B. Chancey, Publisher, Union, Or. PACIFIC COAST. A Portion of Fresno City, Cal., Inundated. A WIDOW AWARDED $4,000. Tho Legality of tho San Diego CharUr Praotically Confirmed Other Interesting Nows. Regular trips to Catalina Island will oegin the latter part of this month. Eureka, Cal., proposes to linvo an op era house that will seat 1,500 people. The Interstate Commerce Coininission frs have just completed their fcession ut Portland. It is reported that an oil well at tho West End, lxs Angeles, is flowing forty uarrels a day. Tho birds received from Germany at Portland have spread all over tho Will lunette Valley. A Haw mill, with a capacity of 65,000 feet of lumber per day, will bo erected nt Coos Bay this summer. Tho truth of the confession of Zwald nt Sacramento that ho murdered two wives in tho East has been confirmed. During tho current galo at Del Norte tho waves dashed spray over the tower of tho Seal Hock lighthouse, 100 feet above tho rock. Truo bills have been found by tho Walla Walla grand jury against poven soldiers who were engaged in tho Hunt lynching affair. Tho bark Colomn has just readied Portland from Hongkong with a largo number of Chinese birds, which aro to 1)0 turned loose. Tho school census of Los Angeles city, just completed, shows an increase of 203 children between 5 and 17 years of ago over last year's report. Three Superior Judges, sitting in bank, liavo practically continued tho legality of tho San Diego charter, which has been in dispute for some time. Tho putting of tho Meusdorfer freo bridgo bill into effect in Oregon has been inaugurated, and Portland people have now freo bridges in sight. Millions of dead carp lino tho shores of Owens Luko. Tho Index says they go down from tho river and tho chemicals of tho lake soon kill them. Tho Kuweah Colony Trustees, with ono exception, havo been lined $301, so that thoy might anneal their case to the Cir cuit Court. They all averred they had; jio property, and will go to jail for thirty days. A largo number of Indians at tho dif ferent Indian agencies in Arizona havo applied to the Commissioners of the Co lumbian Exposition at Chicago for space in which to exhibit their curios and ar ticles of their own niunuhicturo. Tho cxtruvaganeo and corruption of municipal atfairu at Los Angeles have prompted the taxpayers to appoint com mittees to investigate tho county and city ofllces nnd to look into the cost of managing cities of tho same class in tho lllBt. Tho largo pumps of the Yuma (A. T.) irrigating works woro started tho other day, running successfully and supplying an immense amount of water from tho Colorado river. Tho Yuinu pumping jdant for Irrigating is the tlrst ever used in Arizona. A three-story, attic and basement con crete building for the girls' dormitory at tho Stanford Universitv has been con tracted for at a cost of $55,000. It is to bo completed by next September. Work lias been commenced, anil liOU mou will bo put on immediately. Mrs. Augusta Schramm of Los An Roles, who asked $50,000 from the South ern Pacific Company for tho loss of her husband in October, 1887, has been awarded $4,000 by tho jurv. This is the Hocond trial of the case, 'the tlrst trial being for the defendant. Articles of Incorporation of tho Pasa dena and Mount Wilson Hallway Com pany havo been tiled at Is Angeles, llio purpose of tho company is to con Btruetan electric railway twelve miles long to tho summit of Mo"unt Wilson in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. President Sidney Dillon sava that tho Union Pacillo extension from Portland toTacoma, on which $2,000,000 havo al ready been expended, will bo built as noon iiH tho company can conveniently get tlio money, and that the road be tween Portland, Tacoma and Seattle will lm used jointly by tho Union Paeltlo and Great Northern railroads, Tlio price of coal for household and ntcam purposes has not been so low in Ban Francisco as it is now for manv years. Tho boycott on Wellington coal mid the