I Boot and Shoe Store. A. HUNT, froprieror. I WIB hsntftet kutp t ooagpkttt stuk Of laflieslf.tes,rak ChildrenV S&ogs! Slipper, WhiU and BlaokSandali, TUB HD SHOES,' ; '' MEN'S AND BOrS. ; , BOOTS AND SHOES! And In fact everything la the Boot and Bhoejine, to which 1 Intend o dsvot my especial attention., ( MY COODS ARE FIRST-CLASS! Andtruarafiteedas represented, and will be sold fur the lowest prices that a good article ean be afforded. . ' '-A.. Hunt. NOTICE! TO WHOM lixIA.V OVCKRX I hereby (rive notice that T am the aole owner or the rtieni nigai rorautKuiKsna Driving Wells in Lane Comar, Pwteof Ureiron. and that aaid Klghtis protected by Letter Patent is ued by the United Suites flovernment to Nel ann W. Green, fit Courtland County. State of Hew xoric. All persons wno nave anven well or had them driven, without mv permission. einoe the 21st day of Febuary, 1871 are liable to prosecution for infringement of said Right and are hereby notified to come forward and adjust the same. . All infrinjfements in the future will be prose outed. 1 I am prepared to -drive Wells or will grant . v B. F. VORRI. SPORTSMAN'S EMPORIUM CHARLES M. HORN, Practical Gunsmith. o i..- i dbalsb ljr CUNS, RIFLES, i Fishing Tackles and Materials Repairing done In the neatest style and ' ' warranted.' Sewing Machines, Safes, Lock, etc, repaired. ... . Guns Loaned and Ammunition Furnished Shop on Willamette St., opposite Postofflce. Book and '.Stationery; .Store, ... ..I-,. ... , V i . . , i Poitoffloe Building, Eugene City. I have on hand and am constantly -receiving an assortment of the bust .4 SCHOOL & MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS STATIONERY, ISlanh Books, Portfolios, Cprds,' Wallets, .- . i . ,. . . . . BLANKS. KTC. A. S; PATTERSON, j .' D. T. PRITCHARD, WATCHMAKER AND-JEWELER, v ' 1 Repairing- of Watches and Clocks iccuUid with punctuality and at a reasonable cost. Willamette Street, Eugene City, Or. B. r. DORRIS, DEALER IN ,' ; ,' ' '. ' .' STOVES, RANGES, Pumps, Pipes, Metals, TINWAREr Honse Fnrnisliing Goois Generally. . :'. . v.'1 . . . . j WELLS DRIVEN PROMPTLY, And Satisfaction Guaranteed. ' WILLAMETTE STREET, - : Eugene City, - - - -. Oregon. Central Market, IT'islicr&Wiitlfiiiw PROPRIETORS. Will keep constantly on hand a full supply of BEEF, MUTTON, PORK AND. VEAL, Which tiirym sell at the lowest market prices. A fair share of the public patronage solicited.' : TO THE FARMERS: We will pay the highest market price for fat , cuttle, hogs and sheep. Shop on "Willamette Street, EUCENE CITY, ORECON. Moats delivered to any part of the city free . , of charge. junU F.M.WILKINS. McMMiastsGisist . .DRUGS, MEDICINES, ' . 1 . . . . . . . Branhea, Paiata, Ulaa, Otla, Lead. TOILET ARTICLES, Etc. PbyBtetaa? Praaoriptlona Compounded. 1 ANCIENT DIVORCE 'LAWSr,""J r TlyiSfoiusT"an4"'TraetIee "of '"'the -, Hebrew. Ureekn aad Romans. I . ( , Cincinnati Enquirer. .. . . Tie well-being of society demand the existence of the marital relation, yet the evil incident to the hasty mar riages, or between uncongenial parties leading to alienation and crime, and the 'commission by one party of acts sub versive of the terms of the contract, have more or less weight to make exceptions to the rule. Among bar barous and half-civilized tribes wives were pat aside with little or no formal ity. The Mohammedans allow divorce by the consent of both parties, although they seek to restrain it by revolting ceremonies. The Hebrews, to whom we owe many of the leading elements of onr civiliza tion, while tljey recognize marriage as an institution for which a man left his parents 1 und clung to his wife? slyly winked at polygamy, and countenanced divorce whenever the husbands found some uncleanliness about their wives. What this uncleanliness was has led to much discussion among theologians. It has boeo a subject of discussion be tween the schools of Shamniai and Hillel:the latter understanding it as anything offensive or displeasing on the part of the wife, the former considering it as only applying to adultery. Solon eudeavored to elevate the in stitution of marringe, but the wayward temper of the voluptuous people who worshiped God, coutinually engaged in amorous peccadilloes, was not to be checked by either the