T SECTION FIVE Pages 1 to 12 Woman's Section Special Features VOL. XXXIV. PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 24, 1915. NO. 43. Trade in Your Old Heater and Get a New P owers' "Mission" Stamps yjSW Powers MmS ifXW', ,t lr ' This Is the Heater JBfc) AnvH 1 mf I See Special Demonstration of the "Mission" Heater at Manufacturers' and Land Prod ucts Show The Armory, October 25 to November 13. - eater in the Store $M? And the Kind of Heater YOU Want All Are Guaranteed and Built for Service and Economy Weeklv Can You Remember of Any Firm Making a Similar Offer? In all your experience as a reader of newspaper advertising-, has any firm, to your knowledge, ever made an offer that could possibly approach this in credit giving? You are able to come to this store, select any heater that pleases you and every one is guaranteed and pay for it on the easiest terms Imaginable. If you "have an old heater we will allow you all it is worth on the purchase of a new one and the new ones are the very best you will find anywhere. Every Heater We Sell Is Doubly Guaranteed. When you buy a heater here, you not only have our guarantee, but the guarantee of the maker as well. This is perfect heater Insur ance. You take no risk whatever. Our aim is to furnish you always with the very best that can be produced at the price. No matter what price you pay you are absolutely assured of getting the very best value for your money. "Quality First" Is Our Motto. No matter what price you pay for a heater at Powers, you are always sure of highest quality at that price. No goods of doubtful quality ever enter this store. It is our aim to supply the very best the price will afford. Even the lowest-priced heater on show is greatly superior to those you will find in most places at an equal price. The New "Mission" Heater Is Made in 12 Different Styles . Is beautifully nickeled, has a large duplex grate and an extra size feed door to admit of large chunks of wood. The body, base and top are made of castlron, which will retain the heat hours after fuel has been consumed. It has a swing top. a fireplace front and high sanitary base. It Is the most economical heater we have ever offered at any price. Trade in Your Old Heater and Get a "Mission." It you have an old heater which has been unsatisfactory, we will take It in and allow you all it la worth on the purchase of a new one. We have so many sizes and styles on display that you are eure to find the very one you have in mind. Discard the old heater buy a new "Mission," you will find your fuel bill will be greatly reduced. You Practice Real Economy when you place in your home a Powers heater.' The saving does not only pply on the purchase price, but on the cost of operation as well. You save on your fuel, give less attention to you- heater and have the satisfaction of knowing that the one you own is absolutely the best. . ; CALORIC Fireless Cookers A Complete Showing A full line of these widely known Fireless Cookers are now on display providing the size you want the kind you want at the price you want to pay. The Caloric bakes, roasts, frys, stews and boils bread, pastry, meats and vegetables. LINOLEUMS Printed and Inlaid s 1 at a Distinctive Saving nOc PRINT LINOLEUM A choice. new variety to choose from in pat terns that are entirely pleasing1. Special, per yard, laid on your floor 9I.OO PRINT LINOLEUMS Four eplendld patterns of extra heavy Printed Linoleum for use in bath or kitchen, superior designs, laid on your floor, the yard ............ If. BO INLAID LINOLEUM Parquet effects, checks and general de signs in high quality Inlaid Lin oleum that will wear for years. SpeciaJ, the yard, on your floor.... 60c 75c $111 The "STANDARD" Rotary Sit Straight Sewing Machine Whenever you compare the quality of this new Standard Rotary Sewing Ma chine with any other, the price will be second in your mind. Quality stands longer than price, but Standard Rotary quality stands forever. You Pay Only $1.00 Weekly for any sewing machine in our enlarged sewing machine department There are machines at every price, every ona guar anteed to give perfect satisfaction. Your sewing machine wants can be filled here at greatly reduced cost to you. $25 Sterling Drop- Head Sewing Machines, Special $17.50 $3.75 Feather-Weight Fold ing Card Tables . . $Q A C An unusually low price for M these Close-Folding-. Feather-er-Weight Card Tables. They come in either felt or enamel cloth top and are nicely finished. Have You a "Model"? The Perfect Dress Form Sent to You for $1 Down, 50c Week $12.50 Automatic, collapsible and adjustable dress forms usually have been sold from $17.50 to $25, and this is the only article ' of its kind ever offered at this low price, $12.50. J It makes perfect dressmaking feasible at home, as forms can 1 be adjusted to every size, form and height. When collapsed it takes up little space. Sealy Mattresses The Kind That Are Guaranteed for 25 Tears. Sold Only at Powers These $17-50 Luxurious Chase Leather Rockers Soft Spring Construction $9.95 Exactly as pictured. Large, c o m f o r table arm rockers uphols tered in Spanish Chase leather, full spring xeats, roll arms and high back, un usual value at the Fpecific price named above. 