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About Oregon courier. (Oregon City, Clackamas County, Or.) 188?-1896 | View Entire Issue (March 13, 1896)
Sou M'ORTHERN li nAninn PACIFIC RY. N S Pullman Sleeping Cars Elegant Dining Cars Tourist Sleeping Cars fHT. PAUL MINMKtl'lH.14 1M LI Til PAIMiO TO J (JIUMl FIHIK WINNlVkri HELENA mill IllTTK THROUGH TICKETS TO SVAfiiuwaTON a ini.ADKi.rifiA nosroN mni mi j'OINTM KAST and KOCTH. For fiiformatlon tlce lkets, call on or w-lte cards, nipi and A. I). CHARLTON, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agent, Portland, Oregon SSS Morrlsou Street, Corner Third. E. McNEIL, Receiver. TO THE EAST GIVES 1'HK CHOICE OF TWO TRANSCONTINENTAL BOTJTHB VIA VIA GREAT NORTHERN RY. SPOKANE MINNEAPOLIS UNION PACIFIC RY, DENVER OMAHA AND AND ST. PAUL KANSAS CITY LOW RATES TO ALL EASTERN CITIES OCEAN STEAMERS LEAVE PORTLAND EVERY 5 -....FOR DAYS SAN FRANCISCO For fall details call on or address W. H. HURLBURT, Gen'l Pass. A Rent, Portland, Ok EAST AND SOUTH The Shasta Route OF THE SOUTHERN PACIFIC CO. Express Trains Leave Portland Dally. Oakss rtinry c, Payns, ITtary 0. Bscslvsrs mm Jiouth.J I North. Sor.M. Lv Portland Ar 8:10 a. M 9:3.) p. M. Lt Oregon City Lt 7:2a a. m lO:4,SA.al. Ar 8an Francisco Lv 6:UUP. K The above trains stop at East Portland, Oregon City, Woodburu, Salem, Turner, Marion, Jetfer sou. Albany, Albany Juiiotion, Taiig.ut, Shedds Halspy. Hurrisburg, Juucllou City, Irving. ugeue, Creswell, urains. KOSEBCRG MAIL DAILY. 8::10a.M. Lt i'urtland Ar 4:40 P. M 9:27 A. a. Lt Oregon City Lv S:M)P.M 5:iOP.M. Ar Roseburg Lt 8:00a. 8 A LEM PA8SEXGKR DAILY. 4:110 pm Lt Portland Ar 10:15 am 4:4 p m Lt OrfFon City Lv t:! a u :15 P a Ar Salem Lv 8:00 A M DIXISO CAlf3 ON OODES ROUTE. PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPERS AMD SECOND-CLASS SLEEPIN6 CARS Attached to all Through Trains. We.tSlde DlTislon, Ketvean PORTLAND and CORVALL18 XAILTBAIN DAIi.T(HCEPT SUNDAY.) 7:S0 A. M. ILT 12:15 P. M. I Ar Portland Corvalhs Ar Lt I 5:40 P.M. I 1:W P.M. At Albany and Corvalils connect with train fOregon Pacillc Railroad. lrlt" TAI nILT'IXCKPTSO!DT.I 4:4SP. M. 7.2SP.M. I Lt I Ar Portland McMlnnTtlle Ar Lt :25 A. M 5:50 A. M THROUGH TICKETS TO A IX POrKTS IH THE EASTERN BTATE3, CANADA ASD EUROPE Can be obtained at the lowest rates from L. II. XOOBE, A feat. Oregoa City E. KOEHLER. E. P. ROGERS, Manager. sat. G. F. A P. ArMit, Portland. Or. Tor' for Hie Jaded and Good Health lor all Mankind. JOY'S VEGETABLE SARI APARIILA. In made from f "" wtauis no I !" I n e r I . tie throiijrh h r.attirc'sow u properchon. nei. Joy'a Vegetable ronta n r ii g or deadly poi. on Joy'sj rinr.apartim cure I)y Vegetable. 6M:iparllla rob the blood of all Ita luipmi t'ca, and course all these Impurl- pepita, Chronic Coni-ilpi . lion, Liver C ointilnlriM oii'l Kidney AlircilOUS. Joy'g Vegetable sursapurllla prevenis tired feel logs, etaggprlng sett Mtuiinn, palpitation of lie.irt. rush of blood to 'the head, diuimtss, ringing in eam,eiPOl before the eye, headache, bil i iusneB,con9ti pation of bowels, pain in 4.1 the hack, nieiuncholy, 3 1 tongue coutt-d, foul rwyifl breuib, pimples on tucbody and limb, &' ffj dfineofnerve force 3 amy spells, faint fSj .nrla ,..,1.1 i. RfsM linings, fntigue, in- 8omma,8iiJ all dis- Vf nines of I he stomach, Gsi liver and kidneys. i Joy.s Vegetable Bar- fcg j snpurilla la aula by all (; driiKRiata. Refuse a ElM Pyforthehetiieethat M Wtf you get the beat, p It is an indisputable tact tuat for more than fifty years, children, from the age of three months to ten years, have oeen benefited by btMdman's booming row- ders. These Powders are termed soothing because they correct, mitigate, and re move, disorders of 'he system incident to teething. SigmaO Sooilpg Powders. For Children Cutting their Teeth. N USE OVER FIFTY