MALHEUR ENTEItPMSE. '. m I MORSE IS BITTER III ' "!asV - ii - COMET WILL BRUSH EARTH. Pacific Coast Will Have Best View About May 18. Oakland, Cal., Jan. 6. Halley a Vntiretr Ttnme TothnKOil fnm 111 comet will five tho Facific Coast a I cIoxa hrinh thm vear on Mav JS. De twecn the hours of 4 and 10 o'clock n. m.. and the "brush" will be some thini? snectacular. says rroiessor Charles Hurkhalter. of the Chabot ob unrvatorv. I . ' mi ii i . ti me eartn win men puss mruugu mo last of the 20.000,000-mile tail or tn colestial visitor, and the result ought to be as dazslinf a piece of firework I ... ii. ... u4 i ... as this feneration has ever witnessed mmmm ai.iftvi .' Wft w m HHW I EVENTS OF THE DAY Items Gathered from All Parts o! the World. PREPARED FOR THE BUSY READER eating Happening from Points Outside the State. Banker Morse begins a penitentiary sentence as convict No. 2814. Archbishop Ireland defends King Leopold's administration of the Congo states. Zelaya says he has abundant proof that American marines aided the revo lutionists against him. J. P. Moriran. T. F. Ryan and Levi P. Morton form a Si 50. 000. 000 bank trust in New York city. It ia claimed that the recent aero plane carnival in France frightened all the birds from the vicinity. United States government officials have planned s raid against nightriders of Kentucky and Tennessee. A millionaire cattleman of Texas rave hia three children $2,000,000 worth of property each for a Christmas present. The barkeeper of an American hotel in Havana refused to serve two negro congressmen and a riot followed. Fur ther trouble is expected. President Taft listened patiently to the committee of railroad presidents but will not change the tone of his forthcoming message to congress. Postal deficit for 1909 is $17,441,- 719. Over 50,00 people attended Presi dent Taft's New Year's receptino. Senator Cummins of Iowa, opens campaign tor further triff revision. If mediation in switchmen's strike fails, 20,000 more men wil stop work. Dauehtes of the American Revolu tion have taken up conservation work. Postmaster-General Hitchcock urges postal reforms to avoid a deficit in 190. Bettinir is even in London that the Liberals will win in the coming elee tion. Indian commissioner reports that tu berculosis is on the increase among In dians. Twelve men were lost by the sinking of a sugar-laden schooner in an At lantic gale. Colonist travel to the Pacific North west for 90 broke ail records, and is ex pected ti still greater for 1910. A woman armed with a shorgun stopped the laying of an oil pipe line on her ranch gin California. Trains collided in a snowstorm near Billings, Mont, killing two. A miss ing baggageman is thought to have burnedin the wreckage. he is still presi- Th astronomer insists that he has "nothing to say" about so dramatic situation, fraacht sot omy with awe innirinr possibilities to the dwellers on tho trlobe. but fraught, as well, with possibilities of tragic moment. Whether . . 1- I J! .1 -U .U. or not tue eario a uivo iuiuuiiu iuo comet's tail will mean anything more than a dazzling starry spectacle, Pro tensor Burkhalter will not predict. lie only says: "Wait and see." The news that Halley's comet will ho seen only on the Pacific Coast has not hitherto been published, although the fact has been known for some time to the astronomers of the world, many of whom will iournev to California to be on the sccno when the great phe nomenon takes place. In discussing the Comet, the astrono mer says: "Astronomers Cromelin and Cowell, of the Koyal observatory at Greenwich, have probably made the most exnaust ive researches into tho history of the comet. "According to the computations Ilal ley's comet will reach the descending node on May 18, 1910, when it will be in a direct line between the orbits of the earth and the sun, and it so hap pens that the earth will reach that par ticular point of its orbit about the same time. Should the calculations of the astronomers prove to be rigidly ex act, the comet will pass directly be tween the earth and the sun between the hours of 4 and 10 o'clock stand ard Pacific time. Assuming that it will happen dur ing the middle of this time, or 7 p. m., t will be visible over the Pacific Ocean, Kastern Asia and Western Korth America. BANK MERGER GROWS. In Zelaya BNSorts that dent of Nicaragua. Taft's special messago on trust law changes will go to congress next wook. A southern chemist expert asserts that the aurora boreal is is caused by gas. The New York suprome, court says patriotism has given way to an ago of graft. Army engineers have recommended extentiivfl improvements for tho Colum bia river. The Turkish cabinet lias been driven out of otllcc and a military premier may be appointed. It Is