10 THE SUNDAY OREGOMAX, ' PORTLAND, 'JANUARY 2, 1910. Ladies' Writing Desks $40.00 Birdseye Maple Desks (No. 201). Clearance price. . .$18.75 .$65 Golden Oak Writing Desk (No. 1231). Clearance price. .39.50 .40.00 Weathered Oak Desk (No. 702). Clearance price. . .$29.95 $45 Circassian Walnut Desk (No. 12), Clearance price. . .$29.50 $25.00 Genuine Mahogany Writing Desk (No. 228). Clearance Sale priee $18.25 $15 Golden Oak DcsksT .S12.50 NS 2 79, . Quartered Oak Buffets $65.00 Golden Oak' Buffet (No. 838). Clearance Sale price '. $47.50 $48.00 Golden Oak Buffet (No. 108). Clearance Sale price .....$36.50 $38.00 Golden Oak Buffet (No. 048). Clearance Sale priee " $27.50 $35.00 Golden Oak Buffet (No. 323). Clearance Sale price $24.00 50c Table Covers, Cs. Special, each .25 $1.75 Table Covers, 8 Vis, extra heavy grade. Sp'l, ea. 75 $2.50 Table Covers, SVis. Special $1.25 $2.00 Inlaid Linoleum, two patterns. Special. Sale-price, yard..... $1.40 $40.00 Tnrkish IjrrtierRockers (No. 2S). Clear ance Sale price $20.00.- $35.00 Turkish Leather Rockers. Clearance Sale price $17.50 $65.00 Tnrkish Leather Rockers (No. 64S) Clearance Sale price.... .-...$47.00 WESTERN FARMER MAKES HIS ADVENT IN WHEAT PIT AS REAL SPECULATOR - t- t Grain Futures Dealing Today Takes New Turn, Surprise to Brokers Fanner Says "Man Who Produces Grains Ought to Have First Chance at 'Velvet "-Chicago Prosperity Shown hy Holiday Expenditure. BY JONATHAN PAI.MKR. CHI ir HICAGO., Jan. 1. (Special.) It takes a long-lieaded, wide-think- ng student of the progress of invents to deal successfully in grain fu M 11 res these days. New factors are con tinually springing mp to be reckoned frTvith. One of these is the rapidly grow- Iinjr power of domestic consumption, due partly to increasing population and partly to the higher scale of living of 11 he average American citizen. Anoth er Is the. new piano of prices for near ly all foods, for which the increased output of gold is held largely respon sible by many economists. James a. Iatten, in his recent operations in wheat and cotton, had been notably .successful and accurate as a reader of these new conditions. Now he has bucked up against a proposition that uromises to put even lum to rout. The Western farmer has come into the grain markets the speculative end j-B a disturbing element. Plainly, . with his daily newspaper delivered at pits door each morning, with the mar iket developments of the day before, he fjiats become convinced that the profes sional speculator and commission men 1n such trade centers as Chicago have no right to exploit the grain business tto their exclusive benefit. The man 'who produces the grain, he argues, ought to have first chance at the "velvet." CoiMt'iied Act Ion Kxpeetcd. $ Tt a considerable number of farra- ers to be thinking simultaneously on this line meant there would sooner or later be some sort of concerted action. (What the drift of argument was is not disclosed, but the conclusion, judging from concrete developments, was that (the farmer might find It to his od- vantage to sell options as well as corn. (.Farmer-like, he took the natural course land bought the options first. That fwas when the price was low, and they liad reason to believe it should and twotild be higher. Mr. Patten thought (the price high enough, and he handed the farmers corn about as fast as they cared to accept it for future delivery. A lot of these tillers of the soil are I now' disposing of their options at 6 to 10 cents a bushel. Thnt did not seem bad Christmas economics, inasmuch as the farmers still have the actual grain (in their granaries. When they sell that, as they believe they will be able ito do at a good figure, they will be in ipowition to enter into negotiations for m 1910 automobile to replace the passe car of last season. Where the farm ??rs are showing signs of leaving the iame at a profit, anti-Patten cotton .peculators are taking it up and will : play out the hand. Holiday Prosperity Kvidenced. Prosperity for the new year was foretokened by the lavish distribution ,f money tor Christmas gifts. Never (in the holiday season in Chicago and line Middle west was there such a rush iof business in mercantile houses, and never such generous sharing of profits with the men who create wealth. Three ( million dollars Is the approximate jumount In cash, stocks and gifts dis tributed by banking houses and Indus I trial concerns in Chicago alone. It was ithe greatest jingle of gold pieces the J Western metropolis has known, and kdtspatcnes indicate that spending Tor the season was on a like opulent scale I1n other commercial centers. i Twelve millions went for friendly re i nierabrances aside from the distribution i to employes. Hood Fellows" who iin .personated Panta Claus allowed pre lious few families to escape some rec lognitlon of the day. Charity and fc-hwxvJi organizations gave out fully fnmm. $5.00 Down Vill place in your home one of our celebrated Gevurtz Steel Ranges Made for us Jbly the "Eclipse" Stove Co., of Mansfield, Ohio. Sl.OO A WEEK will soon pay ,the remainder of the cost price, and you will have the privilege r-ks?9 of using: the range until T xmaxiy paia lor. xne quick-baking range. 