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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1918)
SECTION FIVE Pages 1 to 12 Women's Section Special Features VOL. XXXVII. PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MOUSING, JULY 21, 1918. NO. 20. AT THE HOUSEBOAT ON THE STYX The Amalgamated Brotherhood of Kings (Copyright. 1918, by the Mcciure Newspaper syndicate) Reported by Wireless to John Kendrick Bangs POWERS THIRD AND YAMHILL POWERS USE YOUR CREDIT AT POWERS gj The Four Pieces May Be Purchased Sepa rately as Follows: - Dresser, $22J0; Chiffonier, $210; Full Size Bed, $17.75; Toilet Table, $1850 You'll Marvel at This Price for - a Bedroom Suite $79 75 of Four Pieces, Ivory Enameled.- It i8 similar to illustration, with the exception that mirrors and bed have straight-line frames as shown. That this suite is an exceptional value will be admitted when one takes into consideration' design, work manship and finish, and the present advanced cost of labor and materials entering into all grades of furniture these days. You can buy this as a complete suite or as separate pieces. The Attractive Terms of $8 Cash and $1.75 Week Place This Suite in Your Home This $9.75 Period Pattern Dining Chair Specially Priced at $7.85 The William and Mary pattern, which so ap propriately adapts itself to dining-room furnishing-. Of oak, with high back and genu ine leather slip seat. Consider this an un usual value at $7.85. SAMPLE LENGTHS of Imported and Domestic CRETONNES, LINENS Y2 PriQe Fine materials are these, and don't think they'll last very long at half price. Thirty-six inches wide. We must close them out quickly, for war conditions prevent, our securing stock of these samples. Again We Mention These Exceptionally A ttr active Items in Room-Size Rugs 40 Patterns in Axminster Rugs Very heavy quality seamless woven, offer ing pleasing assortment GJCQ Kf of colorings, 9xl2-ft. size tDDO.pU Terms $10 Down, $1 Week. 10 Patterns in Velvet Rugs Also seamless woven, in attractive range of colorings, 9xl2-foot CCTQ Kf size, for. j.. '. . OtJO.DU Terms $7.50 Down, $1 Week. Six Patterns in Velvet Rugs Seam less woven, in- the popular 8-foot 3- mch by 10-foot 6-mch size, for Terms $5 Down, $1 Week. S45.00 $98. SO Buys This Regular $11730 Tapestry Davenport One of those large, deep. luxurious seating pieces, with the loose cushion, spring-filled seats. A superior grade of tapestry used in. the covering, of which you have choice of four patterns. This davenport is much larger than the types usually offered at this price. If you've put off buying an upholstered piece of this character up to this time, we suggest that you decide on this design which, at the above price, is an unusual offering. Use Your Credit THE LEONARD GLEANABLE REFRIGERATOR Is the most profitable piece of home equipment you can possibly Invest in. and health. Tou can wash it like a china dish. USE VOIR CREDIT. It conserves food Two Big Mattress Specials For This Week $14.25 Dixie 40-lb. Mattress 100 per cent cotton and no jute mixture is what you get . in this mattress, which is covered in art ticking and has a roll edge. It's an unusual special value d 1 1 fit? at this week's price wl 103 $11.85 dtiK rioss mat- tfon TP tress Special. . . PLU.ld Take our word for it that this is- beau tifully made mattress, with ts imperial roil edge ana its covering or linest qual- ny, aatin-imian art ticking. very special this week at. s;$29.75 Sturgis" The Big Word in Folding Go-Carts ..J --nr. oiurgiw ijro - i;arts, with their many convent ent and comfort features, -Te- werf -n a vrf e d "Luxury" Go Car t s. No less than eighteen patterns shown i,i our line at this time, ranging in price up from 113.50. See our line of "Reed Loom carriages, sold here only In Portland. A. SMALL DEPOSIT DELIVERS OMS TO, YOU. MEN! Save 6c Car Fare Ride a BICYCLE To and From Work Fortunate are the workers who. have become "bicycle wise," for they are "thrift wise," and to their profit. By the thou sands, in various cities throughout the country, they are journeying back and forth from work on swift, easily pedaled bicycles. We have just received A Large Shipment of Columbia and Treemont Bicycles which embody every up-to-date feature of construction. Come in and acquaint yourself - with them. Moderately priced. We'll Sell You One on EASY CREDIT TERMS FO UR TIM EL Y SPEC I A LS in Outdoor Pieces Don't subject your interior furniture to outdoor use, when you can buy durable and comfortable pieces at 'such low prices. '' Porch chairs and rockers in natural JQ OCT finish, with double cane seats; very special &O70 - Folding porch and garden settee, of ? pr hard-wood, 42 : inches wide, special at f 1DD Basket seat fiber rockers,' finished in Qpr brown. Special for this sale at only 50OD $5.60 folding lawn swings for children, rjf quickly taken apart and put away; special Dae U Only $66.10 IX r .