fact that many cargoes of It have arrived in this jwrt'lias caused tho price to drop to $8.50 a ton at wholesale nnd 110 retail. Other Uritlsh Columbia nnd foreign coals are also selling much t'heaer than at this season last year, Tho water from tho break in tho Church canal near Fresno has inundated the northeastern portion of tho city, ami is coming in on several streets.' Tlio jtcoplo aro shut in their hout-es, and hcIiogI children have dilllculty in getting home, Water in tho suburbs is four to lx feet deep, The company will have hoveral dniuuge suits to attend to. There wru fears that tho water will rouoh the business center of the city, !uUr orgiinUiitloim ami the builders and iiiaiiiifacturers o llultuiu, Mont., have locked horns mi the Uiycott mum t ion. Tiiu hitter has decicM thai it milliliter Imvu Hie right to employ Hiiy one, rcuiiidlutis of oipiniutluii, n mriiu liilltllHlly UKiecablo, denying the ilnlil n uny ortfunituil'iii In dhlulu i)i.IhiII li einplinl. uinl d turn. a ii.t Kt)Uid Mi lken will lie met I v i ' tP THE NATIONAL CAPITAL. Kx-GoTernor IMtc Will rrolmhly be Our Mlnliitrr to China. The contract for erecting the public nuildirig at Sacramento, Cal., has been awarded to Kreuzeberger & Ilarvie ut $116,000. The President has granted a pardon in the case of Charles L. 'IVrry of Wash ington, convicted of facilitating the transportation of opium into the United States. The Navy Department ip not informed of any quantity of dutiable gode smug gled into this country bv oflicers of tlio United States steamers Omaha and Swarta, as reported from San Francisco. It is understood that Secretary Tracy has decided to sustain the action of As sistant Secretary Ncttleton in the mat ter of tho controversy between the Su perintendent of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing and the Knights of Labor, glowing out of the recent dissatisfaction with the State printers on tho ground of insubordination. It is stated positively that the men will not be restored, but will l)e given an opportunity to re-enter the service in the usual way. Assistant Secretary Spaulding decided that queen bees are entitled to entry free of duty under the tariff providing foranimals especially imported for breed ing purposes, notwithstanding the re quirement that the provision for a cer tificate of pedigree showing a pure breed cannot possibly be complied with in their case. This is in harmony with the prac tice under tho old tariff, but is in con flict with tho practice under the present tariff" of assessing duty on queen bees nt n rate of 1!0 per cent, ad valorem, under the provision for animals not otherwise provided for. Tho present, ruling is based on representations that these i.ees aro never imported for other than breeding purposes, and that they are always of a superior breed. It is is reported that President Ilarri son has decided to sendee-Governor nnd ex-Senator Gilbert A. Pierce of North Dakota as our representative to China. Minister Pierce is now an editorial writer on the Minneapolis Tribune. Ho is a native of Indianapolis, and his per sonal relations with President Harrison were of so intimate a nature that during his Senatorship his utterances were usu ally accepted as authoritative. The send ing of Governor Pierce to China will, it is thought, bo followed by tho appoint ment of ex-Senator Blair to Japan. The salary is $12,000 a year, the same us that attached to tho Chinese mission, while the court to which ho will bo accredited is a far more desirable ono from an American standpoint. The Interior Department, acting upon tho recommendation of tho Indian ofhco, has adopted a new departure in the man agement of grazing matters upon tho Crow Indian reservation in Montana. The total unoccupied portion of tho res ervation has been divided into five graz ing districts, and proposals for grazing tho same aro invited by advertisement. The proposals received were opened at the Crow agency. A permit agreement, covering