50.000 well-filled baskets. Chicago postal forces were taxed to the limit. The day before Christmas over 4.000, 000 letters, circulars and postcards were handled, an increase of 450,000' over the previous high -water mark. Bank clearings for th4 week ending with Christmas were $19, 000,000 in ex cess of those of the like week in 1908. This increase is not merely typical of conditions in Chicago. It means simi lar prosperity in all contributory cen ters. Financial students are afraid the lavish flow of money has resulted in too much inflation of stock values, and that a check is in store, but the gen eral hopefulness of the coming year lies in such clews as are afforded by the plans of the United States Steel Corporation, which will spend upwards of $100,000,000 for extensions, Gary and South Chicago to be the chief centers of enlargement. Things at Zion City Not Were. as They f Things are not like they used to be In Zion City when John . Alexander Dowie was the autocrat of the north shore religious colony. Dowie dipped his pen in venom against his enemies. hut he managed always to keep inside the law of libel. Wilbur Voliva, his successor, emulated the first prophet of Zion in bitterness but not in adroit ness, with the result he went to jail for not paying a judgment of 910,000 obtained against him for libel by Philip Aiothersill. He got out in time to spend Christmas a free man by the grace of few farmers who provided a bond pending an appeal to the appellate court. Voliva declares that, no matter what the courts may decide finally, he will not pay a cent of the judgment, but will rather remain in jail. The mar tyr plan does not appear repugnant to him, and as he is young and- strong and self-willed, there is a very good chance of his editing his paper from a cell for a long time. The fine Dowie private library has been sold and re moved from the mansion in the center of Zion City. It brought $7000, and is said to be worth thrice that. Glad stone Dowie, the "great un kissed." is quietly attending to his own business and making a living the best he can. Mrs. John Alexander Dowie rarely ap pears in the public prints. Voliva lias not the power over the 'Zionists that Dowie had, and in a few more years the whole colony will be merged into the secular business life of Chicago and its environs. It is far on the way already. Streetcar Revelations on In Chicago. An interesting life drama in a big, crowded city lies in the rebuilding of the surface traction systems of Chicago imaccordance with ordinances passed by the City Council two years ago. In that time $43,000,000 has been spent for new trackage and equipment in the way of buildings amk rolling stock. The number of miles reconstructed is 310. The number of new pay-as -you -enter cars in operation or contracted for is 1350. The traction companies are much ahead of the schedule designated in the ordinances. Their prompt fulfill ment of contract agreement under city supervision has resulted in a renewal of confidence between the public and the companies. There used to be no such confidence, and it was because the people had lost all hope of better ment of the service under private cor poration management that they went on record for municipal ownership a few years ago and elected Edward F. Dunne Mayor. The city has not achieved municipal i ownership, but it has virtual municipal Specials in Carpet Department $75.00 Hartford Saxony Rugs, "9x12 feet, three patterns. Special ..$4l.OO ZJ-OO Anglo-Persian Rugs, 9x12 feet, two pat terns. Special -.$45.00 $1.00 Lakeside Brussels Carpet, madeby Marshall, Fields Co.,-of Chicago, cut off the rcfll at, the yard..49 $1.25 3-ru Lace Curtains, 250 in number. Special price, ftie pair...... 75 Clearance of Music Cabinets $35 Mahogany Music Cabinets. Clearance priee $22. 50 $22.50 Birdseye Maple Music Cabinets. Clearance Price : - $16.75 $17.u0 Golden Oak Music Cabinets. Clearance price . . . . ...$9.00 $lo Mahogany Music Cabinets. Clearance price $il.OO : ' . jfj.wi.uu .tsrass r5ed (jo. 6215), all solid brass tubing. Clearance Sale price . . . . . .$55.00 $45.00 Brass Bed (No. 6061), slight ly damaged. Clear ance Sale price only . . . $22.50 $75 Princess Dress ers, solid Circas sian walnut and Mahogany (No. 720). Clearance Sale price. $49. OO $65.08 Stolid Quartered Oak Dresser (No. 648). X Clearance Sale price ...$39.0u $35.00 Mahogany Dresser, large Frenchplate mirror. Special $22.50 "New Method" Gas Ranges Save one-fourth of your gas bill. Prices from $16 up. 