NEWBERG GRAPHIC. 4 l> T i:ilT IN I.ÌG NEWBERG GRAPHIC. U A ilìN : .Twenty Dollar« T»*n Dollar« ....... O n« Dollar O n« Column-------- Half Column — Profataional Carda H e a d in g N o t i c e « w i l l b e l a o c r t e d th e r a t e o f T e a c e n to p e r L ia o . at NEWBERG. YAMHILL CO., OREGON. FRIDAY. MAY 19. 1893. VOL. 5. Advertising Hills Collected Monthly4 C H U R C H NOTICES. JO H N Y O U N G E R , i I i . M. l U c I C t U l i U I | TO s e r v e ks 10 a . M EVERY ami One door went of ^orr**. M i’e* A Co.’* new store, ou Fir-«t 8tre’. t. — a . m d v e n t s i c h u r c h — p k a i e k m e e t in g e*ery Wednes ayexcuiug Sanbain school every Saturday at 10 a m ., services fol.owing. A San Diego’s tax levy has been fixed at Portrait* enlarged to life size an*! finished in 86 cents on the S100. Crayon, India Ink or Watt r Col *r*. Studio— UpHtair* iu Honkiuh building. ! The San .hue Council lias passed the J. s. R % K F it * HONS. lK E E METHODIST.—P R A Y E R MEETING every Thursday at 7:30 P. m . Sabbatu school every Sunday ai 10 a . m . f P ianos e . c h u r c h — s e r v i c e s e v e r y u n d a y • *t 11 a . M. aud 7:30 p. M. Sabbath School aiiO A. M. Ep a orili League at 0 30 P. M. Player meeting every Thursuay evenin* at 7:30 o'clock. 11. N. ROUNi S, Past-.r. M - AND - O rgans DIRECT FROM THE FACTORY. r OUNG LADIES’ A U X I- I \RY TO Y M. C. A. meets every Sunday at 4 p . m . in M. E. Lnureh. Ladies cordially invited to attend. \ C. T. U.—SECOND AND FOURTH WED- uesdays. J Or T IIE W — NEWBERG CAMP, No. 113, • meets every Wcdu.suay evening. b O C l E l 'V w w J I N O T IC E S . C. T. U.—BUSINESS MEETING 1 HE SEC orni aud fourth Thursday iu each mouth. O. O. F —SESSIONS HELD ON THURSDAY • evenings iu Bauk budding. I 1 A. R —SESSIONS HELD FIRST AND TH IRD , • Saturday evening iu each mouth. t w Cl * Angeles. El Paso,New Orleans, land East.................. . Roseberg & way stations •4:30 P. M. [ Via Wood urn fo ri 1 ML Angel, Silver Ion, I ♦ 1:30 P. M. I West 8eio, Browns- ( [v ille and Coburg..... J Excellent opportunity for good work. Board and lodging. I3.0C per week. All other expenses very low. I f you want to teach; i f you want to take a business course; ii you want to review or take advanced work, we can suit you. Send for catalogue or come and see for yourself. THUMAS N E W L IN , President. M Albany and way stations fio 30 a . m . m . Corvallis & way station» ♦ :0 p. m m McMlnnvi le A way Ma’* ♦* 20 i ■ D in in g Cara nn O g d e n K n u te. PU LLM AN H ir r K T B ank of N ewberg S L K E I ’ K K S. Second-Clan« Sle epi ng C ar « Attache*! to A l l T h r o u g h Train*. NEWBERC, OREGON. Through ticket oflV e, 134 F ln t street, where through tickets to all points in the Eastern Mate*, Canada and Europe ran be obtained at lowest rates from J. B. K IR K LA N D . Ticket A gen t All above trains a-rive and depart from Grand Ceutral station. Fifth and I streets. N A R R O W G A l ’G K - W . S. D I V I S I O N —AUD— : Capital Stock : | , JESSE E D W A R D S ...................... ........................... B. C. M I L E S . ............................................................... B. C. M IL E S ............................................................... $ 30,000 President Vice-President ........... Cashier P o r t la n d and W il l a m e tt e Val ley R ai l w a y Passenger depot foot of Jefferson street. Directors— Jesse Edwards, B. C. Miles, F. A. Morris, J. C. Colcord, E. H . Woodward. fS:30 a . U. *Uü P. * Certificates of deposit issued payable on demand. Exchange bought ♦1:56 r a O«wego A