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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 17, 1891)
iver Glacier. vol. :;. HOOD UIVKk, OREGON, SATURDAY. OOTOHER 17, 18U NO. 20. The IIooc 3food Iivcr Slacicr. rum.i.iiKi. kv Kiir hatiikdat mohniku t Tlie Glacier Publishing Company. uvum iiin ioN riutK. One jf ,,,,, ft Mi Ki hiiiiith. or Thrne month.. f ( fci C.nU OKO. P. MORGAN, Ui. (;hi.i ( ik ii. h u.mI omr.. IjUihI :: I.nw :: Kpt'riiiliHt. IliMim No. 0, UmI Oltlc llullillii,-, Tim HAM.KH, OH. O. D. TAYLOR, Real Hstalo Broker, Fire, Lire and Accident Insurance. Money Loaned on Real Estate Secnrily Offlcii, Krfiirh Co 'i flunk Itiilhlhif, THK PAI.I.rS. OHKijoN. THE GLACIER Barber Shop Grant Evans, Propr. rWomt St., near Ouk. Hood River, Or. Shaving ami lluii'ctitting ai-ntly done. .NtiUl tiull (iiiitiuntvwl. PACIFIC COAST. Orogon Naval Reserve Incorporated. WASHINGTON IRON INDUSTRY Deady Decides in Favor of a Chinese Morohant's Wire Without a Certifloato Eto. The pine-nut crop is iihort in Nevada. The irott Industry in Wellington gives grwat promise. A copper-smelting furnace at San Di ego in being discused. The O-egon naval reserve has lieen in corporated at l'orthuul. Riverside is talking of a co operative kitchen on the Bellamy plan. Nevada people want the Governor to call an irrigation convention at Reno. ( Aden's street-ear system has been clmiiKed from Bteain motor to electricity. J. de Barth Shorb in to represent tag Angeles county in the California Hoard of Trade. All the railroad washouts in New Mex ico have been repaired, and trains are moving regularly. Two hundred Tucson ladies have signed a petition asking the Constitutional Con vention not to discriminate against wom en's civil rights in the constitution. The work of construction on the Santa Fo, Prescott and Phii'iiix railroad, which will connect Pho-nlx, A. T., and the Salt Kiver Valley with the Santa Fe system, has begun. The grand jury at Reno is unable to find the slightest evidence upon which to Indict any one for the hanging of the rutlian Ortig by vigilantes, and asks to be discharged. Los Angeles complains that the Chino kief-sugar factory has not made sugar cheaper there, owing to the fact that only throe firms, handle the sugar and no one else can get it, in carload iots. Mrs Maillard, who disappeared from her homo near Han Rafael, Cal., several weeks ago, was found at Fortuna, Cal , where she has boen living with W. II. Ingram, a hired man formerly employed by her husband. Bradstreet's mercantile agency reports twenty-seven failures in the Pacific Coast States and Territories for the past week, as compared with twenty-five for the previous week and ten lor the corre sponding week of 1800. The S,an Diego Sun says: They are having daily showers of rain at San Ja cinto, which come from the evaporation of the Salton Lake. Their origin and drift have boen watched from the sum mit of San Jacinto Peak, and there is no further room for doubt as to the effect the lake is having upon the rainfall. The Itata's officers testify that the ves sel when she came to San Diego had no sailors, soldiers or arms on board. The vessel changed captains three times be fore leaving Chili, and four breech-load-erf'that she carried were put off at Arigo. The arms were taken on board at San Clemente. A bill has been filed in equity in the United States Court at Lob Angeles against the Southern Pacific railroad and 218 other defendants to quiot title and forfeit to the government 850,000 acres of land in Los Angeles, San Bernardino and Ventura counties, Cal. The land is overlapping grants to the Atlantic and Pacific Company of 1886 and 1871. EDUCATIONAL. Nwrilcii Miami Itflilml No Count rr In r.iiulitr Induration. (tf ,'IM towns and cities in Massiiehii sells 2IH have free public libraries. The MTcrage salaries of the mistrexses in the Loudon board schools is $050. It costs the teachers of Kansas $200. IHHI a year to attend the Normal Insti tutes, There are 2:M) Normal Schools, with an attendance of .Ml, IKK) students, in the United Slates. Philadelphia turns out more