THE MORNING OREGONIAN, MONDAY, MARCH 18, 1907. Buy Your Easter Gloves While Stocks Are Complete Every Good Style and Shade ii All Sizes Best Silk or Kid All Grades eier ran ay an Millinery, Cloaks, Silks, Dress Goods, Laces, Men's Clothing, Gloves and Fancy Goods 500 New Silk Petticoats See the Grand Displays of "M- $8.50-$9 Vais. $5.45 illinery, Cloaks Today 14 TheM k;Store "Opening Days" Tod d Tomorrow Portland's Leading Cloak Store's Annuol Easter offering of high- grade silk Petticoats 500 of them All new up-to-date styles and colorings at a price about one-half what you are asked to pay at other stores for Petticoats of equal qual ityMade of superior heavy taffeta silk with deep flounce and six rows of bias bands Very attractive and serviceable style Full width and a grand assortment of shades to select from White, pink, light bine, navy, royal and medium blue lavender, purple, tans, browns, light and dark greens, red, rose, gray, black and a great variety of changeable silks Silk Underskirts that find ready sale at $8.50-$9.00 Choice while they last at this price, ea. $5.45 Mail and Phone Orders Filled Spring " Opening Days" in the Millinery Salons today and tomorrow Magnificent showing of new Headgear for women, misses and child- -ren Beautiful creations Paris, New York, London models The best efforts of the most famous artists Never before have we shown such an immense array of high-class, attractive Millinery A treat is in store for women who want the handsomest hats Portland will see this season Picturesque Hats portraying true Millinery Art Large pic tare Hats with lace drapes, the new bell or lampshade Hats The Marie Antoinette Hat, the Coolie Hat, the Mushroom Hat, the "DoUy Varden" Hat Every new shape and trimming in every new style shade and combination Exclusive models in wonderful array Tail ored Hals in great assortment Misses', children's Hats in beautiful styles Don't miss seeing them Suits, Dresses, Costumes, Waists, Etc., Etc. Portland's Leading Cloak store invites inspection of the grandest and most extensive showing of ready-to-wear apparel for women, misses and children ever displayed in the West 1907 fashions in fascinating styles and attractive materials Ready-to-wear apparel for occasions A wonderfully complete stock to select from Particular attention is directed to the exquisite new Waists Dreams of daintiness in lace, silk and sheer wash materials Visit the Cloak store during "Opening" If Lace aid Embroidery Bargains French Cambric Embroidery for women's and children's -wear, 9 to 12 inches wide. Best designs. Values np to 60c a yard on sale at the very low price of, yard, 29 French Cambric and Eyelet Embroidery, 3 to 5 inches wide. Beautiful designs in large variety. Values up to 30c a yard on sale at the very low price of, yard, 18 Special lot of Swiss bands, designs in Anglais and blind work, for women's wear; 6 to 10 inches wide. Values to 75o per yard on 6ala, at low price of, yard, 25 Special lot of Swiss Corset Covering in lace and baby Irish effects. Very pretty styles. Values up to $2.00 a yard on sale at the very low price of yard, $1.29 French Corset Covering in Swiss and nainsook, $1.25 values on sale at, yard, &T$ French and round-thread Val. Lace and Insertion, to 14. inches wide. Handsome styles. Values to $1.25 dozen yards on sale at the very low price of....59 Great Sale of New Lace Curtains Special lot of madras weave Lace Curtains, Arabian color, floral patterns, very best styles, 52 inches wide, 3 yards long. Regular $2.5Q values on sale at, pair, $1.65 8 patterns of white Nottingham Lace Curtains, 50 to 60 inches wide, 3 and 3 yards long, detached floral and Point d 'Esprit centers with heavy floral borders. Regu lar $2.00 values are on sale at the remarkably low price of, per pair $1.30 Special lot Irish Point Lace Curtains, white or ecru, plain centers, with floral scroll borders. Regular $3.75 values offered at the very low price of, per pair. .$2.85 Ruffled Net Curtains, white or ecru, lace edge and inserting, 3 yards long, 36 inches wide. Regular $2.50 values on sale at the very low price of, per pair.. $1.65 Special low price on all our Rope Portieres. Best styles; all patterns and colorings; great values. $2.00 to $6.50 values on sale at low prices of $1.35 to $5.20 Women's Suits $30.00 Easter Sale Extraordinary of women's Tailored Suits 200 new, handsome garments in the very latest fashions and materials to be sold at the popular price of $3Q each These Suits manufactured by four of New York's leading Cloak houses are positively the best value ever offered for the money Fancy black and white checks, stripes, mannish mixtures and plain colorings Navy, black and , red, prettily trimmed in silk, lace and fancy braid Eton, blouse, semi-fitting, tight-fitting and 3-button cutaway styles The materials are Pan ama cloths, serges and fancy Tweeds Perfect fitting, well made and finished We place these handsome spring Suits on sale while they last at $30.00 each They would find ready sale at $35 to $40 each $30 We Want Yon to See Them-2d Floor New Tailored