20 Handsome Sectional Bookcases Big Savings! $28.00 Four-Piece Mahogany Mission Sec- 4f Q 7ti tional Bookcase Stack for 3 I O $21.70 Five-Piece Mahogany Sectional " 1 A Ofi Bookcase Stack for. wl'tiAJ $37.50 Five-Piece Fumed Oak Mission 00 Cft Bookcase Stack for. P3v! $14.85 $20.10 Five -Piece Sectional Bookcase! Stack for $38.50 Seven-Piece Quartered Oak Slat- COO ff Front Sectional Case for PUU $43.50 Six-Piece Chippendale Quartered 0O1 ff Bookcase Stack for........ . . ffO X mJJ $25.00 Five-Piece Quartered Oak Stack. panel ends, for. $42.00 Six-Piece Mahogany Mission Book- (fQI rn case Stack for..... OOX.OU k. $19.50 The Kind You Are Using Now 2 Worth-While Drapery Specials SSe CRETONNE Light - Ground Cre- f rm 1 tonne, pink, blue or yellow, in floral I design, full 36 inches wide, the yard.. 7Se SVN-FAST MADR AS Sun- Fast m n Madras in mulberry, blue, gold, brown' 4tjC or green, 36 inches wide, special, yard Light Your Home at Less Cost Guaranteed High - Efficiency Lamps at Special Prices 10. 15, 25 and 40- QC Watt Lamps 3l 60-Watt LampsORn reduced to uOu 60-Watt Nitrogen Qf Lamps, each OUu 100-Watt Nitrogen now at. SI Two Great 3 -Room Outfits s $127 $159 Bedroom Kitchen Dining-Room An outfit consisting of the largest number of pieces ever assembled at this price. Furniture of quality In every Instance. Including ruga for both dining-room and chamber. Dining-Room, Chamber, Living-Room Powers" outfit par-excellence. New, up - to - the-mlnute furni ture for these three rooms, in cluding fine auality reversible rugs. Karpen Upholstered Furniture The kind you see advertised in all the lead ing magazines a big new shipment just sampled, consisting of Davenports, Chairs and Rockers. In tapestry and denim. Extra special . values in force during the week. u n WHITE CHILD OF ARCTIC REGIONS SEES FIRST MOVIES AND STREETCARS William B. Van Valin Tells Many Interesting Incidents of Life in Long Night of .Winter Trouble Found in Keep ing Track of Dates Great Reindeer Camp Watched Over Eskimos Kind and Courteous. "'. w" : " " Y11 ' ' ' " - illlif U v. mi i t-rn-; c- SMSmk t, a c rt X j v ... n- : Jjh -Some o'fie JjAs-JVifA 777e2-T&renZcr. i-W, Ja-! K;k?'. Qi r -- - h --rT3r"?r!'7( fltf 'aV'ft'jfiy H I 5 y"'1" ""Vtwunnw '! 18? t'--jrnsii i .S VL )-v5 -4J. - . J (-- --.tcar- y. r-0Jg3 BY FRED LOCKLET. WILLIAM B. VAN VALIN. who for the past four years has made his home north of the Arctic Circle, Is making a brief visit at the horn of his brother, R. F. Van Valin, of this city. "When my wife and I went North four years ago." he said, "Olive, my lit tle girl, was only a year old. She is 5 now; This Is her first trip out, and she is having her first experience with electric lights, streetcars, jitneys, paved streets, the movies and a hundred other things that are familiar to other children. I married a Pittsburg girl in 1906. I had charge of the city rescue mission in Pittsburg for some years. Shortly after our marriage we came to Northeastern Washington and took up a homestead not far from Colville. After proving up on our homestead my brother, R. P. Van. Valin, who is a member of the staff of the Young Men's Christian Association in Port land, myself and Albert Bean made an evangelistic tour of Alaska. Native Campa Visited. "We spent the Summer and Fall of 1910 at Dawson. Fairbanks and other cities and mining camps of Alaska. We went down the Yukon to its mouth by small boat, stopping en route at native camps to hold services. "Seeing the need of work among the natives I asked to be sent up there. W. T. Lopp, the chief of the Alaska di vision of the United States Bureau of Education, who had made the trip with reindeer from Cape Prince of Wales to Point Barrow, assigned me to his di vision, with headquarters at Slnuk, which la west of Nome. I had charge of the Government school there for two years and was then transferred to the Kok River district, which Is north of Icy Cape and about 90 miles from Point Barrow, the most northern postofflce In the United States. "We ar located on Walnwright In let, which is about 275 miles north of the Arctic Circle and about 700 miles by boat northeast from Nome. Our near est white neighobs on the south are about 400 miles distant. On the north, however, we have comparatively near neighbors, as they are only 90 miles away. You can see that we have plenty to keep our minds occupied when I tell you that we have 45 Eski mo children enrolled In our school and I have supervision of the Government reindeer herds, consisting of about 2200 reindeer. 