NEWBERG GRAPHIC. A l f r V t : iM 'I K I ^ 4 ¿ NEWBERG GRAPHIC NEWBERG GRAPHIC. HA H Ä : .Twenty Dollars Ten Dollars One Column H a lf Column Professional Cards une Dollar K . n i l l i i u X o t l r r s «s il l l w l a s e r l e B tts<* r a t o o f T e s r e n t a | .e r l . t n a . VOL. .*>. JOHN NEWBERG. YAMHILL CO., OREGON, FRIDAY. APRIL 7. 18 E\ fcRY Suu*l»v at 11 a . m . and 7 r. m . and lbur>day F Photographer, E Central Meat Market N K \V It K ItO. 4 ) It. > A P llS T C H U R C H —RKGUI A R SERVICE I . . . . . . ... . . first and tliird suudtya of the month at 1L ; M»y be fouud at all times a full assoinieiit of good marketable M- ami 8:00 r m ; also on fi th Sun lay. morn la g and evenin'/. Stiuday acliool every Sunday at 10 a . M. Prayer meeting every Wednesday j eveuiug at 8:00 o clock. IP H igh W a te r on the G ila R iv e r Causes a L a r g e S ection o f a D am FRESH MEATS. ______ U I RISI IA N CHURCH.—SERVICES EVERY ' One door west / seuoud aud fourth Sunday at 10 a M and ; :30 p M. ''°rrls , M i’es A Co.’s on First street. Counterfeit dimes, composed of anti- j Portraits rularged to life size aud finished in mom and tin, arc in circulation in Lane Crayon , India Ink or Water Colors. j eounty, Or. I Ì OT~ Studio— Upstairs in Hoskins building. S. H X It K i t & S O N ' ST CHURCH —P R A Y E R MEETING every Wednes ay evening. Sat bath school \ DVKNT every Saturday at 10 , services fol owing. m P ianos [A R E E M E TIIO D H r.—PR A Y E R MEE TING I Jj every Thursday at 7:30 p . m . Sabbat. i s < ..o <1 every Sunday at 10 a . m CHURCH—SERVICE EVERY UNDAV at 11 . . M and 7:80 7:30 r. . Sabbath School . . and . M E. , CHURCH—SERVICES a at i 10 . M. Epworth league at 6:30 6 :i0 p. M. Player p m 10 a m D IR E C T m meeting eveiy Thursday eveuiug at 7:30 o’clock. H. N. ltOUNi S, Past-.r. AND FROM O rgans THE FACTORY. LADIES’ A U X IL IA R Y T O Y M. C. A ____ ry imiay at 4 r. . in M. E. meets evi Y ’ OUNG Ladies cordially invited to attend. m S O C IE TY NO TICKS. i i T Or TH E W — NEWBERG CAMP, No. 113, Y f , meets every Wedn.saay evening. T U. -«BUCHNERS MEETING I H I BBC and fourth Taursday in each month. I W C. , on-1 I. O O. F —SESSION' HELD ON THURSDAY evenings in Bank building. A. R —SESSIONS HELD FIRST AND TH IR D / I *___ _____ VT* Saturday eveuiug in each mouth. W. R. C.—MEETS FIRST AND TH IR D urday afternoon in each month. 0 SA T LI OF V.—M EEIS EVE RY SATURDAY EVEN 0 L K- S. m . c . a .— d ic v o n o s a l w b v i c m e v k k y I • Sunday at 3 p. m . Young men earnestly requested to atteud. Y A. (fi O. U. W.—MEETS EVERY TUESDAY EVEN ing at 7:30 p. m . in I. u. O. F. Hall. O F F IC IA L D IR E C T O R Y . C ity o f N ew b e rg ;. Mayor........................................G. W. McConnell | Recorder........................................ F. H. Howard j Marshal................... ........................ F. C. Mills Treasurer....................................... Moses Vetaw | Street comm issioner................. .........Enos Eilis Surveyor........................................... Miles Reece COUNCILMAN. Second Ward. Third Ward... I ’K O FE S j IO N A L ■d fl té t Paul Many ’ j J«>s. Wilson 1 Jesse Ed war. is fS M. calkins \ H. F. Lashier " } M. J. Joues First Ward.... CÔ CARDS. w . M c C o n n e l l , m . d ., Physician and Surgeon, g . Ü N k W I t E K G , OH. Office on First street, A ll calls promptly at- tended to day or night, Diseases of women aud childrou a specialty. H. J. LITTLEFIELD, Physician and Surgeon, I f y u want a Piano or Organ, buy it from first hands and save agents’ commissions. I carry a full line o f R E L IA B L E K IM B A L L P IA N O S and O R G A N S and C E L E B R A T E D H A L L E T * D A V IS ’ PIA N O S . Old Pianos and Organs taken in part payment for new ones. N e u b e r g , O r. Office in building occupied by the late Dr. Carman, on Main street. 