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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1908)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, THURSDAY EVENING," AUGUST 13. 1008. IS r A AS TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE. The importance of this announcement, the one to which I have carefully led up, can be seen when I assert I am in absolute control of a corporate institution adequate to cope with the machinery of the SYSTEM. I shall make demonstrations of its power to perform what I have predicted for it. t To get the voltage of my dynamo, keep in your head the financial factors I have so insistently urged upon your attention. 1 The SYSTEM'S billions are made by its power to fix and sway the stock market values of the 70 billion of securities which the American people now hold. 2 The System's "right" to use the people's money deposited in the banks and trust companies of the Nation supplies it with the millions necessary to the process of fixing and swaying the values of American securities. 3 The stock market must be the theatre of opera tions for whosoever purposes to dislodge the System's head on the American people." All these necessary condi tions are here in the " National Stock LEGAL NAME, BAY STATE COMPANY. CAPITAL, ONE BILLION DOLLARS; 20,000, 000 SHARES. CAN INCREASE TO ANY NUMBER OF BIL LIONS. FREE FROM TAXATION. BACKED BY A SOVEREIGN STATE. NOW HAS 80,000 STOCKHOLDERS. INTENDS TO HAVE 20,000,000 STOCKHOLD- ERS. THE ONLY CORPORATION IN EXISTENCE TODAY WHOSE SCOPE AND LEGAL AND STRATEGICAL POWERS ARE UNLIMITED. CHARTERED TO OWN AND OPERATE BANKS, TRUST COMPANIES, RAILROADS, INDUSTRIES AND TO BUY AID SELL AND HOLD ITS OWN AND ANY STOCK IN EXISTENCE AND TO CARRY ON ANY AND ALL KINDS OF BUSINESS. Today I am in absolute control- of this extraordinary institution, the only one of its kind on earth. I am its president and have the proxies of nearly all its stockholders, with special instructions from them to elect my own board of directors. "National stock" is the one instrument that unites all the privileges and attachments essential for a pro longed contest with the System. .1 know the how, when and why of the System's movements. I am now ready to put this instrument to work. That skeptical, wedded-to-old ways Wall street and the System and the Tress may instantly see that my claims, notwithstanding they read Jules Verneish, and sound "business is business," I point them to the fol lowing : In the past, as these three classes, Wall street, the System and the Press know, I have never failed to secure " ',ie, and then their money sup port. However radical my plans seemed at the start-off, time demonstrated their soundness. Boiled down, this l what I propose tu do. In "National Stock," I have a corporation with un-' limited capital stock. The stock I shall offer in prac tically unlimited amounts to the people, constantly ad vnncin" the price in the open markets, that every buvcr may, if he wishes, sell what he has bought at a profit. This means that every buyer of "National Stock" will become an agent for the making of new stockholders amongst their friends and associates. The proceeds of the sale of stock will be used in active operations in the market, with and against the System, as seems best in my judgment, in underwriting and any other ways that will return the institution profit. Illustration : J Whenever in the past I have appealed to the people in the interest of a stock and they have responded, the money they paid has always gone, less my pay for the job, to the corporation whose stock I had sold, thereby leaving me helpless to protect its price in the market. Bear in mind, there are two classes of people who buy stocks: Speculators and investors. The marketing of a stock is only a first move in a stock manipulator's business. To be successful, lie must establish- his proposition on recognized trading basis. This can only be done by deliberately making a market for it. Example: My first moves in wielding the power of "National Stock" for the benefit of its stockholders, the public, will be certain and aggressive operations in American Smelters, National Lead, Trinity and First National -Copper, St. Paul Railroads and Yukon gold. An event still soggy in the public mind will show the procedure. At a time when the market was hardly out of the convulsions of the panic, and when even the Sys tem could