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About Washington County hatchet and Forest Grove times. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1896-1897 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 26, 1896)
IN THE COWLITZ SAN * Heh.n,. t„ *.U bH .li „ Frio®. Washington, Nov. 24.—The Teat Three More Lives Lost in the Inis morning cays: A conference of nations on the sub T u rbu len t Stream. ject of the world’ s wheat market is un derstood to be desired by at least one of the great foreign wheat-growing em much d a m a g e to property ! pires It is stated in official circles here that Rusisa is partioulary fneucly to snoh idea, aud is believed bo 11 mak Town of H am ilton , In S k a g i t ing overtures, not only tc the United C ou atJ. T o t a l l y W r a o k .il b y t h « btatua but to Engl mil, tho Argentine floo d o f 1 h a t l t l v o r - N o l . l v , , . L o . t . Republic and Austria, which arc the principal wheat-growing nations of the Cbebali*. N ot . 24. — Additional world. The idea suggested, as out tbiiagh tueiiger details of the flood* in lined here, is that the nation!, shnul I lie neper Cowlitz valley, in the eastern they see fit to unite in an agreement end of this comity, were received to- upon the anbjeot, could fix a price for A letter written by L. A. Davis, wheat to be maintained uuiform'y to Mrs Davis, at Cora, etafea that through various seasons of overproduc p n i damage was done in that vicinity, tion and unsatisfactory orops, caused ¡¡be Bays the inuilcarrier just informed by drought or continued rain, and thus her that A. L. Brown, his w ife and make the principal grain staple upon JO year-old daughter were drowued in which the millions of consumers de the Uiwlitai Brown’ s house and barn pend for food, almost as unchangeable »ere swept uwu.v. in value as gold itself has become. Siler, a w ell-to-do farmer, lost a This would enable the produoer, in the valuable team and all his livestock. event of an unusually large crop, to York, a neighbor, lost ninch steak. The store nis wheat aud obtain thereon a water ruined many farms, destroyed loan that would tide him over until promising orchards, and swept away wheat was in demand in the wolrd’ s barns, houses, fences and stock for market, when he would get a full and many miles in its course. fair price for it. Jobu Shumaker, the farmer whose wife and fire ohildren were drowned, A FLAX MILL TO START died from expusn-e. When fonnd by neighbors he was exhausted and de P r o m o t i o n o f I n cl im t ry In O r e g u u I n mented. F a irly In d e r W ay. Superintendent Sheldon eaid today Portland, Or., Nov. 24.— Mrs. W. P. be bad aaoertained that the loss of the Lord, wife of (Governor Lord, untiring Chehalis Water Company at the pump in her effort-* to promote the flax in ing station on the Newanktun, neat dustry in Oregon, held a conference in town, was more serious than supposed. Portland yesterday with Dr. Thornton, It will probably amount to several of Washington, aud Henry L. Deniel, hundred dollars.. relative to the project. The conference jesterday was the result of long corre A Nkaiclt T o w n W r e c k e d . spondence among interested parties. Seattle, Nov. 24.— Notwithstanding The plan, as given by one of the con yesterday’ s severe snow storm, all the ferees, is to organize a stock company tiains in and oat o f Seattle are run of $100,000 capital, and to contract ning. although the sohodnle time has with farmers to furnish a specified been mashed to pieces. Saattle is still quantity of flax per year, the contract in the clutches of snow and slash. to be based npon a reasonable estimate Probably the town in Skagit county of the amount Oregon soil will produce to Buffer the most by the Hood of the per acre Enough flax thus guaran Skagit river was Hamilton. Tim town teed, machinery will at once be ordered' las complete wreck. The big brick and a manufacturing plant locatod store building o f .Barker & Fountaiue somewhere in the state. Salem stands it a heap of ruins, end the goods are a good chance to be selected as the site. buried under the fallen wails. Every The purchase of the old Scotch mills is» thing is in a horrible snspe. The under consideration. street! are washed ont, sidewalks gone, tad the town is tilled with trees, A SHOOTING AFFRAY. slumps and rubbish Everyone is dis couraged and heartbroken, and the Callforni» Man Went After HI® Wif. bul scene beggars description. Gut Cold l.eatl Inttead. No lives were lost, although there JacksoD, Cal., Nov. 24.