5 CIT1 PROSPEROUS YEAR AFTER FAIR IF YOU WANT TO KNOW. WHAT SMARTLY DRESSED MEN WILL WEAR THIS SEASON, ASK BEN SELLING THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND, OCTOBER 14, 1906, (Continued From Part 1 ) day, the total amount of money in volved in real estate transfers is nearly double that of the corresponding period of last year. From January 1 until October 15, 1005. when the Lewis and CUrlc Fair closed, the real estate trans fers amounted to $10,403,956. From January 1 up to and including yester day, the transfers reached a total of J1T.115.4S4. Thus a tremendous gain of $6,704,52S. for nine months and a half, is shown It is generally admitted that there is no better criterion of the growth and prosperity of a city than the real estate transfers, and the remarkable showing n this respect ever since the close of the Lewis and Clark Fair has been a Fource of great wonder and still great er satisfaction on the part of the busi ness men and all other interested citi zens of Portland. Even the most optimistic and those who supported the Fair the most heartily vere not sure that there would rot be a slump after the Exposition. .They formed their conclusions from the aftermath of other fairs, and while they believed and knew that in the long run Portland would derive great land lasting benefit from the Exposi tion, they did not feel sure that a flump could be avoided. But the real estate transfers demon Ftrate conclusively that there has been no slump, and that instead the city has continued to grow since the Fair with a rapidity never before experienced. It is said that figures cannot lie. and the statistics of the real estate trans fers cannot help portraying the true conditions as they are in Portland, re garding the business and financial prosperity of the city. A gain in the real estate transfers is not shown from month to month with out a break, as. like almost everything lse, the real estate business fluctuates In volume. But out of the nine whole months six months show a gain for this year compared to the corresponding 'reriod of last year. During the months of April, May and June a slight loss Is noted, and during the months of July, August and September no great gains are shown. This is due to the fact that the real estate transfers during the months the Fair was in progress were swelled very materially by Eastern invest ments, persons coming from the East to attend the Fair became Impressed with the importance of Portland, and while here made large investments. This entrance of Eastern capital was . expected. Realty Sales Mark Xew Era. The following are the real estate trans fers from January 1 of this year up to and including those of yesterday: January j 1.454.fifK. T,'t,r1!Lry 2.J34.H9S fr,',h 2.49S.SS8 2.i7i3r 1.3tf.j.J J"- 1.91)5.0.57 iu'5r ; 1.VM.KS Auguft 1.505. September 1 1,4 diss ter'f'Uber 31 to October 15 OTSlSKi Toul .S17.113.4S4 The following are the real estate trans fers from January 1 of last year until October 15. when the Lewis and Clark Fair came to a close: Jnurv $ March 74,, -i9 l.nibiSTO fv. S 864.065 JJJP - 1.300.S24 uD'b;;:r--"""""""":::::::: September , j- fceptember 31 to October 15 'arb'.iZi T-tal Uo.4fiu.0i0 . The same rapid increase shown in Port land realty is to be found also upon a perusal of comparative tables of the offi cial building permits. A gain of $1,9S4. S96 -was made during the period from January 1 of this year up to the pres ent time, over the corresponding period last year. From January 1 to the mid dle of . October. 10ns. permits officially .recorded amounted to S3.2S2.S77. From (January 1. .1906. up to last night, permits 'were recorded reaching a total of JS.247,273. ' ) Building Activity Significant. Not only this, but fully as significant as the Increase is the fact that a new char acter of buildings is ruling in Portland from those which were put up in the ( rast. More expensive and of more mod , ern design are the dwellings, as a rule. I which are uow being constructed. Bet- ter. too. are the business buildings. The 1 new stores and office structures which prevail in the Pose City today are of the 1 latest design, stel skeleton or reinforced 1 concrete, and built for the best results, I regardless of expense. Many of them com I pare very favorably with the latest type of office and business buildings In the large Eastern cities. It is the passing of the old and the beginning of a new 'era. the transition into a city of metro politan appearance and metropolitan pro , portions. The leading building project of the year 1 is the structure now nearing completion for Wells. Fargo & Co. Fourteen stories thigh, thoroughly fireproofed, and built at an expense of about $550,000, it is a v' structure of which the city may well be proud. Its construction is being followed by a dozen or more buildings of the same character located upon important corners in the central business district. Besides this, plans have already been announced which assure the. continuance of activity in building for an indefinite time to come. The building figures from January 1 to October 15. 1906. follow: January a. 392.057 Fbruiry 30S.S53 March ... .. 423.414 April '550, S02 May 1.0S7.769 June oS.167 July .......... 740.S30 Augut 71091 Eeptembar 440 440 October (up to date) 1S7515 5.247.273 The following tab! shows the figures for tne tame period last year: January 432.SSS February 376.S70 March 4S1.996 April .'..' 374 4S5 May 267. 