Suits, ranging in price from $15.00 to $ 1 50.00 3.00 Silk Hosiery 98c Our Annual Easter Sale of wo men's Silk Hosiery is announced for today and we promise the greatest bargain ever known in women's full silk Hosiery Pure silk thread All the newest Spring shades, also black Grand styles, grand qualities AH sizes This unusual opportunity was presented to our Hosiery buyer on a recent trip to the market Every well dressed woman in town should take advantage of this remarkable offer ingColors are white, black, light blue, royal blue, maise, cream, gray, nile, reseda, biscuit, tan, lav ender, plain styles and embroidered instep Beautiful designs and con trasting shades Sizes 8V2, 9, 9V2, 10 Values up to $3 a QO. pqir, on sale while they last at the very low price per pair New Fancy Hosiery, New White Hosiery, New Tan Hosiery for Women, Misses and Children All prices PATENTS WILL ISSUE Department of Interior Yields to Oregon Settlers. MILLION ACRES AFFECTED Order Taking Off Ban One of Secre tary Garfield's First Acts of Reform Carries Oat Presi dent's Xew Policy. Applications for patent to public lands In Oregon by settlers will be hastened with the greatest possible expedition. This Information, eagerly awaited for months by settlers who have compiled with the land laws, has been announced by Secretary Garfield, of the Department of the Interior, who will forthwith advise the registers and receivers of the various land offices of the plans of the depart ment. By this order. It Is estimated that the greater part of tWO.OOO acres of the public lands in this state, that have been regularly settled upon by home-seekers, will proceed at one to patent. Of this large acreage, fully 90,000 acres are lo cated within the Portland Land Offioe district. Many of these applications have been held up at Washington for as long as three years on all sorts of pretexts. Prin cipal among the excuses for delaying the Issuance of patents to these lands was the alleged lrresular methods that were be- lntr resorted to by corporate interest, through Individual settlers, In acquiring possession of the public domain. For this reason and the generally arbitrary attitude so long assumed by the former administration of the General Land Of fice towards Oregon, these applications have been held up almost at the pleasure of the Land Office Department at the National Capitol. In support of the alleged misappropria tion of the public lands of the state, the department sent special agents to this state to investigate and report upon the manner In which settlers had filed on these tracts. The action of the depart ment In directing that these lands be oatented is taken to mean one of the pre liminary steps In carrying into execution the modified land policy of President Roosevelt, .which la cons uued aa.ueJftK .de, cldedly mora liberal than that which has prevailed for some time. ' Many Applications Held Up. In the Portland Land District alone ap plications for patent to 100 homesteads and probably 425 tlmberland filings or commuted homesteads have been held up for various periods, ranging from six months to two and three years. In a large majority of these cases there were pend ing no contests nor was there any evi dence of irregular procedure on the part of the claimants. The new order, how ever, it Is explained by men conversant with the Land Office business, does not Imply or contemplate that patents to these lands will be issued on a wholesale basis. On the contrary, It Is understood that lands will proceed to patent only where there exists no question of irregu larity in the application and proof. In cases where contests are pending, or where unfavorable reports have been re turned by the special agents, the' usual procedure will have to be gone through with, and the claimant will be required to show good faith In his actions, which must be entirely regular, before patent can issue. Oi the 30,000 entrymen, whose applications have accumulated in the General Land Office, probably oue-third are Oregon settlers. The effect of the order Is to transfer ..Lie from the Government to the Individual claimant and make available for permanent homes as well as for pur poses of taxation, approximately 1,000.000 acres within this state. It is evidently the plan of Mr. Garfield, who only re cently succeeded to the Secretaryship of the Interior Department, to facilitate the passing to patent of all applications for homesteads and timber lands that have been legally made in all states wherein are located public lands. Policy of President. Thts plan is merely carrying out such a policy that has been determined upon by the President, who, at the same time, has devised plans for throwing about the public land business all necessary safe guards to successfully defeat monopo lies. Registers and receivers of land offi ces will be Instructed to facilitate the Issuance of final certificates In all cases to bona fide settlers. These officials will also be acquainted with the fact that they will be held strictly to account for the exercise of sound discretion and good judgment in the porformance of this duty, that the Interests of the public and the Government In preventing illegal, entries may be properly guarded. "Through its revised policy for handling the public land business." said a land office attorney yesterday, 'It appears that the Government desires to not only en courage the legal acquisition of these lands, but to expedite the issuance of the same to patent where all proceedings are entirely regular. Mineral lands, within the public domain, under the new order of the administration, are to be more carefully segregated and disposed of as such. The new order provides that loca tions, selections and entries for land in the mineral area shall continue to be tinaila under, xialicg. miss, but ULev.