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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1891)
ood River Glacier. vol. :.. HOOD ItlVICIt, OUKGON, SATURDAY. OCTOIJEK 3, 1891. NO. 18. The 3(cod Iiver Slacier. rUHI.UIIKI) IVIIIT RATI'HIiAT MDRNINO 91 The Glacier Publishing Company. m umi iiirrioN I'uitt On. ymt tt M 8i nicitiihi ,. or Tlilm llliinllii ttl HiimI. iuijr , 1 1 C.iiU GEO. V. MORGAN, Ui. ciii. f ci..k ii n Uuj om. Linul :: Law :: Kpi via Hist. RiMHIl Nil, (, Ufnt Jlflle. llllllilllif, TIIH DAI.I.M, OH. O. D. TAYLOR, Real Hstate Broker, Firr, Life and Accident Inturanza. Money Loaned on Real Estate Security (im,, Kr.in-h Cn.'i Sunk liillilln, TIIK PAI.I.M, HllKliON. THE GLACIER Barber Shop Grant Evans, Propr. ftiwoml St., nrr Oak. Hood Kir, Or. Shaving ktiil Iluir t-tit titiK rtly done. SttttaUc tinu (iui antral, PACIFIC COAST. An Immense Fire Rages on Mount Shasta. GRAY WOLVES .IN OREGON. The United States Geological Survey Looatos Storage Resorvoirs In New Mexico. San Diego Iiiih organized a omptiy of naval reserve. Thirty Mojuve Indian ixilo players have gone from Needles to Albuquerque, N. M., to play at the fair there. At the navy yard at Mare Island al-out npilifatitiiB for work have Itcen filed with the lal-or employment bureau. Tlio perennial tight of the disposition the sewage of 1.0H Angeles iM nhotit to break out again with renewed fury. Tlio eleventh annual exposition of New Mexico has opened at Albuquerque, and promises to exeel all previous meetings. A syndicate of Chinami'ii, with ample capital backing it, ban purchased a site near Victoria for a rice mill, and work on the erection of the mill will begin at once. According to the Virginia City Eittt.t wie a disease reseinblingdiphthcriahuB broken out among the horses and cattle on a ranch near Stcamlioat, and a nuui lier of animals have died from it. In the United States Court at Los An- feles the cases against Senator Rieardo TUinbnll, Supercargo Hurt and Captain O'Farrell of tlie Robert and Minnie were continued " until hereafter called.' Coal of good quality has been found by a purveyor who is mapping out a reli gious colony on Malcolm Island into sec tions. The coal is a mile west of Hough Bay and opposite Port McNeil on Van couver Island, B. C. Advices received at Vancouver, B. C, say that President Harrison has ap pointed Frank II. Pierce of New Hamp shire, formerly of the Cuban consular service, as Consular Agent there, vice jay E wing resigned. At Sacramento gambling is in full blaBt everywhere, and players can find any kind of a game they wish close at hand. Every public house has from four to five games running many of them keeping open day and night. An immense fire has been raging on the southern slope of Mount Shasta, a lew miles south of Sisson, a vast amount of wood, ties, logs and standing timber Wing destroyed. Every available man was needed to check the fire. In the timbered districts of Clatsop and Tillamook counties, Or., large gray wolves are Incoming more numerous, and are rapidly destroying the elk, as they kill the young calves in the spring and even the old ones when they catch them alone. The testimony in the Albertson bank robbing case at'Tacoma continues to show that Albertson was very deliberate in his work. It. B. Albertson, a cousin, is charged with writing the guaranty of immunity and knowing for whom he worked. The Los Angeles Time prints an inter view with De Barth Shorb, who lias just returned from Chicago, in which he states that the management of the World's Fair is rotten to the core, and that he will take steps to have an inves tigation at Washington unless Davis is re moved as Director-General on the ground n thla nnfitni.ua fnr t.hfi nlttllP. Mr. Shorb says Senator Stewart of Nevada has J ... ... , . . 1 ...... promised to leaa we ngiu in me aciinic EDUCATIONAL. T-m-hi-r. In Nome I nrirHii l.'oiiiit rle. llttve Not rioMmililfat V. imrleiM-e. Twenty-one Sisters of Charily have been licensed to leach in Texus public schools. Brown University has decided to ad mit women to Its cIiihwh on the same conditions us men. The entering Chautauqua class which In to pursue a three years' course com prises 1 5 , M K ) Htlldeuts. The University of Oxford has rescinded the vote sdiiiitti'iig women to the Bache lor of Medicine examinations. Harvard College- wan founded in lii'JO, Vsle In ITol. William and Mary of Vir ginia was chartered in Hli'5. Thirty-two students of Queen's College, Belfast,' huve petitioned the council that women shall not be admitted to study. ' The chair of oratory In the University of Honolulu, Sandwich Island, has lieen oll'ered to Miss Norma 0. Crawfurd of Miuersville, Pa. The legislature in Maine has enacted a law which requires all public-school teachers to devote some lime each week to teaching kindness to animals. The girl who carried oil' the honors of entrance at the Univernitv of Guidon examination was Charlotte iliggins. She is but 20 years of age. There were 1,1100 male students pitted against her. Teachers in Nome European countries do not huve the pleasaiiteHt experiences. In Spain the payment of salaries is ha bitually in arrears. Altogether ,.riiMi teachers have arrears due them, and il is not surprising that in one place a teacher has taken to selling matches, ami his wife and children have gone into domestic service. According to the late military statistics there are no illiterate persons in Bavaria. Among "J, 77- recruits enlinted in the army in the palatinate there were only three individuals w ho could not read or write. But that district forms no exce tioii to the rule. The general riuml-erof recruits from the entire population was 20,54, and among them were only bix illiterate persons. The New York Knimjtlirt says: Do not the methods of teaching in our pub lic schools need to 1st overhauled? The pupils are crammed with a superficial knowledge of nearly a score of -lilt'crcut studies without an ability to write a sen tence in the English language correctly. What children need is not to learn so much, but to learn a few things well, and w bile acquiring such knowledge to learn to think for themselves. In Sweden philanthropy has seized Uhui the schools now as the vehicle of teaching the children the cleanliness that is next to godliness. The chief parochial school in Stockholm has intrixluced w in ter bathing as a feature, with great cau tion apparently, lent innovation excite prejudice, for the reort says that the children are given a bath every three weeks. Now that the thing is in run ning order, 100 children can lie washed in three hours. The Isiys bxik readily to the scheme ; the girls for some reason did not. Of forty girls in one class that averaged 13 years of age only sixteen had ever known the luxury of a bath in winter. The teachers reort that the ell'cct on the children is beneficial in every way, especially since they have got on terms with the soap, which they at first were shy of. THE NATIONAL CAPITAL. Km ltl Inventor of the Italn-I'rodurlnK Troop. In a Virginian. Secretary Foster has issued a circular giving notice that no more bonds of the 4,'.j per cent, loan would be received for continuance at 2 per cent, after Septem ber HO. Bonds which have not lieen continued will be redeemed on presen tation. Secretary Noble has issued an order establishing county lines and county seats in the Indian country aliout to tie opened for settlement in Oklahoma. He lias also directed tbat cavalrv be sta tioned on each county-seat reservation to warn away intruders. The Treasury Department has com pleted the purchase of silver for the cur rent month. No further purchases will he made until Octolier 2. The amount of silver offered for sale was 800,000 ounces, and the amount purchased 400,- OiK), ranging in price from U7 to 07.2 lents. The purchase of silver bullion at the local mints aggregated 351,261 ounces. Owing to numerous inquiries coming from dilferent parts of the country for fractional silver coin, the United States Treasurer lias prepared a circular stating in substance that the new halves anct dollars will be furnished in sums of $200 or mote by express, free of charge, or by registered' mail in sums or