Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1891)
ood River Glacier. vol. i HOOD RIVEft, OREGON, SATURDAY. NOV EM HER 7, 1891. NO. 23. The I 3food Iiver Slacier. rUIILUIIIII IVSRT lATUklli Y MORIftNO IT The Glacier Publishing Company. font iiiftion nticg. On. ytw hit nintilht, ,,, 1 hrn. Htniilht , Sum I xiijr . ft OS I OP (CmI GEO. P. MORGAN, ui. ciii.f n..ii ii. h Una im.- r.iuul :: Law :: Hp'cin!iHt. , Room No, t, Und Offls. Iliiiltlliif, Tim riAi.t.M, oh, O. D. TAYLOR, Real Hstatc Broker, fire, Life and Accident Insurance. Money Loaned on Real Estate Secnrity Om. , Krnnrh To.'. R.nk Riilhlluf , TIIK DAI.I.KH, OHKIION. THE GLACIER Barber Shop Grant Evans, Propr. Second St., near Ouk. . Hood River, Or, Shaving ami Hulr cutting "fatty dun. ,Ntifti(Mi (iuarauteed. PACIFIC COAST. A Hugo Block or Pure Asphaltum. GOLD HILL'S CINNABAR VEIN.! Heavy Business Done Along the Rio Grande in Smuggling In Horses and Cattle. Fresno Ih considerably agitated over thu (Iihk"iiI of ita niuiiiiiiy, One day lant week sixty tramps were put oil' the train between Yuma and Col ton. ( regon 'a State f u nd h am ul I ex hutlHt ed. The last legislative levy has proved in sufficient. .1. T. Hayne of Portland bus lxen eli'cU'd Grand Chancellor of the Knighlu of Pylhiaa of Oregon. A cinnabar vein, sixty feet in width, lias been discovered near Gold Hill, Or. The ore in iinmciiHcly rich. Tho Cliino sugar-lieet factory will run until iVeember. So far 824 tons of gran ulated sugar have lieen turned out. In Nevada the total tax levy through out the State is over $3,000,000. The total levy on railroads is nearly $2,000, 001). it is lielievcd the property involved in the Davib will ease at Itutte, Mont., will lie divided anions the claimants and fur ther litigation will be auKpended. The tailors of Vancouver, 15. C are on a Htrike localise the bosses have refused to pay extra for all pockets over four in coats. Tho bosaea want five pockets al lowed. The HrltiHh sealers Otto and K. B. Marvin, seized in BohringSea, have lieen released at Vancouver, 15. C, by direc tion of the Ird Commissioner of the Admiralty. The Oregon Grantl Lodge of the Knights of Pythias voted that hereafter no saloonuien shall lie admitted to mem bership in the subordinate lodges of the . order in the State. A Fresno physician ia recommending eucalyptus tea, made by boiling the leaves, to all bis patients suH'ering from malarial troubles, and the discovery is thought to be quite an important one. From observations made by Prof. Is rael C. Kussell, who was sent out by the United St atea government and the Na tional Geographic Society to explore the region aliout Mount St. El as, the mountain is between 18,000 and 19,000 feet high. Walter Law of the firm of W. & J. Sloane of New York city has presented $1,000 to the Lick Observatory for the purpose of publishing a series of en larged heliogravure plates of the moon made from the photographs taken with the great telescope. M. E. Wisdom and J. W. Bailey of Portland have purchased the Point ' Breeze Htock farm in Baker county, Or. There are atiout fifty fine brood mares on the place, and the celebrated stallion Challenger ia at the head of the stud. The price was $150,000. Santa Barbara is to have a boulevard 100 feet wide on the beach in front of the city just above high-water mark and protected from the sea by a heavy bulk head. The sidewalks and roadway will lie naved with bituminous rock and lined with, double rows of trees. PERSONAL MENTION. Mr. and Mr. Gladstone Will Past the Winter In Italy Death of Mri. Henrietta Lamnr. Mr. ninl Mm. Gladstone have l-t i r mined to piiHH thu winter in Florence. Tennyson, who i h In excellent health, ha JiiHt Ix'en giving sittings for a r trait. Mr. llnrriNoii ha been chosen an honorary iihmiiImt by the Association of the King's I laughters. Iril l.ylton la In such precarious hi'itlth that he Juts Itiindcr consideration to resign his xlst of British Minister to France. Secretary