10S June 19S.S50 Ju!v 260.620 Augutt 30S.S94 'September 3S1.754 October (one-half total)... t 179.611 Total , 3,242.877 Citizens Tell Their Stories. Leading citizens of Portland and those most in touch with local conditions are unanimous in their recognition of the " present prosperity as a result in large measure of Oregon's great Exposition. f .'JHt T- M-TV lv I ijv ijsl -iLjff . LjTVi V? v 'Is M I jllLasEd Esjaj i Some of the expressions given along this line follow: H XV. Goode, president of the Portland Light & Power Company, who waa exec utive head of the Lewis and Clark Expo sition Corporation: "Speaking from an industrial stand point. I feel safe In saying that the Fair has given Portland an enviable standing and credit in the money markets of the East, and, for that matter, of the world. It brought men of capital and men of commanding power in the financial world to the Northwest, and induced them to invest their money here. It attracted an army of smaller investors. It advertised our present and our as yet undeveloped industries in a way nothing else could have done, and which nobody could have anticipated. "It has added millions in permanent in vestments, it has added thousands of population, and has given an unprece dented impetus to steam railroad build ing, to street railway cSnstxuction and to light and power enterprises things which count enormously for wider development and the fullness of prosperity." Entire Xorthwest Benefited. Tom Richardson, manager of Commer cial Club: "There is not a subject in the world I would rather discuss than this. As soon as the Fair was over, the Commercial Club sent letters to scores of business houses in St. Louis, requesting informa tion as to the effects of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition upon that city. From the replies which we received we prophe sied many good things for the North west, but not one of us was able to guess how splendid the results would be. Home seekers and investors began to pour Into the Northwest in greatly increased num bers, an unprecedented building boom was inaugurated, magnificent edifices of first-class type were planned and started structures as imposing and magnificent as any to be found in the country. Capi tal poured in. Factories sprang up. - The demand for labor became greater than the supply. , Real estate values soared. Building sites were at a premium. Va cant houses were unheard of. Rents ad vanced. All these elements have added their momentum to the wave of prosperity now sweeping over the Northwest. "We suddenly became 'exposition wise.' XVe began to learn the value of adver tising, for we could see its results. Peo ple of the Northwest who had been in the habit of 'knocking- Portland laid down their hammers and began to pull together with the people of this city for a; 'Greater Northwest.' A magnificent feeling of kindred interest was engen dered. 'What is good for Portland,' they argued, 'is good for us.' The county fairs throughout the- state, catching the in spiration of and learning lessons from the Lewis and Clark Exposition, dis played better exhibits, shown in a better manner, than ' ever before. "AH feeling of rivalry has been wiped out. There are twice as many people in our streets now as there were two years ago. We don't notice it because we are ujed to the ?owds. The man who knew Portland thoroughly two years ago will not know 10 per cent of the people he meets on the street today. A certain bank in Portland during the past year has shown a greater per cent of increase in deposits than any other financial in stitution in the United States. As Sena tor Borah, of Idaho, said: 'The thorough fares of Portland are no longer streets they are workshops.' "And it is not of Portland alone- that all these wonderful things are true. Not a city in the whole Northwest, not a little town nor village, not even a farmer or rancher, but has felt the impetus and C3 caught step In the general march of progress. All over the country the in fluence of the Fair has been felt.'' What Governor Chamberlain Saj-6. Governor George E. Chamberlain "The Lewis and Clark Exposition was the greatest factor for the development of Oregon that this state has ever had. It brought Oregon to the attention of the j East, and, in fact, of the world, in a wise accomplished. As a result there has been a large addition to the popula tion in every section of the state. This is true wherever I have been and the influx of population and the influx of capital for investment is remarkable. All this is attributed directly to the Fair. There are increased values in real estate on every hand, these increases being from 25 to 100 per cent The Lewis and Clark Exposition was a great thing for Oregon, and I believe that this is gen erally conceded." Willis Nash, president Board of Trade in many lines the exposition ; has pro moted the welfare of the state., It has attracted Eastern money immensely and has opened up whole lines of valuable manufacturing Industries, which are of material assistance to the progress of the state's development. Another point: It has brought the different sections of the state together and we now know more about the resources within the various districts of Oregon than ever be fore People who visited here have re turned to live, while others have been brought to Oregon through the glowing accounts of visitors during the exposi tion. New industries have started as a consequence. Business concerns which brought exhibits to the fair have been so impressed with the surroundings that they have opened branch houses and are making this the center of their trade. . First Vice-President of Exposition. D. I. Fenton Nothing has been done within all the past history of the state and city that has helped both state and city so much as the exposition. It has made the city and its vast possibilities widely and favorably known.