3 0 5 W A S H IN G T O N S T R E E T . P O R T L A N D , OR. DR. HAROLD CLARK, Dentist, ^NEWBERG v FLOURING v MILLS,(£ - Dentist, N K W I i E l t f l, O R . N E.W BERC, O R E C O N . Gold fil ing a specialty. Gas or vita1 1 zed air given iu extracting teeth. All work wa ranted. ! Office— Near postoffice, ou First street. J . D. T A R R A N T & S O N , P r o p r i e t o r s . H aving recently equipped our m ill with new and improved ma­ chinery, we are now prepared to manufacture the best grade of Hour by the P U L L R O L L E R PROCESS. Cash paid for wheat. Feed ground Saturdays. EAST AND SOUTH The Shasta Route P acific —OF THE- C ollege , N ew berg , O regon . Trains leave and are due to arrive at Portland: All the Grammar School Studies, Music and Art. FROM FEB. I, 1892 00 p • h :30 a . ♦S:30 a . ♦5:00 p. t;::;0 a . ♦4:40 p. ’:36 a . •4:30 P. M ♦4:30 r. >i. ♦ 10:.*») a » -:30 p . »8:20 a . m . m m . Excellent opportunity for good work. Board and lodging. $3.00 per week. A ll other exiienoes very low. I f you want to teach; i f you want to take a business course; ir you want to review or take advanced work, we can suit you. Send for catalogue or come and see for yourself. TH u M A S* NENVLIN, President. D in in g C a r * o n O g d e n R o u t e . PULLM AN BUFFET H L K E P K K *. S e r o i i d - f 'l a f t A S l e e p i n g C a r a A t t a c h e d A l l 'I h r o u g h T r a i n s . to B ank of N ewberg NEWBERG, ORECON. Through tick* t offi e. 134 First street, where through t ckefa to all points in the Eastern states, Canada and Europe can be obtained at lowest rates from J. B. K IR K LA N D . Ticket Agent. Al. above trains a-rive and depart from Grand Central -tation. Fifth and I streets. N A R R O W G A U G E —W . PL D I V I S I O N —AND — C a p i t a l Stock JESSE E D W A R D S B. C. M IL E S ........... B. C. M IL E S $ 30,000 President Vice-President ........... Cashier P o rtlan d and W lllan iette \ alley R a ilw a y I)irectors— Jesse Edwards, B. C. Miles. F. A. Morris, J. C. Colcord, E. H. Woodward. I r. M Certificates o f dejnedt issue«! payable on rlemand. E x c h a n g e bought V P. M ; Oswego A way »t ti’s ) ♦3 io r. m and sold. («« kh I notes discounted. Deposits receive«! subject to check P. M ♦6 20 P. M ♦: io r M at sight, and a general hanking business transacted. Collections made •53» r : ■ o«wegn. Newberg. on all accessible points in the Unite«! States and Canada. I Dande«. Dayton. loi- ♦3 20 r. u. •V 40 I fs ¿ette. Hheridan, Correspondents— Ladd it Tilton, Portland; National Park Banc. Monmouth A Ai rile. J ♦4J0 P. ii ridsu A way station» ♦9 30 a . m New York. Strangers visiting the city are invited to call at the hank for infor­ • D a ll' . ♦Daiiv. exc.;pi Sunday. R. KOrni.ER. Manager. mation concerning the city. E P ROGKRd. Asst G«n F A P Agt., Poit* laud. Or. C‘ rresp«>ndence invited. Pass**ii7er depot foot of Jefferson street. ♦7:20 ♦ 12:15 ♦ 1 v5 ♦ v.1.5 % M. ♦6.30 A. M. Mrs. M eW hirter lia« begun suits at Fresno for f 30,000 insurance on her lms- I band’s life. The Astoria canners fixed the priee at | f l a salmon, and the Fishermen’s Union demands $1.15. The American Historical Society lias instituted two libel suits at Portland against the Oregonian. A ll the men charged with crime in connection with the labor troubles in the Occur d ’Alene are now at liberty. There is talk of reducing the miners’ pay at Nanaimo, 11. C. The union is verv strong there, and a strike is not at ail Improbable. Bands of Apaches areaway from their reservation in Arizona. So far the In ­ dians are charged only with frightening people and Iteing very sanev. Governor Murphy of Arizona lias ve­ toed tite bill passed by the Legislature extending the time of citizenship from six months to twelve months. The whisky smuggling on the west coast of British Columbia is not