Soot and Shoe Store. A. HUNT, Proprietor. Will btrwfter kMp oomiilet ituck of Ladies', Misses' aiii Chilto's Shoes! - BL'TTOX IIOOTtt, Slip A- White and Blaok, Sandali, i rant KID SHOES, BtEN'S AND BOY'S BOOTS AND SHOES! Ami In fact everything In the Hoot and .'"11 Shoe (line, to wlilch 1 intend to devote my esiwciul attention.. MY COODS ARE FIRST-CLASS! And guaranteed an represented, and will be wild for 'lie lowest prices that a good article van bo afforded. uV. Hunt. NOTICE! TO WHOM IT MAT 0F.K: I hereby give notice that I am the sole owner of the ratent Right for Sinking and Driving Wells In 1-ane County, 8tatonf Oregon, and that laid KlKhtl is protected by Letters Patent is sued by the I'nltod States Government to Nel son W. (Ireen. of Court land County, State of New York. All persons who have driven wells, or had them driven, without my permission, since the 'J 1st day of Kcbuary, 117. are liable to prosecution for infringement of said Right and are hereby notified to come forward and adjust the same. All infringements In the future will bo prose cuted. I am prepared to drlvo Wells or will grant permission to others on application. B. F. lORRI(S. SPORTSMAN'S EMPORIUM CHARLES M. HORN, Practical Gunsmith DEALER IN GUNS, RIFLES, Fishing Tackles and Materials Repairing dono In the neatest style and warranted. Sewing Machines, Stiffs, Locks, etc., repaired. Guns Loaned and Ammunition Furnished Shop on Willamette St., opposite Postofflcc. Book and Stationery Store, Poitofflce Building, Eugene City. I have on hand and am constantly receiving an assortment of the best SCHOOL & MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS STATIONERY, Blank Books, Portfolios, Cards, Wallets, BLANKS, ETC. A. S. PATTERSON. D. T. PRITCHARD, WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, Repnirlng of Watches and Clocks ciecutcd with punctuality and at a reasonable cost. Willamette street, Kug-ra City, Or. B. F. DORRIS, DEALER IX STOVES, RANGES, Pumps, Pipes, Metals, TINWAIMi) House Furnishing Goods Generally, WELLS DRIVEN PROMPTLY, And Satisfaction Guaranteed. WILLAMETTE STREET, Eugene City, - - - - Oregon. LIVERY STABLE! FORMERLY OWNED BY TITUS. Having purchased this woll known ptable, I respectfully request a continu ance of the public's patronage I intend to thoroughly relit and restock the table. IF YOU WAST A SOBBY BIU Be sure and givo the Fashion Stable a call. Horses Boarded at Reasonable Rates. This stable is first-class In every re spect; and competent and obliging hos tlers are on hand ready to servo the public GIVE IS A TBIAL! Stable, ono door south of St. Charles Hotel. D. R.LAKIN. F. fotwiLKINS. ist - tUGS, MEDICINES, Brashes, Paint. 1. Oil; Lads, T TOILET ARTICLES, Etc. Physicians' Prescriptions Compounded. S"mM Thai We MUaed. Washington Cor. New York Sun. Now that there is some sHeulitt'ou on whit name to give the northern por tion of Dakota in oasetlio southern part should ba admitted to the Union as the state of Dakota, it may be interesting to note that just one hundred years ago, in 1784, an ordinance wan drawn up in regard to "the territory ceded or to be ceded bv individual states to the United fctates." The original draft read : The territory northward of the 45th degree, that is to say, of the comple tion of 45 degrees from the equator, and extending to the lake of the WooJs, shall be called Sylvania. tf the territory under the 4"th nnd 44th degrees, that which lie westward of Lake Michigan, shall be called Miehiganla: ami that which is eastward thereof, within the peninsula formed by the lakes and water of Michigan, Huron, St. Clair, and Erie, shall be called Chersone.sus, and shall include any part of the peninsula which may extend above the 45th degree. Of the territory under the 43d and 42d degrees, that to the westward, through which the Assenisipi or lioek river runs, shall bo called Assenisipia; and that to the eastward, in which aro the fountains of the Muskingum, the two Miamis of the Ohio, the Wabash, the Illinois, the M amis of the lake, and the Sandusky rivers, shall be called Mesopotamia. Ot' the territory which lies under the 41st and 40th degrees, the we-toin, through which the river