Woman's Section Special Features SECTION FIVE Pages 1 to 12 PORTLAND, OEEGOJf, SUNDAY MOESISG, MARCH 21, 1&I5. NO. 12. VOL. XXXIT. "You Can Do Better on Third JH Street" The Greatest Rug Offering of the Year- New Arrivals in Wool and Fiber Rugs Marked at Special Prices for a One Week's Sale! Oriental. Medallion and Small Effects These are designs that will not be found in other stores; in fact, they are exclusive designs selected by us and represent patterns that will harmonize with the furnishings of most any room. They are shown in five different sizes, in a variety of color combinations and patterns. Long-wearing rugs of splendid design unusually priced. ' Coverings to Harmonize With Every Decoration So varied are the designs and color combinations that no matter what particular room you wish to use them in, you can select a rug that will harmonize perfectly with other decorations. The assortment is so large that almost any color or pattern may be selected. This advance showing at these special, pncea is worthy of your consideration. WOOL AND FIBER RUGS, 7:6x9 Some of the WOOL AND FIBER RUGS, 4:6x6:6 A most com- nrehensive assortment in this size to choose from. Special . WOOL AND FIBER RUGS, 6:0x9:0 For the small chamber or alcove. Good line of colors and designs. Special .'. WOOL AND FIBER RUGS, 9x12 These room-size wool and fiber in a splendid variety of colors and $3.95 or the small $7.65 newest designs that are pleasing and ef- dQ QC fective. Color combinations that will suit pO.J WOOL AND FIBER RUGS, 8:3x10:6 A varied as sortment of choice patterns, never be- A fifl fore shown. Extra special this weekviOU Rugs of d1 O I e patterns plaSi.i 80c Printed Linoleums New patterns, just sam pled, suitable for bath or kitchen use. Extra spe cial price, laid on2f your floor at " vC $1.50 Heavy Quality Inlaid Extra fine Linoleum that will give years of service. A long line of colors and patterns. . Extra special price, laid on your d "1 T floor, at only, the yard P Ask For S. & H. STAMPS Drapery Materials, Curtains and Couch Covers at Substantial Reductions 16c White Swiss. 36 inches -wide. $1.25 Oriental Striped Couch small, medium and large dots, 11 Covers In red, green and brown, QQ the yard HC each VO. 25c White Swiss, with colored 75c Hemstitched Curtains in ecrira, dots and figures, red, blue and 1 Q . guaranteed to wash perfectly, AQg, gold, the yard IOC the yard -XVJ. 45c and 48c Plain Scrim, with $5.50 Scrim and Marquisette Curtains, double drawn-work border, 36 OQ with C 1 u n y and lace - edge 4tJO CQ inches, the yard ..aSiJC insertion, the pair if Custom Drapery Work Foreign Cretonnes We are equipped to execute any kind A most exclusive showing of foreign of made-to-order draperies. Let us cretonnes in shadowed warps and estimate on your work. printed linens, per yd. from 75c to S7.60. COLONIAL BRASS BEDS $7.95 A remarkable brass bed value, in deed. A bed that is quoted in most stores at il4.5(i. Has large two-inch Colonial posts, fitted with door knob mounts and ten filler rods, fin ished in royal satin and very rigid in construction. $ 50 Worth of Furniture $ 5.00 Cash $1.00 Week $ 75 Worth of Furniture $ 7.50 Cash $1.50 Week $100 Worth of Furniture $10.00 Cash $2.00 Week $125 Worth of Furniture $12.50 Cash $2.25 Week $150 Worth of Furniture $15.00 Cash $2.50 Week $200 Worth of Furniture $20.00 Cash $3.00 Week $3.75 Silkoline Comforts $2.45 A big special from our Bedding Department. Silkoline-Covered, Pure White, Cotton-Filled Comforts, in full size, light grounds, in floral de signs, some with plain borders, to sell at this extra special price. We Charge No H Interest This Napoleon Bed, Dresser and Chiffonier, Selected Quartrd Uak Here is a remarkable value in a quartered oak Colonial Chamber Suite, coupled with credit terms that are truly unusual. The entire three pieces are exact copies of the old Colonial. All three are made in the same factory and : u : r. .1 1 , Tl, d,acDai nnA hif f nrtipr si rp narmunizts ueauuiunji, lire ucwv, PVAt-tlv as vou see in illustration. The cabinet work is above the average and the drawers slide smoothly and noiselessly. $592 $6.00 CASH-1.50 A WEEK Finished Golden All Oak Where Can You Duplicate an Eight-Piece Suite Like This for It is unusual value, of good design and at a price within your reach. Suite consists of six dining chairs, one buffet and one ped estal dining table, all of solid oak and