- & YICTROLA Outfit And the terms are only $7.50 cash and $5 monthly. Another of those Powere unusual in ducements. Outfit con sists of Vtctrola IX in oak or mahogany; six ten-inch records and one record album. Twenty Styles in the ivroehler T Bed Davenport And they're all new and unusual. Few homes there are that could not use a Kroehler to good advantage. One style, similar to cut. covered in imitation Spanish leather, special $49.75. Terms (7.50 cash. $1 week. 1 " Ivory Enameled Dressers . and Chiffoniers - SPEC I A LL Y PRICED THIS WEEK Large oval mirrors, shaped fronts and generous size bases. Finish and workmanship that measure m well above the average. Bedroom pieces that will be recognized as "substantial" values at their regular prices. Use your credit. DRESSERS Regular S33.S0, fer. . . $26.90 THIFFOMERS (Og A f Regular S31.30 for. . . . tfAUilU - "To Give Up, Gott for Git!' lie Used to Chute His Shop-Worn Harems Into the Bosphorus DEATH OF ALBERT MILDENBERG MOURNED SINCERELY THROUGHONT MUSICAL WORLD Talented American Musician Succumbs After Illness of Nearly Two Tears Girl Musician Now in France Writes of " How Soldiers Are Entertained at Concerts. BY EMILIE FRANCES BAUER. NEW YORK, July 20. (Special.) After an illness of over 21 months during which there was not one liour in which he was free from pain. 'Albert Mildenberg. one of the most talented of America'' musi cians, composers and pedagogues, died in the hospital. He was stricken at Raleigh, N. C almost at the hour when he was to have played the Liszt E Flat Concerto with Modest Altchuler and the Russian' Symphony which he had engaged for the music festival' to be held in the South. Albert Mildenberg had resided in the South for several seasons for the purpose of building up a great music school in connection with Meredith College. He received the de gree of doctor of music from Meredith College and his success was beyond the greatest expectations. Dr. Mildenberg was born less than (7 years ago In Brooklyn and from his earliest childhood, his musical talent was extraordinary. Those who knew him best, however, were perfectly aware that music was only one phase of his brilliant mental endowments, as he might have put it to one aide and become a writer of the rarest type. His poetic imagination. . surmounted by a fine mind, gave him a wide scope and he has seen many of his short stories in print. This also served him well in his operatic writing as he was able to manipulate any story into a libretto and to weave the libretto Into most genial and beautiful music. . . The part that music plays "over there'' may be realized to a certain ex tent from the following reproduction of a letter "home"" from a youncr arirl who went to France in February under the auspices of the Y. M. C. A.: "I'm enclosing some pictures of a purp tnat a soldier boy sent me. 1 was having lunch with him at a hotel and I saw a cute little puppy while we were there so, he sent me these pic tures I guess he drew them himself. I am up on the front now and having a wild and thrilling . time. We are needed up here- much more than in the interior, but. they are not letting us stay very long we are leaving this district on fiunday. We should have had a rest of about five days in Paris, but are spending it playing up here instead, we are having the most won derful experiences up here any airl (Concluded oo Pace .) (T-rOWDT, LouT said Benjamin J- Franklin, as Louis XVI. the Ill-fated monarch of revo lutionary France, came aboard the houseboat on the Styx the other morn ing and joined the Illustrious party of deathless souls already assembled there. "How is your ex-Royal Highness ex healththts morning?" - - "Bon very bon indeed," said Louts. "Fact Is, Ben, 1 haven't felt so bon in a long time. If I were any boaneryou'd have to screw me down to keep me i from kicking Gibraltar off the face of nature. Why do you ask?" "O, no reason In particular. said Franklin; "only the king business is almost as flat these days as the stock market, and I wondered how you chaps who still hold stock in the Interna tional Royalty Company were getting along." "I don't bother about earthly stocks any more." said Louis. "I haven't even looked at a market report for going on a hundred years, and whether Roy alties are up or down interests me not at all. I opposed the Introduction of a ticker in this clubhouse when the proj ect was first proposed by Midas and Croesus and Monte Crlsto. and while I was overruled. I have been consistent with my principles and let the darn thing tick for all I cared." "I am not surprised, Lou that was always your principle," said Franklin: "you never were willing to listen to anything frojn the outside. If you'd had a daily hint from Wall street slid ing through a ticker in the palmy days at Versailles, when you and Marie An toinette were looking on life as nothing more than one glorious week-end after another, you might have staved off the catastrophe that cost you your head and made Napoleon Bonaparte possi ble." "We had red tape enough at Ver sailles In all conscience, Ben, without introducing a couple of miles of white tape Into the family circle every day." retorted Louis. "That's Just it," said Franklin. "Red tape was all you had. and it bound you hand and foot. But that little strip of white paper tape that you so despise would