Foster's jmrtrait aim just Is-en painted for the TreHiiry Ih'part inent liy Miss Blanche 1". King, a young Washington artist. Warner Miller hit Ijuwi studying tin caiial system of 1 lollaud ami the water way that the German government in count met iii; at Kiel. I le in to take part in the- New York State rwiti jwicn. The lli'iitli of Bishop William J, Boone (Episcopal) of China is Biinonneed. The Bishop, wild WBN the HOII (( Bishop Boone of China, diil milch to forward the cause of Christian missions in that eoninrv. ninl wan entire v devoted to In work. After publishing a ureal variety of contradictory and alarming stories aliout the health of the ijuecii of Kouinania the Iondon iicwHpniM-m aM ar to have reached the conclusion that there is nothing very terrible the matter with her after all. Many of the valuable gems in the col lection of the I lohen.ollf rua are to lie utilized in the const ruction of the new crowns recently designed by Kuiieror William for himself and the Kmiires. Both crow ns are to lie of gold, that of the Kmpresa a little the smaller of the two. Mr. Hpurgeon waa only 111 when he pleached his first Bcrmon. F.veu then Ida elixpiem was remarkable, and within a few years he had gathered alxiiit him a large congregation. At that time be w hs a pale and slender stripling, with a noticeably large head. His ro tundity of liody came many years later. William Cotter, Jr., of Hartford, Conn., must have a remarkable memory. He is a registrar of voters, and the Tin!f says that of ll'.lKHJ names on the list he claims to lie able to tell from memory the residence and politics of each one, and also in cases where a person has been alsent in Hnroe, or staying in some oilier part oi me country, to tell where be went and when. Scurvy and typhus fever are raging in the wake of the famine in Russia. The Xiirotii says that famine prevails in thir teen different governments of the coun try and l4,(XM,tk;0 persons are in urgent need or auecor. The government is pur chasing corn for the use of the famish ing peasants. The government is also negotiating for the purchase of large quantities of breadatufl'a in the United States. NATIONAL CAPITAL. Annual Report of the Auditor of Treasury for the PostorTico Department. the The reKrt of Lieutenant Cow lea upon the wreck of the United States steamer Despatch has I teen received at the Navy Department. It is merely a brief state ment of the facta already well known, and contains no comment nor explana tion whatever. It is customary in such cases for the officer (b reserve liis testi mony for later use under oath. In bis annual report to the Secretary of tho Interior Governor Prince of the Ter ritory of Now Mexico refers at length to the iKwflcial results which, he thinks, will accrue. from a settlement of the dis- nutett hpantsli and Mexican land claims I by the Court of Private Claims recently organized, lho Governor insists from any point of view that New Mexico is entitled to Statehood. The annual report of the Auditor of the Treasury for the Postollice Depart ment, showing the receipts and expend itures of the department for tho fiscal year ended June 30, 1801, has been sub mitted to the Postmas'ter-tieneral. It shows that, the postal revenues during the year were ifOS.D.'UJKS. The expend itures to September !50, 1801, were $71, 002,402, leaving an excess of expendi tures over all revenues of $5,730,077. The amount placed with the Treasurer to the credit of the department, consist ing of grunts from the general treasury in aid of postal revenue under the act of June 30, 185)0, was' $2,200,000. The ex cess of the expenditures over the grants IS $3,30,J77. Chief Harrington of the weather bu reau in the report of the opeiationa of the bureau eince its transfer to the De partment of Agriculture July 1 last says the service has been reorganized with a view of carrying out the ex pressed intention of Congress to especially de velop and extend its work in the inter