considered that tho reclamation service is sufei from abolishment, though many changes may be uiado. A Nebraska man got an appointment s a deputy sheriff ami then proceeded to bring homo his orring son from Los Angeles, A draftsman on a Britlah school ship is under arrest for stealing complete plans of the nritish navy's wireless system and codes. .Tames Gordon, once accused of con spiring with Hooth to kill Lincoln, has been uamod United State senator from Teuiienseo by Governor Noel. Henev hits filed a libel suit against W. H. Crocker for SO.OOO. Fifty out of 88 American colleges will contir.uo to approve of football. Phviiriann say there is no hope for Cardinal Siitolli, though ho may linger several days. Loss by the tidal wave and Mixard on the New Kngland coast will reach .1,000,000, besides many lives. When elHVH arrives in Mexico, Pre dent Iinz will attend a reception in his honor, which is taken as a direct insult to the I'uited State Six women are en route on foot from Poattla to join the 1. W. W. of Spokane and ngtit for tlie right of free speech ou the public street. Zelaya boards Mexican gunboat under . eyes of American mariue. J. P. Warren, who pursued ard helped to capture Jesus James, is dead, Strike leader for the switchmen have called off negotiation with the railroad, and will appeal to WaiV.ug ton for advice and aid. Mi Iconise Taft, niece of the presi dent, will be married to G. II. Suowden, of Seattle. After a trip to Kurvpe they win reside in rvalue. A crippled Italian girl in Chicago robbed her father' bauk of 30,iKH, With which she hoped to Induce her Co mill, also a cripple, to marry her. Prance is in a panic at the Inroads of Aniericaa commerce, President Taft is being urged to tuaks active war tia the trust. .!krd sweep th east f rt til Win Biped to llliuoii, and Chicago face a l famine. A ihixmr arrivwd at lloijiilain, Wkh., H7 d4 out from llypong, China, with arr pUis kopeUxsly til aud uly fw HisaJs i prvvuiuai left. Big Money Trust Adda $61,000,000 One Day. New York, Jan. 5. J, Pierpont Mor gan and associates may control, through further trust company mergers in Isew York, the enormous sum of $210,000,000 in deposits alone. This is approximately $23,000,000 more than the deposits of the National City bank of this city, the largest finan cial institution in the United States. Reports of additional trust company consolidation are given credence in view of yesterday's announcement of tho merger by J. P. Morgan & Co., of the Guaranty Trust, Morton Trust and ilfth-Avenuo Trust companies, with combined deposits of about $150,000,000. This brought a revival in tho finan cial district of rumors embracing the Hankers Trust and the Manhattan Trust enmpo2:c3 jn il0 ,iame combina tion. There were definite reports that the Mercantile Trust company and the Equitablo Trust company eventually would bo taken into some sort of a powerful alliance. In jwint ot fact, the Bankers Trust company is closely afhliated with tho so-called Morgan interests in that two partners in the Morgan banking house Goorgo W. Perkins and Henrv P. Davison sit in tho directorate of tho form or. Other directors of tho Hankers Trust company, including A. I). Hepburn and A. H. Wiggin, presidont and vice-presi dent respectively of tho Chase National bank, and William II. Porter, president oi mo i,nomicni national bank, aro active in affairs of the Guaranty Trust company, wtiieli is to bo made tho titular head of tho Guarantv-Morton Fifth-Avenue consolidation. relations between tho Morgan inter ests and tho Manhattan Trust company always have boon intimate, though the latter is not regarded as a Morgan ap pondnge. It is porhaps significant that tho building onco occupied by tho Man hattan Trust compnny is to bo razed soon to make way for a 30-story build ing to bo erected by the Hankers Trust company. jvejiomifl or mo imnxers Trust aggre gate f-Jti.miU.UUU nnd thoso of the Man minim i rust, company !., Jl'H.UtMi, so that tho two companies, if combined with those now in process of nbsorn tion by "J. p. Morgan & Associates," would total in deposits moro than $200. 000,000. Train Is Lost la Desert. Salt Lake, Utah, Jan, 5. Train No. 4, carrying 100 to 1.10 passengers from Los Angoles to Salt Lake, is marooned on tho desert, 34 miles from Calinete, lv., tho track before and behind it Having been torn out bv the flood of week. 