way it^tl’s ! tl 30 10 p. p g. w ♦5:15 P * and sold. Good notes discounted. Deposits received subject to check t*:3D P M. i H» 20 P g ♦8:35 P. M ♦7 40 P. M. at sight, and a general hanking business transacted. Collections made [ Oswego. Newberg, on all accessible points in the United States and Canada. •9 40 a g * DJudee, Dayton. La ♦3:20 P. M. fajette. .Sheridan. ( Correspondents— Ladd & Tilton, Portland; National Park Banc, • V m - :an A w ay « tâ tio n s f9 30 a .H . New York. Strangers visiting the city are invited to call at the bank for infor­ •Dail v, tD aily, excepr 8wn tar. K. KOEHLER. Manarer. E P R4JGER0, A m i Gen. F. k P Aft., Port­ mation concerning the city. land, Or. Correspondence invited. *7:JO » . a. 1 Ht JO A. M. 1 Sunday-closing ordinance. Santa Rosa voted to bond the city for the purchase of water works. The Reed Hotel at Ogden lias closed its doors, because the patronage did not make it pay. The Directors of the Bellingham Bay and British Columbia Railroad Company have made arrangements for the sale of the road to the Canadian Pacific. Director Antes of the Union Pacific railroad writes that the company is mak­ ing an active inquiry with the view of extending its track to Astoria, Or. The by-law for Vancouver, B. C., to guarantee the interest on $400,000 of debenture bonds to be issued by the street railway company has been de­ feated by 152" majority. Health Inspectors visiting Chinatown at Los Angeles found fifteen buildings that, in their opinion, cannot be cleaned or made healthful, and recommended their being razed at once. Inquiries are now being made into the practicability oi shipping frozen mutton by the Australian system to Vancouver. A company will probably be formed to build a cold-storage warehouse at the latter place and go into the business. The damming of the Mojave river at Victor, creating an artificial lake nine miles long, three miles wide and 130 feet in depth, water sufficient to irrigate 200,000 acres of desert land, is a project on foot in San Bernardino county, Cal. The arrest of ex-Prison Superintend­ ent M. M dnernay at Yuma, A . T ., on warrants charging him with embezzling Territorial property lrom the peniten­ tiary at Yuma is the beginning of one of the most sensational political scandals ever developed in Arizona. Janies Reedy, an old miner who is now janitor oi" the City H all at San lose, claims to have discovered rich gravel iii Santa Clara county, and in -upport of the claim exhibits a small bottle containing flakes of gold, which he claims to have washed out. No fewer than thirtv-two daggers, butcher-knives, saws, files and slung- -hots have been found, beside inor- nliinc and other drugs, in the Arizona Prison at Yuma Tiie former Stiperin- ;endcut, M. McTnernav, is in arrest for appropriating Territorial property. Alderman T ow lerof Vancouver, B. C., refused to apologize for saying the metn- ers oi the City Council went around • i in cr hauls behind their Docks eking bribes. He said he would go ■u! in the alley and take his coat oir viih any Alderman that tried to make lim eat his words. A « i l l contest has just been com­ menced at Stockton by a woman who 1 Inims to be the widow of Joseph Mc­ Kinney, tiie colored recluse, who recent­ ly died in the town of Bantus, San Joa­ quin county, Cal., leaving a $40,000 es- late. The widow is a colored woman, and tin; adverse claimants are white. A public meeting was held at Cres- well, l ane county. Or., a few days ago to ngil lie the question of removing the county-seat from Kugene to that place. It was argued that