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About Washington County hatchet and Forest Grove times. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1896-1897 | View Entire Issue (June 25, 1896)
ÉÊÊ W A S H IN G T O N M ILITIA AND A Troops Were «'¡tiled <i„t Lynching. M OB. MORE Srevent a Murderous COUNTY HATCHET. A TR O C ITIE S . H|miilar<lft 4 o n t f u u o D e a d ly W ork . FIF T Y F U U R T H T h eii Roseburg, Or , June 2 8 ,-U p o n the New York, June 94.— The American -TwoHundred Lives Lost request of the mayor. Governor Lord three-masted schooner Mabel Hooper, A Resume o f Events in the ordered out the militia here lust night OIT Finistère. which has just arrived brings news of to protect prisoner James I'ixou who fresh atrocities by the^panish troops in Northwest. shot and killed Churles Kice, on the Cuba. The ¡Spanish commander of 14th, from mob violence, The order Sagua had orders from Havana to see TWO BOATS LOW ERED ihsd the desired effect The mob, to it that all the tobacco planted near E V I D E N C E O F S T E A D Y G R O W T H hearing th t the jail was well guarded, that place should be taken to that city. did not come. Sheriff Catheart took A large pliutation near that place is Ju jlr * < »* * o f N arlga- the prisoner to Eugene for safe keeping owned by Mr. Gonzales, said to be an M e w . G a t h e r e d lu A l l t h e T o w n s o f .(Inly T h r « » 1- 1» . . N a r a d T w e e - on the north-bound overland. Having The tobacco from O u r N e ig h b o r in g S ta te s — I m p r o v e |,jve DodieS l lu v e l l « e n I t e o u v e r e d . walked a short distance. Catheart sig- American citizen. his place had not been moved for the m e n t N o t e d lu A l l l u d u s t r i e e —O r e g o n . naled the train, and gertiog on board prauc«, .lune 22.— Detail» are reason that all his horses had been with his prisoner, was soon beyond Pendleton is to have ita ordinances rbeiiiK obtained of the Iona of the stolen by the Spanish soldiers. He , linet Oruiuouiud Caatle, bound the ieaoh of the woold-be lyu ¡hers was sumomned before the commander oodilled in book form. The first intimation that an attempt lUpe Town to London with 144 A nugget weighing |28 was recently and asked why he did not move his would be made to lynch Dixou was crop He gave his reason, which the found in the left fork of Galioe creek. birman11 108 officers and men. J¡teamer was « o i n g at fu ll speed last night, when John Diinn. a brother commander said was satisfactory, and The G. A. R. Eastern Oregon vet |T before m id n ig h t on Tuesday, of the murderer, rode in t . K cehurg turned him over to a lieutenant with erans w ill hold a reunion at Union, lib , heading a ron u d Finistère, and informed the sheriff that a large instructions to return biui. The lieu July 3, 8 and 4. ■the Bav o f lUaoay, and m a k in g mob was forraiug at Blakesley’ s. the tenant did so, but on arriving at his The express company at The Dalles scene of the orimo, with tile intention plantation the lieutenant ordered him* lops of the B ritish c h a u u e l. has shipped op to date 13,975 pounds iKiuistere is the is la n d of Ushant, o f proceeding to Roseburg and demand in his house and then set tire to it. of strawberries to Montana and Port ing tbe prisoner. The smoke soon compelled Gonzales, land. 1 twenty-si* m iles northwest of The sheriff and his deputies at once bis w ife and five chiloren to leave the lia a group o f th irty islands. The The Albany creamery had to return Bond Castle, t o steer a safe made preparations for defending their house, a»d as they walked ont of The an 8,000-pound order for butter, a l ( ihonld have been away outside charge, but at last, fearing that the rear door, the front o* the building be ready having orders amounting to 21,- j.npon w h ich isla n d is the light- mob would be too strong for them to ing in flames, all V'e»e shot Quwu. 000 pounds ahead, all it oan till in the find signal s ta tion , but for some cope witu, a