multiples of 50, registration charges paid to any point in the United States. In view of the fact that sugars not above l(i D's in color are now exempt from duty, irrespective of the country from which imported, the Treasury Depart ment has authorized the Customs Col lector at San F'rancisco to waive require ments imposed by the regulations com pelling importers of sugar from Hawaii to produce properly authenticated in voices, showing such sugar was the pro duce of that country, when free entry is claimed under the act of October 1, 1800. Congress at its last session authorized the recoinage of the uncurrent fractional coin now in the treasury abraded below the limit of tolerance, and made an ap propriation of $160,000 to cover the loss to the coin by the abrasion. This sum, it is estimated, will cover the loss on about $4,000,000 of coin, and this amount is now being coined into quarter dollars and dimes, for which there is a very great demand. The recoinage into stand ard silver dollars of the 5,000,000 trade dollars bullion, which the last Congress authorized, is also in progress. EASTERN ITEMS. Skoletons of Prehistoric Peoplo Found. SUICIDE MANIA OF AGNOSTICS Chicago Will Have to Modify the Plan3 Made for the World's Fair Buildings, Eto. MiniieHpoliM has no desire to consoli date with St. Paul. Carloads of diseased Chicago cattle have U-en seized at Bull'iilo. The (iradv monument will In- unveiled at Atlanta, ia., October 21. There is something over llTi.OOO natives of Switzerland in and around New York. ('. 1. Huutinutoii is to complete the Middle and East Tennessee railroad within sixty days. A company to insure tobacco planters Hk-aliiMt Ihhm by hail is one of the latest Hellenics in Connecticut. The house at A piHiuiuttox, Va.. in which General Lee surrendered to Gen eral Grant has been sold fur 10,INM). Canada has sent but H UM) sheep to Great Britain during the year just ended. as compared with 4',oiHl for the year be fore. A landlords' association has been formed in Boston for the purpose of mu tual protection agaiiiHtobjectiouable ten ants. The organ in the music room of the residence of the late Mrs. Hopkins Searle at Great Harrington, Mass., cost 100,000. So great is the homeward rush of American tourists that many of them are unable to find passage on returning steamers. It is said that the smuggling of Chi nese into this country has been recently accelerated bv the price having risen to flOO per head. Cleveland has passed a law reducing the price of gas to 00 cents per l.(HH) feet and giving the city an option on the gas works at anv time. Judgments aggregating 14.020 against Alexander Herrmann, the magician, have j lift lieen entered in the County Clerk's oilice at New York. The trade and commerce of Charles ton, S. C, last year amounted to 1)8.. r."4,718, a net increase of 17II.35,00I over the preceding year. Thomas Delanv of Albany, aged lit. thought nothing of smoking five or six package;" of cigarettes a day. His funeral took place the other day. Judgments aggregating lM.OOO have lieen filed against Adam Backer, the commercial note broker of New York, who assigned August 3 last. Counsel for Joseph A. Davidson of New York has obtained an attachment against the Mexican National Railway Company upon a claim for 105,000. Oklahoma is liardlv a year old as a Territory, and yet we are told that the question of admitting it to Statehood will come before Congress this winter. Chicago Odd Fellows are to erect a thirty-four-story building. The structure from ground to' dome will be 500 feet. and it is to be completed by the fall of ISO.'. According to statistics gathered by charitable organizations throughout the country there are 3,000,000 people wholly or partly dependent upon charity every year in the United States. Two thousand men. mostly French Canadians, employed in the saw mills at Ottawa have struck for a reduction of one and a half hours' work per day and an increase of 00 cents in wages per week. A mound containing skeletons of pre historic people has been discovered on a farm near Carthage. 