Illinois runs, shall be called lllinoia; that next ad joiuing to the eastward, Saratoga; and that between this last and Peniisyl vania, and extending from the Ohio to Lake Erie, shall be called Washington. Of the territory which lies under the 39th and i)8th degrees, to which shall be added so much of the point of land within the fork of the Ohio and Missis sippi as lies under the b"i th degree, that to the westward, within and adja cent to which are the continence of the rivers Wabash, Shawnee, Tanieee, Ohio, Illinois, Mississippi, and Missouri, shall be called I'olypotamia, aud that to the eastward, further up the Ohio, otherwise called the Telisipi, shall be called Polisipiu. 1 at'h reader can judge for himself how much was gained and how much lost by tho fact that, under the ordi nance finally agreed upon these pro posed uatues were not fastened upon tho western territory and perpetuated in history. Twenty Cent' Worth ami Xo Thank Hartford Journal "Do you have four-cont stamps?" she inquired of Clerk Gates, at the stamp window." "Yes, ma'am, how many?" "Twenty cents' worth: let's see (counting her ringers , four, ei',ht, twelve, sixteen, twenty, that makes five; yes, five; I'll take live of them." "There you are, ma'am." "Cun't yon give them to me fastened together all in one piece, you know ?" "There you are. ma'am." "Lear me; do ypu keep 20-cent stamps?" "les'm; we keep everything in the line of stamps?" "Well, I'll take a 20-cent stamp in place of these. Ought to have thought Of it before." Clerk renews examination of his ac counts and is suddenly interrupted with : "Isn't that provoking? I've left my package at home, and I've got to go clear up on North Main street before I go homo. Oh dear, whiit shall 1 da with this horrid stamp '" "Shall I send it to your house, miss?'" "0, mercy, no; it isn't heavy; but how shall 1 carry it? Do you deliver goods hero?" "Well, such an awkward bundle as a 20-cent stamp I suppose we ou'ht to deliver; most of the boys in the office could find time enough to take it home for you. Where shall it be sent?" "Out on" but she thought the folks in the o.'tice were laughing at her, and she withdrew without saving "thanks." (nlrk on Trlstxer. Bost hi 01' be. "Then came the self-cocking pistols using cartridges, but tho first experi ments were failures, and they fell into disuse." "What wos their weak point?" asked the reporter. "Tho spring. It did not hold its strength, and after a little uso the pis tol was apt to miss fire. That naturally drove it out of favor at once, and very properly. That weakness has been overcome, and springs aro now so ad justed that the shot is sure evory time. The present self-cocker is neat, handy, quick in action, and a dead-sure thing every time. Is it dangerous? Well, no, not more so than any other kind of a pistol; and in cases where a fraction of a second counts one of these is worth a bushel of hand-cockers. They are a little more dangerous in the hands of a nervous man who does not intend to shoot. I have known of several cases in which persons have escaped convic tion for murder on the grouud that in tl eir excitement they pulled too hard on the trigger, and the pistol went o!T by accident. Hut any kind of a pistol is unsafe in su h hands, and when we think of the advantage which a quick, reliable weapon gives to a man in an emergency, we are bound to admire the self-cocker, Five shots in three sec onds is pretty quick work, but that's what it will do. and do it every time. As a pocket pistol it is us safe to carry as any ether kind." Memory' .Ylaxtery. I hicaeo Her dd, Rev. George W. James, of Reno, New, can recite the whole of Southey'i "Cataract of Lodore." forward and backward, give the number of any lint quoted, or recite it by alternate lines. It is regarded as the most dillicult poem in the English language to commit to memory or recite, but he claims to have mastered it in l-s than two hours. A Wodra Sla-httnare. A Butler county, Kentucky, som nambulist, left his bed. buckled a sad dle on an old log near the house, mounted it and rode for two honrs, and then returned to led without wakiag. NOT GENERALLY KNOWN. Mora Carloaltlra of Oar Xatlonnl