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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (April 8, 1893)
,4 , iver Glacier. VOL. I. HOOD KIVKU. ORISON, SATURDAY. APRIL 8, I8M NO. 45. The Hooc 3fccd liver Glacier. ITIIII.IIKII EVKHV MTHKIIAV MOKNINII HT The Glacier Publishing Company. mi iik iiirnoN I'ltii k. ii yt i or Nn Di'ititli. , , , I Ml Tl Mi. hi Ilia. , fte ttnul ruijf , ( ,,L. thf: glacier Barber Shop Grant Evans, Piopr. Mrruii'l M , ruin ( l.ili, . . Iluuil Kivnr, Oi Slmi Inj; nml llitii rutting wntly ilonx Sal infurlinii 1 1 it Mil i tii-i I . Di-play of Orison (iame Birds for t lie Woill's Fair. A MISAPPROPRIATION OF FUNDS The Kitfe for Hidden-Treasure Hunting In the NrfKhliorhood ol the San l.uls kvy MMun. Arix in's legislature closes it" session mi April 1 1. Blocks sixty f et in length witli.mt a tirt-uk mm found in the onyx qinuries in l,oiT California. Tn Arir.oim Council Ins passed a I'ill exempting lmiii taxation fur tenty years nil railroads Unit I 11 work in the Terntny within one year. The hint of the fnvir d'Alene rioters held in jtt.il have Im'cii released m obedi ence to a recent United Hates Supreme Court (Irritiion. Railroad shop employes Kt Saeramen'o llirt'ati'ii to IkivcdU inetulier ol the 11 uril ol I rude tl the hitter persists in titkuiK business Irom the lift. Oc. re touutl on Elijah Welch's place below Pendleton, Or., makes paint ol about the same Ixxly and "'r " burnt sienna, whicti it resembles gicatly. In theAnzma legislature the Field hill, whim provided mr the division ol IIih' l'l-rrii" rv inu irrigation dndric s, Iihm been killed in the lln-e hy anover- Wl. lining Vote. Toe misappropriation of funds in tfinl.nl tor improving the capitoi grounds ..I I' o'ii x, A !'., him led lo the intioiliicti.in ol a if 'liiiion u the Leg IH iituie to ifin ve the capital. Tlie co iled over the Kdzslde will at Sunt, li.ilmri I as he tin. Abut $50, IM) are involved, and the widow cnar. eH her hiiHh.ind was unduly mlhienced in hi liestowal ol Hie properties on inner people. frank L.n:ot, receiver of UhUohwiII, N. M., United Slates l.nnd Oiline, disap peared a few weeks since, ami advices at. tVuitu Fe Mlale that he M short to the ynvTii nt somewhere between $H,OllO and $20,000. By the provision of a bill which has pasted the Ar r.na House no bonne ol III fame can exist within 400 yards of a piiMic-Nchool lm Itling. It will break up and clear out the divert on Monroe street in Pl.tenix, as all that portion of the town is witnin two blocks ol tbe llii School budding. A few days k' Miss Liznie Ptisan, in structor at the Indian echo 1, known as tlie Stewart Inutitute, at Carson, in at tempting to separate two Indian Rirls who were quiii relinif, was stiuck over the head and it is believed ser:ouily in jured. Two bars of bullion marked "Vulture mine" have been oundiii a stable ditch at Han Bernardino. They ate supposed to have tie- n part of the bullion secured by three Mexicans who killed lour years ao Captain Uuod, Superintendent of the Vulture mine in Arizona, while he was on bis way to 1'hieuix with the mine's output for the month. Allen UbodeB of Salem baa prepared a display 01 Oregon tranie birds that will ffotothe Wor.d's Fair. It consists of seventeen Mongolian pheasants, includ irnr cock, hen and fllteen chicks, four pair for a group; two pair of Kastern Oregon prairie cuickens, two pair of dnHky grouse, two pair milled grouse, four pair vallov quail, three pair moun tain qna-1, a g.oup of jack snipe and some other single specimens The rage for hidden-treasure hnnting still exists in the neighborhood of the San Luis Uey Mission, and the Itestora tion Society is taking steps to put a stop to the t urrowing in and around the walls As an illustration of the elusions, there'livea in Us Angeles an old Indian woman with the name of Trinidad. She was a young girl, about twelve years old, at the mission of San Juan Capistrano, when that building was distroyed by an earthquake in 1812, and thirty eight In dians were ki.led on that memorable Sunday at biuh mass. Trin'dad, who claims to be a witch, says she knows where a large amount of gold and silver is buried in that budding, and the spir its tell that it ib still there. FROM WASHING ' ON CITY. Hccii liiry C 'in I i hI m has signed vouchers to the at int. ol ILW, I L'O in f.vir of the World's Fair Coiiiiiiih"Ioii, which are payable in nmvinir Iuill-iiolnirH. The cotiitniMMi ii up io tliiii ' in'f has r ceiv (I fl,IC'0,l5 hi Ihn f:ylMi.( HI Hpproitria tluii lv CoiiKresH, payable ill snuvt-iiir hit (-dollars. The ile egati'H to the rtrKiit Inlfriia lional Monetary Conffifiirn Ii ve le siguid. Al nig iiifini'fm ol Coiik'rf'H it IH I elieved I he I'lehidi lit u ill hfipl a i'IiIiiiiiIhhkiu Id llMl"hfl Io ifpre'ent Ui n country when the cniifcri-nce iiMM-em-bicH. 