'Iho train is well stocked HAPPENINGS FROM AROUND OREGON MANY NEW PHONE LINES. Independent Company Connects Boise With Central Oregon. Ontario Ontario's independent tele phone system is nearly completed. The telephones have been received and the switchboards will soon be installed. It is expected that all will be in working order by the middle of January. Rural lines will be installed from hern to Nvssa. and from here to Vale, including ranches all along both lines. A modern metallic circuit will be put in from here to Vale for long distance use. to connect at Vale with the line alroady practically complete from Vale to Burns in Harney county. The Vale- Burns line is beinz installed by a Brew- scy corporation, of which W. D. Baker is one of the principal stockholders and the manager. Exchange with this line has been ar ranged by tho Ontario lines, which will also have exchange wita me i-ayciie, Fruitland and Idaho towns as far east as JJoise. mis will give in eneci a throueh service from Boise to Burns, which will be the largest territory that has ever been served by telephone in this locality. The Drewsey line reaches Westfall, Beulah, Harney and Burns, will soon be in at Juntura, and will have con nection with all the ranch homes in Otis, Malheur and Harney valleys. NOT BUILDING LOGGING ROAfl last with provisions and thero is no suf lenng. As soon as wagons can reach the stalled train, a matter of three or four days, the passenger will bo buuight to Barclay, six miles west of Acoma, where a train will bo to bring them into Salt Lake. waiting Town Nearly Wiped Out. Wutertown, S. IV, Jan. 5. The town of Castlewood, H mile outh of here, narrowly missed being wiped out by flre of unknown origin tonight. The entire south side of Main street I in ashes, entailing a loss estimated at 1M',000, when 12 buildings were de at roved. The tire did not stop until the Inst building on the south side of the street was destroyed. I.ate tonight the fire had burned ' itself out on the extreme edge of Main street. President of Pacific Railway Declares Grade Is First Class. Portland "Who ever heard of a log ging road constructed Bt a cost of 40, 000 per mile?" This the question E. L. Lytle, presi- ent of the Pacific Railway & Naviga tion company, propounded when Baked in regard to a report emanating from ABtoria to the effct that the line being built from Hillsboro to Tillamook will be nothing more nor less than a log- ing road: that it is not intended for passenger and freight business. Why, it is absurd," Mr. Lytle con tinued, and laughed heartily. "Of course the report came from Astoria; Astoria does not want the road built at II. It never did. 'We are pushing the work as rapid ly as possible, and expect to have trains in operation by August 1. At present 1,500 men are engaged on the work, and they are certainly doing something." "The report has it that the road contains too many sharp curves, and too steep a grade to make it practical forpasaenger traffic," Mr. Lytle was told. Curves and grades? We have no steeper grade than the maximum of the Southern Pacific to California, wbtch is 3 per cent, and as lor curves, there is not one exceeding 15 degrees. You must not lose sight of the fact that we have 18 tunnels on that stretch of road from Hillsboro to Tillamook. These tunnels shoudld do away with some of the grade that seems' to fright en those who might have started the rumor. "The road will cost in the neighbor hood of $4,000,000, including the cost of equipment, and passenger and freight trains will be operated to supply every demand. "As far as logging goes, we do not own a tract of timber in that district. Of course, it taps a rich timber coun try, and logs will, of course, be haul ed if they are offered, but it will only be part of the business." Potato Panning Pays at Elgin. Elgin Tho country around Elgin is taking its first stride in potato raising this year. The crop ran from 100 to 2(10 bushels to the acre, and yielded nnoiit .4,uuii uusneis irom the nu acres j planted. Next year it is expected 1000 arres will be planted. We have har vested the largest crop of potatoes in the state this year," said 11. II.. With orspoon. "Off of S" acres we obtained 1 !',((( bushels. This is considerably larger than the crop at Medford, which was claimed as the largest." CANAL FROM LAKE TO SEA. Pacific Canal Co. Incorporates for SI.OPO.000 to Build Shipwsy. Portland Monev makes the sea port, then the people come. Upon this policy, it is announced, the Pacific Caual company has incorporated with a ranitaliiatlnn nf SI. 000.000 to con struct a ahinwav between FloreS lake and the ocean. Pacific City is to be a new town maintained largely by tim ber intersets. "But the building of the city is in entirely different hands than the canal project," said L. Reeder, attorney ioi the promoters of the canal. "The men who are backing the enter prise, I might say, went down to Florea lake and looked over the situa tion. They saw a natural wooded har bor. needinar but a short connection to open it to the ships ot the sea, They measured and found 10,000,000 feet of virgin timber, and the cleared land