consultation was held Gomez the m snrgm t leader, ariived time dearied. dajs later, and l not satisfactorily explained, the with the mayor of the city, which re on the sceue a sulted in a ri quest being made upou when ho was told how Gonzales and A gentleman in Independence, has a Bip headed m sid e Ushant Governor Lord for aid. his family had been murdered, he be French rapier in his possession that keen that p o in t a n d the main- The crime for which Dixon ia await came furious. was used by his grandfather in tbe Franoe is a lin e o f islands, Revolutionary war. He also has an ing Molene and Leoonquer, con- ing trial was the inorder of Charles Itru tn l M u r d e r o f ttn A g r i l P e n s i o n e r . old razor that bears the date mark of | by ridges o f rook w ith each Rice at a ball game near Blakesley’ s, on last ¡Sunday. Shelbyville, Inn., .lune 24 — Milton 1778. At the d iffe ren t places there The two young men were old ene- Boley, an aged pensioner, came to this The directors of the Garnd Hondo Iffles, between w h io h vessels pass miea, and their quarrel was reopened city from his home, seven miles north Valley Agricultural Society have pre Etfety, but b e tw een Ushant and over a deciaion concerning the game, of here, and drew $500 from a bank pared a speed programme for the fall , the latter isla n d being half |i the m ainland, is a sunken reef when, after a few hot worda between with which to pay off the balance due meeting, whioh beigna on Monday, Tbe purses range from i with deep w a ter on both s id e s them, Dixon drew u revolver and fired on his house. About dutk Boley start September 28. He was waylaid by two 176 to $150. j covered in p a rts e v e n during j tw ice at Rice, both shots taking effect, ed for home. est tides. It w a s on t h is ridge I and resulting in the instant death of men, who beat him with clubs and A large amount of w ool is being | the young man. crushed his skull. They went through moved to market, says the Prineville Be D rum m ond C a s t le struok his pockets, and not finding the money joing at fu ll speed. T h e steamer paper. It has been a backward spring T H E S T R I K E IS O F F . returned to his house and demanded about shearing, and many thousand {bare struok so as to tear a big that Mrs. Bolley inform them where ber bottom fro m stem to s te r n , F i s h e r m e n ’ « U n i o n l l » s F o . - m u l l y V o t e d pounds of w ool were lost on account of the money was. She refused and after there being no grease in the wool. riling the w a ter t ig h t oompart- to G o to W ork beating her in vain they held her over [almost im m e d ia tely and sending The Prineville Review learns from Astoria, June 28.— At a meeting of a natural gas blaze until she could not bottom on th e other side of the fishermen’s union, held tonight, endure the torture 1 aiger. Blackened reliable authority that there w ill be I in about three minutes. under a call made for that purpose by and blistered and covered with bruises 250.000 yearling ewes bought in East \ two boats were lowered after ern Oregon this summer and driven compelled to reveal the hiding East, to be used for breeding purposes. i first struck. One capsized, the executive committee this afternoon, I she was ______ the strike was formally declared off, by j place of fche^ money, Bolley w ill die Crook county w ill furnish a large share tly three men were saved out of I people on board. The British a majoirty of 57, in a total vote of 450. I and there is little chance of his w ife's of them in anticipation of the action of the recovery, [class cruiser Sybelle, whioh was Since the waters of the John Day meeting, the men have been applying tant at the time of the disaster, have receded it is found that the dam all day at the canneries fop their nets. c,ty Murd*r«d. |be signals of distress and sent The militia have left for their homes. Toledo, O ., June 24. —-City Marshal age to the Canyon creek county road p the rescue, but without avail. It