DRAMATIC, REAL ESTATE AUTOS, ROADS SECTION FOUR Pages 1 to 12 - : : . -.v . .-rmri : - oiTvn ' impvivr. . nVKAfP.l? 24-. 1012. r XO. 4 . VOL. XXX). . riKjLiAiu. 'Uivwiuj. oujux jiwti....v., . . - i runiLHiiu numun No his h - r e fff store c an compete nil y with Wuliam FIRST AND WASHINGTON Sons Floor Cover ings With Service and Beauty Put In ioStay In V 1 I n I I r - "I i i rr-T J. HTH. k' mm wnrnmi mBMm r inn n l That's the kind we sell and we call your particular attention to our ele gant showing . ROOM - SIZE RUGS 600 PAT TERNS TO CHOOSE FROM Five racks like picture, each display ing 120 patterns. Hugs from Gx9 feet to 12x15 feet on display. Anglo Persians, Indians, Arabians, - Royal Worcesters, Bagdads and lepracs itmie spe-' Av cial bargains: Oriental Wiltanas, 9x12 SS7.50 Wilton Velvets, 9x12. Eureka Velvets, 9x12 . . Metropolitan Brussels, 9x12. All other brands equally low. .$25.00 914.50 $18.00 Smith's Tapestries, 9x12 Tyvan Art Rugs, 9x12 Anglo-Persians, 9x12. Special Brussels, 9x12. L$15L00 120 .5700 . 9.50 Don't forget we have the extra large lings in stock. Sold on Easy Terms Has receptacle for bedding; makes a comfortable bed. Frame is of oak. Seat and back upholstered over oil tempered steel spring. Covered in Chase leather. Gadsbys' special price this week $25.00 Folding Go -Cart With Hood S$6.75 We know you will be pleased with this folding: Go-Cart it is a practical desijrn strong, durable, light in weight, and folds flat, so it can be taken-on the street oarsT Made of imitation leather has half-inch rub ber tires and comes complete, with fold ing hood, nU $6.75 Great Sale Handsome jj Bedroom Uuthts, Unly 9.K The Bed may be had in sev eral finishes, juk like cut, with continuous posts, large size tubing, a handsome, yet plain design, d T C f Special price Q J . i cviuco ill .'an. ui $12.50 The Dresser eomes iu oak or niaple, at secial. . . The Washstand, also in oak or (maple, at f special only. . O The Bed may be had in the cream finish to nisteh maple 'dresser and washstand. ' AVe have Metal Beds in all t-izes and all -colors of enamel. We are . "We are . t 111CIUI I " 11.- -in . . ' taxi. ' . w . - - .... . . . if anions for the values we give. (f -fl Q AA offeringrthese special, $1.85"to p lOtUU Buy Your Heater at Gadsbys' Remember, We Have 30 Different Styles of Heaters From $2.00 Up All Heaters Set Up Free Cast Top, With Lid. JUNIOR AIETIGHTS With cast top and lid, sheet steel body, steel linings. Three sizes, $4.50, $5.50 and 8.50. Same .with plain steel ton. in three sizes. $2.50, $3.00 and $4.00. NEW MODEL HEATER The principal feature of this heater is slow combustion. One feed a day is all the fuel you need; has large front feed door, swing top, with lid, nickeled foot rails and orna ments. Takes 18-inch Wood. Price $T.S5 C.r3 - mam .. W $7.85 :'V Use Our Exchange Department If v.u have furniture that doesn't suit-want something more up-to-date' and .better,; phone us and we'll senil a competent man to see it and arrange to take it as part payment on the kind you want the Ciadsbv kind. We'll make vou a liberal allowance for your goods, and we 11 sell you new furniture at low prices Th. new furniture will be promptly delivered. Easy terms on balance. Have turm- turo you 11 be proud of. The Great Majestic Range Never equaled. No other Range eonir pares with it if j-ou are contem plating the pur chase of a . Range, get our free book on Range compar isons; you can then familiarize your- orit jiii nit: iiaiigu - yfr. i ' d.i a ts, fiiii'.si if vii : .tm u i (nv i and $") ier month. Ask for one of pur free cook books." tm ' ' : "-: jMJtSTK) S 1 fmjtsTic f I a 0 f rw !!! a.-i'&i.WH 4 $12 All-Cotton Felt Mattress $8.95 Gadsbys' Mattresses Always Please Bed Davenports -bpeeial ' These splendid white cotton felt Mattresses, weighing .50 ' pounds, are rcorrrpressed down to six inches in thickness, -remain- soft and elastic, and do not wad; equal to the mattresses so extensively advertised ' at $15; absolutely sanitary, durable and comfortable. Gadsby's price, special only! $8.9o Ask the man who sleeps on one. $40 Leader Steel Range Equal to any $40.00 Range in. the market; oven 20x16 inches, as bestos lined through out. You cannot break the lids. Sp'l $29.50 Gadsbys 3-Piece -f $25 Parlor Suit P Specially Priced Q.50 Parlor Suite, this style, three different patterns, in birch t frames; finished a dark, rich rosewood; upholstered in 'velour; regular $25.00; cut to, special...... $19.50 Others as low as $15.00. Great Sale Dining Chairs : LlJ 0 M This Solid Oak Dining Chair,. $2.50 Box seat, sub stantially made and beauti fully finished; solid oak seat. Regular $3.50. Gads by's price en special only iff JJ i ' .