valuable for dairying and near ly all of it arable. It was practically an unopened country. They decided that it would be a sure investment to build a city; the canal comes as a mat ter of course. "In 1912 we will heve there a city of 10,000 people, possibly. The land is capable of supporting fully that many. Railroads are coming and the largest ships will be given a fresh wa ter harbor two miles long, three quar ters of a mile wide and everywhere 40 feet deep. Located about 40 miles south of Coos bay, we are at a conven ients hipping point for all coast cities and for the trade of the Orient" Wallowa's Lumber Industry. Wallowa In 1909 the chief advance ment in the county was the lumber in dustry. t the beginning of the sea son there were only three small mills in the immediate vicinity of Wallowa; at the close of 1909 there were ten mills, many of which have a capacity of 20,000 feet per day. The largest of these mills is the Nibley Mimnaugh Lumber company's mill, located in this city. It is a modern band mill, with a capacity of 50,000 feet per day. These mills will market more than 30,000,000 feet of lumber annually, all of which will be sent from Wallowa. As the lumber industry increased rapidly in the past year the population of the county increased. Wallowa ad vanced from a little hamlet to a mod ern town with many magnificent resi dences. Wallowa county built a modern court house within the past year, which is located at Enterprise. $20,000 Library at. Astoria. Astoria Arrangements are being made to accept the Carnegie library of fer, which provides for the construction of a $20,000 building in case the city will guarantee's $2000 maintenance fund annually. Tho present eha-ter provides that no more than $000 prr year be raised by taxation for library purposes. Mayor Smith favors a sps cial election to amend the charter in this particular, so that the required amount of $2000 could be raised. This would be no great additional burden, as the city now raises $1500 by a half mill tax. Convicted Banker Claims He Has Been Made a Victim. New York, Jan. 4. With a supreme effort to be cheerful, but with emotion occasionally getting the better of him, Charles W. Morse left New York today to begin a 15-year sentence in the ted- eral prison at Atlanta, us., ior vioia tion of the national banking laws. Before leaving the Tombs, where he had been confined for the greater part of the last year. Morse received his wife and two sons and thon the news oaoer men. He was too affected to say anything, but handed out a care fully prepared statement. Morse left at 10:45 o'clock in cus tody of Deputy United States marshals. The party occupied a stateroom. Morse's statement is bitter and dra matic. "I am going to Atlanta to begin penal servitude under the most brutal sentence ever pronounced against a citizen in a civilized country," is his opinion of the sentence. "I have hoped," the statement con tinues, "with that hope which comes from a consciousness of my innocence, that I will not have to close out for ever the light and liberty of this world under such an inhuman sentence. 1 have felt that the fact that I had paid a tne of $,0(K),UU0 nnd served a year in prison would satisfy the cry for a victim and I have steadily believed that the courts would be compelled to give me a new trial. "When I learned that the private detectives of the prosecution were the keepers of the jury, that the jury drank like men upon a jaunt or a holiday, rather than citizens engaged in a se rious service, and that as a result, two of them were rendered unfit, I natur ally hoped I would be allowed another trial by another jury, free from these hostile influences. It seems, however, that, the courts intend to establish the practices which uiuilu ruHi-uriHKin a pare or a jury service and private detectives as the custodians of a jury a permanent insti tution. By this sentence and judgment I may be brought to ruin; but the dam ago done to me is not half as import ant as the injury to the administra tion of justice. I am now up in years and must, with the passing of time, pass also; but the record of my con viction and the wav it was broueht about will remain a lasting and dan gerous example of a government gone mad in search of a victim." OIL FOUND IN ATHABASCA. Secret Borings Show Inexhaustible Supply, Cmmittee Is Told. Ottawa, Ont., Jan. 4. Evidence of the value of the Athabasca oil fields has been given before the Dominion senate committee by Alfred von Ham- merstein. He stated that for the last eight years he had been exploring the field between 320 and 350 miles north of Edmonton, and that some of tho wells had revealed the presence of oil and gas in larce auantities. The wells varied in depth from 250 o 1,200 feet. He