medical Ntinh iils in a year than any other city in the country. President Warfleld of Lafayette Col lege, pa., is tuking vigorous measures to stamp out hazing. Pittsburg is trying industrial courses in the public schools, and their success is rcMrtcd to be marked. Albert ). !une has been chosen Su jirliiti'iidciit of the public schools of Chicago, vice I low land resigned. The Kansas University is a good deal set up liecauso a Harvard graduate is sending his sou to lawrence this year. The number of students registered this year in Sibley College of Mechan ical Engineering, Cornell University, is something like 1W, including a consid erable mnnlsT of graduates from other colleges. Superintendent Anderson of the Mil waukee public schools is talking alxiut getting up a procession of children of school age who are denied an education from the lack of school room in that city. They numlier about 2,inn). It is said that Miss Mary K. Holmes of KiH'kford, ill., propones to invest from $75,000 to $IOO,KK) in establishing in Missouri a colored women's literary and industrial school to aecommodatu 150 pupils as a memorial to her mother. The fall term of OWIin College has opened very auspiciously, there lieing nearly 1.300 students enrolled, rrot. James Craig of Lane Seminary and Miss lotliroii of Harvard Annex have U-en added to the already efficient corps of teachers. Within recent years the rush into the professions has heen so great in tier inanv, Denmark, France and Greece that these Mates can utilize only a small per cent, of the university graduates. Since INTO the growtli of the attendance at the German universities has increased from 11,000 to 20,207. According to an educational journal the nuiiilsT of illiterate persons in Rub da, Siberia, Roumania and Bulgaria lot in mo per cent , oi me K)piiiauou, in Spain 03, Italy -W, Hungary 43, Austria Hit, Ireland 21,'Franee and "Belgium 15, Holland 10. United Slates 8, Scotland 7, Switzerland 2'.. and in the greater part of (iermany only 1 er cent. Sweden stands behind no country not even the United States in ixiinilar education. To this may perhaps be due the superiority of the Swedish emigrant to this country over emigrants from other European countries. The numlier of school children per l.uuu inhatntanls is 110. Technical instruction, especially of woman, is a great feature. The dilh- culties in the way oi school attendance are very great, not only liecause of the severe Northern w inters, ht also lieeause the people live to a largo extent on iso lated farms. Prof. Miehaolson has just returned to Boston from California, where lie has spent a large jvortion of the summer, lie has been working at Lick Observa tory, experimenting there with his recent invention the refractometer. This he attached to the smaller of the telescopes at the observatory, and during the sum mer ho made numerous measurements of the Isidiesof the solar system, partic ularly of the satellites of Jupiter. The results of this work were highly satisfac tory, and the mean of the measurements made varies from the maximum and minimum measurements by but 1 or 2 per cent. a variation many times less than is obtainable by other methods. The refractometer will lie used by the staff at Lick Observatory during the com ing year, and in that time Prof. Michael son hopes to perfect his invention still further. The refractometer bids fair to lie an instrument of great importance in future astronomical work. THE NATIONAL CAPITAL. Secretary I'rootor Han Approved the New Tactic for the Army. Secretary Proctor has finally approved the new tactics for the army, and they will l put in practice as soon as the necessary arrangements can be made. The President has passed upon the record of the court-martial in the case of Colonel Compton of the Fourth Cavalry, who was charged with failure while in command of the military post at Walla Walla to take steps to prevent the lynch ing of a man named Hunt under arrest for killing one of the soldiers under him. The court found him guilty, and sen tenced him to suspension from rank and command for