SECTION FIVE Pages 1 V 12 Women's Section Special Features VOL. xxxv ',111. PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORXIXG, JANUARY 19, 1919. NO. 3. SEMIPHORES ON SNOWBERRY BUSHES SIGNAL WINTERS END Red Rose Hips Ornament i n Profusion Branches of Wild Roses and Shrivel AVith Passing of Season. 000 mm , III cv n - 12 Oi'fers Still More Remarkable Values in Furniture of All Kinds. Read This Announce ment for News of the Biggest Bargains Ever Offered in This Part of the West Continuing the Most Notable Sale of OVERSTUFFED FURNITURE Ever Held in Portland. Read These Items: The most famous furniture manufacturers in America among them S. Karpen & Bros. have sent special shipments of their finest pieces at 'way below regular prices. $64.50 Karpen Bed Davenport $51.85 $79.50 Karpen Bed Davenport $59.75 $89.75 Karpen Bed Davenport $69.85 $72.75 Mahogany-finished Bed Davenport $59.75 powc3 ( This regular $115.50 Tapestry Uphol holstered Spring Arm Dav-!QQ 7c enport... .sPO&ti $89.75 Overstuffed- Tapestry Davenport , $69.75 $105.00 Overstuffed Tapestry Davenport ... -. $85.50 $132.00 Karpen Tapestry Daven port $99.00 $162.75 Karpen Mahogany Cane and Silk Damask Davenport $119.50 $216.50 Karpen Mahogany Cane and Silk Damask Davenport $175.50 $142.00 Mahogany Cane and Ve- lour Davenport $99.50 This Handsome $59.75 Karpen Bed Davenport $45.75 Like illustration. Covered in Spanish leather ette. A very good design and well finished. m 3 1 I II J V. Irli V! ' 1 I,, 1 11 This $109 Four-Piece Oak Cqo QC Suite Bedroom VERY ATTRACTIVE OFFERINGS IN MAHOGANY BEDROOM PIECES $13.75 Bedr'm Stand S9.15 $28.75 Frosted Brown Cretonne Reed Chair for $22.15 $34.75 Frosted Brown Cretonne Reed Chair for $26.90 $32.75 Frosted Brown Cretonne Reed Rocker for $23.60 $54.50 Frosted Brown Cretonne Reed Settee for $41.15 $39.50 Frosted Brown Reed Rocker for $33.50 $108.50 Frosted Brown Reed Davenport for $80.75 $22.15 Cretonne Reed Chair priced at $14.90 Desirable Reed Pieces Were Never So Op portunely Priced $12.75 Ivory Reed Book Rack priced at $8.55 $31.50 Cretonne Reed Rocker priced at $25.15 $25.75 Cretonne Reed Chair priced at $19.50 $19.85 Cretonne Ivory Chair priced at ....$15.75 $9.75 Reed Book Stand priced special at $7.15 $22.85 Cretonne Upholstered Reed Chair for '. $17.25 $19.75 Tapestry Upholstered Reed Rocker for $15.25 $15.75 Ivory Reed Rocker priced special at $11.90 $33.50 Tapestry Reed Arm Chair priced special at $21.50 $34.75 Ivory Reed Table priced special at $24.60 $25.75 Tapestry Reed Arm Chair priced special at $18.85 New Reed Carriages and Go-Carts for Baby An advance showing of the latest and most improved models in Collapsible and Oriole Carriages, Go-Carts and Go-Baskets. V. 5 J 8 ., 1 ifty.A'H Plenty of Novel Styles for Baby's Choice at Powers $59.75 Mahogany Adam Dresser for $39.50 $79.50 Mahogany Poster Bed for S62.75 $119.50 Queen Anne Dresser for S91.75 $67.50 William and Mary Dresser for S49.75 Ivory Enamel $21.75 Ivory Dresser for S17.15 $31.50 Ivory Chiffonier for S21.75 $34.50 Ivory Wood Bed for $29.80 $37.75 Ivory Wood Bed, spool post for. . -S22.95 $39.50 Spool Dresser to match for S28.75 $24.75 Ivory Dressing Table for S21.50 $78.50 Mahogany Colonial Dressing Table. -S52.95 $107.50 Mahogany Adam Dresser for S79.75 $62.50 Mahogany Bed to match for S44.80 Bedroom Pieces $126.00 4-piece Ivory Suite for S103.85 $414.00 4-piece Ivory Suite for S332.75 $37.75 Ivory Dresser for S29.90 $57.50 Ivory Triplicate Mir ror Dressing Table for only S42.75 $346.50 Ivory Four -piece Chamber Suite S277.50 Quartered Oak Rocker With Genuine Leather Seat. Very Special $ 1 4.45 Comfortable high-back de sign, with easy spring seat. A very unusual value in a chair that will last for years. Genuine leather cov ered seat. Your Credit Is Good at Powers. NO INTEREST Sale of Chairs and Rockers $36.85 Mahogany Cane-back Rocker . . . $23.90 $12.50 Mahogany Rocker for $ 9.95 $18.30 Mahogany Velour Chair $13.85 $23.75 Mahogany Velour Chair $18.90 $12.35 Mahogany Rocker for $ 9.75 $18.50 Mahogany Velour Chair $13.80 $97.50 Tapestry Davenp't, overstufd, $79.75 $14.75 William and Mary Rocker $11.80 $23.75 William and Mary Settee $18.85 $19.75 Mahogany Tapestry Chair $16.60 $19.75 Mahogany Tapestry Rocker ...$16.60 $33.50 Adjusto Chair for $23.90 $27.50 Mahogany Tapestry Chair ....$21.85 $27.50 Mahogany Cane-back Chair $21.85 $52.75 Mahogany Bookcase for $44.90 $31.50 Mahogany Bookcase for $26.85 $25.75 Child's Velour Uphlsfd Rocker $14.25 OAK DINING ROOM PIECES $39.75 Plank-Top Dining Table for $29.80 $44.50 Scroll-Base Dining Table for $o.&0 $51.50 Plank-Top Dining Table' for $42.50 $37.50 William and Mary Dining Table for $25.75 $34.50 Oak Colonial Buffet for $29.50 $43.50 Oak Colonial Buffet for $32.60 $59.75 Oak Colonial Buffet for '...