EUGENE CITY GUARD. EUGENE CITT. OREGON. PERSONAL MENTION. Th laraat Kln mt pala I Reallaaa ad rreaoctoaa Will Crtr. Count D'Abrai, the French Consul at New York, ha a neat little salary of fll.OUOayear. ' Prealdent Kliot, of Harvard, haa powerful baa voice that i noticeable in congregational singing. Him Keevea, the noted Knlifh tenor, who bai Jiift retirel from the tnge, w quite well-known m linger over half century ago. Mini Hattie Maine liaa vone to Kng land. Mie baa liavi letter from home assuring her that her father it in no respect seriously ill. Senator Vila owni 2.2U0 acred of land in Wood county, Wisconsin, iJ0 acre of which will be planted with cranberriea, lie may yet come to be known aa the Cranberry Statesman. Charlea Dudley Warner i described, in what i ktI. j lueant to be a com plimentary way, by a Western news paper aa "Our American Hash-light photogMpher of social lads." General I-ew Wallace, of "lien Hur" fame, av thut be it not a candidate for the republican uuhcriiator al tiomiiiation in Indiana, and that he would not have it were it offered to him on a silver aalver. Herbert Rpeneer it not so greatly ab sorbed in almtruxe philosophy but that be can take an intercut in the humane and concrete, lie ha joined the lint lull Society for the Trevention of Cruelty to Children. The 11,000 which Mini Jurh waa to re reive for singing at the Indianapolis May festival waa attached on the suit of a Montana bank hut week. w hen the fair songatren received the news she ob served, ' How horrid: " Professor Hurt Urcen Wilder, of Cor nell university, wants to annihilate all intercollegiate Krt. It'a evident that the athletic side of college life was de veloped alter the professor had bia in nings as an undergraduate. The infant king of Hwain is a restless ana precocious iiiiib creature, lie nas already, though only 6 years old, out' f;rown his toys and yearns for live lorses Instead of tin ones. He speaks Kngliah quite correctly and is learning trench. . The assertion of that bright Irishman, T. 1. O'Connor, that hereditary royalty in Knglaiid is now pacing through the severest ortleal It hua tieen uli ectetl to for generations, has some truth in it; yet it is well to reiiiemlier that Knglish royalty is hard nut to crack. Selectman Iiinahurv, of Seymour. Conn., one of the otliciiil in the Cnited , Hale Tin Company, is going to build a ' sidewalk of pins, "lie lias at the pin company's shoii some twenty trrel of old and lnierlect pins, tlie accumula tions of years, and these be will now Dtilixe. Kx-Speaker Thomas 11. Keed is stay ing at a quiet boarding houae in I'aris. Al the request of Minister Heed. M. Floqtict put bis private gallery in the Chamber of IVputics at the disiotal of the ei-speaker, who is seen there fre quently, following debates with close attention. The foreign minister to l'ekin who saw the euiM-ror at the recent roval audience, carried away an agreeable (in presaioii of the Oriental sovervign. He was simply attired in silk and bore no scepter or other emblem of authority. Instead of a crown he wore a plain Chinese felt hat surmounted by a button of crimson silk. He appeared mild and somewhat melancholy, and bia ot!e face wore an expression of great relineinent and dignity. The Kussian (.irand luke Scrgius is said to tie profoundly devout in man ners. If be happen Uwn an image of re- J nited sanctity he will prostrate himself wfore it. If there are relics of some old eccleaiastic or by-gone gener.it ions, he will not be bappv till he kisses them. If there is a shrine where pilgrim gather, there he must alio worship. And the lady (almost an Kuglish princess, since the granddaughter of the queen) to whom he is married has bad to learn to accommodate herself to hie tastes, CRIME AND CRIMINALS. Orrwalmn, th Mnt Deiral Outlaw la lha ttnuthsril. Killed. Bob Clark, a mulatto, under arrest at Bristol, Teun., for ravishing Mrs. John Warren, was taken from jail by a mob and hanged. llarley McCoy, convicted of shooting Inspector of I'ofiee Haw ley. in lVnvcr, last January, was sentenced at tirvelcy, loi., to li le penitentiary lor lilt. Julio Merabachcr, the Spanish-American agent of the New York Life Insur ance Company, is said to ! a defaulter for anvahcre between fM.lUO and 500,1k. An Italian murderer of Camden, N. J., pleaded guilty to murder, his counsel saying that after the New Orleans lynch ing his client preferred to thus avoid a jury trial. lieronimo, the most desperate outlaw in the Southwest, was killed about thirty mile from llenson, Cochise county, A. T. A reward of 3,00u had been offered tor him. John Macmillan, a well-know n lawver and a member of the I'aris council,' is missing. He is said to lie a defaulter to the extent of 7,0rt). He is supposed to have gone to the I'nited State. In Judge Trout's court at San Fran cisco Chin Chun, convicted of man. slaughter, w as sentenced to San Quentiii for ten years. He was one of gang of highbinders whirh raided Taiin Foo's house of ill-fame and killed the pro prietor. J. C. Emery, a butcher, was Instantly killed in Philadelphia by a blow on the neck with a cleaver in the hands of an other butcher. The killing was the re sult of a quarrel over a trivial matter. F.mery leaves a family. The murderer w as arrested. Judge Murphy, of San Francisco, de nied a motion U.t a new trial in the rase of Hong Jing, convicted of the murder olChu YYy. The jury having fixed the penalty at life imprisonment, the court pronounced a sentence in accordance with the verdict. The fourth trial of L. A. IVwell for the killing of Editor Smith at Kedw od City, Cal., has begun but it ia not be lieved a verdict will be obtained. The Interest in the trial, ow ing to the la,.. I .