111. The skeletons lay in all conceivable positions, and are supposed to be those of warriors who fell in battle. An order has been issued by Secretary Tracy which forbodes the breaking-up of the White squadron. It was directed to the chiefs of the bureaus, and ordered them to prepare the Yorktown for serv ice on the Pacific Btation and the Petrel for service on the Asiatic station. A suicide mania has taken possession of the aged members of an agnostic cir cle in Bradford, Pa., which was founded by the late Dr. Stuart, who himself led the way by taking his own life. Since then three other members of the circle have tried to kill themselves, and two have succeeded. Chicago will have to modify the plans made for the World's air buildings and grounds or face a serious financial diffi culty. The estimated cost of getting the show ready to open is 18,000,000. This is too much, even though the govern ment should l)e induced to contribute $5,000,000 outright. Senor Celso Balsar Mareno, a well- known Italian American residing at Washington and acting as an agent in this country of the National party of Ha waii, corresponding to the (Jmlian Con- gressionalists, has laid before the Presi dent a letter he recently received from a correspondent in Honolulu, asserting England is now planning to take posses sion of the kingdom. The writer said that some action on the part of the United States is necessary; that the Queen is favorable to British interests and is ready to countenance the move when made. The President was inter ested by the letter, and asked Senor Ma reno to communicate with Secretary 1 Blaine, PERSONAL MENTION. Mr. illtoiiff In Sulci to Havci Orxat l(lHt for Ituinltr. Queen Victoria puts in her spare time plying the crochet needle, Jules Simon, the celebrated French economist, detents tobacco, and says that he is an inveterate enemy of alcohol. James N. Pidcock of White House, N. J., former Congressman from that State and prospective candidate for Governor, expects to market over 10,000 baskets of peaches this year. The ex-Emperor of Brazil is moping away existence in a melancholy mood at Vichy, where he is leing treated for heart disease. He t-eema to huve lost all interest in passing events. General Maury Is the third distin guished Confederate officer to have a desk in the war-records oilice in Wash ington. The other two are General Mar cus Wright and General George Field. Prince Bismarck suffers much from his old enemy, neuralgia, and the writing of his memoirs does not progress swiftly. He dislikes the work, and a revival of the past seems to embitter and disturb him. William B. McCreery, United States Consul at Valparaiso, Chili, is a Michi gan man, who served with credit during the civil war. He was one of the few who succeeded in escaping from Libby prison. Senator Proctor's first step into official life was as a village Selectman. And the Vermont villagers were mighty particu lar aljout a man iH-ing an undeveloped statesman before they would trust him in such an oilice, Susannah Annesley, who married Sam uel Wesley and became the mother of the famous John Wesley, was twenty-third child to her father, twenty-fourth to her mother, and she herself gave birth to nineteen children. Colonel Elliot F. Shepard expresses the opinion that, if Chicago permits the opening of her exhibition on Sundays, some dreadful calamity will lie called down upon the city. Can this be a threat that he will go to live there? Hon. William Walter Phelps, United states Minister to Germany, will prolong his sojourn at Hamburg, where he has been joined by his wife. He is improv ing in health, and is very happy over the outcome of his fight on the pork ques tion. Mr. Gladstone has a profound respect for royalty, and never wounds the feel ings of the royal family if he can help it. His recent letter denouncing gam bling as a formidable and growing evil in Great Britain seems to be capable of a royal application, however. Another inipular American who will not grow old is Key. Dr. Edward Everett Hale, who, although 70 vears of age, still performs the duties of a pastor, contrib utes articles to