$48.50 $5.75 Slip Seat Dining Chair for $4.40 $8.00 Slip Seat Dining Chair for $5.95 $4.75 Pad Scat Dining Chair for $3.95 $4.85 Saddle Seat Dining Chair for $3.75 J Regular $55.75 Oak Queen Anne Buffet $39 SO Like illustration, with large mirror, 54-inch size. $7.50 William and Mary Dining Chair for $6.50 LIBERTY BONDS Accepted in Payment of Merchandise or on Account. tH 'YAMHILL. - ! ! . V ."w. . -- v 3L 'T.-Vart -- T 3 . i TV V - ? hSL Mfcr? sJ 1 rsr-yCYA ' r . ill w - I . w l - III If on fZt'cjfff Cu.i-Op9rt;' BY ALBERT R. SWEETSER. Professor of Botuny. University of Oregon. UNIVERS1TT OF OREGON. Eugene, Jan. IS. (Special.) At this sea son of the year one Is prone to forget the call of the wild, but quies cent nature, stripped of the most of her striking adornments, nevertheless reveals many things of Interest to her lovers. Along the highways and bordering the fields the Snow-Berry bushes hang out their semiphores. attracting atten tion and signaling the parsing of Win ter. (Fig. 1.) In the Spring and early Summer clusters of inconspicuous flow ers, with their tiny rose-colored petals and still more minute green calyx cup, easily escape notice. But with the fall ing of the petals the spherical calyx develops new energy, enlarging Into the familiar white berry with its few seeds. The scienitfic name, symphorocar pus, seemingly of disproportionate size for such a humble flower, signifies fruiting together and refers to the clus tered arrangement of the berries. The apostle of variation finds a striking II luHtration of the law in the leaven of this shrub, which show striking dif ferences of shape. These berries are reputed to be slightly poisonous and seem to be shunned by the Mrilx. hut the writer would be pleased to learn from any one who has different information. lied Rose Hips, incorrectly called berries, ornament In profusion tha branches of our wild rosea. At first round and plump, they shrivel with the parsing of the season and furnish food fur the birds when other supplies fail. When In the glory of their bloom the conspicuous rose petals obscure the green, cup-like receptacle to which they are attached. (Fig. 2.) With the. shedding of the petals, these spherical cups increase in size and prominence. If one will take the trouble to cut one of these hips, he will find within a number of seed-like appearing bodies, and will be inclined to call the whole a berry. Such a section is shown in Figure 3. the right hand hip. A more careful study from a botanical stand point, and with the aid of a magnifying glass, will reveal thread-like struc tures of varying length, depending on the age, being ihc remnant of the pistil on top of the so-called seed. This means that each of these apparent seeds In reality is a fruit or ripened seed case ccMtaining a single seed, so close ly attached to the seed-case wall that It can be separated only with difficulty. The fleshy portion is th flower re. ceptacle prolonged into the five leaf like sepals and bearing the petals on its throat. Figure 4 represents another species of rose but with few small hips which drop their petals. This Is tho rose with naked fruit, Rosa gymno- carpa. PRESENT MUSICAL SEASON DECLARED MOST DISASTROUS FOR MANAGERS IN HISTORY Influenza, War and Other Unavoidable Elements Contribute Largely to Inability of Artists to Attract Houses Sufficient to Fatten Pocketbooks of Those Sponsoring Their Appearance. , BY EM1L.IE FRANCES BAUER. NEW YORK, Jan. 18. It seems al most impossible to realize that the musical season is half over, nd indeed the early part of lDlS-'lS may be written down as one of the most disastrous seasons in history, not alone by reason of the cancellations, but also if we reckon with the large number of excellent artists who have succumbed to the dread malady. It be comes almost as appalling as the loss cf life through the war. All this, not withstanding the fact that there has never been so complete and absolute a sense that next season w-ill surpass in brilliancy and activity anything that has ever transpired in this country. Things are gradually getting around to a normal basis where the wave of prosperity will be able to take care of all- conditions and the interest and support which have been accorded to music, the exceedingly important part that music has played during the war days and which it is still expected to play during the time of reconstruction has placed It on 'a different basis in this country. In addition to this there has been a vast growth through war activities throughout Wyoming, Oklahoma and other states in that vicinity, where music came as a new luxury to people who had become immensely wealthy and able to support the best, artists of the world. This will open up new terirtory for steady concert courses and