Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (March 14, 1896)
EUGENE CITY GUARD. L L, CAHniU . rrssrtotar. EUGENE CITY. OREGON. EVENTS OF THE DAY EPITOME OF THE TELEGRAPHIC NEWS OF THE WORLD. km latoroitlag OollMtloa flUm From th. T HoaiUBhoros FftMaM la Osadeasod Form A Largo ! f laronaatloa la laiall Spao. Chief of Polloe Crowley, of Ban Franciaoo, hat reaigned. lie baa been in servloe for nearly forty year. The Baltimore & Obio Bailroad Company, one of the oldeat and moat extensive transportation ayatema in the United States, baa gone into the hands of receivers. Balllngton Booth baa announced hia plana for an indopendent American balvation Army, of which be and bia wife will be leaden. He states that be will not oppose the formor organisa tion. General Lew la Merrill died in Phila delphia, aged 65. lie waa one of th noted offloers of the war, and waa re tired from active aunrloe on a anrgeun'a certificate of diaability in 1888. after several years of frontier dnty. Two little girla loot their lirea and two men were injured in a Are which partly deatroyed the big double tene ment at 158 Prospect atreet, Brooklyn. The origin of the Ore ia unknown. The loaa will not reach more than 2,600. The Britiah and French negotiation! at 1'aria on the Niger qneation bare boon temporarily suspended. The French representatives accused the liritish of trying to acquire control of territory within the Freuoh aphere, and there the matter enda for the present. Aa a train on the Ferrla St Cliff House railway In Ban Franciaoo waa on Ita way to the beach, a tunnel near the ocean tertninua oared in. No one waa serioonsly injured in the debris. . Heversl pataeugera were bruised, and the road waa impaaaable for aome time. The Very Key. Father Borgmeyer, father superior of the Franoiauan nils aion, in Banta Barbara, CaL, waa fa tally ahot by a man who bad been em ployed at the mlaaion for over a year. Three ahota entered the prleat'a body, and one in the bead. Ilia recovery ia impossible. The Britiah troopa which formed part of the Aahantee expedition returned to London in a dilapidated, though not battered oonditlou. Tboy were enthu aiaatically oheered aa thoy marched through the oity from the docka where they landed to their barracka in the weat part of Loudon. At Home, Oa., a deaperate atreet fight oouurred botween V. T. Bauford aud Policeman Ma Iky. Mulky la dead and ex-Hhoriff Mat the wa critically wounded. Bereral atray ahota took effect in innocent tpootators.one a young lady. The altercation began because Mulky clubbed a friend of Bauford, The Bouthern Paoiflo Kallroad Com pany haa reopened the rate war be twoon Portland aud Ban Franciaoo, The out la a radical one, puttiug eqt figures back to where they were during the early daya of Dooeiuber, namely, flO for first-class paaaage, inoludlng berth in the Pullman alueper, and f & for second-class in Uie touriat iloepor, Governor Clark of Arkauaaa, baring refuaed to further Interfere in the oaee of Prewitt Turuer, the negro who waa respited aereral week ago, waa hanged at Little Kock. Turuer waa oourlcted of killing a young man named llaw kina, in Crawford oounty. lie olatmod that be did the killing in aelf defeuao. The supremo oourt of Washington haa decided that a oounty treaaurer ia liable personally or on hia bond for money deposited In a bank which after warda becomes iuaolreut, In a oaae whnrolu there la no oharge of uegli geuoe agaiuat the oQlcor aud iu which the oounty failed to aupply a safe de poaitory. The conference between President J. Kdward Bimuioua, of the Pauaiua Hallway Company aud C. P. Iluntiug ton, prealdeut of tlte 1'aciBo Mail Btoawahip Company, regarding the re oeut friction between the two ooin pauiea, ia auid to have resulted in the adjustment of all differences. It la understood tliat entirely harmonioua relutioua hare been restored. For February the receipts from cus toms shows a talliug off of J, 474,408, and the Internal roreuue receipts a de oreaie of 'J34,64t). As the expenditures during the month, howerer, were ex ceptionally light, a small surplus is shown. The total deficit for the pros etit fiscal year amounted to $18,568,- 637, aud it ia the opinion of treasury omulala that the deficit July 1, next, will not exoeed this amount. In Chicago W. II. Pearson, kuown at cue of the youngest expert telegraph operators in the weat, held a long con vernation with Manager Btonier, of the Hyde Park morgue, In which he practically made all arrangementa for having his body embalmed. He then told him he was going to oouiiuit sui utile. He went to the home of his cousin, and locking all the doors, ad justed a gas tube to a burner, turned on the gas, swsllowsd Dre graini of morphine, lay down on his