not sell any stock to the public, I undertook for the American Smelting group of capitalists, "The Guggenheims," to sell to the public 700,000 shares of Yukon Gold incidentally worth then and now $12 to $15 per share which I did in two hours on Saturday, March 28, at from $." (par) to $T. Ry the rules that gov ern such transactions 1 turned over to "The Guggen heims" the proceeds of the shares I had sold, less my pay, thereby leaving the stock unprotected and exposed to the attacks of the System, which, fearful of my suc cess, jumped on its value, thereby inducing speculators to believe they had been tricked and causing them to sell, leaving the market price under the thumb of the Svstem. Had "National. Stock" handled Yukon, the monev paid by the public would have been retained to support the stock in the market, buying all the stock that was offered, either by those who wished to sell for profit or bv those who, bv selling fieelv. wished to attack the value, the result being that in a short time the stock would be firmly established on a rock-bottom basis' on its intrinsic value, $12 to $1"), and impregnable to specu lative attacks. After this had been accomplished, the money received for the stock then outstanding would have been paid over to "The Guggenheims." With the resources of "Xational Stock" this could be done, 'not only in Yukon, but in the other stocks which I have mentioned, and in any others to which 'Xational Stock" directs its powerful attention and stocks which the System's machinery has perched too high can be yanked down to their proper level by "National Stock." Thatthere shall be no misunderstanding as to the ' character of "National Stock," I say right here at the beginning of its career that the chief theatre of its first operations will be the stock markets of New York, Rns ton and Philadelphia, and eventually London, Paris. Per lin. The funds derived from the sale of its shares will be applied in exactly the same manner as the System uses the people's savings in banks and trust companies to sway and fix the prices of the stocks in which it deals. You already know something of the profit possibili ties of such operations; but. conducted on the scale per mitted by the resources I shall command, results will be as stupendous and as certain as the System's own pro cesses. Whatever "National Stock" sets out to do in the market, its ready and unencumbered millions will enable it to crush through in spite of the System's opposition. Those same ready and unencumbered millions will be as effective in forestalling any stock move of the Svstem with which "National Stock" does not concur. A Word Here: It has developed since the writing of my first advertisement that It la 9 physical Impossibility to print In this space oven ir. this full page, what 1 Intended the plnns of "National stork " I have, therefore, decided to lirenk off here and rush the full story into a pamrhlot. This means that the first necessary action which confronts me is the getting of this pamphlet Into the hands of every man and woman In America. With my story of "National stork." Its intentions and plans In the hands of the people. tho people will buy "National Stock." If the people buy National Stock" now at the market price, say $1.50 to t" per share, they will make a profit of at least .' ... to 760 per cent, for every dollar they. Invest now will turn i $10. which performance will cause the people, to ent huslas' I a! ! y back "National Stock" In Its battle apalnst the System. With tfie millions of th people's savings, and their enthusiastic barking "National Stock" will he able to bowl over the System in short order, and "National Rtock" will become the srmteet Instm menC of modern time for the rigl-.'ii.g of the po.pl.) a wrongs. I mlgtit'''a well admit before you go furtlu r timl those four advertisements havo been pubiwi.c , m m at a est of $150,000, for no other purpone than to get the . .i.ii. into n frame of mind where they must have the story of 'Nai.r.l Hto k the Ntory of Its plans and Intentions. I mean by mis that these al i it 1 1 semnnts were not puDllahed for tho pursue of booming 'National Htock' or for securing buyera for It now. hut solHy f..i to.- .o i of getting before the millions a document of too mm nil a rint ire to pub lish In a newspaper advertisement. 