the musical clubs of that vicinity will have a strong link to put Into the chain. There is little doubt that the- Spring will bring a number of peace festivals and jubilees. The first one of these to be announced, however, comets from Walter Damrosch, who will combine the Oratorio Society and the New York Symphony Orchestra in what it has been decided to call a "Victory and Peace Celebration." These plans were formulated at the last directors" meet ing of the Oratorio Society otf New York, Walter Damrosch, conductor. Upon this occasion Mr. Damrosch intro duced the society's new president, Charles M. Schwab, noting the fact that it was just 30 years ago that le had Introduced the former president. An drew Carnegie, who has retired from all active work and office. At this meeting it was decided to make the next concert of the OraAorio Society a victory programme. It will be given in Carnegie Hall, March 7, and the numbers will be selected to symbolize the world war and final vic tory. To further the idea of a festival of more than usual importance, Mr. Damrosch will combine the Oratorio event with the New York Symphony concerts of March 13 and 15. when he will give the Beethoven Ninth Sym phony. It is rather grim humor to celebrate tho vanquishing of Germany by giving tne Ninth Symphony of Beethoven, who is a world figure, a genius belonging to no country, and to no epoch, who however, was oorn in that country. The Society of American Singers Is In Its fifth month at the Park Theater, and William Wade Hinshaw is receiv ing congratulations from all sides upon the extraordinary manner In which his scheme has worked out. Those Inter ested in the promotion of opera in Eng lish feel indebted to the Gilbert and Sullivan operas for landing the proj ect far upon its way. Only a man dauntless as Mr. Hinshaw would have continued in the face of the financial disaster which threatened the scheme which was sent upon its way at the very worst possible time, when, added to the seriousness of the war condi tions, the influenza epidemic closed rooEt of the bouses and reduced the au diences of those which kept open to the minimum. The upward swing in finances came with the Gilbert and Sullivan operas, and for the time being the theater was turned over to these works exclusively. Never did they seem more fresh or more to the point, more delightful mu sically, and from the standpoint of the libretto the people who attended learned to love and appreciate the snap and satire of Gilbert no less than the tuneful music of Sullivan. Large audiences every night brought to the company's bank account enough money to pay for all the past losses and to send it aafcly on Its way. Re turning to opera of the larger form. Mr. Hinshaw announces for Monday evening Auber's merry and melodious opera "Fra Dlavolo." with a star cast, and this will be followed during the week oS January 20 with Maggie Teyte in "Madamo Butterfly" and the ever popular "Martha." DALLAS BdY ON FURLOUGH Dewey Steele Twice Wounded n French Fighting Front. DALLAS, Or., Jan. 16. (Special.) Dewey Steele, a Polk County boy who has been a member of the Sixth Can adian Field Engineers for the past year, is visiting relatives and friends in this vicinity. Young Steele was rejected by the United States Army officers three times but was afterwards accepted by the Canadians and sent to France. He was twice wounded in action. In ad dition to being gassed. A sister of the young soldier, Mrs. N. C. Anderson, lives at Buena Vista, south of this city. SERVICE RECORD PREPARED Military History of University Men to Be Published. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON. Eugene. Jan. (Seclal.) Mrs. Emma Woot- ton Hall, of Astoria, graduate of the university In tne class of 1918. as secretary of military records, is bring ing the service records of University of Oregon up to date. This reek she sent questionnaires to men In the Bervlce and to their parents to obtain further data on the men, in preparation for the publication of a complete service his tory of all University of Oregon men. Present records, which are incom plete, give a total of 1609 university men In the service. 30 of whom are to be represented on the service flag with gold stars. Of this number 319 are of ficers of the Army or Navy, one a Colonel, t wo Lieutenant-Colonels, seven Majors. 