— A shooting were several closa calls. The waler uffrav occurred early this morning on was in every house in the lower part of the Payton ranch, three miles east ol town, and some of the people were Amadou City, resulting in the instant I prisoners upstairs until Huudav noon, killiDg of .1. Thomas, at the hands when they were tiken off in boats of W. Payton, his brother-in-law. The track of the Seattle & Northern Thomas, married a sister of Payton. railway, between W oolley und Hamil Their married life was unhappy, and ton has been almost completely de- their matrimonial jars led to several •troyed, and it w ill probably be two separations, the wife returning to her weeks before the road is in good work folks on more than one occasion. The ing condition again. The loss to up last separation took place a few days river ranchers w ill be heavy, as con ago. About 5 o’clock this morniug, siderable stock was lost. Thomss repaired to the Paytoo place, and, rousing the inmates, said he had come for his wife. He was told it was no time to came, whereupon Thomas ras O iii.lu H o te l M y ste ry la C lea red drew a pistol and commenced shooting, one shot taking effiot in Paytou’ s A w ay. Omaha, Nov. 24.— Charles H. E ll shoulder. Payton then went into the iott, now in the oounly jail, has con house, got his shotgun aud fired at fessed to the murder of (lay Hutson- Thomas, killing him instantly. pillar, his friend, in the Windsor hotel A It Title«* G uv ® W a y . here last Tuesday. His confession Birmingham, Ala., Nov. 24. A covers twenty typewritten pages. Hs party of a dozen youug people, who left says Hutsoupillar was about to leave Eiisley City last night, in a wagon for for Montana, and continues: a hay-ride, had their merriment trans ‘ ‘ I owed him $15, and wanted him formed into death and disaster before tosigu a reoeipt for it, and lie would they bad proceeded a mile. A new “ Of. I told him 1 would not pay un bridge has just been completed across less he did. lie oalled me a fool, and Village creek. While crossing the Slid he would take it out of my h id e." stream the bridge gave way, precipitat Elliott then picked np a coupling pin ing the wagon and its load of human aud struck his friend, and becoming freight fliteen feet telow into the wa alarmed at his hard breathing, went to ter. William Shannon was injured * drugstore aud bought fifteen cents' about the head, and died todav. Mag worth of chloroform , saturated a towel gie Hartigan was injured about the with it, and put it over Hutsonpillar’ s head aud back, and will probably die. faoe. Elliott then left the hotel and Charles Barnea was badly iujured about •ook the Northweatern train east, and the head and internally. Several was arrested at Cedar Rapids. He did others of the party were seriously in oot know at the time that Hutsoupillar jured. The cause of the accident wai was dead. He adds: Ibat the striDgers of the bridge were "I took only $21 o f his money. Tho too short and gradually worked off the tost of the money found on me, abont silts The water in the creek was all W5, was sent me by my uncle at fee, deep, and but for the timely work of those least iojured, the lsdies and Akorn, O. ” thoae more seriously injured would have been drowned. Th® Terror*® G n n T rial. MURDERER CO N FE SSES. Atlantic Highlands, N. J ., Nov. 23. —The monitor Terror did today what “o other ship in the United States D*vy ever did. She fired solid shot at *•* from her four 10-inch guns in one A ll were fired as if one