bed aud, puttiug the other eud of the tube in bia mouth, quickly euded bis life. Bt James' Uaaelte, in oommeuting upon the recent dtsmlaaal of Lord Dun raven from the New York Yacht Club, said; "The New York Yacht Club rery properly expelled Lord Duurareu, aud we now only regret that the oredit of Britiah sportamauship was ever identified with a man wbo can behave to badly. His oharges were improba ble, and bis refusal to aooept the deci sion of the ooniniittee waa a sheer pieoe of ohildiah obstluaoy." Uorernor Lord, of Oregon, haa been notified that land claimed by the state, under the swamp land grant of 1868, which afterwards paased by gnut of the state to the United BUtes Military Wagon Koad Company, in 1866, baa been rejected by the oomuiiesiooer of the general land offloe, at Washington. Attorney-General Idloman bas the mat ter under advisement, and will likely sppeal on behalf of the state to the secretary of the interior, Hoke Smith. Alarming reports bare reached Ber lin from Linda Peathof the most terrific sand storms that bare erer occurred in Northwestern Hungary. The dis patches say that aereral moving trains on the Austria-Hungary railway and many Tillages bad been completely buried under the sand. Many fatal ities bare resulted, the dead in some rillages reaching into the hundreds. The stonn is described as a ooustant suooeasion of whirlwinds. The loss to osttle and other property will be enor mous. The rates of exchange in Uracil bare fallen lower than was erer known be fore. Grare fears are entertained that a commercial crisis will result The French chamber of deputies bat adpoted the project for a new subma rine telegraph line between Franoe, the United BUtes and the Antilles. The massacre of thirteen Armenian families la reported from the district of Moosh. Fire Armenians are said to bsre been killed at Kirchehlr, in the Angora district. Superior Judge Murphy, of Ban Franoisoo, hat granted another stay of execution in the Durrant caae until March 12. The bill of exceptions Is not ready for settlement Three hundred tons of tide armor for the battleship Bebaatapool were shipped by the Betblebem, Pa., iron works to Kussla. This is part of the first order for armor the company baa reoeired from Kuaaia. A great ioe gorge hat been formed on the New York Central St Hudson Hlver tracks between Hudson and Al bany. The road ia oovered with ioe, in some places ten feet high and the tracks and telegraph poles for a dis tanoe of 700 feet are waahed out The steamer Clyde was burned to the water's edge at Point Grey, just outside the harbor of Vancouver, B. C. Captain Woodworth and the orew had a narrow escape. Toe steamer was valued at 13,000, and insured for f 1,300 in the Western Insurance Com pany. Secretary Lamont bas issued an order loosting the military post at Magnolia Bluff, near Seattle. While this settles the location, much remalnt to be done before the site can be established. Be attle must give a perfeot title to the site, aud then an appropriation from oongreas must be obtained, A dispatch from Bt Petersburg Bays The Norosti, in sn editorial says that Kussia will maintain the ludepeud snoe of Corea and that if Japan oon tlnues intriguing Kuaaia may be forced to oooopy the peninsula. Japan must oonsider that if she wishes to acquire Corea this means war with Kuaaia. With the tobsldeuoe of the waters which overwhelmed a great part of New England, figures of losses sus tained in the section will be oonsider ably more than f '.1,000,000. Thia does not luolude the wugot to laboring men and women through suspension of manufacturing aud othor Industries. Six lives hare been lost Andrew F. Burleigh, the well-known attorney of Heattle, will ooutlnue to re main reoelrer of the Northern Paoiflo Railroad Company in Oregon, Wash ington, Idaho and Montana. Circuit Judge Gilbert, of Portland, and Dis- triot Judge C. H. Hanford so dcolded in decision handed down in the federal courtroom at Betattle. A dispatch from Kobe sayt the kins of Corea it still at the Kuaiian legation in Seoul. Internal uprisings ooutlnue. It Is rumored that Japau ia making ad raucea to Kuaaia with a view of arrang lug dual oontrol iu Corea. It la be Herod the Marquia Yauiagata, while in attendance upon the csart' oorona tton, will negotiate a treaty of al liauoe. Although the offlulali at Cranin'i shipyards in Philadelphia say they have received no special orders to rush the three warships, the MaaaaohuaetU, the Brooklyn aud the Iowa, to oompletion. beoauae of the peuding trouble with Spain, there la, nevertheless, an air of activity about the yard which oon traits strougly with the reoeut dull neas there. Mist woman made a United without THE PACIFIC STATES GLEANINGS FROM ALL PARTS