1 have 25 Eaklmq herders in charge of the reindeer. In adidMon to this my wife maintains a hospital for the sick Eskimo children and 1 look oat for the health of the adults. Sun Long: Abaeat. Ours Is a tundra country without foothills or trees. On about the 19th of November the sun tells us goodby and we do not see it again, till about the J2d of January. During our long night we can not distinguish except by our clock day from night. Our little girl will come to us and say, "Is this today or tomorrow?" It Is very hard to keep regular hours. We try to get seven or eight hours sleep out of the 2-4 but occasionally, we discover after the break of Saturday and Sunday than, we are starting school at 9 o'clock Sunday night or on Monday night In stead of at 9 o'clock Monday morning. In mid-Summer when the daylight is continuous, we have the same difficulty In keeping track of time. You can only tell It Is bedtime by becoming tired or by having your eyelids feel heavy. If we don't keep watch of Clive she stays up and drops asleep wherever she hap pens to be. "The year before last when Clive was S years old, I hitched up my dog team and started from Walnwrlght Inlet to Icy Cape to be there during the Spring whaling season. Mlz-ratloa la Followed. "When the Eskimos migrate I try to go with them so their children can still have their schooling. I had two or three natives with reindeer sleds go ahead to take supplies. My wife and baby were comfortable as they were wrapped up in their sealskin sleeping bags. . The weather was Intensely cold. It was so cold .that I could not exercise enough to keep warm. I held to the steering pole and mushed along back of the sled. I got so cold I decided I would have to stop for a few hours rest and sleep in my sleeping-bag I had to give it up though, on account of the danger of Polar bears coming upon us while we were asleep and making a meal of us. Where I am on a trip and the bears are not numerous I usually put my sleeping bag in an Ice crevice, tie my dogs to an ice. hummock and take a Ehort nap to rest myself and get warm. "We found a warm welcome from the natives when we reached Icy Cape. The Eskimos were cordial and good hearted and they took us in, thawed us out and fed us. I found the main village had moved out on the ice about 15 miles offshore, while the whal ing crews had gone out five miles fur ther on the edge of the floe ice. "Each Spring the whales migrate from the Pacific Ocean to the district north of Herschel Island. The Eskimos are wonderfully daring and coura geous. Before the day of firearms they used .to spear the polar bears. To attack a polar bear weighing 1800 to 3000 pounds with nothing but an ivory headed spear takes a lot of courage. Hospital la Started. "My wife started hospital for the sick babies at Icy Cape, while I went out on the floe ice with the hunters. They killed several polar bears and a good many whales while I was there. Polar bear meat is greatly appreciated, as it makes a welcome change from seal meat or whale blubber. The flesh of a polar bear is red and tastes like the meat of a Jersey cow. The bears they killed had layers of fat two or three inches thick under their skin. They live largely on seal, eating only the blubber. The foxes follow the polar bears to eat tho seal meat. "The seals have many enemies. Eski mos, walrus and bears all prey on the seals. The seal comes ashore or rather up on the ice for a nap. Be leaps from five to SO seconds at a time. I never saw one that slept as long as a minute. They, have a keen yeoman &m sense of smell. The way the bears frequently . get them Is to spot one. then swim under water to Its vicinity. When the seal takes to the water it is seized by the bear. Ilurng Slenace Eskimo. "We 1 a4l a serious time this year both at Walnwrlght Inlet and at Icy Cape. Storms came up while the Es kimos were otit hunting on the ice. The ice was broken up and an offshore wind took the ice out to sea. The Es kimos had to abandon their sleds and gear and take to their open boats. For three days they were at the mercy of the storm. They finally landed 2b miles trom Icy Cape. When one goes out on the ice there is always danger of an offshore gale breaking the ico up and setting you adrift. You will re member that the Karluk got caught in the ice and drifted away while Vilhjal mur Stefansson was ashore at Point Barrow. The Karluk drifted to the northwest and when the ice began to work she was crushed and lost. Ste fansson wrote to me to keep a sharp lookout and to ask my natives to try to locate Captain Bartlett, who was on the Karluk when she went adrift. Bartlett and an Eskimo boy took to the ice and landed on the Siberian coast. Peterson picked them up at East Cape, on the Siberian shore. "A number of our most daring Eski mos from Walnwrlght Inlet were near ly lost this Spring. In fact they es caped by the skin of their teeth. They were out when the ice broke up. They hauled their skin boats over the pressure ridges, young ice forming all the time. At last they found a shore ward lead and escaped. Wosderfnl Curtoa Fonnd. "I have picked up some wonderful curios in the North. Three years ago I gave my school children a trip to Sledge Island. We went in a power boat, the New Jersey, which, by the way. was lost this season in the Arctic with all aboard. It was caught in slush Ice while on its way to Point Hope and crushed. While we were on Sledge Island one of my Eskimo boys went to the top of the island, while the rest of um were exploring an old abandoned village. He noticed a shaft of wool sticking out from under a large, flat- rock. He could not pull It out, but finally succeeded in prying up the flat rock. He found the rock covered the entrance to a cave. With several of the other boys he explored the cave. "They found an old - whaling outfit that must have been there for hundreds of years. The outfit consisted of dos- Concluded on Fag 4, column 4.1. ET1 1 04.0