a f SECTION FIVE Pages 1 to 12 man Woman's Section Special Features VOI,. XXXI V. PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 23, 1915. NO. 21. A Showing of High Quality Freocln Wiltoo Rogs That Everyone Should Know About y The most comprehensive, most varied showing in all the city. Scores 4 and scores of French Wilton Rugs, such as AngloPersian, Royal ft Ka-Shan, Herati and Aridibel, in all the wanted sizes and colors. y French Wilton Rugs, 27x54 in J? 7E- French Wilton Rugs, 6x9, large doj Elf size, at only PvJ J choice of colors, at J)00Ovl French Wilton Rugs, 36x63 in d - f C f" French Wilton Rugs, 8:3x10:6, d CO 'TC size, at only y 1 v.JU excellent new designs, at .pOu I O French Wilton Rugs, 4:6x7:6, COf OC French Wilton Rugs, 9x12, ?r ff large assortment, at... iVJaCiiJ scores of patterns, at.... pDV.vlvl $5.00 5 fis handsome Bed Daven port in youf home. and then $1.00 a week quickly pays for it. It has a fine quarter-sawed oak frame, with standard ends, covered in best quality Span ish Chase leather. Opens with flJC OC one motion. Specially priced P"J.OJ 1 V 80 Cent Printed Linoleum, Laid on (2Cr $1-50 Inlaid Linoleum, Laid on 6 1 1 7 Your Floor, Special, the Yard UvJC Your Floor, Special, the Yard. . .N' ' J STAMPS ; J iSSfel C d- ! . I Folding Sulky with I a J- Hand-woven Rattan Hour-Glass Chair $3.99 Just as pictured, large and comfortable. Suitable for interi or as well as out-of-door use. Folding Sulky with large hood $2.85 Remarkable value, indeed. Collapses with one motion, has large rubber-tired 'wheels, enameled black. These $8.75 Large Arm Rockers offered at $5.85 Large comfortable arm rockers built of quartered oak, wide up holstered seat, panel back. $3.50 Folding Card Tables felt or leather cloth tops, now $2.79 S SO Worth of Furniture $ 6.00 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 $6.50 Continuous Post Child's Crib with drop sides and close filler rods, $4.45 We Charge No Interest Your iKHii m mi Credit Is Surely Good at Powers I his Solid Oak, Eight-Piece tfjTfc v9 vm Dining-Room Suite for only pi, ,"8 q $5.00 Cash $1.00 a Week The suite consists of eight pieces, ali in selected oak stock, six saddle seat dining chairs, one large buffet and one 6-foot pedestal dining table. The special price. coupled with the low credit terms, puts this suite within reach of everyone desirous of furnishing the dining-room. Pieces of different design may be substituted if you like and at the same special price. i Sleep on a Sealy Mattress Guaranteed for 20 Years, $25.00 New Showing of Jacobean and William and Mary Furniture Protect JRgd Cedsr Chests Your Apparel from Moth Special Showing arid Sale of SomeTwo DozenCedar Chests A recent shipment has just brought us a splendid assortment of Red Cedar Chests Chests that will keep the moths from your clothes, pro tect your furs and give you a safe storage for all apparel. These' Chests range in size from 42 to 54 inches. Some are fitted with trays and others with brass trimmings. Special at $14.75, $15.50, $17.75, $22.25 and up. Estimate! Furnished on Draperies IB jjf Come to Powers for Scrims You Save on Every Yard You Buy 13c SWISS New Dotted. Fiprured and Checked Swiss, 36 -1 - inches, the yard 1 1C $16.35 For This $21.00 Dresser It Is i'itr value, indeed. Nicely niado, well finished and fitted with a lar-Ke mirror, built of solid oak with ncroii posts and standards. ow siAUK.u rigiirea Madras in green witn. Diack warp. wiotn .1 incnes, yard.. 29c ."- 50e VOILE inch Voiles li white, or ecru, the yard Plain 46- lvory 30c c TO IKic SCRIM White and ivory scrims, with colored i q borders on both sides, yard 1C i NEW VOILE S In white. Ivory ana ecru, wnn a o u D 1 e borders. iuu ,.t . inches wide, spe cial, the yard. t sinvnovrns New shipment of 50-inch Sundours, in brown, srreer. mulberry and blue; 'ast?Q colors, the yard DC 25c CRIME LAID TO FAULTS IN TRAINING CHILDREN Mrs. Schoff Tells Kugene Women to Pay More Attention to Boys and to Make School a Pleasure, not a Prison. EUGENE. Or., May 22. (Special.) "Stealing belongs to all classes of society. Kleptomania is synonomous with lack of home training. Punish ment of a child will not stop it; home education, tho development of ideas, will. Reform schools must be abol ished as incubators of crime, and the school must