24 Captains, in the Army, and 62 of high rank in the Navy. The questionnaire will show the name, year in college or date of gradua tion, date of enlistment and branch of service, military training, transfers, changes in rank, overseas service, en gagements, wounds, decorations, expe riences, discharge and plana for the future. Spanish Composer Flu Victim. MEXICO CITY. Quinito Valverde. a Spanish composer, well known for his oneras in Spain. Mexico and South American countries, was one of the more noted victims of the epidemic, of Spanish Influenza in Mexico. He re cently came to Mexico from Spain with an opera company. SO MUCH has been written and said on the subject of bidding that It would almost seem anything fur ther was unnecessary. Yet in view of the utterly Irresponsible, wild sort of bidding indulged in by some players, and the almost incredible figure to which at times they carry their bids, it is evident that many have yet much to learn on the subject. In this connection X often wonder why auction is made the motif of so many of the card parties given when five hundred or some similar game would be so much the better game. Why Is .It that many who evidently look upon five hundred as beneath their attainments nevertheless do not accord the superior game the respect it deserves by familiarizing with the rudiments of the game at lea.t. If un taught players would but realize how disconcerting It is for good players to be compelled to enter Into a contest with them yet who from the stand point of courtesy have at times no es cape they would either familiarize themselves somewhat concerning the game, or would insist that some other game be substituted. Five hundred is pre-eminently the game for promiscuous card players. While it is not what may be strictly termed a scientific game. It neverthe less calls for enough thought and Judg ment to take it out of the class of purely games of chance, and at the same time it is sufficiently relaxing and diverting to admit of social inter course and a good time generally. Singular to relate, in all contests composed of players of varying grades and conditions, the really good players mofe often than not are the ones who get the lowest score, luck, or what ele ment of luck there is In the game, gen erally favoring those who have no con ception whatever of Its sclerce. Thus is proven what has so often been said that "downright Ignoramuses some times hit on plays that surpass the cleverest devices of genius, and that although we perhaps knew all develop ments and inferred correctly the posi tion of the last five cards, the duffers nevertheless took all the tricks and marked up the rubber." Good players fully know they cannot win upon all occasions and trat as long as they play at all they must.be pre pared for defeat as well as victory. They also know that their success is not always the result of their own good play, but to a certain extent of the special distribution of the cards and the mistakes of their opponents. Such facts arc entirely overlooked by the poor or average player, who. happy in his complacency and self-sufficiency, is very apt to believe his success- is the direct outcome of his supe rior play, and that the vaunted good player is not after all entitled to the prestige he enjoys. This consciousness but adds to the discomfiture of the really good player, and makes it more unfair than ever that either by acci dent or design he will be drawn into a contest with Ignorant players. A well-known teacher one who en joys a National reputation as instructor of scientific card games, and who per haps has turned out more thoroughly good, dependable players than any other one teacher makes it a rule never to play with inferior players. If she does and does not always come out victor and she knows too well the pe culiar vagaries of the cards to feel this Invariably is an assured fact the cir cumstance she says is exploited far and wide, and she hears of it from every possible source for months to come. This same Instructor, who. by the way, carefully guards her reputation as teacher, as she has a perfect right to do. admonishes her pupils never to make a statement regarding the cram giving her as authority. Could she be quoted correctly, she of course would have no objections, but since as a rule statements of this nature are fright fully garbled and made to assume a. meaning entirely the reverse of their true meaning, her best refuge she feels lies in their silence. This reminds me that only recently I was given as authority for the state ment that upon picking up one's hand at the end of a deal, no effort should be made to systematize the enrds or sort them In suits. Those who over heard the remark who knew better simply gave a. significant smile, feel ing, doubtless, it would be waste of time to endeavor to set the speaker right. As a matter of fact, my very first admonition to pupils, whether be ginners or advanced players for ad vanced players as well are often care less in these respects Is to count and carefully sort their cards in suits, ac cording to their respective value aa trick winners, and then to alternate the colors. This last is to lessen the danger of a (Concluded on rage 4. Column i l