'Pay $1.00 a week. it is iamous First and Yamhill operation, and for the present it is quite satisfied with that arrangement, ince it is getting for the treasury 55 per cent of the net receipts and is on the way to the most complete and mod ern system in the world. Besides rush ing the work of construction more rap idly than the ordinance calls tor, one of the companies has installed 80 more cars than iKwas required to install. Likewise it is taking excellent care of the pavement between its tracks. It was in the very small interference with regular traffic that the work of rehabilitation took'on the aspects of a rare engineering feat. In the down town district the minimum of annoy ance was procured by doing the work at night or on Sundays with an army of men that stood almost shoulder to shoulder and worked together with the precision and lack of clash of a cir cus crew. Often the citixen who. rode home on a block of old track which made him seaslcic came down the next morning to find that the old rails had been removed, the old pavement tossed aside, new ties and rails set in con crete, new pavement laid and the rfars rolling smoothly along on a brand-ew bit of perfect track. . In the two years enough pavement has been "laid to cover a 100-acre farm and enough brick put-in new outlying buildings to make a wall 110 feet high and IS miles in length. One new river tunnel has been completed and two others are under construction. In those things wHh appeal to the child's pleasure and Imagination, the children of Cherry, 111., had the greatest Christmas of their lives this year. When the festivities, the gift-giving and the neighborly greetings ' were over, it was IMPORTANT ASSEMBLAGE OF LABOR MEN pECLARES l- . W ,tlr lyn-t .fiTT IpTrij , riff I ti 4 c? -1 V.v. , -z , , , . , J NEW YORK Jan. 1. f Special.) This Important assemblage of labor men declared war on the Stel Trust last week at Pittsburg. The Steel Trust has maintained an "open slop." The labor leaders in convention as sembled denounced the steel company as the enemy of labor. A big disturbance in the labor world may re sult and may not. In the picture thojde in the front row are W. D. Mahon, of the street railway workers; P. J. McArdle, of the iroH steel and tin workers: Samuel Gompers, of the Federation of Labor; Charles F. Lawyer, of the tinplate workers; James 0Connell of the machinists, and F. M. Ryan, of the bridgeworkers. j New Spring Skirts An advance arrival of new Spring - Skirts, with tlienew pleats and tunic effect, will be in cluded in this clearance sale at special and very attractive prices from $5.95 to $15. & SONS Second and Yamhill clear that the fate of the 200 men who still lie dead in the St. Paul mine has not brn In vain. It developed a Christ mas spirit and a thoughtfulness of others which made a particularly bright spot in a bright American Christmas day. The little folk, only a few of whom realize the blight that fell on the village a month ago. saw In one day more gifts than they had seen in their whole lives hitherto. Chicago was very considerate of Cherry and helped materially in its merriment. A Santa Claus had to be imported into the village to play the role of gift dis penser. Those fathers and husbands and brothers who survived the mine disaster were too busy in other necessary ways. In the church of the village there are said to be only two men left one the pastor, tho other the village barber. The latter, who is called "Barber John,' is the long-distance hero of Cherry. He did not risk his life going down into the burnhig shaft to save his fellow towns men, but wflile the" grieving mothers were gathered about the shaft walling for their husbands and almost forgetting their children. "Barber John" constituted himself the Little Father and the Official Optimist. He gathered the unfortunate children into the church, and -saw that they were housed and fed. Ever since he has been working day and night dis pensing good cheers Soundings of the mine with thermome ters show that the fire is still raging be low. . There is no forecasting when lc will be possible to remove the 00 bodies, but it is feared when the time does come Cherry will be in for another-season of acute mental distress. Most of those In Cherry are in no position toleave if they should wish to do so. They will bewared for all Winter and next Spring, and it is hoped the warm Summer months will somewhat relieve the tension. "Many posthumoiW children have been born since the isastei-. Most of the niothers are young women. They are being watched over with particular solicitude. It also is-TUd two or three of the widows have remarried. ar 172 telegTaph and S5 telephone in Corea. offices One- 1 hird iJrf on Every Suit or Dress We are offering-the most wonderful Suit and Dress val ues during this January Clearance Sale of any house ii the city, for there is no inflation of prices for sale pur - poses. $25 Values for