-. : .l ? " B . 1 7 of time aince the crime was committed baa been much reduced. Policeman Clancy, of San Francisco, who waa arrested njwn a charge of steal ing f 15 from T. B. Serla. a restaurant waiter, has been acquitted. It waa ahown Serdahad charged three police men with the robliery. The court r x preesed the opinion he a as insane. FOREIGN LANDS. Repeated Earthquakes Occur in Italy. HONGKONG BURIAL GROUND, German v is Said to bo Anxious to Withdraw From Samoa Alto getherOther News. The Cxar's royal yacht, the Polar Star, cost over ).i uuj.um. It is expected the eruption of Vesuvius will assume vast proportions. The Influents continues to rage in Hamburg, and ia on the increase. The reneated earthquakes in Italy are creating panics among Hie people, The Czar receive from hi Siberian gold mine aliout $18 (XXI annually. The increase of the population of Lon don in the last ten years is 3i5,;3. Over 100 miles of country has been de vastated by fire in New itrunawick It is irin reported that I'arnell will marry Mrs. O'Shea at an early date, Fiahing off the Newfoundland coast is nl to be remarkably good tins reason, The total wheat crop of Frame this year will be but little more than half the average, I'irates in the Illack Sea fired upon and killed six Russian soldiers and two officers and then made their escape. It is said the Oueen has reprimanded tliel'rince of Wales and exacted a prom ise from him to never handle cants again. Senaputy, commander-in-chief of the Manipuri force, has lieen condemned to hang for the crime of reliellion against the British. Karth tremors, sometime of terrrify ing violence, continue in the Verona dis trict, Italy, threatening the complete de struction of the towns. A dispatch to the Edinburgh Journal states that a divorce suit to be instituted bv l-ord Ilrooke and naming the I'rince of Wale as co-respondent is imminent. Ilurial ground being very scarce in Hongkong colony, the government pro poses to take up and burn Chinese un claimed dead buried for live or six years. The famous crater of Solfatara of Hoi xuoli near Naples is show ing signs of re newed activity. This volcano was active long before esuvius, but for ages has been nearly extinct. (iermany is anxious for a pretext to withdraw from Samoa altogether. The Chief Justice there says his life is en dangered by conspiracies, and he is gen erally made miserable. The new Kussian municipal reform bill completely sweeps the municipalities out of existence. Mayors will no longer have any power. The (rovernors will hereafter I State otlicials. Admiral Vallon of the French navy says: "our navy is still capable ot beat ing the allied fleets of the dreibiind. If the British navv waa against us, how ever, we could do nothing lnit retreat into port." The natives of the Cameroons, West ern Africa, are reported to have cruelly tortured the German urisoners before executing them, and that many prison ers committed suicide In order to escae torture. I.t Jnur of Pari announces that Liqui dator Monchicourt, with Chrispohle, Governor of the Credit Foncier, has ar ranged so that the affairs of the Panama Company shall lie taken over by a group of financial houses. The harbor authorities of Southamp ton, England, the great mail port, have decided to adopt electric cranes for the unloading of vessels on account of the greater raniditv with which thev will enable work to lie performed. M. Eiffel, the daring civil engineer who conceived tlie tower In Tans w hich hears his nsme, lives up on the Jung frau in the Swiss Alps. He has just ol tained pel-mission to build a railroad no the mountain to his very dwelling. Mine. Sarah Bernhardt has iust boinrht by cable a large tract of land at Neuillv, a suburb of Paris, for t-MMxM, all made during her recent American tour. It is said that she will build a veritable pal ace after she has finished her travels. IwM i i i ne ijonnon periaior mn$ a dome . I,., ..I ........ i . .i i i- i ih. r.f. Ln t I. . V'T in! tlie rale ol linilon a crmirMi almvn , by statistic just made public. The writer sees in this fact that the emnire has passed the meridian of greatness. There are now in Moscow 1.V0O0 per sons w aiting to be transported to Siberia. Five thousand are convicts, the others are their wive or children who volun teered to follow them into exile. The number has accumulated since the new vear. Great distress is in the government of j (Xlessa, owing to poor crops and the fail ure of the Volga to rise. In Simbriaki the winter crops are ruined altogether, and the peasants have no grain to sow for the summer. More than half the fields lie idle. The latest election rwtnrns in the Ne therlands show that out of 100 seats composing the Second Chamlier the Lib erals have secured 41, the Catholics 22 and the Protestant Orthodox II. A sec ond ballot is necessary for the remaining twenty-six seats. The Aral at Yemen (Arabia Felix) have revolted and attacked the Imperial troops, forcing them to retreat. The troops Uwt several officers and HH) men. The tirand Council at Constantinople has decided to dispatch 10,000 troos from the Syrian garrisons. After considerable additional debate in the lxwer House of the lTUssian liet Kickert's motion that the government i should submit to the House the material ; The new rules of the English Jockev upon which th I haneellor based his re- j Club provide only for the licensing of cent speech upon i grain duties was re-1 riders not owneraor part owner unless jected by a vote of S3 to SO. , j wia f,. joAeys betting or re- The brigands who robbed a Turkish 1 present from other than the train and eiicd several rich Germans, jner of their mounts will becashiered. who were afterward ransomed, have! Tlie regatta of the New York Yacht been retreating toward the Black S-a. ; Club was sailed the other day in a gale. On the way they were attacked bv Bui- i A heavy sea was running, but the Glori gariaa gendarmes, and it ia believed that 1 ana, Mr. Morgan's new boat, proved her the brigand chief, Anastasius, was self a wonder and showed that she can wounded. . sail in any weather. She easily won in Tlie number of cattle in Australia it her class, estimated at H.iiXi.tXKi, an increase of j President Fulda of the California Ath more than !.&tM,000 in the last fifteen 1 letic Club has made public a long state year. Sheep have also increased from ! ment of the club's position in regard to NVXW.OOO to 90,000,000. The people of the recent Corbett-Jackson fight. After England view these figure with great , telling ot the effort of the club to en satisfaction, inasmuch a they indicate courage legitimate sport Fulda aavs the l"ttT, ' i l 'J " nwuier country. The Bishop of Ireland, finding the cost of maintaining member in Parlia- ment a heavy parochial drain, ar work- lug to sect! r a return to the Common at the next genera! election oi wealthy candidate w ho w ill form the nucleus of a new Catholic party, and it i stated the selection of these candidate ha al- ready been commenced. ! MISCELLANEOUS. A ab-Traarr ftrhama Bla Cnaald mtri hi I ha Humi Alllaaca. The Colored Farmers' Alliance is said to number HO,OUO men. About 15,0u0 acres of land will lie throw n open to settler in Iowa July 15, A man who was atruck by an icicle falling from a Boston bouse sues the oc cupant for 110,000. A Philadelphia capitalist says that 35.0txi.000 cigarette were consumed in that city last year. A 1.1.000,000 hotel about to 1 built in New York will have 000 living rooms and 2A bath rooms. Mackerel in immense quantities have struck in along the coast of Nova Scotia, and famous catches are reported. A Canada exchange says million of dead tiali are floating on the surface of Lake Ontario. Rev. Dr. Hall succeeds Rev. Sam Small a financial agent of the Utah Wesleyan I'niversity at Ogden. The boldest band of thieves in New York city eoneisi of three little girls, who operate in the large Data of the wealthy. Sam Jones' law and order league at Houston has closed the gambling house and disH-rsed the gamblers to the four points ol tlie compass. Chicago jewelers have been nctified bv Federal otlicials not to gold-plate coin (or use aa bangles, because some of these plated coin have been passed a money. Johnstown, Penn., has been growing rapidly since the floods of 1KS9. Before the ureal disaster the taxable property of the tow n was only S 2,000,000; now it is over !I,OUO,000. The street car lines in Toronto have tun nnrrliased bv that iiiunicinalltv and henceforth will I operated by the city government. The experiment will lie watched wltn mteresv. The Sons of the Revolution in New York have asked that there shall be a general display of the American flag hereafter on June 14, the anniversary of the adoption of the national colors. The Secretary of the Navy has de cided to name the 2,0u0-ton protected cruiser building at the Union Iron Works, Baltimore, the North Point, in honorof the historic battle at that place. In three week past the quantity of wheat on ocean passagit from Eastern ports to Europe has increased 7,000,000 bushels. In the corresponding time a vear ago there was a decrease of 1,000,000 uehels. A sub-Treasury scheme is being con sidered by the Farmers' Alliance in Kan sas. A bank and produce warehouse is to lie established in each county. The ttank is to issue check, which will be circulated as money. I'nder the New foundland Permanent Act it is proiosed that each man-of-war shall carry a judge to try cases oi alleged violation of treaties, the Captain being the complainant, and appeal lying to the Supreme Court of the colony. New York city is making a determined move to establish cheap lodging-house (or women, and seems likelv to succeed Houses not managed on a philanthropic, but on a purely business basis, are to be eatabhsli'M throughout the metropolis The leading trust companies