Kugene was only a temporary county-seat, and that land and Money would lie donated at Cres- wt II for county building, and that the county property at Eugene could then be sold for sufficient money to pay off the debt of the county. I t was charged that affairs were now in the hands of a corrupt and extravagent set of men, who used tiie public offices for private gain. David McDannald, living on Mud Creek, below Milton. Or., was Dithered with snakes; they would swallow eggs whole and they would swallow the young chickens. So great was the an­ noyance he could not raise any young fowls. He finally studied up a plan to rid his premises of the snakes. He bought a big lot of porcelain eggsaud laid them around so the snakes could get them. They swallowed them the same as tin genuine ones, but they could not d'gcst them, and death was the inevita­ ble result. The State of Oregon has filed its an­ sa r to the cross hill of Multnomah county in the tax suit. Theansweradmits several unimportant charges, and asserts that the object of the equalization was to maintain a uniform assessment. The charge that assessment on mortgages in sum" of the counties is lower than that of Multnomah county, anil other asser­ tions to the same effect, are denied. The answer also denies that mortgages w re discriminated against in favor of other n al estate in Multnomah county, a id also that only 10 per cent was added to the usscs-incnt of mortgages in Ciros, Linn and Washington counties; 25 per cent in liouglas, 30 per cent in Yamhill, and 7 | mt cent in Marion. The answer a*ks for the dismissal of the cross bill, and that the county be compelled to nay it*; OH.HD taxes to the State, which it has refused to do. I riiteil States Judges McKenna, Mor­ row and Hawley, sitting as a Circuit Court of Appeals at San Francisco, have affirmed the judgment of the United State“ District Court of Southern Cali- fornia. dismissing the libel suit against iii Chinan steamer Itata and releasing the vc-se| and 2.0*10 eases of rifles she h i I u'loanl when seized by the United Siatc. Marshal in San Diego harlsrr two year- ago. The hied filed in the Itata ease charged deliberate violation of Sec- t on 5 2v! of the United States Revised Statute- and si t forth that the Itata had lee n tit!' | out with the intent to cruise and commit hostilities against the gov­ ernment of Chili, with which the gov­ ernment of the United States was at peace. The derision of the Circuit Court is lengthv and reviews the details of the late Chilian revolution and over­ throw of President Baltnaeeda. The Court finds that the state of affairs as alleged in the libel is not borne out by tiie evidence. C ollege , SOUTHERN PACIFIC CO. College Classes, Normal Course, Book-keeping, LKAVK. M O J A V E R IV E R . Y urna—A Sensation. Portrait and Landscape Artist. ▲11 orders promptly attend*’*! to aud satisfaction guaran ecd. p J THE the A r iz o n a P e n ite n tia ry a t a . m W DAM N E W B E R G , OR. FRESH MEATS. n r R C i i .— E v­ Lord s nay at 11 . P ery second and c fourth ami 7:.;0 . M. Sabbath school every Sunday at K H TIA N CHURCH.—SERVICES / se<* 1H 0 P M I I U May be found at a'l time* a f ill assorinent of good ma » etaMe P. M. at 10 a . M. Pray- r meet in; Wedne* tax evening at 8 o clock. REV. M A R K NOBLE pastor. r e s b y t e r ia n 1 Central Meat Market T ST • ■ HU KCH —SERVICES FIRST, SEC- and third Suud ya of the mouth at 11 H A P ond ami 8:00 Sunday school every Sn day An Alderman Refuses to Eat His Words. P h o tn o ra n h fir PERSONAL T H E P A C IFIC CO A m . SAMUEL HOBSON, N 'c n k c rK , O re g o n , lK IK N iib ’ CHURCH.