J I'M 1 j SECTION FIVE Pages 1 to 12 Women s Section Special Features VOL,. XXXVIII. PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MOKXIXG, MARCH 1), 1019. NO. IP. 130 Oak Dressers in a Big Special Sale A Sale That Means a Saving of Many Dollars to Home Furnishers, for These Dressers Are Priced Lower Than Has Been Possible to Price Them for Many Months Plenty of Good Patterns to Choose From All of Solid' Oak, With Heavy Plate Mirrors fte fSllter 8ter rHSllir itpBliir Vmi' lpl yn ii pjpn tH Regular $22 JO Oak Dressers at $17.45 As illustrated. A handsome pattern with oval mirror and scroll decoration. A eplen did value at $17.45. Regular $24.50 Oak Dressers at $19.65 Well built, well finished, in a substantial design that will never go out of fash ion. Deep drawer epace. Regular $24.75 Oak Dressers at $19.90 The sketch shows voir what a roomy, well-proportioned dresser this is. Shaped mir ror, as illustrated. Regular $26.75 Oak Dressers ' at $20.45 A spacious, well-constructed dresser with plenty of room in its deep drawers. Hand some shaped mirror. Regular $29.75 Oak Dressers at $23.45 A dresser of exceptional beauty and finish, with pood shaped mirror of fine plate glass, as pictured above. Regular $3250 Oak Dressers at $25.90 A dresser that will stay in style as long as it lasts, flood finish and built for wear. J'lato glass mirror. Reduced Prices on Other Dressers in Various Finishes $38.50 Dressers of QQI Qfl Oak. Reduced to DO.7U $38.75 Walnut Finish CJOI "I K Dresser. Reduced to.. DOJ.J $34.75 Ivory Finish CJO fTA Dresser. Reduced to.. I " $99.50 Walnut Dresser QQ Qf Reduced to OUU $59.75 Mahogany C?OQ Kfl Dresser. Reduced to.. dOV0J $67.50 Mahogany Dressers. Reduced to. $119.50 Mahogany Dresser. Reduced to.. $94.50 Mahogany Dresser. Deduced to.. S49.75 S91.75 S73.75 Dining-Room Chairs Reduced for Special Selling $2.95 Brace Arm, Saddle Seat, Dining Chair in good substantial pattern. Re- CJO Qfl duced to .OU $4.85 Panel Back Dining Chair in a much admired pattern. Reduced for ? 7 special selling DO I J $4.75 Dining Chair, with upholstered scat, in box-frame pattern, a very special C?Q QC value, at OO.OtJ $5.85 Slip-seat, High-back Dining Chair, a very special value at this reduced QQ rffSj "3 r Regular $22.75 Oak Dresser at $17.90 There is plenty of drawer epaco In this exceptional dresser at J 17.30. Mirror with handsome scroll fctand, as illustrated. r This $8950 Tapestry Over stuffed Davenport $69.50 As Illustrated Above. Upholstered in beautiful figured tapestry in handsome colors. Built in cushion effect in seat and C?IQ Kfl back. Greatly underpriced ut. Dv)7tJO This Exceptional $115 Tapestry Overstuffed Davenport $97.50 An Unusually Fine Pattern, with deep, spring seat, sott, comfortable back, and spring arms, as illustrated. The best CQ7 FQ value we know of anywhere at tDU I tlvr Regular $1850 High-Back Oak Rocker $13.90 A durable, good -looking pat tern, as pictured below. Genu ine leather auto scat not to bo surpassed for ease and high, three-slat back. A rocker that will bring comfort to any home. Specially reduced in price. Your Credit Is Good Sale of Oak Library Tables Choice of Four t Handsome Designs Values Up to $25.50 $17.85 Here are the four patterns, each worth a Rood deal more than this spcchtl sale price. All are of heavy, selected oak. in massive, substantially built styles. Each has a convenient book ehelf. drawer space for writing matt-rials and the like and Is splendidly finished. It is seldom, indeed, that such tables as these are offered for as low as $17.85. Use Your Credit at Powers. We Charge No Interest Powers Is Portland Headquarters for Good Rugs, Carpets and Linoleums x1S AxmlterJ3 Rvg vw ' Mottled Axmlneter Rugs in five excellent patterns. Regular 37.50 values. Velvet Crpeti,( QC Special', ard "JliiJJ Ten different patterns, with stair carpets to match. Linoleums A choice of many new patterns and coloring's. Brings This $2250 Vic j trola to Your Home Join Powers Victrola Club. 2- i,h This Is the Plan First payment 5e. To each following payment add 5c weekly, the second payment amounting to 10c, the third to 15c and so on until $1 a week is reached. Balance of 13 is payable on the plan of $1 a week. If you do not already own a Victrola or if you are thinking of buying one of these smaller instruments for use during the summer don't delay. Come In and Choose Your Vic trola Tomorrow at Powers Powers Design Contest For Billboards FIRST PHI7.K .