substitute. Modern child labor laws are a menace to children, driving: them into the streets and into mischief. Parents must be educated to eliminate 75 per cent of the present SOO.000 annual infant mortality. World peace, problems of sociology and the abolition of crime depend upon the de velopment of the home life and the education of the fathers and mothers of the Nation." Such was the message of Mrs. Frederic Schoff. president of the National Consress of Mothers, and director of the home education division of the United States Bureau of Educa tion, to the women of Kucene at the Eugene Commercial Club this week. "IHin't object because tho children litter up the houne with their play,' she continued. "We don't like their noise, so we let them bo out on the streets to ploy. We don't like to an tr their questions, and they fro somewhere else to find out away from the home supervision." Correspondence lessons in mother hood and homemaklng is the Govern ment's project under the home educa tion department of the Bureau of Edu cation to bring about these reforms through the home. "The fathers and mothers have more teaching- to do than all the teachers in the world," she said. "Yet they are the most unprepared. The work of the home underlies the whole civic life of the Nation. So many babies die and so many people go wrong- because the. parents fail to see the right and tho wrong way. "We- can't do anything further for tho children unless they live." she ex plained. "With the death of 300,000 babies a year. 75 per cent of whom can.be saved, it is a crime not to edu cate the parents. No one can save the children but the mothers. "Children are not born wrong they have not had the proper surroundings. If a child steals he has not had the training that teaches him that it is wrong to steal and teaches him to re spect the rights of others. "Punishing a child is not going to stop it. This is not constructive. Teach him what is the riirht thing. Tut ideas into his head. . Tell him of the knights of old and of the ideals of manhood. It is a slow process. To administer a punishment requires less patience. "Nine-tenths of the children arrested are boys. To think that we have so failed in our duties to boys. Men are not worse than girls they haven't been given the right treatment. The fathers have been too busy to tend to them. "It is almost a proverb that the children of wealthy parents are unable to equal the standard of their fathers. It is false kindness to make things too easy for a boy and to give him money. It Is unfair to the boy not to let him bear his share of the work. Teach the boy self-control and prevent drunkenness and crime. Give him some responsibility. We Ignore the fact that they need social life. He longs for excitement. Fill his life so full of good things that he won't have time for tho evil things. "Schools are made prisons for boys. They are tied down to lessons, not in terested in life, and by forcing all Into the same mould you have wronged the children. If a school is all right you couldn't keep the children out. The fault is not with them; it's with the parents. "One cause of boys' going wrong is that we force them into doing what we don't want them to do. Our pres ent child labor laws will be one of the greatest menaces to children. It is absolutely wrong to prevent them from doing anything to earn money." Ice Cream Tempts; Job Lost. CLEVELAND, May 16. Miss . Ira Vegney, 1790 East Fortieth street, waitress in the restaurant of Curtis Wheseemore, 0504 St. Clair avenue, was discharged because she ate her em ployer's ice cream, according to testi mony before Municipal Judge Baer. TV'hessemore withheld $6 from her wages for the ice cream, and Miss Vegney sued him. She was awarded $5. YOUTH ELUDES PURSUERS Bostonian Breaks Away From Po liceman and Makes Escape. BOSTON, May .15. A crowd of 2000 joined in the chase for a boy prisoner who broke away from Inspector Fel ton pust as they turned Into Pember ton square a few days ago on their way to police headquarters. The boy. who was arrested In the store of W. & A. Bacon Company, on a charge of stealing two pairs of shoes, gave his name as Louis J. Flint. 