Only Long-Coat Sui,fs; some hand some braided models,- others se verely tailored effects, in finest quality broadcloth, homespun, covert, camelshair, serges and cheviots; blacks, grays, browns, navy and mixtures; linings of exquisite Duchess and Skinner satin; revers of moire; coats 45 to 50 inches; all sizes. Cash or Credit 3 rPr7 : HEAD FOR PROPOSED GREAT WORLD S ' FAIR NOW WORRIES SAN FRANCISCO Great Celebration Planned for 1915 When Panama Canal Is Opened, May See General M. H. De Ynng or William H. Crocker Elected President Governor Gillett's Ambition Believed to Be to Succeed Himself. BY HARHT B. '-SMITH. ( SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 1. (Special.) Who will be president and ex ecutive head of the great world's fair tha t is to be held by San Francisco In 1913 to celebrate the opening of the Panama Canal? !s the question that is agitating commercial circles these days. There are several names under con sideration just now. General M. H. De Young, Charles C. Moore. Louis Sloss and William H. Crocker have . their supporters and admirers. Moore has a wondrous energy, as- shown by his resuscitation of the moribund Chamber of Commerce and his work in getting foreign nations to send their battle ships here for Portola. Louis Sloss is a popular man in commercial circles. General De Young has demonstrated his fitness for the place by the way he handled the Mid-Winter Fair and there is no question if he can be induced to accept the post but that he would make an able executive. Plenty of time remains for the selec tion of a head, however. T"p to date there has been nothing but the pre liminary skirmishes and advertising. Subscriptions have been refused, as the committee in charge wants to look after that matter at a later dat In order to secure some funds' and to determine the popularity of the proposed fair, the committee had some 25,000 buttons em blematic of the fair struck off. These were sold at 10 cents apiece and the way they were grabbed up shows how Sun Francisco in general regards the fair. In fact, the committee has de cided upon another issue of tl)e buttons. Calif ornians noticed for the first time the other day that when Virgil ia Bogue WAR ON STEEL TRUST. Si 632 Iu these Dresses we can save you money and sell you goods that will prove eminently satisfactory. These one-pieee Dresses are growing in pop ularity, and our Clbarance Sale offers exceptionally good values. Materials embracing finest broadcloth iu modish shaTes as well as navy and black: cheviots, worsteds, camelshair, serges, homespuns; cluster plaited, side buttoned, fancy trimmed, etc; sizes to Clearance Sale of Long Coats, $25 Val. $16.70 Made of fjne broadcloth, wide wale diagonals, homespuns, coyerts, camels hair, etc. lined through out witli Skinner satin, best of workmanship in every detail ; coats that have sold all Fall for 25.00; clearance sale price, credit . $12 Hats $4.95 All our $12.00 Hats at the clearance priee of, each $4.95. married her Italian Count that she gave the place of her birth as Tacoina, Wash. And yet. at the time she was selected, as Queen of the Portola Festival, we were told that she was a native daughter of California. It seems that this wae not fraud" practiced by the stately girl, but merely a mild deception, on the part of the committee in charge. When it had been determined that Mira Bogiie was- the woman- to select, it sud denly came up that she was. not a Cali fornian. That would never do. A daugh ter of the state should be queen of the great carnival. Resourceful Andrew McCarty said he would fix that all right and he did. He went to the Bogues and impressed it upon them that their daughter was born in Auburn, Placer County. At first they protested that she was a daughter of the Evergreen state, but when they caught the point they went into roars of laugh ter and then for the benefit of the press, transferred their daughter's birthplace to Auburn without the batting of an eye. GHUett'S Ambition Is Gossip. Governor James X. Gillett has not as yet announced whether he will be a can didate to succeed himself. The . general opinio among Gillett's closest friends, la that the Governor will seek the Republi can nomination. Gillett la known to have an ambition to put to a test the unwritten law of the electors not to return a Goverftor for a second term. But one Governor of Cali fornia has been re-elected and that was John Bigler, ' who was returned in 1SS4 alter having served two years which was then a term for Rtate officials. - The reason popularly assigned for the micoess of Bigler, who by the way. was a Democrat, is that nearly all of the male population had been attracted by the Frazer River excitement and those remaining, paid- little attention to the election, leaving the Bigler administra tion a clear field to reinstate itself. Gillett thinks he cart break the record. There