YEARS. Htllma fttnrlth Htat, prevent f fa, Cormiltlont, ans preserve a neantiy etate of the constitution turlng tnepertot of teething. To COKSTJMPTIVESI Tn unaeralmed having been restored to health by simple menu, after mitl't'riiiK for ereral year- with a severe 111111- alt'ectlnn, and that dread (I Incase Coi.jiiiiiplliin, In anxlou to mane Known to nln fellow Hiitierera tne means ol cure. To thore who desire it, he will cheer- f'lllvsend (free of chnrsei sconrof thenreiicrln- tion used, which they will Hud a sure cure lor Consumption, Asthma, CHtarrli, Hrimuln- tls and all throat and lung Maladies, Ho hopes kll sutTerers will try his remedy, as It Is invaluable. Those desiriiiK the prescription, wnicn win ensi mem iioining, ana may prove a DleMing, will please address, ev. Edward A. Wilson. Brooklyn, N. Y. Oregon Central & Eastern R. R. Company. YAQUINA HAY BOUTH Connecting at Ynquina Bay with the San Francisco and Steamship Yaouina Bav Company. Steamship "F.iillon" l 1 and nrsl-clflss in evArr restrict find. from Yaouina for Han Franciscn atwmt pvurv eiisiib unys. Passenger accommodations unsurpassed. Faro from Albany or nointa west to San r rHuuiRco; Cnbin' Hteerai-e 112 00 8 OU ChIiIh, round trip, good for (SO days .... IS 00 For sailing days apply to H. I. W'ALDEN, Agent, Albany, Oregon. CHAM. CLARK, ftupt., Corvalils, Or. EDWIN STONE, Mgr., RI-P-A-N-S The modern stand ard Family Medi cine : Cures the common every-day ills of humanity. WANTED-AN IDEAte0. thing to patent? Protect your id eaa ; theymay bring you wealth. Write JOHN WEDDEK BUKN & CO., Patent Attorneys, Waabicgton, . tur Lucir eiMw prize uaer. eavrarc TRADE taanvfl. OESICN PATENTS, COPYRIGHTS. mtaJ rw lnrormatlon anl rre Handbooa write to MINN a CO, Ml Broadwat. NIW Yoag. Oldert bureau for sernrlnjr pau-nts la Amerlr. E.rerrp&teni taken oat by us is brought befom tlx public by a Dotiea alvea f rta of cbarg la Urn tmiitit Smtxim Larmt elwTrtstl of iirr ritl!l'- parr tn fh man fchvp; iM be without It. WetlT. slIMi 1 be without It. WerklT. ar; ai.ni sli monl-M. Aldrei. ML. .vv a co, si i.araa, 241 iwvadwa, w York City. ill rasoc f jt Sdentiflo American Agency fox maA sr r em m ssh OUR SISTER STATES INTERESTING NEWS NOTES FROM . VARIOUS PLACES, Tlia Uraat Northwuit furnUhet Soma Kiwi of Mora Than Uanaral Inter ait Dsvolumut maiX I'rogreaa In all Induatrlea-Oreaou. Malheur has a tohool district named 'Fighting Seven." The Bandon broom-handle factory has started np again. Sheepmen of Grant oounty are taking their sheep to the bills. A Umatilla reservation farmer will have 1,600 acres In grain this year.. Two eagles were caught in a trap set for coyotes near ti rant's Pass last week. The pnblio sohools in Albany for February had an average attendance of 605 and an enrollment of 603. The whole cost of assessing Washing ton oounty for the year 18U6, inolnd ing Held and office work, was only If 1,860. Fishermen predict there will be nojmoi,tn ' February there were 14 judg. hieh water in the Columbia this year, and anticipate a poor Ashing season in oonsequenoe. , Brownsville i. one of the few towns in the state where no city tax is paid. That oity has decided eleotrio lights are not absolutely necessary just yet. There is said to be a good prospect at Astoria for the location of the rail road depot at Smith's point, in case ne gotitaions for the Boow bay site fail. The mill oompany's boom at Pitta- burg, in Columbia oounty, was broken by a freshet, and between 160,000 and 200,000 feet of logs went down the river. A petition was circulated and signed in tit. Helens last week and forwarded to Senator MoBride to be presented to congress asking lor an appropriation for the improvement of Soappoose bay, A man in Brownsville is putting out 8,000 fruit trees, the majority of whiob are prunes. Almost seventy varieties of