Government ItroucM o Mailt. Wai-binst n L ttor to New York So . Next to the president of the I'nited States the best paid federal o licial is the clerk of the supremo court. Pennsylvania has a larger number of postollices than any other stati. I ighty years ago North Carolina had as many representatives in congress as New lork. North Carolina now has nine, or less than it had in 1800, while New York has thirty-four. Estimating congress to be in session 200 days a year, the salaries of senators and representatives amount to about $10,000 a day. The state of Nevada, which h is two senators and ono representative in congress, has not so large a population by 617 souls as the city of New Haven, Conn. A number of the United States sen ate's employes are put down on tho records as "skilled laborers," and draw pay at 1,000 a year, while those who are merely "unskilled lub rers get $840 a year. The distinction I otween the two is the kind of brooms tliev manipu late. The "skilled" laborer uses a com mon broom to sweep stone Hacin, while tho "unskilled" laborer wields a coarse broom in sweeping carriage ways. During the past ton years the gov ernment has expendoi nearly $70,000, Odd ia caring for the Indians. The total number of Indians attached to agencies is only 2 HI, 0(10, and of these (iO.OO'J in Indian territory, 7,70(1 in Wiscons n, and .r,(K)0 in New York are supposed to le partially self-tupport-ing. The fivo sttitos of Delaware, Color ado, rloridi. Nevada and Oregon, com bined have not so great a population by about 1(10,001) s mis as the city of New York. Yet New York city has not eight representatives in congress, while the five states have sixteen, besidos their ten i-enators. There are in the railway mail ser vico fifteen clerks who draw the salary of $12 a year each. From the five states of New York, Pennsylvan'o, Illinois, Massachusetts and h o. the government derives one half of nil its postal revenues. It cots $.10,1)00 a year to light the capitol and grounds. More than one-half of the internal revenue receipts of tho government comes from the four states of Illinois, New York. Ohio and Kentucky. To wait upon seventy-sit senators there ore 210 employes, not counting police, watchmen, and librarians. Virginia now has the same number of conKro.-smen she had in l i ''(), when there were only sixty-five niombers of the house. . There are several postoftii es in the country at which the annual salary of the postmaster is only $1. 1'ostal cards cost the government 54 cents and 4 mills a thousand. The pension o;lice expends more than $(U,UU0 a year investigating al leged ponsion frauds. The postoflice department u-es $80, 000 worth of wrapping twine a year. The thirteen states of Arkansas, Cali fornia, Colorado, Connecticut, Dela ware, Florida, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, Oregon, Khode Island, Vermont, and West Virginia, with an aggregate population which does not exceed that of New York alono, have twenty-six United fctates senators to New York's two. California, with less than half the population of Indiana, pays to tho gov ernment moro money for postal sorvice. It costs the government $187,000 a a year to maintain lights and buoys on the Ohio, Mississippi and Missouri rivers. Two-fifths of all the newspapers and periodicals seut through the mails by publishers at pound rates are mailed at New York city. Nineteen thousand seven hundred and eighty-eight dollars of the public funds was recently expended for "m ichinory and experiments iu the manufacture of sugar." To supply public buildings through out the country with fuel, light and water requires au expenditure, of $1,000 a duy. Seven hundred and fifty persons are constantly employed by the two houses of congress (while in session) in and about the capitol. The government has sold more than $200,000,000 worth of public lands in eighty years. In the lost twenty years the govern ment has paid for interest on the public debt the enormous sum of $2,08:1,000,000, a sum which would defray all the ex penses of the government, excepting in terest on the public debt, for nearly nine years to come, at the present rate of expenditure; and for