wisdom of Solon or the edicts of Draco. The Greek husband put his wife aside for slight causes. In Crete a man could divorce her if he was afraid she would become the mother of too many children, At Athens it took two forms, the first was apopompein, or sending away or out of fie house, when the husband repudiated the wife; the other was apoleipein, when the wife left and rent away. Littlo ceremony was used when the husband sent the wife away, and often times the causes were slight. , Timo crntes finds a rich heiress, so he sends off his wifn, who, in a day, marries Aphobus, the gaaidian of the boy Demosthenes. AYhon the wife left the husband she was compelled to go before the archou and present a writing in which the rea sons for the separation were set down. If both parties agreed, that was the end of the affair, and her husband paid over whatever dower was in his hands. If not agreed, a suit arose. Tlipparete, the wife of Aleib'iades and daughter of one of the leading men of Athene, became indignant at her husband's licentious excesses, went before the archon with her grievances,, but Alcibiades collected a band of men and dragged her back, perhops for the sake of her great dower of twenty talents, and sho hved with him until her death. Among the Romons the husband had the right of divorce by the laws of the twelve tables. The first divorce was the case of Sp.Carrilius Ruga, who put away his wife for barrenness, yet re ceived the condemnations of the simple republicans. After the extension of the llomau empire in the ea it and the ex tinction of Carthage, corruption and lax morals crept in and divorces be came common. Sulpicius Gallus put osido his wife because she went outdoors with her head uncovered; Antistius Vctus because his wife spoke to a freed woman of the common sort, and Sophus because she went to the cirous without his permission. Cicero, the orator, dis missed Forentia for nd orime, after a long marriage, so that he could marry Tublitis, a rich young lady, and pty his debts. Among the grounds which a husband had for divorce were some sufficiently nonsensical, as witchcraft, eating with strangers, dealing falsely, raising the hand in anger, frequenting theatres when forbiddeu, sacrilege, murder and violating the sepulchres. Under the Christian emperors the laws of divorce were several times modified. In 439 divorce by mutual consent was allowed. So great were the odds in favor of the husband that the historian Gibbon says: "In the most rigorous laws a wife was compelled to support a game ster, a drunkard or a libertine, unless ho was guilty of homicide, poison or sacrilege, in which coses the marriage, as it would seem, might have been dis solved by the hand of the exaon'tibnet." ' ' " ' " - In the times of Christ 1 he announced that divorce ought to bo restrained to the single cause of adultery, and when his disciples expressed surprise his reply was, "What God hath joined to gether let not man put assnnder." As early as the eight and ninth centimes, when the power of the church of Rome was becoming firmly gronnded, the doctrine was taught that marriage was a sacrament. For a time this doctrine was rejocted by the civil tribunals, but when the church had gained strength enough to take from the civil authori ties the jurisdiction of marriage and di vorce, the revolution was complete. Marriago became a religious ordinance, and no power except that of the church, itself could dissolve it. Tell Fa of OnrMln. Now York Hour. Here is a chance for the ministers. When thev come home from their long vacations let them omit to tell us what they have seen abroad or in the moun tains or at the seashore. Let them take the people to task lot their little sins; don't let us have any doctrinal sermons or theological discon-.es; lot us have undiluted Christianity, wh'ch denounces lying, dwtonosty, trickery, nndue ad vantugo over one's neighlwr, liocntious noss and all kinds of wrong-doing. Where Satnre llampn Her Eaak. Cor. Denver Now. While on earth I never expect a view more glorious than on Gray 'a Peak, Col. o pen can describe it, and this is merely the stub of a 6-ccnt pencil. If in somo sphere of the future there is a panorama more grand in its roughness, more magnificent in iU extent