est of agriculture. Since July I new service has been organized in Arizona, California, Utah, Florida. New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia and Wyom ing. The most practical and the most highly complimented portion of the ex clusive work of the State service is the issue of a weekly weather crop bulletin. On September 30 there were over 1,300 weather signal display stations in opera tion, an increase of about 100 per cent, in less than three months. There are now probably 2,200 voluntary observers in the United States, reporting to the weather bnreau, and steps are being taken ' to cover every section of each State and Territory? so aa to leave no section without atatio;is from twentv to thirty miles apart. EASTERN ITEMS. Cartor Harrison Buys tho Chicago Times. JOSIE MANSFIELD MARRIES Tho Mannor in Whioh the Ballots i Ohio Are to Be Distinguished From Each Other. St. Paul earn have letter boxes. Carter Harrison is said to have Imugh the Chicago Timet for $400,0(10, Anthracite coal has Is-eu discovered in the district of Alberta. Canada. mi j i . i oh iiauan uonsui in lioston a t lives. tigaung the condition of Italians. I he public schools of Oawatomie Kan., have been dosed for wantof funds, Chicago will elect a buildinif in mem oryof Columbus at a cost of $1,000,000, Ihe postmaster of Philadelphia has ordered his suiKirdinates to stay away irom me races. The govern merit is about to begin the work of preparing a bydrographic survey oi wie ureal i.hkcs. A Justice of New York has just de chum inui you neeu not pay lor a inea at a restaurant unless you eat it The financial statement of the Pull man I alace Car Company shows a stir plus for the past year of $2,W.),223. A moonshiners' church in Alabama and a secret oath-liound moonshiners club in Georgia are promoting lawless ness by wholesale. In the ,0 "0.000 letters that reach me oettii-ieuer omce last year mere waa money amounting to 2S.(M2 and checks and notes of the value of $1,471,871. Four men were shot by the Mexican military auiiioriues a lew miles across the bonier from Itio Grande City, Tex. They were charged with. Iieing revolu tionists. ' J. and F. D Molleuhauer will start s new sugar factory in Brooklyn, with i capacity of 1,200 barrels refined per day It will open next July. It will lie inde pendent of the trust. , Septemlier statementof the Santa . . Railroad Company shows that the gross earnings of the system for the fourth week in September were the larg est in tne History oi tne company The validity of the new constitution o! Kentucky is to be contested on the ground that the Constitutional Conven tion made numerous changes after the instrument was ratified by the people Josie Mansfield, whose relations with Jim Fisk and Kd Stokes brought her into public notoriety in New York twenty years ago, was married recently in Lon don to Robert L. Keade, a New York lawyer. A statement prepared at the pension oflice shows that the pensions issued during September numbered 27.044. on which the first payments aggregated $4,- 0 -viiii. i ne average nrst payment m each case was $137.32. M. R. Hanson, reputed to lie a wealthy lumlierinan at Hanson, Wood countv. Wis., is alleged to have signed the name oi ueorge llilea, a Milwaukee million aire, to $.")0,0X) worth of fraudulent na- per. Hanson has disappeared. There are thousands of dead fish alont? the shores of the Upper Mississippi. The river fell lower than for twentv years. leaving large numbers of fish in nools which gradually dried up, and the fish have since died on the bed of scorching sand. . The Bank of Columbia and theOolnm- bia Banking Con pan v of Columbia. Tenn.. have assigned, the canital Htoek of the former is $100,000 and that of the latter $00,000. It is claimed that the creditors of both institutions will lie paid in iuii. On each ballot to be cast according to the provisions of the new election law in Ohio are to be these distinguishing de vices mat nave oeen adopted