OF THE NORTHWEST. Edith M. Day, the young who, in the spring of 181)4, trip by railroad around the BUitos aud through Mexico touching her foot to the ground, died in San Franciaoo. The scheme for the trip waa devised by rail road men oi i'ortiaud to offset the at tention giveu to Miss Nellie Bly't trio around the world. One huudred aud fifty ftve-tael runs of opium were waahed ashore at the logging oamp of Edward Latour, near Utaalady, Wash. The opium it valued at 15,000, aud it tuppoaed to bave been part of the oargo of a small smug gling tloop whioh left Victoria laat week. The sloop. It is lunrxtaed. waa wrecked during the severe gale of laat week ana the men drowned, expert I atiou, who waa appointed w examine the oity offlolara books of Walla Walla, has submitted bit report to the city. The report It from Juue 1, 1886, aud shows a total deficit of f 3,4.1, divided between the oity treas urer aud two ex-inarshala. The ahort agea, so the report aays occurred through ucgllgfuoe on the part of the oity clerk, who oolleoted the delln quent taxes for the marshal The United BUtes supreme oourt bat decided the Stanford oaae in favor of cwuiura. i ue uue or. the case is the Uulted States vs. Jane L. Stan ford, executrix of Leland Stanford, de eased. It involves the Individual lia bility of stockholders in the Central Paoiflo Kallroad Company for the debt due the United Statce on bouda Issued in aid of the Central Paoiflo under the California oouatltutlou. Bhlpplng circles of the world are greatly interested in the voyage of the Britiah ship Auspioee, bound from Santa Rosalie. Mexico, to Kuul and with a valuable oargo of corner or. More than eight ruouths have paased sinoe she left port, and ainoa thn nothing baa been heard of the thin. The underwriters are oonaiderlng the advisability of paying the insurance on the oargo and Teasel, amounting to tS0,000. Maws of Towns and Count! la tb Growing IUUi of Orogon, Washing ton. Idaho and Montana Coadonsod for Busy It.ad.ra-Or.goa. The oarabopt at La Grande are being thoroughly overhauled and repaired, A auautitv of finishing lumber was washed np on the beach between Cape Lookout and the Neatuoca river last week. The power-house for Forest Grove' electric light plant is about completed and the builidns ia ready to receive the machinery. Marabfleld't fine new publio uhool building wat opened for use laat week and the people are delighted with the plant and the work. It it proposed by the Catholics of The Dalles to build, during the early part of 1BU7. a magnificent church build log, the oost of which it to be $13,000 to f 16,000. The oounty oourt of Umatilla bat opened the gate on the North Fork bridge and everyone bat been admitted to free travel over the toll road until further notice. Farmert in Sherman oounty are said to be hauling seed wheat from the rail road to their farms, they having told too much wheat laat fall, not leaving themaelvea enough for teed. ..It It expected that work on the Rat tlesnake road in Watoo oounty will be gin next week. A petition will presented to the oounty oourt April to open the Gordon ridge approach. A pocket of rich ore wat ttruck the Old Tom Payne mine, in the Poca hontaa district in Eastern Oregon, About ten yeart ago a pocket wat found in the mine from which $13,000 wat taken in one week. A drive of 100.000 feet of logt bat been received at the Dilley aawmilL The mill will start up soon and 400, 000 feet of logs will be brought down before the water it too low. The logi are from Patton't valley. A Tillamook dairyman baa made an experimental thipmeut of butter China. Under perfeot oonditiont, the butter waa landed in fair maps, and wat told so at to realize a better figure than if marketed at home. The board of directors of Milton have decided to oontinue the school two months longer than wat originally intended. Thit will make a full eight mouths term, the longest held by any town In Umatilla oounty this year. The Paoiflo Express Company and the O. K. N. Co. bave offered a re ward of $50 for the arrest and convio tlon of the men who robbed the agent at Ueppuer. Thia, with the sheriff offer, makes the reward offered $100. All the logging oamps of the Grand Koude Lumber Company up the river from La Grande have been closed down. The river is gradually rising and it ia probable that the spring log drive will be oommenoed in a short time. Word bat been received from Bel glum, sayt the Pendleton Eaat Ore, ogniau, that Polydor Moeua, who shipped cavalry horses from Umatilla county to that oountry, has oloaed his aooounta aud finds that he but lost money on the deal The board of regenta of the ttate normal school at Weston held a meet' lug last week and aooepted the bid of Gibson & Cole