and less adapted to general transportation, no wonder that the inhabitants have winga. How seldom we realize the massivenesB of nature when she really humps Juj back.' - - ' : Real Bummer Hotel. Of the days I i'lnt in YSniilHife'coul ness and comfort in the delightful Cuban house, thero was none wlion I did not reflect how stranso a thing it in that wur summer hotels nud summer out tiiges iu this -country are . not built upon the tropical plan. The morel turned the question of the practicability of the mat ter over in my mind the less reason I could 8co why, with such modes before us, wecontiDue to build summer dwel lings upon the some plan as our city wintcrhousos. Tho mast delightful lodgings I ever in habited were in a hotel in Mnntanzus. My bed-room had a floor of tiling at leant fifteen and perhaps twenty feet be low th ceiling. The door wm out in two, width-wise, so that the ton could be shut to keep tho sun out, or the bottom could be shut to keep intruders out while the open top let in the air; or a ourtnin could bo drawn across tho lower half when I wished to read or write, or take comfort in my shirtsleeves, with privacy and coolness combined. ' A little window high in the opposite wall provided for tho circulation of air. But when tho door was wholly open, 1 MiW beyond ' the little covered gallery hat led to all the rooms around a central eourt, a tropic garden at my feet and the clear sky overhead, for the court was open to the sky, and was planted with fruit trees and flowers in great boxes on a flooring of marblo mosaic. F.very room in the two-story, hotel opens on this court and has a window or door through tho outer wall. Tho guests sit in the dining-room looking out upon the smiling park across tho, street or back into tho littlo garden in the heart of tho house. The kitchen, the baths, the closets and the sleeping-rooms of the help are on the farther side of this court, to all iuteuts and purposes in a separate buUdiri,;,Iho front of tho hotel ou the grounaniw is a series of doors and win dows so big and clone together that when all are open tho peoplo of the houso en joy all the advantages of the open air without suffering from the sun. - If tho air is moving in Mantanuis it moves through that hotel. ' The l:rly Hlaer a Nnlsaaee. ' San Francisco Chronicle "Undertones," I rcmcmlwr many years ago reading a most sensible article In an English paper on early rising. It sot down early rising as tho bano of modern civilization. Ro;Uly, I believe it is right. The gentle man over mo is not a nowspaper man. llo goes to bod early ana very early Us begins to move about. .In tho con sciousness of virtuous ' industry he despises all who do not get up ns early as he does. Sometimes he sins, but thero is always a heartiness and cht?er fulness about his dressing in the morn ing which keeps all below him awako. As a positivo fact the early riser is a nuisance... In. those days when lifo pplj begins uftgr dinner, the man who r'nc with tualark breaks up everything. He begins to yawn during dinner, llo goes to sleep and snores : immodiately alter, lie is remonstrated with, and gives as an excuso that he gets up at daylight, lie gets up at daylight, ho wakes up all the houso, ho is merry when peoplo are en joying their best sleep, and ho simply inflicts upon himself, with tho most vir tuous and praiseworthy iutent, annoy ance. . ' . .'.-'', " An army of Benedicts. i I London Truth. The Italian army has for Bomo yean been known as a legion of benedicts. For many years it was a royal rulo that no officer holding his majesty's com mission should marry unless he possessed a certain amount of private income. It aly is not a rich nation, and tho subal terns of iU army are not wealthy. Tho consequence is that married officors have been the exception, not tho rulo in Italy. The grievance for in this light the rule has been regarded by its victims was recently brought nnuor the uotico of his majesty, and the king has now relaxed the regulation, fixing the marriago in come of his officials at a point which will enable gallant gentlemen to enter the bonds of matrimony in the broad light of day, as becomes the action of tho soldier, instead of marrying in secret and repenting at leisure. . A Burial In Palestine. , , Jaffa Cor. Kansas City Journal. 