piece. They were fired by electricity from the bridge. Nearly 1,000 pounds of Powder was burned in doing it, and a ton of metal waa hurled into the deep. That volley represented $500 worth of ®*terial destroyed. The recoil of the ^ans represented no less than 5rt.0<><>- foot tons, and yet the Terror showed ^ fo r iy a tremor as the guns p lu n g ed from the discharge and then slid ln* their places. That same en ergy *ould have lifted one ton 5 0 .0 0 0 feet »n the air. That reveals the possibili t y of such craft as the Terror, whose digest guns are of the 10-inch "izo is because of the fact that the TerroT mark another distinct advance in affairs by Americans that this *«■ of nnusnal significance. H a n o ta a i* S p e t c h A p p rove«!. Paris, Nov. 84.— French newspapers f^oerally approve the apeech made by ** Hanotaux, minister of foreign '•airs, in the chamber yesterday, in T*Blr to M. Millerand, aooialist. as to whether a convention between France *>d Russia actually existed, and, if a°> •»»t were its main line». The news- *pers recognize that M. Hanotaux **»d not be more e x p licit The ao- •Wiat newspapers alone complain of ™ reticence. BENITO WRECKED. Intornatlonal Tho C ollier a T ota l I.o .s »n d t w w UruwntMl. 81* o f th» Point Areuu, Cal., Nov. 24.— Tho steamer S*u Benito, bound from T aco ma to San Fraurisoo, went ashore seven nnles north of Point Arena this m orn ing. The steamer struck on u sandbar und broke in two The San Benito earned forty-four men. During the neveio storm last niirbr, she mui-t have lost her bearings. The wind blew ter rific aud a heavy sea was running. The vessel struck about 1 o'clock in the mornii’g, and an hour later broke just aft of the smokestack. Boats were lowered, but one capsized immediately with five mtu in it, four of whom were drowned. Another boat, with four of the crew, capsized nine times, losiug two men. The three men by heroij means reached the shore. Daylight found the rest of the orew clinging to the rigging. Such a heavy sea was runniug that it was impossible to ren der assistance. The drowned are: John Sherman, mesaboy. , C. ( ’ondon, second assistant engi- neer; married. (). W. Scott, first assistant eugi- neer; married. Michael Pendergast, fireman. Two men, names unknown. The steamer Point Arena reached the scene at 11 o ’ clock this morning, and sent out a boat, aud, by great bravery and skilled seamanship, res cued seven men. In making a second trip, the boat was almost swamped, aud waa compelled to abandon all efforts on account of the great breakers washing over the wreck. A sailor was washed overboard aud reached shore almost dead. He wus revived by a doctor on the beach At 4 o ’ clock this afternoon, a sailor jumped overboard, aud attempted to swim ashore with a liue. The should- erstraps of bis life-preserver broke and the man went down. Lighthouse Keeper Brown, an In dian, Lasarus, William Caumprey and Al Cunningham manned a boat und made two heroic efforts to connect the wreck with the shore line, but were unsuccessful. The steamers Point Arena and A lca zar are off the wreck, but can render uo assistance until the sea calms. A passing steamer lauded a guu at Poiut Arena this afternoon, and the line w ill be shot to the wreck tonight. Both parts of the ship are fast in the sand, fifty feet apart. The sailors claim the accident was on account of the foghorn not blowing, but the night was clear and the light could be seen many miles. Carried h Light Cargo. . Tacoma, Wash., Nov. 24.— The steamer San Benito left here Wednes day at 4 P. M. with 4,COO tons of Car bon H ill coal. This was 600 tons snort of her usual winter cargo. She arrived Monday at ¡3 P. M. The Northern Pacific branch to Carbon Hill mines being d oted by washouts, Captain Smith Wired tbe sitnation to San Francisco and was instructed to sail with » light cargo. Thursday coal began coming in. and he could have gotten away Friday morning with a full cargo. Captain Monntford, the Southern Paoiflo agent here, thinks the light cargo should have been in the steamer’ s favor. The San Benito has been between T a coma and San Farncisoo since the San Pedro was wrecked near Victoria in 1891. Fora year previous she had been running to Comox, B C. The South ern Pacific brought her aronud from Newport in 1890. She made the round trip between here und San Fran cisco every eleven days, and in the summer season cairied 5,500 tons pet trip. , There are several members o f the San Benito's crew belonging tc this port, and much uneasiness is felt re garding their safety. F lv ® Child**® Cr em at ®« l. Hamilton, Mo., Nov. 24.— Five ch il dren of Mr. and Mrs. Snyder Neal, liv ing five miles north o f tbe city, were burned while their parents were attend ing a dance. They bad eight oh il dren. The oldest, a boy of 15, and a baby accompanied the parents to a so cial party. About 11 o ’clock tbe gath ering broke np. Soon after starting home, the Neals and those accompany ing them, discovered the Neal residence on fire. When they reached the burn ing bnitding, the father saw his 11- year-old girl lying burning in the front door, clasping her 3-year-old brother in her arms. The flames prevented the rescue. Tb children were then dead. Tbe father fell in a swoon, and has i been a raving maniac ever aince. It ia thought the fire was caused by aD in cendiary. Nora, 9 years old, ia the only survivor. A Mur«lcr and Sulci«!®* Mayfield, K y„ N ot . 24. - A murder and suicide occurred here today “ Baker, a farmer, recently sued ta t db vorce. He and bis wife h a d l o r t M together for some time, and b.tter feel ing existed between ‘ h '“ Today. Th® Larth Slipped. Hsker went to see his wife at his real Meadow Lake, Or., Nov 23.— A bad deuce, and when she would not: listen landslide occurred at thia place. Such ,o his overtures, he shot and killed her and then shot himself twice. Both died damage waa incurred that tbe present proprietor w ill not attempt to restore almost instantly it. Tbe slide occurred laat Saturday. For more thau a mile in length and Emperor W illi»* IHsg««**- 300 feet np the mountain aide the earth London. Nov. 24,- T b e Dally Mail a gave way. Tbe dam and flume, power Berhn correspondent says h® '* * " th®‘ generators for the large shingle m ill, Emperor William ta disgusted w ‘ »h th' weie carried away, together with much „.„Medinas of the reichstsg. and 1« of tbe buildings and machinery, in- d P.,e r » .n .d tod,«scire that ^ rludmg two large turbine water wheels. Water over tbe entire lake, which ia ^ o o n a i s ^ t w i . h the e « c i „ c y of one-balf by one and one-half miles, wav raised more than seven feet. The loss the navy, and considers the navy win was a heavy one. • prove a'splendid electioneering cry Aa Appeal «o Charity. San Francisco, Nov. 24.— Twenty- J a r r e d in the market known « five men. who form tbe nucleus c f a l »cite A number of stores and bouses scheme to ettabliah a colony of artisana iTeredeatroyed. and,be damage done on one or more o f the South Sea islands, met tonight at tbe Tnrk-atreet is estimated at $300,000-^ temple and decided to appeal to the Working Hoar. public for fundi with which to pur chase a schooner and an outfit They figure it w ill ocat $1,000 for a schooner Missouri Pacific Iron and $3,000 fur enough supplies to es the workiug. h ^ . ^ pe, tablish fifty men. A special appeal for aid w ill be made to tbe church en. - Aa S a l* « '» , l r * ' _ o . _ A disastrous fit» r S iK i-— CUBA IS DESIROUS OF PEACE Both Spaniards and Natives Tired of the War. EDITOR CORONADO INTERVIEW ED H 'e y le r’ a Latest F dict — M auy Non* ouiubu Huti Murdered by III® Sol* diem — M orro Castle F. s e d i t i o n s . New York, Nov. 23.— Manuel M. Coronado, editor of tho Cuban patriots' paper. La Discussions, published in Havana, who escaped from that oity in the last days of October, after General Weyler had ordered his arrest, reached New York this morning. He brought with him important news for the junta in thia city, and early this afternoon visited the headquarters. Of histsoape he said: “ When I loarned by private tips that General Weyler had ordered my arrest, I made immediate preparations for es-( cape. The order was not a surprise. I had secured a disguise in the costume of an ordinary Bailor. When my bouse was surrounded by troops. 