as ex­ tensive as reported. The hulk of it is from Victoria, not the United States. Reports have itcen received at Phoenix, A. T., of new and rieli placer diggings in the southwestern part of Maricopa county, about thirty miles north of Agua Calionto. Superintendent Hussey of the British Columbia police at Victoria has decided to go north in connection w ith the In ­ dian excitement over the alleged Sorrow Island massacre. Tlie International Nickel Company, which owned the great nickel mine at Riddles, Or., has sold a two-thinls in­ terest in the property to an English syn­ dicate for $000,000. The Bonanza mines in the Hanpia Halas, Yuma county, A. T., cleaned up $150,000 as the result of the last month’s run. This is the largest chunk of gold ever run into one bar. During high water on the G ila river a few days ago a large seetion of the dam of the Gila Bend Irrigation Company’s canal, sixty miles southwest of l ’huvnix, was washed away. The damage is stated to be not less than $100,000. Oregon has five live ex-Governors, and all are Democrats hut one— Hon. Z. E. Moody of Salem. The Democrats are Hon. L. E. Grover of Portland, lion . W . W . Thayer of Portland, Hon. John Whiteaker of Eugene and lion . S. F. Clnidw iek of Salem. In the suit of John Doe against the Waterloo Mining Company, tried in the Isis Angeles United States District Court, involving the title to disputed ground in the mining claims at Calico, Judge Boss rendered a verdict for the plaintiff. Several suits are practically settled by this decision. The Grand Jury at Portland, Or., has indicted M. Koshland of the firm of Kosldand Brothers, wool dealers, who failed a few weeks ago. He is charged with fraudulently obtaining about $12J,- 000 by means of false certificates which lie issued to the Bank of British Colum­ bia on wool in his warehouse. The advent of a Chinaman at Great Falls, Mont., who proposed to open a laundry there, created much excitement, and caused a mass meeting of lalstring men, w ho sent a committee to consult with the authorities. Police protection was given the Chinaman, hut he was forced to forego his design and leave town. The Planz murder case at San Jose is again before the people in the shape ««f hints at evidence being found, and that sensational arrests will shortly ffdlow. The theory of suicide lias never been |M>|mlar, the appcanwicc of the clothing and the shoes tending to show that ttie Ixjdy had been dragged to where it was found. The murder was committed last Nox ember. SOUTHERN PACIFIC CO. College Classes, Normal Course, Book-keeping, O ve r lan d E xpress .' Salem, Albany, Eug­ ene, Roseb'g Grant’s Pass, Medford Ash­ land, Sacramento,Og­ don, San Francis« o, Mojave, Los Angeles. El Paso,New Orleans, Caini East. .......... m . Rose berg A way station«« i Via Wood urn fo r Ì I Mt. Angel,Milverton, I | West Scio. Browns- I ^ ville ami Coborg.....J m . Albany and way station** m . C n n a iii» A way station« tf.lMcMinuville A waysia’s to G iv e W a y . Portrait and Landscape Artist. All orders promptly attended to and satisfaction guarameed. C a a m Bands of Apaclies Leave Their Reservation in Arizona. N E W A N D R IC H P L A C E R M IN E S . A. ery second and fourth Lord s «lay at il a . m and 7:30 p . m . Sabbath school every Sunday at 10 A. M. PACIFIC COAST. -IS PREPARED TO REPAIR at 10 a . m . Sabbath school « v e r y Sunday at J :40 | A. M Mout ily ui i ti»»K - »’• * tbe first sat- --- * W a t c h C S and • Clocks t— unlay in each mouth. ,000. “ There’s more whisky on the west ciiast than in Victoria,” remarked Frank Adams, who has just returnisl to Vic­ toria, it. C., from that s»c*ion. “ The Indians are all drunk, and the s«‘alers have a hard time in getting a crew. Whisky is being smuggled in by the wholesale, and the red men are having a high old time. The whisky is coming from