three years on half pay and to be confined in the limits of a mil iary post. The President approved the proceedings of the court, but mitigated the sentence to suspension from rank and command on half pay for two years. The Director of the Mint, with the approval of the Secretary of theTreasury, has issued instructions to the superin tendents of the assay office in New York that in cases of deposits of foreign gold or bars such an approximation of value as in the discretion of the superintendent may be regarded as safe, not to exceed 90 per cent, of the value, will be paid pending the melt and assay. The pur pose of this regulation is to encourage, so far as can be legally done, the govern ment importation of foreign gold into the United States by allowing the im porters 8 pot cash for foreign gold so Boon aa received instead of requiring them to wait while the deposits are being melted and the exact gold determined. EASTERN ITEMS. Tho Coal Product of the United Statos. GEORGIA TO TAX BACHELORS Arrangements Complete for the Poly, technio Excursion to the World's Fair. The Twin City f Miiineaolis) Athletic Club has assigned. It is said Canada intends to reiinpone an export duty on logs. Ohio this year produces the largest to bacco crop in her history. A cooking school is a part of the public-school system of Milwaukee. The validity of the convict lease sys tem in Tennessee is to le decided by the courts. Turkey's Hag has liocn the first to lie unfurled on the Chicago World's Fair grouuils. The witters of Ijike Erie are to le piped to Cincinnati, taking in many oilier cities en route. Most of the fires in Wisconsin were confined to districts burned over last spring. The rams have checked them. A factory is to ie built at Minneapolis by parties who claim to lie able to tem-H-r copper so that it can lie made hard us steel. The .Millionaires' Club of New York will erect a $750,000 house. The promised site is on the corner of Fifth avenue and Sixtieth street. The people in Kiiiiuons countv, N. D. who lost their property bv prairie fires are said to le in a deplorable condition without food or shelter. Since the passage of the American copyright law it is said that one New York song publisher has paid $d,0()() in Iiiidon for manuscripts. France, it is believed, will next month rescind the pork prohibition laws. Italy promises to rescind her prohibitory reg ulalioim after France acts. It is stated that the government has realized $0,000,000 from the sale of lands in that part of Kansas which is beyond the line of certain rainfall. In the Red River Valley, N. I)., farm lalior is very scarce, and the railroads in that section carry men free to various points where they are needed. The largo yield and high price of wheat will, it is estimated and expected, make this season's Dakota crop equal in value to those of the five preceding years. A rnilroml mirvovinir nurtv t lint u-pnt. up the Big llorn Canyon in Colorado nearly two months ago has not been heard from, ami there are fears that the members have been lost. Vessel agents and mariners on the Great Ijtkcs are urging the establish ment of a branch hydrographic otlice on the lakes to look out for the vast mari time interests centered there. The Sovereign Grand Lodge, I. O. O. F., has voted down the proposition that members could tiecome eligible to the degree of Patriarchs Militant without going through the encampment. Georgia is going to tax bachelors. A bill for that purjwse has been brought into the Georgia Legislature, and the House Committee on Hygiene and Sani tation has reported it favorably. An extra session of the Pennsylvania Legislature has been called with a view to remove the Auditor-General and State Treasurer, whose connection with the financial scandals has been charged openly. The Sovereign Grand Lodge of Odd Fellows has voted against the eighteen vear limit to eligibility to join the order. The vote was 107 to 58. The question regarding liquor sellers was postponed until next year. In a drunken fight on a train from Mount Vernon to Carmi, 111., William Robertson stabbed Sheriff Williams slightly, and a man named Stanley, who went to Williams' assistance, was badly cut and will die. The conductors, switchmen and brake men on the Southern Pacific Atlantic system have demanded an increase in wages, and a strike at an early day is possible, as the company refuses to ac cede to the demands. Florida's Secretary of State, Mr. Craw ford, refuses to attest the commission of ex-Congressman Davidson, appointed by ex-Governor Fleming to succeed Senator Call. Mandamus proceedings will be taken by the Governor. A committee of physicians at Louis ville is examining thecaseof Mrs. Stuck enburg, who, it has been widely pub lished, on Fridays goes into a trance, when the stigmata or bleeding wounds similar to those of the Savior when on the cross are said to appear. A secret organization is terrorizing the people in the neighborhood of Tellville, Ark. It is composed of "moral regu lators," but they are brutal in their treatment of those who come under the ban of their displeasure. At the Gravesend race track at New York an ingenious trick, by means of which the bookmakers got news of the races, was discovered. A "coachman" with a big hat was arrested in the field for carriages, and it was found a battery was in the hat and small wires around the man's body, while in the rear of the carriage was an operator who sent mes sages dictated by the supposed coachman. PERSONAL MENTION. A Man and IIU Wife nr. Niiiiilna'nl Judicial I'oaltloii In Nlirnk. for Mr. Partridge, the sculptor, is making a heroic bust of James Russell Ijwel1. Mrs. Mackay is the possessor of a string of flawless diamonds two yards in length. George A. Pillsbnry of Minneapolis has presented a soldiers' monument to Concord, N. II., his native town. The report that Bismarck had recently a slight stroke of paralysis is pronounced untrue, and his health is said to be fair. Mark Twain is thinking of descending the River Rhine in a boat with his cou rier and working up his adventures for his new book. Moorfleld Story, who was at one time Sumner's private secretary, has agreed to write his biography for the "Amer ican Statesmen Series." Secretary Foster is the best croquet player in Washington, and is so far ahead of all competitors that they don't try to pit themselves agaiiiKt him. The man thought most likely to suc ceed the present Iord Mayor of London is Alderman David Evans, a manufact urer and a Welshman, aged 42 years. Francisco Cortisi, the great Italian singing teacher, lives alone in a little villa just out of Florence, where an old housekeeper prepares his spaghetti and his wine for iiim. James S. Sinclair, a farmer of North Dakota, a distant relative of the Karl of Caithness, has received word from Eng land that he has succeeded to the title and estate of that Englishman. The seat which Mr. Edmunds has been occupying in the Senate will not 1 taken ly .dr. Proctor. Senator Dixon ot Khode Island gets it by the assignment of old Captain Bassett. Mr. Dixon was the first applicant. Mrs. Ingalls is quite unlike her tall, thin husband in figure. She is rather short, with a tendency to stoutness. Her complexion is fair and rosy, and her face is animated by a pair of bright and ex pressive eyes. The new Duke of Cleveland comes into a rich income of MOOWO, derived from the estates in Shropshire and Durham, vast properties of which he will have the unineuinliered rent rolls without having to sell an acre of their broad lands. fin nniniinl tt Mm ttii.aifa1 inftrmitioa of Bishop Galleher of Louisiana his du ties nave lor tne mosi pan oeen assumed by his assistant, Rev. David Sessums, who is to all intents and purposes the Bishop of the diocese. As he is but Xi years old, Mr. Sesstims is probably the youngest Bishop in the United States. It is declared on authentic British au thority that there is but one British offi cer left w ho fought at Waterloo, and all pretenders are w arned to ring off and die as modest folks as they were born. This one officer is Lieutenant William Hewitt of the Rifle Brigade, born in 1705. Of late he has been in failing health. He lives