each of said districts, wiw exe cuted by Agent Wyniiin, with tlio high est bidder for each, Hiiid permits to be in force for a period of three years from .Inly 1 proximo. It is believed the new arrangement will relieve the department of much annoyance and trouble and bo decidedly better for tho Indians and bet ter for cattlemen. CABLEGRAMS. The Oznr HimiiiiIoiI mi mi In vltnllim to VIhU l''rnnr!. The French Senate hits passed the bill reducing the corn duties. It is said Salvador and Guatemala havo warned foreigners to secure their pass ports. It is announced that the British Par liament will bo prorogued the first week of August. Lieutenant Hitler's expedition to ex plore East Greenland has started from Copenhagen. Sir Charles Dilke has agreed to con test tho Forest of Dean at tho next gen eral election. It is reported that ox-President Pierola of Peru, who escaped from prison in that country, is in Now York. Veuve, Dufetel, Grinians it Co., bank ers of Amiens, France, have suspended operations. Liabilities, $1,000,000. 'fho epidemic of outrages in China on the foreign population is increasing, and the Mandarins appear to encourage the feeling. 'fho French squadron threatens to bombard Nankin unless the sulferers of the recent riots aro promptly indemnified by China. Empress Frederick has canned an old ruin near her new castle to be turned into a hospital, and she personally at tends patients there. 'fhe appointment by the French gov ernment of Antonio Prout as art com missioner of the Chicago Fair is warmly approved in Parisian artistic circles. Queen Victoria has liestowcd the dec oration of the Hed Cross upon Mrs. Grimwood, wife of Commissioner Grim wood, who was killed in tho recent re bellion in Muni pur. The peasant inhabitants ol tho'fersk district in Russia blew up with powder a schoolhouso while it wau tilled with children, ten of whom were killed ami twelve seriously wounded. There is to lie presented to the Portu guese Chamber u project to sell all the Portuguese colonies, except Angolia, St. Thomas, Principe and Capo Verde, with a view of redeeming the national debt. French Anarchists attempted to place wreaths on tho 8ot where tho Varliu Communists were shot in 1S71 and near the Moutmartru Basilica, hut the police prevented them and arrested six of the leaders. Messrs. Turpln, Trlpone, Feuvrier and Fessler have Ken committed at Paris for trial on a charge of treason in con spiring to sell the secrets of Franco, par ticularly the manufacture of tho new explosive melinite, to foreigners. Buffalo Bill's success in Brussels seems to havo Ikioii remarkable. The Queen of the Bulgluns visited the Wild West show thrice. Thousands were turned unity for wMiiUif room ut nuwt of tht perform hiiiim nutwltlibtundlng the incuMimney of tiiu w wither. Iluurv In inn's two sans am about to follow in (Li fitoiUM of Uu4r cU turned fmhur and dmi ths nid Imii- kill 1'liM I'l'll'T illi HttlM Will kll It. iu J n t it f. r t'ttiD' ii u u.4 i'. i ii ii r I awn i, c ud f. it j r Wiur i. ii f u H0u EASTERN ITEMS. Dr. Brooks' Appointment as Bishop Confirmed. CALL IS ELECTED SENATOR. The Government Will Co-operate With the British Authorities in the Behring Sea Matter. The World's Fair will have an electric house. Fifty Tennessee farmers will settle in Nevada. St. Paul women have begun an anti Sunday theater crusade. A new tunnel between Detroit and Canada will be 8,433 feet long. The Commercial Cable Company lias declared a dividend of l3.j per cent. The Councils of Kansas City sav the companies must reduce the price of light. The election of Senator Call is consid ered a defeat of tho Alliance men in Florida. A New York Judge has decided in an interesting suit at Utica thut "truth is not libel. Tho penny-in-the-slot weighing ma chines have been removed from Central Park, New York. "Would-be settlers are picking out clioico spots in tho Sac and Fox lands soon to be opened. Tho students of Harvard and Yale wero recently relieved of $10,000 