'I Ms n,. nn I Intend t. compel every man and women In America to k.m.i I ., ih0 p.imphl-t now, not next month or the month after next I. it now, 1 uy now be cause: 1 Everyone who gets It must real It. 2 Everyone whr reads It will a; otno l.tonnf . stockholder 'n "National Stock" Whjilu-r he bins ;i alngln slur. f. , u dollar and a half to two dollars, fit 1i0.fioo shares f..p J i .... t !. . ''ion. i ,,f no Import to "National Stock." What "N.iih.iu.l St.- k wnnts. must have, Is going to have, Is stockholder.'., a n'c ..f stock holders. It now haw rising 60,000, the largest n itnl f ,i;iv i l Tt. t poratlon It intends to only become i ::' i .r'ninci In n . i ; c in n rl "Nat.c;al TV r k . in ih. u-,irl(1 with the execution of the H t Increase thin number In less than fiO days 8 Everyone who reads this pamphlet will i. stockholder, but will becauwe of a certain do.-.n each pamphlet, create other stockholders. 4 Each day that goes bv will, because of tl,, ir.ir. of NlAtlonal Stock" nluns. ruust I lie lu K e of to mount higher. Stock Market Activity. ' This Is why I say everyone must have a copy now. rot when "National Stock" has advanced In tho markets to $10 per share Hear In mind, as my plans work out, the extensive advertis ing will mean increased activity In "National Slock" In the stock markets of the country, which, as I will steer It. will mnk for constantly advancing prices until tho excitement generated by "National Stock" will top allof the past nock market activities which I have created, notwithstanding: The culmination of my Amalgamation flotation caused mobs of buyers to surround the National City Rank, tho Standard oil bank, tho biggest bank In America day and night at the opening of subscriptions. The tre mendous activity am', rife of Trinity (1.000 per cent in less than 1.000 stock exchange hours) last yrnr brought such a mob of buy ers to the Stock Exchange, ns to cause a panic and the barring of all visitors. My Yukon campaign caused th calling of the New York police to Wall stteet to control the glial army of buyers who flocked to tlia: center, and the "l.awson Panic," In December, 1S04, dropped prices over $ 1 oo.oou.000 In three days. Also bear In mind another reason for great activities and rrloe advance. I will advert Ise -t hroughou t the world at the completion of each of my stock, market iIcoIh their evact history, showing In the result the big profits which have act rued to "National Stock," which profits will hn reflected nt once In increased activity and ad vance In the price of "National Stock." The arguments contained In this series of advertisements are not Intended to urg.- the puro.linae of "National Stock." They are solely fop the purpose of showing tho public all classes of the public that It Is n duty they .y themselves to send at once for the "National Stock" pn mpiilet s. which will be sent tree to all upon application. Later on, my advertising will be brutally brief In Its effort to induce the public to buy "National Stock" and biutally thorough in its assaults upon the stocks of which the "National Stock" has flr!-t gone short, and brass-l andedl y booming of the stocks fjf which It has first gmio long. '1 hose advertisements are solely for the purpose of getting L'a.nOO.OdO "National Stock" pam phlets into the hands of 20,000.000 people now. To that end I earn estly ask the following classes to apply at once for this pamphlet: Bankers, Brokers, Ministers, School Teachers, City and Town Offi cials, Presidents and Cashiers of National Banks, Presidents and Treasurers of Saving's Banks, heads of Labor Unions, Superin tendents of mines and Manufactories and other businesses, News paper Editors and Reporters, weekly and monthly periodical writers, Postmistresses and Postmasters, and savings bank de positors. T cull the attention of these particular classes to this pamphlet l.eeauso each copy will contain a document extraordinary In Itself and of vital Interest to taoli member of the classes I have enumer ated. NEW BANKS AND TRUST COMPANIES KX T K Ai "T FROM PAMPHLET. With the fund secured by the sale of "National Stock," banks nr..! trust con. panics will be established In which the people will deposit their money to be loaned 011' at rates of Interest only large t-ttough to conduct a legitimate bunking business and to make a fair return to stockholders. Today the Svstem banks exhibit state ments showing enormous earnings and surpluses, which. If their ib po.'