1 The other day a tomb was opened, and I had tho surprise of discovering . that tlie Biblical 'method ; of interment still prevailed. It was a young man who had died. His body was first washed and then wrapped in new white linen, tho feet and hands being tied with tho same stuff, and a napkin being wound around his face, as in the case of Lazarus. Then tho bonos of tho young man's father were taken out of the grave, and put back into the new grave with tho fresh remains. As this process is repeated from generation to generation, of course tho dust of previous paternal ancestors is mingled with tho fresh consignments of clay, so that the' dead rnay literally be said to "sleep with their fathers." A Trench Equipage. New York Post A new style of equipaso is to bo in troduced at Uowport and Lenox ; this year, called by tho French a char-a-banc. It ia intended to accommodate a' large party, and L? bettor adapted for country drives than for regular avenue parado; IU distinguishing novelty is the three horses abreast which drag it, and a Rus sian innovation of a large hoop fastened over the back of the middle horse, to which small bells are attached, has boon introduced with those that have been imported to this country. The effcet will be novel and picturesque, no doubt; but in a country neighborhood the tink ling bells might call up memories' of the rag and bottle man, or tho summer ieo cream cart. Tbe Strength of;roMlnat Blreb. fExchacsp. There is a birch tree in York, Mo., only about forty feet high, two roots of which have been ablo to l.ft home twelve inohes a block of granite computed to wei'h twenty tons. Tho tree is still grow.u, and the rock continues to be raised and pushed sideways at the rate of nearly m inch a year. Philadelphia Call: A patent device for fastening a neck-tie has just boon sold to a company for $1,000,000. If it will keep the necktie from playing leap frog with the collar it U worth it. DOMESTIC TEUSGRAfHIC MtTWb. ' Crops in Sow'F.ngland'wYll yTtdJfair. Hog cholera Is t'pidumlc ih New" Jarsayi Eose EytliiKO BayS aha is no relation to pearl, 't - ; J 1 r . There are 123 prisoners In the Montana penlteutiary. i., '., u V, Another big gas well has been struck In Pituiburg. Tbe Ute Indians are on the warpath in southeastern Utah., , , ; 1 San Francisco is determined to have no more Chinese lepers. The Union Pacific shops at Kansas City have been shut down. , Green McCullough was lynched at Cot thula, Texaa, recently. i . A CoiKrrcsslenal naval committee will soon visit San Francisco. ' Billings, Montana, will ship 600,000 pounds of wool this vear. New York canals have carried 2,003,853 tous this year a falling off. S. F. Wentworth committed suicide In San Dletfo, Cal., the Other day. v It is rumored in Washington that Indian Commissioner Price has resigned. A squaoh weighing 1!0 pounds was ths boast of San Diego, Cal., last week. British gold bars valued at f 1,500,000 were landed In New York last week. - - Last week's bullion shipments from Butts, Montana, aggregated flUO.sl'O. , A fire in Chinatown in Port Cost. Cal., recently, did f 2,000 worth of damage. Two hundred negroes will march in the Knights of Labor procession in xvew 1 era. Ths Salvation Army in Cincinnati has been disbanded, not Having been a sue cess, : '. ., Schley and Haren deny that human nesn was eaten during tne ureeiey expe dition. .A delegation of Conimanrhe, Kiowa and Wichita Indians is visiting in Wash iugton. , .. . . ... Near Helena. MT the other day,' Linn McFarland wm burned to death by a lamp explosion. " General Grant Is to receive 910,000 for his articles on the war, for the Century Magazine. The continued rains have made much havoc with the smaller fruits in central Connecticut. , A monument will probably be erected over the grave of General James Shields in New York. .. One hundred and thirteen foundlings have been picked up in New York In the last six iuonuis. AtClendive, Montana, recently. Thomas Allen was seriously injured by the explo sion of a Urpedo. . At Glenaenln, M. T lost week, Pete McDqrmott shot and- instantly killed a man named Murane. Governor St. Jfchn ran away from home at 12 years of age, was married at 10, and was a