by a pair of card sharks. Tho New York Continent is to become the Morning Advertiser, and will bo is sued as a one-cent paper. Tho Massachusetts House lias rejected tho bill making eight hours a day's woik for State and city employes. Tho Illinois Senate has voted 27 to 21 to lay on the table the bill to extend municipal suffrage to women. A granite sarcophagus for the remains of tho Into P. T. Barnum is approaching completion nt West Concord, N. II. A corps of wheelmen is to bo organ ized at Brooklyn, N. Y., as a part of tho Thirteenth Regiment of State troops. Tlio strike on the Midland (Ind.) rail way is at an end, and the company has paid all its back debts to the strikers. Tho effort to make tobacco a staple crop in Florida is being continued on a I largo acreage ana " wun apparent suc j cess." The lato John T. Parish of New York city left tho liberal sum of $280,000 to various religious and charitable orguni ! rations. Acting Secretary of the Interior Chan dler says, if the ICaweah colonists are to bo reimbursed, it must bo by a special I act of Congress. ! Mad dogs aro so numerous in Georgia that the Legislature will bo urgently pressed to legislate concerning dogs at tho next session. Tho American Nurserymen's Associn tion at Miuucunolia has strongly pro tested against Maxwell's confirmation as chief of the horticultural exhibits at the World's Fair. The Directors of tho Union Theolog ical Seminary have declined to accede to tho veto of "tho Presbyterian General Assembly, and Dr. Briggs will continue his work'nt tho seminary. A trade organization has been effected among tho Southern plaid mills to obtain a uniform standard of production and a better representation of tho Southern plaids in the markets of the world. Governor Pattisou of Pennsylvania has to consider 203 bills passed "by tho re cently adjourned Legislature, which he must approve, veto or allow to becnm laws by failure either to approve or veto. Augustus St. Gaudeus of New York, Henry Mitchell of Boston and Charles E. Barber of Philadelphia have been ap pointed by the Secretary of the Treas ury to select the designs for tho new sil ver coins. The whisky trust has at last acquired outright the only remaining important anti-trust establishment in the West tho great Chicago distilleries owned by Shufoldt it Co. and the Calumet Distill ing Company, The new postal cards will be alone soon. There will bo a size for ladies' use and one for business men, the former smaller anil the latter larger than the card now in vogue. Grant's portrait constitutes the stamp. Tho Treasury Department has under a recent decision of the Attorney-General converted the eiguorage accruing from the coinage of silver dollars into stand ard dollars, and is now issuing silver certificates against them. Tho President has appointed Edward 1. Thompson postmaster at Indianapolis, lnd., vice Wallace deceased, and ex-Congressman Owen of Indiana Superintend ent of Emigration, an ollice created at the last session of Congress. Major-General John M. Schofleld, sen ior ollleor of tho United States urmv, it is stated, is soon to be married to Mise Georgia N. Kilbournu of Keokuk, la. Tho young ladv was a schoolmate ol General Scltotleld's daughter. A bright old lady of New York has suggested that tho managers of the World's Fair as a matter of national pride, as well as for the astonishment of foreign visitors, should make a collection of Americans over 10.1 years old. The letter carriers of St. Louis propose to light the rule which prevents them from holding a picnic, because in doing so they come under the order which for bids them selling tickets for fairs, etc., or to solicit money contributions. According to tho otllcial roinirt of the New Hampshire Secretary of Agricult ure, Mr. Batchelder, more than half of the I, ,100 farms which went roortml a your ago as abandoned in that State have Instill disced of to purtlan wlio will use them as iiiiiinf humus. It is ullogml that a syiuUutUi ha