1 hastily shaved off my heavy mustaohe, and, donning my disguise, which also in cluded a heavy false black goatee, I stepped into the house adjoining and made my escape to the street, as 1 thought, nnobserved. I jumped into a oarriage. An alarm was given and the polioe pursued me in another. 1 worked an old game. I told my driver to keep ahead, and, watching for an oppor tunity, jumped from the carriage aud walked baok on the pavement, mingled with the crowd and made my escape to tbe country. “ A few daya afterwards— I prefer not to give dates, 1 shipped aboard a sailing vessel as a common, sailor. The captain, knew me, however. We reached New Orleans after an unevent ful trip, and I oame to New York by rail, arriving this m orniug." In reply to a question as to the gen eral feeling of the people living in Cnba, be said, through an interpreter: “ Today we might say that ¡Spain holds Cuba by sheer force of arms The whole country, Spanish aud Cuban alike, desires peace at almost any sacri fice, and although it may seem strange, tbe Spanish element are quite as pro nounced in this feeling aa the Cubans, and wish peaoe and independence for Cuba. " I t is thought that Cnba again an- der Spanish rule would he unable to pay the enoromus war debt already in curred or to stand the tremendous tax that would now invariably be imposod by Spain upon Cnba, and another up rising would, nnder those conditions, follow. Spain would have to expend great sums of money to keep Cuba in submission. The war debt now is esti mated at $500,000,000, and is accumu lating at the rate of $12,000,000 a month. " I f Cnba gains her independence in this struggle, aud I hope and maintain that she w ill, she w ill start afresh with wonderful possibilities for her. Spain w ill soon be forced, by lack of funds, to withdraw her troops. The opinion I express is not that of transient Cuban residents, bat of merchants aud land owners, Spanish as well as Cuban. The Spaniards express this rpiuion in private only, as public expression would insure their execution as rebels. “ Weyler does as lie pleases. His latest edict i9 that all persons, men, women and children, who are fonnd outside of the Spanish lines, shall be considered rebels and shot as such. This ediot was published only in tho official gazette in Havana, which cir culates among officers and officials only. There was no way in which those out side of these circles conld learn of the edict. There is no railroad to Finar del Rio from Havana, and it is in this province that the edict has cost many lives. People taken nnder this ediot are marched outside of the gates of the city and shot down by soldiers. The reports of prisoners captured by Weyler are only the captare of these poor devils "T h e former practice of the Spanish authorities of shooting prisoners ia Morro castle and throwing the bodies into the water for aharks, has been stopped, because not long ago several bodies drifted into the bay of Havana. Tbe authorities explained to inquiring citizens that the men had probably drowned. Ballet holes in the head, however, dispoved this. The people would welcome anything to hasten tbe end, not only on account of the loes of property end life, bul on account of the massacres. ” I ndi an Hunter® (Jnr Mt min ed . SOME FACTS ABOUT SMUGGLING flu p g rrliln f S p ecia l Agent C row ley F i t « ® III® A n n u e l H e p u r t . Washington. Nov. 23.