nearly thirty five years if expenses could be limited to what thoy were in 1800. The Amend Honorable. (Texas Sittings A stranger traveling on horsoback through the the backwoods of Arkan sas was very much impressed with the familiarity that existed between tho pigs and the natives. The swino had a free pass to the privileges of the house, and seemed to make liberal nse of it. lad ing up to a shanty, the stranger asked a tall, unkempt specimen of humanity. "Why don t you keep your pigs out of your house?'"' "Look here, Btranger," responded tho Arkansas man, putting his hands in his pockets, "f you mean to say that my family ain't fitten for hogs to associate with, just come out like a man and say it." The stranger immediately appeased the native by conceding that the farmer was a tit as sociate for a hog, and the usual greet ing of: "'Light, stranger, and have some simmons beer. Loll a pumpkin out from nnder the bed and make your self at hum. Wheu you first spoke, I thought you was getting some sarcasm on me, and I don't propose to take any of that ar." Into a Heart-Throb. Hartford Post It is now the height of "good form" to have the finger-nails "cameod." A likeness of your sweetheart engraved on the thumbfor instance, ia "de riguer" every time. This warms the kiss of the finger-tips to her, as she passes, into a heart-throb of tremendous size. FOREIGN TELEGBAPHIC HEWS. The Thetis, of the Greely expedition, has arrived at St. Johns, X. F. In Cairo there are fresh reports of the surrender of Herber in circulation. The Mexican circular modifying the stamp act gives general sat if act ion. The Duke of Cambridge formerly opened the health exhibition at London last week. It. J. McKeim, a member of parliament, has been arrested at Toronto, Canada, for forgerv. The demand for dwelling houses In Vic toria still continues. None are to be had any price. The steamer Faraday, with tho Bennett Mackay cable on board, has arrived at Dover bay. The Monte do Pledad Dank, of Mexico, shows assets of nearly $1,500,000 In excess of liabilities. Havana authorities have Anally stopped the publication of the Republican paper, El PaUnqut. The wearing of primroses in London as a political demonstration is causing them to become costly. An explosion at a torpedo school, near Rochefort, France, last week, severely in jured several persons. It Is stated that Zokehr Pasha has de clared that he would not rest until he had killed General Gordon. The Empress Eugenio Is making rapid progress in her version of Houher s Mem oirs of tbe.French Empire, Rainy, Knox & Co., linen manufactur ers of Glasgow, have suspended owing- to Dunlap & Twaddle's failure. The proposition by Chang to the Em. firess of China urging peace with France s condemned by the council. The delegates of the various cantons in Switzerland aro discussing the propriety of suppressing the Salvation Army. Dissention exists among the Chinese aud the Black Finns. Desperate fighting has occurred between them at Laski. A Halifax telegram snys: Holmes and Bracken, dynamiters, have been sen tenced to six months' imprisonment. The honorablo Victoria Haille, one of the Queen's maids of honor, is going to be married, and receives 1,000 from the Queen. The Reichstag recently passed, by a vote of 1HU to 157, the anti-Socialist bill to the second reading. The passage was a great surprise. Crown lands along the line of the Island Railway, in British Columbia, will be thrown open to settlement at $1 an acre after June next. Admiral Baldwin has arrived in Con stantinople on board a United States ves sel, the Port having granted a firman permitting this. Says a London dispatch: Daron St. Leonards, on a charge of indecent assault on a female servant, has been sent to jail. Uail was refused. Tho life of Queen Victoria, by Sarah Titler, edited by Lord Ronald Uowen, will soon be issued. Tho royal family assisted in its preparation. The bark George Henley, from Liverpool for Chili, came in collision with the ship Tuscar. The latter sunk and three of the crew were drowned. Two English railway companies, owing to the depression ef trade, have dis charged 2,500 employees and reduced the salaries of clerks 10 per cent. British imports decreased in April, compared with April of last vear, 8,300. 