and capi talists at the East have taken the posi tion that they will lend no more monev on mortgages unless on a contract oi gold repayment, The International Typographical Un ion has decided by a large majority to remove from the foreman the power to letine the davs ol tlie week that a man should work: that a member of the union should he allowed to work or plav as he pleased. And now the New York Rapid Transit Commissioners talk about putting tun nels on the east side ol the metropolis also, a talk which is received with many wry fact's by the majority ol ew lork- ers, who are in nowise ready tor tne underground. As Jav liould said, they want to go there as late as thev can. Hut J. it. owns elevated railroads and likes them. A hot w ater ar'esian well is in opera' tion at Boise Citv. Idaho. The water company of that place has now two wells, each ahoflt four hundred feet deep, dis charging over one million gallons per day of water said to have a temperature of'lW degrees Fahrenheit. Another w ell is to lie bored, and this hot water is to be utilised for bathing purposes and for a large hotel to lie built near the wells. Soanixh cauitalists residing in New York, Havana, Spain and Mexico have t - 1 . t .l:..l . suosenoeo. capital lor ine rsumiisiuueui of a steamship line, to run in connection . . with the Spanish Transatlantic Com panv, which w ill connect with Mexican (lilt port, the Antilles, the I'nited States of Colombia, Venexuela, Hon' duras and Guatemala and making direct connection with the I'nited States and Europe. The Treasury Department has in formed the Secretary of State that in its opinion the delegating of authority by tha l'liimm I tiivi.rniiient to itji ("inatiU to issue certificates of identity to those classes in that country who are privi leged to enter the I mted States is not incompatible with the intention of the restriction laws of this country, and such certificates should be accepted by tlie custom otnciais, SPORTING NOTES. Oaklaail'a Council Attamnta la Llrrnsa I'ool Kunnia Uvar tha Mayor's Veto. A purse of ,5,000 has been offered bv the Magic Citv Athletic Club of Omaha tor a finish iiglit between Slavin and Sul livan. A lio.txx) bond was filed in bank for faithful performance. Oakland's City Council attempted to pas an ordinance, licensing the pool rooms over the Mayor's veto. Council man Wilkins changed his vote, and voted to sustain the veto. The necessary two. thirds was not obtained. CT n" J r and waa forced to make rule lor itanvn protection. The men were instructed to finish the fight, but refuse.!. Each had victory within his grasp, but dared not take it. Referee could to mma taW 1 conciuskm that both principals decided wot to take an v risk and preferred to save their friends' money and their rep uution in preference to keeping the agreement w ith the club. FARMANDGARDEN Some Things Which May Be Sown Late. THE FRUIT ON THE FARM. With ConsUnt Watching, But No Great Labor, Every Farmer Can Be Supplied With Fruit. Shall farmer continue to produce fruit for home use in face of the fact that inaect foe are apparently on the increase, making fruit-g'owing very un certain? It is seldom we meet wiui a farmer who is not discouraged in this lini. wriipa John L. Shawver in Farm mid FiremHt, yet they admit that a good harvest of luscious fruit i very desirable. Some have determined to give np the attempt, arguing that upon the same soil they can produce enough of wheat or corn to purchase a supply for family use. Too frequently, however, where this is the case, the wheat ami corn are marketed and the money used for other purposes. It is certainly cheaper to pro duce one' ow n supply of fruit than to purchase it on the market, even though one must contend with insects and dis eases. One is then assured of a supply if the season is favorable, and can enjoy the fruit in its freshest and moat delight ful condition. With constant watching, but no great amount of labor, every farmer's house hold can be supplied with a choice vari ety of apples, pears, iieaches, plums, cherries, grapes and berries. Where there are children, the care and culture of trees and shrub will furnish them with healthful work and recreation. It will prove a source of many valuable lessons. And they will grow up to pos sess many kindly feelings for that dear old home, where delicious fruits were always an attraction. 1 low fondly does a man look lack and recall some favorite tree beneath which on velvety grass he romped or rested as taste inclined or oc casion demanded. Happy hours were those, and healthful, too;' and through a busy life, amidst business cares, they furnish recollection that are in them selves a source of recreation. Recall the orchards of twenty-five years ago. eatlv trimmed, washed down with diluted lve, watched and cared for, and loads of delicious fruits. To-day the orchard is perhaps the most neglected siot on the farm. It is visited only for fruit, and the farmer, being dis appointed in the yield and quality, still more neislects it 'in future. Stock and grain claim hi time, and the health- giving fruit is placed in the background. Here is room for improvement, and he who plants and trains