widower at 2U. t T j . j. The sanitary Inspection in progress in San Francisco is bringing some terribly nasty things to light. . The bricklayers of New York, who are on a strike, are jubilant, ths bosses show ing signs of weakening, . , , r A daughter of William Antor hnd Orve Wilson, son of It. T. Wllsou, will be mar ried at Newport, It. I.j Boon, f j . ; j There were 15,000,01)0 gallons of French champagne more Bold in this country last year than were raised In France. A negro at Athens, Ga., bound out his child for one vear to get money to go ou an excursion with a lire company. The next meeting of the Army of tho Tennessee will be held ia Chicago, on the second Wednesday of August, 1SH5. A Boston dispatch says: The old Beach street theater burned last week. It was occupied by a number of tradesmen. The skin of a Florida rattlesnake, eight feet two inches long, has been forwarded to the National Museum at Washington. A New York dispatch says: The leading depositors at the Wall street bank peti tioned the court last week t appeiut a re ceiver. .: j '(-..;'!, Russell Sage, who was thought to have gone crazy by recent Wall street losses, is quite well, and will soon appear on the exchange. The Congressional committee, to inves tigate the Soldiers' Home in Milwaukee, have arrived there and will begin taking testimony. . , , A Tntckee, Nev.. dispatch says: The Truckes and Sierra Valley road Is reported to be in an almost impassible condition, owing to the lute storms. ? Dog stealing has been reduced to such a science in lioston that a protective society against it has been formed, one man start ing it with a contribution of $1,000. Round Stone, a police officer from Pine Yil.a liNiiifi' !u in fin, lnwilir nl Tsugue valleys, iu Montana, with orders to bring oucK llie auu renegaue ineyenncs now wandering in that country, - A Chinese leper was discovered a few days ago in the state prison at San Qaen tin, Cal. The directors have concluded ta ask the Governor to pardon hlin, on condi tion that be shall at once return to China. Postmaster General Grcsham has been thoroughly overhauling the subordinate olllces of ids department, and will call to sharp account several heads of bureaus and divisions for laxness of discipline and shirking of responsibility. A disastrous Are occurred in Cincinnati recently. Twenty dwelling houses, the Little Miami depot and the lumltcr yard of llintou & Cole were burned, lliuton & Coles loss Is $'.10,000. One fireman was injured and will likely die. - Three children living on a farm near South Perry, Ohio, named Robert Wood, Louis D. ood and Kate Shaw, all under ten years of age, were burned to death in a barn last week, iiavlug gone there to smoke, and In so doing set the building on tire. .,,,.. , , , . ' , The First Comptroller of the Treasury has iriven an opinion that there is no au thority for the payment of claims of the Creek nation of Indians, sggregatlnK $ l,. 740, alleged to be due under article 6 of the treaty or August 7, Jinn, ana mai there Is no appropriation under which It can be paid. The attorney of F. E. Hutrhlngs, the San Francisco strangle, has filed a pc" tion with the Commissioner of Insanity, requesting that bis client be examined as to his fanitT. as from the stolid indiffer ence manifested when the death sentence was pronounced there Is ground to believe that Hutching Is of unsound mind. William J. Lansing, once one of the most brilliant lawyers of Cohoea. N. Y., tried to kill himself reesntly by dashing huge granite paving blocks airaint his bead, and alsa by dashing his head upon tbe pavement. lie had been arraigned in the police court for intoxication. He will be taken to the Utlca insane asylum. roUEIUN TELKOBAi'HiC M8W. , President Grevy, of France, Is at Jura. Dumont, the Paris archaeologist, is dead. Victoria, B., wants to'ralse 9100,000. Marshal Scranno is dying at Blarries, France. ' ' Sickness among French troops lo China, ib increasing. . Manitoba will have an enormous wheat crop this yoar. . , Salvation Army meetings are prohibited In Swilssrland. Michael Davltt denies that he Is "at war" with ParnolJ, It is reported that cholera has broken out in Toulouse, France.