000. Exports Increased 308,000, com pared with April of last year. Owing to tho discovery at Moscow of a filnt to assassinate the Czar, festivities iu lonor of the coining of age of the Czaro vitch will be held at St. Petersburg. The remains of the late Empress Anna, widow of Emperor Ferdinand IV, of Aus tria, were laid in tho Imperial vault in the Church of the Capuchins, in Vienna. The Nationalists of Englnnd aro prepar ing for a popular demonstration at Newry on Whitsunday, The Orangemen are also preparing fur a counter demonstration. Froude, the historian, is Buffering from work and worry over the Carlylo memoirs, and proposes to make a lecturing tour ill America and Australia to recuperate. The Spanish War Department reports that the revolutionary force of General Aguero In Cuba Is 1,400 strong, and is uiuking for the mountains of Las Tuiuas. The Grand Duke Louis IV, whoso mor ganatic marriage has been the subject of so much gossip, has suddenly made his appearance in Englund without his bride. Tho Mexican government Is negotiating for a loan of $20,000,000 from the Franco Egyptian Bank, one-half the amount to be advanced to the present administra tion. The American colony In Berlin gives a banquet to Sargent before his departure for America. Minister Morton, of Paris, and ex-Mlnistcr General Noyes are in vited. Count Cortl, Italian Ambassador at Con stantinople, has addressed an energetic note to the Porte concerning the Borocite mine. Earl Dutl'erin supports Count Corti. The government of Bagdad opposes a British armed gun boat being sent for the British Consul. The Porte complains that the Sepoy guard at Bagdad is much larger than allowed. A Berlin cable says: It Is rumored that a marriage has been arranged between Princess Victoria, second daughter of Crown Prince Frederick William, and Alexander, Prince of Bulgaria. Earl Shaftesbury at London last week unveiled a statue of William Tyndalc, a martyr burned at the stake in Vllvordcn in ltti. The statuestands in a conspicuous place on the Thames embankment. Lord Randolph Churchill has written a letter asserting that the statements; that ho had withdrawn from the Conservative party aro untrue, and was the work of some evil-minded persons anxious to grat ify a private malice. The general elections in Switzerland have resulted in a full conservative vic tory. All the government measures, in cludingone providing for the increase of tho salary of the Minister to the United States, were rejected. A series of skirmishes lasting ten days bare taken place between the French troops and Chinese pirates at Quang Yen. The engagements resulted in the French forces capturing one gun, and losing one man killed and five wounded. It is reported that King Humbert has eomraissionsd Ismail Pasha. ex-Khedive of Egypt, to confer with Gladstone, Aus tria and Germany with the wish to place Italy on an equality with the French in th Egyptian discussion. There its very uneasy feeling in Mon treal, Canada, owing to the failure of the New Tork Marine National Bank and Grant & Ward, stock brokers. Any fail area in the UniUd States are more keenly felt there now, owing to the prevailing stagnation business throughout Canada. DOMESTIC TELEGRAPHIC NEWS. Randall says he thinks Congress will adjourn by tlie loth of June, Ex-Mayor Saunders has lieen held for trial at Lawrence, Mass., for ballot box stalling. Nine young wolves were killed recently at Piano, III., for which the owner re ceived $00 bounty. Daniel B. Fisher, of Leesport, Pa., made an assignment recently. Liabilities, $130,. 