Is no question but that he has made a popular Governor. Reform League at Work. The Lincoln-Roosevelt League has been quite busy in this city during the week just closed. President Chester II. Rowell has been here in conference with other leaders to select a campaign committee to consist of two members1 from each Con gressional district. The leaders of the movement are about the same as during the last campaign. . The managers of this machine are now at work endeavoring to agree upon a eeris of issues1 of policies and they are having a good deal of trouble in develop ing it. In- the first place, each section I of the state has its local issues, which it wishes embraced in the new declaration and ae they are conflicting, the harmon izing of these various fads is a difficult task. Among the candidates that are be ing considered by the reformers are ex State Senator Charles Belshaw, Francis J. Heney, W. R. Eavis, George C. Par dee, of Oakland, and J. O. Hayes, of San Jose, brother of Congressman E. O. Hayes. Night Life Is Scattered. ' The preparations for the New Year's "festival that has been' going on shows that San Francisco has lost the old village concentration. The fire has as sisted in giving the scattered life of a metropolis. Before the fire all the night life was downtown. Shopping was centered in the district near Market and Kearny streets. The New Year's celebration surged up and down those two thor oughfares. Now all this Is changed. The Mission had its own celebration. Fillmore street had its own glorification on Friday t braid 39. either cash or $16.70 night and the North Beach celebrated in true Latin style. There was tho usual all night outinsr for people, both downtown and at thn beach resorts. The cafes as usual were crowded, and after 11 o'clock there was nothing but wine parties. Confetti, 'of course, was one of the features of- the festivities, but the old habit of scooping up dirty confetti from the streets, , mixed with sand, was changed. The Supervisors fixed this, and by a simple ordinance, y The new law provides that the throw ing of confetti Is permissible, but that the confetti must be of one solid color. The authorities don't care whether your outing party uses red confetti or white paper, but the minute it is mixed there is a chance for arrest If some keen eyed policeman ia at hand. It is a wise measure, as during the Portola Festival a number ofvpeople had to go to the hospitals to have dirt re moved from their eyes. Senator Clark Delays Limited. To exchange " Christmas greetings, with a colored valet who had been in the service of the family for more than 30 years, William A. Clark, ex-T7nited States Senator from Montana and mil lionaire mining man, kept the Coast Line Limited, with 1000 passengers, waiting 30 minutes on Christmas day. The train was held at San Mateo while the ex-Senator conversed with Mr. and Airs. James Collins In his pri vate car. Clark's private car had been attached to the limited and the signal had been given to start, when the Sen ator' heard his name being called by a familiar voice. - Sure enough, it was Collins, and the Montana millionaire ordered the en gineer to stop. This was done. A few seconds later Collins and his wife were each given a warm handclasp by their old employer. They were ushered into the private car and there they re mained for 30 minutes, absolutely for getting all about the time schedule of the Southern Pacific. Oreen way's "200" List. Czar Ned Greenway, wine agent and dictator of San Francisco society, has decreed a new list of social eligible. No more will the agile writer be ablo to speak with accurate ease of "San Francisco's Four Hundred." Greenway has definitely cut the number to 200 the selected "brut of society as It were. Greenway is to give a ball the mid dle of January. It is to be the Green way ball, with Greenway paying all the bills and having full control of all the invitations. "I had intended to giv'this as a Christmas party," said Greenway, "but business called me away to the North and as such things require a great deal of personal supervision, I had to put off the date. There will be 200 invi tations out and just my personal friends will be on hand." So there you are. There is no longer a Four Hundred. Romance and Realty. New York Sun. She planned the man whom she would we-J Should be both brave and good. Full six feet tall. with, curly hair. Adept at sawing wood. Combining woman's tenderness With man's Btern hardihood. IFter husband measured five feet two. His hair was red and straight. " He only made ten plunks per week, , Cared but for what he Pte, And yet she truly thought he made JL hu&band simply great. ;- VJre-Conaul General Claude "E. Guyant of Panama reports that a British Inventor ha been iivinfc tejta on the iwthmu of a nw exploiuve. which led the canal commission to order 20 tons of it Tor trial.