at Southampton. Sir A. Paget is the senior member of the British diplomatic corps, and has held appointment under the foreign Sec retaries acting for thirteen Cabinets. He recently celebrated the fiftieth anniver sary of his appointment as an attache. His present position at Vienna will be shortly vacated, the wily old diplomat having determined to retire from the service. The last French survivor of the battle of Trafalgar, Louis Cartigny, has just completed his 100th year. He was a cabin boy on the Redoubtable in 1803 at the time the fatal shot was fired from that vessel at Lord Nelson. Cartigny is still hale and hearty, in full possession of his -faculties, and spends most of his time in the open air. Nothing delights him more than to converse about his ex periences. Grace Greenwood writes to the Home Journal from Washington to say that she is not blind, as has been reported in the newspaper press. She says she can see to thread up her sewing machine and even to find her way across Fifth avenue at an hour when the millionaires are out in force. She adds: "lam not blind, neither to my neighbor's sins nor to my own little human frailties. I can still ' read my title clear ' to more good for tune than has ever come my way." CRIME AND CRIMINALS. German Anarchists Sentenced for. Circu lating Prohibited Literature. Charles Mock (colored) was taken from jail at Swainsboro, Ga., by a mob and hanged. Mock a few days ago criminally assaulted a white woman of that place. Sheriff Simons whipped seven crimi nals in the jail yard in Newcastle, Del. There was but little interest) shown in the affair, and only a small crowd gath ered. A quarrelsome negro shot and killed the Mayor of Spartanburg, S. C, and a mob surrounded the jail at last accounts with the purpose of hanging the mur derer. Six Anarchists, who were tried in Co blenz, Germany, have been sentenced to terms of imprisonment from six months to two years for circulating prohibited literature. Thomas O'Brien, a well-known all round crook and confidence man, has been arrested at New York, charged with robbing a wealthy citizen of Al bany of $10,000 a year and a half ago. Andrew Gage, clerk of Madison coun ty, was assassinated at his home in the suburbs of Huntsville, Ark. Gage was standing on his back porch, and the as sassin fired from the shadow of a house. Colonel Bradford Dunham, general su perintendent of the Alabama and Mid land railroad, shot and killed James Cunningham, 19 years of age, at Mont gomery, Ala. Domestic trouble was the cause. FOREIGN LANDS. Rajlroad Buiding in the Heart of Africa. SUPPLY OF GUTTA PERCHA. Afghanistan Opened by the Ameer to Free Commercial Intercourse With Russia. Russia is negotiating a commercial treaty with Persia. Minister Grant lias great hopes of the American hog in Austria. San Domingo w ill abolish its free list for all countries except the United States. The wheat crop in Italy is unusnally good, but barley is below last year's crop. Paper that is absolutely water-proof has just been invented bv a Parisian chemist. Instruction of horses in swimming is given with the greatest care in the Ger man army. By a new law iust published the Jews of Poland are forbidden to buy real es tate irom peasants. The near future promises to witness an unprecedented amount of railroad build ing into the heart of Africa. The supply of gutta percha is beine rapidly reduced, and the French govern ment has undertaken to produce it in Algeria. The Cologne !a:rUt savs the Emneror and his principal military advisers ap prove the proposition to reduce the term of military service to two years. Much anxiety is felt regarding Rus sian movements in Pamir in Central Asia. It is rumored that Lieutenint Davison has been taken prisoner. The great shoals of mackerel which were discovered only a few years ago on he south coast of Ireland in" the autumn mve again made their appearance. The Moscow (lazetle, speaking of the Mityiene incident, says that every blow struck by England at Russian diplomacy in Europe will lie met with a blow by Asia. Russian troops are practicing forced