to do the carpenter work for the turn of $633. The work in queatiou it the building of a lady's hall additiou to the school building at Weston. I no Williams brothers are prepar Ing to build two boats on the Snake river, near Ontario, A large pump twelve incnet in diameter, aud an engine of 100 hone power to run the pump will be put In one of the boats. The other will be a tug, used for haul Ing supplies. It it estimated that the milk from fully 1,000 oowt It delivered daily to the throe oreameriet at Tillamok, to say nothing of the milk used in private oreameriea and dairies. A total of 80, 000 pounds per day for the three creameries It about the highest re- oelptt for laat season. A farmer ou the Wild Horse, in Umatilla oounty, who hat eight oats, report! gophers quite sea roe on bit premises. Tweuty squirrels a day, he aays, it no nuusual catch for hit cats. Coyotes live largely ou squirrels, but owing to tholr fondness for mutton and fowl, their numbers have been largely reduoed by scalp hunters. The Gypsum Plaster Company, of Uarrisburg, hat ooutraoted for the de livery of 6,000 tout of gypsum from the deposit near Harriaburg to the oompany't workt at Lime Spur, a dia tanoe of about five miles. The oon, tractors are to deliver the 6,000 tons between the first of March and the 8 lit of December, for $5,600. Washington. there will be a jury term of oourt In Kittitas oounty, begiuuing March 10 Silas Fisher hat sued Spokane for f 16,000 lor injuries reoeived from driv- lug into a ditch. The new ferry at the Blockhouse orossiug over the Chchalii river has been oompletod. Mr. Bovee ia expected soon in Oakes dale to start the creamery, whioh that town hat to long labored to get under way. Charles Gray, of Entiat, it making arrangementa to put in oomplete box making machinery at the Entiat mills thit tpring. Many of the farmert of Kittitas oounty pay four aud five cents a pound tor beans, instead of raising enough for home oouaumptlon. The annual report of the state board of dental examiners shows that certifi cates bave been issued to 109 practi tioners during the year. The Kirby Uightower lumber mill, two miles from Sedro, was destroyed by fire lsst week. The loss is estimat ed at $3,600, with no insurance. The mill, it is said, will be rebuilt at onoe. Albert Lund aays that he hat run out about 1,000,000 feet of logt from upper Gray't river, in Cowlitt oounty thit winter, of which about 800,000 feet were of tpruoe, The .Snake River Fruitgrowers' Association hat leased the fruit farm! on Snake river to J. B. Tabor for a number of yeart. The oonaidoration It $3,600 for the first year and $600 addi tional or each tuoceasive year. The present season promises to be s very lively one for Cattle Rock and vicinity. Already extensive prepara tions are being made to put in opera tion all the shingle and taw mills at an early date that bave been shut down the past year or to, and other Indus trie! are talked of. The bee industry in the oounties near Wbatoom la a flourishing one, and is rapidly growing. Laat year nearly a thousand bivea were told in Wbatoom, and an order of 600 hives it just being finished np for a local dealer. Three work trains are toon to be put on the O. K. & N. between Colfax and Riparia, hauling graveL The roadbed is to be oovered with gravel at a rem edy for the dust that provel to auuoy Ing to travelers on the line during the summer time. A mast meeting of the citizens of Snohomish waa recently held and reso lution! adopted condemning the aotion of the city oounoil in refusing to revoke the lioense of the Gold Leaf saloon, al though a petition for inch abolition, signed by 670 citizens, had been pre sented to the oounoil aaking for tuch aotion. Captain L. M. Lambert, aid-de-OAmp to tbeoommander-in-cbief of the Grand Army of the Republic, and instruct or of military science in the publio schools for Washington and Alaska, bas iaaued a circular to all county school superintendent! and principals of publio schools in towns of 6,000 inhabitants or over, setting forth the benefit! to pupili of school drilL J. Williami. the Indian wbo wai oonvioted of murder in the aeoond de gree for killing another Indian near the British line in Skagit oounty, baa been reoeived at the Walla Walla peni tentiarv for fifteen years. Thit it the oaae in whioh an appeal wat taken to the tupreme oourt, because it waa claimed the ttate oourt! had no juris diction over the Indian. At the reoent examination of teach' eri at Colfax, forty-six applicants pre. tented themaelvea. Only forty-one oompluted the examinations, and of these but twenty -one moceeded in pass' Ing well enough to teach. The greatest tumbling block, ai usual, waa the test branches, arithmetic and grammar, al