000; assets, $,'10,000. Commissioner Fink, of New York, reit erates the denial that he has resigned his commisslonershlp. The story that Vlllnrd was about to re enter journalism is ridiculously absurd, says a New York advice. The maple sugar crop In Calhoun and Barry counties, Mich., this season will largely exceed lost year's yield. The sixty -eighth annual meeting of the directors of the American Bible Society took place hi New York recently. The failure Is announced of Hopkins, Mathews & Co., commission merchants of Baltimore, whose liabilities are $40,000. George W. Traliue, one of the Southern SupcrintcndcutK of the Western Union Telegraph Company, died recently in New York. II. F. Webb, who recently organised a council of the Golden Rule at (ialesburg, III., lied with the funds aud left his bills unpaid. The third day's session of the American Medical Assoxiation wnsattended by 1,240 delegates, which represent the total at tendance. Albert WIthelme's 14-year-old daughter died at Canton, O., recently, from the ef fects of jumping a skipping rope 357 con secutive times. Charles Friess, of Baltimore, and his wife and four sisters were stricken with trlchnosis from eating pork last week, and the former died. Tho treasurership of the Oregon Im provement Company will lie given, it is said, to Prosper Smith, brother of Elijah Smith, the president. James W. Tasher, a wealthy farmer of Oakland, Md., has lieen lodged In jail for criminal intimacy with his two daughters, 17 and 10 years of age. J. C. Burrows of Michigan, recently nominated and continued solicitor of the treasury, has written tho president, foim ally declining the otlice. Late reports from northeastern Texaa In dicate considerable damage by Hoods and the retarding in the growth of cotton from three to four weeks. At Hot Springs, Ark., recently, tho jury In the Circuit Court acquitted Robert Pruit, Indicted for murdering John Flynn, in the Dorati-Flynn affray. There is great excitement at Glendive, Montana, over the discovery of gold at Lone Tree gulch, sixty miles north of there, in paying quantities. Mayor Petry, of Long Island City, N. Y., hits been assured by President Fish that that city will not lose a dollar by the closing of the Marino Bank. About half of the 8,000,000 cotton spin dles in New England have agreed to re duce protection. The Lowell companies will shut down on Saturdays. Forest Fires, raging along the Lehigh Valley Railroad from Newport to White Haven, are destroying a vast amount of pine, chestnut and oak timber. Burglars blew open the safe In the post oflice at Ocononiowoc, Wis., scattering nearly every window in the building, but fled before securing any plunder. Small pox is epidemic at Charleston, 111. The schools were closed last week, and the Circuit Court, just convened for the spring term, adjourned until fall. Miles Petty, a negro who some weeks ago outraged Miss Vannert near Eliza-iH-thtown, Kentucky, was taken from hill by a masked mob last week and hanged. The tournament of the Missouri State Sportsmen's Association, advertised to begin May 15th, has been Indefinitely post poned on account of the scarcity of birds. James S. Coleman, colored, was hanged at Columbus, S. C, last week for tho mur der and outrage of Sarah Willis. Ho was a leading Republican and a schoolmaster. A New Y'ork dispatch says: Superin tendent Cami). of the clearing house, says that there is not the slightest grounds for rumors against the banks of m-w York city. A penitentiary guard In charge of eight convicts, whom ho was transferring from Frankfort to tho prison on the Kentucky Central Railroad, was killed by one of the prisoners. Tho strlko against tho reduction of wages at Sanborn & Mann s slioo factory, In Boston, has ended. Tho employers agreed to lake back all the strikers at the old wages. The preliminary examination of Joseph Allen, recently arrested In Canada for the Crouch murders, was begun last week at Jackson, Mich. Nothing of Importance was elicited. Grain is being taken from Chicago to New Y'ork at rates varying from 11 to 13 cents per 100 pounds, and agents who cling to the i.