fruit are represented, and being placed in good soil will doubtless grow . Via in n 1 1 - r 1 w m nu vawoaavm. viuuniui The Exploring Syndicate of Mines and Mining in the United States, the Frenoh syndicate that has been buying mines in Eastern Oregon, made the first payment on a plaoer olaim in the Burnt river distriot, a short distanoe from the town of Bridgeport Several hundred cranberry plants have recently been received by persona on the JNebalem beach. Wild oran berries nave grown tnere lor many years and there is no doubt that, with proper cultivation, an immense orop of the tame variety can be raised. J. H. Houston has been buying furs at Klamath Falls for the past three months and is now ready to make one of the finest shipments that has ever been made from Klamath. His lot of furs consists of martin, mink, wildoat, skunk and badger, and the whole will bring him in a neat little sum. The Ashland woolen mills are ship ping blankets to San Franoisoo as fast as they can be tnrned out. An order for 1,000 pairs of vicuna blankets for a big San Franoisoo firm is now well along. A portion of the goods has been delivered, and they are so satisfactory that the firm desires ' to increase the order to 8,000 pairs at the same prioe. The taxroll of Lane oounty for 1895 has been turned over to the sheriff. It shows the following: State, oounty and school tax, f 108,881.28; poll tax, 3,89l; Lebanon poll tax, $148; Leb anon oity tax, $969.98; Halsey oity tax, $143.63; Sodaville oity tax, $98.73; Soio oity tax, $39.31; speoial school tax, $8,886.16; total, $123,130.98. Of the school tax, Albany's share will be $3,685. The East Oregonian is informed that the buyer for the abattoir at Linnton will oome into Eastern Oregon next week for the purpose of purchasing a large number of horses to be shipped to Liinnton, to be killed lor canning. The buyer made this statement to the East Oregonian's informant, saying he had positive orders to proceed at once and commence finding suitable horses at a prioe cheap enough to justify pnrchas ing them. The searching parties that went out to search for D. J. Woodward, the missing toll-gate keeper, have re turned, and are of the opinion that Woodward baa perished in the snows of the Blue mountains. The Elgin searching party found a pair of snow snoes, out wnetner they belonged to Woodward is not known, thouirh all indications pointed that way. Little doubt now remains that the missing man has perished. Woodward was a Mason in good standing and the order may institute farther search. A thrifty dairyman, near Ashland. has figured np what he has realized on a half-blood Jersey and Durham cow in the last nine years. He finds that from the butter and cream and the sale of ten calves she has raised the amount foots up $995, or an average of over $110 per year. This is the ao tual cash return easily traced, and does not include any allowance for the skim milk that during that lensrth of time nas rattened a fattened a good manv faotrs. The cow is now 13 years old and apparently as raituDie as erer as a money-maker. Waahlagtoa. Reoent rains have so swollen the Yakima river that fording at any point is difficult Work has been commenced on a Methodist church building at Chinook, Pacific county. The firemen of Walla Walla have de- oided oramiw to take I'M .m uw lUUlUBUUUlt U IO UCIU lip Pendleton. The Seattle capitalists who are put' ting in ohlorination works on the Upper Cle-Eluin are moving in their machinery. The Washington academy at Colville, bag juHt closed its seooud term The people are much gratified at the success of this school Columbia county commissioners have ordered 1,000 ounoes of strvobnine for distribution to the farmers for poison ing squirrels, The general opnion in Eastern Wash ington is that the recent oold snap did no damage other than