though the quueationi on theory aud practloe were extremely difficult A new scheme for "bagging" wild geese haa been invented by an ingeui oui farmer lad and was put to a piac tioal test a few daya ago in Wilbur. The scheme oonsists of a dozen or more trout-hooks and lines. The hooks are baited and tied to sagebrush roots or firmly anchored to pegs driven into the ground somewhere where the goes are in the habit of feeding. A watch is kept for the geese, aud when one it caught it ia easily told from the great oom motion caused. It is said that when two or three geese in the tame flock are trapped in thit manner any one oan ride up to within easy gunshot of the nock before they will fly. Idnho. George T. Murray, of Cottonwood, itiano oounty, nat boon granted an original pension. The star mail service between Gran geville and Raymond will be increased to three timet a week from March 3. At a largely attended meeting held in Wardner, $1,000 waa subscribed, and work will soon be oommenoed building a new ohurch for the Methodists. Farmert bave oommenoed plowing in Juliaetta. A larger percentage of grain will be town than htBt year, due to the advauoe in the price of wheat Flax will be the principal crop on the reservation. A large number of sheep are being fed in the vicinity of Lewiston. C. Thiesen, James Madden and Riggs Bros, all have large bunches aggregat ing 3,600 head, that they are fattening for the spring market Kigga Bros. sold lust week a carload at 8 cents. Thia ia oonaidered a good tale. The oomplaiut recently made by the oitisena of Antelope, Idaho, that the waters of the Big Lout river had been turned out on the publio lauds by a ditch company aud had created damage to settlers, will be inquired into by the government A special agent of the general land offloe baa been ordered there to investigate. Parties are building a ttoamboat in Lewiston for use on the rivers in a big mining scnenie, representing an invest ment of $30,000. The craft will be fitted with a aixty horsepower engine tor motire power, and a forty horse power engine for operating mining ma chinery, with a hydraulic apparatus, appliances lor crushing quarts, assay ing ore aud separating flour gold from black sand. Montana. A party of leasers bare started work on the Stevens mine again. They are sinking a new sbart near the gulch, There is little question but that the new light acetylene will become the popular illumluant The shares in the new company recently incorporated in Butte bave about all been taken up by oitiaena oi that city, and It la expected that oousumers of the new light will soon be supplied. The oompletion of the new concen trating plant of the Montana Ore Pur chasing Company ia being rapidly pushed ahead. Already several of the vannert and jigs are running. Thia plant when oompletod will be capable of handling 600 tons of ore daily. New boilers are also being added in order to furnish the increase of power re quired for the new plant If all reports are true Helena is to be turned Into a mining oamp aa the re oent discoveries of copper there would indicate that the find ia of more than ordinary merit Years ago the claim waa abandoned, but waa again located on January I, at "96." United States Marshal MoDemiott haa secured an option on the find and will no doubt work it, at the assays show great values in silver and ooppet More than ever before now. Snan- iardt will win vlotorles by cable. ITALIANS DEFEATED DISASTROUS RESULTS OF BATTLE IN ABYSSINIA. Thousand, of th. King's toldl.r. K. porfd Klll.d-O.n.r.1 B.mlorl Said io H... Co.nn.llUd guleld-i-ubl" Ks.lt.mont nt a Ulgh T.n.lon. Rome, March O.-It it reported here today that General Barateri. command Jt Italian forces in Africa, who suffered another tevere reverse at the haJdttfthe Shoant, while advancing on Abbacarlma, wat wounded. Ihe Italian army wa. divided column, under Generals A lbe tone, Arlmondi and Darbormida, with a brigade under General Euiena, at I re serve. The Italian! captured the passe! leading to Adowa, the capital of ligre. General Albertone'i column then ad vanced on Abbaoarima. It wat toon afterward! attacked by the Shoau army and compelled to retreat The other column! were unable to render him as aistance, at they were shortly after ward! engaged in defending themselves against large numbers, aud eventually retired behind Beliesa. , Aooording to oorrespoudeuta in Africa of the People Romano, half the Italian artillery and ammunition and pro visions were lost Other ad v iocs re port 8,000 Italian soldiers killed, and among them Generals Albertone aud Darbormida. It ia reported that General Baratori, when he became aware of the full ex tent of disaater to hit successor, thot himself. At the