-ceni tariii are unauie to se cure round lots. Tho Pennsylvania Railroad has declared a semi-annual dividend of 4 perecnt. The Western North Carolina Railroad paid $000,000 to the State ot North Carolina under its contract. A Winston, N. C, special says a band of .about 250 citizens took Henry Seraim from jail racently and lynched him. He mur dered Mrs. Harrison Redmond for the pur pose of robbery. The-railroad committee of the Massa nlmunttM I.ciriuliitiirn has unanimously re. ported adversely on allowing telephone and telegraph companies the right to use land along railroads for erecting lines of wires. A bomb was thrown on tho porch of the Crawford House at Colorado Springs, Col., recently; and exploding, shattered the doors and windows of the hotel and ad joining houses. A saloon keeper is sus pected. The New England press Is cackling trc menduously over a cast-Iron (run cast at Boston recently, said to be the largest gun in the United States. It weighs 212,000 pounds, Is thirty feet long, twelve-Inch rille, and is expected to carry a projectile six miles. Jesse Smith, confined in Jail atBluffton, Indiana, for complicity in the murder of Amos Bockcsto, near Boone, Adams county, Indiana, April lrtth, recently con fessed to assisting Fred Richards, who is confined in the jail in Fort Wayne, In the murder as charged. Last week at Charleston, fl. C, an at tempt was made by a sheriffs posse of forty men to capture W. B. Cash, the Chesterfield outlaw. The Cash mansion and Cash's depot surrendered and a tior ough search of the premises was made, but the murderer could not be found. An entertainment was given last week in the Brooklyn Academy of Music In aid of the home for Confederate soldiers at Richmond. The house was Oiled. Rev, Henry Ward Beecher presided, and in an address he alluded with satisfaction to the change of feeling that bad come about. POETLAWD MAKKET SEP0BT. f-'LOUR Fancy extra, bbl, $4.75; bakers' extra, ; country, $I.O0(ji4.6O; Stipertlne. ?H.i5. FEED, Krc.-Corn meal, 100 lbs.. $2.75 (uit.OO: buckwheat, $5.50; oat meal. $4.014 4.23; cracked wheat, $:l.2.VM.dO; bran, f ton $lH.fr20; shorts, $22(u25; middlings, fine, $iUHK;)0.00; hay, baled, $ln.00fa ai.OO; chop, j$L'2.50(it 25.00; oil cake meal, 15.00. BUTTER Fancy, fresh roll, If lb., .1563 40c; inferior, grude, 20(ii,25c; pickled, 25V 30c. CHEESE-Callfornla, 17 10c; Oregon large, choice, 11X4 2(c. small, none. EGGS dos., ate. OATS Choice milling, nominal; good feed. 50t erdinary feed, 4f(a50c. BARLEY Brewimr, f 100 lbs., nominal; feed, nominal; ground. $25.00( 27.50. WHEAT Good to choice, 100 lbs,, $1.47 K", 1.50, good valley; Walla Walla and Eastern Oregon, $1,400? 1.45. FISll-Extra l'aclllc codfish, whole, In C, 7Jc, boneless, in Ins., Hjc tt.: domestic salmon, hf bbls., $ll.(HKu7.00. bhls.. $11.00, 1-tb. cans, f dox., $1.45; mackerel. No. 1, V kit, $1.75C2.00, No. 2, $1.5(Krl.75, No. 1, hf bbls., $10.00, No. 2, $8.50; herrings, salted, hf bbls., , dried, 10-lb. bxs., Toe. HIDES AND BAGS Hides, dry, over 10 lt., fb 14c; Murrain hides, two-third off; hides, wet salted, over 65 lbs., f lb., 6 (a, 7c (one-third less for light weights, dam aged, cut grubby or dry salted); pelte, shearling, l(k-(a $1.00; deer skins, winter, 12(ijil5c, Eastern Oregon, 22c, summer, ., 18(u 20c, valley, 25ui.;tOc; burlaps, 40 In., 8Jc, 45 in., KJc, 00 in., 15c; twine, flour, 3fKgi 40c, wheat, 35c, fleece, 1213c; gunnies, le: wheat sacks, 7(u7ic; HONEY In comb, lb., 22 25c: strained in 5 gal.. 11c lb.; 1-gal. tins, V oz, $14.WKJ.15.00, half-gal., $7.50. HOPS- lb., 15(a 20c; PROVISIONS-llacon, lli121c; hams, country, f tb l15c, butcher, scare; shoulders, 10(a.llc. LARD Kegs, V lb-, 12c; Eastern, pails, 12(l.'lc Oregon, tins, 12124c; Cali fornia, 10-th. tins, none VEGETABLES Potatoes, V bu., 60 00c, according to variety; cabbage, V lb,. 2c; turnips, t sck., $1.2o: carrots, $1.25; beets, $1.2i; onions (now), lb., l'ie; parsnips, 2c. BUCKWHEAT Nominal, $3.00. CORN-No demand. RYE -Nominal, 100 lbs., nominal $1.5O((f2.00 POULTRY--Chickens, do., spring, f l.Outu.3.50. old. 8(1.00: ducks. S10.00tal2.OU geese, $s.()0(.! 10.00: turkeys, lb., 15fel8c. PEAS, SEEDS, Eti Beans, lb., pea, 4c, s. w., 3Jc, Ig. w., 4Jo, bayou, 4Jc, pink, bc, liinas, ,-ic; peas, Held, 2"i(u,:)Jc. sweet, 15(a 20c; timothy seed, lOJdi 12c, red clover, 22(u25c, white clover, 4(ku 50c, alfalfa, UKi) 20c. hungarian grass, 8y(10c, millet, Hoi.lov, orchard grass, luiu ilOc, rye grass, 20(a,25c, ed lop, 15(i 17c, blue grass, ltK&20c, mew quite grass, 10(ail2Ac. SUGARS Golden C. in bbls., 1 ft., . In hf bbls., refined D, bbls., 7c lif bids., 7ic; dry granulated, bbls., UJs, hf bbls., Oje; crushed, bbls., 10c; One crushed, bills., 10c, hf bills., lojc; cube, tikis. 