t 1 4 ' 5 t 0 THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL PORTLAND,' SUNDAY MORNING," JULY, 13,' 1018. TOE IH FRUITS HI NUTS RUNS 0 H 1 Export Business in Fruit Has , Ambled on the Last Decade; Fruit . uoes to turopean . Markets. "IRON HORSED PRESAGES PASSING 0R OLD-TIME LOG DRIVE ,'i"'Sf ' (WnMnrtsa Bou or Th Journal.) Washington, July 12. Fruit are raoldjyv awwlnar (actor In-the foreign trade of the United States. The value t fruits and nut passing' through the custom houses of the United States In . the fiscal year just ended approximates 190,000,000, and Is twice as great as that '-of a. decade ago. The exports of the fiscal year 1113 amount to $87,000,000, y tnraklnr In . round terms, against 118.- OO.OOO In 1903. a decade earlier; and the . Imports approximate $42,000,000 against . $24,000,000 In 1903. These figures do ; not mciuae tne traae wnn jiwii ana Porto 'Rico. ..which sent to continental fruits and nuts daring the last fiscal rear. . ; Fralts exported rs chiefly apples, . prunes, apricots,; raisins ana oranges, and go largely to Kurope and - North .America;! while those Imported are chiefly bananas, . lemons, : olives, cur. ' rants and grapes.' The Imports of outs, almonds,', walnuts, eoooanuts and cocoa- ant meat, are drawn principally from til tropics. -i : i Annies Go ta snrona. - Of the $37,000,000 worth of fruits ex- , portea aunng me year apples aione ' amounted to about $11,000,000 in value. of which about $$,000,000 were In their natural state and about $3,000,000 dried. Europe takes the bulk of apples, both green and dried, having taken In 1912, for which period , complete figures are . at hand, over four-fifths .of the total. England is by far the largest purchaser ui ini nuii m iw nuiunu ami, navma taken. In 1(11, $2,760,000 worth of green . apples, against. $750,000 worth by Scot land, $750,000 by Canada and $500,000 by . Germany. .'Of the dried apples exported, - Germany Is by far the largest purchaser, having; taken, in 1912, . $2,330,000 worth, , against $1,125,000 worth by the Nether lands and $260,000 worth by Belgium. , Prunes are the next largest Item In " the exports of domestic fruits, amount- . In a ovr tfi.OOO.OfiO in valna In Ifill and of these Germany is the largest pur chaser, having taken about $3,000,000 worth In 191$. against $750,000 worth . . .4 RAA AAA, Km . Wmmm. - $500,000 worth by Belgium and $500,000 , worth by England. The growth in ex ports Of prunes has been very rapid, " the , Quantity exported in the current year amounting to 110,000,000 against ((,000,000 : ln ,1903. , a erUer-,i....V.;.'-:.,-.'i.'; v. Raisins ; show a still larger growth In exports, the quantity exported in 191$ . being about ZS.ooo.ooo against 4.560,000 . .. - i. 1 X CLACK CART. I!0 ' LOnBADJE . vT,Vi"' .' i .. ." r.".',' Prison Operation Made Man of One Who -Was Once lies-'. Vperate .Character.' 1 . July's big log drive on the McKeade river, a' goena the. like of which Is Lefcomlng ; scarcer each year, because the locomotive engine ts penetrating the forests, and the logs which otherwise would go down the river are transported to the mills over a path of Bteel. ; i'w' ?-':''y '-l ' ' -': '" 7 ' '"s,f1:) .V-'.' Insert "Charlie" Williams of Pleasant Hill, Or., who for S7 years has been, ruining logs on the McKemle and Willamette rivers. ' .'4?" -r1""":' j'.'Kl'i' 1 '-:-J (Special Correspondence). Eugene, Or., July 12. Log drivers on the McKenxle river have, . during the past week, delivered some 6,000,000 feet of sawlogs to the mill at Coburg, the drive being one of the large ones which are e ac.h year becoming fewer. This In creasing; scarcity . is true not only on the McKemle river but , of all Oregon streams, and, in fact, of the streams of the entire