showed samples of naphtha oil and of oil collected in the sand. He declared that in the wells which he was boring thero were. ir.AY. austible supplies of this material. Near the surface it was found in a hardened state, while 60 feet lower down it was found in a semi-liquid condition. His work had been carried on secret v. ucciareu mai mere was no toundation for the statement in th prospectus of tho California & Albert UU company that it had discovered on on a ao.ooo-acre property 30 miles norm or .amonton. NEWS ITEMS FROM WASHINGTON Congress Convenes. Washington, Jan. 4 A lowering of the bars in favor of fermented, malt or fruit beverBges at army post ex changes and on army transports, but permitting "no distilled nor ardent spirits to be sold, "is provided by a bill introduced in the house by Representa tive Parker, chairman of the judiciary committee. The measure provides that the favor ed beverBges may be sold, under prop er regulations, by enlisted men or oth er persons authorized. The increased cost of living was the Bubject of a concurrent resolution offered in the House todsy by Repre sentative Hull, of Tennessee. It pro vides for a joint committee of the house and senate to investigate ana report what remedies msy be effected through legislation. Secretray Wilson, of the uepartmeni of Agriculture, has ordered a sweeping inquiry of the same nature. "Ireslize," said Secretary wnson. "that we hBve undertaken a big con tract, hut we can carry it out. We have the men and we have the money." A bill making sweeping changesin the interstate commerce laws for the regulation of railroads was introduced today in the House by Representative Mann of Illionis, chairman of the com mittee on interstate and foreighn com merce. Representative Hawley today in troduceud his bill granting to the State of Oregon the right to make lieu se lections, equal in arer and value, to all school lands embraced in forest reser ves. Late today after a conference with Senators Aldrich and Root and Attor ney-General Wickersham, President Taft decided to revert to his original plan of combining his views as to amendments to the interstate com merce and anti-trust laws in one mes sage, which he will send to congress Thursday noon. An aggregate of $6,344,000 of re pairs to naval vessels is provided in es timates the secretary of the navy to day submitted to the house. The recent legislation required recom mendations for authorization where re pairs are to exceed $200,000. ,o,t, 4 CONSOLIDATE REPUBLIC, Minister Barrett Says This Outcome of Trouble. Washington, Jan. 4.-00, of the five Central American re Into one government is the Stale department is workingon ing to information from an tive source tonight. I th, future only such steps as will k! about the commercial doi..- develo the Countries', their aafokt.-.i. , -""uiwninent ot sound financial basis and the ti tion of an entente between the lies, are contemplated. The first note of the new prow was sounded by John Barrett, dit of the bureau of American rpUbr In his recent Toledo speech, fii declared that eventually the (j v! States of Central America would be accomplished fact V On the heels of this announce, came the declaration of Senor Cri the special agent of Mexico, whouu on leaving Washington: 11 "The United States and Mexico continue coopearting to bring peace in Central America and to Z FOREIGN TRADE $1,475, 000,000 Land-Hungry Men Busy in Lake. Silver Lake During November 12, 800 acres of land were filed upon before Commissioner West at this place. There were 15 homestead filings of 160 acres each. 2S additional homesteads, three desert filings of ItiO acres each, and one of 320 acres. These fig ures show how eagerly land in this por tion of Lake county is being sought after. From the way December filings have continued, the number will be far in excess of those for November. AIR CUTTERS ARE READY. PORTLAND MARKETS. Big Hospital for Medford. Medford The mother provincial of Oregon, who is in charge of all hos pitals in the northwest under the man $18(ci20 per ton ; Eastern Oregon, Wheat Track prices: Bluestem, $1.20; club, $1.10; red Russian, $1.09; Valley, $1.10. Barley Feed and brewing, $30((f 30.50 per ton. Corn Whole, $35; cracked, $36 ton. Oats No. 1 white, $32.50((i33 ton. Hay Timothy: Willamette Valley. $18 agement of the Sisters of the Holy Names, is in Medford for the purpose of meeting local business men and dis cussing with them plans for the erec tion of a $125,000 hospital in this city, l'or some time the Sisters of the Hoiy names have been considering the mnt ter of erecting a hospital in this city, but this is the first definite step. Thirty Potatoes VWigh 8f Pounds. Junction City Floyd Ilowerd hs on display here six potatoes which