- and has given to Oregon new importance in the eyes of investors and home builders. The results in the future will exceed all conservative expectations, and as the direct and immediate effect of the ex position I expect confidently to see Port land a great metropolitan city of 300.000 inhabitants within seven years from Oc tober 15. 1?05, the day the exposition closed its gates. We must follow this by loyal and ample support of the Seattle exposition in 1909 and reap the benefits of a great effort of like kind by our sister city. Let our state appropriate $130,000 for the Alaska-Tukon Exposi tion of 1S09 MEET IN DIVORCE COURT Alter S2 Years Apart. Old Wife Wants It Perpetual. CHICAGO, Oct 13. (Special.) Peter and Mary Glynn, husband and wife, aged 70 and 67, met today for the first time in 32 years. The meeting-place was a divorce court. Mrs. Glynn says her husband de eerted her while she lay ill of rheuma tism at Mercy Hospital. She has never been able to walk since and was brought into court in a chair. Glynn replies that it was his wife who deserted him. He fold the Judge that he was taken ill before his wife. He. too. went to Mercy Hospital. On his return he found his house vacant. For 18 years, he asserts, he searched for his wife. The husband was a cab driver -when he an, his wife lived together. After their separation he inherited a small fortune, engaged in the livery business, speculat ed in real estafe and is now a wealthy man. Mrs. Glynn heard of it in her home in Dover and came here to obtain a di vorce and alimony. These matters are still pending. WRECK NEGROES' SCHOOL Teacher Makes Himself Obnoxious to White People. COLUMBIA, a C, Oct. 13 A special to the State from Anderson says: Word was received here today from Seneca that Harrel College, a negro institution here, was blown up by dynamite about midnight last night. Rev. J. F. Will iams, a negro, is president of the col- PIMPLE BLACKHEADS Get Rid of All Your Face Troubles in a Few Days' Time With the Wonderful Stuart Calcium Wafers Trial Package Sent Free. Tou cannot have an attractive face or a beautiful complexion when your blood is in bad order and full of impurities. Impure blood means an impure face, always. The most wonderful &s well as the most rapid blood cleanser is Stuart's Calcium Wafers. You use them for a. few days, and the difference tells in your face right away. Most blood purifiers and skin treat ments are full of poison. Stuart's Cal cium Wafers are guaranteed free from any poison, mercury, drug, or opiate. They are as harmless as water, but the results are astonishing. 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WHENEVER IT BECOMES A QUESTION OF CLOTHES CORRECTNESS It Can Be Easily Solved at Our Store FABRICS of undisputed merit, DESIGNED by the best-paid artists in the world, MADE as the custom tailors', FIT, absolutely guaranteed. RAINCOATS $15 to $35 OVERCOATS $15 to $50 FALL SUITS $15 to $40 lege and it is supported by Northern white people. He went to Seneca from Abbeville several years ago and it is said has made himself objectionable to the white people. He advised the ne groes not to work for the whites. A warning was sent him several weeks ago advising him to leave Seneca, but he ignored it. Dynamite cartridges were placed un der each corner of the college building last night and when the clock struck New Dining -Tables Buffets and China Closets AT SPECIAL PRICES ALL THIS WEEK! I La, r mm I! We've received a new lot of the celebrated HASTINGS PEDESTAL TABLES, ai?d we're going to sell them cheap. They're all fitted with the Tyden Lock, that makes an absolutely perfect and solid pedestal. No dining-room table on the market works as perfectly. HASTINGS TABLES Price for six-foot extension, 42-inch top; quartered oak, hand-polished; regular value CtO"7 Cft $40.00; special . ! P THERE ALSO WILL BE SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS ALL WEEK ON BUFFETS AND CHINA CLOSETS Quartered Golden Oak and Weathered Oak Buffets, made by the Rockford Palace Furniture Company, the largest, case-goods makers in the country at "attractive prices. Price of this ele- OC Cf gant Buffet, quartered oak, hand-polished; beautiful French plate; regular $40; sp'l... ptJ&J China Closet Special, exactly as cut, made from golden quartered oak stock. ' Best plate-glass front on all three sides. French plate-glass mirror in back of top section; movable. shelves; Cf French legs; regular $45.00 special -. pJZJ EASY TERMS ON ALL THESE ARTICLES. COVELL Portland Agents for LAUREL Ranges and Heaters, the Fuel-Saving Kind. COMPLETE HOUSEFURNISHERS ALL THE CREDIT YOU WANT LEADING CLOTHIER midnight the dynamite was exploded, partially wrecking the building. Hotel Man Kills Wife and Self. TUPELO, Mtea. Oct. 13 cSpeciaU After a year of married life, G. W. Campbell, proprietor of the Johnson Ho tel, a well-known Southerner in the hotel business, cut his wife's throat, killing her almost instantly, and ended his own life in the same manner. Servants heard the ft i 4 f a- in IBS ten- 11 vreki& Aa' j- b FURNITURE CO. 184-186 FIRST STREET struggle in Campbell's room and made an effort to break in the door, but it was locked. When an entrance was finally gained, both Campbell and hio wife were dead. A prolonged 6pree on the part of Campbell Is said to have caused the trou ble which terminated in his rash act. . Deep Snow at Cripple Creek. CRIPPLE CREEK. Colo.. Oct. 13 Twelve inches of snow fell in this dis trict today, and was drifted badly by a hieh wind. 1 ?t y" cvri $ J -'!-". . . 'J t