19 years old. of East Fifth street. South. Boston, which the police say Is fictitious. The inspector placed one handcuff on his prisoner and held the other in his hand. As the two turned the corner of Pemberton square the boy broke away. He ran across the square with cuff dangling from his hand, knocking over two men who attempted to stop him, ran up Beacon street to Beacon place, where he scaled the wall into the Granary burying ground, and ran out of the Tremont-street gate, down Bromfield street to the corner of Prov ince street and Province court, where he escaped. The cries of "stop him" diew the crowd and it impeded the police in their attempt to catch the thief. HISTORY OF FIRST WHITE SETTLER IN OREGON REVEALED AT HIS GRAVE Resting Place of Ewing Young, Who Took Up Home in 1831. Is Visited by T. T. Geer, Who Compiles Data of Romantic Early-Day Events. 1 1 . " . 1 j " , . ....... . . 4 yx -vu.toir .-v j9 X i i A--"Y -'ir.H' j' -r.s - - ' - -i C3fr 77&- Jari .'. V-rr'' - vCtT r ) r Of 1 j -i-J5!L -J nV'M-r" BY T. T. GEER. THK man or woman who is not fascinated by a delve info the early history of Oregon is to be pitied for the lack of an enthusiastic temperament which. in many ways, contributes to the enjoyment of life and to a more complete appreciation of the fact that at least this, portion of Old Earth is good to look on and even to be on. The beginning of Oregon's history is unlike that of any of trie other states of the Union in that it was tsv,Uled and claimed by citizens of the United States, largely, at a time when it did not belong to the United States nor to any other country. The first serious move in this direction was made by Jason Lee and his companions in 1834, followed by degrees and slow degrees by stockmen who were attracted by its immense resources as a grazing region, and by others who had heard of its unusually favorable combination of soil and climate for the production of all kinds of cereals, vegetables and fruits. So gradually did all this come about that it is quite possible actually to designate the particular incident and the person who figured In- the begin ning of things in the settlement and ultimate acquisition of "The Oregon Country." Hiving Young Flrnt Settler. v The purpose of this article is to set forth some of the details of the coming to Oregon of Kwing Young In the. year 1834, he being the first independent American white settler in Oregon, so far as the matter can be determined. He was born in Tennessee but the date of his birth is not known. He was in California as early as 1828. trapping in the San Joaquin Valley. Afterward he went to New 'Mexico, where he mar ried a native woman, by whom he had one son. Joaquin by name: After a little while, however, his restless dis position returned and, leaving wife and child, he revisited California and in the Fall of 18S4 fell in with Hall J. Kelley, a school teacher from Bos ton, who had made a painstaking study of Oregon from such books as he could find. With a party of 16 the trip was made to Oregon, overland, bringing to the new country about 100 horses and mules. They stopped at the Methodist Mission near Salem, which had been established that same Summer by Jason Lee and his companions, and it is a matter of record that they as sisted the mission in making a cart the first ever constructed in all this Oregon country. In the Fall of 1S36 Young conceived the idea that there would be "big money" in the importation of cattle and horses Into the Willamette Valley and at once organized a stock company for the purpose of carrying it Into ef fect. There were 13 subscribers to the stock, amounting in the aggregate to 14600. of which Young himself took $1100. Jason Lee J600 and Dr. Mr. Loughlin Jo00. In the party, of which Young was chosen leader, there were ten Americans and three Indian boys taking paKEage on the Alni liian brig Loriot. Difficulty was encountered in getting permission to buy the cattle wanted, but this had been surmounted and the journey, with S."0 head of cat tle, begun by the first of July, 1S37. The trip, as may well he Imagine.!, was a trying one. with that number of prac tically wild cattle to be driven through a country totally uninhabited save by Indians. Much trouble was encoun tered in the Itogue Itiver Valley by rea son of the hostility of the Indians, which experience, by the way, led to the expressive name which has since designated that picturesque and pro ductive valley. On their arrival In the Chehalein country the cattle were di vided among the subscribers to the purchase fund according to their pro portion, 200 having been lost on the way, and the "long horned" cattle that prevailed In Western Oregon for a gen eration afterward were turned loose in this paradise for stock and tho stock raiser. II u rial Flaw In Vlsltrd. In the Fall of 183'J there came to the Young settlement a wandering New Yo.