is asserted by all the fishermen th a t! ^c°tt Rees, of North Baltimore, was by reason of wash-outs is incalculable. saved, two men were picked the compromise comes at a late day, as killed instantly today while attempting Much work and plenty o f dynamite ing on the wreckage by Usher- few , if any fish have been coming into ! to arrest three robbers whom he w ill be required to make the grades n the mainland. A man named caught in the act of endeavoring to passable. trdt reached Molene island, the river during the last few days. A ll the property of the defunct A s The catches last night were uniformly effect an entrance into the village post- ten bodies have already been re- toria & Portland Railroad Company large, one of the Scandinavian Packing office. | off Ushant. waB last week sold by sheriff Hare in Copmauy’ s men being paid $102 for W i l l U s e (Joni|irPH8F(l A i r . ) time the Drummond Castle Astoria to satisfy executions amounting his night’ s work, while few of them Chicago, June 24.— Compressed air Ihe reef a high southwest wind to about #164,000. The property was motors w ill be tried on street cars in pwing, and it was raining and delivered less than 2,000 pounds. The appearance of the fish indicates Chioago for the first lim e July 1. The purchased by a representative of Ed pbont tbe worst condition pos- that they have been in the river for new motive power for street passenger ward Ebrman, a judgment creditor, for approaching that part of the #80,000, and is supposed to be in the |Marquardt Bays Captain Pierce | some days st least, and it is predicted transportation may find a permanent interest of the Astoria & Columbia t gone to the cabin for a brief that as soon as all the boats are out, abode in this city if the test is success River railroad. |en a terrible shock caused tbe the river w ill quickly be cleared of ful. Should tbe motor demonstrate its The law of Oregon provides when jond Castle to qniver as if fish, and small catches w ill be the rale efficiency, a battle royal w ill be begun until the July run comes. between compressed air and electricity 100 oitizens of a county petition the Jby a dynamite explosion. This which may end in the abolishment of oounty oourt to have the question as to flowed by a horrible grating, F o lly o f a D river. whether or not hugs shall run at large the trolley. I sound, the noiae of in-ruehing Atlantio City, N. J., June 28.— voted on, the coart shall order the pd the cries of passengers. Three meu were instantly killed and a S ilv e r M in ers W a n t a K aiso. clerk to place the same npon tbe bal |om ms tiding oflioers ordered all fourth probably fatally injured in a Leadville, Colo., Jnne 22.— As a re lots at the next regular election. ¡Such pclear sway the boata for low- grade crossing accident at Absecon to sult of discontent and fruitless efforts a petition was prepared, circulated and rot the rents in the steamei day. The dead are: George Huber, for an adjustment extending over sev singed in Union oounty. The result 1 wide and deep that bnt few aged 60; Fred Huber, his son, 82, of eral months, 800 miners tonight walked is that a very large m ajority of tbe fcrahad time to scramble upon Germania, this county, and Harry out, ow ing to tbe refusal of certain sil people of that oounty desire hogs shall Ifore she gave tw o or three Henbeler, of Philadelphia. The in ver mine managers to increase their not ran at large. Ills, then an awfnl lurch, ao- jured man is George Sahl, of Gallo wages from |2.50 to |8 per day. The led by some interior epxloslons, W a s h in g to n . way. The men were crossing the j situation is peculiar. Three large en- track in a wagon drawn by a pair of terprises, known as the Smith-Moffat, W ork on the new cigar-shaped craft psrdl, contarry to the reports fther two seamen rescued, said spirited horses when the accident oo- the Small Hopes and the Welden, can- at Btella is porgressing slowly. enrred. Nearing tbe track, the driver not afford, they