10c. hf bbls, 101c; Islands, No. 1, kg. 7(a7Jc, bgs., 0i( 7c. GREEN FRUITS-Apples, bx., $1.50 2.00; lemons, California, 1.00(2,5.00, Sicily, $12.00(a 13.00; oranges, bx., $1.00(0)4.50: limes, t 100, $1.S0(2.00 RICE-Sandwich Islands, No. 1, lb., tijc: China inixsd, 4(o,5c; China No. 1, none; Rangoon, 6JC FRUITS-Pruncs, Hungarian, !., 1213 15c; raisins (Mew), f bx., $2.5tKui2.75, hf bxs., $2.75(n 3.00, qr bxs., $3.25(0,3.35, 8th bxs., $11.25(93.50; currants, Zanle, v H. In bxs., 10c; citron, tf lb. in drums, 22 Jc; almonds, Marseilles, lb., lS(i 20c, Lane, 20c; walnuts, Chill, llfeL'Jc, California, 12(6) 13c. DRIED FRUITS Bleached, 14 15c; apples, machine-cured, f lb., lfHa.ldc, sun cured, Otju 10c; peaches, machine-cured, in boxes, 13tol4c; German, in boxes, V lb., 10 (u llc; plums, sus-cured, pitluss, bVoilOc, machine-cured, Mai 18c; pears, machine cured, 10(a 12c. sun-cured, 10llc; figs, California. 25-'h. bx.. 0c: Smyrna, 20(ai2i"c. WOOL-Valley, 14tol0e; Eastern Ore gon, Wtaloc. SAN FBAKCISC0 MARKETS. RECEIPTS-Wheat, 22.500 ctls.: llcitr. 22.000 qr. sks.: oats, 550 ctls.; potatoes, 700 sks.: eggs, 32,000 doz. FLOUR San Francisco extra, best, at $5.25(o.0.40; medium, $4.25(o 4.75; shipping superfine, $3.00(0,4.50. WHEAT Spot delivery was not wanted, while the demand for futures was anything out brisk. Sales in No. 1 white were as follows: Buyer 1884-200 tons, $1.55(0 1.75J. Seller 1884-100 tons, $1.30. 100, 1.30J tl. Closing prices were: No. 1 white Bid. Asked. Buyer season $1 58 $1 (Ml Buyer 1881 1 51i 1 54$ Seller 1881 1 42$ 1 3Uj BARLEY Holders aro not forcing busi ness, hut meet the wants of the trado quietly at a range of 8iy M2c V ctl. for the better grains of feed. Nearly 0.000 tons of No. 1 feed changed hands as follows; Buyer season-400 tons, 70Jc;4(K). 70c; 200. 7l)Jc; UiH), 70c; 400, 78gc; 600, 7ic; 100, 78c; 100, 78J. Seller season-300 tns. 85Jc; 700, 85c. Buyer 1881-100 tons. 00c; 100, b7Jcj 100, 87iJc; 100. K7Jc. Seller 1884-200 tons, 77c Iff ctl. OATS-Black, $1.35wl.40; white. 81.50(1 1.05; for common, $1.7(Kaa,80 for fair to good, and 81.70(a,1.75 for extra choice CORN Choice ary yeliow, tfl.UO; white, choice dry, 81.NXiM.50; common, $1.37i (a 1.45; Nebraska, $1.35(41.40. BRAN-Quietand unchanged at $14.00. MIDDLINGS-Active at $l7.00(gl0.uu V ton. HAY-Wheat, $11.0O(ail3.A0; wild oat, $11.00(0)13.00; barley, $h.O0(oj11.00; stable, $13.UKod4.00: cow, $10.0012.00; alfalfa, $ti.oorot lo.oo & ton. ST it A W Quotable at 43$57Jc If bale. . BUCKWHEAT Quotable at $3.25(:. tfctl TALLOW Good to choice ron .dred, 7 (2.7c; refined, m Jc V lb. HOl'S-Quotable at Kkoilrtc, ft. for fair to medium. and21fa,22Jc for good U choice. Ai'1'l.KS Uregon, V bx., $1.50, ?Z.Z3. iirriL'unM- u s. ..u..,.i A..i.nii.,n un.. Ill LJ IjkJ Jf '-" "UlUV-llMll, dry kip, 20c; dry calf, 20j(a,23c; prime hair goatskins, oocuc, LARD Eastern refined, 3 to 10-ft. tins, I'l Ha i:tc. Other provisions unchanged. SALMON Oregon, l ib cans. V dos.. f. o. b., $1.20, $1.22. KGGS- doz., SfoiSi.Jc. MILLSTUFFS-Ground barley. 124.00 (a 25.00 ton; oil cake meal, old process, 10.00, new process, $20.ou; rye Hour. $o.uu i bbl.; rye meal, $5.50; buck-wheat flour, ft., 5c; pearl barley, 4(a,5c; graham flour, 3 jo-oat meal, 5Jc; Eastera oat meal, bbl., $0.75, net rash; cracked wheat, t? ft'.. 4c. FOTATOKS-New sell, according to quality, as follows: Small, 2c; medium, 2V; large choice, 3c f ft. Sweets, $2.75Xg 3.00: Cuffey Coves.l 75c; Jersey biues, 75c: HumboldU, $1.40; Petalumas, $1.35(o 1..J7J; lomaleB, $1.3.)o 1.37 J; early goodrlch, $1.25; early rose, 81. 121C,1.25;river reds 00c; peerless. 1.00(0,1.05. HONEY Extracted, 6c, 8c, 1 ft.; extra white comb, 18c, 20c; white, 13c, 10c; dark, c. 12c. SEEDS Brown mustard, $2,75 3.00, yellow, $3.00 Flax, $2.75(a3.00, Iff ctl.; can ary, 5fe51c; alfalfa, WaHte; rape, 23c hemp. 4c; timothy, SJiftOc, Iff ft. for Im ported. CHEESE-Callfornla, 1718c; Eastern creamery. 14(o)ltlc: Western, 1518o, lb. POULTRY Dressed turkeys. 24&25c, live, 23a,24c, Iff ft., for hens, and 22rol23c for gobblers, geese, $1.50(2,2.00 Iff pair; ducks, $10.00(0,12.50 Iff dos.; hens, $7.50oiu.00; roosters, young, $0.50(3:11.50, old do. $7.50(a 8.00; rollers, $4.005.00, according to size