just the right size for the average home. In f;icV, otuI rnnatnirtion it is eaual to that of the price. We claim that complete outfits can and this is a convincing example $552 suites costing double be bought best here, TERMS, $5.50 CASH-$1.25 A WEEK 'BP125 ygj?fj " i Over IBItSllli 5000 1 Prtland The Luxury Cart for Baby Sturgis One-Motion Collapsible The most luxurious, most comfortable, easiest-operated fold .ing Go-Cart it will be your pleasure to see. The Sturgis col lapses with one motion, has mohair cloth hoods which will not crack, adjustable backs that give the position you want and detachable wheels which can be removed in air" instant. The Sturgis is a cart for baby's health and comfort. Priced From $8.75 to $25 A-B SANITARY GAS RANGES The most satisfactory, most conve nient and most economical gas range produced today. The white tile fea tures alone merit its installation in your kitchen. Compare it-with- other gas ranges you have seen examine .the rust-proof ovens, the automatic, lighter and the sanitary features, then bear in mind that it costs no more than the ordinary gas range. n $5.95 THIS LIBRARY TABLE SPECIAL ONE WEEK The Library Table pictured here measures 42 - inches, in length; has large lower . shelf , heavy three-inch legs and slat ends. Built of selected, seasoned stock, with wide drawer and finished golden. The greatest Library Table value that we have offered in years. INDIAN WAR VETERANS RECALL DAYS OF 1855-56 Of 200 Men Who Enlisted From Polk County, Seven Survive Was Not Uncommon on Bill of Fare. -Horseflesh MONMOUTH. Or., Mar. 20. (Spe cial.) Of the 200 Polk County men who enlisted in the North Yakima Indian War of 1S55-56 now only seven survive. The Indian War veterans are among the county's oldest residents. Samuel Tetherow. of Kalis City, aged "9 years, came to Polk County in 1S45. He set tled near Monmouth and afterwards moved to Dallas. "In 1SS5 we went to Walla Walla where we were engaged in a four days" tight." Mr. Tetherow said. 'The soldiers lay there a month on guard and then ran the Indians across the Snake River into the Palouse country. At Yakima. In the light. Captain Hembree and many of his men were killed, and the horses were stolen." David L. Hedges, of Independence, ravs he remembers clearly the time when the Polk County men were camped at Palouse and lived on horse meat for a number of days. He was sent to The Dalles as an escort with provision wagons, and was there dis charged. ..For 63 years Mr. Hedges has lived in and near Independence, coming to Polk County when IB years old. James M. Campbell, of Dallas, served u private in the first regiment of Ore gon Mounted Volunteers from October 6. 1865. under Captain A. N. Armstrong and Captain Benjamin Birch, until May 8, 1856. He recalls: "I lost one horse and one mule while on duty, lived on half rations most of the time, chased Indians and was in a number of skir mishes. My health was good, and I am still active and in the best of health." Mr. Campbell passed his 81st birthday on October 9. His brother, T. J., cele brated his 81st anniversary on the same day. The two have lived 61 years in Polk-County. Coming from Missouri in the Spring of 1846. James Layton Collins settled near Dallas, where he has lived 68 years. His 82d birthday will be ob served on May 9. Sixty-one year a resident of Polk. Lafayette W. Loughary, of Monmouth, says: "We were mustered in at Salem, January 25. 1856, went from there to The Dalles, via Portland, thence to Wild Horse Creek. We remained here a few days.'then proceeded to the fort at Walla Walla, where the commander hanged an Indian spy. After we crossed the Snake River we saw the first wild Indians. From there we moved to the Columbia River below Priest Rapids, crossed the river to the west side. Horse meat formed our chief diet, it'ext we went down stream to the mouth of the Yakima and received provisions. Three days more we traveled and struck some Indians. Captain Embry was killed. We killed one Indian. We went on to Klickitat Valley and lost our horses. Again we moved. This time it was to Salem and we were mustered out on May 8, 1856." Thomas J. Hayter. of Dallas, and Thomas H. Montgomery, of Rock Creek, are the others who survive. Their story runs close to the recollec tions of Mr. Loughary. Not until the Spring of 1913 did the Indian War veterans of Polk County receive pay from the state for the horses and