— J. J. Crow ley, supervising special agent of tbe treasury, in bis annual report, devotes considerable attention to smuggling. Opium smuggling, the report says, has decreased largely during the last year, as tbe result priuoipally of the redac tion of the rato of duty from $12 to $6 per pound; 138,850 pounds of smoking opium was imported at San Francisco during the year 1895, upon which $913,404 was paid in duty. Last year the amount was 98,126 pounds, upon which duty aggregating $588,756 waa paid. The report shows there has been a noticeable increase in the smuggling of diamonds since the dujy on precious stones was increased by the tariff act of 1894. A return to the rate of duty provided in the act of 1890, Mr. C row ley says, would he in favor of the rev enue and of the legitimate trade. Daring the past year 5,566 Chinese persons applied for admission ta this country. Of (these, 1,521 were in transit to other countries: 415 were re jected and 3,510 were admitted. The number of Chinese arrested for viola tion of the exclusion law was 198, aud the number deported 120. Under the treaty betweeen the United States and China, providing for the departnre from and return to this country of Chi nese laborers, 936 laborers left tbe United States and 106 returned during the past year. The joint resolution of congress, ap proved Maroh 1, 1895, prohibiting tbe transportation through the United States of merchandise destined for places in the free zone of Mexioo, Mr. Crowley says, now obtains of sbippiug goods to th e' zone librq, via Mexican seaports, and the only apparent result accomplished by the legislation re ferred to has been less business for American railway companies. It is suggested that the removal of the re strictions imposed, at least to the ex tent o f allow ing the transportation of goods oonsinged to places in Mexioo from the seaboard to the Mexioan fron tier, undor the usual transportation entries, would involve no danger of loss to the revenue of our government. " A tten ron ia oalled to tbe shipments of Canail, n goods in transit through the Unit- 1 States to points in Canada, and to the transportation of free and dutiable merchandise in bond between ports in the United States through Canada. New linos of travel have been opened, which require constant oitre and snrvePlanoe. The report shows that during the last calendar year, loaded cars to the number of 430,- 678 were sent over Canadian roads from ono point in the United States to another. CIVIL To Ue SERVICE PRINCIPLES. A d o p t e d In C h i c a g o tli® N e a r F u t u r e . School® In Chicago, Nov. 23.— Tbe «ity board of eduoation has decided by a practic ally unanimous vote to embody in its new rules the principles of the exist ing civil service law. Tho employes of the board, excepting snperintendents. teachers, the business manager, chief engineer, architect, auditor, attorney and board clerk, are to be placed under a system that w ill conform as nearly as possible to tbe lines followed by tho city civil service commission. The action of last night does not give the cchool employes into the hands of tho existing commission in the city hall. It makes a oivil service com mis sion ont of the board's own committee on rules, or a body subordinate to that j committee. The aotion took tbe form of a resolution which was adopted after a lively disenssion, and in which the committee ou rules was directed to em body the necessary provisions in its forthcoming report. It was generally understood that tho question of civil service wonld come up at last night's session of the board, and there was an unnsnal number of vis itors Only two members were absent. The triumph of the new rnle was ac complished after a sharp and spicy fight among the members. PORTLAND MARKETS. Froduo® Mark®«. F lour — Portland, Salem, Cascadia and Dayton, 14 40; Benton county and White l.ily, 14 40: graham, 13.50; su perfine, 42 60 per barrel. W heat — Walla Walla. 78®70c; Val ley, 8lis82c per bushel. O ats —Choice w hite,38@40cper bnah- e l; choice gray, 36@38c. Rolled oats are quoted us follows: Bags, >4.26® 6.25; barrels, $ 1 . 50 ( 117 ; cassM, »3.76. H at —Timothy, »11 00 i>er ton; cheat, »6@ 7.60: clover, »6.60(97.60; oat, »7.60; wheat. »7.50 B a u l k y — Feed barley, »18 00 per ton ; brewing, »17(318. M i l l s t u k k s — bran. »14 00; shorts, »15.60; middlings, >23.00; rye, 00c per cental. B u t t e r —Fancv creamery is quoted at 60c; fancy dairy, 36c; fair to good, 20 @ 22 Jic. P otatoes .