.lts were loaned back in the people at fair rates, would he as impossible ns the palaces in which many of these banks and trust companies tire boused, cystine millions wrung from borrowers and returning nothing on t lie sin ciil. Example: In New England P.duv there Is 11 National Bank and Trust Company two of the s. ' h. New England controlled by the Svs'em. Their combined deposits belonging to the people am j 1 5. una. onn. and their combined stock, belonging to the System, has risen In value ft) a short period more than $12,000,000. The enor mous profits, fully set forth In tho annual statements of these In stitutions, which they have sipiii-ned from the community of New K'.tiand. In addition tu $3.fmi,..nn which Is i per cent annual In terest on the capital sic k ..f both, wore not accumulated by the produi tlon of anything marketable or by any recognized form of .i.l:.es. sior nn- t '. ey the .-.. ei "!e profits of legitimate bank ing, but t'lov me to.- rid, spoils of System manipulation of the pee) ie s deposits, augment. ! I i the wreck, by consolidation, of man-, of Nrw England's oldest end soundest bunking institutions. on fronting this situation "National Stock" will take a part of the proceeds of the sales of its stork or the profits made In Its stock market operations, and set up duplicate banking Institutions' alongside of these two The foundation of each will be an IdenJ etiarter that will bar even the owners of "National Stock" from curing directly or Indirectly any profits other than 5 per cent trpon ft.. . . I r 1 !-.'-... . All -. . -. 1 . . . V. - -a f 1 . rt .nnii.ll. n ih. uitRiauri in ine ninn 01 interest upon deposit ur iu purnnrm throughout New England In the form of reduced loan rates, not will "National Stock" retain for Itself the control or direction Of the Institutions Their management will be absolutely placed In th hands of the best of the old bank officials, who will be selected , from those who have been driven out of business, or from savtnfS bank officials. Aftor these facts have boen advertised, aa "National Stock", will advertise them. It in inevitable that the depositors of thoe ' System Institutions, When the opportunity In offered will transfer all or a great portion of their deposits to the new Institutions, and that the borrowers will secure their loans from the new Institutions), And the establishment of these two banking: Institutions by "Na tlonal Stork" will make easier the creation of similar Institutions) In the other large cities wherever the business men and depositors; are being exercised between the upper and nether millstones Of th System. GREAT PROFITS IN "NATIONAL STOCK" KXTIIACT "H" FROM PAMPHLET. ''National Stock " after It has made helpless the Rockefeller, ! Harrlmar.s and Morgans In the same way the System rendered help- . less the reople last October, after It has vast sums of cash In lt treasury and has banded together at least 1,600,000,000 of Intelll- . gent stockholders, will use these stockholders and lta vast resource V to convert bock to the people's ownership the great Industrial anil liiMiricuw institutions 01 tno cinuiir. ru miracie is promised nersw . hut the disintegration ln?vltable from the coups I shall Inaugurate will loosen the System's hold on the concerns and they will be) taken possession of and reorganized by "National Stock," In the) mere process of events. The backbone of "National Stock," which can. and will bring about these things is In Its stockholders. The more ttockholdern there are the greater will be Its power to accomplish these things that 1 have set down, the quicker the results from the ' application of that power and the richer the results to each stockholder. In buying es much "National Stock" as you can af ford, and In canvassing amongst your friends for additional stock holders bear in mind: 1 "National Stock" today Is selling at about $1.50 to $2.00 per share In the open markets of the country. 2 Every additional tfcockholder will cause the price to advance .: beyond what you pay for It. s Neither "National Stock." nor myself, nor any one connected with it, have any stork for sale, directly, to you or to any one. "National Stock" will he dealt In only In the open market, where all 1 have the privilege of buying and making the price. 4 All orders for stock should be sent to reputable New York, Philadelphia and Boston Stock Exchange and curb Brokers. 