mules which they lost while on duty. MOTHER DECOYS SON HOME Woman Who Put Cp All Money for Ball Saves It by Boy's Arrest. PHILADELPHIA, March 14. In an swer to a decoy letter Frank Keeler 23 years old, a few days ago. returned to Philadelphia from Riverside, N. J and was arrested on a charge of jump ing bail. His mother wrote the decoy letter. She wrote it because she had put up every dollar of her savings. $500, for the ball, which the authorities would declare forfeited unless the son returned to stand trial on a charge of larceny. She is 60 years old. She can no longer go out and wash and sweep and sew as she did in the years when Frank and his three brothers were schoolboys. She cannot earn another $500. So when She heard that Frank had left town just the day before his trial was scheduled, she borrowed a letter head from the printing Arm where Frank had . last worked and wrote: "There is some money waiting for you at this office, and if you will come back they will give it to you." Probably she would not have been able to write it if Special Officers Bender and Daufman, of the Front and Master-Streets Sta tion, had not stood by and told her that she owed as much to the law, and she owed as much to herself. These were the officers who arrested Frank. After a hearing on the charge of bail-jumping he will probably be tried on the charge of stealing money from a coal office at Ninth and Jeffer son streets. Mrs. Keeler looks her age, and in the neighborhood they are beginning to call her "old Mrs. Keeler." Last week Frank's oldest brother Thomas, who was the main support of the family, died of tuberculosis.- 12 KATIES IN ONE SCHOOL Lancaster County Haa Only ' Six Family Names on One Roll. LANCASTER, Pa, March 14. Fairview School, in eastern Lancaster County, is one of the most unique in ' this region. Until this year there were only five family names on the roll, and now the- Kauffman name has been added. There are 17 pupils named Fisher and 12 named King. . They are all children of Amui'i parents. It is' one of the few schools- in the county In which . the children ': sing German hymns. In another school In the same region there are 13 girla named Katie, TESTING MACHINES PUT PURCHASES BY CITY ON BIG SCIENTIFIC BASIS .. System at City HaJ! Now Installed and Ready to Try Out All Materials Used in Various Departments of J City Work With Elimination of Supplies Below Standard as One .tim. fl - - ''& - J;. i fr ' t- , COMPLETION . yesterday of the task h s 3si -: ' ' . , I of installing a series of testing ma- :,;,- . I chines at the City Hall, Is to be o k . E : ifsio -. : y . I I L - ' i- . 1 it I. . .f; i .. . . j ' f . i ' fir x-r ids fe; COMPLETION . yesterday of the task of installing a series of testing ma chines at the City Hall, Is to be followed by the. changing of the city's purchasing system to a scientific basis. All supplies will receive accurate and official tests to see that they measure up - to the specifications under which they are purchased. The machinery as installed cost several thousand dollars and has fitted, the city for testing op erations of a scope that probably can not be handled by any other city In the Northwest. Machines were installed for the test ing ' of . paper, -. steel, paving materials, cement, oils of all kinds, coal, fire hose, alloys, brass bronze, wire, cables, rope, belting, .'building stone,- brick, tile, sewer pipe, reinforced concrete and wooden beams. Heretofore these com modities have been purchased either on the statement of ' the dealer that they measured up to specifications or by tests' in private laboratories. It is expected the new system will save the city a great deal of money and will result in all supplies being up to the standard. ' Heavy Apparatus In Basement. The testing apparatus was selected and installed by City Chemist Dulin. Some of the machines are in the chem ical laboratory on the top floor of the City Hall, while the heavy machinery has been given a place in a room in the basement. Everything' will be in work ing shape tomorrow. The largest machine of the number is a Riehle' Tester, with a capacity of 150,000 pounds - for , either tension or compression ' tests."' This machine is equipped' with' a ' combination extenso meter and compressometer. the. inven tion of Professor S. H. Graf, of the Oregon "Agricultural College. This gigantic-tester, is to be used by the city in testing nearly all the ma terials of. engineering and building construction, - such as steel, brass, bronze, wire, cables, ropes, belting, con crete, building stone, brick, tile, sewer pipe, . reinforced concrete beams and wooden beams. The tests will deter mine the strength in tension, compres sion . 