Uhmi formed to hrmiV the Mwuttrt Mill, ami that the syudiuMl htut Ummi eulllug uuk ut the ruto of ft, MX) f,.r eiry ffto.ooo II. ui may Imi ruotiii! the cluui.mt If u.u uM i i rK n ti ui u u,r vty 1 1 00 )( Up I y ll.o pt'i't-r .u X) m i sm luit to (hew t Miti vmI U PERSONAL MENTION. The Kinperor of Grrmunr Snll Not to be a rioriil Sicukiir. Governor Hill is trying the virtue of a new hair restorer. No Shirt lias been elected chief of the Umatilla Indians. No Shirt, it is proper to remark, is no Etripling. Colonel John Hay, the author, has been suffering in London from n sharp attack of the prevalent influenza. Secretary Rusk works more hours at his desk tlian nnv of his clerks, but this is true perhaps of all the Cabinet officers. Dr. A. A. Miner's church in Boston will not nccept hip resignation, nn offers him an assistant if he will withdraw it. Ex-President Hayes declares there is no truth whatever in the statement that he is growing feeble in mind and body. Of all the great men of England Salis bury is quoted as the most consequential and autocratie and the one most difficult to approach. Leo XIII. will grant no more private audiences. J'ress comment upon the re ports of the interview, rather than ina bility to hold them is the cause. Mr. Balfour. Chief Secretary for Ire land, has sold his Scotch Highfand estate to Mr. Coo m be, the brewer. The price paid by Mr. Coornbe is 100,000. The Duke of Rutland is credited with exercising more influence over Queen Victoria than any individual since the death of tlio .hurl ot Ueaconsfield. Tho Maypr of Chicago is alluded to by I ono paper of that city ns "Hemp" 1 AVashburne. Hempstead is too long a I nnmo fnr m liMMtline nlnpn liko niiii'sum. President Harrison with a party of friends will go to Mount McGregor dur ing the summer for the purpose of visit ing the cottago in which General Grant died. Thomas Beaver, the coal and iron magnate who died at Danville, Pa., re cently, leaves an estate of ! .000.000. I and was noted for his philanthropy. Ex- Governor Ueaver of I'ennsylvaniu is Ins nephew. Senor Antonio Batres, the new Minis ter to Washington from Guatemala, has filled this oflico once before, anil still longer ago was secretary of the legation. Ho has an income of $40,000 from his cocoa plantations. The young Chinese Emperor has cele brated "the completion of his twentieth year by picking out a new wife. Prece dent allows a man of his rank seven of these companions, and this acquisition is only tho second. Mrs. Leland Stanford has decided to turn the Lathrop memorial in Albany over to the trustees of the local orphan asylum and endow it with $5,000 a year, so as to secure relief from personal at tention to this charity, which she found ed in memory of her parents several years ago. The venerable portrait painter, G. Y. A. Healy, now 8.'5 years of age, still plies tlio brush with skill and enthusiasm in Chicago. He has recently completed a portrait of the Duke d'Aumule, third son of Louis I'liillipe, for the Crear library, for which the artist made a study at Chantilly. Rev. T. E. Downing, assistant to tho Episcopal Bishop of Jerusalem, is upon a visit to .niericn, irom wiucn ne nas been absent since January, ISiM). His purpose is to spread the knowledge of what the church is doing in the Holy Land and to ask aid for its support and the extension of its labors. 1 The Emperor of Germany is not a florid speaker, but is a plain, straightfor ward talker, and the reporters find it easy to get his meaning. It didn't re quire even a short-hand man to tako these sentences from his Dusseldorf speech : " There is only one niater in , this country, and I am lie. I shall suf fer no other beside nie. In this spirit I 1 drink to the welfare of tho province." ' Mrs. Alico Freeman Palmer has spoken out for the manual training schools: " Wo stand to-day with reverence before the loy or girl who can do any one thing 1 perfectly who can draw d perfectly straight line or hit the nail exact on