weigh 16 pounds. One potato weighs tive pounds. F. W. Thorn raised about 4.000 bushels on his Kiverview farm. Thirty potatoes filled a sack, which weighed 89 pounds. A dealer pur chased three sacks of potatoes from Wm. Michaels and found one that measured 4 inches in length. Wild Cats In Linn County. Albany The foothills of Linn coun ty are abounding ii wild animals. Wayne Menear brought the skins of three wildcats and two cougars to the county clerk's office, ior which he was given the state bounty amounting to 6. lie will be given nearly as much county bounty at the next term of the county court. I John D., Jr., Deep Dolver. New York, Jan. 5. ' ' I am heart and oul In this investigation," said John D. Uockofoiirr, Jr., todsy as he en tered the Criminal Courts building to talk over the plans for the "white lave" investigation. Mr. Kockefeller was yesterday selected a foreman of the grand jury which is to make the uiri!gaiion. --ir iheje stories are It created during the year, and which true. ' he said, referring to the alio- will mean th dividing un nf th- i?atlon tit h..U.uU . . ' "the truth about them houl.l V .,.,. definitely. If they are fl. they should U ailtfuced.' Orchards In Linn. Albany The plantina; of thousands of acres of orchards in Linn county, through the organisation of orchard companies, is the real awakening spir- Taper Trust Trot Nsar. New York, Jau. 5. Tho fejeral graul jury here u e,.ectd to taU up shortly (ho luve.tu-ition of t), .i. bged paper combination wl.u-k il.- f...i eral authontiei ha beea looking into, following (he action whick led to K. UiMolulwu r (k mauiU fiber I'vol. ent Urge tracU of land. Profit In Wallowa Land. Joaeph -Augustus Whit has sold his eUO acr aUvk ranch in Initiation park to Jo Shinn of Joeeph for $S,uoo. Kir. While taught this place four years ago for ft, 600. paper Klevlrlc Llhu tor Teu. Halfiii A complete eleetri 1 g h t ! n yaleui, Including ou bu'b is rath cell, ha teea latlallei at Ik pentetlitry (d.21.50; alfalfa, $16wl6.50; clover, $15(i16; cheat, $15(il6; grain hay, Butter City creamery extras, 39c; i a in-y uuisiue creamery, i54(aayc per jponud; store, 22 , (d :24c. Butter fat I prices average Hc per pound under I regular butter prices. I Poultry Hens, 15v'(j 16; Springs ! 1 5 . (a 1 6 ; ducks, 20c; geese, 12c; tur I keys, live, 22c; dressed 25c. I f.ggs rresh Oregon extras, 41(.i a ! 1 - J - . , i-per aozen ; eastern, zui 3)c per uozen. ; Pork Fancy, 10d; 10gc per pound j Veal Extras, 1 lot 11 c per pound rresh fruits Apples, $l((3 box; i pears, i.oo per box; cranberries. , t per barrel. ioiasoes carload rniying prices: uregon, tott;e per sack; sweet po- laioes, zc per pound. egetables Artichokes, $lf.il.75 per dozen; cabbage, $1.60(n 1.60 per nunarea; cauliflower, f 1.75 per dozen; ceiery, 3.ou per crate; garlic, 10c pound; horseia lish, 12 Si c per pound ; pumpkins, lV'ISc; sprouts, 6i 7c per pound; squash, lot 1 i.c: turnins. $1 per sack; carrot. $1; beets, $1.60; parsnips ei.ou. Onions Oregon, $1.50 per sack. Hop 1909 crop, 20(d21c; old nominal. w ool tastern Oregon, lfi(j23c pound; mohair, choice, 25c pound. Cascars bark 4 'e pound. Hides Pry hides, Lioil9c pr pound; .1... L : i - . i o . j . ... . ' uj "h utilise pouna; dry cailskin, 19n21c pound; salted hides, 10(,i 11c; salted calfskin, 15(,il6c pound; green lC IrS-t. Cattle Pest steer. $4.50u4.75; fair to good. $4t4.25; medium and feeders, f.1.25.t6 60;. cows, top, $3.5d (i4; fsir to good, $:t(,i3.25; common to medium, t2.5iV.i3.75; bulls, $3.25(.t 5.60; h.avy, $4i.i4.?&. Hogs-Peat, $S.6iVa8.65; medium, 7.60.tS.25; slikk.r. $tUi)ta.75 ; Sheep-Hest Wetbrrs. $5.60oi6.75 . fair to good. f4.6oi.(6: . v,e lea, yearling, Uat, 6i5.1!5j fair U good. 14 eou4.Ul lambs, $itl.l6. Aviators Arrive in New York From Paris Leave for Los Angeles. -New ork, Jan. 4. Edwin Cleary who arrived here from Paris a few days ago with seven aeroplanes, which ne expects to try out during aviation ween at i,os Angeles, and Faulhan wno will arrive tomorrow, will leave tor Lios Angeles Monday next. Four of the machines are of the latest model aeroplanes, two Bleriot's and two Far man s. There is also an Antoinette, one Far man and one Hlenot, which Mr. Cleary t-.ecis to use auring vtne aviation snow week. Ho expects to break his own record for speed, height and Hnr ation. His record already is more thar i.fnu reet ror height and with his 50 norse-power motor in a new Rleriot he expects to be able to travel in the air at the rate of 50 miles per hour. i auinan is under contract at a big oil id 1 jr. 100 Days Weston's Limit. -New ork, Jan. 4. Edward Tayson Weston, veteran pedestrian, announced today that lie will make one more transcontinental walk, and get from ocean to ocean in 100 days. Weston