country. : v The passing of - the picturesque "drive".' marks another, step In the march of progress, where skilled men and horses, trained often through gen erations, are giving way to modern ma chinery. Where the ring of the sledge, the clanging of chains . on .the gravel bar, the shout of warning:, and the crash and splash of the great timber in the water has echoed between the narrow walls of the mountain stream. Is now to be heard the shrieking- of the locomotive, and the grinding of brake shoes. . ; The rlverman is losing his calling be cause a ; better substitute has; been found. Ons of, the first considerations wherein i the locomotive engine excels mere man, is that of certainty. The log- drive is a somewhat, uncertain fac tor In milling. Sometimes the logs ar- nve at their destination and sometimes . lng them to a they do not, or mayhap they will go swirling tempestuously past their des tination, and 1t is beyond the power of man to stop them. The. water In -the 'streams is uncer tain to a considerable extent and often Just when the logs are most needed at the mills, there is not sufficient cur rent and .volume in the river to carry thenx ',.' "J f . . ' The locomotive engine takes the logs out as soon as they may be cut and delivers them to e degree of practical certainty," where and when they are wanted. So as the donkey engine la re placing . men and ' animals in the for ests, so is the locomotive. engine replac ing them to a great extent In the transportation ' end of the business. Comparative safety is another feat ure In favor, of railroad transportation of logs as against the river drive. Each year the , river demands its toll In human lives, and the lives of horses. Log- driving in Oregon dates' back to the '60's. In those days it . was an in dustry of skill and bravery. There were few tools or none. There Was not even the peavy, - and . men,' fought with . the waters and log ' jams y with levers or crow bars. . . . . . In 1885 the industry was almost rev olutionized by the peavy. Charley Wil liams, who, has just completed his thirty-seventh, year at. the work brought the first peavy to the Willamette. In the early days, too, - the horse' was little used, ' but gradually - the animals were trained v to' the work and now take an Important part in the operation. .' Kiver driving begins- In May or June and ends in July. -The men wait until the last flood has passed, then droD the logs from the bank where they have rested all winter, and right to get them to the mills before the, water gets too low. If they begin too soon high Water will tear out the iboom and scatter the year's cut to points, below. . If. they begin too late, or delay, the drive will not reach the mill at all. Luck is a trump card in the river drl veraL game. , .,.:. .. . . ... a., ' pounds decade la 1903. Canada takes more than one halt of the total exportatlons. Canned fruits exported amount to about $(,000,? 000 worth in 1913, and these go chiefly to Europe. , Fruit imports, as already indicated, are chiefly bananas, lemons, olive, cur rants and grapes, the banana Import for the fiscal year just closed amount ing to about $14,000,000 and coming principally from Central "America and ths West Indies. Figures for 191$. which ,-do not : differ materially.' from those of 1813, show from Jamaica $4. 000,000 worth' Costa Rica $2,750,000, Honduras a little over $2,000,000, Pan ama a little over $2,000,000, Cuba a little less than. $1,000,090 and Colombia a lit tle less than $600,000 worth. The value of. bananas 'Imported-was, in 1890, $4, 500,000: in 1900 a little less than $. 