the American side. I never saw so much drunkenness on that coast. There dof-s not seem to Is; any government control there at all.” The Chinese Six Companies at San Fran* isco have issued a new circular of- ticiallv and openly advising the Chinese to refits, compliance with the Geary law. A translati«in of the circular is in part as follows: “ This registration law is not right. All authorities we have consult«sl agree to this. We have employed five attorneys to go to Washington at the Supreme Court to fight this unjust law. W ait until May Sbemre you do anything. W ait and we w ill help you. The Chi­ nese Minister has gone to the head men of the government to get derisions, and we ho|*‘ to get them wmn, in order that our people may not lie arre-ted and sent to jail. We ought to do w hat is right and not pay monev for registration, and thus lose our respectability.” N A i IO N a L C A P IT A L. Q uestion o f S h ea th in g Our N a v a l V e s se ls R e c e iv in g A tte n tio n F rom th e S e c reta ry . Secretary Morton of the Department of Agriculture lias devised a plan to test the fitness of applicants for position» not governed by the civil-service rules. Each applicant on filing his application w ill he required to answer a set of ques­ tions as to moral and physical qualifica­ tions and on the work wltieh he will lie required to perform. H e ho|>cs hv this means to secure a high standard in the department. A Republican Senator, who stands high in the party councils, says the pro­ mised Senatorial investigations of a pri­ vate character and the reorganization schemes will come to nothing this ses- ieion. They cannot he considered while ! the contested seats are under considera­ tion, and when that subject is disused j of the Senate will probably adjourn, as the quorum would otherwise disappear ! within two days after tite President no­ tified the Senate he lias no further busi­ ness to present to it. Secretary Carlisle is having prepared a list of the employes of the lTeasurv Department, with the salaries they re­ ceive, and will have it arranged hv States. The list lias lieen prepared al­ ready to such an extent as to show a great disproportion among the States, some having many more clerks than their proy°r quota and others less. The Sec­ retary, it is understood, intends hv every means in his power to reduce the Dis­ trict of Columbia’s list of employes so that the States may receive their proper quota of appointments. Assistant Secretary Bussey lias ren­ dered an important decision in the mat­ ter of the claim of Joseph P. Smith for an increase of pension on the ground of new disabilities, in w hich lie overrules the action of the Commissioner of Pen­ sions in allowing an attorney fee of $10. The claim for increase was made under the act of June 27, I8!K), and the Assist­ ant Secretary holds that all such claims should lie treated as strictly increase claims whether new disabilities are claimed or not, for which a fee of only $2 can lie allowed. It is said that prob­ ably 200.000 claims w ill be affected by this decision. The Senate Committee on Foreign Re­ lations held a meeting the other morn­ ing. It is understood that, while favor­ able to making public the text of tlio Russian treatv, it was unable to agree UlMin a favorable report by reason of dis­ agreements relative to the correspond­ ence accompanying the convention. A well-known Senator, who is tlie cham­ pion of general humanitarian legisla­ tion, states that, when published, the treaty will lie found neither more nor less objectionable than several other treaties which have been in operation for some years. The criticisms, lie says, arc due to a conception of the elleet of the instrument upon the garbled ex­ tracts of a surreptitious publication of the treaty first sent to the Senate. Secretaries Gresham and Carlisle