by the par ties: Republican , eagle; Democratic. rooster; Prohibition, rose: People's. plow and hammer. The influx of Chinamen into thu United States from Mexico continues. and it is only those who are unaware of the prohibitory law that are caDtured. Those who know they are breaking the laws generally evade the officers. Fif teen were arrested last week. The Cramps will enlarge their Dlant for ship building on the Delaware river to eight tunes its present area. Seven launching ways are to lie constructed, large enough to admit the building si multaneously of seven vessels of the size of the war ship Philadelphia. One of the recent evidences of a grow ing interest in trade with the United States on the part of the countries to the southward is to be seen in the announce ment that a permanent exposition of the products of Mexico and Central America is to be opened in New York. James A. Bradshaw, engineer of the Ragle I-oek Company works at Terry yille, Conn., approached W. A. Hough, aged 17 years, and ordered him to go to another part of the shop on an errand. Bradshaw had no authority over the men, and the boy refused to obey. Bradshaw picked the boy up in his arms, and car rying him to a vat of vitriol in the room, dipped hiin in, head downward, lefore the other employes in the room could interfere. The boy'B hair was all burned off, bia scalp ia raw,,hia face and neck ware horribly burned, and both eyes were burned out. Bradshaw has disappeared. EDUCATIONAL. An Iowa Public School Gives a Holiday That the Children May Attend the Races. Wellesley College opens this year witli 700 students. New York has turned away 10,000 seiiooi children that cannot fe housed President Angell threatens to close the University of Michigan if gambling is not stopped. The gain in population in the United I- w.f,. . ....... ..... nuites irom iu to jwhi was lin per cent, and in the school enrollment l'.5 er cent. There are said to lie over 23.000 In dians in the United States who can read Knglish and over 10,000 who can read Indian languages. Northwestern University at Evanston, in ... ... ... .! hi., rias followed tne example o( Cornell and abolished the barbarous cane rush lietween the freshmen and sophomores The schoolmaster is iroim? to lie abroad in England more than ever. The Lon don School Board is educating 20.8iiH more scholars now than they were three years ago. The management of the public schools at Mason City, la., declared a recent Thursday afternoon a holiday in order that pupils might attend the races. The action has caused much comment. The census statistics show the train in population in the United States to be 4. Kb per cent., while the enrollment of children in the public schools is 20.54 per cent. This is a healthful indication. The Cornell school of law has enrolled Mrs. Marv Kennedv-P.rown. a. irrndiinto of Wellesley and a young w idow, as one of its students. She is the first ladv whose name appears on the school list. The endowment of the new Chicago University is now over 2.000.000. and more than 000 students have already en tered the first year's course, which w ill Ix'gin, it is expected, in the autumn of 1802. Austria has not only a hiifh school of agriculture, but fifteen intermediate and eighty-three primary agricultural schools besides nine chairs of agriculture in pol ytechnic establishments and agricultural experimental stations. Prof. Harris, United States Commis sioner of Education at Washington, in a letter to Assistant Postmaster Sturgeon of St. IiOuis. who had requested his views aa to corporal punishment in schools, has replied that the fewer the cases of such punishment the better the schools are likely to lie. and that en-1 ightened sentiment is airainst the use of ine rod. Cornell University has opened with an attendance in excess of that in anv ore- ceding year. Up to date 1,370 students in an departments nave registered, and a number are in attendant, especially post graduates, who