say, to pay higher The Pleasant Valley, Whatcom coun Bship went down so suddenly attempted to beat tbe approaching wages, but can afford to employ a large ty, school building burned laet week. ts no time even to launch one Camden express train across the track. force at #2.50 per day. Home other Inch less two, and even if the One hnndred trainloada of gTain The train was running at the rate of silver mines are paying #3 per day, lbeen launched, the seas were have been ground to Hour at Spokane sixty miles an hour. Tbe Hubers and the miners want all to pay this Iso high and in such rapid snc- since last September. were thrown nnder tbe wheels and figure. l a peculiatrity of the seas upon The W hatcom Zouaves are happy in ground to pieces. Henbeler was thrown wof the French coast) that she K ussian W o r k m e n I d le . the receipt of twenty-five stands of against the station, with a horse npon fcve been promptly swamped, St. Petersburg, June 23.— There are arms from the adjutant-general. him. issengers, however, succeeded 4,000 factory hands now on a strike. The Tacoma Morning Union has been fnng life belts uronnd them- ; They are quiet and peaceable, but de- awarded the oontract for doing the city U n e a s in e s s in S p a in - me bodies washed ashore be- London, Jnne 23.— A dispatch from j termined to obtain their demands. It printing of Tacoma daring the com ing fovided. A tug just returned Madrid to the Daily Mail says: The ; is stated that 10,000 workmen in year. ‘olene island reports that the platform adopted in St. Louis causes the proivnnee of Tver have resolved to Ow ing to the refusal of the Northern i twenty-five victim s of the great uneasiness» in Spain, and it is go to the railway, when the czar re fve been washed ashore there. feared a conflict with the United turns to St Petersburg, and stop the ’ Pacific Railroad Company to pay its road tax in Chebalis oonnty, many of States has now alomst a fixed date. train and throw themselves on their the road districts w ill be short one- >orthna»t Land., knees to induce the emperor to receive The government has hastened to bny third of the money expected. fgton, June 22.— In the case a memoiral of their grievances. irner Valley Stock Company, two 12,000-ton ironclads at Genoa, at Federal surveyors are at work ascer a price which a few days ago was . against Secretary o f the In- taining tbe exact boundaries of the E x cu rs io n is ts K ille d . A great *e Smith and Commissioner thought to be excessive. Fort Wayne, Ind., June 23. — This govenrment reserves at Points Wilson morcux, o f the laud office, the part of the loan of 100,000 pesetas Adm iralty ___________________ morning three excursion trains with and Marrowstone, and M the lower court has been made by Rothschilds on the Alinadin Head, where the fortifications are to be ^uTcksilver minis w ill probably be im- I 8,000 employe* of the Pennsylvania fby the district oourt of ap- built by the w ar department. > company loseB. The corn mediately applied to such warsihsp as railway shops «nd friends on board J. P. Carson and Eugene France, re ed the title to certain lands are now for sale. The government, started for Rome City, to spend the ceivers of the Aberdeen bank, have Near Kendallville one of the ®t from the state o f Oregon, responding to the undoubted national ( day. - -• - 1 trains broke in two. Tw o shopmen, paid off all of the bank’ s indebtedness, f lands, by virtue o f an act of sentiment, and trusting probably to j except about $2,000, and expect to F. 1 1860, extending the provi- the help of other powers, seems re- j Sam C. Henderson and G. F. M iller, have that paid off and the affairs were thrown from the platform and aolved to resist American imposition«. r e Arkansas swamp lands act finally settled by the last of the month. run over and killed. pber 28, 1850, to Oregon. R e s u lt o f s k l r n i l . i l * « . I K lickitat county wag made a part of i made by the com pany from Havana, J u n e 2 3 . - A s a result of T r o u b l e o n t h . N e w f o u n d l a n d c „ M t. the judicial district com prising the Ntaining the demurrer to and skirmishes in Pinar del Rio, Havana St. Johns, N. F. June 23 - T r o u b le counties of Clark, Hkamania and Cow- •he appellant's b ill for an Santa Clara Clara provinces. orovinces, the ltiz, by the last legislature, bat sev Hanta ....... insnr- ....... , I has broken . out . on . the part .. „ of the , New u 8 against the appellees. The and gents have sustained a loss of nineteen foundland coast where the French have eral of the Klickitat people think tbe | company prayed that the killed, eleven wounded and four pris- fishery rights, between the residents law is unconstitutional, and w ill take /™®,re'1 to be restrained from oners, while tbe troop, had three killed and the French fishermen over the use a test case to the supreme court and ^further jurisdiction relative and five wounded. On acoonnt of the of ood traps. The English cruiser Mo- have it deeded before election day. *ition of the lands in con- alleged outrage, committted throughout hawk, guard.b.p of the port, ha. been It is now practically certain that the I from interfering w ith the the country, many families are moving summoned to th« soene. proposed reincorporation o f the oity of ^Possession of the lands; and B r o o k s ’ C o m e t H as R e tu r n e d . Port Townsend, whioh is to be submit r ' ' ,',ayy be required to issue into the towns. Cambridge, Mass., June 3 3 — A ted to the voters at a special election [If the case is not taken to M o n t h l y R e v e n u e S ta te m e n t. cable message from the European celled for that purpose on Jnne 29, w ill “ court the com pany is Washington, June 23.— The monthly »ted by the action o f the statement of the internal revenue bu Union of Astronomers received by be favorably considered, and that the Teals. Messrs. Chandler and Ritchie an place w ill thereafter be known as a reau shows that during May, 1896. the nounces the discovery of Brooks’ peri city of the third class, incorporated receipts form all sources amounted to 1 person in 1,000 dies from $11,464,490, as compared with $10,- odical comet, on its return, by Javel, nnder tbe general laws o f tbe state of Washington. of the observatory at Nice. 768,490 during May.^1895^__ A G ood B o u t . Judge Hanford has denied the ap T r a c k s . A P e c u lia r A c c id e n t. I plication of certain of tbe Indiana liv June 22. — A. Cal., Jane 82.— The Pbiladelpiba, June 23 — More than Buffalo, N. JJ® ,or *be valley was held twenty passengers on two open trolley Carey, who is making a tour o f the ing on the Yakima reservation, who five miles from here to- cars were injured tonight in a peculiar world awheel, passed through Buffalo aaked for the injnuotion to prevent the P'dnwayman, who had sev- accident at Fr.nkford, a suburb of this today. He started from Lynn, Mass . agent on the reservation from expend |Plnses in ambush. Pointing city One of the oar. was returning and ia making bis way by easy stages, ing $20,000 for tbe construction of an driver, the highwayman from and the other going to a nearby He w ill «all from San Francisco, and irrigation canal. They ran on parallel w ill endeavor to follow tbe same route ■ JJ° throw ont the express i n s u r e park Treasurer Lewis, o f Chehalit oonn by tbe unfortunate Lena. ty. has issued a call for general fond I **o money boxes, one for traoks. Both were so crowded that as was oovered ---------------------------------- r>d one for Grub Gulch m a a y of the passengers were on the oounty warrants. Nos 173 to 1837, P ro m p ted b y J e e lo o e y . *ynun then stood np the sideway footboards, and when the earn W ichita, Kan., June 38.— O. E. amounting to $8,670.34, o f which $2,- J »Wtht travelers surrender attempted to pass each other st s rapid Hart, a prominent farmer, ahot and 276.71 la interest, each dollar o f the L*nd Jewelry worth $1.000. rate of speed, a jam reunited. Eight killed bia w ife tbla afternooon, and original promise now amounting to r**e'>red from the express o f the passengers were interns ly in then ended bia own life In tbe eeiue $11.58. These warrants were Issued r *»'d -o be only $50. The jured, and were taken to hospitals, but in 1893. manner. Jealouey prompted tbe act. f list ppe, red. it is not thought any deaths w ill follow. K esu m e o f CONGRESS th « Im p o rta n t t h « to«-»»inn. llu s lii« * « o f The first session o f the Fifty-fourth Mngress which has closed, enjoys the iistinction oi being the shortest ‘ ‘ lon g’ ’ -Hssion fo ra period of thirty years. Of the measures whioh become laws, the most important from an international standpoint, was the b id creating tbe commission ‘ to determine the trne divisional line between Veneznela and British Gniana. ” O f scarcely less general interest were the bills prohibit ing prizefighting in the territories; per mitting appointments in the navy and army o f former United States officers who served in the rebellion and mak ing one year’ s residenoe in a territory a prerequisite to obtaining a divorce there. Excepting these, however, the re mainder o f the 225 bills and resolutions which received the president's approval were not of a oharacter to deserve ex tended mention. The more important were tbe bills incorporating the nation al society of the Daughters of the Revolution, opening the forest reserva tions in Colorado, for the location of mining olaims; regulating proof of death in pension cases; providing for a naval training school in Han Francisco harbor; making it unlawful to shoot at any railway train or any person there on, or to throw missiles into such train, and repealing danse 61 of the tariff law providing for a rebate on alcohol nsed in the arts. If the session, however, was con spicuous by reason of its brevity and the lim ited number of important laws enacted, it resulted in the introduction of a larger number of bills in the honse dnring any similar period for a quar ter of a century. The total number of bills introduced during the entire last congress was 8,987, o f which 4,406 were introduced dnring the first ses sion, whioh corresponds to the session now closed and in which latter the ag gregate reached 9,500. O f these 2,800 were favorably reported by the com mittees to whom they were referred, and soores of them are likely to be brought to the attention of the house next winter. The Nicaragua bill was one of these measures After many months of con sideration in the committee, it received a favorat'"- report in the faca of an ab solute certainty that it would not be taken up during this session. The b ill to liquidate the indebtedness of the Pa cific railways to the government is an other far-reaching measure, which was also npon the calendar with a favorable report, bnt which for prudential rea sons w ill oontinne to slumber there The popnlar interest in the Caban revolution wag shown in the large number o f resolutions, more than fifty in all, that were introdnoed and refer red to the committee on foreign affairs. A fter careful consideration, a concur rent resolution was reported, for which was subsequently substituted, in con ference, the senate resolution express ing tbe sympathy of the United Htates w ith the insurgents, recognizing their belligerency and calling npon the presi dent to nse his good offices to secure the independence of the island. Measures for which there has been a widespread demand that have passed the honse and w ill probably receive consideration from the senate next ses sion, inclnde the bankruptcy bill, the MoCall bill, providing an ednoational test for immigrants, the labor com m is sion and labor arbitration bills and the b ill sim plifying the rales of the pension office so as to facilitate the adjustment o f private pension cases. The early weeks of the session were a busy period for the ways and means committee. Of the 187 measures refer red to it, thirty were acted npon. Tw o o f the