will start from Los Aneeles at 4 o'eloeV the afternoon of February 1, and will be due in New York May 2S. His hike from New York to San Francisco early last summer took him 105 davs. but u uiai journey ne encountered a long c '.A oi Biornis ana unusually hot . V suro l"al De faa cross me Lnitea Mates m 100 days. Mining Plant Is Burned. Spokane, Wash., Jan. 4. The sort ing plant and ore bins of the Mace mines at Mace, Idaho, in the Coeur il Alenes, burned today, together with the sorting machinery, heating plant, blacksmith shop and 200 feet of ex pensive cribbing, entailing a loss esti mated tonight at between $",000 and lloo.OOO. The fire is believed to have broken out in the heating plant All the property destroyed is owned bv the Federal Mining 4 Smelting com pany. The gorting plant bandied ore worn mo piandard aud other Ma in iues. nee South Pole Next Goal Worcester. Mass.. .Ian 4 TV.nUii n McMillan, member of Commander esrv a jolar expedition, and Captain Hartlett, who Commanded V lTV 'a B K i n the Koosevelt, today said that thev would like to be members of the expe dition to seek the South Pole. Cap tain Hartlett said: ! have heard of uch a tr.n be:iu iilnn.) T ...... k.. . . f - ...A UD lected to command the ship which will carry the exned.tion a.mtWnF.l t think the Koevelt will be selected, if the expedition oea thr.ni.. - --. Imports of Raw Materials Lead Ex ports of Cotton Show Big Washington, Jan. 5. The foreign commerce of the United States in the year 1909 will exceed in value that of any earlier year, with a single excep tion. The imports will be larger than in any previous year, while the exports will fall slightly below those of 1906 and 1907. The above is an estimate of the" year's trade based on official figures for 11 months as presented by the bu reau of statistics of the department of commerce and labor. Assuming that the twelfth month, December, shows figures of imports and exports approx imately equal to those of the immed iately preceding month, November, the imports will aggregate about $1,475, 000,000, and the exports about $1,750, 000,000, of which approximately $25, 000,000 consists of foreign merchan dise exported, and the remainder, $1, 725,000,000, domestic products. imports free of duty will be larger than in any earlier year in the history of our commerce and will aggregate approximately $700,000,000, against a little over $500,000,000 in 1908 and $636,000,000 in 1907, the high record year prior to 1909. Dutiable imports will amount to about $780,000,000, and will be larger than any preceding year, except possibly in 1907, when the total was $787,000,000. This esti mated total of $1,475,000,000 of im ports in the year exceeds by over $50, 000,000 the highest import record of any earlier year, that of 1907. Of this $1,475,000,000 of imports, about $525,000,000 is raw material for use in manufacturing and $260, 000,000 jartially manufactured mater ial for further use in manfuntnrinn making the total value of mannfnotnr! ers' materials imported nearly $800.- uuu.uoo, or more than half the entire imports of the year. solid substance to the Washington 2 ing of high respect to the interna ' court at Carthage." It is positively stated that the rek tions of the United States and Meii have not been strained in the slight by the Nicaraguan episode. It is the coonviction of the present administration that the influential eW ment of the republics can be won ove by giving a staple basis of comm.... The removal of Zelaya means the elin- ' ination of the troublemaker of Cental I America. It is necessary to the buc j cess of the plan to eliminate all traces of Zelayanism, for the reason if una enows any disposition to compro mise with Zelayanism, his chances for recognition from the United States art small. CAN'T BEACH HIOHEE-TJPS, Taft's Brother Is Their Attorney, ant Roosevelt's Relative Is Manager. Shreveport, La., Dec. 31. Declarint that if Mark Hanna had died ii months sooner, he would not have been tried and sentenced to jail for havijj represented a corporation that had a case pending before a government de partment, ex-Senator Burton, of Kan sas, today severely criticised President Taft and former President Koosevelt. "Tho men higher up in the sugar fraud eases will never bo molested. hfc Cause Mr. Taft's brother is attorney for sugar irusr, anu Mr. Koosevelt'i the uiuiuui-m-iaw is virtually tne mana ger," declared Burton. "The sumr the most powerful agency io owe imprii- JAPAN SEfcKS NEW TREATY. Ambassador Uchida Hopes Immigra. tion Law Will Be Revised. Washington. Jan. 1 Amnno- th official acts of Baron Uchida, new Jap anese Ambassador, will be a series of steps leading to a proposal to th United States for a modification of the Root-Takahira agreement which I. poses limitations on the immigration of Japanese laborers to the United States. While the subject is now being spoken of in a conservative vein, it is said that such a duty is one of th especially imposed upon the new Am. bassador by his government. K is also reported that Jnn t,Dv.. to terminate in 1911 its treaty of com merse and navigation with 'U rt.i.