5 All money received by "National Stock" from the sale Of stock and all profit mado by It In any way will be the property of all stockholders alike. : 6 Not a dollar of "National Stork" funds or property comes to me. In profits, salaries, or In any way. "National Stock" starts with about a million cash. Before the public or the System are fairly aware that 11 has begun business this million will have been turned Into 40 millions by the selling: of 2,500,000 shares of "National Stock" at an average of $2 per share and 2.500,000 shares at an average of $4 per share, and with this $16,000,000 thus received It will have made profits of $24,000,000 . out of Wall and Sjate streets stock deals. , TREMENDOUS MARKET DEALS EXTRACT "C" FROM PAMPHLET. It Is common knowledge that In many of my previous stock .. market campaigns, whenever I predicted the rise or fall of a stock,, the System could make It go temporarily the other way by the sheer weight of money. As they did in Yukon so they did long: ago In ' Amalgamated. After I sold the stock to the public at 100 the Sya tern slaughtered Its price to 33, then accounting; me discredited, they allowed it to rise to 121. After Copper Range had gone from 10 to 50 the System drove it back to 21, then allowed It to rise to 105. Butte and Boston having- arisen on my advice from $2 to $48, was driven next to $14, then allowed to advance to $130. And so on through the list of all other stocks I have handled . against the System, even to the last two, American Smelters and ' St. Paul. At 57 I said to the public. Smelters will go to 100 and at 120 st. Paul will go to 175. Smelters, because of purchases by the people who absorbed mv advice, Immediately mounted to 73, when tho the System drove it back to below 60. Today It Is 102, two points higher than the 100 I predicted. St. Paul was driven back to 60. Now it Is 147. on Its way to the 175 I pointed to. To that System which has done all these things I have but a . final word to say Watch the activities of "National Stock." In Its rise you will see all your power ebb. When you read In one of : my advertleements that St. Paul, or Trinity, or Yukon, or First National, or Smelters. Is going to advance, it will advance and you will be powerless to prevent. When you read In one of my adver- j tlsements that one nt your arbitrarily boosted stocks Is going' to drop to its proper price level, that stock will drop to that level, and you cannot stay its fall. Watch them all go up or aown ss .National tstocK dictates ana : you will see the billions which you have stolen from people go back Into their pockets. w;atch the banks through which you robbed -them crumble and disappear and the giant Industries through Which you crush them begin to make fortunes for the people Instead of you. The power which will accomplish these seeming miracles Is the same power which his performed so often In the past at your own bidding, for your own enormous benefit In the hands of "National Stock." the Irresistible power of the people's money will be exer cised for your destruction and the vast product of the people's labor will go to the people themselves. BOSTON, August 13, 190$. THOMAS W. LAWSON LOUD PROTEST FROM "STREET" Commission- Men Complain Against Egg Grading Sys tem Newly Adopted. Has the new system of grading eggs adopted bv the board or trade this week been instigated by agents of com panies which are havlly overstocked with eastern eggs in order that they can sell their supply at fancy prices? This is the imputation cast upon the Innovation by Front street dealers this morr.tng. The commission men down there eav the new svstem will never be come a success Thev ssy that Front street is n. t in favor of It. and that alreadv there has bn created great i'i'r-:i-oi. In the countrv. Local dealers can not get the prices quoted by the board of trade, and the countrv merchants, from whom ? per cent of the eggs sre secured for tne trsoe nere. are demanding to kr.ew the reason why Commission men have been kept busv explaining bv mail for the past few ds hut these fiplrttenp do not suf fice, and some of the b1gt firms are In line to lose old customers as a con sequence. Neerlr all the commission houses of Importune on Frent street are mem bers "f Uie board of trade, but they fio rot per much attention to the war thirg are run br the manafemeot. and declare that their had nothing te d with the rhaiire made hr the board la adopting tbe new arading Manager Tom