-. SixoD .PKizif: :iO. The Idea portrayed, and riot the workman-chip, will be judged. Size of design: All designs to be 38 inches long and 10 inches wide, on either cardboard or paper. Border: To be two inches on each end and one inch on the top and bottom. This must be neutral gray color. Lettering or printing to be "Powers Furniture, Third and tmi ii n prize irt. KOI 11 1 II PRIZE 95. Tamhill. Toot credit is good at our store use it. " All designs must include a picture of the GOOSE. A n y number of colors may be used, with the exception of the border, which is to be neutral tjray. Write name and address and phone number (if any) plainly on back of each design. Dell? er deitticna to Powers AdvertlMlna- Uepartment oa or before March IS. An A-B Sanitary Combination Gas Range Will Add Much to Your Kitchen Efficiency ! A Kitchen Heater and Rang e-combined yet each, feature can be operated independently of the other. Come in and let Ma show you the many other advantages of the A-D Gas-Range, lis convenience and the saving of time and ga will more than com pensate for its cost. Turn in Your Old Gas Range 1535 Use Your Credit, Too DAFFODILS AND NARCISSI, IN FORM MUCH ALIKE, DIFFER Botanist Explains Flora of the Season and Also Tells What the Jonquil, Also of the Same Class, Really Is. u . I. WW-. ill J i BY ALRFtlT RADOIN SWKKTSEO, Profeor of Hotany in V'nivcrjitty of Oreicon. UNIVKRSITV OK CiRKliON". Eugene. March 8. tspecial. From this time on the plan will be to select for our weekly study either exalted dignitaries or some less known and humble Individuals from the flower parade now forming in forest and field. on hillside and in garden. While the attention will be turned to structure and classification and bo tanical facts, tbcre will alto be an at tempt to inject some of that spirit voiced by Ruskin in one of his lectures on art, "What we especially need at present for educational purposes, is to know, not the anatonv' of plants, but their biography how and where tlify live and dt, their tempers, benevo lences, malignities, distresses anil vir tues. Wo want them drawn from their youth to their usr. from bud to fruit." That Is, we are interested In botany as plant biology. Today It i.s the swing ing and ringing of golden bells that fascinates our gaze and mayhap might peal a chime for us. were our tym panums tuned with fine delicacy, tine has well said. "It is not alone the In dividual and collective beauty of their riowers that endears them to our hearts, but the bravery of their ad vent, for the time of the daffodil closes the gate on bleak winter and ushers in with trumpets of gold, longed-for spring." I.oe Story nrt-alled. 'This Is a daffodil, but whnt Is n n:irclssus, whnt a Jonquil?" Such is the inquiry often propounded by pux slfd individuals. The answer to this query will compel the use of a few scientific names which have been part ly popularized. All this group is in cluded in the genus narcissus, a word on the same root as narcotic, from the tireck. meal ing torpor, in allusion to the poisonous qualities of the bulb. The Ureeks had a, beautiful l-cnd which Ovid relates In book III. be ginning with line 370. a considerable portion of which is repeated in Kull- rint h s Age of table and also in bis "Ltolden Ae." It happened that the saucv goddess I.VI10, who is still wont to talk back to us. teeing- the beautiful youth Narcis sus, fell in love with him but by her very nature Is hindered from ap proaching him. Now it chanced that Narcissus becoming separated fron his companions, cried out. "Is any one here'.'" and this was Kcho's chance, who immediately replied "Here." In amaze ment he cries "Come," which he im mediately answers. So the dialogue progresses until he finally spurns her and runs away and she hides herself In lonely caves and pines away until, as Ovid eays. "Only her voice and her bones remain; then only her voice: for they say that her hones were turned to stone." Echo appeals to Nemesis, who proceeds to punish Narcissus. As he eclined by a clear pool of water he fell in love with his own image mir rored back to him and made love to It. Vainly he attempts to caress, to em brace, to kiss the image, which ever eludes him. until he dies of a broken heart. As the Naiads were building the funeral pile Ovid says "his body was nowhere to be- found. In place of his body they find a flower, its yellow center girt with white petals." Any one who desires to peruse further this delightful bit of legendary literature may find It In a translation of Ovid made by Frank Justus Miller. Hut now for an unraveling and straightening out of the terminology. As we, said above, they are all in eluded in Narcissus. liut as amorir the Browns or Smiths we may dis tinguish John Brown. Mehitable P.rown and Henry Brown, so among the Narcissi. The striking Paffodil would be sci entifically designated as Narcissux pseudo-narcissus. The common name has in some manner been transformed from Asphodel which, used by the old poets and writers, referred to the Daf fodil. Figure 1. Chinese Sacred l.ily Traced. The Paper Narcissus, or Polyanthus Narcissus, figure S. has a cluster of flowers springing from a clump of broad leaves and - may be white or yellow or intermediate shade. Its bo tanical name is Narcissus tazetta. and when