a goodly collection of fruit trees will surely have a bounteous harvest. Lale Crop. Buckwheat and rye for fall and w inter pasture, turnips, rutabagas and w inter radishea can be sown in many cases after the wheat and oats are harvested and vet give a good yield, A good wav to put in rve, write N. J. S. in the l'rairit Farmer, is to sow the seed broad cast among the corn just before the last cultivation. In a majority of cases unless the corn is foul with weed seeds this is all that w ill be necessary. By the time the corn is harvested and hauled off the rve will have made such a growth as to atlord a considerable amount of feed in the fall and early w inter. Buckwheat is a good crop to grow for green manuring. Its quick growth, in addition to the effect produced upon the soil, places it next to clover to plow under as a green fertilizer. heat or oat stubble can lie broken up and the seed sown broadcast and harrowed in and a sufficient growth will be secured before fmst to turn under a good layer as a fertilizer. If desired, in anything like a fair season, a good crop ot grain may be secured, line t wheat make a good feed for winter, as the grain can be fed as a change to nearly all kinds of stock to an advantage. Of the three root crops rutahairas should be sown first, as they reiuire longer time to make a food growth than the others. Tnrnips should lie sown next, if any difference is made, and then the radishes, although a good plan is to mix turnip and radish seed. From the middle to the latter part of July is considered a good time to sow the seed. 1 ne best rule to follow is to sow when ever the soil is in condition to secure a good germination. Prepare the soil nicely and then sow the seed just after a rain, sowing broadcast, taking pains to scatter as evenly as possible over the ground and then cover with a light har row or brush. These can often be sown where early crops have already matured and may be considered catch' crops be cause they occupy the ground only a short time, and tliat to a considerable extent after the first crops have made their growth. Of course in a very drv season these crops will often prove a taiiure, partially or wholly, but in an average season very fine as well as profitable yields can be secured, and those that cannot be marketed profit ably can always be fed to stock to an advantage. Toaltrr Xotee. Do not put ud an expensive noultrr building tiecause some millionaire set's the example. If the ducks and seese are picked rei?- ularly during the summer and earlv fall they will not niou.lt. The scrap from the table soaked in sweet milk until soft make a good feed for young turkeys, especially in the sum mer. The lazy man never makes ends meet on a pouury larni. 1 Tones can never expect to have hen keep them in idle ness. It 1 not the state of the market that cause failure in poultry-keeping, but the state of mind of the poultry keeper. At least once a week the hens should have a feedinu of charcoal, or nuhhina of corn on the ear may be burned and ted. At this season, after a Ion winter's confinement in small pen and before an abundance oi green food can he obtained, the charcoal will he found a good alter native, ami an improved condition will ioiiow its use. rlaua la Cat. Itappeara from a communication ruad to the Regit Lincei at Rom that eels and murernr pomes pouua similar to that of vipera In them it bn.4f.mno in the mouth, arid they have no orpui (01 inoculating t.Vir enemies with it So it ia UMiaJly without any effect upon man, because in tlweej eaten by him ax food the poison is destroyed by the lieat o( cooking, and also tn-ise. a the ca with th Venom of tins viper, it lias noef feet upon the digestive wy. New t) leana IVaYuii. PORTLAND MARKET. It t'loar Quirt In All Ita Hraarhei. El rrll( Hull. Straw berries came in at their nana heavy rate. Cherrie are more pleiiiilul and cheater. Gooseberries now being received are of a better quuhty and cheaper. There are plenty of oranges and lemons in the market, yet prices are advancing steadily. California ache of very fair quality are in moderate sup nlv. Eggs are scarce. Poultry is scarce and in good demand. There was little doing in the grocery line. but Produce, fruit. Etc Wheat Walla Walla, fl.50; Valley, fl.iiO per cental. Fu)ia Juote: Standard, 5.25; Walla Walla, 5.uo per barrel. Oats Quote: Wuac per bushel. Hat Quote: llttiatU per ton. MiixsTtrys Quote: Bran, 121.00; Shorts, 2o.OO; Ground Barley, aX0Ui 34.00; Chop Feed, 25ii2 per ton; Bar ley, 1.2.5ia 1.30 percental. Bi TTKB -Quote : Oregon fancy cream ery, 25-; fancy dairy, 22'sc; fair to ipiod, 17V20c; common, 14c; Cali fornia, 22 f 24c per pound. CiiKEsa Quote: Oregon, 13315c; Cal ifornia, 12c per pound. Ecus Quote : Oregon, 22 25c per Hou-n: Eastern. 22'nC Poiltbv Quote: Old Chickens, Hi; vonng chickens, 3.50i 5.00; Pucks. i7.0iiwK.fio; Geese, nominal, 10 per dozen ; Turkeys, 15c per pound. YatiXTABLas Quote : Cablage, fl.50 per cental; Caulillower, $125 per dozen; Onions, ll,flV per pound; Beets, 1.60 per sack; Turnips, 1.75 per sack; Potatoes, 0070c per cental; New Potatoes, lc per pound; Tomatoes, 2.50 per box; Asparagus, 4idc per pound; Oregon, Mm 15c ner pound: Lettuce. 