'or. cross-bending of these ma terials. In addition to the materials mentioned it can be used to determine the ultimate breaking strength of many other things. This is the only machine of its kind in Portland and the third ever installed in Oregon, the other two belonging- to the Oregon Agricultural College. ; , , The apparatus ' includes a Riehle transverse testing machine for cast iron or other materials of - like nature and a crusher -ana a pulverizer tor crush ing and pulverizing, samples for tests and analyses. It includes also a centri fuge machine for the determination of water and sediment in fuel oils and the separation of the pigment and ve hicle in paints. Heat Value to Be Determined. Heat value of fuels will be deter mined by an Emerson, fuel calorimeter of the same type as used by the United States bureau of standards. This In strument : consists . of a double-walled copper tank filled with water in which a steel bomb or globe, containing the sample of coal or oil is immersed. The coal or oil is: ignited and virtually in stantaneously burned by an electrical charge and the heat generated by the combusion is taken up by the water in the calorimeter. A proper reading of a finely graduated thermometer cali brated to read to one one-hundredth of a degree Centigrade makes it possible to determine the heat received by the water and hence the heating value of the sample of coal or oil. Samples of asphalt and bituminous cements, are taken by the city from every cargo-destined to be used dn city work. Proper tests will be made at the laboratory to determine whether, 1) Powerful Machinery for Teetins Every Kind of Kmclurerln mm Ha lug Material. Oscar Beck, Physleal Tester la Machine 111, aad B. "'" ; City Chemist, la Bockurouad. (3) laboratory Fitted for lllaK .Wsalt aad All Otaer Paving Materials. 3) Machines for Testing; Coal, uel OH, Paper aad Alloys. these samples reach the standard de manded by the city s specmcauuns inu all found faulty are rejected. Inspec tors maintained at the various paving plants are to secure the proper mixing of the bituminous materials used in paving work. Samples also are ob tained directly from the mixtures when delivered on the streets. The instruments include a "standard" brick rattler for making abrasion tests on paving brick and blocks. Devel abrasion cylinder is used for determin ing thea, coefficient of wear of rock such as is used for macadam or pave ments with a rock base. With the new machines the city probably will make tests and analyses of materials for the Commission of Public Docks, County Commissioners and School Board whenever requested. FLOOD FROM THAW FEARED Minneapolis Has Crews Digging Trenches In Snow and Ice. MINNEAPOLIS, Mar. 16. City crews are shoveling drains and catch basins to make gutter lines in the snow and ice, all to prevent flooded walks and streets in a thaw that threatened to grow steadily worse. Walter Walsh, superintendent of the city street de partment, said that more than 600 men and 200 teams were at work on street cleaning and that more would be added if emergency bonds proposed to relievo the unemployment situation were is sued. The Civil Service Commission has posted notices to Job seekers to apply direct to the ward street commissioners. MANY THINGS IN RAISINS Hair, Dirt and TarU of Insects Found and Seller Arrested. Philadelphia!"" March ii. one timind of raisins purchased by a spe cial agent of the Dairy and Food Com mission was analyzed by Btato t.ncin ist Charles H. LaWall. Ho found: Prunes, rice, beans and fuzzy dirt. Human and animal hairs, straight and curly, and fibers of cotton and wool dyed green, yellow, brown, pink and gray: Straw and a little bit or bran. ; Sand, cornstarch, broken wheat and yeast spores. Pine wood and fragmonts of uniden tified other timber. Tobacco loaf, cigarette paper and ci garette tobacco. Also, the winjrs and les oi a iuvr unfortunate insects. Otherwise the raisins er! nil riglit. As the outcome, William ollason. i;l South Fourth street, in front of whose store the collection was bought, was held by Magistrate Rooney la MOO ball for court.