Polyanthus Is used as its desig nation it should always be coupled with Narcissus, us Polyanthus is the name of a member of the Primrose family. Here belongs, the Chinese Sacred Lily. The poet's Narcissus or Pheasants Eye Narcissus. Narcissus poetica, has a solitary white flower, the saucer- shaped crown being more or Jess 'yel low tinged with red. The Jonquil. Narcissus jonquilla. has slender rush-like leaves, deeply grooved down the center. The flowers are from two to six In number and some shade of yellow. These individuals, which in the be ginning were so easily separated, have married and intermarried until the hybrids and varieties are bewildering and In some cases distinguished only with difficulty. Although exhibiting an apparently considerable difference of form an ex amination of figure 3 will show a sim ilarity of plan in them all. The draw ings are of lengthwise sections of daf fodil and paper narcissus. At the top of tho flower atem Is a dry husk or brac t remaining, attached to the stem in the clustered sorts, but often carried up and cast off by tho opening daf fodils, as may be seen in fi'gure 1. The flower tube cannot be distinguished as calyx and corolla but consists of a blending- of the two and is spoken of as the floral envelope or perianth. That i portion, often luiatakcn. Xor pet Ala id Y i 4 a mrMifiratlon of the perianth and is railed the crown. Within are the fix pollen -bear in it Rtamrns ani in the cen ter the pistil. ti pol irn-rMept tve upper portion jolnel by the H end or style to eutj ihm1, roiiulinn? the numerous eccs that after fertilization will ripen into ae-d.t. When 1 he ilafforilT "pnshen its way up from the ground it holds haughty hiad rrrct. hut a.s it breaks out its jclnrious bell it iM'tiJs that rain and dew may not fill the golden chain and injure t he pollen, thus preventing pollination and the perpetuation of the rare. While usually cu Itivatec! f rom the bulbs all new forms are obtained by crofs pollinating and raisins from seed, S4 nd thiJi takes eonsiderj bl t i mr. Sheridan Soldier Tells of Battle of Argonne. Iltmcoc Tnlhot In Tblek of KIbllMff in Whh-h American Took. Hum Mrongbuld, S1-.' 11ERID.VN. Or., Feb. 13. (Special.) Itoscoe Talbot of this city tells the following interesting talc of the Argonne battle: "The barrage we advanced under, at the Argonne. was some noise; there were big guns and mall guns belch ing fort.'i noitc and destruction on a "o-niilc front, and the tog was so thick that about 'JO eel ahead was the limit for seeing. We picked up guns and amniumi ion. carts and horses, and two or ihrte men. After we went on a ways farther some men went back after more crts. Wc then marched farther on und I was sent back to guard the ammunition and direct the carts in. "While sitting there alone in the fog. listening to the shells pass over me from both sides, and the Bodies hitting Just the other side of me. the SMlh came scattering in. from three different sides and covered, with mud and dirt and blood. 1 shook hands with a fellow I knew and he said that they caught hell back by the carts. Then the ones who went back after the carts came up and said that the horses and carts were hot to pieces, so we picked up the ammunition and went up to the company. "We marched on over the Hun first line trenches which were cut up by our big guns. When we were up to the front lines a lost plane came eoar Ing down and turned machine guns on us. but nobody was hurt. We shot at it with the same effect. We then run onto a machine gun nest on the opposite slope, and after we cleaned it up the infantry went over and cap tured whnt few were left." Fighting of Second Division Held Second to None. Milea Rarrrlt Writes of Made bjr Marlaes. Heeerd Tun Id division is the best Ameri can unit in France, in the opinion of Miles Barrett, gunnery Fcrgeant in the 97th company. 6th regiment. Vnited States marines, according to a letter ha has written to Major llichard I'cich of the t'regon state police. "No doubt you have read a great deal about the accomplishments of tho various divisions over here during the war. and particularly of the 4Jd. a na tional guard division composed of tho Ohio. Iowa and New York regiments. This division gets all kinds of news paper publicity, while the old 2d. an outfit that lias it beat four ways from the Jack, never gets any at all. The last drive of the war we took the place of the -d In the center of the line and made nine kilometers the first day where they couldn't make any." Sergeant Barrett's letter Is written on the back of a divisional bulletin telling of tho fights in which the id took part and quoting tdwin L. Mimes of the New York Times us authority for the statement that It had dona more fighting than any other division. According to the bulletin, the 2d fought at Chateau Thierry, Su Mihiel, Kheima and. iu llio isutlau operation: