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About Washington County hatchet and Forest Grove times. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1896-1897 | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1896)
W A S H IN G T O N 1HE EVENTS OE EHE DAY Epitome of the Telegraphic News of the World. O F INTE R E S T T O O U R READERS U t m p r t h e n i l T « K e v le w ant H a p p e n in g s o f th « Im p o rt o f th e l* » « t W eek C a lle d F r o m t h e T e l e g r a p h C o lu m n «* Chinatown in San Francisco is in a fever of excitement and another high- hinder war haB been declared. Cloolin's sawmill, situated on Deep creek, near Medical lake, Wash., was horned to the ground. The loss is $3,500. Cholera is abating in Egypt. Bat tles in Crete are almost of hourly occur rence, and the Turks have suffered heavy losses. The remains of Ed Moran were found floating in the Puyallup river. Moran is supposed' to have drowned himself on June 30 last By the reopening of an old vein in the Gwin mine, in Calaveras county, Cal., the mine has become valuable, and the owners now bold it at $3,000,- 000. The storthing, the representative body of Norway, has defeated the bill for the temporary increase of duties on petroleum and sugar, and for the imposition of a duty on meat. Mrs. T. H. Tofree, who was Grover Cleveland’s secretary while he was mayor of Buffalo, committed suicide in Mojave, Cal., by drinking carbolic aoid. It is supposed she was temporarily in sane. Adjutant-General Tuttle has received from the secretary of the state of Ore gon a warrant for $5,917, with whioh to pay the m ilitia boys for their serv- loes at Astoria during the recent fishing troubles. On the anniversary of the birthday of the queen regent of Spain, which occurs the 28d inst., General Weyler w ill release many prisoners. The an niversary w ill be made an occasion of unusual clemency. Near Dryden, Mich., George Swayne, a farmer, about 45 years old, killed his three small children and set fire to his house, then blew his brains out. His w ife died a short time ago. It is thought that this deranged his mind. The two-story briok building, occu pied by H. W olf & Brother, at No. 30 Front street, Portland, Or., as a whole sale gentleman’s furnishing goods house, was completely gutted by fire, and the stock is a total loss. The stock was valued at upwards of $00,000 and is partly oovered by $28,000 insurance. The barkentine Herbert Fuller, Cap tain Nash, from Boston for Rosario, has put into Halifax, Novia Beotia. There had been a mutiny on board. The captain, his w ife and the second mate were killed in their berths in the night. The first officer, who was on watch, knew nothing about the affair. The murderer or murderers crawled aft to the cabin, descended, and with axes chopped the victims to death. Upon the arrival of the barkentine all the crew were locked up in the police station to await trial. Rioters are again rampunt at the Brown Hoisting Works, in Cleveland, O., and serious trouble is feared. Cincinnati and vicinity have been visited by heavy thunder storms and at several places there is reported loss of life and property. Near Portsmouth five persona took refuge in a shed, whioh was struck by lightning, killing all of them. Captain-General Weyler has issued a deoree that all foreigners in the island are to register in a special book in the government’ s charge previous to their being justified in appealing to ar ticle 7 of the decree relative to foreign oitizenship in November, 1894. James Harvey Hherman, a famous spy in the war of the rebellion, who resided near Charlotteville, Mich,, is dead. Before the war broke out Bher- man resided in Virignia, where he ac cumulated a fortune, which was after wards entirely swept away by the war. Albert Olsen, 36 years of age, an em ployee of the Willamette Casket Com pany, of Tacoma, was caught in the machinery, whirled rapidly around the revolving shaft and instantly killed. The body was horribly mangled, the left leg and right foot being torn off completely. A little boy of Marshall, Mich., when herding cattle, tied two of his sisters, 4 and 5 years old, and another little g irl with a rope, the end of whioh was attached to the saddle on a pony. The pony ran away, dragging the three girls half a mile. Two of the girls were killed and the other badly injured. The oolorad people of Cincinnati held a memorial meeting in honor of Harriet Beecher Btowe. It was in this oity that she wrote "U n cle Tom's Cabin,” also spending her early life here when her father was president of Lane theological seminary. Bhe was married in Cincinnati, Professor Btowe being connected with Lane seminary. He was 76 years old and leaves a w ife and six children. There is no longer doubt that the wheat crop in Eastern Washington has been badly damaged by hot winds, says a Walla Walla dispatch. Reports from the Palouse country are to the effect that the damage is about 75 per cent, and that many fields are not worth onttius The grain on Eureka flat, in this comity, is damaged about 60 per oent, and w ill only average about fif teen bushels to the acre. One farm er along the Yellow Hawk now esti mates his yield at about fifty bushels to the acre. F ! r « d on t h * T a g , It is rumored at Astoria that the tug Relief, while on a trip from Astoria to Port Townsend, was fired upon by some fishermen whose nets the tug bad just passed over. ( J o s e M g ceu K i l l e d . COUNTY THE WITHDRAWAL New York Panks Prepared to Assist the Subtreasury. Private dispatches from Havana say that General Jose Maceo, the Cuban patriot leader, was shot through the head and instantly killed during an N E A R L Y S 4 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 T A K E N O U T attaok whioh he led upon the Spanish forces in Gato Hills. The report says that Colonel Caratageua, another in B u u k e rs H«*e N o C a u « * f o r A l a r m , N o r A r e T r e a s u r y O ffic ia ls th e L e u t l D Is- surgent officer, and several members of tu r b e d b y D e c r e a s in g G o ld R e s e r v e . Maoeo’s staff, were killed at the same time. Washington, Jnly 22.— The gold M y s t e r io u s P o is o n iiig . reserve went below'the ninety-million In Cincinnati an unknown blonde mark today fob the first time in many woman was found by a Fort Thomas months, and the actual figures were soldier lying unoonscious on the ground $89,761,336, a redaction of $3,706,300 on a farm,within a few feet of the spot for the day. Uf the withdrawals, $3,- Treasury where the beheaded body of Pearl 000,000 were for export. Bryan was left by her murderers. The officials look npon this heavy gold drain g irl was taken to Newport, where it as entirely abnormal, and are confident was found she had either been drugged that it w ill not continue. They say there is nothing in trade circles to war or had taken poison herself. rant the exports, adding that, although E x - G o v e r n o r R u s s e ll D ea d exchange is at a point above the ship Ex-Governor W illiam E. Russell, of ping point in normal times, the condi Massachusetts, was found dead in bed tions are snoh, in their judgment, as to in a fishing camp near Grand Pabos, make it uncertain whether it can be (Quebec. When he passed through Mon profitable at present. In the absenoe of Secretary Carlisle, treal on his way to the salmon grounds in Gaspe, he was in the best of health. who w ill not return to the oity from It is supposed be died of heart disease. bis jaunt down the bay nntil tonight He was well-known in publio life, and or tomorrow, no one can speak author took a prominent part in the national itatively respecting the probability of Democratic convention recently held another issue o f bonds to replenish the in Chicago. reserve in the Dear future, but the gen eral trend of opinion was that such a H a n g e d a t F o ls o m . thing was not to be expeoted. John E. Howard was hanged in the The rumor reached the treasury late prison oorridor at Folsom, Cal., for in the day that the N ew York banks the murder of Martin DeLanina, in had deoided to come to the relief of the Tulare county, in June, 1894. Only department, and pledge themselves to twenty persons besides the prison maintain the reserve at the $100,000,- officials witnessed the execution. 000 point. There was no official back Howard walked firmly to the scaffold ing to this report, bat officials profess and stood calm and composed till the to see other hopeful signs even if this drop fell. A slight twitching of the promise fails of realization. Among hands gave the only evidence of agita them is the prospect that the demand tion. for money in the West w ill oblige New ----------- « York banks to deposit gold with the N e w S te a m s h ip L in e . A 8t. Paul dispatch Bays S. Iwanaga, treasury in order to obtain the neoes- . „ of Tokio, Japan, general manager of »6*7 Paper. This w ill add materially the Japanese Mail Steamship Company, , protection of the gold reserve, . . . . I n « Honurfmnnf IrouHu unnnn The department nu has a u already accumu limited, has just signed a contract with the Great Northern Railway Company lated in the general balance of $261,- for the establishment of a steamship 618,383 no less than $84,286,016 o f the line between Tokio and Beattie. Thus Old legal-tender notes and $35,113,019 ThiB leaves the the Great Northern system extends its in Sherman notes. operations into the far east, and its whole amount of legal tender notes bills of lading are in force from Tokio outstanding of a kind that can be nsed under the "endless-chain” plan, to to Buffalo, N. Y. draw ont the treasury gold at once, $345,000,000, and very much of this is A n A m e r ic a n H a rk A s h o r e . A dispatch from Zanzibar reports actively circulating in the conrse of that the American bark John D. daily trade. The national banks held Brewer, went ashore at Pangawani. of this total $147,000,000, and, so far The government has sent a vessel to the as the treasury offioials know, they are not generally lending themselves to the assistance of the Brewer. present raid. As to other conditions, the officials H crap ed F r o m t h e R a n d W a g o n . The band which accompanies Buffalo are satisfied with the manner in which B ill’s W ild West Show attempted to they have gotten so far through the drive under a bridge in Massillon, O. month of July. This-is always a try A ll the men were scraped off. Five or ing month, the beginning of the fiscal six are reported dead or dying and in year letting loose a lot of appropria tions for miscellaneous objects, as well jured. as for rivers and harbors and pensions. I ’ o ls o n e d b y D r in k in g L e m o n a d e . The payments on account of the latter News has been received of the fatal have amounted so far to $9,827,000 poisoning at Bantiago, Minn., of a this month, while the quarterly inter fam ily of nine children, caused by est charges on the 4-per cent bonds and drinking lemonade. The children died others have aggregated $6,479,000. one after another, and the parents are The total expenditures for the mouth not expected to live. have reached $31,118,000, which leaves a deficit of $12,091,294; but this is no A F a t a l C a l i 'o r n i a F ir e . more than was expeated, while the Fire broke out in the residence of encouragement is found in the fact John Coyle in Fresno, Cal. Coyle that the receipts have averaged well was in the house asleep at the time and up to a million dollars per diem, and was burned to death. He was a that much of this increase is composed pioneer citizen of Fresno county and of internal revenue receipts, an indica possessed of considerable means. tion that whisky in bond has been at last drawn npon. F ie n d is h W o m a n H a n g e d . News from Coeburn, V a., says that S U IT T O FORECLOSE. Mary Snodgrass was hanged there foT the murder of a fi-months-old ohild by burning it in a stove. The woman was H ro u jch t A g a in s t t h « O r e g o n I m p r o v e » nit*ut C o m p a n y . 28 years old. The Snodgrass woman Seattle, Wash., .luly 22.— In the was a disreputable woman and was compelled to leave Pikoville, Ky., on United States flonrt in this city, the first mortgage bondholders of tho Ore that account. gon Improvement Company have B o n d I n v e s t ig a t io n . brought suit for the foreclosure of their Senator Harris, chairman of the sen mortgage and the appointment of a ate committee to investigate the recent receiver. Judge Hanford ordered the bond issues, says he has not yet deter new suit consolidated with the suits mined whether the committee w ill already pending, which were brought wait until the fall before going on by the holders of the consolidated with its investigation or w ill complete bonds, or rather by their trustee. He its work, frame its report and make it also gave an order appointing C. J. public this summer. The last meeting Smith, the present receiver, as receiver adjourned subject to the oall of the under the new suit. chairman. The immediate occasion of the new foreclosure suit, as set up in the bill of T h * M e s s e n g e r C r u e l tied . A London dispatoh from Wady complaint, is that a default of interest Haifa reports that the messenger who on the first mortgage bonds tpok place carried the news to Khalifa at On»- June 1. Under the terms of the first duran that his army had been defeated mortgage, this default rendered the at Firket, was immediately put to company liable to a suit for foreclosure. It is understood that the first mort death by crucifixion. Khalifa an nounced that the same fate would be gage bondholders were not sorry of imposed upon any one who mentioned this opportunity to place themselevs in a position where they may have a voice the Firket in his hearing. in the reorganization of the company. A P r o m in e n t L a w j r r D e a d . If the other bondholders should now John Cameron Simmonds, formerly refuse to accede to their terms, they of Chicago, and a member of the bar. w ill press their foreclosure and the died at the Ward island insaue asylum, consolidated bondholders would have to New York. His business interests put up cash for the first mortgage bonds. were largely in the West. He was in terested in mining and railway con T w o Y o u n g M on D r o w n e d . struction in California, bot did much Dayton, Or., Jnly 22. — Walter and of his business in New York, and was Russ Atkins, 20 and 18 years old,while well-known to Wall-street bankers. swimming in the Willam ette river Mr. Simmonds was an authority on yesterday afternoon, a few miles south criminal law and wrote a great deal of here, near Wheatland, were both on that subject. His writings on drowned. One of them had just come prison reform have also made him from the East to visit bis parents. The noted. bodies have not yet been recovered. The semi-official Nenstenach rich ten. of Berlin, refers in ironical language to Rudini'a speech in whioh be refer red to the possibility of bettering the terms of the triple alliance. The writer draws attention to the weakness of Italy, whioh was so completely beaten by Abyssinia, and asks wbat she could do against France. The ar ticle declares that Barateri’s report on the complete rout of the Italian army at Adowah Is perfectly true. Her al lies should studs- her bad organization. Huntington, W. V a., July 22.— W. J.' Call and Nettie Call, his daughter, were killed in a shanty about six miles east of here this morning. Lollie Call and several small children are at the point of death. Etta Robins is in ja il aooused of murdering all of them using a double-bit ax as a weapon. Cali and his daughter had their heads severed, and the children were slashed In a hor rible manner. One woman leaped into the tiver and saved her life. No cause is known for the murders. H A T C H KT. S T O R M O / * 'S pbRTLAND BR IE F . V e n a iu e la 's C w . P ra a a a ted In an A b l . M a n n e r. Washington, July 22 — The first part of a brief prepared by James J. Stor- row, of the counsel for Venezuela, in conjunction with Mr. Scruggs, the le gal adviser of that government, has just been completed and submitted for the consideration of the Venezuela boundary commission. The brief is framed as an answer to the general summary of the British bluebook de voted to the Venezuela dispute, and, like that, is an argument based upon the evidence obtained by the agents of the governments interested. The brief is regarded at the state department as a most important contribution to the British-Venezuela question, as Mr. Storrow is a Boston practitioner on whom Secretary Oluey places muoh re liance. Mr. Storrow devotes much of his brief to an attempt to combat what he regards as an attempt to extend the claim beyond occupation, and, applying the laws and faots as he finds them, he declares that they give no support to the British claims, bot are affirmatively aud specifically fatal to it. Mr. Storrow then turns his attention to the Schomburgk line, against the running of whioh Venezuela protested, and he says that every British ministry, exoept that of Lord Salisbury, recog nized that it was monstrons aud diplo matically inadmissible upon such a flimsy claim, whioh the British now oalled the Dardanelles of the Orinoco, and offered to agree to lines whioh tney declared would secure to Venezuela the undisputed possession of the mouth of the Orinoco. Lord Salisbury’s claim, however, says Mr. Storrow, grew every time he recurred to the subject, and he then proceeds to point out in great detail how, after Schomburgk's death and forty years after his survey, the British colonial office discovered that all these maps were wrong and that Scbom- bnrgk’ s line went around by the big bend of the Onyuni, and compelled the engraver to change all of his maps to correspond, taking the Schomburgk line far westward from the original course. Says Mr. Storrowt “ This is perilously near the altera tion of anoient landmarks and spolia tion of records. It evidently deoeived Lord Salisbury, who, on February 13, 1890, asserted it to be the line surveyed by Sir R. Schomburgk in 1841. He did not survey this line in 1841, or in any other year.” B R Y A N 'S S om e MAIL. A d v i c e t o L e t t e r W r it e r s H a v e B e e n P e s te rin g ; H im . W ho Lincoln, Neb., Jnly 22.— Each day, the pile of letters at the home of W il liam J. Bryan increases in size. In stead of catching up with his corre spondence, the Democratic presidential candidate gets farther behind. More letters come in each day than he and his w ife and his secretary can open and read. In order to let the people who have w ritten, to him know about the condition of affairs, Mr. Bryan has given ont the following: “ To the Public: My daily mail has grown so large that I find it impossible to reply at length to each. Those who are interested in the success of our cause w ill appreciate the situation and pardon me for making the following suggestions: “ First— As time w ill not permit a full discussion of the principal ques tions in so large a number of private letters, I shall, in order to avoid dis crimination,reserve all such discussions for publio occasions. “ Second— A ll offers of services and snggestons as to the condnet of the campaign should be made to the na tional committee represenfng various states and territories. A ll requests for campaign literature should be adressed to the secretary of the national com mittee at headquarters as soon as head quarters are opened. If my friends w ill be kind enough to observe these suggestions, I shall be able tp devote my time more fully to the work of the oampaign. W. J. Bryan.” T h e G o ld I>*■ m n rn ,t*.. St. Lonis, Jnly 22.— Prominent gold standard Democrats of this city today took the first step toward repudiating the ticket and platform of the Chicago convention. They decided to issue a call for a convention of the gold stand ard Democracy of Missouri to determine whether a third ticket shall be put ill the field, whether the fight for gold shall extend into the congressional dis tricts or whether the bolters shall come ont openly for McKinley and centralize their efforts on him. Colonel James O. Broadhead, ex-minister to Switzer land under Cleveland, presided. A resolntion was adopted providing for the naming of a committee of seven by Broadhead to send out a oall for a con vention of gold-standard Democrats. Circulars w ill be sent all over the country to gold-standard leaders asking them to co-operate or be present at the meeting. A Resume of Events in the Northwest. E V IDENCE O F S T E A D Y G R O W TH N e w . G a t h . r . d In A l l t h * T o w . . . o f Our » I z O b o r l n g s t a t e - - Im p ro v e m en t S o le d In A l l In d u »trle.-O re« on . A young cyclone passed through the timber near Fox valley last week, and a great deal of timber was blown down. The ordinances preventing cows from running at large and for cutting thistles w ill be strictly enforced in The Dalles. According to the report given the ooumy court by George Tregaskis, stock inspector, there are over 110,000 sheep in Harney county, not including lambs. Bandover & Co. propose putting in a mill at their Olalla, Donlgas county, mine. The firm has sunk a shaft ten feet, and at that depth the assays run from $9.60 to $50 a ton, it is said. The Long Creek Ealge, of Grant county, is informed that over 200 sheep are dead on the range between the mid dle and north fork of the John Day river, the result of poison on the range. The Umatilla county grand jury cau tioned justices of the peace against issu ing warrrants for the arrest of persons charged with petty offenses, unless the judge should be satisfied that the evi dence is sufficient to convict or that the accnsed is attempting to leave the coun ty or state. C. B. Wade, cashier of the First Na tional bank, of Pendleton, sasy, after a personal inspection of seventy-five wheat fields in Umatilla county, and npon careful inquiry, that the damage to the wheat crop in Umatilla county, done by hot weather, has been on the average, 50 per cent. It looks as though Salem and Marion county were to become famous by rea son of the newspaper sketch artists produced from that section, says the. Statesman. F. F. Bowers, a bright and conscientious cartoonist, has been summoned by telegraph to the office of a San Famoisoo paper and to assume the dnites of a valuable assignment. The directors of The Dalles, Port land & Astoria Navigation Company visited the Cascade Locks, where they met the governor, secretary of state and state treasurer, who were looking over the state portage. The portage was damaged but little by the high water, and w ill require only slight repairs before it can be operated. The repairs w ill be made as soon as *he water goes down sufficiently to allow The Dalles City to land at the lower end of the incline. The county court of Union county has reduced by one the deputies in the offices of sheriff aud olerk. In the matter of the depntyship for the school superintendent's office, which in a pub lic way has been conferred on Miss Nellie Stevens, it is stated that the oounty oonrt w ill not favor I ipt ap pointment in that capaoity, the beard taking the grounds that disqualification as to the principalship also disqualifies her from discharging the duties of the office as deputy. W H f th il ig tn ii . The city cooncil of Puyallup has ap propriated $25 for cutting the thistles in the streets and highways of that town. Daring the month of June the Egbert & Johnson Company at Getohell, in Snohomish county, cut 2,175,000 shingles. Government Architect Aaron Johnson, who w ill have charge building Spokane's new army post, arrived in that oity to assume duties. According to the report of the di- rector of the mint, Kittitas county took the lead in mineral production in Washington last year, and produced one-third of the gold of the state. George H. Lowe, a Georgia melon planter, has booked an order to ship two carloads of the green-above-the-red frnit to Seattle, 3,000 miles, The freight charge is $350 per carload. Captain Kingsbury, who has „ been „„ employed as engiueer of the Yakima reservation ditch, reports that the channel w ill carry 16» feet of water per second, sufficient to water 40,000 acres of land. The oyster men of Mason county have all been notified by the state land commissioners that their deeds for oyster lauds are ready for them, and they are happy, as the work of years is bearing frnit. A t the Day logging camp, at Uak Point, in Cowiitz county, a logging railorad is being built. It w ill be about five miles in length, and w ill tup a large body of excellent timber P o . t u ia . t e r S k ip s O u t. Vanoouver, B. C., July 22.— A. B. heavy steel rails w ill be used, and thé Buie postmaster at Lytton, has skipped track w ill be standard gauge, out, and is believed to bave crossed the A few weeks ago a quantity of flax boundary. He is said to be about straw, grown on Puget sound, «a s $5,000 short in his aocounta, and also snipped by the Seattle chamber of com- owes personal debta for a conaiderable merce to Barbour & Sons, of Lisburn, amount, having borrowed from every Ireland. The manufacturers report that one he could. Write were issued at the samples are excellent, and very the instance of several creditors. similar to that grown in the Courtral district in Belgium. E x p o r t s F r o m Y a n r o u v o r D is t r ic t. An applicaiton has been filed on be Vancouver, B. C., July 22 — Exports half of Anacortes to make that city a from the Vanoouver consular district to sub-port The recently erected salmon the United States during the fiscal canneries there w ill use fish brought year ended June 30, 1896, amounted from British Columbia waters. This to $2,068.343, and consisted principally of ore, ooal, copper matte, lumber and turn T8D * ' ’ tbe reaîon f0T ‘ he applica- fish. A. Tobiaaeon. of Delta, in Whatcom ,1 o .e p h K i b l e r D r o w n * « H e a r L e b a n o n county, heard a hog sqeual near his Albany, Or., July 22.— Joseph K ib home the other night, and on going ler. of Lebznon, aged 22, was drowned emt found a black bear had just killed Mr. Tobiaason killed the while swimming with other boys at «h® hog Lebanon yesterday. bear which waa a very large one. with a tingle shot in its bead. M AR KETS up with a big rush, due a grw. , - to the Fourth, but within th« “ week “ fa ir " is about the bee r ^ given. The crop damage report, in a measure contributed to th« vailing quietude in business. ? salmon pack is pulling up « «A Butter is still on the up-grade j lianas and watermelons are in th " ket in good supply. Cherry .hip ®' have been rather large during the » week. A lew grapea are in the and bring |2 par orate. W h e a t M a rk e t. The local wheat market remain, chauged, as there is no movement sufficient importance to oall foranj a nominal prioe. Quotation, „ Walla W alla, 49 to 50o; Valley ¡j 53c per buahel. P r o d u c e M a rk e t. F lour — Portland, Salem, 