— SKKVICKS EVERY auu'lav ar 1 1 a m ami 8 p. m . and Thursday - I S PREPAKKO TO U K PA IR — at 10 a . m . Sabbath school *v ry Sunday t 9.45 a m . Moutaly m etlng at 2 p . m the first Sat­ — $ W atch es • and » C locks I — urday iu each mouth. Quarterly meetiug the second Saturday amt Sunday iu February, May, In * workmanlike mat uer. SatisfH. Mon g inr- August aud November. au‘ ee*l. tu iì. M Hale*' *ho • *h«»p on F.rat street. 1 Thirty-five year»’ exj.e i uue. EVANGELICAL CHURCH. — PREACHING j servo- at the Kvangelical church every ---- A T T H E ---- Suudayat 10 a m . and 7 45 p . m ., except the fourth Sundav of every inou li. Sab »ath school every Sunday at 11 a m Prayer meeting Th * rad ay at 7:15 p M A ll are cordially iuvited to attend these service*. a ! NEWBERG GRAPHIC IN D U S T R IA L IT E M S . Grent Britinn has more than twenty- thousumi trained nurses. Thero are nearly sixteen thousand miles of railroads in Canada. Great Britian levies a tariff on about twenty articles of commerce. The streams of Wisconsin yield $100,- 000 worth of pearls in a year. There are 20,000 American publica­ tions, a gain of 1,202 iu a year. The money circulation of the United States is estimated at $1,000,000,0110. Of the 51,000 breweries estimated to be in the world 20,000 are in Germany. Fully 25 per cent of all the champagne made is lost by the bursting of bottles. It requires more than 1,000,000 sheep to supply the mutton consumed in Lon­ don. April saw three bank failures in Aus­ tralia, representing liabilities of $100,- 000 , 000 : The nine rum distilleries of this coun­ try put out about 1,000,000 gallons annually. Cleveland carpenters will lie paid 30 cents an hour for a nine-hour day, be­ ginning May 1. It is estimated that there were 10,573 papers published in this country and Canada last year. The domestic rico crop of the country for the current season is estimated at 225,000,000 pounds. According to tiie W ade’s Fibre and Fabric the cotton acerage of 1804 will be as short as that of 1803. A total destruction by fire in the United States for eighteen years before 1802 was »1,760,944,017. Eight hundred and thirty-eight pairs of corsets for men were made by one firm in England last year. 11 ciists $30 to decorate a room properly with (lowers for almost any entertain­ ment.— Philadelphia Record. A dollar loaned for 100 years and com­ pounded at 21 per cent, will amount in that time to $2,551,790,404. An uptown genius has invented a slut machine that will furnish a small brick of ice cream.— Philadelphia Record. The roll of paper as used in the Hoe iress on which the Bulletin is soon to si printed, is from four to six miles long. Alaska produced $1,000,000 in gold last veer, and California $12,000,000. The gold pnsluct of the United States was »33,000,000. The hot-house peach crop has not failed, but a man who bought enough for a large dinner party did.— Phila­ delphia Record. A company of colored people ii being formed at Charlotte, N. C., for the pur­ pose of building a cotton factory to em­ ploy only negroes. There is still an enormous quantity of gold in the banks and among the people variously estimated at between »600,- 000,000 and $700,000,000. Kansas City tailors propose to make an effort to secure a large home patron­ age. They complain that too many pis,pie send East for their clothes. The largest piece of eopper ever taken out of the Michigan Upper Peninsula was brought to the surface from the Quincy mine. It weighed about nine tons. In 1802 the total nnmiier