12'-c per dozen ; Green Peas, 5c per pound ; String Beans, 8c per pound; Uhubarb, 4c per pound; Artichokes, 40c per dozen; Kad lshes, 10c per dozen bunches; young Onions, 10c per dozen bunches; Cucum bers, 75c per dozen; Carrots, 1.25 per sack. Frl its Ouote : Los A nireles Oranges, ,2.25(r2.50; Kiverside, 1.003.25; Na vels, 4.50(i5.50 per box; Sicily Lemons, $7fi7.50; California, r4.50(rf5 per box; Apples, $1.00(tf2.5O per box; Bananas, 12.00(4 2.50 per bunch : Pineapples, i.i.00 (iS.OO per dozen; Strawberries, doHic per pound; Cherries, $I.00U.25 per box : Gooseberries, 4(i5c per pound ; Cur- runts, 5c per peund ; Apricots, 2.0iM 2.50 ts?r box; Kaspberries, ve per pouna; Peaches, I2.5J per box. Mt Quote: Calitornia Walnnts.il1, (3 12c; Hickorv, 8'sc; Brazils, 10411c; Almonds, 16iixc; Filberts, 13(al4c; Pine Nuts. 1718c; Pecans, 17(jtlSc; iCocoanuts, 8c; Hazel, 8c; Peanuts, 8c per pound. Hlaple tirorerlra. Cofpek Quote: Costa Rica, Kio, 23c; Mocha, 30c; Java, 25'2c buckle's, 100-pound cases, 2o'4tf on,. ..1, pound. StoAKs Quote: Golden C,4('c ; extra C, 4'e'; dry cranulated, 67iC; culs crushed and powdered, (i'c per pound ; confectioners' A, 534c per pound. Syhtps Eastern, in Iwrrels, 47(355c; half barrels, 50i5S-; in cases, 5Si80c per gallon; $2 2."ki2.50 per keg; Califor nia, in barrels, 40c per gallon ; f 2.25 per keg. Beans Quote: Small Whites, Sc; Pnk, .swSSjc; Havo, 4'4c- Bnttor. 4Vc; Lima. 44'ri 5 per pound. Dkirp Fritts Quote: Italian Prunes, 10la(i 12c; Petite and German Prunes, 10c per pound; Raisins, $1.75(2.25 per box; Plummer-dried Pears, 10(Sllc; sun-dried and factory Plums, 11 iff 12c: evaporated Peaches, 18(i20c; Smyrna Fiire, 2V: California Figs. Pc per pound. Rice Q-,iote: f5.50nit5.75 per cental. Hosky Qi'ote: 18(tf20e per pound. Salt Quote: Liverpool, lti. lti.f0, (17: stock, 11 per ton in carload lots. Canned Goods Quote: Table fruits. 12.00. 2's; Peaches, f2.5d; Bartlett Pears, 12.25; Plums. fl.5 Straw lierries, f2.5); Cherries, 22.50, Biacklierries. f2.25; Raspberries, ?2.75: Pineapples, f2.75; Apricots, f2.40. Pie fruit: Assorted, f 1.50 per dozen; Peaches, 1.5: Plums, $1.25; Blackberries, $l.rt5 per dozen. Vegetables: Corn, fl.35 iiil.t5, according to quality; Tomatoes, fl.l,")(S3.50; Sugar Peas, f 1.25(41.60; String Beans, f 1.10 per dozen. Fish : Sal mon, ; sardines, S5c((t$1.65; lobsters, f.' 2.-)3.25; oysters, fl.50 3.25 pet dozen. Condensed milk : Eagle brand, fS.10; Crown, f7: Highland. i.75: Champion, f6.w); Monroe, fti.75 per case. Tha Meat Market. Beef Live, 3',a4c; dressed. 7c. Mutton Live, sheared, 3',c; dressed. Sc Hogs Live, 60: drwd, Veal 5'a7c ptr pound. 8c SMOKED MEATS AND LARD. Quote: Eastern Hama. 12.'(213c; Oregon, lO'jlic; Brear'a-t rUcon, 12i13c; other varieties. HdUc: Lard. 9S4(ll V per pound. Mlarellaaeona. Hides Quote : Dry Hides, selected prime. 8V(iSV. less for culls: irreen selected, over 55 pounds. 4c; under 55 pounds, oc; Mieep I'elts, short wool. 3v it50r; medium.tjUiiSOc: lonir.)ef2il.a: shearlings. 10($20c; Tallow, good to choice, 3KI31, per pound. ool Quote : illamette Vallev, 18 20c: Eastern Oregon, i3il9c'per pound, according to conditions and shrinkage. Hops ominal. Ouote: le per pound. Aatls Base quoUtion: ton, 2 85 Steel, f2.S5; Wire, f3.40 per keg. Shot Quote: f 1.75 per eact Coal Oil Quote : f 1.95 per case. Peculiar Fya of a Markaman. This man Swinaoy, who wants to be a trail robber, and int, has most remarkable eves. H. i a dead shot, if such a thing exists, and you would think so when you first look al him. His eyes, which are Tery dark an2 pieremc, affect one unpleasantly, mainly be cause bo haa ill the iris, and immediate around the pupil, a lijlit gray ring that yoc will not find in tlieoriiuary human eye. " It fact I never saw but three men w ith that ring and they were all dead shots with (h rilV 01 revolver. I hav heard and beiu-ve that thi kind of an eye is always fund in good marksmen; but it doc no; follow by anj means that a man without it isnt a good shot You boor a great deal alxxit men being am biJextercxa iu the use of the revolver. 1 have met men who conld ihoot well witt either band, but tbesa storua you hear about such men aa Iuiite and others being able U fbe successfully tt two marks one to tht extreme rijht and the other to the extrunx left ro in rry oinnion (airy t&k, LVUvt ive in Ctobe-Dcnuvrak rVUini'a piano, on which hrmmnrw! his earliet t;eras. has just been found in the ixxsession of a widow bdv of UttajiU. whov husland bought it for 1 10a. Tlie lalaniana have petitioned the owner to rvt-iit the piano to the town Bellini's UrthpUv-tliat the n lic of their townsman may t preserved a souTcnir. and not pass into careW hands. A LatUville. Ga.. man was trying to chase a bU t snaLe out of his chicken yard, when the rvpUle suddenly turned up.-n hiui and pursued him for over bail a mile. Tba Dead A lite. irp;, Tri rr r n dend man walk about T queried Oriawolfl streM Insurauee agent of u friend the otiier day. 'Of eoiirxo not." Well, there U a case of It. See that man on tin corner." "He look pretty lively." 