- ; 1 1 , f Advices from India report the crop pros pects lower, owing to drought. , . , The late Kind of Annam has been poi soned bv anti-French mandorlus. An anti-Jewish outbreak is reported from the province of Roune, Russia. The bill for the revision of the French constitution has passed ths Congress. Fifteen hundred sharpshooters em barked at Algiers last week for Tonquin. Ten persons were killed by a powder mill explosion at ou 1 etersburg recently. The French Senate has voted nO.000,000 francs to carry on operations iu Madagas car. The French transport and one Ironclad have departed from Foo Chow for Houg itong. British gunboats have been ordered to Heligoland for the protection of Luglish tisheriea. !,, . !! i Ten persons connected with the Social ists were expelled from Festh, Hungary, last wee. ' . , .; : t -It Is rumored that the French garrison has been massacrced while en route for Lang Son. Tonqulnese pirates Infest the West river and are ravaging the country north of llarp I'ong. 1 Indian Jim. committed for rourclur, hanged himself iu the Victoria, It, C, jail last week. ' . , Horr Von Maitcffel, governor of Alsace Lorraine, has been summoned to Uorlln to confer with the Kinperor. ' Ernest Lowenberg, a famous pianist and a pupil of Rubenatein, died In Vienna re cently, in the Ztith year of his age, 1 , 1 A dispatch from Brighton says that the Duke of Wellington dropped (lead there as he entered the train for Londou. . . , A Paris dispatch says: Two reirjmenU of marines and three more Ironclads are being placed in readiness for China. ( , 'Sir Evelya-Wood, commander of the Egyptian forces, started up the Nile last week to inspect the forts and camps. That portion of the Canadian Pacific railroad between Emory and lioston Har, in Urltish Columbia, will cost f H0.CO0 a mile. The number of cases admitted into the Marseilles hospitals since the outbreak of chslera there is Ki7, of which !M3 have died. , . , t The German admiralty has authorised German fishermen in the North sea to use II rearms should English Ushers molest them. The commission appointed to take evi dence In concerning the Chinese In British Columbia began its labors in Victoria last weck. ...11... 1,, 1 a. A Chinese miner was drowned near Kamlootm, B. C, recently, by a cloud burst which sent a torrent of water down the gulch in which be was working. , , , Black Flags lroin Laoki, and it is ru mored that Chinese troops also, are march lug southward onTuyetikwan, an Isolated post sixty miles north of Hung Uou. Owing to ill health, Induced by over work, George O. Trevelyn, chief secretary of Ireland, is not llkoly to he in the House of Commons tho rest of the present ses- slsu. ..,.,,, ,1 . , ... . Two batalllons of British troops at Sim la, under relief orders for England, are to go to KxypU The Indian government op poses the depletion, of the British forces jit India.' L -J " Eight of the Turkish mutineers at As sioul have been sentenced to death and two were shot at Abassiyet last week. The sentence of the others has been com muted to servitude for life. The King of Sweden, who Is now In England, is a popular guest with both lords and commoners, and his easy car riage and universal courtesy are subjects of general and favorable remark. The Duke of Nassau has issued a formal protest against the King of . the Nether lands' declaration that tho passaire of the Dutch regency settles the question of suc cession to the duchy of Luxemherg. In the House of Commons last week Mr.' Parnell spoke in opposition to the grant to the Queen's college in Ireland. Mr. O'Connor, Home Rulo inemlmr from Gal way, spoke in favor of iU The grant was carried. , , .-.., The Londtm Drurv Lane Theater, In which llaverly's minstrels have been per forming, has been summarily closed. It hi rumored that the steo was taken on ac count of non-payment of rent. The com pany lias experienced a oaa season, ' At the medical concrress, which met In Copenhagen, Denmark, last week, Dr. John S. Billings, assistant surgeon gen eral, U. B. A., in behalf of the American Medical Association, Invited tne congress to hold its next meeting in Washington, lnlW. ';.,' mj;j v v j; -M Those who suffered losses at the time of the bombardment of Alexandria by the British are becoming impatient in their demands 'for indemnity. If