0» and Dayton, »2.86; Bruton conuiy VV bite Lily, »2.86; graham, »2.5th perdue, »2 26 per barrel. O ats — Choice while, 26 m 28 c per b e l; choice gray, 24(326c. Rolled are quoted as follows: Bags, ,» 5.25; barrels, »4.50(97; cases, »3.75,' H a y — Timothy, »11.00 per ton; 4 *. »6.60(37 ; clover, »6(3 7 ; oat, »6.50- wh«, $6.50(36.60. ’ B arley —Feed barley, $13.50 par ion brewing, $14(316. M il l s t u f f s — bran, $14.50; »16.60; middlings, *18ig20; rve per cental. B u t t e r — Fancv creamsrr is quoted 40c; fancy dairy, 30c; fair to 17)*c; common, l$>yc per roll. P otato es — Burbanks, 40@65c sack; Garnet Chiles, 40(346c; F Rose, 50c; new. $1.40 per Back; sw best, 4!« (¿5>iC per pound. O nionb — New, $1 per sac*. P o u l t r y —Chickens, mixed. »2 50» 3.00. broilers, »1.60(32.50; geese, »».- turkeye, live, 10(3 l l c ; ducki, |2 3.50 per dozen. Koos— Oregon, 12>4@16s per down. C heese — Dragon, 9c; Dalifoinu* Young America, 9c per pound. T e o n c a l F ruit — Oahiornit iem« »4.50(35.00; choice. $---- ; ticilj »6.60; hauauae, »1.75(33.00 per buna. California navels. »2.6UQ2.75 per bor pineapples, »3.00(35.00 per dozen. DBE00N V egetables —Ganc, tie*.1 per pound; Oregon peas, 2c; new v uage, 114 " per lb; tomatoee, »125 box; string beans, 5(36c per lb; 3 @ 4cp erlb : Oregon radisues, 10c dozen; cauliflower, 70(375c per ( cucumbers, 15(340c per dozen; plant, 15<3l7>nu per lb; rhubarb,! (33c F kesu F buit —California applet,»1. @1.50 per box; d i rriea, Kuy.l An: loose, 6c per lb, 75c a box; Black publicans, loose, 5c per lb, 60c per’ gooseberries, 2(32)$c per pouud; e rams, 5c; raspberries, 5c; bLckberriaj 5c; apricoiB, »1 per box; peaches, 8f »1 per box; watermelons, »3lgo.5U dozen. STRAWBERRIES—8C. D bikd F r u it s — Apples, evaport bleached, 4(94J4c; sun-dried, 3V'(k; pears, sun and evaporated. 6(i(tic pin pitless, 3(a 4c: prunes, 3(36 per pounu. W ool — Valiev. 9c, per [round; 1" ern Oregon, 6<97c. H ops — Choice, Oregon 2@lic pound; medium, neglected. N uts — P eanuts, 0@ 7cper pound fc raw, 10c lor roasted ; cocoanu s, yuc dozen; wall uts, 12>s(3H c; pme n” 16:; iiic.ory nuts, 8(nl0c; diestnir 17c; Brazd, 12c; pecans, large, 1 .111111 bo, 16c; filberts, 125*c; fancy, Ur 14c; hard-shell, 8c ; paper-shell, V 123*c. P rovisions — Portland pack: brook hams are quoted at lU(ull)'ac per» picnic bams, 7c; bjneleas hams, 7 ureakfast bacon, l'*c; bacon, 7c;^ salt sides, 6c; lard, 5-pound pails,”? lbs. 7(*c; 60s, 7!uc; tiercce, 7c [round. H id e s .— Dry hides, butcher, so per pound, 11 (312c; dry kip and skin, 10(9l i e ; culls, 3c less; Ball«! Ilrs and over, 6c ; 60 to 60 lbs, 404! 40 and 50, 4c; kip and veal sk‘ 10 to 30 ibs, 4o; calfskin, sound, to 10 lbs, 6c; green, unsalted, less; culls, l- 2o lesB; sheepskins, ¡ti lings, IO1915c; short wool, medium. 30(34hc: long wool. 60(JJ$t B l o w ax — 20(922 per pound. T allow — Prime, per pound, Vo. 2 and grease, 2t$c. H e r c h e u d l i e M a rk et. S almon —Columbia, river No. 1. $1.25«3l.60; No. 2. tabs, »2.26@* fancy, No. 1, flats, »1.75(31.86: Alt« No. I, UtllB, $1.20(31.30; No.2, tails,1 <92.26. B eans — Small whit I, No. 1, 2c pound; butter, 3c; bayou, O4C; L 6)4 (3 4c. C ordage —M anilla rope, 114-inch, »noted at 8c; White sisal, hard twisi Rope, 1'4-in. eir. and upward, d* rope, 12-thread, tr^c. S ugar —Golden C, 438c ; extra 0, L dry granulated, 5c; cube crushed powdered,6c per pound; j»c per" discount on all grades lor prompt half barrels. more than maple sugar. 15(916e per pound. C o ffe e —Mocha, 27(331c per •lava, lancy. 21(329c; Costa Hie*- -3‘» c ; Caracal, 22‘ *(326c; bslv**; (422'; Arbuckle, »2d.16; Lion, t-u Columbia, >20.15 per case. R ice — Island, »3.50(34 per sack; pan, $3.75(34. C oal O il — Cases, 20l*c; 1 ” 1 ac ; tanks, 15>ec per gallon- W heat B aos — Calcutta, »4.26*»*, for July and August deliveries. M e a t M a r k e t. B eef —Gross, top steers, $6-36; $2.25(32.50; dressed beef, 406V pound. M u t t o n —Gross, best sheep, $3.00; ewes, $2.76; dressed mutts* (95c per pound. . „ V eal —G ross, small, 4>$e; '*'**’ 3)»c per pound. Hons—Gross, choice, hearfi * 3.25; light and feeders, $2 75; 1 3) z (34 c per pound. SAN F R A N C IS C O MARKET* F lour — Net cash prices: f traa, $3.75(33.85 per barrel; 1 *» tras, $3.56(33.65; superfine. $2. » B a r l e y — Feed, fair to k00** choice, 73?«c; brewing, 86'¿c. W b z a t — Shipping. No- J choice, $1.10; milling, $L17’j i “i ' 1 P otatoes — Sweets. $2.50! * ' * banks, Oregon, 60(380c. O nions — New, 15(320 per sac*-