'Yea, but lie's legally dead. Let me tell you about liitu. We served iu the mine Oldo regim in. the war. At the battle of Grovctoti, which tofik place a day ortwoU-fore Second Hull Run, he was detailed us a skirmisher. The Confederate puhvd forward, and aa the skinnislien were running back to the line this man stopticJ for a mo mont fin tL littlo knoll. A shell came Uimui.'h a can in the Confederate lines. entered the base of the knoll, and when it exploded he was lifted tweuty feet hiKli." "And torn to pieces V "We thought so, and a thousand men nw tlie performance. He was picked up by the Confederates, sent to a hos pital and then held a year and a half aa a prisoner of war. Our captain re norted liim dead, he waa carried down tliA mil as such, and even now the tancle haa not been straightened out When taken prisoner the Confederate put hitn down as Jaiues instead ol John, and that helped mix matters." "But was he badly wounded T "r H did not lose a drop of blood, but was simply stunned, and it was six months ln-fore his hearing was fully restored.' lie has paid a claim aent over (500 to secure his discharge as a Union soldier, but he has not got it yet" Detroit Free Tress. Cray llrattla and Itualaeaa. I heard a story the other day which was told to illustrate the different way In which voung men are regarded in Boston and New York In reference to their capacity for business. A middle aged man who left this city for the larger one to go into business surprised his friends here on his return on a visit by appearing without the full beard which he wore on his departure. With his Jaunty mustache, which was the only relic of his hirsute appendages, he looked quite youthful, and waa hardly recognizable by his acquaintances. On asking the reason for the change lie said, "A man must look young in Xew York to got business; my bill beard streaked with gray was an obstacle to my success then?, though it was a help to me in Boston." I suppose there is enough basis in this experience of the transplanted Bostonian to serve as a text for a dis course on the slow going business meth ods of this city as compared with Xew York, but there is something to be said on the other "side of the question. The rush and the whirl of American life are moderated by a system of con ducting business which leaves time for Interest in something besides money making, and it is pleasant to have the gray beard recognized as a sign of ma turity of exerienee and judgment Boston Post "Illlnd Hal." the Sparrows Friend. "Blind Hal," the sparrows' friend, is one of the most interesting inmates in the quarter for blind men at Blockley almshouse. He has been a resident of the ward many years, and has made it his practice to feed the little birds in one corner of the yard three times a day, rain or shine. The birds have got to know him, and just before feeding time will congregate in numbers out side on a tree close by the door through which he comes. They have learned to know him, and on his appearance hail him with a storm of their chatter and song. They fly to meet him, and will light upon U shoulders and head. He carries a stick, yet the little feath ered friends never fear him, and keep close to their friend, "Blind Hal" When he is ill the birds seem to know it, and keep up such a noise that they have to be frightened away by some of the officials. "Blind Hal"' is never so happy as when feeding his little feath ered friends. Philadelphia Press, Her Contant Companion. People usually enjoy laughing at those illiterate people who delight in using words that they do not compre hend. A lady of this sort lives in one of the cities of Mine. She is quite wealthy, moves in "good society," and has a great ''flow" of language, a good deal of which is, however, interspersed with words and expressions that are a trifle incoherent, to say the least An ac quaintance was one day talking with her and wickedly complimented her upon her unusual and surprising com mand of language, and upon the fact that she seemed never at a loss for words. "Oh," replied the other, flattered but complacent, 'that is easily explained. I always carry a 'Webster's Unabridged' in my pocket" Lewiston Journal. Eitraonlloary Growth. The following extraordinary instance of the rapid growth in the human spe cies has been noted in Fin l,v member of the French Academy 'of Sciences and reported by him in the annals of that institution". "The sub ject herein mentioned was a lad of but 7 years of ae when I first saw him ; but his tender years notwithstanding, j he measured 4 feet 8 inches and 4 lines high. His people had observed his marvelous growth when he was only 2 years of age. At 4 he was able to iift j and carry a bushel of wheat and to ' throw thebundlesof hay (S3 pounds) to the four horses each night ; and at 6 he could lift as much as a sturdy fellow of 20. But although he thus increased in bodily strength, his understanding was no greater than is usual with children of his age; playthings were also his fa vorite amusements." St. Louis Repub lie A Laac Walt. Dashaway An amateur performance I attended the other evening was de layed an hour because one of the lead ing actors was ilL They got a fellow from the audience to take his place. Cleverton I don't see why getting a fellow from the audience delayed them an hour. Dahaway-They had to wait for one to come ia. Jud4"c DINED Ofi ROA3TE0 Hy, rat al a tljl Caaaiaal Wk. Ua. Kaun H., rie1 Tba gwieral curiosity 0f on, town waa aroused by the upon our streets of a nativ, who waa born noon . Islands. He wore a very red colored suit of cloth;, knee naV jacket trimmed with black VeUet T and cuffs. 