FarTell of Ererdlng Farrell. says there Is only otie prH-e aeted hr Front street for egra, and that en. have brought more thsa' 24 e-ftte this . a4 that a somtxr ef bcr bants were glad te unload accum ulated stork at from 21 cents to 22 cents a doien. Allen & Lewis, Mason & Ehrman. (Jare & Co.. Everding A Far rell, Henrv Farrell, Dryer A Rollam and other houses. Mr. Farrell declares, have sold at these figures Now comes the protest. "How can we sell at 24 cents, at the very highest market, price for eggs, and be expected to pay 26 cents." The firm of Dryer & Bollam Is one of the large egg sellers of the local mar ket. Mr. Drver In an interview with The Journal market editor, today said: "I don't know whether agents of firms which handle eastern eggs are responsi ble tor the new svstem of grading or not, but do know that It ts not satis factory to Front street, and will not be for a long time to come. In Chicago and other plsces where this system Is In vogue eggs are of a more uniform slie and color This is due to tne lac that In the east eggs are largely suf plied bv bis chicken ranches where one kind or poultry Is kept exclusively. Each farmer is able to put eggs on the market that are about the same site, weight and color. Here In Oregon the farmer keeps a mongrel flock of hens. Plymouth Rocks and Bantams cackle In the same henhouse, and of course the eggs are not the same kind. However, the eggs sr Just as good as though they were laid bv one brood of bens, and It will certainly be admitted that they re at least as fresh as the eastern eggs. "T'nder the new way an eastern egg may he put side br side with a local egg and graded as "extra" And thus the dealer sella for a fancy price of 26 cents what In reality should be quoted at .21 or even less. "All our eggs are carefully candled, ss are those of most of the other mer chants on the stret. and onlr the very best eggs are sold for the top price All other eggs are graded as "rots" and thrown away, or as "seconds." and sold to a cheaper class of customers Japanese and Chinese restaurants are largely buyers of these eggs. Peconds are fresh eggs, but consist r.f ttwse which mar have begun to deteriorate, or the" yolks of which may hare ben broken or flattened out- "It the public Is buying eggs at fancy prtree and sMttns stale nat. that Is not our fsolt. Eggs that we sell for th bt trade are perfect when they leer eur ttousesi but ef course they de teriorate when kept In stock too long, and that is the reason that consumers often get stale eggs from their retail dealers." Cantaloupes Drop. Cantaloupes dropped 50 cents a crate today with the advent of the first con siderable shipment of melons from home gardens. The price is now from 12 to 1 2. - 5 instead of from J2.50 to $2.75. Oregon Orapes Come. All fruits and vegetables continue in good demand, with an adequate supply which holds prices stationary Oregon grapes made their first aipearance to day. Oral 11, Flour ana Kay. WHE.AT Buying price, new Track, rortland Club, fcoc; bluestem, 90; red. 90 FI1PR Selling rrlce Eastern Ore gon patents. )4 S; straights. J4 06 3 4 63: exports. $S.40S.O; valley. It. 45; graham. H s i i. wnoie wneai. ti lt, rye, 6s, $5 60; hales. IJ MILL8TVFF8 Selling price Bran. 126; middlings. 130 60. rhorta. I2S 9 28 80: chop. Ill 0 21 per ton. BARLEY Feed. 12160; rolled. I27.J9 C2180, brewing. 27. OA To No. 1 white, 127 60; gray. 117 per ton. HAT Producers' price Old tlmothv, Willamette valley, fancy. Ill II 00; erdlnarr. til 600 IS: esstern Oreton. 1 . iftii.iA. -1 ad iiower. ii ft ,nin innu- eh-t nt .ir.w. . uregnn. Jio , iff or-; artlr'osee ten) Butter. Xggs and SoaJtrr. WITTKR FAT Delivery f. o b Port fluid Sweet cream. 2c. sour, ,'4e per lb. PUTTER Extra creamery, 27He. fancy. 26c. ordinary, 26c; store. 160 17c. F.OIP Extra. 2Cc; esstern. 20021c: flrtts, 2!fi:Se, seconds. rajiHc CHEESE Full cream, flat, trtclets end da!tts. 14Hc. Toung Americas. lISc POCLTRT Mixed chickens lv,e ih; fancy bens. II He; roosters, c'd, te; fryers, 14e; broilers, lie ; fefeee. spring. lie, turkeys, allre. .r: erring duefca, II (Tile lt: pigeons 1121 dos; dressed poultry. 101 We lb hither. - . KtV. Weal ad Blldea. WOPt) 1M7 rrop. first prime, te; rtrre, 4Uc: mediant te prime. 1 9 4c: nediem. lb: crop, j t fee ; II ; la. Ill ,' extra sne barrels. contracts. 9c. WtXDL 190S Willametts valley. 1J 15c MOHAIR 1907 Nominal. 