of persons employed in and about all the mines in the United Kingdom was 721,808, of whom 6,000 were females, working above ground. In the five or six months of the vear during which the sardine fishery fasts something like $61*0,000.000 of these little fish are caught otf the coast of Brittany alone. ( ......................................... f i gn rfU Month* Three Month«. ............................... . ............................. ■ a b a r r tp tto B P r t e e P a y a b le a b ly l a A d v a a e e . NO. 25. M E N T IO N . Mark Twain’s eldest daughter, Miss Clara Clemens, not yet 20, has written an allegorical play. Ismail Pasha, ex-Khedive of Egypt, now 63, lives in regal splendor on the shores of the Bosphorus. His wealth is $25,000,000. Alva tinge lus presented to the Unita­ rian Church of Charleston, 8. C., a handsome brick parish-house, costing over $11,000. A son of the Archbishop of Canter­ bury, Primate of all Englaivl, is a Cap­ tain in the artillery and an enthusiast in the art of war. Mrs. Laura do Force Gordon, a well- known woman lawyer on the Pacific Coast, has filed her application lor the Consulship at Honolulu. Queen Victoria is traveling in Italy, and in England she isn’ t missed, so little does she really have to do with the gov­ ernment of that country. Dr. H affkine, the bacteriologist who has been investigating cholera, writes that he has conquered the disease by an inoculative method, which he will give to the world. Frederick Weyerhauser, one of the richest of the lumber kings of Minne­ sota, began work in a brewery when he came to this country from Germany. He worked for $1 a day. Conigsby Disraeli, who has just come into his inheritance at Hughemlen man­ or, is described as bearing a striking re­ semblance in personal appearance to his uncle, Lord Beaconsfield. The ex-F u press Eugenie is said not to put trust in French medical men. When the fell ill of a sore throat in l ’aris not long ago she telegraphed to England for a physician to attend her. The Trustees of Lane Theological Sem­ inary have accepted the resignation of Prof. Roberts, one of the prosecutors of Prof. Henrv I ’ . Smith in his trial for heresy. The Trustees also re-elected Prof. Smith for the ensuing year. Dr. Buchner, the African traveler, broke from the highest point on Mount Kilimandjaro, one of the highest mount­ ains in Africa, a piece of rock, which lie presented to the German Emperor: The Kaiser now uses a mountain summit as a paper-weight on his writing desk. Mine. Paul Mink is a picturesque can­ didate for a seat in the Paris municipal­ ity. She is the wife of the French an­ archist and the mother of a child named “ Lucifer Satan Vercingetorix M ink.” Her political platform is that of “ woman, mother, Socialist and Republican.” Pope Leo X I I I . spends most of his mornings in tiie Vatican gardens catch­ ing birds with nets, a sport which he practiced when Bishonof Perugia, and of which he is particularly fond. Hundreds of birds are «••'light every morning and distributed among the hospitals and the poor. N I U M 1 R IP T I0 3 Ì K A T E 9 t One Tear 75 flQ I a v a r i­ Address, O k » p h i c . Newberg. Oregon. AGRICULTURAL. PO RTLAND M ARKET. PROOl’ CE, r ilU lT , ETC. W heat — Nominal. Uiome Sensomble Pointers for the Hnsbandman. Valiev, $1.203 1.22*,.; Walla Walla, » 1.10 o 1.12’ ,. per cental. F i . ih - r — Standard, $3.40; Walla Walla, $3.40; graham, $3.00; superfine, $2.50 per barrel. SOW CLO VER I)o N ot Fc.il to T H IS S P R IN G . P rep are the S o il P ro p e rly fo r the R ecep tio n o f the Seed. By