slightly injuring fruit trees that were far advanoed. Colonel L. S. Howlett, commissioner of arid lands, has sone to Washing ton, D. C, where he will endeavor to seoure the passage of a bill granting the government arid lands outright to the state. There will apparently be almost as great a rush to the Nez Peroe reserva tion this spring as there was last fall, Many will return to their claims, and others will go in the hope of findings Homes or work. In Whitman oounty during the menta granted, 26 forealosure aotions "rougni; nine marriage licences issued 8ix returns, two divorces granted, 28 olIwa ana Dve aeatn returned. uavia inanibers died at his home on Chambers prairie, near Olympla of heart complications. He was promi nently associated with the early history oi Washington. Since 1848 he had re sided on his farm, east of Olympia, where he amassed a considerable for' tune fattening stock. Expert Cation, who was appointed to examine the oity official s books Walla Walla, has submitted his report to the oity. The report is from June 1, 1886, and shows a total deficit of $3,471, divided between the oity treas urer and two ex-marshals. The short ages, so the report says occurred through negligenoe on the part of the oity olerk, who oolleoted the dellu quent taxes for the marshal. Thousands of acres have been planted to grain in Uarneld oounty the past two weeks, and many farmers are well nigh through their early seeding, says the H-ast Washingtonian. The ground I i j v i i . ... . I o ou WJ LTO 1U VAUttliOUb UUUIUUUU is said and on the pasture lands the grass has been coming on rapidly. The recent indications are that this is to be a pro dnotive year, and that the state of Washington will make snch a record in growth and prosperity as will bless her people with abundance and plenty, The loggers of Chehalis oounty have organized a temporary Loggers Pro tective Association. A oommittee was appointed to confer with the mill men of the harbor and, if possible, agree with them in the selection of a man who would be acceptable to mill men and loggers alike for appointment as government sealer of logs, the inten tion being to entirely do away with private soaling of logs, all oonoemed to accept as final the figures of the sealer who may be so agreed upon. Idaho. A restoration and increase in pension has been granted George F. Lyons, of Lewiston, Nez Peroe oounty, The postoffloe at Leyburn, Shoshone county, has been discontinued, and its mail hereafter must be sent to Fraser. In Fremont and Bingham counties recently a rabbit drive was had and nearly 1,200 rabbits were killed in one day. A patent has been granted to James B. Perkins, asignor of one-half to P. f iannery, oi tiewiston, Idaho, on an animal trap It is said on good authority that the woolen mills of Desert, Utah, are soon to be moved to Orobard, about thirty miles from Boise. In the Star mail service operating from Blaokfoot to Chains, Bryan post offtoe has been ordered to be supplied without any change in the distanoe of the route. Bryan is between the Blaokfoot and Aroo. The order be oame operative March 2. Harry B. Hall, ex-treasurer of Sho shone oounty, has been sentenced to one year in the penitentiary for embezzling oounty funds. Hall was treasurer of the county and oashier of a bank which failed, and in whioh Van B. DeLash mutt, of Portland, was one of the prin oipal owners. County funds were in the bank. All exoept $1,500 was re covered by the oounty. Hall was tried for embezzlement for failing to pro duce that sum. Montana. Several rich copper veins have been discovered east of Dillon, Mont. The annual report of the Boston & Montana Mining Company for 1896 shows that this oonoern is in a most prosperous condition. The smelting concerns of Colorado find it necessary to draw on the lead mines Irom Montana and British