nave not yet regis' tered. A noticeable feature is the in crease of students in the courses in arta. pnnosopny and electrical and mechan- cai engineering. A remarkable career in the teaching profession was brought to a close some two weeks since bv the resignation of Miss Lucy D. Bliss from the principal ship of the Plain Primary School, Stock bridge, Mass. Miss Bliss began teach ing in town when 10 years old. and taught continuously, with the exception oi one year, lor about titty-tour years Three generations in Stockbridge have beinin their school life under the instruc tions of Miss Bliss. MISCELLANEOUS. Use of Chloride of Gold and Manga nese Successful for the Cure of Consumption. uovernor Steele ot URiauoma lias re signed. George W llham Curtis says Tammany is an organization lor plunder and with out politics. Edward F. Searles is to present to the town of Methuen, Mass., a fine statue of ieorge Washington. lhere is much excitement at Clifton Forge, Va.,over the threatened uprising oi the negros, owing to the lynching of one of their number. The noted telescope makers. Alvan G. and George B. Clarke of Cambridge. Mass., who made the lens for the Lick telescope, have dissolved partnership. Mrs. Parnell proposes, if she recovers her health, to write a memoir of the great leader and relieve him from much of the blame cast upon him on her ac count. The original site of the old Valley Forge? Washington's headquarters in the winter of 1777-8, has just been sold for $10 per acre. The tract embraces fifty-one acres. There is a rumor at Washington that Governor Steele of Oklahoma is to su- persedeCommisaionerof Pensions Raum, who, it is asserted, has resigned, to take effect November 30. The length of the twelve-inch gun for the Monterey is thirty-seven feet, and it is designed to propel an 800-pound pro jectile twelve miles, necessitating a pow der charge of 000 pounds. Prof. Totton in a military lecture at Yale remarked that the average age of the 110 men in, the class was 21 years, and he added : " Upon graduation you will have before you about forty-eight years apiece." The largest Sunday-school in the world is in Stockport, England. It be gan in 1804. It now contains 5,000 pupils and 440 teachers. It has registered dur ing its existence 70,000 scholars arid 3,500 teachers. Government schools are to be estab lished in San Salvador, where free edu-1 cation will be given to women to fit them for places in the government offices as postofhee clerks, printers, telegraph and telephone operatora. I FOREIGN LANDS! Pritchard Imitates John L in Brutality. SCURVY AND TYPHUS FEVER n the Wake of the Famine In Russia The Czarina Gives an Immense Sum. Berlin'a debt is $50,000,000. Austria wants Germany to admit her hogs, too. American cars will be used on an En glish road. Government management baa reduced railroad fares in Saxony. Th re thousand people in London have the influenza or la grippe. A co-operative home for single women ia to be started in Vienna. The first consignment of American bacon has arrived in Berlin. London theaters issne aomethinir like 50,000 free passes every year. The sarcophagus of the Einrjeror Fred- erick baa been placed in his tomb. It is reported that Italy has decided to abolish the decree against American pork. The German interior press ia showing considerable hostility to the Chicago World's Fair. The Czarina has given 20,000,000 rou les to the Russian famine sufferers from her private purse. A unique present by the British war office to the Salvation Army was 30.000 worn-out helmeta. An English doctor at Simla. India, has succeded in discovering, separating and neutralizing a special microbe of leprosy. Russia ia experimenting very exten sively with the idea of nsini? metal sleepers upon the railroads in that country. The time limit of the Russian loan which is being taken up in France has been extended from October 31 to No vember 1. It is estimated that no fewer than 70.