&li4ll. not be allowed to pass to final certificate or approval except upon the report of a field officer. At the same time the powers of the offi cers of the different land offices are en larged, respecting the entries of land in the nominal areas. Such entries are to be considered by the resident land office officials with a view, to final action by them and the Issuance of final certificate In the regular order." OITPICE SHORT OF CLERKS Over Five Hundred Land Proofs Are Held TJp at Roseburg. ROSEBURG, Or., March 17. (Bpedal.) The local Land Office says that there are from BOO to 600 final proofs awaiting ac tion. Delay has been due to lack of clerical assistance, rathar than to the President's former order, though action on some proofs was delayed to some ex tent by that order. Many of these cases have been pending since 1904, but most of them have aooumulated since reopening of this office, January 8. 1906, after a sus pension of one year. The suspension resulted in a great ac cumulation of business and the local of ficers have never been furnished suffi cient help to clear up the work. Besides there has been a great rush of applica tions here ever since the offioe reopened. The expectation that the timber and stone act would be repealed caused a scramble to make filings. During the month of February, 1907, there were filed here 154 timber and stone applications, to say nothing of homestead and scrip applications. The officers here are doing their best to clear up the work, but are heavily handicapped. All clerks must be furnished by the authorities at Washing ton from the Civil Service list, and the supply Kerns scarce. IjA GKAXDE SETTLERS REJOICE Glad to Know Patents to Lands Will Be Expedited; LA GRANGE, Or., March 17. (Special.) Two thousand entrymen In this district, who have been waiting from a month to two years for patents from the Govern ment, will be affected by the President's recent instructions to the General Land Office to expedite the Issuance of patents. The local Land Office is six months be hind in the work here, a great majority of papers being held up in Washington. Logger Cuts Artery In Arm. Albert Timmins, a workman at Taylor's logging camp, near Kelso, Wash., was brought to St. Vincent's Hospital yester day for treatment for a severed artery in the arm. While carrying a crosscut saw. Timmins fell upon it. the saw inflicting a dangerous wound. Timmins will recover. KISER FOR SCENIC PHOTOS, LiM'y J,myrJ jjj Jig tel. PIONEER RIVER Mi DEAD CAPTAIN JAMES WILSON SAILS OX LAST VOYAGE. Was Engaged In Steamboatlng on Columbia and Willamette for Nearly Forty Tears. In the death of Captain James Wilson, yesterday at his home, 47 East Third street north, a well known pioneer of river navigation in Oregon passed away. At Cherbourg, a fortified seaport town and naval station of France, Captain Wil son was born August 16, 1S27. His father, James A. Wilson, was a sailor and was connected with the French navy-yard at Cherbourg. All the education Captain Wilson received in France was prior to his ninth year, for at that age he went to sea, following the taste he inherited from his father. Aboard a merchant ship he shipped as a cabin boy, and came to America In 1836, his first . trip being to Martlnque. In 1843 he entered the Ameri can merchant marine as mate. Captain Wilson came to Portland in 1852. As a deck hand on the Multnomah, one of the first steamers on the Colum bia, he sailed from Portland to the Cas cades during the floodtide of emigration to Oregon, In 1854 he became captain of the steamer Portland, in which capacity he served for some time. Later he was a deckhand on the steamer Marie Haslow operated between the Cascades and The Dalles. In 1865 he became captain or trie Willamette and Reliance, remaining with the company operating those boats until it sold out when he went into the em ploy of the company that bought the fleet. A few years later he became con nected with the Oregon Railway & Navi gation Company, with which he remained many years. In 18S9 Captain Wilson went into the wilderness of Clackamas County, having decided to quit the water and become a farmer. In the wilderness Captain Wil son bought 39 acres which he cleared and nut under cultivation. He prospered and acquired valuable , property in Oregon City and in Portland. -.ntin Wilson