all means sow some clover this spring. Seed is high, yet we cannot well uo without this useful plant. Wo need it in our rotations. W e require it both to furnish the best of hay for our stock as well us to maintain the fertility oi the soils of our farms. Try and keep a good start with tho spring work, and then keep ahead. The man who keeps ahead of his work does not labor as hard in the end as he who is behind. How everything drags and how discouraging it is to perform every farm operation just a few days later than it should have been done, and how much loss such a practice entails. So it is good advice, tiiough often hard to follow : “ Push tho work and don’t let the work push you.” Do not fail to piepare the soil properly for tho reception of the seed. Fine up and pulverize until it becomes perfectly loose and mellow. This is the very foun­ dation of farm work, and when this is slighted hoiv can satisfactory results ho reasonably expected? Then do not omit incessant tillage and cultivation through­ out the growing season. Keep at it. Do not turn out the stock to pasture too early. Spring is trying to the con­ stitution. Winds and rains arc preva­ lent, and these are precisely the right conditions for stock to take cold and be­ come sick. There is no saving in this premature pasturing, for the grass has perhaps barely started. It contains much water, and cropping in earlv dues cattle small good and very likely dimin­ ishes the later yield. Furthermore, the ground, lieing soft, is poached and the sod badly injured. Make tho change from grass to hay very slowly, and thus prevent disorders, winch are liable to occur. Spring is the season for all kinds of transplanting and “ setting-out ” w ork ; so improve the farm by establishing or­ chards and small fruit patches that will in future years provide the family with most healthful fruit, furnish a source of income and improve the appearance and value of the farm. It seems paradoxical that so many farmers aud their families scarcely taste fruit in any quantity. Ru­ ral people should certainly take hold of all the blessings which their lot allords Plant potatoes early. Blight and rot generally affect late plantings more seri­ ously than tho early ones. Commercial fertilizers are preferable to stable ma­ nures, as the latter seem under certain conditions much more favorable to the spread and propagation of tho dread “ scab." The ground for potatoes should be plowed deeply and the see! 1 put down pretty well, say four or live inches, faivel ulturc is easier and te tte r than the old- 1a diioned “ hill culture.’ Save nil tho manure from all U,e stock, and by all is meant tbo entire fertilizing matter from te tli solid and liquid excre­ ments. Manures are shamefully wasted, and our impoverished soils are chenti-d of their just dues and needs; and year by year thev beiome more and more ex­ hausted. What wonder that crops glow less and less and we hour the complaint that “ farming does not pay?” Turn over a now leaf. Employ absorbents, such as straw, meadow hay, land plaster, sawdust and coal ashes, freely ami cur­ tail this expensive waste. There are advantages in H]M*cial fann­ ing as well as in general farming. There are also disadvantages in each. In spe­ cial farming there is more concentration of ell'ort possible; but if the specialty fails, as all will occasionally, then there is nothing to fall hark U|a>n. if a man’s land is particularly suitable for one crop, let him “ go into i t ” extensively, but yet produce to a secondary extent some other crops as a partial