not settled soon, they threaten to make a great pub lic demonstration to bring a pressure up on the authorities. The Advanced Liberals held a meetlnir in London recently. ' They resolved to establish a league, whlah should labor for the rerorm or tne House 01 Lords, xney wish to deprive the peers of their power of legislative veto and to abolish the he reditary peerage altogether. EmfTand'and Holland offer to raise (he blockade of Tonorn and give the Rajah Kio.ikiO rupees if he will release the crew 1 of the Rntish steamer Nisero, which was wrecked on his coast last autumn. If the IUjah refuses this offer England and Hol land will combine to punish bim. The thunder storms which swept over the north of England and Scotland re cently were almost unexampled in sever ity. 01 any miuuings in junnuurun, i-im and other cities were partly demolished by lightning. Dundee was enveloped In darkness for an hour, and traffic was sus pended, i.i , , A Madagascar dispatch, dated July 25th. says: The Freneh troops are displaying the greatest activity in drawing mules from nennion oy requisition, uenerai Willoughby is at Tarafatee with IO.IXiU Hovas. wk are mainly Telrtng on mortifi cations and torpedo pits. Measures have been taken to retire, 11 necessary, to Am boL fifty miles Inland. r j J ; ;j WETLAND HAalKT iLttVUt rLOUR-Fanrr extra, f bbl, 4.fi(k 4.76 superfine. &J.60. WHEAT-Goud to choice, It 100 Ir. l.M; good valley,l.ao4 1.35; Walla Walla, 1..K). FEED, KTC.-Corn meal, 100 lbs., f 2.75 (3.0U: buckwheat, .".60; oat meal. fLOUTf . 4,25: cracked wheat, W.&W.M; bran, 4 ton $14(0)10; shorts. lHa,LlH, middlings, fine, $'41,011; hay, baled, $10.1)0 feliOU; chop, $22.50: oil cake meal, J5.00. OATS New, tf bu, 32Ca..Vc. HAKLEY-iirewing, 1(0 lbs.. $1.10 . 1.25: feed, $1.10; ground. $25.00. CORN-No demand. RYK Nominal, ? 100 lbs.. $1.50(3;2.00. BEANS Small white, $3.25; bayos, $4.25, pinks, $4.2. and butters, $3.30; country brands, $lcj4.25. bUUAK-ioldeu V. In bls If lb., 80, ' In ht bbls., Mc; re lined 1). bids., . hi bbls., : dry granulated, bbls., BJs, hf bbls., tfjc; crushed, bbls., tjjc; An crushed, bbls., 10, hf bbls,, hc; cube, bbls. bo. ht bbls, 10Jc; islands, No. 1, kgs, 74fl, bgs., 7c. SYUUPS-Callfornla refinery s. If gah, bbls., B2jc, kgs.. 5c, cs gal. tins, 06c; Eastern, bbls.. If gal., 65c, kgs, 00c, cs., 60c. HONEY In comb, if Ib 18c: strained In S gal., lc f lb.; 1-gal. tins, dot, $14.0$ 15.00. balf-Ral.. $7.60. VEUETAULES Potatoes, V bu., 2M -30c, according to variety, new, t? lb, Jc; cabbage, If lb,. U?.2c; turnips, If set., 75c: carrots, 75c; beets, 7ic; onions, f lb, lie: parsnips, sck, 75c; corn, If dos, 12 fa,15c. BUTTER Fancy, fresh roll, If Ib 2fi 27Jc; Inferior, grade, l20c; pickled, 2U4 20c. CHEESE-Callfornla, 13lflje; Orvaon large choice, 1 6(0. 17c. small, ItXftlHo. hGUS W'doi., ate. GREEN FHUITS-Apples,new.9bx..n v a,7&c; lemons, California, $3.7.rKaj4.&0, Sicily. 1.00; oranges, f bx., $i.7j5.00- limes, lot), $1.2i; peaches, If bx, $1.50; plums, 1 50$ 1; currants. lb, 6c; pears, California Bartletta, $1.25(311.60; watermelons, If dos, 81.00. DRIED FRUITS Apples, machine-.i cured, If 124i,13c, suu-ctirod, looolle;, 1 1 peaches, niaclilue-cured, In boxes, K;ilite;. . prunes, German, in boxes, If U KujlOc; f plums, sua-curea.pltles,10$!llo, machine- cured, 12($13c; pears, machine-cured. 12la 14c, sun-cured, luaic; ugs,taiuoruia,20-u., bx.. 8c: Smvrnt, Uii&'Xv- . I i WOOL Valley, H10; Eastern Ore gon. 15(17c HIDES AND BAGS - Hides, dry,' sound. 17c If lb, culls, one-third less; salt hides, heavy plump, He, light weights, 7c; kips aud calf, He. sheep pelts, ' just shorn, 10c, two mouths wool, 20c, lambskins, HKulO", tallow, 0c; burlaps, 40 in. He, 45 in., HJc, 00 in., 16o; twine, flour, US (?40c, wheat, 35c, fleece, 1213cj gunnies, loMlsc, wheat sacks, 747j(c; POULTRY -Cliickens, r dos., spring, $2.00(ai4.00. old. $5(?6.00; ducks. louA; geese, $UCa;9; turkeys. If lb., 1214c HOPSHf lb., 25(u.30o: , PROVISIONS-bsron, 13c If tt; hams, country, If lb., 15(g) loc, butcher, Bcrc shoulders, tsJlOc, ' . i LARD tvegs, f lb., li12c: Eastern; ' palls, U124o Oregon, tins, 12(fliic FlSli-Extra Pacille codfish, whole, is C., 74c, boneless, in bxs., tyclf Ib.j domeatio salmon, hf bbls., fS.UK7.00, bbls.. $11.00. 