Co lumbia for the majority of this class of ore and there are a number of ship- tunts reported each week. The bills around the Rabbit district are fall of prospectors and a number of very good discoveries have already been made. The snow is fast disap pearing. Several new copper dis coveries have been made during the past few weeks in the Nes Peroe can yon, which give good indications for proving valuable. A syndicate from Butte has taken up 200,000 miners inches of water from the Madison river three miles east of Red Bluff which they propose to utilize in generating electric power for vari ous uses in the different cities of Mon tana, and especially Butte. The pa pers have all been filed with the proper authority and it is said that fully $25,000 will be expended this summer ! in building dams snd other necessary I improvements. FIELD. FARM. GARDEN USEFUL INFORMATION CONCERN INQ AGRIOULTURE. Farmers Must Meet Competition In the World's Markets-New Onion Culture Feeding Potatoes to Dairy Stock Miscellaneous Notes. Farmors begin to realize that they must meet the new order of things. We have the markets of the world and must meet the competition, or produoe what South America, Australia and India cannot produoe for the European markets. They raise wheat oheaper than we can, and they raise scrub stock oheaper than we oan; but in the better grades of improved stock and dairying North Amerioa stands next to the Euopeaa ooantries. Our exports are now well established for high grade beef, mutton, pork, horses and dairy products, and we have a great and growing home trade in our own cities. All our markets are much more exacting than in former days, and we must produoe superior quality or be content to take sorub prioes. The markets demand greater quantity and better quality of the high grade, early maturity sort, from good grade oows and pure bred sires, but where oan we get tne nign grade oows? Now we marketed most' of them when we quit breeding; and as to bulls, there are but few breeders, and the Western breeders are taking all the bulls at better prices than our farmers think they oan pay; but as there is no way to breed good beef animals other than to use good, pure bred sires the sooner we get them, the quicker we oan get into market. New Onion Culture. The new oultnre consists simply in sowing the seed in greenhouse, hotbeds or elsewhere and then transplanting to the open ground, as oabbage or other plants. By selecting the right varie ties, there is claimed for this method a larger yield of better quality and with less labor than by any other jnethod. There are several varieties of foreign origiu that take well to this method of oulture, but the Spanish King or Prize Taker is by far the best and most at tratii'o of any of the varieties we have testis. This variety resembles the large Bermudas. The seed may be sown from the mid dle of February to the middle of March, and the transplanting done when the soil will permit The plants are taken up by loosening the soil un der them first with a trowel or stick. By trimming off parts of the tops and roots we are enabled to set plants more rapidly and better. Do not trim severely, but with a bunoh of plants in one hand and with a single stroke of the knife we take off just enough of the top so that the plant will stand ereot when set, and at another stroke enough sprangly roots are taken off so that we oan do muoh better work. To set the plants a round stick about an lnoh in diameter, sharpened to a point, ans wers the purpose very welL With this make two or three strokes to eaoh plant First, a straight hole, into whiob the plant is plaoed and held with the left hand. A seooud time the dibble is in serted, about an inch from the plant, pointed toward the plant at an angle, and then pushed toward the plant, thus compacting the soil