papers and magazines. edits a department in a magazine, and does many other things dillicult even for younger men. M. Jacques, who has recently begun a fifty days' fast at the London Aquarium, assumes an air of extreme comfort as he sits in his easy chair. Sometimes he reads for an hour or two, but lie is not much disposed to talk. He says that that uses up too much vitality. The Duke of Edinburgh is the very picture ot an athlete. Uver six leet in height, broad-shouldered, strong-limbed and as active as a cat, it is surprising to find that lie takes more pleasure in fid dling than in field sports and is happier in saving a dollar than in having a good time. The Earl of Warwick, father-in-law of Lady Brooke of baccarat-scandal fame. is very ill. He is periodically subject to fainting fits, and is expected to die in one before long. He is over 73 years of age, and has been in feeble health for some time. Lady Brooke has of late kept in the background and shown a dis position to avoid the social glare. Dr. James Ramsey Speer, who died the other dav in Pittsburg at the age of 04, had lived under every President of the United States, and was the cousin of one, Buchanan, while his mother was the grand aunt of another, Benjamin Harri son. As a sensible man, however, Dr. Speer was very content to rest his claims to attention on his local reputation as a physician and surgeon. CRIME AND CRIMINALS. A Kentucky Feud Assume Proportions TliRt May End in Woodshed. An express train on the Missouri, Kan sas and Texas road was held up the other night near Leliaetta, I.T.,and robbed of $2,500. George Jones, a convicted murderer in a San Francisco prison, is slowly dying from paralysis, and is gradually growing insane. John and Henry Martin and three un known women were whipped by white caps near Hinsdale, Ind., for petty thieving. Henry T. Edson, son of the ex-Mayor of New York, has been arrested for ob taining $5,000 on a draft on a bank in which he had no credit. The Alleghany Heating Company of Pittsburg claims that Thomas L. Shields, its Secretary and Treasurer, is short over $100,000 in his accounts. W. F. Slingloff, ex-Treasurer of the Montgomery Trust Company of Morris town, Pa., lias been arrested, charged with embezzling $180,000 of the bank's funds. Mrs. Popke, aged 19, living in Sey mour, Wis., has been arrested for smoth ering her infant. Her husband, who buried the child in the woods, was also arrested. At San Francisco the Coroner's jury in the case of Otlicer Alexander Grant has rendered a verdict finding the de ceased came to his death from a gunshot wound in the head, inflicted by Maurice B. Strelinger. known as Curtis, and charging him with the crime of murder. FOREIGN LANDS. Theosophy Fad Widely Infects London. THE JAPANESE CREMATORIES The Workingmen's Union of Halle, Germany, is Dissolved by the Police. The Prince of Wales is insured for $HH ),000. There is a newspaper in Indon which is printed with scented ink. The total loss to life in Martinique from the recent hurricane was 340. Berlin is to have an elevated railroad. Electricity is Ui be the power used. The proposed ship canal between the Firth of Forth and the Clyde is revived. An underground cable is lieing laid to connect important German fortifications. The Prince of Wales is ambitious to race his new yacht in American waters. Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria has or dered 1,000,000 worth of cannon from Krupp. Russian newspapers say the Czar fears no war on account of the Dardanelles incident. Active supporters of Balmaceda are likely to lose all their property by con fiscation. The theosophy fad is infecting London society widely, and a mission to America is talked ot. The police of the Chilian Junta are still seeking for Balmaceda among the monasteries. Kiamil Pasha, who was removed from the Turkish Ministry, it is said, will be appointed Governor of Syria. The Munich papers say William did not receive a very enthusiastic welcome on his visit to the Bavarian capital. A co-operative home for single women is to be started in Vienna, Austria. Each will have