night inarches and other night manue vers across the River lruth on the Rou manian frontier with the aid of electric lights. Mrs. May brick's solicitor has been ad vised not to proceed with the agitation for her pardon, as the British home of fice will decline to reopen the case in any form. Little credit is given to the report in Paris that Berlin will be transformed shortly into a fortified city. The last etl'ort in this direction is almost twenty years old. There is a large population of Jews in Vienna. The recent census in Austria shows that there are 118,494 professed Hebrews in Vienna out of a population of l,lt5,175. The Eiffel tower is evidently a finan cial success. Over 17,000 has been paid for admission to it by visitors since March 22 last, when this year's season commenced. The telephone between London and Paris is proving a big success scientific ally, commercially and financially. A letter from Salvador says President Ezeta has decided to call President Ba rillas of Guatemala to account for incit ing rebellion in Salvador, of which pol icy President Ezeta is said to be obtain ing ample proofs. After consulting with the British agents the Sultan has decided to recon struct the administration of his govern ment and appoint responsible Ministers in the different branches, he himself re serving the fixed civil list. The government of Montenegro has ordered three merchant cruisers built in England after the type of the Russian volunteer fleet. The vessels are to be employed during times of peace in trade between the Adriatic and Odessa. In London Mr. Giffen's recent estimate that 110,000,000 in gold would be the limit of exports to New York is not dis puted ; but even this maximum is ex pected to entail an increase of the Bank of England rate of discount to 5 or 6 per cent. Rome is to be lighted by electricity by the first of the year. A motor at Tivoli, about twelve miles distant, will supply the power, while the Via Nazionali will be the street first lighted. Le Jour of Paris says the Chinese gov ernment has granted the Jesuits an im mense tract of land as compensation for the losses which the order suffered by the burning of their buildings in the re cent riots. Electricity is playing an important part in the working of heavy guns, am munition hoists and winches in the French navy. New ships are being fit ted with electric appliances in lieu of hydraulic gear. It is stated at Constantinople that Lord Salisbury has consented to re-examine the Egyptian question on the expiration of his vacation, and the basis of all ne gotiations is that English occupation shall not be followed by that of any other power. The published stories rporantinw tha conversion of Prof. Winscheid of Leipsic to Protestantism are not entirely due to his disannroval of the pihihit.ion of tha " holy coat." The facts are that the Pro- iessor joinea tne old uatnonc movement in 1870. since which time. Via Vina Wn entirely disassociated with the Catholic ii t inurcn. PORTLAND MARKET. A Keanni of the Condition of It Dif ferent Department. Business continues fair in the whole sale district. Shipping orders were large, and receipts of produce and fruit were about the average The fruit market is heavily stocked with grapes, and peaches are in large supply. Apples and pears are also plentiful, rather more so than the demand warrants, the season for alums and prunes is about over, and the fruit is growing scarce. Tropical fruit is not plentiful, nor is there much demand for it. Quinces are in fair supply. The vegetable market is well stocked, and prices are nrm anu tne uemana good, business in the grocery line has been very good th past week, and prices on staples were firm and steady. The wool market is weak, and there is hut little doing in the way of real business. Hides are dull. There is not much doing lo cally in hops, and prices are weak. WHEAT. There is little that is new to be chron icled in the local market, which has re lapsed into a dull, easy condition under the influence of weak tables from Eu rope. Stocks on hand are not large, and shippers are