18H'c SHEEPSKINS Shearing, 10 fj 16c each; short wool, 26 it 40c; medium wool, 6ic0l each; long wool. Ibcti 11.25 each. HIDES Dry hides, IS 14c lb; green. 6H6Hc; ralvea. green. sjMiV;- kips. 67c lb; hulls, green salt, 4c lb. TALLOW Prime per lb. SW4C; No. 2 snd grease 2 3 2 He. CHITTIM BARK-1fT4e Fruits and Vsgrtstilss. ONIONS California. 11. "6, Wslla Walla. SI per sack, garlic. 15c lb. POTAT ES New. selling, II. U' Ji.iS. buying. St4j oc j. er cw U APPLES -New. II Co I FRESH Fit C I Tt rar ges t4fiJ '4 60. bananas. ru.: per .b. ertiel e lemons, SJ -' 0 box. gtapef :!t J 4 I (I 4 60. ptneapi s. H;.li.it-, 13 3 .'. doj , ear. t ft ie. 1 p. $ . 't J ' h 1; - .I. 6c-j$l; blackberries. II. 60. peaches, ;c (311, pears, II joji. Kr;p-. I. foi. raspberrlet 11 0" ii 1 n: loganberries.. 0r a II ii", cherries. H a! Ann. 3. . Lamberts snd Blr ss. fan. v. J J lim, watermcbirs, lii.0173 .wt. j-r.int.' .116.1 crat VEGETABLE! Turnips, new Oregoi. 10c. beets. ZOc; Mrri. II 60 urk: rsrsnli'S fc6c?l -nbhk- 11' TV Tor i oes. ,Scal" box, rwans 7c: caul- flower. California, rrstr. I1T502OO. rnrseni.ll.. ) dor green onlona, 18c pr dei ppper. hlL he; Chile. (1: head lttuc. 267l1c dos. cucumbers. lo-l. 2rrSf.'"- dos. rndi.s I6c dos. bunches. ceiry, Tfcc'jlllS. f ooaebrrie, 6c. eggplant. 10 Sc. green 1 ecrn. 20cftc i,on 1 Qroearlee. gat, vta 81 GAR -California Hawaiian Re-1 finery Cube, 14 44. powoereo I 4l, I berry. II 16. dry imnu.HfJ. It 16, XXX greaelated. lift, corf A, 116; eitra 1 B. 160: e-o dn 0 . 1610: D yellow.! 16 66: beet grenj'.a'ed. M6. barrels. I 16e: naif barrels lae. besee. t6e ad vance on aark boats (Above prtce are II days net cash gnotatl'na FONPY Newv 16e rr IK COFFEE Package brands. Sit It tMLT Coeree Hlf rrM, la.' tilt r-er ten: tftc lilt: tsMe. ds'ry. toe. till: is. tit M: Ills; Irerrrted UfrerrL I : ; iea. Liverpool 2s. 6e and 10s. M 50 if 6 60 lump rock. 120.60 per ton. KICK Imperial Japan No 1. 6c: No. 2. 64 96r: New Orleane. head. 7te; AJnx. 1; Creole. 6 i c REANS Pmall white. 14. 7S; large wh1t. $ 4 S : rink. ISS5: bavou, IS 85- iimas jp if Mexican rens t ). Meats, ruh and Provisions, i;Kfc..s;jfca) JliATS- front street lions, lancy. , w j &r. :d; ordinary, ic. large 6c, veal. extra. c per lb; ordinary, d y . 4 . per lb, heavy, 7Vc per lb, mutton, fan. y. 7 ii Tc per lb; spring lain b. 7 ij 7 c .h I! A.M.". TMO'N. ETC. Port Is nd pack (local 1 harrs. 10 t1 IS lbs. ITc per lb; 1 rtakfast bn. on ; ' i.'lUr lb. picnics. 11c per lb. nvtage toll 1 Jo lb: regular I short . ien-s s-ion 1 : - jh; backs, smoked 1 1 r - '.' sniokei short clears. 13 Vo i:. iear b-iile smoked. IS He 'b; should" re. 12c cr !b, plcklej tongues. 7 0. fi.h. I.ix M. LARn-Ke''le leaf. lts, 14c r. a 1K tjl- 11. I. II,. . I li 10. i v -m m. q.i-iu linn. .3 4'' per per lb r kr 1 1 FISH-R-x-s ro'. 1!c lb flounders. 6c per Ih halibut. 6r pr lb, striped bjs, !." i'T lb, catfish 11c per .b; sal mon chir.ook 6c lb bluet. a. ks. c lb; steelr ead, 60 lb. herrings 6c lb; antes. 7c pr lb. shrimp 1 Or per lb: perch. ;r lb. tinood lie rer lb. lobsters. ?5" p.-r lb. fresh rrscKtrl, r r ib; rrsfih, 20, pr 1--i-n. sturgeon. 1 2 H . ter Ih Mark bsss 2'V per lb. silver smelt. Te pr lb. black cod. 74e lb. rr!-. II 0" 1 61 dojen, shsd, lc; roe hs1 r shad roe l2Se lb OTPTER -oa!water Bar Per n Ion. i: 50. per rf lb sack. I" I Moclips and Westport Beaches ,b ee.rr. reroered, 10s. ISc 13 per lb, compound. 10a on ; Oiym- rds, r- reliorv 12 40. p-r ion lb sack. liteo'.. Full i-ifM. r nil 17 00 do-n. ustern In shell. II 76 per 1 ce CLAVS- Hsr'-heH. rer rwij. !4; rstor r's- I ."o 1 - kt " per doa , "rWiata, Ooml. OU. 2na HOI i; -i ul, la. .... standard. 11c. siaa.. 1 K iwLSc 1 BENZINE M d-g. rn J' e per. gal. Iron bbia 12Hc l-er rL TURPENTINE- In caeea. Me per gsl; wwn ro B rr r Ki , LINSr.K.l OIL Rf w. bhiv. Je; esse 65.-: r-''1 lie r. sea. j a gal; lets ef 26 ga'.lona. Ie less, otl cake tresl. 114 4n WHITE LK.A r Toe lota T.e rf lb; ;6 -! e lb; less lets, Ike IV WIRE NAlL Freeeet bes a, ttti. ; : : i IDEAL SUMMER RESORTS Easily reached via Northern Pacific Railway with frequent train service Summer Tourist Fares $60.00 For the round trip to St. Paul, Minne apolis, Duluth, Sioux City, Omaha, Kansas City, Etc. Chicago, $1250 St Louis, $67.50 Ask your nearest Northern Pacific agent regarding train service, rates, etc or address A. D. CHARLTON, Att.'Cn. Ft, Atvent. 25$ MORRISON STREET PORTLANp OKECO.I : -4 J0UHXAL LDiEKS COST LITTLE, ACpVlVl I :! "f T