have bound you to nothing; but, on the contrary, might have freed you. simply by telling you what your court iers didn't dare tell you, which way the wind blew. If between 177s and 1780 you had had a ticker at Versailles, from which you could have learned that there was a bull market on pro letariats and a corresponding fall in the securities of the thrones, you'd have taken care to put a few million francs In Robespierre common and sold out your Divine Rights preferred before the bottom fell out." ' "O, well." said Louis sadly, "there's no use of crying over spilt crowns. It's all over now done forever and it doesn't add to the joy of Hades to go round moping over what might have been." "Spoken like a philosopher, sir," said Marcus Aurelius. "If I had spent my time back in the old days writing aphorisms on the unhapplness of duty, and the gloom of life, where would I be as a household word today?" "Correct!" said Job, sipping his sar saparllla tonic through a straw. "Same here. All over the world several thou sand years after my last carbur.ole bad bunked its way into nothingness to land upon-the neck of oblivion Itself, because of my patience under suffer ing, my name, too. Is spoken with af fection. Little children lisp It with reverence, the middle-aged with affec tion, and the aged with pride. B.ut who knows the names of my comfort ers, who'd have had me dead and bur led before my time, bad I yielded to their pessimistic lamentations? No body! They might have been Smiths, Browns. Joneses or Robinsons for all the world of today knows or cares. Even I have forgotten them." "Nevertheless, Job." said Franklin, "there Is such a thing as preparedness. It Is well to be patient under suffering. but better still to think right at the proper time and to stave off trouble If you can. It Is quite possible that If you had made a practice of taking a few doses of cod liver oil, and a liver pill or two before your carburetor be gan to corbonate you wouldn't have run down so far. If I see a carbuncle headed my way I don't run out and greet it as though It were & prodigal son and fall on lta neck ana tell it it was always my favorite uncle. No slr ree! I get out the old medicine chest and mix up a bottle or two of - old Doctor Franklin's anti-bunk, good for man or beast, and use is as an appe tiser at every meal, with the result that the unwelcome visitor skids off In an other direction and bunks on' some other fellow's neck. A tip in time has saved many a vanished margin." - "The trouble with kings has always been that they wouldn't aecepc the tips." said Jeremiah. "Take NebUehad- nesxar for example. They even went so far as to scribble a straight tip to Neb on his dining-room wall; but the old boy came to grass in spite of it. because he wouldn't take it." "I didn't know it was a tip. said Nebuchadnexsar: "I thought that hand writing on the wall was the work of a party of Cook's tourists that had Just passed through, and ordered It washed off. Besides, kings should be above tips. You can give a tip to a barber, or a hat-check boy, or a bootblack, but not to a king." "Query," cried Don Quixote. "What Is the difference between a king and a Pullman porter?" . "Easy, said Solomon. "One loons after his own birthrights, and the other looks after the berth-rights ot other people." "That lsn t the answer, said Don Quixote. "The answer is that kings don't take tips." "Fairly good. fairly good," said Franklin. "Send it to Boswell for his Joke column, -Qulxy. Say Johnson said it and hell give you a dollar for It. In the meantime, about this king busi ness. It's on the toboggan today, all right, and for the self-same reason that Louis the Sixteenth and Charles the First lost out kings won't take tips from the ticker.' Just look" at' this morning's quotations in the market re port of the 'Gehenna Gasette,' as re ported from over the River. Russian Csars, quoted two years ago at 287 Ti. now in the hands of a receiver; Greek Kings, worth a trifle less than par eighteen months ago, now offered at a half of one-eighth per cent, and no takers; Emperors of Austria, gilt-edge five years ago, as shaky today as a second mortgage bond on a Bolshevik roof; and as for the Hohenzollern Pan Germanic Security '& Trust . Company, whose brilliant prospectuses ranked among the finest specimens .of fiction of the ages. Invested In by ICaisers, Kaiseretles, Kaiserlnes. Junkers and all sorts of Teutonic rag-tag and bob tail, guaranteed by the personal word of Bill himself, its' shares have fallen from 95 to 2i.wlth -Bill- himself reported to.be quietly selling short." "O, well, what of. it ?' said. Louis. "Who In Hades cares?" " ' "O, nobody much," laughed Frank lin. "Only It shows which way the wind is - blowing, and proves that if Kings, Kaisers, Emperors and Czars would only be wise enough to take tips from the ticker they'd have their cyclone cellars built and a few corru gated steel umbrellas handy - for the rainy day ahead." "You foresee wet weather for kings?" said Jeremiah. , "Surest thing you know; Jerry." said Franklin. "The deluge that was apres Louis Fourteenth is now rolling apres Bill and .his pals, and when the -day comes you'll hear BUI singing tthat plaintive little lyric It Is not raining rain for me, It's raining- daffodils. "Ov'well."' Interjected Baron Mun chausen, "a daffodil or two isn't going to hurt- the Kaiser much. It'll take something more than a daffodil to get through his helmet." "Ah! but in this case,. Munch, the daffodil will be only a figure of speech." said Franklin. "Bill will sing a revised version of the lyric, running something like ' It Is not raining rain to me. It's pourlnff shell and shot. Mixed In. with H-S-S-O-S. And. blftzen. ovarhot! . A cloud of bom ha obacurva the' town, Sun-harsed with deadly saa. And through the blue the clouds let down A vitriolic maaa. It la not raining flowers at all. ' But mlaal-a round nia fill. And on all sldaa I hear a call To give up Oott for git! "What's H-2-S-O-J?" demanded Munchausen. "It's poetic license for H-2-S-0-4." 'aid Franklin. . "And H-2-S-0- is the formula for sulphuric acid a nice lit tle chemical compound that can eat and digest anything." "Sort of a ' liquid goat. T imagine." said Samson. "Gee, wouldn't it be awful If it should ever rain goats?", "It sure would. Samp," laughed Franklin. "Far worse than the prover bial cats and dogs. But 1 have a feeling way down in-my bones that, ticker or bo ticker. Bill baa got his weather eye open, for 1 have Just read in an American newspaper that he has written a letter to one of his fellow potentates that they've all got to stick together or be put out of business. That's rather like Bill, too quite Teu tonic to take something somebody else has said and try to pass It off as his own. Back in seventeen seventy six, when Tom Jefferson, and I got up the Declaration of Independence to send over to another Deutscher Boy who happened to be asleep at the Brit ish Switch, I myself made the remark that we signers would have to hang to gether or we'd all hang separately." "He's trying to get up a sort of Amalgamated Brotherhood of Kings, eh?" said Caesar. ' "Yep," said Franklin. "A sort of Potentates' Union, and no scab kings allowed on earth. Nobody allowed to reign anywhere without a union card, not a bad Idea If it were designed ito make better kings, but in this case .of no more value than a union of pirates or second-story men would be." ; "I hardly see the necessity of Blfl'S call, though," said Caesar. "The only kings he is inviting to Join, as I under stand it, are himself and the Sultan of Turkey and the Emperor of Austria and the King of Bulgaria, and. Judging from the letters they are all writing each other every day, they are so everlasting stuck on each other al ready that It seems like piling an Ossa of. Cement on a Pellon of Glue to call for a closer compact." -"All camouflage, ' all camouflage," said Franklin. "They don't mean . a word of it. and Bill's on to the fact. The love-letters of these potentates may be sticky In their slobber of senti ment, but there's no real love lost be tween aaiy of them. Ferdy of Bul garia knows that Bill's bootblack has more real Influence with Wilhelin than he has: the Sultan of Turkey Is perfectly aware that when Bill whistles it's up to him to salaam; poor little Charlieboy of Austria, in, spite of his highly orlflammed front and his" wav ing plumes of power, knows down In side that he has dropped kingship for good and has become nothing more nor less than Bill's political valet, and that the once, proud Hapsburg Isn't even a Perhapsburg today, but is just a plain little . megaphone thnaugh which Bill roars his orders to the Austrians. And If human nature Is still human nature today they all hate him for it That's why Bill has called for the Union. He's like a spider, sitting In the midst of a web In' a hurricane, with a big sheet of flypaper for a doormat, calling upon the flies to come and stick together. They know it Just as well as he does, but they, are all so hypnotized by the grrat mass of glittering medals that Bill has been pinning on his own chest for the past thirty years that they can't refuse. The Union will go through, and they will stick together, because they are going to be stuck to gether, and sooner or later they'll go down together In one red burial blend. Superstitious Nick of Russia haa al ready gone and Is shoveling snow in Si beria. Twittering Con of Greece is knit ting socks Somewhere in Somewhere Else. Charles of Austria Is keeping his eye on the Vlenna-to-the-Pole Railroad with a 9:10 train ready at all hours for the Imperial use. Abdul Azain't-for-Long keeps a special submarine hitched to the coal-hole of the palace, through which he used to chute his shop-worn harems into the Bosporus, so as to be off with the old woman before he was on with the new; and Ferdy, the Hall Room Boy of Bulgaria, is learning how to drive a Flivver, in hopes of getting a job on the box of a taxicab in Cathay when the end comes." v'You draw a terrific picture," said Bonaparte, "but I guess you're right. They got me." "Yes. Boney." said Franklin. "And they got you because for forgot, aa these modern kings have also forgot (Concluded on Page .) (