$1.10 for This (ioam Omk Ulnine Cbalr You will find it elsewhere at 11.50 or high er. It is made of selected oak, grolden finish. There are scores of dinlnff chair hfLrfi-ains in all f 1 grades and f in" E) 1 - X J priced at ' ishes, ' ; J JlKmMfia:sgjincsBimfnrtr umiiiiihii ini ' i iiiiiiiii'iiiniiii WINS HIGH PRAISE "The Guardians of the Colum ' bia," by John H. Williams, : Lauded, in Review. EASTERN PAPERS', LAVISH Oregon Metropolis Is Commended' ns City Beautiful, and Scenic Moun tains of Pacific Northwest Called Inspiring. High praise for Portland and a note worthy appreciation, by a famous trav- ler and Alpinist, of the snow-peaks seen from this city are expressed by the New York Evening Fost in review. ing a new Portland book. Oregon and Washington mountain scenery, says the New York newspaper, is "unsurpassed unvwhere": It Ik destined to yield a vast and profitable tourist crop. The Kvening Post's comments were called forth by "The Guardians of the rvilumbia." the Illustrated volume ivhl.-h John H. Williams has written and published on the great scenery of the Columbia-Cascade region. Calling special attention to some of the book's fine illustrations, the reviewer oe rlares "Oreeon's metropolis one of the most superbly placed cities in the world." As promoters of tourist travel to the Northwest the Kvenlng Tost discusses the now volume and its companion, "The Mountain That Was 'God.'." by the same author. In a review which Is re markable alike for Its 'cordiality and its acquaintance with the districts de scribed in these books. The review is from the pen of the well-known author and traveler, Henry T. Finrk, one of the editors of the paper. Mr. Finck, who has many friends in Portland, has himself described the Northwestern fountains in one of his best known books. "The Taclfic Coast Scenic Tour." He spent the last Summer in Switzer land. Kxperl's Irnlie t.lvm. Fresh from the glacial wonders of the Alps, Mr. Finck nevertheless con fesses that he is "awed and thrilled" by the views of Mt. Hood and tne other peaks shown in the Williams books. His discussion of their value for tourists follows: By Issuing those two handsomely Illus trated volumes on the mountains and for ests of our Northwest, Mr. Williams has rendered a service of great value to the .States of Washington and Oregon, and to all Nature-loving Americans. It Is possible, as the writer of this review can attest, to be fresh from a fortnight's sojourn at the Rlf felalp, above Zermatt, In face of the Mat terhorn and the giacial wonders of the Gorner Grat. acknowledged the climax of scenic Switzerland, and still bo awed and thrilled at the mere sight or tne piciurrs of Mount Tacoma (Rainier) and the three guardians of the Columbia River Mounts Hood, Adams and St. Helens Included In these books. To enjoy the "Playground of Europe." Americans are helping the Euro peans to spend JI50.00O.00O a . year. It M safe to predict that some day Oregon and Washington will harvest as many millions from the visitors to their mountain and for est playground as they now do from their bountiful fruit crops; and Mr. Williams' pic tures and descriptions will greatly accelerate the advent of that date. Hla books are per haps the strongest argument ever brought forward In favor of the exhortation. "See America Too." More than B0 photographer?, professional and amateur, contributed their best to make "The Guardians of the Co lumbia" a pictorial monument to the Pa cific Coast; and so well are their contribu tions reproduced that one needs a reading glass to get all their Impressive details. The number of these illustrations exceeds 2tx. Many are full page, some in colors. A glance at them will convince any Alpinist that we have picturesque peaks, snowfields, glaciers and rugged Ice formations unsur passed anywhere; and so cast are the four mountains named that not only do they dwarf the Cascade Range near by. but all along the Oregon and Washington coasts, at a distance of 50 miles and more, one may say of them In astonishment, "Thou art so far and yet so near." City Heantlful. No one, surely, can look at the picture of Portland on page 61. with Mount Hood towering In the background, without con-ft-ssing that Oregon's metropolis Is one of the most superbly placed cities In the world. The Impression Is strengthened by another telrphotopraphlc view, on page US. of the city with another stupendous