a share in the houseaeeping. M. Ader of Paris after expending more than $100,000 on a living machine has produced one in w hich he flew about 100 yards. A great outcry is being raised in Fin land against the recent introduction of the Russian language into the schools of that country. Russian merchants want their govern ment to abolish its free ports on the Black river in Asia and remove an ele ment of foreign competition. F'avorable results are shown in the school attendance in England under the free-education act. Manchester had an increased attendance of 2,000. The principal article of export from Russia into Servia is coal oil. There are at present 3,000,000 kilograms of kero sene in the port of Odessa ready for ex port. Since the Pasteur Institute for the cure of hydrophobia was established in Paris in 1880 there have been 9,439 pa tients treated, of whom sixty-four have died. The stories of destitution among the peasants in Russia, owing to the failure of the crops, are somewhat terrible. In some of the afflicted provinces the peo ple have not eaten bread for days. Sally, the interesting chimpanzee of the zoological gardens, London, has de parted this life. She could count up to seven, had a large acquaintance and had often been interviewed by Darwin. In the province of Orel, Russia, bands of peasants are roving over the highway, attacking the convoys of grain and food, even where the convoys are escorted by soldiers. Queen Victoria's health is not good, and the physicians regulate her diet more strictly than ever. Visitors find a notable increase in the Queen's aspect in respect to age. The International Agricultural Con gress at The Hague has pronounced in favor of a State indemnity to owners of animals condemned to death for tuber culosis or pleuro-pneumonia. The Liverpool Elevated railroad, run ning along the line of docks, is rapidly nearing completion. Two miles of the road have been built in the past six months, and it is expected the line will be open for traffic next spring. The line. when completed, will be between five and six miles in length. The natives in East Africa have terri bly defeated the Germans. Three hun dred blacks under the German com mander were killed and a large quantity of guns and munitions of war lost to the enemy. The victorious natives followed up their Buccess w ithout mercy, killing all they got in their power. A scientific expedition to Spitsbergen, organized by Herr Sanglin of Stuttgart, has just left Bremen. Among those tak ing part in it are Dr. Zeppelin, Prof. Baur and Prince Karl von Urach. The object ia to make a thorough study of the geology oi spitz Dergen and to exam ine the fishing grounds of the Northern waters. The collapse of a swindling banking concern run ny one fechuiz at Luben, Germany, has caused widespread ruin to the people who had been induced to invest their funds with the institution. Laborers and other poor persons were led by Schulz' specious promises to de posit their scanty savings with him, and fhA reniilt. in that. hnnHraHa nf familiaa are now mourning the loss of all their i possessions. PORTLAND MARKET. A Romra of thi Condition of It Dl (rant Department. The fall season is backward about let ting in, but when it does come it must come with a rush, for the wholesale com munity have made preparation! for an unusually large arnountof trading. Bart lettsare becoming scarce, and the season for plums is about over. Prunes are ar riving freely, and are cheap. There ia a fair supply of late peaches on band, and enough grapes to satisfy the demand. Apples are fx ginning to come in, and will soon be the leading article in the market. The vegetable market il well supplied, and prices are kept firm by a good demand. The market for dairy pro duce shows no change except in butter, which has advanced 2' 3 cents per pound. Poultry is scarce and firm, ana eggs are in the same condition. WHKAT. Valley is ofTering freely, but pricei anked are above the market and few transactions are refiorted. The tone of the market is slightly firmer in sympa thy with foreign advices. Cables report