ministry of war this was discredited. At evoniug wore ou aud the worst newt of the Italian de feat waa ooufirmed, the Inhabitants gave way to rage against the govern ment Bands of young men began parading the ttreett shouting, "Down with Crispi," but were promptly dis persed by the polioe. All troops throughout the oity were placed under arms and patrolaof mounted gendarmes were ordered to the leading thorough fares. Nothing but the terrible defeat of the Italian! ii talked of In the cafe! and other publio places. The Shoaus are .ui.i r huA hmm well armed with modern riflea and cannon, and the en tire force opposed to the Italian! it esti mubut rn huvn been over 60.000 men. It is impossible to exaggerate the consternation wnicn tne news ui me I td inn defeat in Abyssinia bus caused in all circle! in thii city. Newspaper! da not even seek to minimize the dis aster in the slightest degree. Every hnnr murks the aDDearauoe of fresh edition! giving additional details of the uewi and more particularly oi tne man ner in which it has been received and opinions of editorial writers upon the disaster and the campaign. All this serves to increase the public excitement which is constantly grow ing. The whole of the garrison of the city ia confined within the barrack! for fear of disorder. PORTLAND MARKETS. VALIDITY OF BONDS. All North.ru I'acIHe Mortgages Alleged to It. Void. Milwaukee, March 6. The biggest sensation that has yet dveloped in the Northern Pacific railroad receivership case waa precipitated today by the filing of pleaa of the Wisconsin Central Railroad Company to the original, amended and supplemental bills of the Farmers' Loan & Trust Company, ou which the receivership it based. The companies make the claim that the Northern Paoiflo company had abso lutely no authority whatever to issue any of the numerous mortgages with which the road is encumbered, and tliat, in consequence, all bonds issued nuder the mortgage!, to the amount of nearly $50,000,000, are null and void, It is claimed the Northern Paciflo was prohibited by oongress from making or executing mortgages on its properties, unless with the consent of congress. This, it 1. olaimed, the oompany never secured, except in one instance, and in that the lien created was long ago satisfied. Nana. il and the 1'nle. St Petershnrir. March R Muinr. General Svotlisky, governor of Irkutsk, teleBmnh hern, in rnnlv to nnnrin. ra. gardiug the reports as to Dr. Nausen'a return, mat x eter ivauowitcn xtuun nareff. who trades at UstvniiRk. nmlnr date oi November 10, wrote to the mer chant, Kuchuareff, at Yakutsk, as fol lows: "We learn Dr. Nanaen has rpioh! the pole, hai discovered hitherto mi. known lands, aud haa now rettirnnd Consequently, the Arctio ocean hat now i i j . ueeu explored. Governor Svotliskv adds that tham no confirmation of this newt from other sources, but he had instructed a mem ber of his administration In the Ver hoynansk distriot to proceed to Usty ausk to verify the news and to aid the expedition, if neoessary. Peter Ivanowitch Kuchnareff is the accredited agent of Dr. Nansen, and haa been intrusted with a supply of Eskimo dog! for his expedition. His trading post at Ustyansk Is on the Arctic ocean, at the mouth of the Yana river, just south of Llfkovislund, one of the new Siberians, and lest than 300 miles east of the Lena delta. Canada Uppoiws a K.l.1on. v w. auiu au uuioiai .1 . ... a 1 1 . . .. uv-uuuiouw .am ociore pari i meiit, it aaaau WOIUIV (Xll linLUttLl t, 1( lg evident that the Canadian authorities are resisting the pressure from the United States government for a revi sion of the Behring tea regulations, on the ground that Iha r,li... 1... ... - .-uo 1UICUWUU of the reprisal Is to destroy the Cans- ' ' r"gio sealing. The Whole mnttfr la ant l iviiu iu a report troin Coetigan, minister of marine and fisheries, which shows from statistics that in spite of harassing regulations the sealing industry it not decreasing in importanoe. The Canadian yield for 1895 wat 18.000 skint more than the average for the past seven years. The rerairt Ain.ln.d u . not becoming extinct the need for revi tion of regulation! does not exist Oppowd to th. War Tnlh. London. Man-h k ti urriiu CIS- pateh to the Times aays that before the budget committee of the reichstag Ad miral Holman deprecated the reckless agitation for a big navy, and declared all annuhAnd,.K- -a . . . . -frvUul,v,ul Hl tne Dissolution of the reichatair vmaln. nn .1.1. - ui una Ques tion were groundless. . i in early 0rwl fruit! reporwu a a- - - . bep..tweok,li"Pri keueujoyeu neas. KooeipU of frnit and . ii. .i.t The egg duoe worn ih" fluctuating, with the e tr fla nlgner wan I uirvnroduoe IU OOUIH J "-' r- - were mantained. No change! ported in groceries. vegetables and Shipping trnus luce mar- bull- Di-Min pro- . . market is prioe a i week. quotation! are re wheat offering! Doll of the wheat in baud! stir as 60c; little i quotod i to ms. M arbaL There ii practioally no local . . u.ulnta re small. 