'Mm Socielan ol Suite in now en deavoring to ascertain how mini v ciiin triiM will be lepri'Sf litd at the re iliceni bl I III of the roiif 'lenie. Thi're aie Hume iillii'ialM who hold Io the opinion that tlm I'res di-iit will not i-eiid anotiier ilelffrit t mil to l!rilH"n In, hut will ib s gniite our M nihter to Belgium I't iitleiid tlm I'on hr'liie bh the if ptineiital;vn of the United Stati-H. Secretary Carlinle, it is Hliitt-d on good authority, t n tf Ih to vive much ol I ii tiiiie this sninmer to the coiiHiih-nition ol the tarill. with a vifw ti so thornugh ly f m 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii r t r. 1 1 kf hiniHidl with the siilijcct ii m lu be nil f t iii'liciitM in a getier il way outlines for the formation of a t ur ill till liy the M-xl Deuiocriitic lloune. Snarly every mail that reaches the TreaMitry I epnrtment contains sugges tion from slut iHtii iaiiH mid olliem an to compilation of a tarill' lull. Some thirty or forty of these communication have ulrcudy heeil received, prnin ii.nt ii'imitg I hem being that from the New York l"(orm Clnti. The weneriil nnt hne ol the New York K"forin (Huh' latiir proM,ition crrepou(ls closely to the proposition Mihmitted in Isn't by K lward Atkinson ol lloxton to I'reM'Icnt Cleveland and Secrulnry M.iiiii'ug. The ex-ofliceholderi are almost deliri ous with joy over Cleveland i modifica tion of the rule e.jiicerning reappoint ments to ollii-e. U is believed tl at the President will appoint "exes" where it suits his pleasure, and apply the rule w here candidates are ohnox oii". One result of the nnnotinieiiient that the ' exes" would slam! some chance i that the Sei ators ami Hepreentatives are heiieed hy a greater iinm er of catidi ilaes than ever. When it was ar iiouncid that the ''exes" were not in n, thry retired reluetitii ly from the lield, and others, who hill not held ollice, me to the front hy scores. Now, how- HI", the "exes are avain liirhting bravely in thelront ranks, and lietwecn ali the t'oiiKre-siimn's h e is made mis erat'le. Senator I'o'ph called upon the Secre tary ol the lirerior the oher dav re garding the proposed timlx'r reservation st Ashland, Or, It. was understood that, this reserval mi wuillil be made during the last aduiiTiistrstiou, but President Harrison did not find time 'o reach it. Secretary Suiitu toid Venator ln'ph that at pre-ent he was uiiahle to do any thing regarding this reservation an I was too busy reorgniiiziiw the depart meiit to give anv time or attention to the work ol the dirUi,t nt except tha of ino t pressing iritttre. The nec -ss ty for hsv Mill the Aihlatul reservation is said to he that the water supply of that, town is dependent upon havim the timber reser vation, as the deiind it on ol the lands where the water now come from wou'd prohahlv result hi greatly impairing the water supply. When the Senile raMlied the Irea y lor toe I'd ui n to the Unite I Sutes of the Cherokee Strip, th re wis inserted tin rem aclm-e which provides for the compeiisition for the laud io he ni;i''o in tune piiyutents in p ace ol the re quirement of the k'overnnient. to pay cash, as contemplated ill the agreement originally draw n un with the Indians. This itiivlili.'ation of the treaty was not accept eil by the Indians, but will he considered bv their legislative body, the Cherokee Council, at a meeting to be held soon. Th' early opening of the Strip will lie entirely dependent upon IheFCtionof the Council, for, should it reject the modification of the treaty made by the Senate, then it will be nec essary tor the matier to be attain brought before Congress, which would, ol course, indefinitely delay the opening of the lands to settlement. The State Department baa received of ficial information that IJueen Victoria has rased the rank of Sir .luliiin Pauncefote, her representative in Wash ington, from that of Kxtraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to t hat of Am bassador, and his credentials as such are on their way here. Under the provis ions of the diplomatic and consular ap propriation bill of March 1, 1SH, Presi dent Cleveland is authorized to confer the snnie rank upon our representative at London. St Julian Pauncefote will lie the first Minister to Washington to hold the title of Ambassodor, but it is highly probable that France, Germany, Uuusia and Austria will be prompt to follow the example thus set by Kngland and change the title of their Ministers to Ambassa dors, thus necessitating by international courtesy a corresponding change on our part. Litigation between the United States and the late corporation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, commonly known as the Mormon Church, is not as yet ended. The Supreme Court has before it an appeal respecting the use to which Bhall be put the church property escheated by the court's deci sion at a previous term When the prop erty was declared forfeited the court di rected the Utah Supreme Court to fix the charitable ussb to which it should be put. The oour rejected the proposition of the government as to the use which should be made of the fund from the property, amounting to about $40U,00, and directed it. should be applied to the support and aid of the poor members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and to buildinir and repair ing houses of worship for members