dependence. ASr.VBAOUS CCI.TCBR. Noel Cisiley of Ottawa read at the re­ cent Northern Illinois Horticultural So­ ciety’s meeting one of the host papers of its kind that we have heard in a long while, savs O. J. Farmer. It was short and brief, hut everything to tiie |K>int. He said asparagus depends first on the man, second on the soil, third on conve­ nient and cheap fertilizers, fourth on convenient and cheap later and fifth on trans|K>rtation and markets. The soil should te deep, sandv, black loain, with a porous subsoil and well tile-drained. Fertilize most liberally; he has no use for salt. Home markets are test. The variety he uses is Purple Giant, and he finds Conover’s Colossal of no account. Plow twelve inches deep, and set one- year-old plants eighteen inches apart in rows three feet apart. Dig holes large enough to receive the plant roots in nat­ ural |M»sitioii and eight inches deep. Firm the earth well over the plants, 2(K) of which arc all that is needed foragoisl- sizeil family. For the test results culti­ vate and fortiiize well for two years be­ fore cutting. AaBicci/ninAi. Korea. Set or “ break up ” the broody hen at once. Pee that the fowls have fresh water and pure air, but not damp quarters or drafts. If the coops for little chicks arc on the barn floor, give them some fresh earth for a carpet. Do not put off the churning until con­ venient, but churn the cream when it is ripe, whether you have much or little. It costs as much to make butter that will sell sell for soap grease as a first- class article that will seJI at a fancy price. I f you have to confine vour fowl* so that they have hut a small run. be sure you keep it well spaded—that is, spade It often. O a t s —Choice, 44 ' 45c per bushel; fair, 40c; rolled, in bags, $0.25^50.50; barrels, $0.50 0.75; cases, $3.75. H a y — Best, $11« 13.50 per ton; com­ mon, $0 a 10. Mu.t.sicrvs — Bran, $19.00; shorts, $22.00; ground barley, $23 a 24; chop feed, $18 per ton ; whole feed, barley, 80 (u851' per cental; middlings, $23 «24; per ton; brewing barley, 00 it95c per cental; chicken wheat, $1.17b.. percental. B utter —Oregon fancy creamery, 22 a i«25c; fancy dairy, 17 (« 2Jc; fair to good. 15 1. 10, ; common, 12 b. e per pound; California, 31 « 37 b e per roll. Lous—Oregon, 10 « 17c per dozen. P oultry —C hickens,mixox ; na­ vels, $3.00,93.50; cranberries, $12.50 per barrel; apples, $2 «2.25 per box ; straw­ berries, 16c per pound; pineapples, $4.50 («5.50per dozen; cherries, $1.51 (52.00. STAPLE GKOCKIUES. H o n e y —Choice comb, 18c per pound; new Oregon, 16.« 20c; extract. 0 «. 10c. S alt — Liverpool, 100s, $16.00; 50s, $15.50; stock, $10.00 « 11.00. D ried F ruit » — Petite prunes, ll<912c; silver, lliifM c ; Italian, 134)15«; Ger­ man, 11«' 12c; plums, 8 « 12c; apples, 8 ( « l i e ; evaporated apricots, 15 « 17,4c; ¡leaches, 12.« 1 l c ; pears, 7 (d 1 lc per pound. R ice —Island.$4.75 «5.00; Japan,$4.75; New Orleans, $4.50 per cental. C opeek — Costa Rica, 22c; Rio, 22c; Salvador, 211 .e ; Mucha, 26 ,J (ft30c; Java, 241 .j (« 30c; Arbuckte’s uml Lion, 100- pound cases, 23 85- 100c per pound ; Co­ lumbia, same, 23 85-100c. B eans — Small whites, 3V£c; pinks, 3 ' lc; bayos, 3,'ac ; butter, 4c; lima, 4c per pound. S yrup — Eastern, in barrels, 40 «,55c; in half-barrels, 42 <$87c; in cases, 35 «) 80c tier gallon; $2.25 per keg; California, barrels, 2,).