-j trust i r.i l .... ponucs. ii exercises mora power in forming the national policy i.juu any oiner agency. To it 1 me inai wnicn resulted in onment. Burton was tried and sent to jail for a brief term for having represented a corporation which had interests in the hands of one of the federal depart ments. "I first incurred the enmitv of Roose velt," Burton continued, "for havinu threatened to oppose his Cuban policy, which meant letting in Cuban sugar oa a bas:s that threatened to throttle iU infant beet sugar industry. "After the passing of a few years, Taft comes along with his Philippine policy. Capital had begun to turn to the beet sugar industry again, and the Philippines industry scared it away. "Koosevelt opposed my Cuban policy, and at the same time he feared I would head a delegation at the national Re publican convention for Mark Hanna. If Hanna had died six months earlier, there would have been no charges against me, and I would still be in the senate." Mexico Acts Within Rigets. Mexico City, Dec. 30. The Mexican government has -acted wholly within its rights thus far and according to its legal methods in the matter of the American railroad conductor, Cook, said Charge d'Affairs Bailey, of the United States embassy, here tonight 'IThe crime with which Cook standi charged," continued Mr. Bailey, "is not bailable under the Mexican laws, and they have a legal riet to keen Cook in custody six raonthB before rendering a decision. He has been in jail four months. The case is waiting the re turn of the letters rogatory from Gen eral Manager Clark of the Mexican line, which have to do with the charac ter of Cook." Brigadier General Edgerly Retires. Washington, Jan. 6. Brigadier General Winfield S. Edgerly, until re cently the commandant of the mounted service school at Fort Riley, Kansas, wbs today placed on the retired list for physical disability. General Edgerly was recently examined by retiring To what extent Jaoan will .u board Bt his own reauest. and the modification of the Root-Takahira ' rePrted tht he was physically agreement has not been learned. I '""P'Ved for active duty. General uKeny is irom New Hampshire, ana Higher-Up Indicted Veiled 1 W,S- raduated m the United States Washington. Dee ot...." , i military academy in 1870, being in the ficials are coneratulaiin; 7a."", .?! ! TVlc" ever ". ..... n.t lIlc ciueing ot ia()9 results have been accomniik ; ... rehabitation of the custom service E' -d'"the K . runa ana corpora t.on. through whom the Government dollars. OUt Of m inn. The department ia am - , t w mm will WVI1S tinuing investigations. The offi- w... .r. aeeping a close secret iraunaiuj- or toe individual UP" in the sugar frauds. the "higher Patrick Henry'a Body to be Moved. Richmond, Jan. 5. It has practical ly been determined to move the body of Patrick Henry from Rel Hill, Char lotte COUnty. to thia rirv .h,inal ! in the churchyard of the old St John's j church in which Henry made hi famous j revolutionary speech. ' The present ! grave is in the rear of the old Henry ' house at Red Hill, unmarked except by a small slab. A bill is to be presented to the Virginia legislature in January I appropriating fund for a monument Heavy Sul Is ja Demand. New York, Jan. I Si.eciflcationi on contracts f,r ilnUhfJ p..i.- w-re hi'svv la the U.t A ik. yur, notably for structural aimtori.l I I short and wire product. Or.!.r. or laiau OU Dennett Asks For Probe. ti,. m gt0"' PC 30'- Presents- Panama Canal Work O K tive Msguire, chairman of the bouse I W..hln. , . committee charged examination ot th. mJjl i "vu.m oi me interior H.nrtm. . - w - "-.'. uiin iiiiiv . . i udtm t, M mi-. 'J I vt W V III..'" Ol OI adminialmtUn 1. n.. i 'Hi, in v airainst It. annound today that at the r7aa.t of flt ,Pl"dldly, but the l and C.mmia.,on KiiVkTi ? ! ""-nt. in I n.-. i. 'v.,,ou. nlte would inveati.t- , " : "7 r"l,c,,m direct! agsins " ! VI lirDrrunli " k, of Nrbraska, . tr l piiii th country Lara I- ..L....I ..n . 1 cntl n add h. T... 1 nm " xb concensus of ODinioti of tb .. . ... e wdico return ror J.vi'00 ton of f.l.ri.i-.l making ii, IWraib.r total 1 ia. luuira.la for a-,.- .1 i ...... '"vii iiw,wu voaa. tl. uk irrtrp..fw. ..... che of furnttur b ah. ....... i f i UWi , '"1 of U fun! provided for th. "D.ngn.n luday, aft.r a visit w tbe renal tone. J rt tt,e party were S.nature OJtver, l'enro, Carter, L)U II y burn and Clark. . t