1-ui. sans, V dos., Bl.4ii; mackerel, no. 1, r kit, 81.7V2.tlU, No. 2, fl.MXull.75, No. 1, hf bbls., $10.09, No. 2, $S.50; herrings, -salted, hf bbls.. , dried. 10-lb. bxs.. 75c. RICK-Saiidwlrh Islands, No. 1, f tK, 64c; China mixed, ; 45c; China No. 1, none: ItatiKSon, 64c. FRUITS Prunes, Hungarian, 12m 16c; raisins (sew), if bx., 2.f0()2.75, hi bxs., (i7fif.iH.00, qr bxs., f:i.2.XoA35, 8th bxs., $:i.2&j!(3-60; currants.- Zauto, th, in bxs., 10c: cltwn, if Ib. fh drums, 224o;. J almotids, Marseilles, tb.,tlH(2tlc Lauo, 20c walauui, Chill, ll(gll24c, California, 12(8) 13c. '. ' I. - .. . PEAS, SEEDS. Etc. Beans, If ft., pea, - , 4c, s. w., io, Ig. w., 44c, bayou, 4io, pink, , 41e, Umas, ,4c; peas, Held, 24g34c, sweet, 1ka 20c; timothy, seed, K4rfl2o, red clover, ". 1 22(91250, white clover, HKuJtic, alfalfa, W4 -,' 20c. hungariau grws, 8(1 l)c, miUsi, m0e, orchard grass, lfttdOc, rye grasa. 20ttf26e, red top, lixgvivc, blue grass, tu&jsjev i Suite grass, lucnic. . . 8A mwnwo MAtiiaa ', RECEUTS Wheat, 104.0W ctTs. flour,' K5.000 or. ska.: oats. 1.0U0 ells.; poUtoes, 4,500 sks. : egrs, 0,500 dos. r LOU K ban Frapclwo extra, beat, at $5.00(i!5.2O; luedlunij $3.60(4.60; shipping superllns, $3.00(g,4.2o. WHEAT There is no heavy volume of business in progress. Growers do not take' kindly to the comparatively low ruling prices, and a good deal of grain ia beln placed la warehouses in preference to be ing forwarded to market. The demand la active, and exporters are ready to take lib eral consignments of good shipping qual ity, provided it can be obtained at $1,321 if ctl, This figure fairly represent ths situation at toe msmeut It Is possible that transactions are made at $1.3'li and even at $1.3 per ctl., but business at these) prices Is exceptional and easily explained by certain attendant circumstances.' On call there was a fair disposition to specu late on the future of the market, though ii was not general enough to create any pai tloular enlargement of the record of sales. Last week's business was as follows: Bnyer season, city 100 tons. $1,411; COO, $1.44J; 100, $1.44; 100. $1.43J. Buyer 1HH4, clty-300 tons, $1,381. Seller 1HH4, clty-200 tous, ? 1.34 If stl. Closing prices wcrej ' Buyer season 300 tons, $1.43 V ctl. Buyer season, city 100 tons, $1,434: 100, $1.44 , Buyer 1HW-100 tons, $1,371. ' Seller 1HK4, Port Costa-KX) tons, $1.314 ' if cU. BEANS We Quote as follows: Bayos, $l.60r4.0O; butter, $.3.25: pinks, $4.50; red, $4.60; Lmas, $2.00 (S) 2.75; small White. $2.65ffl2.75; pea, $2.762.80 If cU. HAY Altalfa,$H.U0(12.00; wheat,$13.00 (810.00; oat, $12.UK 1(1.00; barley, $U.00 12,U mixed. $7.0OY4ll.OOt ton. GROUND B ABLE Y Quotable at $20 22 ton. BEESWAX This article finds poor cus tom. Quotable at 24c If Ib. MIDDLINGS Active at f20.0022.00 If ton. -i , .. ' . . . ' CORN California ysllsw is quotable at $1,674(3)1.60 for large, and $1,024 1.05 for small; white, $1.6o4L66; Nebraska, white, $1,424(21.45 cU. i . APPLES-4f bx., 6075o. . ,. HONEY-Extracted. cV7o If ft for choice: comb, 8m)llc; extracted, 6 54c . BARLEY The market keeps pretty ' steady, considering that the new crop la now finding Its way to market in fairly liberal amounts. Offerings are compara tively large, but holders are firm, and ef forts to obtain any marked concessions are, as a rnle, fruitless. Buyers do their best to force values to a lower basis, but. so far, etTbrts of this character have not availed anything. No. 2 grades of Feed are quotable at 77fz80c If ctl. In Drew, ing there is nothing new worth remark ing. The tone of the situation is of easy character, and the market is likely to shape more favorab'y for buyers as the time approaches when the new crop ean be better utilized than at present. Good new Brewing can be bought at 85Ca,U0e, while old ranges from (toc(g$1.05 V ctl. Chevalier has not yet come is to much prominence, as the samples have been more or less of indifferent character. A wide range in values Is expected this sea son. Choice will probably find quick sale at $1.40 If ctl and even higher, while poor is likely to role as low as Il.lor$1.15, with dull sale at even these prices. Sales were: Buver season 20U tons. V3c: 100. Kiic: JW, 3ic; 100, 83Jc If ctl. I 1 s 1 " i t Hi ; 7