0er bis shoulder Urf cloak that was tied oyer the Utffi der aud under the right, u:idt jT and red flannel, nis head wajto with a blouse that Ml down LUtl aud still over this a sombrero, fli, were tied under the instep win, half inch white braid that wound theleguPtotl..y:..eefc n peurance wa very gaudy. Ir Thi native waa converted !,,-. years old, and is uow 74 year, " His father lived to be 130 years of His life has been spent in lectariii!ft the condition of his people. twenty languages fluently. When or six year old he saw an Indian woo? throw her child to a crocodfl, TJ weighed 1,000 pounds. Th missed the child, and the mother canT it as it ran back to her begging turt life, when she threw it again. Thittin! the crocodile struck it with iu cl,7 tore it into two pieces and ate it yl quickly. She then reported her act, u the pagan priest, and he blessed her J Ing to her, "Go sin no more." ' He also was a cannibal. When he 7 years old there were twenty-one J biters who were caught traveling m prospecting for pluces to locate charcU and one of these ministers was leheajS every morning by their high priest J his flesh cooked, and the natives wm made to stand in a row and each one given a jwirt of the flesh, and they ifoj and ate it. This was continued em day for twenty one days, until all of S minUters were eaten up, and heater of twenty-one preachers. He saya the natives never do eat on another unless one is taken in war or a missionary; that it is a mistaken ik that they slay one another to eat whn this man and thut is fat enough to eat; that the beasts of the field sever tin one of their kind to prey upon, and thi the savages have never gotten to t lower than wild animals. Atlanta C atitntion. Geeae In a Tog. The oddest story of geese in the comes from Xorfolk, and was told Mr. Stevenson, the author of "TheBinli of Xorfolk," by the Rev. LL T. Frere. A large flock of geese were attracted to th town of Diss on a foggy night by tin lights, and from the sound of theirvoicn seemed to fly scarcely higher than th tops of the houses. They came about 7 p. tn., and, it it was Sunday evening, they appeared U be especially attracted by the lights it the church, and their incessant clama not a little disturbed the congregatioj assembled for evening service. Frua that time until 2 a, m., when the f cleared off and they departed, they con tinued to fly around utterly bewilderei One bird happened to fly so low it a strike a gas lamp outside i he town probably it was flying round the light just as a po'iceiuau was passing by, win very properly, as the bird was making i great noise outside a public house, ba it into custody, and the next day it w with equal propriety sent off to a pri vate lunatic asylum at Melton, where il b7-d for some years an honored guest spectator. When a GeDtlemaa See ma Homelea. Do yoo know when an elegant pot islied gentleman seems like a tramp? II is when he allows the impression to p out that he has no placa he can (al home, or belongirj j to himself indirid ally, by using club stationery for alia his correspondence. Something about il there is that smocks of siiobbishnrsi, poverty or secrexy more than of thedif nity belonging to au exclusive or pop lar club. For a general address in tin revolving of city life one's club il de cidedly convenient, and there are cer tain notes and letters that have the cor rect air when topped by the club nann monogram or coat of arms, but when I man confines himself to the clnb i tionery for his business letters, his formal and informal notes and all social letters it calls up tb -it class of men who board at inferior hotels and slip aronnd tt well known high priced ones and 11? themselves to the paper that is left a the reading and writing rooms forth use of the guests. Chicago Herald, Lamp Shades. Many of those gorgeous lamp shadf that bewilder the eye from half a dotes show windows on Fifth avenue are mato at home by women who have seen th proverbial "better days." The work re quires nicety of taste and skill in needle work. Desigr.8 and materials are fur nished sometimes by the shopkeeper, sometimes by the women that doth work. The largest shades are made G parasol frames. The materials enteric into the work are silk, satin, lace aw artificial flowers. Prices of the mow elaborate shades vary from $16 tn so that he cost of a handsome lamp fully equipped may run up to f300- I some cases milliners also make 1CP shades, and the fact that they are ah to utilize remnants of 6ilks and of other materials gives them a peculiar ad vantage in this business. Xe Sun. BE VEGETABLE PANACEA PREPARED FR al ROOTS& HERBS, rostVHt cure or mm AND ALL OTHER DISEASES ARISIN0FKOMA DISORDERED STATE orncSIDMADi ON AN INACTIVE LIVER. Vaaxaaa aa at a aw fcaw r f DRUGGISTS ft GENERAL DEALER mm - IKSJXa' .. taw- '