—California, 66 c ; Oregon, 45(a 66 c per sack; sweets, 2c per pound. O nions —75c per cwt. P o u l t r y — Chickens, mixed. »2 25® 2.60 bi oilers, »1.00® 1 76: geese. 46.00; turkeys, live, 10c; ducks, »2.00&3.00 per dozen. E g o s — Ranch, 27J£c p e r d o z e n . C h e e s e — Oregon, l i e ; Oalifo n ia fe ; Young Atherica, 12c per pound. V kuetaui . kb —Garlic, new, 7o per pound; cabbage, lc per pound; toma toes, 20c per b o x : si ring beans, 2 % @3c per pou n d; wax beaus, 2>»®3c per pound; cucumbers, 16®26c per box; <gg plant, »1.5J per crate; corn, 10® 12^jc per dozen; summer squash, 28« per b o x ; green peppers, »1 per box. I hocical F ruit —Cal norma teutons, fancy, are quoted at »3.00C44.60 per box; bananas, »2.60 per bunch; v wleucia late oranges, »4.50(35.00; pineapples, »3.00 ®4.b0 per dozen. F resh F r u it —California apples, »1.00 @1.60; Oregon, »1 per b ox; crab apples, 66 c ; pears, 78@85c; prune, 2)4c per pound ; Salaw ay peaches, bO@75c; ¡"inane river and Indian Red, 70c per b ox; wa termelons, Rogue river, »1.00 per dozen; California, »1.26 per dozen ; ( a melon pee, Oregon, 0Uc®»l per d a t e ; quinces, $ i ; grapes, 40@80o per crate; Hungarian plums, 60c per b o x ; egg, 1 1 ac per pound ; Eastern Concord grapes, 30c per basket. 1 titiKit F ruits — Apples, evaporated, | bleached, 4 @ 4 j^ c; unbleached, 3)£@ 4c; sun-dried, sacks or boxes, 4@ 6c; pears, eun and evaporated, 6 @ 6 o ; prunes, 3@5c per pound; figs. 10c per pound. W ool —V aliev. 10c, per ponnd; East ern Oregon, 6 @ 8 c. H ops —New crop, 9W @12c; old, 60 . Nure— Peanuts, 6®7c per pound for raw, 10 c lor roasted ; cocoann e, 00 c pea dozen; walnuts, 12@14c; pine nute, 15;; hickory nuts, 8@10c; chestnuts, 15c; Brazil, 12c; pecans, large, 14c; Jumbo, 16c; filbert», 1 2 c ; fancy, large, 14c; bard-isheil, 8 c ; paper-slit II, lu@ 12 >»c. P rovisions — Portland pa ck : Smoked tiatns are quoted at 10 "® 10 i»c per lb ; licntc hams, 7c; boneless hauis, 7 X c ; treakfast bacon, 10 c ; bacon, 8 c ; dry salt sides, 0>*c; lard, 5-pound pails, 7c; 10 b , 0 ? „ c ; 60 s , 6 > 4 c ; tierces, 7o per 1 pound. ; H ides — Dry hide*, No. 1, 16 itoumla -an d upward, 0 a 10 c per pound; dry kip, No. 1, 6 to 10 pounds, 7c per pound; dry ralf. No. 1, under 5 pounds, 11® 13c; ! dry salted, one-third lc.-s than dry flint. Salted hides, sound steers, ()0 pounds, and over. 6 c do, 60 to 60 pounds, 6 c ; do, under 60 pounds ami cows, 3>?@ 4c; do, kip, Bound steer*, 15 to 30 pounds, 4c: do, veal, 10 to 14 pounds, 6 c ; do, calf, under 10 |tounds, 6 m 6 c ; green (nn- saltcd', lc per pound less; culls (bulls, stags, moth-eaten, badly cut, scored, hair slipped, wearner-beaten or grubby) one-t!iiid less. B eeswax —20(3 22 per pound. T a l l o w — Prime, per pound, 2 )i@ 3 c ; No. 2 and grease, 2(a>2)»c. | -------------- * { Bf®rchau<ll®a Mark®*. P a LEON—Columbia, river No. 1. tails, »1.25® 1.60; No. 2. tabs. *2.25®2 6 ); fancy, No. 1, fiats, »1.75(31.85; Alaska, No. 1, tails, » 1.20@1.30; n o. 2, tails, »1.90 @2.26. C o k d a g r —Manilla rope. H i-inch, is | ouoted at 8 c ; White tisal, hard tw isted: Rope, ll* -in . eir. and upward, U)£a; rope, 12 -tlireaii, 6,4 4 'c. S ugar —Golden U, 4 % c ; extra C, 4 )» c ; dry granulated, 6 c ; cube crushed and powdered, 6 c per pound; I 4 C per pound discount on all grades lor prompt cash; half barrels. I^c more than barrels; maple sugar. 15@16r ner pound. C ovkke — Mocha, 2?<3Slc per pound; Java, lancy, 2l@2Wc; Costa Rica, 20® 23!*c.; Caracal, 22'tj@25c; Salvador, 19 (a22e; Atbnckle, »18.16; Lion, »18.15; Columbia, »18 16 per case. R ice — leland, 4 )i@ 5 c ' Japan, 4t$® 6 c ; New Orleans. 4@4>ic. C oal G il — Cases, 19c; barrels, 17)*c; tanks, 15!*c per gallon. Y O U T H F U L BURGLARS. W heat B ag »—Calcutta, »4.25(g4.87X Two of Them Caught In m 8®attl® Man’ ® for July und August deliveries. lte«ldene®. Seattle, Nov. 23.