doing very little buying, except for delivery later on. Quotations are nominal. London advices show a further decline of 7d in cargoes, with the market quite inactive. Other European markets are dull, but nominally steady. Produce, Fruit, Ete. Wheat Valley, $1.50: Walla Walla. $1.40 per cental. Flock Standard, $4.80; Walla Walla, $4.0 per barrel. Oats New, 3H(w422c per bushel. Hay $12rl3 per ton. f ir r t'ri L'iurira n 1 fl oViavh OA ground barley, $2.5(520; chop feed, $20; per ton ; feed barley, $18 per ton ; brew ing barley, $1.15 per cental. Bi tteu Oregon lancy creamery, rt?35c; fancy dairy, 3 )c ; fair to good, 25 272c; common, 1522gC; Eastern, 25 (t3l cper pound. Cheese Oregon, 1212)c; Eastern, 13c per pound. Eoos Oregon, 25(a27oC; Eastern. 25c per dozen. Pocltby Old chickens. $4.50 ; young chickens, $2.00(93.00; ducks, $5.008.00; geese, ta.uuffiiu.uu per dozen; turkeys, 15r 10c per pound. Vegetables Cabbage, nominal, 75c $1 per cental ; cauliflo wer,$1.25 per dozen T; Onions, $1 per cental; potatoes, 40(3 00c per sack; tomatoes, 4050c per box; sweet potatoes, l?4t2c per pound ; Cali fornia celery, 90c per dozen bunches; fancy Oregon celery, 75c per dozen bunches. Fkcits Sicily lemons. 18.00(28.50: California, $ti.006.50 per box; apples, 50c ( $1 per box ; bananas, $3.00(23.50 a bunch ; pmeapples,$4.006.00 per dozen ; peaches, 50(S75c per box ; plums, 2550c per box; watermelons, $1.00(31.60 per dozen ; cantaloupes, $1.5C2.50 per crate; grapes, Tokay, $1 per box ; muscat and black, oo7oc per crate; pears, 7585c per pound; nectarines, 6075c per crate; prunes, 22I32C per pound ; quinces, $1 per box; cranberries, $1011; Oregon cranberries, $9.50 per barrel. Ncts California walnut8,ll12c ; hickory, 8Wc; Brazils, 10llc; al monds, 1618c; filberts, 1314c; pine nuts, 1718c; pecans, 1718c; cocoa nuts, 8c; hazel, 8c; peanuts, 8c per pound. Staple Groceries. Honey -l"Ja18c per pound. Rice Japan. $5.00: Island. J5.75 nr cental. Salt Liverpool. 114.20. 15.50(aifi.OO : stock, $11 (a 12 per ton. Beans Small white, 3Mc; pink, 3c; bayos, 4c; butter, 3'c; fimas, 4c per Coffee Costa Rica, 2021c; Rio, 3e. Mneha 5MV Java OKln. A buckle's. 100-pound cases. 2S3- , f - i - pound. Sugar Golden C,4?i,c; extra C, 43c; u-hitfl extra f!. 4T'o crronnlotorl K7'. cube crushed and powdered, 6c ; con- half-barrels, 5058c; in cases, 6580c per gaiion; tz.zataz.ou per keg. Cali fornia, in barrels, 30c per gallon ; $1.75 per keg. Dried Fruits Italian prunes, 8c; Petite and German, 7c per pound; raisins, $1.201.50 per box; plummer dried pears, 89c; sun-dried and fac tory nlllmn. 9c ! Avannrafarl naaiViaa 9llc; Smyrna figs, 20c; California, uga, in pel puuiiu. Canned Goods Table fruits, $1.65 1.80, 23.3s; peaches, $1.802.00; Bart lett pears, $1.801.90; plums, $1.37 H 1.50 ; strawberries, $2.25 ; cherries, $2.25 trh9..10- hlncbhni-rioa 1 tUI M. v 1 i.m, y..uu. , loop berries, $2.40; pineapples, $2.252.80; apricots,$1.601.70. Pie fruit: Assorted, 1.101.20; peaches, $1.25; plums, $1.00 1 10- VllnckViArrioa 1 etables: Corn, $1.25 1.65; tomatoes, Sl.flfllft3.fln ! Hlluar noaa tl I11S1 IS. ' v ..... , ?- fviu, 1 . w k; 1. j. L , string beans, 90c$1.00 per dozen. r tail : earames, ,oc(cEi.bO ; loDsters, $2.30 wio.uu; oysters, i.ou(Sd.o per dozen. Salmon, standard No. 1, $1.251.50 per , J V" VVHAGUOC 111 1 Ilk Eagle brand, $8.10; Crown, $7; High- ami, ?j.io, vuaiupion, $o.ou; aionroe, $6.75 per case. Meats: Corned beef, $2.00; chipped beef, $2.15; lunch tongue, $3.10 Is, $6.00 2s; deviled ham, f x.ouo.w per uuieu. Hides, Wool and Hopg. Hides Dry hides, selected prime, 8 HC' less for culls; green, selected, over 55 pounds, 4c ; under 55 pounds, 3c ; sheep pelts, short wool, 3050c; me dium, 6080c; long, 90c$l.25; shear lings, 1020c ; tallow, good to choice, 3 3l4c per pound. Wool Willamette Valley, 1820c; Eastern Oregon, 1016c per pound, according to conditions and shrinkage. Hors Nominal ; choice, 10c; poor, 5 8c per pound. Louis Ortig, who shot and, it is re ported, mortally wounded Police Officer Lash at Reno, Nev., was taken from th jail by a mob of fifty men and hangsd.