the head. Wo who are older and missed , this teaching will go down to our graves poorer because we missed being taught to hit straight, to see straight, which makes us think straight and speak , straight." . CRIME AND CRIMINALS. A .111111 KIUn AimiUiit for Sriullnjc Ilia AVlfn nn limiiltliic I. filer. Dr. Garrison, a prominent citizen of Wheeling, W. Vn., who killed Dr. Baird , last March, has been convicted of mur- ' dor in tho second degree. ' Three men cruelly tortured a China- I man at Squirrel Creek, near Grass Val ley, Cal., to make him give up his gold. ! Ho may die from his injuries. Jackson Rhodes, who murdered D. E. Shull, tho school teacher, near Green wood, Mendocino county, Cal., has sur rendered, and is now in jail at Ukiah. llerr Stapefeldt.Treasurerof the Rutz burg (Prussia) Savings Bank, has ab sconded, and a defalcation to the extent of 100,000 marks has been discovered in his accounts. William M. Knight has been brought in to San Diego from Bear Valley, charged by Justice of the Peace Dinwiil die with shooting the legal gentleman's . two Imys with intent to murder them. Ex-Mayor J. P. Johnson, J. T. Faulk ner and Ed Wailer, prominent citizens of Waldo, Ark., have lieen arrested by a United States mail inspector and charged with robbing mails at McNeil March 10. Tho establishment of Hilton, Hughes it Denning, New York, was robbed tho other night. Upwards of $10,000 worth of diamonds wero taken. The fact was kept secret in tho hope of catching tho burgltirs. Charles W. Seidell, ono of tho Trustees of tho village of East Grand Rapids, Mich., has Iwon arrested for bigamy, and pleaded guilty. He has a record of live wives, all living, and was after a sixth whim arrested. Major John 11. Walker, who was beaten by Alfred Hall because of the hater's W lousy of Walker's HttouUoiid to Mrs. lUll, has died of bis iniurios in St. Mary's llospiul, Brooklyn, K. Y. Hull litis tfiirrtiudtwKl hiiul( to tlw HuUtor itk. Mry lUuli -t L - i.u i M mttu nnvt U ' m Mu llM :, .u4 , In-uau l'ktlil niii fj iHkl ' 1. 44 ' I 1 l lid lit. ..( 1 III I I t it l .It'll v.i.tr M.i ,(., , L lit. I a I I . I I FOREIGN NEWS. Catholics and Greeks Riot at Jerusalem. THE NEW JAPANESE CABINET The Portuguese Cortes Committee Approves of a Convention With England. Brazil wants Russian immigrants. Ireland will exhibit nt the World's Fair. Scotland farmers complain of a mice plague. Brazil's exports for 1801 are estimated nt $200,000,000. Japan will have a $500,000 exhibit at the World's Fair. It is reported the Rothschilds recently lost MO.OOO.OliO in speculation. A pair of Zulu chiefs are said to be the present social lions in London. Ex-King Milan's latest gambling bout resulted in a loss of f JO.O0O to him. The British Parliament proposes to pass a bill to exclude destitute immi grants. Fiftv thousand Jews have been thus far expelled from St. Petersburg and Moscow. Eitiht thousand taMors are now idle in London, and their number is constantly lncieasini:. Thirstv throats in the Congo country swallow 'nUiut $1,000,000 worth of lire water a week. The population now is about 4, 00,0:10 in Portugal, 18,000,000 in Spain and 151,000,00.) in Italy. 'fhe Swiss people are preparing to cel ebrate the riOOth anniversary of that hardy little Republic. The Portuguese Cortes Committee has approved of a convention with Great Britain in relation to South Africa. Balmaeeda has released from prison many prominent citizens, they giving heavy bonds for their future conduct. The Turkish brigands have released the prisoneis they captured recently by derailing a train." The ransom was paid. Catholics and Greeks at Jerusalem have been rioting. Turkish trnops in tervened, and several persons were killed. The infant dauchter of the Duchess ol Fife is to be christened Alexandre in honor of its grandmother, the Princese of Wales. Famine prices are "aid to be prevailing at Iqnique, meat selling at 70 cents a pound, potatoes at 20 a bag and flour ut $'50 a bag. The inventor of