snow peak. St Helens, as the background. From the heights, in the residential district, four more snow mountains are. visible. Mr. Williams' text lis devoted chiefly to Hood. St. Helens and 'Adams. He tells the story of their career as volcanoes so far as geologists have laid It bare; he relates the legends the Indians inventd about them: gives accounts of flrst ascents; of present facilities for reaching and climbing them: of automobile roads and mountain clubs and hotels, and so on; while Harold Douglas Langllle contributes a chapter on the vast forests which hold about one-third of the timber In our country. Other leading Eastern newspapers have found "The Guardians of the Columbia" a compelling invitation to Americans to know their own country better. "Here." says the New .York World, "are glaciers and grandeurs more than rivaling. those which thous ands go to the Alps to see." The New York Sun says: "In 'Ths Guardians of the Columbia,' Mr. John H. Williams continues with his mission of making knownthe natural beauties of the Pa cific Northwest, with the help of superb photographs. The book should divert tourists to scenes 83 well worth seeing as the Yosemite." Itoxton Pnper Prple. "In this picturesque description of Western mountain scenery," the Christian Science Monitor, of Boston, declares, "the author succeeds admira bly in making his presentation 'a call to better appreciation of the splendor and worth of our own land. Without any attempt at exaggeration, he pre sents his subject simply and sym pathetically, making it an appeal not only to the lover of magnificent scenery and Indian legends, but also to the geologist, the economist and the climber." - - The Louisville Courier-Journal in a column review pays the following en thusiastic tribute to the author's text: In John H. Williams', fascinating -new book of pictures and text about the ma jestic Western mountains, the author's de scriptive power rises equal to his task of painting on a grand scale what the hand of Ood has so magnificently laid out. But the. eve and hand of a word-painter are not his sole possessions. He s.es the geo logical ages at work, uptitlting herc an ocean bed. here an island. folding the earth's crust, molding colossal mountain barriers, planting the forests. Nor does he forbear to nole -those earliest human as sociations which have invested the scene with the poetry of myth and legend. Fasci nating are the Indan legends whereby the bronxe aborigines attempted to account for the marvels that thrilled their primitive imagination. . . . Especially interesting I Is the story of the birth of the great moun. I tains, told In the author's eloquent and graphic text. The Springfield Republican has this to say about the third section of the book. The Forests,"-by Harold Doug las Langllle: The Interest and value of the book are much Increased by the chapter which deals with the forests vividly and yet with sci entific accuracy of detail. The forests of Oregon and Washington are second only as natural wonders to the Sequoyas of Cali fornia, and in the depth of the Northern forests there arc revelations of natural beauty which even the big trees of Cali fornia may not rival. In Washington and Oregon together there Is estimated to be no less than a third of the standing merchant able timber In the entire country, a state ment esflly to be believed as one looks at the remarkable photographs here, which .how beside the puny rigures of the lumber men the Immense -.trunks of the various species. It may be doubted whether the forests of the Northern I'aclfic, Slates have ever been pictured between the covers of a book In the manner approaching the excel lence of the present volume. MEMORIAL SERVICES HELD Spanish War. Veterans Pay Tribute to Late Commander Hurlford. Comrades of the. late John K. Ilul ford. Commander of Scout Yountf Camp, XTnited Spanish War Veterans, and senior vice-commander of tho state organisation, assembled Friday nlsht at their hall nt Eleventh and Alder streets and conducted memorial serv ices in his honor. Circuit Judno Gan tenbein presided. The services were simple but impressive, and he paid tribute to tho life and character of tho deceased. Others who testified in short addresses to the admirable qualities of Mr. Hulford as a citizen and a sol dier were Klmer U. Lundherg-, .lay H. Upton, Roy Kesl. A. J. Salisbury, A. K. Cooper, Clarence It. llotchklss end Dr. L. W. Hyde. Before adjournment the following; resolutions were adopted by the camp: Whereas, In the denth of our beloved com rade and commander. John R. Hulfonl. Scout Young Camp. N". 