cagoes firmer and 3-1 higher. Liverpool spot wheat is quoted Id per cental higher, and options are firmer through out, later months showing a marked advance. Produce, Fruit. Kte. Whkat-Valley, $1.52J; Walla Walla, $1.45 per cental. Flock Standard, $4.90; Walla Walla, $4.70 ter barrel. Oats New, 3Sffl40c per bushel. Il.iv 112 14 per ton. Mills-tots Bran, $2122; short, 24 (a 2 ; ground barley, $ 0 32 ; chop feed, 22H23 per ton; barley, $1.20(41 25 per cental. Blttkr Oregon fancy creamery, 32,' 035c ; fancy dairy, 3 c ; fair to good, 25 27 '4c; common, 15(a2gc; Eastern, 25 (" 31' j cper pound. Ciieehk Oregon, 1212c; Eastern, 13c per pound. Euos Oregon, 30c per dozen. Pocltky Old chickens, 5.50(26.00: young chickens, $2.504 50; ducks, $5.00 (t8.0d; geese, nominal, 8.00((i9.00 per dozen ; turkeys, lti(al7c per pound. Vkoei abi.es Cabbage, 75c(5$1.00 per cental ; cauliflower, $1(0)1.25 per dozen; unions.auciaf 1 percental; Deets,$1.25 per sack; turnips, $1.00 per sack; new pota toes, 45.f 00c per cental: tomatoes, 40( 50c per box; lettuce, 120 per dozen; green peas, 3w4c per pound; string beans, 2(3c per pound; rhubarb, 3c per pound; cucumliers, 10c per dozen; car rot:t 75c per sack ; corn, 78c per dozen ; sweet potatoes, 2 2'4'c per pound. Fhuits Sicily lemons, $7.00(28.00; California, $4.500.00 per box ; apples, 60(80c per box ; bananas, $3.504.00 a bunch ; pineapples,$o.00 (37.00 per dozen ; peaches, tjOigOOc per box; plums, 2500c per box; watermelons, $1.50(32.00 per dozen; cantaloupes, $1.001.50 per H17.an A? IW1 ttjr cputo ffntnoa Tntan $1.00 per box; muscat and black, oc(ctfi.uj per crate, boxes 7oc; pears, 75c; Bartlett, $1.00 per box; nectar inps. ti0rt?7oc ner crate! erah nnnlon 3 per pound; pumpkins, $1.50 per dozen; prunes, z(u;.,'-2c per pouna. Nuts Ca'itornia walnuts.U1 (312)0; hickory, 8,lc; Brazils, 10lfc; al monds. 16U 18c: filberts. 13fai4e; nina nuta, 1718c; pecans, 17fSc; cocoa nuts, 8c; hazel, 8c; peanuts, 8c per poui u. Staple Groceries. Hoxey 17'o(318c per pound. Rice Japan. $5.00; Island, $5.75 per rental. S ,, t T.ivprnnnl 14 00. 1R riOffllB.OO: toek, $11012 per ton. beans Nnaii white, agc; pinK, ac; bayos, 4c; butter, ajc; limas, 4c per pound. Coffee Costa Rica, 2;"K21c; Rio, J3c; Mocha, 30c; Java, 5c; Ar buckle's, 100-pound cases, 24c per pound. Si'gar Golden C,4?gc; extra C, 4c; u liitp p-ftrfl P 47Ap- trrflnnlatPfV RTI S ' j - i r- , a r cube crushed and powdered, 6J4C; con fectioners' A, 53vjc per pound. Sykup Eastern, in barrels, 4755c; half-barrels, 5058c; in cases, 5580c per gallon; $2.2502.50 per keg. Cali fornia, ir. barrels, 30c per gallon; $1.75 per Keg. PaiEr iRiiTs Italian prunes, 8c; Petite and German, 7c per pound; raisins, $1.205H.75 per box; plummer dripd rtPMrs 861 Hi unn-rlripff mH fac tory plums, 9c; evaporated peaches, n . 11... c ... ... ), . rni;fn.;n ngs, tc per pouna. flAvsen Goons Tflhlfi friiit.o. tl.lvKa 180, 2s; peaches, $1.802.00; Bart lett pears, ft.tsotsi o j puuns, f 1.374 (!9 l.ou; straw Derries, jfL'.a; cnernes, fz.zo fi?9M- blnrkhprrip 1 RRrtf 1 00 . rann- berrie8, $2.40; pineapples, $2.252.80; apricots, !fi.ou(i.(U. rieiruu: Assortea, $1.101.20; peaches, $1.05; plums, $1.00 1.10: blackberries. 1.25 per dozen. Veg etables: Corn, $1.251.65; tomatoes, $1.0003.00; sugar peas, $1.1001.25; string beans, 90c$1.00 per dozen. Fish : Sardines, 75c01.65 ; lobsters, $2.30 03.50; oysters, $1.5003.25 per dozen. Salmon, standard No. 1, $1.2501.50 per case; No. 2, $2.55. Condensed milk: Eagle brand, $8.10; Crown, $7; High land, $6.75; Champion, $5.50; Monroe, $6.75 per case. Meats: Corned beef, $2.00; chipped beef, $2.15; lunch tongue, $3.10 Is, $6.00 2s; deviled ham, $1.3502.65 per dozen. The Meat Market. Beef Li"e, 23c; dressed, 56c. Mutton Live, sheared, 33c; dressed, 7c. lloos Live, 5c; dressed, 8c. Veal 507c per pound. Smoked Meats Eastern ham, 13J 130; other varieties, 10012c; breakfast bacon, I214c; smoked bacon, 10 ll?4c per pound. Lard Compound, 10c; pufe, I2c; Oregon, 10Ml2c per pound. Late cultivation in the orchard should be avoided, as time muBt be given lor the trees to mature their wool.