the Sims-Edison tor pedo says its exhibition lias created great excitement in Europe, where it has just been exhibited. Sir William Gordon Cumming denies that there is any truth in the story that he is to bo married shortly to Miss" Flor ence Gardner of New York. Great building operations in Rome and other Italian cities, begun on the expanding trade of the past, have been brought to ignominious collapse. In consequenceof Bolivia's recognition of the Chilian Congressional party as belligerents the Chilian Minister at La Paz has demanded his passports. The rumored suspension of Russell it Co. of China has been confirmed, in consequence of which the New York, London and Boston branches have sus pended. Tho expense of governing Italy has increased from $245,000,000 in 1881 to $:55O,O0O,00O in 18K0. The debt has ad vanced from $2,01 1.2o7,lKi2 in 1SS0 to $2,32 1 ,825,1520 in 1SSD. The Duke of Argyll is a witness in a trial in Dumbarton concerning a certain cure for rheumatism in consequence of having given a testimonial of its value in return for free treatment. Tho Japanese Cabinet has been recon structed, with Itoas President of Coun cil, Takato as Minister of Public Instruc tion. Tunuku as Minister of Justice and Shingula us Minister of the Interior. The King of Belgium will soon visit England, and before he leaves for home Stanley will probably havo told him def initely whether he will go back to Africa as Governor of tho Congo Free Stato. A iiuarter of million Hebrews are to bo driven out of Russia forthwith. War saw alone has given 150,000 of them no tice to depart. There are supposed to be alwut 7,000,000 Hebrews in Russia. At a Socialistic meeting in Paris ono of tho citizens present moved that tho death of the Minister of tlio Interior, M. Constans, should be voted by the As sembly. The President refused to put the motion to a vote. Marie Wilt, the famous retired prima donna, has been dismissed as completely cured from the private asylum at Fef dotr, near Prague, and the free disjosi tion over her fortune of 500,000 llorins has been restored to her. Archbishop Croko declares that many of tho Irish members of tho Commons aro desirous of settling the trouble exist ing in the Nationalist party by forming a union of the factions and "selecting John Dillon us their leader. And now Germany is threatened with an invasion of cheap Italian lalwr, a largo gang of lalwrers from Italy having been engaged by iron masters at Frank fort at wages much smaller than are paid to skilled German workmen. There is vory great misery among the working classes in Romo. Owing to tho decline in values and stagnation of build ing interests, thousands are out of em ployment. Tlio multitudo of beggars has never been so great or importunate That graat engineering work, the C r inth canal, which will tovor tho 1 1 -jKimeu8 (row the mainland of Grt-c t aud will permit tbs lurgwit ships to pu-s tlimtly from ths Gulf of Athens to the Uulf of (jfintli, U Mid to bo rapidly Upp0ilbitltf cinplliott. 1 1 . 1 r 1 t rt .1 ' . k r uj VI '-i ! 1 ' l .-. ior the Annum cup 1 .mi .l.yidNMi Th lift I I.. 1 1 if t Ulr 1. a .tl,ii, ..111 i.l ).!( I. .11, , , , , y II l..i4v I , . ( Ujj H i I v t (.., I" tf Iftfloyyui I l . f PORTLAND MARKET. It li Well Stocked With Vegetable J Staple Grocrlea Are Active. Strawberries aro plentiful. All fruits are in good supply aud fair demand. The j market is well stocked with vegetables ' of all kinds, but the demand is onlv fair. ' Potatoes are weak. Eggs are niore'plen i tiful. Quotations on butter are strong. 