2. Cnltert Spnnh-h War Veterans, has lost an able anil effi cient officer and a tireless worker for the welfare of tho organisation and its mem bers. No member h.a-s been more willing to sacrifice his time and means to Dirt d serv ing roinrjd'i or to build up and promote tho welfare of the order thau" was our lal commander. . - Broad In sympathies, firm In his convic tions, kind and courteous to all and yet with a rigid adherence to right and justice which could not be shaken by any appeal to sentiment or prejudice In his death Scout Young Camp has lost a member, than whom no other was better loved, the state a loyal and patrlollc cltl xen. the community an upright and hoU' St mail, respected and loved by all who li-cl the privilege and plecsuio of his acquaint ance. ' He It resolved that these resolutions be spread upon tho uilmil'-N of Kcoi't , Young Camp No. 2. Cnited Spanish Wur Vi trau. and a copy thereof be given to the widow of our deceased commander and to I he prc;s of the city of Portland. Be It further resolved that the char ter be draped In mourning for :t( dnjs. Harvey Wells has been elected by Scout Young Camp to succeed Mr. Hul ford as senior vice-commander of. th state organization, and will probably accept the office. WIFE CEASES TO PROVIDE In Six Years Husband Earned $10, Suys Woman Asking Divorce. ALBANY. Or., Nov. 23. (Special.) That her husband contributed only about $10 to the household expenses during their .wedded life of six yeurs was a statement of Lenora J. Morris in the State Circuit Court here today In the trial of her divorce suit against Benjamin F. Morris. Judge Galloway gave her a decree. Mrs. Morris testified that when they were married, six years ago, they began living In a house she owns In Lebanon, and have lived there ever since. She said she had an income from other property and with this she paid all of the household bills. She told the court that she not only bought all the sup plies for the house and her own clothes, but paid for her husband's clothing, too. She said that when they went oa pleas, ure trips it was she who paid the rail road fare and hotel bills and that she even provided Morris with spending money. - , The plaintiff testified that notwith standing her husband Is a big, strong man, he had not worked more than five or six days a year during tho past six years. She told the court that 30 davs' work during the entire time of their married life was a fair estlmato of his activity In the line of manual labor during that period. FOREST PESTS TO BE SLAIN Agricultural College and Govern ment to Co-Operate. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGK, Corvallis, Or.. November 23. (Special.) Announcement was made here today that arrangements are being perfected for the establishment of a department of forest entomology, which will de vote its entire time to co-operative work with the Government bureau of . i ,. q .1 nrivdtA interests to en luuiuius j " carry on investigations toward the re duction and control of insect pests. V. I. Safro, researcn assisiuni m en tomology, who has returned from Ash land, where he has been in conference with W. D. Edmunston, Government expert, reports that preliminary cruises which have been made in some of the most densely timbered regions of the state have shown insect pests to be prevalent. A. B. Cordlcy, dean of the school of agriculture, is now in Washington, D. C, making final arrangements for a joint campaign which the Government j . i. - nff.tntiltiirttl onllps-p will eon- ana iiic - duct In an effort to rid Oregon's for ests of insect pests. LEWISTON SHOW TO BE FINE Wide Interei-t Manifested In Live stuck Exhibit December 9 to 13. r.KWISTON. Idaho. Nov. 23. (Spe cial.) So broadcast Is the Interest In the Northwest Livestock Show to be held in Lewlston, December 9 to 13, nrt an keen is the interest in tne exni- hitlon of stock here, that it has been necessary for the association to pro vide Increased quarters lor tne siocu. Daily Inquiries from all sections ot the Northwest bear out tne stuteineui. that the show will exceed expectations. t nresent there are move man a'u Individuals who have signified their In tention to ship rtock to Lewlston with view of taking away tne ju niai has been offered In cash premiums. The pure bred stock sale that will be conducted promises to be one of the distinctive features of the show ihi. vear. owing to the large number of breeders who have signified their Intention to ship stocK to ticwiatun for sale.