greatest importance were the bond and revenue bills. The bond bill passed the house, was sent to the senate and returned with the addition of an amendment providing for the free coin age o f silver. The revenue b ill died in the senate committee on finance. Am ong other measures of interest re ported by the ways and means com mittee were the bills permitting the k illin g of all the fnr seals in Alaskan waters; the "filled cheese" bill and the b ill amending the law permitting a re b ite on aloohol nsed in the arts. The committee on invalid pensions broke all previous records for work. Upwards of 2,800 bills were referred to it, o f which 700 private bills were reported to the honse. Am ong the measures reported in addition to those which passed the honse, were bills g iv ing members of state m ilitia a pension able status; granting pensions to re married war widows; broadening the soope o f the law pensioning army nnrses; increasing the pensions o f those who lost limbs in the service and providing for the payment of penalona by check. The penaiona committee, whioh deala with a different claaa of meaanrea from tboee whioh are referred to tbe invalid penalona committee, diapoaed of 240 of the 600 bill» referred to them. The finance committee, to whioh was referred 106 different measures, baa succeeded in getting through the senate bnt three of any importance that have become laws— the filled cbeeee bill; the amendment to the administrative fea ture of the tariff act permitting expreea com psni*» to pay tbe duty on package# valued at not more than $500. The senate committee on pensions shows ■ belter record for accomplished remits. H* nste pension bills aggre gating 1,030 were referred to this com mittee. Himilar bill* aggregating 320 came over from the honee. T w o hun dred and seventy aenate billa were paaeed by tbe senate, o f which tbe bonee paaeed but 60. On tbe other band, the aenate paaeed 110 o f the bouae pension billa out of a total o f 330 paaeed by the bouae. Out o f all Ibis proposed legislation bnt 8$ bill» be came law». Tbe war department was established by act of c ingress August 7. 1788. PORTLAND M ARKETS. There has been a very notioeable im provement in business in many lines w ithin the past week or ten days, and wholesalers are fairly w ell satisfied w ith the ontlook The salmon industry thus far has put bnt little money into circulation, and hardly anything haa been done with the w ool orop, bnt the remarkable prospects for a great wheat crop have tended to loosen op purse strings considerably, and a continued improvement is looked for from this time on until next fall. W h e a t M ark et« Prices have remained steady here in tbe wheat market, despite the feverish fluctuations in other parts of the world. This situation, though, would hardly exist if receipts were snffioient to pat any life into the market. Quo tation! are; W alla W alla, 51 to 52c; V alley, 53 to 54o per bnshel. P r o d u ce M a rk et. F lour — Portland, Salem, Cascadie and Dayton, $2.85; Benton county, and White Lily, $2.86; graham, $2.60; su perfine, $2 26 per barrel. O ats —Choice white, 28<g30cper bush e l; choice gray, 27(g28c. Rolled oata are quoted as follows: Bags, 44.250 6.25; barrels, $4.90@7; cases, $3.76. H at — Timothy, $9.00 per to n ; cnept, $0.00; clover, $6($7; oat, $606.60; wheat, $6.60 @6.60. B abi ,* y —Feed barley, $13.50 per ton ; brewing, $15@16. MiLLSTurrs — Bran, $14.60; ahorta, $16.60; middlings, $18@20; rye, 92)^e per cental, B uttib — Fancv creamery ia quoted at 26c; fancy dairy, 20c; ¡fair to good, 16c; common, 12^c per roll. P otatoes — Duroanks, 60@60c per sack; (Jarnet Chiles, 50@60c; Early Hose, 60c; new. $1.40 per sack; sweets, best, 4 )« @ 6 )ic per pound. U nions —New, 76c per saca. P oultry —Chickens, hens, $3.50 per dozen; mixed. $3.00@3.26 per dozen; ducks, $6.00@6; geese, $6.00; turkeys, live, 12)kc per pound; dressed 15@17c. E cu s—Oregon, 10c per dozen. Cuaasa—Oregon lull cream, 10c per pound; halt cream, 9)^c; skim, 4@ 5c; Yoang America, 10c. T ropical F kuit — Calilornig lemons, $3.00@4.00; choice. $3.00@3.50; Sicily, $6,60; bananas, $1.75@3.00 per bunch; California navels. $3.26@3.50 per b ox; pineapples, $3.60@5.00 per dozen. O bxuon VaoaTABLxs — Cabbage, lc per lb ; garlic, new, 10c per pound; artichokes, 36c per dozen; sprouts. 