday morning and continues until
these sample pieces are sold. , 1
$35.00 RANGE FOR ONLY
27.5
Leader Range, with high
closet and duplex grate,
spring-balanced oven doors.
This is a heavy, substantial
and durable range, made of
the best quality cold-rolled
steel. Is adapted for coal or
wood. Oven thoroughly
braced and bolted, asbestos-lined
throughout, nickel-trimmed,
section plate
top; Gadsbys ' price $27,50
$38.00 ROCKER FOR ONLY
$19
This $38.00 Chase Leather
Rocker, i2 price . . $19.00
HIGHLY SATISFIED
CUSTOMERS
$6.75
Our complete line of collaps
ible Go-Carts marks the evolu
tion of this class of vehicles to.
a state of unprecedented perfec
tion. They are sightly, and me
chanically correct. '
Strictly one motion. Can be
opened and a closed with one
hand.
Wheels in perfect alignment.
Roomy and comfortable,
light in weight. 1
We Can Show You 375 Different
Patterns of Room-Size Rugs
Without Any Trouble With Our Rug- Display Racks
Brussels Rugs,.Dunlap, 9x12. . . . . 9.50
Brussels, Burlington, 9.xl2 . . . . . .... . . . $18.00
Royal Brussels Rugs, 9x12 . ... ... .$25.00
Wilton Velvet Rugs, 9x12, guaranted
20 years $27.50
Bagdad Wiltons, 9x12 $39.75
Axminster Rugs, imported, 9x12 ..... .$25.25
Burmali Pro-Brussels, 9x12 $10.80
Extra Quality Ingrain, 9x12 ......... 9.75
Larger and Smaller Sizes in Proportion.
5-Piece Parlor Suit for $27
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Parloi: Suite, 5 pieces, beautifully finished in rich, dark ma- . QQT flfl
hogany, upholstered in verona, regular price $50.00. Sale price. uZ I ilIU
FULL ROLL-EDGE COUCH
BARGAIN AT
$7.50
Couch, full roll edge,
upholstered in vero
nas; reg. $15 Half
Price $7.50
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$25 SIDEBOARDS AT $15
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This handsome Sideboard, -well
worth $25; Gadsbys' price, $X5
THIS DINING TABLE $10
You wilt be asked a third more at
other stores. It is made of selected
wood, golden or weathered finish;
6-foot size marked at $10.00
THIS DRESSER FOR $9.50
This Dresser, finished in a rich
golden oak color, with French bev
eled -plate mirror; Gadsbys' price
is $9.50
iBl Wii. Msfeyd Sons ffBS -
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OAK, $1.50 S12.50 $16.00 $1.00 $10.00 $1.00 $17.50
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IPINGHOTASTOUNDS
BOARD OF INQUIRY
Admission of High - Handed
Policies Is Revelation to
Joint Committee.
PRESS BUREAU IS COSTLY
Witness Tells of Spending Thou
sands of Dollars of Federal Money
to Create Sentiment for
Enlarging Own Service.
OREGOXIAX KBWB BUREAU. Wash
ington, Alarchli The testimony of Glf
ford Pinchot before the Congressional in
vestigating committee was astounding in
many particulars, and was a revelation to
the Senators and members comprising
that committee. It gave them their Hrst
insight into the bold methods pursued by
the Forest Service while Pinchot was its
head, and displayed to them, for the first
time, the utter disregard which that
bureau showed for the restraints of
the law. q
For insTance. Pinchot was Interro
gated about his press bureau. He ad
mitted that he maintained a press
bureau, which he said cost from 16000
to $10,000 a year. This bureau, he
explained, was maintained "for Instruction-
work through the newspa
pers." Asked further to- explain this
scheme, he said:
Public Sentiment Created.
"The Forest Service had as its prin
cipal duty, or one of its principal
duties, the education of this country
to the necessity for. forest reservations.
One of our big Jobs was to create a
public sentiment which would support
the forest work and lead to its in
creased spread, and the saving of the
forests generally. And we got from
this newspaper work which cost some
thing below $10,000 a year we got in
one year our material carried In about
300,000,000 copies of newspapers. It
was one of the most useful and best,
and most worth-while parts of our
work."
Think of it! A press bureau costing
$10,000, or thereabouts, to advertise
the forest service and create senti
ment, so that the bureau could be
enlarged. The success of this press
bureau is told in the increasing appro
priations that have been made for the
past bIx or seven years.