about the roots; then another light stroke to fill up the noie. When properly set, plants oan not be pulled out by the tops. Aim to set the plants when the soil ia moist By this new method of cultivating, says an Eeastern paper, is avoided the most tedious part of the cultivation. that of the first two weedings, and most of the onltivating is done with the wheel hoe. Aim to oultivate with this every week or ten days. One thorough weeding by hand ought to sufHoe. One of the best tools for this work is an old table knife. What hoeing is necessary after this is usually done with a nar- row-bladed hoe. Feeding Potatoes, One pf our experiment stations says that for dairy stock it is doubtful, when foods are as oheap as they are at present, whether it would pay to feed very large quantities of potatoes, be cause a dairy ration neoessarily re quires more protein than a fattening ration. Potatoes cannot be fed to young ani mals as safely as to more mature ones. If fed too large quantities they have a tendency to prematurely fatten the ani mal and build up a lighter frame work, With more mature animals, when the fattening period is largely a period of tne addition or fat to the body, the po tatoes can then be fed to advantage and more economically. In the feed ing of large quantities of potatoes, no more should be fed than the animals can comfortably dispose of in one day. In one of the digestion trials, when ten pounds of potatoes per day were offered, the pig refused about half of them; when only nine pounds were offered there were none left over. Rolling the potatoes in the grain was found to be another way of encouraging a large amount to be eaten. It ia impossible to state at the present time, the actual money value of potatoes in the produc tion of pork and beet When fed in proper combinations potatoes will, without doubt, yield a larger return than their present market prioe, of about ten cents per bushel Notae. Young animals should be watched and attended to with as much care as any crop on the farm receives, but not always are. It is claimed by writers in the East that it eoats one cent to produoe an egg. On the farm in the West, a writer avs it ia nnt r iavaH th.l 4 more than half as much, which would sfford a profit at the lowest market 1 I figures. PORTLANC markets. Dealers in early vegetables and fruits reported a good shipping trade the past week, and other produoe mar kets enjoyed a satisfactory oity busi ness. Reoeipts of fruit and green pro duoe were light The egg market U fluctuating, with the average price . trifle higher than reported last week. In poultry and dairy produoe quotations were mantained. No changes are re ported in groceries. Wheat Market, There is praotioally no local wheat market Reoeipts are small, offerings light and no trading reported. Dull. ness may be expected for the rest of the season. There is very little wheat in the oountry, and what', changes hands from now on will make but little stir : in the market. Prioes are Quoted as follows: Walla -Walla. 60 to 60o: Valley, 63 to 63o per bushel.' Produoe Market. FlODB Portland. Salam. Oaapjutla an1 Davton. am mmlul of t'l IK no. k..i . (jolddrop, 12.1)5: Snowflake, $3.20: Ben ton county, 3.16: graham, 12.00; super fine, 12.26. OATS Uood white are nnntaH waaW at 27c; milling. 28(330c: Vrav. 22ti)23e. Rolled oats are Quoted as follows: fiura 4.266.25;. barrels, 4.607.00; cases. $3.76. HAl limothV. 19.00 ner ton: chant. . 