0 . . ....Jl..,. rnmrted, i- ornected for the rost it-ia vurv little season. i" , the country, and what change. ...ill muka lint lit from now ou j .v,. murUpt. Prloci are ii .. Walla Walla, 60 lOUUTIB. . Valley, 02 to 03o per busheL Produce Marh.U Fwoa-Portland. Salem. Cascadia and DavCn! are qWjftS Uoiddrop, $2.1: nflk Jf-f !. . .,..,i v. ixi5: erahain, -MK); tuper- ""oaSooJ white are quoted weak, a, 27c; milling, g'-jt g---- Kol edoaUarequoUxlaaiollowi: Bag! Sb.25; bairela, 4.60ia7.00; cases, -.1 Ti Ti.nnthv. ifl.OO per ton ; cheat, .UK) ; clover, t7; oat, 6(30.50 ; wheat, LSY-Feed barley, $14.00 per ton; "Tahran. $13.00; shorts. $14; middlings, llSa-V-lX); rye, 85(ijb7, inr iwlltal. Burrsa Fancy creamery la quoted at 55c; iaucy dairy, 45c; lair to good, 35c ; common, 17c per roll. u'.,.,.. :Uuf iirMMin. 25(i30c per 1VM1VH -' " n . - . tack; Meets, common, J.c; Merceu, 3'g per pound. , dnionb Urek-on, OJSOOc per tack. PnnLTuv Chickens, hens, $3.60 pel dozen; mixed. ii.5Utf3.00 per dozen; ducks, $3(!J4 50; geeee, o.0U; turkeys, live, H(iJ!h: per pouuu; oreniwu ,.. . n nu, iliiuin. Cusasa Oregon mil cream, 14(3 lo;t per pound; hall cream, ucjtsim, ia America. lOdtllc. Thoi-ical raorr Caliioruit lemons, 13.00(43.50; choice. i6O(S3.U0; bicily, .U NI. Ananas. 1.75w2.60 per buncu; California navels, $2.60(9X1X1 per box; ;....L. t-imfUkl Der dozen. utumpciv-i m - .... , , , Uusuon Vkuktallss Cabbage, A ii.- onilii;. new. 76480 per pound artichokes, 7c per dozen; sp outa. 6 per pound ; cauhuower, $2.75 pel crate, u0oa1 per dozen; hothouse lettuce, 40 perdoieu. FttksH r'BUiT rears. inter Nellie, $1.60 per box; cranberries, tl pel barrel: fancy spplea, $l(glw&; common Ain.t7!ii' tier box. Dmiko Fauns Applet, evaporated, bleached. 4(S4c; sun-dried, 3,(g4c; pears, sun aud evaporated. 6(flbc plums, unless. 3iu4c: prunes, 3w6 per pound. VVool Va.le. 10c, pei pound; East ern Oregon, oHc. Hops Choice, Oregon 4oo per pound; medium, neglected. Nuts Almonds, toft shell, 9(3 11c per pound: paper shell, 10vjjl2'c; new crop California walnuts, soft shell, H(!il2)jc; standard walnuts, 12(jl3c; Italian chesnuta, 12)fc(gl4c; pecans, 13u$ltJc; Brazils, 12tdl3c; filberts, 14(gl6c; peanuts, raw, fancy, 0(3 7c; roasted, 10c; hickory nuts, tiiglOc; oo coauuts, 90c per dozen. Provisions Eastern hams, medium, I idyllic per pound; hams, picnic, 7'uc; breakfast bacon lOjvQlOc; ahort clear sides, 8'n(st9c: dry salt aides, 7).(j8c; dried beef hams, 12 (gl3c; lard, compound, in tint, 1 lard, pure, in tins, eV,10c; pigs' feet, 80s, $3.60; pigs' feet, 40s, $3.26; kits, $1.25. Oregon smoked hams, 10c pet pound; pickled hams, 8)c; boueiost tiauia, 7c; bacon, lu34c; dry salt sides, uJ4cjlard, 6-pound pails, 7ac; 10s, 7c: 6oa, 7'4c; tierces, 7c Country meats sen at prices according to grade. limns. Dry hidee. butcher, sound, per pound, ll12c; dry kip and calf skin, lOy 11c; culls, 3c less; salted, 00 lbs and over, 6c; 60 to 00 lbs, 44c; 40 and 60, 4c; kip and veal skins, 10 to 30 lbs, 4c; calfskin, sound, S to 10 lbs, 6c; green, uusalted, Ic iest ; culls, l-2c less ; sheepskins, shear lings, 10ctl5c; short wool, 20(g30c; meuiuiu, dU(S4uc; long wool, 60(g70c. M.rohaudl.o Uarhoi. Salmok -Columbia, river No. 1. tails, $1.25(jl.b0; No. 2. talis, $2.25(32.60; fancy, tio. 1, flats. $1.76(41.86; Alaska, No. 1, tails, $1.20(SI.30; No. 2, talis, $1.91 Bxans Small white, No. 1, 2'-40 per sound; butter, 3c ; bayou, l?4c; Lima, 4c Cokdaoi Manilla rope, 1-inch, u quoted at Sc, and Sisal, tttfc per pound. Baos Calcutta, 4c Knnin 1.1. .1.1.... .1 e.. . . . . u...-u,uwi v, oc, extra j, o 1 dry granulated, 634c; cube crushed and pvnuereu, o;nc per pound ; 4c per pound discount ou all grades lor prompt cash . half barrels, 4c more than barrels; maple auitar, 16iS16o per pound. VS""06 Kic' 3i0i Rio, 21 tffr.. lor; 21 22c; Mocha fUSilc PadangJava. 30c; Palemban. Java mzic; Lahat Java. 23t25c; Ar buckle't Alokaska and Lion. $21.80 pei 100-pound case; Columbia, $21.30 pei 100-pound case. RK.V7i8land' 4-50(g5 per tack; Ja pan. $4.00(34.60. ' Coal Steady; domestic, $6.00(37.61 pe ton; for Igu, $8.60(311.00. M.a Mark.t. R. 12 ... . . t"rV i ' p ."r1?1 '25: cows, Pound! ' bee'' im0 P8' t..n a i . ' v"s-" u reused mut ton, 4'.c per pound. V sal dross, small, 6(g6c: lanre S 4c per pound. ' 8 H.a-L:. .1..; . rii. i- Cl nevy. $3.25(3 -.uotov., ou,n; per pound. SAN FRANCISCO MARKETS Floor Net pjm), . t. tras. $4.00(34.10 m-, . JL"nl". tras H Kil 5i (in. , uaaera- ex choice. 