«j40c per gallon; $1.75 per keg. S u g a r —N et prices: I h o 1,,«; Golden C, 5 ^ c ; extra C, 5/¿c; Magnolia A, Sl^cj granulated, tDgc; cube, crushed anil powdered, 8c; confectioners’ A, 6^0 per pound; maple sugar, 15j$16c per pound, C innkd Goons—Table fruits, assorted, $1.76 « 2.00; peaches, $1.85 4)2.10; Bart­ lett pears, $1.75 «J2.00; plums, $1.375(1® 1.50; strawberries, $2.25 ( 2.45; cherries, $2.25 « 2.40; blackberries, $1.85 «2.00; raspberries, $2.40; pineapples, $2.251 $ 2.80; apricots, $1.65 «¡2.00. Pie fruits, assorted, $1.20; peaches, $1.25; plums, $1.00(«1.20; blackterries, $1.25 «1.40 per dozen. Pie fruits, gallons, assorted, »3.15 «3.60; peaches, $3.50 « 4.00; apri­ cots, $3.50 «4.00; plums, $2.7»i<$3.00; blackberries, $4.25 «4.50. V egetables —Corn, $1.50(^1.75; toma­ toes, $1.10 «.1.15; sugar peas, $1; string beans, 05c pof dozen. M eats —Corned beef. Is, $1.50; 2s, »2.40; chipped, $2.55 44.00; lunch tongue, Is, $4; 2s, $0.75; deviled ham, $1.75 «$2.75 per dozen. F ish —Sardines, *•4'a, 75c(8$2.25; q s , $2.15 4.50; lobsters, $2.30 43.60; sal­ mon, tin 1-lb tails, $1.25 «$1.50; fiats, »1.76 ; 2-lbs, »2.25 42.60; -barrel, »6.60. L IV E AND DRESSED MEAT. B eek — Prime steers, »3.85(94.25; choice steers, $3.7594.00; fair to good steers, $3.0098-50; good to choice cows, $3.16:43.75; common to medium cows, $2.50 4 2.75; dressed beef, $6.0097.00. M utton —Choice mutton, $4.25 4 4.50; fair to good, $4.00 44.50; dressed, $8.00; lambs, $2.00(o;2.50; dressed, $7.00(48.00; shearlings, 3>£e, live weight. H ogs —Choice heavy, $7.60(47.76; me­ dium, $0.5096.75; light and feeders, $0.00 46.50; dressed, $8.00. V e a l — $4.0090.00. M eat akd L ard — Hams, large, 10q917>4c per pound; hains, me­ dium, 17 oi 17‘ aj C; Breakfast bacon, 109 17:* c ; short dear sides, 14 «16c; dry salt sides, I31^ 9 l 4 q c ; lard, compound, in tins, I2 412*iic per pound; pure, in tins,15916c; Oregon lanl, l i q 912>£c. S moked MISCELLANEOUS. N ails — Base quotations: Iron, »2.25; steel, $2.35; wire, $2.75 per keg. I ron — Bar, 2!^c per pound; pig-iron, $23 ■ t25 per ton. S teel — Per pound, 10qc. T in — I. 0 . charcoal, 14x20, prim eqnal- ity, $8.50 49.00 per b ox; lor crosses, $2 extra per box; I. C. coke plates, 14x20, prime quality, $7.6098.00 per b o x ; terne plate, I. 0., prime quality, $6.8897.00; 14x20, $14. L ead — Per pound, 4 q c ; bar, 6 q c . N a v a l S tores — Oakum, $4.6095.00 per bale; resin, $4.80 45.00 per 480 pounds; tar, Stockholm, $13.00; Caro­ lina, $0.00 per barrel; pitch, $6.00 per barrel; turpentine, 65c per gallon, in car lots. S hot — $1.80 per sack. H orseshoes — $5 per keg. HOI’ S, WOOL AKD HIDES. H o rs —Quote 12 416c. W o n — Umpqua valley, 16917c; fall clip, 1 3 9 IS q.:; Willamette valley, 159 18c, ac -or ling to q u a lity; Eastern Ore­ gon, 10916c per pouud, according to condition. Hines— Dry hides, selected prime, Whitewash the coops before nsing 6 48c; gre«n. selecte 1, over 55 pounds, 4c; tin ler 55 p >11 nils, 3c; sheep pelts, them this spring; it gives an air of nea - ness and an air of healthful—an air full short wool, 30 960c; medium, 60 480c; lour, 9>)c 41125; shearlings, 10 4 2 »«; tal­ of health. low good to choice, 3 9 6 « per pound. Even now the average profit in horse- BAOS AKD B ID D IN G . hreisling is greater than It has been in Burlap«, 8-oiini'e, 40-inch, net cash, half of the other lines of business dur­ 8c; burlaps. lO'i-ounee, 40-inch, net ing the past five years. cash, 7c; burlaps, 12-ounce, 45-inch, Cattle are often fed too long for a profit. 7 '*c ; burlaps, 15-onnce, 60-inch, ll* 4 c; The tetter and more profitable plan is burlaps, 20-ixince, 76-inch, 14c; wheat to feed more liberally from the start and hags. Calcutta, 23x36, spot, 6>»c; then market the steer earlier. 2-bushel oat bags, 7a.