— Tw o young men, each under 20 years o f age, are in tbe city jail. They gave thier names ar Charles Phillips and Chris Soott. Soott ia suffering from a bullet wound in tbe left arm, inflicted last night by H R. Bsyli**, whose residenoe they were burglarising. For the last two weeks, the oity has been overran with burglars, aud the police could not cap ture any of them, although from twelve to fifteen residenoe* were looted. The young men made * confession to tbe chief o f polio* tbi* morning, with the result that tbe officers are now in pos session of about $1,500 worth o f stolen property that tbs yonng burglars had hidden in room 20 o f the Pacific lodging-house, on Washington and Booth Second street*. M »»k SI ark at. B ee »— Gross, top steers. »2 25; row*, »1.75®2.60; dressed beef, 3>*«4J*c par ponnd. M utton —Grow, best sheep, wethera* »1.76; ewes, »1.60; dreesea mutton, 3 * e per ponnd. V eal — Net, small, 535>»o', large, 4)»c per pound. H o «»—Oroae, choice, heavy, »3.00® 3.26; light and feeder», $2 60; drama«* »3.60(23.76 per cwt Denver, Nov. 2 3 — A speci il to the News from Lander, W yo , says: Par ties arriving here from Uoback canyon report that a large party of Bannock Indians from Fort Hall reservation are •lsughtering elk, autleope and deer in that vicinity, and that this has been going on for some weeks without mo lestation on the part of the anthorities of Uintah county. White men of that vicinity say that there ia no money in the county treasury to prosecute these Indians, consequently they are allowed to do as they please. An effort w ill be made in tbe next legislature to pies such laws as w ill provide to protect game. Trl*d Lins'® Fl®a. Athens, N ot . 23 — The socialist who killed the rioh merchant, FraDgc Paulo, in the open street of Patras last Kunday has committed suicide by ex plodiug a dynamite cartridge in his mouth. It it not known bow be ob tained the explosire. Lem on, Nov. 33 .— A Daily News dispatch from Paris contains an inter view with Mr. Jewett, United »tales consul at Uivas, Turkey, who is on hi* way to New York Mr. Jewett seemed to think, says the dispatoh, tb it M. Hanotaux, tbe French minister for foreign affairs, was too confident of the sultan's sincerity in bis promisee to ae- oogd reforms. Mr. Jewett attache* • great deal of importance to tbe yonng Turkish agitation in Turkey. Hu w ill ctMarn to Armenia ia February 8L Louis. Nov. 33.— Colonel Fred erick Grant, of New York, eon o f Gen eral Grant, who is here attending tbe convention of the Society of the Army of the Tenoevee*, oalled on Mrs. Jeffer VaoETAnLES—Bsy tomatoes. 250400; son Davis end Miss Winnie Davis, at bay 1 ncumlier*, 23@40c per lox : pick- their hotel, accompanied by General I*e. hset. 1)4* P*r polled; hay squash. George V. Henry, of Jefferson bar 20(926c; egg plant, 25®40c; Alameda racks. Hs heia e s informal interview coin , »1; Berkley, do, 60® 60s per crate; with tbe ladies which listed abont fif green pepper», 2 W 5 0 c; green okra, 40® teen minutes. The w idow of tb* Con ,6c per I ioe ; 1-inia leans, 60®7V stria« federate president expreeeed herself aa leans, $1 per Mck; garlic, l@ 2e pan greatly pleased to meet Colonel Grant. pound. 8AN FRANCISCO MARKET®. P o t a t o e s — Garnet Chile, 35rJ40e; Salinas Burbank», 50@76u: Early Kuee, 36@40c; River Burbank», 26@36c; tweet», 76r@»l.l)0 per cental. Gw ion »— 11® 40c jierteik for yellow, 30c for pickle. E gg »— Btore, 24 @ f0j; ranch, 37J»e: duck*, 20: per di sen. C hb « » » — Fancv. inild. new, O f 10a; fair to good. 7)hi»8'<,c: Yonnr Atuerma, 9@ 10:; FTaateru. I2(413 , w i pound. W ool — Han Joaqctn and Number» coast, [«o r , 4@li; do good, 4 ‘ y ® 6 i . -*n Joaquin foothill, good 1 « choice, 6>*@ 7>fcc; do yeai ’« fleece, 4 " 5 ‘ «,c; Nevada, heavv. 6'u 7c; do. rhon-e, 8 u 8|»e; North ern, choice, 1 6 @ llc per pound. H ay —W heat, » 8 n o @ u - wheat end oaf, » 7 » 1 0 ; oat, i6 S > barley, »7 00® 8 60; alfalia, lin t crop, »4® 5 do second crop. »6 5d@6.60: clove,, |0<g8; »lock, 14.60® 6 50; per too.