w hile looking into the expenditures of the Behring Sea Commission reached some allowances which were extravagant and should he discontinued. It appears that everybody connected with the commis­ sion, from the stenographer dow n. Ii ive been given very liberal allowances, which the officials of this administration in­ clude under the head of “ useless extrav­ agance.” There are, it is said, eight or ten officials connected with the commis­ sion who are receiving more than double pay by drawing $11 to $15 per day in ad­ dition to regular salaries, which range frm i $1,500 to $5,500 per annum. Hu­ mors of these exposures have made quite a stir in the department, and some interesting developments are expected. Assistant Secretary Spaulding lias written the following letter to Collectors on the Pacific Coast: “ The department is informed that the practice obtains among Chinese laborers in this country of entrusting money to merchants, w liiefi is treated as a part of the capital in the business. Chinese laborers who have made such a disposition of their savings, although not actually engaged in busi­ ness, have claimed to bt; merchants, and sav they are thereby entitled to leave the country and return at pleasure. The de­ partment desires you to closely scrutin­ ize the certificates which may lie pre­ sented at your i«>rl by returning I Itinese and to require evidence of the standing of the holders as bona-tlde merchants, actively engaged in business. In no ease should Chinese he permitted to enter as merchants unless their right to the p riv­ ilege is clearly established, and where it ap|iears tlie practice herein referred to is attempted the certificates presented slioulo ls‘ ignored, the holders arrested and the facts reported to the depart­ ment.” The question of sheathing our naval vessels is one to which Secretary Herbert, it is said, proposes to give some earnest consideration. Naval Constructor Ilieli- born has prepared some ini|N>rtant data on the subject. He shows that the A t­ lanta on her trial trip with a clean bot­ tom attained a speed of 15.5 knots an hour with a 3,345-liorse power, while the Boston, her exact duplicate, with a comparatively foul bottom made hut 13.8 knots on 3,31K)-horse power. Constructor Hichborn holds that t ic Im­ portance (*f the preservation of the isit- totn of steel vessels from corrosion ami fouling can hardly lx; overestimated and is continually emphasised by the reports of loss of speed and inrreaiwd coal con­ sumption riseivisl from our new un­ sheathed steel vessels now in c«>iiimis- sion. Unless our cruisers are to lie con- finisl to eniis«'S of short duration in H ip neighborhood of our own ports, It would appear that they are deficient in the most important quality— the ability to maintain high sjxx-d at sea for long pe­ ri oils. The additional expense incurred in putting on the sheathing of wuxxl and copper is in reality a great saving dur­ ing the lifetime of a ship, as it obviates the necessity of frequent dis king and the largely increased coal hills when the the metal bottom is foul. For a vessel like the Chicago the cost would Is' be­ tween $1X10 and $400 for iks king alone. To this sum must be addisl alsiilt # 1,000 for scraping and painting. In Great Britain competition has brought the charges f” r privet«’ docks down to a min­ imum, hut the d«s*ks in India, China, Australia and on the Pacific Coast are very expensive. Captain Midilsirn rec­ ommends that all cruising vessels in­ tended for general service in foreign w a­ ters lx* siiealhfxl if alxive 1,000 tons dis­ placement. and that vessels of less than 1,000 tons displacement intended for gen­ eral service as cniisimr guiiUiat", etc., lx- of »com posite construction, with st«x l- framing wood outside, planking and cop­ per sheathing. N O . ID. Address. G r a ph ic , Newberg, Oregon. AGRICULTURAL. P O R T LA N D M ARK ET. PRODUCE, F R t t r , Column Devoted to the Inter* ests of the Farmer. F O R S T A R T IN G E A R L Y P L A N T S A G ood D eal o f C are and E xp e ri­ ence R equ ired to R e g u la te a H otb ed —N otes. I f one does not have a propagating house, he need not on that account go without early plants, for a box in the house or an easily constructed hotbed will answer the purpose very satisfacto­ rily. Indeed many truck gardeners who raise a considerable variety of early veg­ etables never have anything more costly titan tin; simplest kind of hotbeds. The early starting of plants in this way pre- sunposes that it was thought of and pro­ vided for Ix-foro winter set in. It would not tx> easy in most cases to obtain the proper kind of soil or compost at this season of tite [year, and if no prepara­ tion has been made, the plant must be laid aside, unless some one else more provident can supply the necessary soil. A good, light, sandy loam—the richer and lighter the better— makes a gixxl enough soil. Before using it should be run through a sieve, so as to remove all stones, lumps and rubbish. A table- spoonful of superphosphate to each half bushel of soil may be added to advant­ age, and five or six quarts of peat moss or sphagnum, such as nursery tnen use for packing, thoroughly dried and sifted, to tite half bushel of soil make an excel­ lent material for starting seeds. If it is thought tix> much labor to make hotbeds, lx>xes alxiut thirty inches long, twelve inches wide and three inches deep, made of half-inch stutl, may lx- used in the house. These mav he placed on a flower stand or on the window sill, where they should be so secure that they will not lie knocked off. Where a la go number of plants is not required, these boxes are all that are necessary, and they are a source of pleasure and instruction as well as of mere utility, especially if there are children in the family old enough to observe and assist. A hotbed should, if nossible, he placed on the south side of fence or building, where it will lx« pro­ tected from the severe winds and at the game time receive the full benefit of the sun’s rays. There are two ways of mak­ ing it. One is to place fermenting ma­ nure on the surface of the ground, tak­ ing care to build it tip in an even, solid mass, with the long anil short manure equally distributed, until it is from two feet to’ thirty inches high. It should !>e alxntt two feet longer and wider than the frame of the hotbed, as the center will be hotter than the outside of the mass. Another method is to dig a pit two feet longer and wider than the frame, fill it with the manure and tread it down evenly and solidly. A convenient size for the sash is 3xG feet. The frames should be made of two-inch plank, the hack twelve ami the front eight inches wide, which allows sufficient slope to carry off water from the sash. Thu sides should, of course, lx; planed down to fit the two ends, end the hack and front pieces beveled off, so that the sash will lit closely at the ends and sides. A sin­ gle brace across the middle of the frame, the short way, is enough to make it firm if two-inch lumber is used. The soil may he put into the frame as soon as it is in place. Six or eight inches of soil is better than a shallower bed, as when once heated through it will retain the heat longer, and the plants will be less likely to hum than if in closer contact with the hot manure. Seisls should not he sown for at least a week after the beds begin to heat. Meantime the weeds and grass will sprout, ami may he re­ moved before the seed is put in. A grxxl deal of care and exix-rienec is required to regulate a hotlxxf. It must )>e guarded against both heat and cold and overheat­ ing— the former by covering with Isiards or mats at night, the latter by proper ventilation