was a Democrat in poli tics- and a member of the Christian fhur-h Ha leaves a wife and the fol lowing children: August Wilson, living near Portland; Mrs. Celia Peters, living near Portland; Erwin Wilson, Clackamas County; Walter Wilson, Gobel, Or.; Mrs. A. B. Holoomb. Portland; Mrs. Perry Rancher. Portland: Mrs. Fannie Geil, Pnrt land- Captain Wilson had been in falling hcoiih fnr the oast ten months. He mnvori tn Portland from his farm about seven months ago. Arrangements for the funeral will be made today. Delay in Tillamook Mall Service. . . jmjLjQG.. ,arn. TnrMl lTSryrJal. There is a good deal of eomolaint In Tillamook City on account of the mail, which previously came in via North Yam hill, over the Trask Road, being sent to Sheridan, and thence coming in by way of the Grand Ronde. This makes a delay or six Hours In tne mail arriving in this city, and holds over the mail one day for. points north of here. Mayor Botts and the business men will protest against the change, whloh - was made without giving the citizens any notice. HE LIKES KELLY'S BUTTE Vagrant Confesses to Weakness for Prison and Would Return. Few men who have "done time? at Kelly's Butte ever wish to return, but Henry Dahm Is an exception to this rule. Dfthm was picked up by Patrolman J. F. Anderson last night, and when taken be fore Captain Slover said he would rather go back to the Butte than leave town. He was released from the rockpile last Friday and came to the city with no visible means of support. He has been wander ing around Anderson's beat for the past two days, and was twice told to leave. When taken to the station last night he was asked if ne wished to get out of town or go back to Kelly's Butte. "I'd rather go back to the Butte," he said. "You see, the cooking Is good and I like the place." The police made no ob jection, and it is probable that Judge Cameron will make his next vlBit a more extended one. MARCH L OF 231 WASHINGTON STj portlahb" OREGON.'" HENS -CLOTHES MISS EMMA NICHOLSON DIES IX ROAD. Body of Garden Home Girl Lies on Ground Near Beaverton All Night Undiscovered. HIIiLiSBORO, March 17.-(Speclal.)-M;ss Emma Nicholson, whose parents reside near Garden Home, Multnomah County, was found dead on the road between Beaverton and Cedar Mil, early this morning. The young woman, who was about 30 years of age, came - out from Portland last night, and left the train at Beaverton, starting for the home of a friend, a Miss Johnson. It was her in tention to attend a dance at the Wood man hall, near Cedar Mill. This morning the body of Miss Nichol son was found and identified by -Robert Johnson, to whose farmhouse the young woman was going. Coroner Brown, of this city, held an Inquest and the jury found that she came to her death from causes unknown, probably from heart failure. There was a slight scratch on her face, but this was attributed to thai fall. There was no mark of violence, and it is supposed that the young wom an was hurrying along and that her ex ertions brought on an attack of heart weakness, causing death. The remains were taken to Garden Home by her father, this afternoon. La Grande Denied City Delivery. LA GRANGE!, Or., March 37. (Special. The Postal Inspector, who was recent ly here investigating the application for free mall delivery for this city, has sent to the department an adverse report. Tha sole ground of objection was that under the present train service the mail cornea during the night, and the carriers would! be practically limited to one delivery each: day, whereas the mails call for two de liveries during the day. In all other respects La Grande is en titled to consideration. The postoffice re ceipts exceed by several . hundred dollars, exclusive of box rentals, the required sum, and the conditions of the walks and the house numbering are up to -the required standard. Palpitation of the heart, nervousness, tremblings, nervous headache, cold hands and feet, pain In the back, re lieved byCartersLittleLlverPills. FRANK L. SMITH MEAT CO. 226-228 ALDER ST., Bet. First and Second "FIGHTING THE BEEF TRUST" These Prices for All This Week. Smith's Hams 17i0 Smith's Bkft. Bacon.l7io Smith's Pure Lard. . .. 12 Smith's Bologna Sau sage (pure), 3 lbs.. 25 Smith's Frankfurt Sausage (pure) ... 10 As the octopus of the sea dashes itself helpless upon the rocks amidst the derision of the smaller fish, on whom it has been accustomed to feed, so let the unwieldy octopus of America's food supply, the Beef Trust, find itself high and dry upon the rocks of failure at Portland, the f urther est Western point it seeks to covet. It aims to catch in its maw every meat dealer. It tries to drag into its net the public who eat the meat, and the farmer and the livestock man who raise it. If we all co-operate and stand together, the Beef Trust, in its desperation to get us, will dash itself upon the shore of defeat, a fate which every honorable citizen wishes ite - Fancy Prime Rib Roast Beef . . .. 10 Tenderloin Steak 12i2 Soup Meat . . . . .... . ., 3 Plate Cuts of Beef. . ., 5 Brisket of Beef 5 Lean Cuts of Beef, boil 5