6c per pou n d; cauliflower, $2.76 per crate, 9 0 c a $1 per dozen; hothouse lettuce, 40c per dozen. F bxsh F buit — Pears. Winter Nelli«, $1.60 per b ox; cranberriea, $9 per barrel: lancy apples, $1@ 1.50; common, 50@75c per box. Damn F ruits — Apples, evaporated, bleached. 4@4>^c; sun-dried, 3>a@«c; pears, Bun and evaporated. 6 @ 6 c ; plums, pitless, 3($4c; prunes, 3(g6 per pound. W ool — Valiev. 9c, per pound; East ern Oregon, 5@7c. H ops — Choice, Oregon 2@3c per pound; medium, neglected. N u t s — Almonds, soft shell, 9 @ lle per pound; paper shell, 10@12>uc; new crop California walnuts, soft shell, ll@ 1 2 )u c; standard walnuts, 12@13c; Italian chesnuts, 12‘ „@ 1 4 c; pecans, 13@16c; Brazils, 12>»@13c; filberts, 12>a@14c; peanuts, raw, fancy, 6($7e; roasted, 10c; hickory nuts, 8@10c; co- coanuts, 90o per dozen. F bovisions — Eastern hams, medium, ll>S<312c per pound; hams, picnic, 7>jc; breakfast bacon 10>j@10Jic; short clear sides. 8 > »@ 9c; dry salt sides, 7>u@8c; dried heel hams, 12 @ 13c; lard, compound, in tins. 73$; lard, pure, in tins, 9fg@ 10c; pigs’ feet, 80s, $3.50; pigs’ feet, 40s, $3.26; kits, $1.26. Oregon smoked hams, 103$c per pound; pickled hams, 8>$c; lioneieaa hams, 7 ‘nc; bacon, 103$c; dry salt sides, 63$c;lard, 6-ponnd pails, 73aC; 10 b , 7)$ c ; 60s, 7>$c; tierces, 7c. Country meats sed at prices according to grade. H idks .—Dry hides, butcher, sound, per pound, ll@ 1 2 c ; dry kip and calf skin, 1 0 @ llc ; culls, 3c less; salted, 60 lbs and over, 6 c ; 60 to 60 lbs, 4@41$e; 40 and 60, 4c; kip and veal skins, 10 to 30 lbs, 4c; calfskin, sound, 3 to 10 lbs, 6 c; green, unsalted, le less; culls, l-2c less; sheepskins, shear lings, 10@16c; short wool, 20@30o; medium, 30@ «0c; long wool, 60@70c. M e r ch a n d is e M a rk e t. S a l m o n —Columbia, river No. 1. tells, $1.26@1.60; No. 2. tabs. #2.26(82.60; lancy, No. 1, flats. $1.76(81.86; Alaska, No. 1, tails, $1.20(81.30; No. 2, tells, $1.90 @2.26. B rans —Small white. No. 1, 2c per pound; butter, 3c; bayon, l% c ; Lima, 4c. C ordaox — Manilla rope, lj$-in ch, ia quoted at 8J.4C, and Hisal, 6 ?.c per ponnd. H uoab —Golden C, 5 ' . c ; extra C, 5>$c; dry granulated, 6>»c; cube crushed and powdered, 63»c per pound; >«c per pound discount on all grades lor prompt ca sh ; half barrels, Jic more than barrels; maple sugar, 16(816c per pound. C o re a s —Costa Kica, 20(823,Qc; Rio, 20 <8 22c; 8alvador, 19,822c: Mocha, 27(831c; Padang Java, 30c: Palembang Java, 26<828c; Lahat Java, 23(826c; Ar- buckle’s Mokaska and Lion. $20.30 par 100-jwnnd case; Columbia, $20.30 per 100-pound case. R ica— Island, $3.60(84 per sack; Ja pan. $3.75(84. C o a l —Hteady; domestic, $5.00(37.60 per ton ; foreign, $8.60(311.00. M eat M a rk et. B a ir— Gross, top steers, $3.26; cow», $2.26(32.60; dressed beef, 4<86)tc par pound. M u t t o n —Grose, beat sheep, wethers, $3.00; ewes, $1.50(82.76;' dressed m at- ton, 6c per pound. V i a l —Grose, small, 4)$e; large, 3 0 3 % c per ponnd. H oos— Gross, choice, henry, $3.000 3.26; light and feeders, $2.60 8 2 .76 ; dressed, 3>$@4c per pound. SAN FR A N C ISC O M ARKETS. F loub — Net cash n n ces; Family e x tras, $3.76(33.86 per barrel; bakers’ e x tras. $3.66(83.65; superfine. $2.86(8 3 00. B ablby —Feed fair to good, 711$e; choice, 73)$«; brewing. 861$c. W b u t — Shipping. No. 1, $1.07)$; choice, $1.10; milling, $1.17)$(31.22>$ . O ats — Milling, 76 0 82 )$ c; surprise 90(896; fancy fend, 8 2 Q « * 7 )$ : good ta choice, 7 6 0 80 c; poor to fair, 6 7 )$ « 7*)$c; gray. 72)$«*Oc. P otato as— Hw<*eta. $2.6002.76; Bur- banka, Oregon, 750$1 00 H ors—Qnntable at 2 «3 e par ponnd. O nion « —New, 20036 par sack.