when the sun shines brightly. But it will repay all the trouble it costs if successfully managed. ITEMS OF INTEREST. Try high feeding with old Brindle. There have been some remarkable yields by very common cows. A go«xl horse can no more stand on hal foundation. Perhaps your old Brindle has never hail a full ration in her life. Not that she has not been experimented with to find out how much site could eat. If you have a cow that always excels the others in yield breed her to a pure­ bred dairy bull, and if she has a heifer calf treat that calf better titan you ever treated a calf before. In feeding a cow we must go about it cautiously; not stuff her with all she can eat the first week, hut train her ap­ petite and digestirm by gradually in­ creasing the amount fed. It is a difficult matter to doctor sick animals. I t is comparatively easy to keep them well by giving good food, pure water and clean quarters. These matters should have attention. Pound for pound chicken can lie grown i heaper than pork, and who will sav the boiled chicken is not more grate­ ful and healthy than the salt pork and romeil beef everlastingly found on far­ mers’ tables? There are some very prepotent good cows among the scrubs; they transmit their gixsi qualities to their ralves in spite of the scrub hull by which they er* serv«jd. These cows should be festeil by high feeding. Farmers desiring to improve the dairy qualities «*f their cows without decreas­ ing size so much as the use of Jersey bidls would should try the Guernseys. The bulls of this breed often exceed 2,000 pounds In weight. Grain may be thrown into a litter of chan straw or hay_ for the fowls to scratch for it, but no frxxl, hard or soft, should lie put where the ground or litter is dirty. It is not wholesome for the hens, and may prove detrimental to hu­ man being* who may partake of their flesh. Kansas has always prided herself on being a great wheat State, hut it is said that her poultry product sells for more than all h"r wheat. If. however, thing* go on much longer ax at present writing, all sclf-rc-pecting hens—to say nothing of other bipeds— will leave the State. ETC. Valiev, $1.12>x @ l.lS ; W alla Walla, $1.05 ci 1.07 «i; per cental. F loub — Standard, $3.30; Walla Walla, $3.10; graham, $2.90; superffne, $2.50 per barrel. O ats —Choice, 43m46c per bushel; fair, 40c; rolled, in bags, $8.25,«0.50; barrels, $0.50 ii 0.75; cases, $3.75. H ay — Best, $11(413.50 per ton; com­ mon, $0(410. M u i.si errs— Bran, $10m 17 ; shorts, $l9,u 20; ground barley, $23(ii 24; chop feed, $18 per ton; whole fe»*d, hurley. 80 (4 Six- per cental; middlings, $23:424; per ton; brewing barley, 90(496- per cental; chicken wheat, $1.10 per rental. B i t t e r —Oregon faney creamery, 27l-_. (•i30o; fancy dairy, 22Si(*«25e; fair to gixxl, 1 7 ui 2 k-; common, 12«., («15c per pound; pickle roll butter, 30«l36c per roll; California, 40 ii45c per roll. C heese — Oregon, l l ( g l 3 c ; Eastern Twins, 15c; Young America, I6e per pound. Eons—Oregon, 10c per dozen. P o u l t r y —Chickens, mixed roups, $4 (44.50; old hens, $5 n 5.5); old roosters, $4 it 4.50 per dozen ; dressed chickens, 10 («18o |x-r pound; ducks, JG.50ni7.50; geese, $10 a 11 per dozen; turkeys, live, 15c: dressed, 17c tier pound. V egetables — Cabbage, $1.50.« 1 .(15 per cental; onions, $1.75n2.00 p er'ren tal; cut onions, 75u00r: potatoes, $1.00 for I Garnet Chilis; $1.25 for Burbanks: new, 5c per pound; Oregon turnips, 75n90r per sack; yonngearrots,75e u$l.(N); sweet imtatoes, $2.50 a 4.00 per rental; cauli­ flower, 90c per dozen, $2.75 per crate; celerv, 90e jier dozen; artichokes, 00c per dozen ; lettuce, 40c per dozen : aspar­ agus, ll(o 16c per pound; parsnips. 