1 Good quality is eelling readily at good I prices. Chickens, both old and vouue. are in good demand; also young geese, but there is little call for turkeys. There is practically nothing doing in the wool market. Trade in staple groceries is active, and a decline in sugar 13 daily I looked for. The coffee market is weak. 1'rodiico, Krtilt, Ktc. Wheat Walla Walla, $1.50; Valley, $1.00 per bushel. Flour Quote : Standard, $5.25; Walla Walla, $5.00 per barrel. Oats Quote: GOgGSc per buehel. Hay Quote: $1G(?17 per ton. MiIjLstuffs Quote: Bran, $21.00; Shorts, $25.00 ; Ground Barley, $o;t.00 34.00: Choo Feed. $25(if2G per ton : Bar- jey, $1.25 1.30 percental. IV Buttku Quote: Oregon fancy cream t- ery, 0.;; iunoy uairy, '2c; iiur 10 good, 17,1!,(i20c; common, 14c; Cali fornia, 22at'i'-4c per pound. Chkesk Quote: Oregon, 13015c; Cal ifornia, 12e per pound. Eoas Quote: Oregon, 22,'.j25c per dozen; Eastern, 22l2c. Poultry Quote: Old Chickens, $5.50 (J; young chickens, $3.505.00; Ducks, $7.50(J8.00 ; Geese, nominal, $10 per dozen ; Turkeys, 15o per pound. Vkoktaulks Quote: Cabbage, $1.50 per cental; Cauliflower, $1.25 per dozen; Onions, l'ale per pound; Beets, $1.50 per sack; Turnips, $1.75 per Back; Potatoes, G070o per cental; New Potatoes, lJ$c per pound; Tomatoes, $2.50 per box; Asparagus, 4((i5o per pound; Oregon, 10feSl5e per pound; Lettuce, 12Jijc per dozen ; Green Peas, 5c per pound ; String Beans, 8c per pound ; Rhubarb, 4c per pound; Artichokes, 40c per dozen ; Rad ishes, 10c per dozen bunches; young Onions, 10c per dozen bunches ; Cucum bers, 75c per dozen; Carrots, $1.25 per suck. 7IJi7r,ft. n.il!fr?,!i, J ROftrfi nur Kit ' . . . " ) VJ.....V-. ...... . . v- J' ' - , 'Apples, $1.00(if2.50 per box; Bananas, $2.002.o0 per bunch ; Pineapples, $5.00 8.00 per dozen; Strawberries, 44 (5'2c per pound; Cherries, $1.25 per box; Gooseberries, 5(f0c per pound; Currants, 5c per pound; Apricots, 20c per pound; Raspberries, i)c per pound. Nuts Quote: California Walnuts, 11 V. 12l,c; Hickory, 8lsc; Brazils, 10llc"; Almonds, 1G 18c ;" Filberts, K514c; il'ino Nuts, 1718c; Pecans, 17018c; Cocoanuts, 8c; Hazel, 8c; Peanuts, Sc per pound. I Stable (irorcrloi. j Cofpkb Quote: Costa Rica, 22c; Rio, 23c; Mocha, 30c; Java, 25c; Ar buckle's, 100-pound cases, 2G3.iC per pound. Sugars Quote : Golden 0, 45pc ; extra C, 4c; dry granulated, 5Jgc; cube crushed and powdered, Ge per pound ; confectioners' A, 540 per pound. ,1 Sykui" Eastern, in barrels, 4755c;&( half barrels, 50(ji58c; in cases, 5580c per gallon ; $2.252.50 per keg ; Califor nia, in barrels, 40c per gallon ; $2.25 per keg. Beans Quote: Small Whites, Sc; Pink, S'n'kctfSjo; Bayos, 434c: Butter, 4)r,c; Limas, 434(rt5c per pound. Duied Fruits Quote: Italian Prunes, 10l2((il2c; Petite and German Prunes, 10c per pound; Raisins, $1.752.25 per box; Plummor-dried Pears, 10llc; Bun-dried and factory Plums, ll12c; evaporated Peaches, "lS(Ji 20c; Smyrna Figs, 20c: California Figs, 9c per pound. Rice Quote: $5.50(f(.75 per cental. 1 Honuy Quote: 18(f 20c per pound. Salt Quote: Liverpool, $1U, if 10.60, $17; stock, $11 per ton in carload lots. Canned Goods Quoto: Table fruits. $2.00. 2!ijs; Peaches, $2.50; Bnrtlett Pears, $2.25: Plums, $1.65; Strawberries, $2.50; Cherries, $22.50; Blackberries, $2.25; Raspberries, $2.75; 1 Pineapples, $2.75; Apricots, $2.40. Pie fruit: Assorted, $1.50 per dozen ; Peaclu, $1.05: Plums, $1.25; Blackberries, per dozen. Vegetables: Corn, $H5 01.65, according to quality; Tomatoes, $1.153.50; Sugar Peas, $1.251.G0; String Beans, $1.10perdozen. Fish : Sal mon, ; sardines, S5c(jr$1.65; lobsters, $2 2503.25; oysters, $1.50 3.25 per dozen. Condensed milk: Eagle brand, $S.10; Crown, $7; Highland, $6.75; Champion, $6.00; Monroe, $6.75 per case. The Stent Miirket. Beef Live, 3lh(r4c; dressed, 7c. Mutton Live, sheared, 3'ij'c; dressed, 8c. Hogs Live, 6c; dressod, 8c. Veal 5(i 7o pur pound. BMOKKD MEATS AND LARD. I Quote: Eastern Hams, 1213c; Oregon, 10ltt12ac; Breakfast Bacon, 1213c; other varieties, 8llc; Lard, 9ll?4e per pouud. VEGETABLE PANAGEA PREPARED FRM ROOTS Be HERBS, FOR THE CURE OF sea AND ALL OTHER DISEASES J DISORDERED STATE or w STOMACH OR AM INACTIVE LIVER r UtSA.ft. 11 J All fciturrs Quote: lx)s Angeles Oranges, ! $2.25fC2.50; Riverside, $3J)0(!3.25 ; Na- ' I t'.ilu .l fill"?! RO Tii.rlirnr. Rinllv l.timntioi ' in nvenuyn "I Mil imuiiiHix . i hi iu iii DRUGGISTS & (TEtiERAL PEALEjfcj