72,c7brewing: 85! m 7 Ww!.5: fanrv T,' , .nrprise, choice 7ii7-K;rT good to cuoice, Uitf.oc; poor to fair Hilfl boo; gray, 75asit lwr' Hors-guotable at 3(35c per pound Potatoh Sweets 11 t0- .V? bank., Oregon, 45370. ,&ai Ba-Ojuom-oOtstSOc per sack hormrMhy San Joaquij , piS,. F7. rSiHiE' S35g Koos-store.llc; ranch, 1213o CHssss-l-ancy. mild, new iio . common to tnod 9iii. t- ' Ul812,,5 ic. 6c8c: sL iU??nAD,er- OLDER COLTSfi NO CALL FOR LESStHaJ YEAR.OLD3. nigh-lrie4 UuriM ful Baadlla, ,od 0"7'"Hr u . .. SiKl " nur tloDS-Ulseollan.oua, i Tho horse mrUn, age than formerly. our th Call. A P draft oolts wr- i..V.Hl"s ree years old: now i- roadsters, there is little Sf?H younger than Ave year. 0M J best market! require six t-w i three years old until told iJl H "work for their board" around the farm. Thit ca 1t icoomDlislied with i,o j. .. . . . ourall . tne production of a tal.bi, 1 hnrui nulla ttm . V niahed nrxn manv f. priced horse it produoed lt.in'f r.,lllt if Aaraf..l I ... ,U4 driving, for thit hnru J?. mannered and kindly diin,i 1 i.v.uv..d. "o very mtjr, condition! aud turroundin h to the production of flrstch' riage horses will long stand 1x7 mtM w.. .u iiLi i, , n , a ... , nlrnln wilhln uikl.l. ... ,. S - 7 ".ou uui an iw to enter. Thit position ii mT noted breeder and It it correct Cora and Cob Meal vs. tmJl xue question it often uuj which it the more valnaM. . and cob ground togother or ej alone. Consider.,!. ... 1 feeding bat been oonducted ui liuht on this ounMiaii ...j . i erally, tay t Indiana Corn Csitf information secured fa von & J ing of the corn and cob togoibal assumed that the pure total ij the digestive organs aud ii ily permeated by the digestincj in the oorn and cob meal, thl ing the mass more poroni j At the Maine Iieiperimai J Jordan fed two lots of pigief days, one receiving oorn udeti the other pure meuL Then i. little dillereuoe in tht gai. each lot Khelton at UmKu.1 tion lound that it required of com and cob meal to a pounda of gain when fed to pin it required u?U pounds of pun maae an eoual sain, in a. ing experiment Professor Shdu secured results favorable to At the oob with the oorn Manas.ui.ut or Mum, Unless very careful prtrruku for oonserving the fertility i mannros, it it far better uvii ary oiroumstanoes to draw tba ly from the stables during rJ, pastures, meadbwt or field, sil be devoted to oorn the oooiij Spread thinly from tht ip cumstanoes and kinds of oof must to a limited extent, when, where and bow to t?, ures, bnt a good rule to keep t it to spread thinly and ertti; turfaoe in the fall and sui; where plants are growiu k nature's method of utiliiiif W 4 vegetable products. It if aj good plan to plow mauunoif k diatcly after it ia spread. u,: it put upon the fields Is faS have largely lost ita fertiliiistC nents by tpring. They fill found in the soil or stored if i roots ready for the oomiiif will do them no barm to ft the oorpse, sinoe the spirit b A departed. Since all the nuv be applied in the best possible on aooount of season and it it well to preserve u fun; that made in the latter part oft: tnr anil nrina until SeDteUW It will be fairly fine, lieu tpread on the fresh plowed harrowed in preparatory to H wheat or rye, or it may oe iii over grass lands. Butter Katloofc Prnfniunr Sanborn. SPeakini' tioal butter rations mtk K hay, out from ground drtiw tnra nr riv art. nioB. I'6" bright clover hay with the saved, sound ooru-nieal sud ij rota will make the beet amount, aroma and tew will ml Jnuin tla nnuntiCT of the butter, especially if n large quantities. I tp8 nniatitntA fnr nnrllineaL I substitute for fine ground m not crushed, but flour be turu' production and not to oonfl nor to carrying two pounu. digest one with Its inte"J digestion. We cannot tfforf 30 cent corn for steers, but we oan. Oats will w r n .uA isva i-Via nnrll WUU't w mo uuktvi se , . f oil meals give a less dltl poorer texture. A m cotton-seed meal is favorst') tity if a lagre amount given, ana in tmau . -11 . i l.l JafltrS. V-i an mat i wuum ponndt of meal in tow grain. Mlcelln", It istmlttaketoconflnWi to grass at any time u - i They need gtain. The sntumn is the mo" t time for the hog. autumn than in any othei : it neither too hot nor too ew- I Hem disposed to . 't timet snouia uo L.t common yard, to at to be J of the nestt, and pieu VMiuil fmm this lnCllDMV , Twnntv thousand VUUZ.A were tent from Tacoma v. a i ... v. .klnnml to vauauuui-auDM.. - is the aeoond shipwe"' i from Taooma of Ust year i Our chief aim in iZJ dairy, should be to tFr , nearly aa possible to ff titntes we use. M,h,'rfn furnish material tot a it is true economy to "P is wsntlng from tom a deposit of pyrittJr yok yo- r r t ii f: a ga, Lumpkin ooumji opened up.