000; .'and in 1913, as above indicated, approximately $14,00.000, s ; Jjemons Oome mom. Italy., The lemon Imports, which umount to between $8,000,000 and , $4,000,000 annu ally, come ; almost exclusively A from Italy, while nearly three fourths of the $2,000,000 worth of olives Imported noma, from Spain. The $1,60,000 worth of currants imported come principally from Greece, the ll,500,00t worth' of grapes chiefly from Spain,, the nearly $1,000,000 Worth of figs and the $500,000 worth of dates chiefly from Turkey In Asia.'':. .-. :'. Of the ' approximately $14,000,000 worth of huts imported, almonds are the largest single Item, amounting to-over $3,000,000 in value and these come chiefly from Spain. . The-approxlmately $2,000,000 worth. ofscocoahuts in the shell come chief ly f rqm the West In dies and, Central' America; Jamaica and Trinidad supplying.; .nearly $1,000,000 worth,- Honduras " $250,000 worth, and Colombia $250,000 -worth. - Of the $2. 000,000 worth of coconut meat, broken (or "copra") Imported, about one-half came 'from the - Philippine) Islands and approximately ...$500,000 worth from French Oceania.' ' , .The fruits and' nuts received in con tinental United States from its noncon tiguous territories Porto Rico, Hawaii, and the Philippine Islands amount In value to over $8,000,000 a year, of which approximately $4,000,000 coroe . from Hawaii (chiefly canned pineapples), over $3,000,000 worth from .Porto Rico, (chiefly oranges and ' pineapples), and approximately $1,000,000 worth from the Philippine Islands (chiefly cocoanut meat, . broken, commercially known as "eopra.") ... POLISH STRIKERS DIE ON CITY; HIGHWAYS St.. Petersburg, July t2.-i-PlUful stories of distress are .coming from Lods (Po land), where 10.000 workers in the tex tile Industry are locked out and 10,00) Others - are being employed on short time. Starving men are suocamblng on all sides. Many are dying in the streets: there has been an alarming increase in suicides, and the' Infant mortality is the highest on record. These conditions - are alleged ' to be due to the Balkan war, whloh has caused stagnation' in the textile trade general ly. Social Democratic members of the duma have demanded that the govern ment take up Immediately the work of relief of the unemployed, and this has been promised, but little effective as sistance Is expected. . The government meanwhile has ac tually forbidden the workingmen to or ganize relief measures for their stricken brothers and comrades. Many- Cubans are utterly miserable; with Uncle Sam as guardian they can't pull-off a revolution, Marquette, Mich.," July 12,- "Black Bart" Holxhay, whose criminal career was one - of the most . spectacular ever recorded in the United States, was re leased Wednesday from the' Marquette prison, after having served 24 years of a life sentence, Imposed on him In 1880 for murder, - His release is made Dos- 4 1 sibie by- leglsjation. ' enacted xtwo .years ago, which extends the benefits of the parole law to .convicts undergoing Jjfe sentence. . s Holzliay Is now 47 years old. ' When he- was received at the prison he 'was illiterate and possessed a record aa a desperado, stage coach and train rob ber. He gave the prison . much, trouble aurjug tne rirst lew years, but follow- A lag. , a surgical operation his character i changed , completely; and he - became a model prisoner. He has sines been a -.' student, and . has given himself a good W education. . For many years he has been the prison librarian and photographer. ' , ' . Because of his swarthy appearance ' and ill-kept beard. Hoisbay gained the f name of "Black Bart, the bandit," and t under, that sobriquet he became notori ous as the most picturesque criminal in the histories of Wisconsin and Michi gan the terror of two states. His ex . Ploits in the woods of northern Michi gan rivaled those of Jesse James. A peaceful lumber jack for