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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1911)
DRAMATIC, REAL ESTATE AUTOS, ROADS SECTION FOUR Pages 1 to lO VOL. XXX. PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, 3IAY 21, 1911. NO. 21. ALASKAN GOAL PROBLEM GROWS Quality, Style afid'-. This heading" tells the story in a nutshell, what you will always .find at Gadsbys'. Ypu will also find something new, novel and different from elsewhere. Our big stock is 'now : at its best and every department overflowing with bargains. For wedding outfits and -gift furniture you 'will find the largest variety, the choicest stock and better values at Gadsbys than anywhere in the city. Come and. see ourv model four-room outfit. GADSBYS' FOUR-ROOM OUTFIT COMPLETE-$120 $120 Sold on I Easy : Credit 1 Terms i - If real Furniture value is what you-want Furniture that is durable, artistic and inexpensive we know positively, after 20 years' experience, that yau cannot dupli cate this four-room outfit for less than $50 more than Oadsby is asking, no matter where you go. Pay us-$20 deposit and $10 per month. When you buy at Gadsbys' you are buying of an old-established firm, with-plenty of capital to take care of your account during sickness or loss of employment. HP Mahogany China Closet Ilere is the very latest de sign of China Closet, fin ished dull mahogany. Oadsbj's' price - $38.50 Mahogany Buffet ;. This beautiful 3Ialio any Uuffet. large and massive, Colonial de sign, with mirror full length of top; the latest dull finish. Gadsbvs price $45.00 a,..,,.,: .. .u.a.Ji.o . .c ii VII (i mi Gadsbys' Gas Ranges Always Satisfy BUY YOUR GAS RANGE WHILE THE PRICE IS LOW $20 Gas Ranges Special at $15 Want greater comfort in cooking t Want to get away from working over a wood or roal fire during the warm weathert It's none too soon to be thinking of ordering jour gas range. This is a model range. It does not beat the oven when j on broil ; it does not heat the broiler when von bake or roast. All the valves hare rrculatini; openings for the gas pressure. It tfjl C fC is of bet eunot ruction. A S'-TO.OO ranire for ifiU.Uu TZZZ COKTfXCTIONS MADE OK ALL OUR GAS RANGES GADSBYS' GRAND OPENING DISPLAY New Carpets, Rugs, Lino leum, Oilclbth and Matting Thin department of our utor la fairTjr bulKtnR with all the best things thnt the nean haa brought forth all the new weave, the very cream of the market. The new dealarns are beautiful to behold, and the rich color romhlnnttona are mont exquisite. The blKKnt variety ever ohown In herefrom the most ftorfteoun patterns tn the nnftet and mot delicate hadea. Kujm of e very fixe, rarpeta In endlena variety of patterns, lin oleums and oilcloths of the choicest styles and most durable qualities, and every price a money-savins; price. R y a I Aimlaatrr, Gads bys' special, per tl "itt yard ., 1 Saxaay Axmlaaterm, Gads bys' special, par t j OC5 yard I Braaaela, good qflalltv. yaPrdC.'.':.r.r..$1.10 Tapeatryt ela-ht-wlre, all-wool surface, 7C at DC 625 RUGS AI.WATS OX DISPLAY HACKS Madras JateBady r"'.9r'2:.$9.50 A I I - 1VO I Killed In- aT".'-:.!:a.:...$9.75 Filn QiialltT Wllloi rte.we.t..Kr.B". $34.20 Rritllr'n Wool VolTft x.:... $22.50 ROOM RUGS $15.85 Dntwli )! tirade (11 ff Rasa. 9x12. each 0 14.3U iialnltri, 9x12. each Boor Braaaela Rasa. a0f OC special at OaiT.OO e.'cT.-.''.'.-.lT.SO Art Pra-Braaaela, tx at 1 O DC 1!. each 9 la-.OO 5x!2".".v'!ve!.R. "!.":.$ 15.85 $55.00 $48.00 . Aaarla Persia a, xl2 Orleatal Baadada. 9x12 The following sixes of factory made rK are In stock here: 11-Sx 15. 10-xl3-6. 10-6x12. 11-3x12. 9x ' 13-S, 9x12. 8-3x10-6, 6x9. 4-6x7-6, etc. Our Regular Prices Are Always as Low as Much-Advertised Sales of Competitors There's a Reason We Fay No Rent. The Famous Gibson Cleanable White Enamel Refrigerators Keep Tour Food Cool and Clean; Sara One-third on Tour Ice BilL We are agents for the celebrated Gibson Cold Blast Refrigerators, white enameled. Carload just ar rived. AH sizes'and shapes. FROM S9.00 UP I 1 J Every Majestic Range We Sell Makes This Store More Friends No user of a Majestic is ever dissatisfied ' with the results. Every one we sell "makes sjood" on every promise we make for it. The Majestic is not a "bargain" article it is made for the woman who wants the best and knows it when it is pood cooks for careful buyers' that want lonj and satisfactory 0 seirice. It is the range chosen j by those who operate-their range at the least cost for fuel. , Now for the best part o' this storv voiir credit is god on a MAJESTIC. You may select any one in our stock and pay for it by the. month or -week. , $40 Leader Steel Range $27.50 Equal to any $40 Range in the market; oven 20x16 inches, asbestos-lined throughout. You cannot break the lids. Of- C97 Cft fered special at... P OU Sale of Gadsbys' Go-Carts Closed, can be packed in trunk, taken on cars; is light and easy to handle. Gadsbys' price is $6.00 This is a good cart cheap; nick el mountings. - jJU& a t 111 USE OUR EXCHANGE DEPARTMENTS T-IS'tt more up to date and better, phone us and we'll send a competent man to see it and arrange to take it us part payment on the kind you want the Gadsby kind. We'll make you a 'ibera! allowance ior your goods, and we'll sell you new furniture at low prices. The new furniture will be promptly delivered and your pieces will go as a first payment., Then eay terms on the balance. Have furniture you'll be proud of. Extra Special See This Couch' $7.85 :V- toxica is upnoisterea WfV- V-V'" S-T ' -i-sw in two -tone velours; 2''iS-feH il beautiful greens, red 3Ittl&fu&ikH ;$c&&i VwSj and browns; Gadsbys' price. $7.85 m mum-mm m f. V ' ' 1 'I ;l P teSi4ai!SS Big Mass Meeting Monday at Seattle Promises to Be ; "Rouser." WIDE EFFECT IS DESIRED ! Slain Object of Plan's Promoters Xs j to Emphasize Attitude Toward ' Patenting of Clalma la Par i Jforthemi Possession. ; SEATTLE. Wash May 20. (Special.) Seattle's massmeetlng Mar 22 on the question of Alaskan coal promises to be a big- affair. It has been Indorsed 1 by the joint committee of several com mercial; orejanizations. all of which are determined to make the meeting a, "rouser." ' On this point the Rotary Club baa . adopted a report reciting- the troubles in Alaska and saying- that the object will be let "the people of the United States understand the attitude of Se attle toward the development of Alas ka coal," and in that way to emphasize the necessity of the Government issuing patents to coal claimants against whom no charges have been filed. "The massmeeting-," says the report, "Is not planned to Influence the de cision of courts upon coal filings ;now in controversy, but to hasten action on claims against which no contest has been made and so make available for development sufficient coal to meet the needs of the people of Alaska,- that their j progress ana prosperity way in iokilu- ed no longer." Greatly to the relief of transportation 1 men engaged in the Alaska trade, the Marine Hospital Service has modified its vaccination order, so that passengers who believe they have not been exposed to smallpox will be allowed to make affidavit as follows: "I hereby swear that I Intend to embark for a port tn Alaska, and to my best knowledge and belief I have not been exposed to small pox during tne past 14 aays, ana xnai nave truthfully answerea xne questions asked me as to my whereabouts during1 the past two weeks. On this showing the passenger win be given a certificate. The modified order will greatly reduce the number of vaccinations, which for a time threat ened to deprive Seattle of Its most profitable Summer excursion trade. . Tideland Holders Fear, There is something akin to- conster- 1 nation among: the owners of preferences to second-class tidelands by the dis covery that they have only 18 days left In which to exercise their rights. Un less thev act before June 7 with ref erence to lands between mean low and extreme low tides, the lands may be Bold as any other tidelands, to whom ever may apply for their purchase. ; Owners of extra-tideland property com- . plain that the state is forcing tnem xo take all the risk, in demanding a re lease of all claims in event the courts hold that the state has no right to sell. Dissatisfaction and acrimony are no ticeable among some owners, who claim that they have learned only through ac cident of the danger to their property. They assert that they have had no notice of the new law; that House bill 253, originally introduced by J. A. Mill er, carried an emergency clause and the 90-day interval of preference right will expire before the laws are printed: and that a way is opened for blackmail by unscrupulous speculators. The bill as drafted gave title out right to owners of the lands in ques tion on the basis that previous Legisla tures undoubtedly Intended to convey as tidelands the lands over which the tide ebbs and flows. But the bill was .amended so as to give tideland owners I a preference right to buy. at (1 per J lineal chain the extra tidelands, this 1 right to be exercised within 90 days. J The sweeping effect of the law ap- pears In the. fact that it will lorce thousands of owners of Summer homes I on Puget Sound to exercise their I rights or take the consequences. Each 1 of them must buy the extra tidelands j at once, or be liable to be placed in : competition with speculators in the ' open market. The holder of extra tide- ! lands -could seriously interfere with a property owner by forcing- him to pay ; for the privilege of getting to and from his Summer home. Seattle Will Have Weed Day. Saturday. May 7, is to be celebrated as Seattle's first "weed day," at which time all citizens are urged to make war on thistles, burdocks and similar plants. At the same time an effort will be made to clear rubbish from alleys. The cam paign against weeds started with .the Western Federation of Improvement Clubs at its meeting in Tacoma last August, and Seattle is trying to make its observance general. To that end Governor M. E. Hay has been asked to set aside May 27 as a legal holiday and to Invite the co-operation of the boy scouts and all school children in the de struction of weeds. Locally, the im provement clubs are calling attention to ordinance 6677 providing a penalty for leaving refuse in streets or alleys and the clubs request citizens to report any growth of weeds on parking- strips. H. L. - Slzer, author of the resolution adopted by the improvement clubs, says: "A general onslaught is requirea. We hope every man in this city will as sign to himself a part of this work, and perform it quickly and thoroughly There will be a second weed day, for such .weeds as start anew and run to seed. -' Electricians Near Death. A curious story comes from Bremer ton of two expert battleship repair men being accidentally imprisoned on the Colorado, and escaping death by chance. They were Dan Sachem, electrician, and M. J. Holt, a helper. They had" been sent to repair a wire conduit in the magazine and lost their way In the winding compartments. A door through which they had entered had been closed and In their search for another door they became so . confused that they could not tell one part of the ship from . another. They then tried to drill their way out. They were ready to give up when the point of a drill cut into a telephone cable, breaking the connec tion. This fortunate accident started an inquiry which resulted In finding the two men exhausted and near death far down in the ammunition and powder holds -J