-kei, 20 years old. named Kidney Smith, who allied himself witli Kwing Young as a hired man. and he contin ued UiU relation until the death of his employer on February 15. 1811. Youngs illness wax of short duration, and at the time of his death there was no one present with him except young Smith. He was buried February 17 on a knoll in a pasture about 200 yards from his cabin, to wbicli place the writer and George H. Ilimes, secretary of the Oregon Historical Society, went one' day last week for the purpose of viewing this moet romantic and inter esting spot, so closely connected with the early history of Oregon and where the first incident occurred that awak ened the settlers to the necessity of some 'form of government. I Hitherto they had. drifted along, each man his own king and owing allegi ance or obedience to no one but him self. Ewing Young was the first man to die in Oregon with a considerable property and no heirs to claim It. Ac cordingly, a meeting of the settlers was soon called, and Dr. Ira L. liabcock was elected supreme Judge, and it was or dered that until a code of law should I be afterward adopted Jud;e Babcock should be governed by the laws of New York State. His first official art was to appoint Rev. David Leslie "ad ministrator of the estate of Kwln? Young, yeoman, deceased, intestate." 1 I ntirandrd Cattle llouitht. While Young claimed the land ad far as he could see. after the Spanish grant system in California, he really had no title but his "squatter's right, which was of little value then, and young Sidney Smith bought at auction that right and all of the unbranded cat tle for $200. He afterward secured 640 acres of it under the donation latin act of 18fn. and lived there until his death in 18R0. John IT. Smith, the only son of Sid ney Smith, now the owner of a largo part of his father's farm, and Who en- tertained Mr. Himes and 1 t his home, told us that he often heard his father relate a conversntlon he had Willi Young in about 1840. Looking at the adjacent hills he said: "Mr. Young, some day those hills will be 'taken up' by Mettlers." "Never." said Young, mc little did he foresee the future that awaited thut rich and fertile country. And now follows a beautiful story which is closely connected with Ore gon's early history at the beginning of things here. In the Fall of 1H4J there arrived in the Tualatin Valley a man whose nnmc wns Daniel D. Bailey, with a wife and several children, among the latter of whom were five dmighters. the eldest being 18 ycin old. Arriving in Oregon destitute and finding the rainy season In progress, he was in sore straits mm to what to do or where to go, for 1845 was an early day to be in Oregon. On inquiry lie was told that not far away was a young bncbelor named Smith, who was living alone and with a considerable log cabin maybe he could find "quar ters" for his family during the Winter. He immediately called on Smith, pre sented his case and wnnts and found him delighted with the proposition, especially as Bailey had mentioned In cidentally that if hl:-i family there were five girl.t for white girls npn senrce in Oregon those dus. sidmy Smith, as ban ulready been related, succeeded to the ownership of lowing Young's farm, was born In New York in ar.il was 3(i years old when he took In his new tenants, but this did not at nil l ter him from at once deciding that the se.oiul Bailey girl. Miranda. would make a more satisfactory wife than her older sister or either of the younger ones. It turned out, therefore, that, by easy stages, fully understood in all their seductive details way out here In Ore gon even at that early iay as well an they are now, all th dirTn-ultie tf there were any were removed from their paths and on the morning of May 6. 1S46. which was Miranda' birthday, the two sauntered out tm (Concluded on PaifQ IJ, Column &,)