a long while, he1, suddenly broke Into a' : series of, crimes, which continued until the men- , tlon of his name struck terror to the hearts of travelers In the north woods. In his cell Holxhay was as fearless as he was holding up a train or a coach. On one Occasion he stole a table knife. '-' sharpened It on, the floor of his cell, and held One of the guards at bay in his -cell when he came to take the prisoner to work. .Many other. times he gave the officials much trouble during the early years of his confinement. Finally the physicians decided that he. was Insane. . and he was sent, to the' asylum at Ionia. J: There he was operated upon, . and then . returned to Marquette. . Since the operation Holxhay has been a different man. He has given no trou- ' bit whatever, his demeanor has been as gentle as that of a. child. 'and. alt his ( time when not at work has been devot ed to reading. He Is familiar with the ' history and politics of every nation, and. has written, many essays on sociological -and philosophical subjects. .Ha Invest -ed the small earnings he had saved In , copper stocks, and his savings jumped to several thousands, with the help of Warden' Russell, who plaoed his money !' for him. He Is now an expert in the do- ' lnga of the market ' It la believed he ha saved enough money to keep him the rest bf his days.. J f , , . .-i ' i H i ' , r . Journal-Want Ads bring results. ' -i- ExtxalDouBle Gold Bond Stamps Given All Day Mond in Grocery Ice Cream Soda 5c, in Basement $1 SKoe Sale oii Fifth Flobir II III II i ' I I II I l m I I I I I II I ! I 1 1 I ' 1000 pairs of Women's Smartest Pumps arid. Oxfords, , all sizes widths mostly D and EE; suedes, gunmetals ' and patent leathers. Season's newest styles first class' si makesShoes worth two and three times low price 'ol 5S1 m mill' mm mv)w( miV& QitWAuWSii, ., -. ... . "'. . 1 . . 111 , "." '" ' ' ,n ." '" " 11 1 r :. Look at This Lunch for 25c Assorted Cold Meats with Potato Salad ; Bread and Butter t Tea, Coffee, Choco late or Buttermilk: Pie' or French Pastry; at Soda Fountain, 25J Hot Rolls and Coffee, 4 to 6 P. M.. 1Q Chocolate Pip Caramels, pound, 18s 40c Buttercups; special, a pound, 27 i , Al m i - m .......... i e i . a n p. Misii--w-w--MM-ii)tt 5000 Yards New 50c Wash Goods at 12Vc One of tomorrow's big clearance sensations S000 yards of the season's most wanted tub fabrics, including dainty JLawns, Batistes, Dimities, Poplins, Voiles, Crepes, Mad rases, Challies, Linens, Rippelettes and others. Plain white; every color and pattern imaginable. Up lOlp to 50c grades. See window display yard 12V2C Dress Gingh'msSV-fc Newest designs of this sta ple wash fabric, including all colors in checks, stripes, florals and plain shades. "Real; 124c grade, 01p tomorrow only at.. Oalv The 15c Dress Percales at 9c Splendid 36-inch Percales' in large selection of, neat colored stripes, for dresses,, wai stings and shirtings. The best 15c grade, on sale Qy tomorrow. at the yard.v' For Tomorrow; 70c Sheets at 49c A real Monday sensation 500 dozen double bed size, full bleached Seamless Sheets, torn and hemmed. Good, durable grade, always Oc. Limit of six for tomorrow's Ag great sale at the low price TttJC Reg. 35c Ribbons Remnants at 10c Extra Special All day Monday, 6000 yards of plain moire and fancy Ribbons, in , remnant lengths. . All' ;colbrs and widths. Up to the reg 'ular ,35c- grades. . For o-.1 A morrow's sale, per remnant AUC V4 OFF SALE Offers that'll bring thousands to Holtz' tomorrow! Take a full fourth off the low regular prices of these. All Waists Now at V4 Of f Ji- . - " $15 Women's Suits, $7.50 rmmnmm $18.75 Suits, special at f Q.3- it $23.00 Suits, special at f 13.S0 $20.00 Suits, special at f lO.OO, $30.00. Suits special