8.00 ; clover, $o7 ; oat, 66.60 : wheat, ' fu.ovuyu. W. Bablsy Feed barley, $14.00 per ton; brewing, nominal. MiiABTom Bran. $13.00; shorts, $14; middlings, $1820.00; rye, 85o7e percental. Bdttib Fancy creamery is quoted at -65c; fancy dairy, 46c; fair to good, 36c ; common, 17c per roll. PoTATois New Oregon, 2630o per sack; sweets, common, S.c; Merced, 36 per pound. Onions Oregon, 6090c per sack. . Poultry Chickens, hens, $3.60 per dozen; mixed. $2.50(33.00 per dozen; ducks, $34 60; geese, $6.00; turkeys, live, 8i)o per pound; dressed 11c. oos Oregon, 12)c per dozen. CiikKss Oregon mil cream, 1416.Ko per pound; halt cream, )$c; skim, 4(f) 6c: Young America, 10(gllu. abopioal Fboit California lemons, $3.00(33.60; choice. $2.603.00; etlcily, tti.60; bananas, $1.752.60 per bunch; California navels, $2.6orj3.0U per box; pineapples, $46.00 per dozen. Obhuon Vbobtablkb Cabbage, 10 per lb; garlic, new, 78c per pound; artichokes, 7Uo per dozen; sprouts. 6c per pound ; cauliflower, $2.75 per crate, 0c&.$l per dozen ; hothouse lettuce, 40c per dozen. Fbbhb Fbuit Pears. Winter Nellis, $1.50 per box: cranberries, $9 per barrel; fancy apples, $1(31.75; common, 50375c per box. ; Dbibd Fboits Apples, evaporated, bleached, 44cj sun-dried, 3j4c; pears, sun and evaporated. 66o plums, pitlfBS, 34o; prunes, 3(g5 per pound. VYooir Vallev. 10c, per pound j East ern Oregon, 68o. Hops Choice, Oregon 40o per pound; medium, neglected. Notb Almonds, soft shell, 9lle per pound: paper shell, 1012)c; new crop California walnuts, aoft shell, ll12)tc; standard walnuts, 12913c; Italian chesnuta, 12, 14c; pecans, 13(3160 ; Brazils, 1213o; filberts, 14 16c; peanuts, raw, fancy, 67; roasted, 10c; hickory nuts, 8(i0c; CO coanuts, 90c per dozen. Pbovisions Eastern hams, medium, llkl2o per pound: hams, nienks. 7 Wo; breakfast bacon 10i10e; short clear sides, 8,9o; dry salt (ides, 73,8c; dried beef hams, 11 (813c: lard, comnonnd. in tins. 7W; lard, pure. In tins. 9 & 10c: pies' feet. 80s, $3.50; pigs' feet, 40s, $3.25: kits, $1.25. Oregon smoked hams, 100 per pound: pickled hams, 8,c; boneless hams, 7kc: bacon. 10c: drv salt sides. ecjlard, 6-pound pails, 7c ; 10s, 7Xc; 60". 7io ; tierces, 7c Country meats sell at prices according to grade. Hubs. Dry hides, butcher, Bound, per pc-jid, ll12c; dry kip and calf skin, 10llcj culls, 8c less: salted, 00 lbs and over. 6c: 60 to 60 lbs. iattiXe: 40 and 60, 4c; kip and veal skins. 10 to 30 lbs,' 4c; calfskin, sound, I to 10 lbs, 6c; green, unsalted, le ic: culls. l-2c less: sheepskins, aheaiw lings, 1016cj short wool, 20 30c; medium, 3040c; long wool, 6070c Merchandise Market, Salmon Columbia, river No. 1. talla. $1.25(31.60; No. 2. talis, $2.262.60, fanMT Kin 1 A... At HKsl Or. , I No. 1 tails, $1.20031.30; No. 2, tails, $1.90 Q2.26. Bbahb Small white. No. 1. 2W nas. ound; butter. 8c: bavou, lc: Lima. 4c Coboaob Manilla rope, l-lnch, is quoted at 8jc, and Sisal, ejo per pound. jjaub vawatut, ic. Una in 44nllan (V n Kl. . w. w, V, VV, dry granulated, 6c; cube crushed and powdered, 64c per pound ; y4c per pound discount on all grades lor prompt cash; uaui uniicio, ?3iu more ,tnan Darreisi maple sugar, 16(3 16c per pound. CorrsB Costa Rica, 2223c ; Rio, 90 22c; Salvador, 21 22c; Mocha, 2931c; Padang Java. 30c; Palem banc Java, 26(328c; Lahat Java, 2325c;Ar buckle's Mokaaka and Lion. $21.80 per 100-pound case; Columbia, $21.30 per 100-pound case. RitB Island. $40(35 per sack; Ja pan, $4.00(34.60. CoAir Steady; domestic, $5.00(37.50 per ton; foreign, $8.50(311.00. Meat Market. Bsef Gross, top steers, $2.252.60; dressed beef, pound. $3.25; cows, 435)ie per Mottob Grow, best sheep, wethers. $2.76; ewes, $1.502.25; dressed mut ton, so per pound. Vsai Gross, 4c per pound. small, 56c; large, t HOOS Gross, choice, hnarv. t1 9K9 3.60; light and feeders, $2.60(32.76; dressed, 34c per pound. SAN FRANCISCO MARKETS, Flopb Net cash prices: Familv tras, $4.00(84.10 per barrel; bakers' ex tras. $3.80(33.90; superfine. $2.85(33 10. Bablbt Feed.' fair tn choice, 72,'ic; brewing, 86c. ' Whbat Whipping, No. 1, $1.12J'; clion. $1.13?4 ; milling, $1.22Jf(f.l.27). j ia jimuig, oojduc: surprise. l?c.ui' "hi380: good to Srra v '&hL Pr 809 Hops Quotable at 335e per pound.