- 000 girls are employed in the public nouses and drinking bars of the United rtinguom. there are said to be nine inmates of the camberwell (England) workhouse who have reached ages varying from 103 to tun years. . led Pritchard, the London pugilist, waa laat week sentenced to a month's imprisonment for a cowardly assault ujion a Dameeper. A new method of torture has been dis covered by Siberian lailers. wherebv prisoners are compelled to subsist on salt herring alone. The endeavor to strengthen the trinle alliance between Germany, Austria and itaiv Dy commercial union is not greasing very favorably. The fishing fleet of Yarmouth, Eng land, have returned to port, and pive fearful descriptions of the effects of the recent storms on the coast. In Vienna the Prefect of Polie Vina ordered an investigation of whether the long, sweeping skirts of ladies tend to spread contagious diseases. A Judge in Glasarow has decided that the amount of copper used in tinned green peas was not dangeroua, and that me process need not be stopped. - until recently the Roval Palace at Berlin has been lighted on v bv candles emperor vviiuamnas naa cas run. in 1? iitiii; l t i . . aim is now arranging ior electric lights !- . . . . r-- The civil authorities of Leipsic, Gen many, have struck a crushing blow at the sausage industry in that mimtrv hv deciding that it is illegal to use dog meat in sausage. The latest report from Turkestan indi cates an abundant crop of cotton. The cotton grown there ia from American seed, and the development within a few years nas been wonderful. The English Conservatives have been prematurely jubilant over havintr eseaiwd the leadership of Goschen. Telegrams irom lialfour denv that he had bpn of. fered the leadership. Forty-three of the leaders of th rev olution in Uruguay are in prison at Mon teviueo. vr. rantoieon i'erez was shot while trying to escape from the barracks. Martial law prevails. Peat fuel has been found verv siircpsa- ful in Russia. It is produced by a patent process, and is cheaper than coal, has less weight and bulk, and contains scarcely any aulphur. The Pope in a note to the nowera sava the recent Pantheon disorders were of extreme importance, and insists it is impossible for both the Italian govern ment and papacy to remain in Rome. An agrarian lawsuit in tho Cmiciisns in which the plaintiff is the Prince of Mingrelia, has so many people concerned with it, the witnesses amounting to 2,000, that the court is sitting in the open air. ' The British and the Portuguese' hav ing settled their quarrel in MaBhona land, are amicably working together to construct a railroad from the Indian Ocean to their adjoining possessions in the far interior. Some estimates of the wonderful value of the fishing industry of Great Britain can be gained from "the state ment that the total catch of fish on th . coasts of England and Wales in 1800 was lilt ivm t i.li .. . utiu,w Kins, cauiubiyo oi sneu nsn. PORTLAND MARKET. Frorfueo, Fruit, K.tn. Wheat-Valley, $1.501.5' j Wall Walla, $l.4'iwl 42'i percental. Flock Standard, $4.8'J; Walla Walla, $4.00 per barrel. Oats Nsw, 40rS4:5c pe' bushel. Hay $11 tl3 per ton. MiixsnT Bran, $182 19; shorta, $20 t21; ground barley, $22.50f25; chop feed, $20tl2 per ton ; feed barley, $20 per ton ; brewing barley, 1115 per centa1. BcniiK Oregon fancy creamery, 35(i 37sc; fancy dairy, 3 (t '3 .,; ; fair to good, 25 27ic ; ' common, " 15(22,'8c ; Eastern, 25rc31 .e per pound. Crntasa Oregon, 12,'ic; Eastern, 14(i 15c per pound. Eoos Oregon,. '0c; F:astern, 25(227,' per dozen. Poultry Old chickens. $4.50r."r5.00; young chickens, $2.50W4.00; ducks, $5.00 8.00; geese, $9.00i 10.00 per dozen; turkeys, 15c per pound. Vkuktabi.ks Cabbage, nominal, 7.c( $1 percental ;caulirlower,$l 25 per dozen ; Onions, 75cf$l per cental ; potatoes, 40 00c per sack ; tomatoes, 40(t50c per lox ; sweet potatoes, Piiic ier pound; Cali fornia celery, 75j per dozen bunches; fancy Oregon celery, 50c per dozen bunches. Fnt'iTH