it f 15.00 Many new serges have been added to these lots. Also the. smart pin striped eponges, natty ' checks, .fancy worsteds, etc. "Suits good for months of wear. An absolute clearance. Take advantage.; ,$11.50 Ratine Tjib Frocks Spec'l $7.50 'v' Smart little Dresses .'that 'you can put on and wear without al - leration. , Tan, . . Copenhagen, ,' ;hrown, maue, white,. Ncllrose, i hey are up to $11.50 Frocks, at $7.50 To $19.85 Newest Silk $7.85 Semi-fancy.; and . plainer tailored style in messalines, charfneuse, taffetas and foulards, Also all over fancy, nets. ,, Regularly sold at ' from $13.75, to $19.85;. now $7.85 Lovely styles in lingeries, marquisettes, voiles, plain and fancy. trepes, regularly $l.oa to $15, at OFF Jap Silk Waists, black and white, $2.50 to $7.50 OFF $6.50 Pongee Waists, ideal for Summer wear; f4.4S AH Lace Curtains at V4 Off On the' fourth floor, entire 'stock of beautiful new Lace and Scrim Curtains, which ; at , our regular prices are, ;away. under, value. r For; tomorrow ,at just J4 OFF Any Piece of Printed' Linoleum, new wood and tile patterns, for tomorrow's great sale only, at: $4 OFF Every piece " of fancy Bungalow ' Net and. Curtain Scrim for .this one day' selling only at just OFF, Summer Goods at Off bn'j'the. .Third . Floor tomorrow, decisive clearance of AH' Framed Pictures for this sale at just 4 OFF Baseball' Goods, Balls, etc. this salespecial at OFF Hammocks all sixes and colors tti vAt at .OFF Dolls, importer's sample line at 'this sale at OFF White Crochet Bags; 'A; Off 'Entire 'stock of pretty," new White, Crochet Bags' to' llW Z3 Qirmmikf f4tarsl ilr-r A la i 11 TTVis4-k ta1ta on sale.tOmorrow at v:J,,,.,v..!OFF r r "' I '! rv ' 7 Yl I ' ' I I i j. f I - - - ''J m ixj -fu 'JX- I yTTi n'.'V Jn Vi" ' y . $1 Dress Goods Special, Yard 1 9c On the Fifth Floor 3500 yards of 42-ich Wool Dress Goods, in pret- tiet novelty weaves. . All colors. Fine- for dresses and children's wear. .-, Fo.r tomorrow pnly,"t" to the $1.00 grades, , yard A'C We Are iCOfferingr Famous Snowball Ice.Craam "Freez ers' reduced On" the Fourth Floor: lKRiart, $2.25 'Freezers at' f 1.85 2- quart, $2.85 Freezers "at f 2.40 3- quart,' $3.10 'Freezers 1 at : f 2.75 1-gallon, $4.00 Freezers at f 3.30 150 Tapestry Room Rugs I $15 Grades for $8.45 I Not one should be left tomorrpw night at this astonishing J saving. Good qaulity Tapestry Brussels Rugs in new I florals and pretty conventional patterns. Full 9x10.6 size, I 6lightly irregular. Splendid; for dining , and dQ AC I bedrooms. ; Reg. .$15 Rugs, 4th floor tomorrow vOstcU $10 Cotton Felt I $15.00 EnameleJ Mattresses $n98 Beds, Each $.75 i Made of fine layers of good White or Veftiis Martin fin- I 'cotton ielr. guaranteed not ish, 2-inch continuous post I to lump.-Good art tick ccrV with , heavy '1-inch f filling er,i full roll edge; ,$10 'Mat- rods. . Full or three-quarter I -tresses on5 the . Qr' QQ size., Real $15 dQ fJK I Fourth. Floor, at VMeaO Bedv 4th Floor tpOel D I j ... v . , r" . ... . . -y VIWonYclce5dhSale To $&50;'Lacet.i...gl.S0 To $3.50 ,'Uaccs t $1.1)8 ' To $5.0Q-Lacea. .$2.79 1 .To 98c Laces. j...r.,59! To . $1.49 Laces . 7Q ,To $1.98 Lacct....gl.l9 ;'thV, To $7.60 Lace.,,$3.08.; A clearance of Laces without precederit jn Portland, An Edees, Flouncinijs and Allovers of Venise Oriental anA bhadow Laces. Laces of every style and aualitv for everv Rurpose., See the bigjvmdow display tpday.f Choose Uic7 1;, ,j! t first thing'tomorrbv.-. -Reach our store bright knd early. VfTY; 35c Laces 8000 yards o,Vemse and OrlentaVLace Bands fdr trimming purposes. "' rfTTf Widths to' 2 inches,, good quality, pretty, patterns of r white and 7 ' ecrtu The grades shown in this lot are worth to 83c the yard. , For, tomorrow, yard f C