Mr. Pinchot also testified ' that he
sent officials of the Forest Service
about the country to lecture and o
further shape public sentiment, and
these trips were all paid for out of
the appropriations for the protection
and administration of the forest re
serves. These lectures were before Y.
M. C A.'s. before women's clubs, be
fore the Yale Law school and Yale
Forestry school, and before all manner
of institutions. The cost of such trips
ranged all the way from $50 to $300
and $400 and ovta.
Controller Xot Consulted.
After some discussion of this public
ity, or advertising business, Mr. pinchot
was asked if he had at'any time con
sulted with the Controller of the Treas
ury to ascertain whether or not the
money so spent was legally spent and
used within the intent of the law, The
Controller is supposed to pass upon all
such matters, and to him all other
branches of the Government turn be
branches of the Government turn befor
expending money from general appro
priations when-the law does not specific
ally stipulate the manner in which the
funds shall be used. Mr. pinchot ad
mitted that he had not laid these ques
tions before the Controller.
"Of icourse," said he, "it would ba
utterly impossible for a department
to do business if it had to submit every
item of its work to the Controller con
tinually for a decision. The Controller
could not keep up with the game."
Ana yet that is what the Controller
is for. and all other departments con
sult him freely and frequently. It
was only another instance where Pin
chot decided that whatever he wanted
w-as right, and it mattered not what
the law might provide.
In further defense of his expendi
ture of a part of the forestry appro
priation for advertising and exploita
tion, Mr. pinchot stated that the Sec
retary of Agriculture sends out officials
of the good roads division t make
speeches on road-building.- and sends
other experts to make addresses on.
subjects on which they are specialists. 1
such as fruit experts, grain experts,, '
etc., "all of whom address farmers' meet-
lngs and give them the advantage of;
the Department's work along lines in
which they are interested. Mr. Pinchot
maintained that the -work of his pub
licity men was on a par with that of
the cither officials of the Department
of Agriculture.
But he failed utterly to draw the dis
tinction, which is very apparent, for
the experts of other bureaus were sent
out to aid the farmers and to demon
strate to them the results of Govern
ment studies, all of which would help
them in their business. The exploit
ers of the Forest Service, on the other
hand, as Pinchot himself admitted,
were working to "create entiment"
favorable to . the Forest Service, and
not to help the public or the farmers.
In other words, in the one instance the
speeches addresses and bulletins were
intended to help those to whom they
were made or sent; in the other In
stance, they were intended to help the
bureau sending them.
Pinchot was fast building up a bu
reaucracy such as this Government has
never known. Had he been allowed to
continue unrestricted, he would have
accomplished his end in the near fu
ture. In view of his unwilling admis
sions before the investigating, com
mittee. Congress is very likely to put
a stop to those practices which are so
manifestly at variance with the intent
of the law.
NOB HILL LOT SELLS HIGH
Corner Twenly-sixtli nnd Marshall
Brings $18,000.
The property at the northwest cor
ner of Marshall and Twenty-sixth
street, 175x100 feet, was purchased yes
terday by Wakefleld-Fries & Company
from the Columbia Land Company for
$18,000. This is in- the heart of the
exclusive Nob Hill residence district,
and was brought purely as an invest
ment. The three lots are unimproved.
Property on Union avenue, even on
the far extremes of the thoroughfare,
was shown to command high prices
through a sale negotiated yesterday
when 150x100 . feet at the corner of
Union avenue and Manhattan streets
was transferred for $7000. Mrs. Lizzie
Gill purchased this property from Mrs.
Hattie Brundell, the sale being nego
tiated through the agency of K. Swan.
The three lots are vacant and were
bought by Mrs. Gill as an investment.
Xorthwestern People in New York.
NEW YORK, March 12. (Special.)
People from the Pacific Northwest
registered at New York hotels today aa
follows:
Portland Grand. Union, P. Terhune.
Salem, Or. Bresiin. II. Clements.
Tacoma Grand Union, A. R. Ayrel;
Bresiin, J. Snyder.
Spokane New Amsterdam, L. H.
Wells.
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JEFFRIES GAINED
' WEALTH BY HIS
TOUR OF COUNTRY
Big Pugilist Is Now Resting at
His Modest Home in Los An
geles Will Take Outing in
Woods.
LOS ANGELES, March 12.
(Special.) Jim Jeffries grinned
broadly as he stepped from the
train at Los Angeles last week,
a suitcase full of money in his
hand," and greeted-his wife. He
has returned' to his little Los
Angeles cottage a rich man. After
a short rest from the road it is
understood he will go into the
woods to get himself into condi
tion for the big fight. ,
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