Sicily lemons, $8.50; Califor nia, $5.50rtfo.5!) per box; apples, 608Jc per box; bananas, $3.0U'a:3.50 a bunch; pineapples, $4rtt(j per dozen; peaches, .jOirt 75c per box ; grapes, Tokay, $1 per box ; muscat and black, 75ff!K)c per crate ; pears, liowSjc per pound; quinces, $1 rtl.25 per box; cranberries. tl0ll per barrel ; Oregon cranberries. $9.50 per Irnrrel; Smyrna figs. 20c per pound: citrons, 27c per pound. Nuts California walnuts,ll,r?12e; hickory, 8'.ic; Brazils, 10llc; al monds, l(K18c; filberts, 13(3 14c; pina nnts, 17(8 18c; pecans, I718c; cocoa nuts, 8c; hazel, 8c; peanuts, 8c per pound. Htapls Grocarle. IIoxev 17Jo(eil8c per pound. Salt Liverpool, $14.50, $15.50.'5;lfl.50; stock, $1112 per ton. Rice Japan, $5.00; Island, $5.75 per cental. Bkans Small wlrt te, 2'4'c ; pink, 2 c bayos 3'c; butter, h!ac; limaa, a per pound. Coffee Costa Rica, 2.),j(321c; Rio, 21 ; Mocha, 30c; Java, 25l..c; Ar buckle'a, 100-pound cases, 22'4C per jwund. Si-oar Golden C,43gc; extra C, 4l2'c; white extra C, 4i8e; granulated, 5V; cilie crushed and podered, 6c; con lectioners' A, 5ac ; maple sugar, 10c per pound. Syrip Eastern, in barrels, 47S55c; half-barrels, oOfccoSc; in cases, o5(i80c per gallon; I2.2ofcc2.60 per keg. Cali lornia, in barrels, 30c per gallon ; $1.75 per keg. Dkiko Farms Italian prunes, 8c; Petit and German. 7c per pound; raisins, $1.20(41.50 per box; plummer dried pears, 8(a9c; sun-dried and fac tory plums, 9c; evaporated peaches, Slgllc; Smyrna figs, 20c; California, figs, 7c per pound. Canned Goods Table fruits. $1.05 180, 2JiS; peaches, $1.802.00; Bart lett pears. $1.80al.9J; plums, $1.37 s.(a 1.50; strawberries, $2.25; cherries, $2.25 2.40; blackberries, $l.851.90; rasp berries, $2.40; pineapples. $2.252.80; apricots,$1.60(ctl.70. Pie fruit: Assorted, $1.10(91.20; peaches, $1.25; plums. $1(5 1.10; blackberries. $1.25 per dozen Veg etables: Corn, $l.251.65; tomatoes, $1.003.00; sugar peas, $1.00(1.15; string beans, 90c$1.00 per dozen. Fish: Sardines, 75cl.(5; lobsters, $2.30 ((73.50. Condensed milk : Eagle brand, $8.10; Crown, $7.00; Highland, $6.50; Champion, $5.50; Monroe, $6.75 per case. Meata : Corned beef, $2.00 ; chipped beef, $2.15; lunch tongue, $3. iO Is, $6.00 2s; deviled ham, $1.35(5 2.05 per dozen. Miscellaneous. Nails Baae quotationa: Iron, $3.00; steel, $3.00; wire, $3.50 per keg. Ikon Bar, 'il4c per pound. Stew. 10'2c per pound. Tin I. C. charcoal. 14x20, prime qual ity, $8.008.50 per box ; for crosses, $2 extra per box; roofing, 14x20, prime quality, $6.75 per box ; I. C. coke plates, 14x2v), prime quality, $7.75 per box. Lkad 43ic per pound ; bar, 6Lac. Solder 13ls16lac per pound, ac cording to grade. Shot $1.85 per sack. Hokseshoks $5. Naval Stores Oakum, $5 per bale; rosin, $4 80(85.00 per 280 pounds; tar, Stockholm, $12.50; Carolina, $7.00 per barrel ; pitch, $6 00 per barrel ; turpen tine, 65c per gallon in carload lota. The Meat Market. Beef Live, 2)c ; dressed, 5Gc. Mutton Live, sheared, 3c ; dressed. 78c. Hogs Live, 5c j dressed, 7c. Veal 67c per pound. Smoked Meats Eastern ham. 12(3 13'iic; other varieties. 12Uc: breakfast bacon, 1315c; smoked bacon, lll4 11?4C per pound. IjArd Compound, 10c; pure. llf13c: Oregon, 10j12,c per pound. Bides, Wool and Hops. Hides Dry hides, selected prime. 9c; kc less for culls: creen. selected. over 65 pounds, 4c ; under 55 pounds, 3c ; sheep pelts, short wool. 3050c: me dium, 6080c; long, 90c$1.25; shear lings, iiKaauc ; lauow, good to choice, 3 3c per pound. Wool Willamette Valley. 17cai9n; Eastern Oregon. 10(M7c per nound. according to conditions and shrinkage. tiopa JMominai ; iii(cji&c per pound. Bass and BsKg-ina;. Burlaps, 8-oz 40 inch, net cash, fie: burlaps, 10o-oz , 40-indh, net cash, 7e; burlaps, 12-oz., 45-inch, net cash, 72c; burlaps, 16-oz., 60-incb, lie; burlaps', 20 oz., 76-inch, 13c. Wheat bags Calcutta, 22x36, spot, 9c ; three-bushel oat bags, 8c. Centals (second-hand wheat bags). Sc. . i i 1 I S ! i 1 I , I 5 1 !