85c per sack ; l«-ets, $1.25 per sack : radishes, 25c per dozen; green onions, 18c per dozen: rhubarb, it u 10c per pound; Or­ egon, 50e ¡“ -r dozen ; green jx-as, 10m I l e ; spinach, 3 lac per pound; ein-unilx-i-s, $1.75 ii2.00 per dozen; string beans, 2c per pound. F r u it s —Sicily lemons, $5 «5.50 per lx«x; California new crop, $4.50(«5.00 per txtx ; bananas, $2.50 ,i 4.00 per bunch ; oranges, seedlings, J2 u‘2.75 per Imx ; na­ vels, $3.00,43.50; cranberries, $12.50 per barrel; apples, $1.50 a 2.25 per tx>x. W heat — STUM.E GROCERIES. H oney — Choice comb, 15 <• I7 a - per pound; new Oregon, 10 «20c. S alt — L iverpool, 200s, $15.50; 100s, $10.50; 50s, $17.50; stock, $ 10.50m 11 50. D ried F ruits — l ’ctitc prunes, 10 n I2e; silver, lt(814c; Italian, 12 u 14c; Ger­ man, 10(tfUc; plums, old, 5uyc; Magnolia A, 4S„e; granulated, 6 '4c; cube, crushed aud powdered, 578c; confectioners’ A, 6«sc per pound; maple sugar, 15m 10c per pound. C ann ed G oods —Table fruits, assorted, $1.75 n 2.00; peaches, $1.85 n 2.10; Bart­ lett pears, $1.75 u2.00; plums, $1.37lo(a) 1.50; strawberries, $2.25m 2.46; cherries, $2.25 «2.40; blackberries, $1.85 "2.00; rasplx-rries, $2.40; pineapples, $2.25(3 2.80; apricots, $1.65m2.00. Pie fruits, assorted, $1.20; peaches, $1.25; plums, $1.10 m l.20; blackberries, $1.25« 1.40 per dozen. Pie fruits, gallons, assorted, $3.15@3.50; peaches, $3.50m4.00; apri­ cots, $3.60m.4.00; plums, J2.75m3.00; hlacklx-rrics, $4.25 " 4.50. V e g e tu ii . es —Com , $1.50ml.75; toma- toes, $1.10 ii 1.15; sugar peas, $1; string tx-ans, 95c jx*r dozen. M eat —Comi-d beef, Is, $1.50; 2s, $2.40; chipped, $2.55 "4.00; lunch tongue, Is, $4; 2s, $0.75; deviled ham, $1.75(«$1.85 per dozen. F is h — Sardines, *4s, 75"m $2.25; *as, $2.15"4.50; fillisters, $2.30i«3.60; sal­ mon, tin 1-lh tails, $ 1.25m$1.60; flats, $1.75; 2-lbs, $2.25 "2.50; '¡.-barrel, $5.60. LIV E AND DRESSED MEAT. B eet — Prime steers, $3.85'34.25; choice steers, $3.75 «4.00; fair to g«xxl steers, $.(.Horn 3.50; gixxl to choice cows, $3.l5m3.75: common to medium cows, $2.50m2.75; dressed beef, JO.00m 7.00. M utton — Choice mutton, $4.50 «4.75; fair to gixxl, $4.00m4.50; dressed, $8.00; lambs, $4.00 "4.50; dressed, $7J O "8.00. lion s—Choice heavy, $7.00(«7.25; me­ dium, $0.50(«0.75; light and feeders, $6.00m6.5 I ; dressed, $9.00. V eal — $4.00(«7.00. S moked M eat and L ard — Hams, large, U tiW -vC per pound; hams, me­ dium, 1 7 '$ ^ 1 8 ^ c; breakfast bacon, 17 318c; short clear sides, 14«xml6'ae; dry salt sides, 13 'am 14«-; lard, compound, ill tins, 14'^c p<‘r pound; pure, ill tins, 16317Jie; Oregon lard, l l ‘^ ("1 2 'ac. MISCELLANEOUS. quotations: Tron, $2.75; steel, $2.76; wire, $2.60 per keg. I ron — Bar, per pound; pig-iron, $23(«25 per ton. S t e e l — Per pound, 10Vae. T i n — I. C. charcoal, 14x20, prim cqual- ity, I8.5UM9.00 ixu- box; for crosses, $2 extra per liox; I. C. coke plates, 14x20, prime quality, $7.50m8.00 per box ; terne plate, I. C., prime quality, $0.88 "7.00; 14x20, $14. L ead — Per pound, 4*t(c; liar, fli.,e. N aval S t o r e s —Oakum, $4.50m6.00 per bale; resin, $4.80 "5.00 per 480 pounds; tar, Btockholm, $13.00; Caro­ lina, $9.00 per barrel: pitch, JO.OO per barrel; turixmtine, 66c per gallon, in car lots. N a i l * — Base HOPS, WOOL AND HIDES. Hops—Quote 12310c. W ool — Umpqua valley, 16" 17c; fall clip, 13(tfl6«*c; Willamette valley, 15 3 16c, according to quality; Eastern Ore­ gon. 10 "16c per pound, according to condition. H id e s — Dry hide«, selected prime, 6m8c; green, selected, over 56 pounds. 4c; under 65 pounds, 3c: sheep pelts short wool, 30 "50c; medium, 60m80c; long, 90cm $1.25; shearlings, 10(«2(k-: tal­ low, food to choice, 336c per pound. BAGS AND BAGGING. Burlaps, 8-ounee. 40-ineh, net easii, •c ; burlaps, 10q-oum-e, 40-inch, no* cash, 7c; burlaps, 12-onnce, 45-inch, 7«4c; burlaps, 15-ounce, 60-inrb, 11 q « ; burlaps, 20-ounce, 76-inch, 14c; wheat bags, Calcutta, 28x36, spot, 6,«$«; 2-buahal aat b u t 7«.