of the church. The United States has ap pealed from this decree, asserting it would practically permit the property to be devoted to the same purposes for which it waa formerly held. Heavy I minora' ion Flowing Into Northwestern Iowa. STRANGE DISEASE AMONG CATTLF. Ilisli' p Wilder "'is a (Jlitul.ir Addressed to the I'llests Kesclndlng; Ills Fjrmcr Older. The Colorado Senate has passed a hill abolishing capital punishment. Prof. Totten predict. Ihe end of the woild some time in September next. Fifty thousand hotel rooms will he available near the World's Fair grounds. The Oketluokee swamp in ( ieorgia is reported to be overrun with wild hogs. A big Boston syndicate is trying to se cure control of the Canadian steel indus tries. Washington newsboys are forbidden by law to sell papers except on the date of issue. Tim city of Boston is making a hard fviit iiK'.iiiiMt the trolley system of elec tric cars. The Aransas Pass railroad has virtu ally pissed into the pos.sess.ion of the Southern Pacific. In the 1jwer House of the Pennsyl vania 1iHltttttrn the anti-Pinkerton bill has finally passed. A strsne disease among cattle in Central Illinois is believed to be due to the feeding of millet. Ksliiniites an to the cost of the hotels in the World's Fa.r district range from :j,fjH),(ux) to fi.oi'o.utjo. The heaviest immigration that evr flowed into Northwest Iowa and South Dakota is iu progress now. A crin iline-maniifacturing concern has been established in Ktiode bl.imi, the f.rst ol the kind in America. It is thought that the coinage of World's Fair souvenir half-dollars will be completed in three months. Alsttit loO Chinamen living iu Boston have iiitiimted tnat they intend regis tering within the prei-crila-d peiiol. Some one has goneolT with all the coin ai:d records of the noted Tenderloin Club at New York, and it is now in the throes of dissolution. South Carol na baa issued bonds cov ering its new loan, amounting to $o,2t0, tsio, tie.tring 4'i per cent interest and to run for lorty years. By a vote of 31 to 1!) the Minnesota Senate has passed the Senate bill ex ten oing the lull suflraice at all elect ons in Minnesota to women. The ca-e involving the Mormon Church property b a Imen advanced in the United Stall s Supreme Court to the sec ond Monday of tne next term. The receivers of the Reading road have definitely decide i on the issue of receivers' certificates. The bondholders' committee will probably fight it. A cor oration with a capital of $15, 0 O.lKwj lias been formed to cover New Jersey in the neighliorhood of Jersey Ciiy and Newark with e.ectric railways. It ia propo-ed by the organized tin and sheet-iron joo workers and cornice workers ot St. Louis to estahhsti a train ing school where apprentices will be taught the trade. The Canadian Pacific and Grand Trunk roads have agreed upon a rate of l1- fare for the round trip from Canadian points to Chicago during the World's Fair. Tickets will tie good lor one month. The Kansas legislature has parsed a bill making it illegal to require a gold contract in notes, mortgages or other ob ligations and making silver, as well as gold, a legal tender for all debts in Kan sas. A committee appointed by the House of the Tennessee legislature to investi gate the chargeB against Judge Duboise of the Shelby County Criminal Court has reported that there are no grounds lor impeachment. Reports to ihe bureau of statistics of theTreasnry Department show a dec ded increase in the number of immigrants entering the port of San Francisco, while in the other ports of the country there has been a faliing-off. It is thought probable that at the con clusion of the naval review Secretary Herbert will divide the ships into three fleets, put new ofheers in command and send the vessels away at once to the Pa cific, the South Atlantic and Europe. Pians for the America cup defenders show that some radical changes have been introduced over tie former type of yachts. The new boata are ne irly all 124 feet in length, 23 to 26 feet beam, and have a mean draught of 12 to 14 feet. The customs officers at New York are holding the trunks of a number of Ital ian opera singers under the belief that the clothing in the trunks is not the property of individual members, bnt of Henry Abbey, who has charge of the troupe. Judge Dallas in the United States Cir cuit Court at Philadelphia has denied a motion to require John F. Searles, Jr., Treasurer of the American Sugar Refin ing Company, to show cause why he should not be compelled to answer im portant questions in the suit of the gov ernment against the eugar trust. Bishop W gger of the diocese of New ark, N. J., has issued a circular letter, addressed to each priest in the diocese, rescinding his former order in which priests were ordered to refuse absolution to those members of a pari-h who sent ' their children to the public schools in INDUSTRIAL BREVITIES. Bottles are blown by machinery at Vineiand, N. J. Uncle Sam's !ny have $30,0X),000 of capital Invested in Hawaii. 'Ihe Angora goat supplies the hair which adorns ordinary dolls. Te ephone chat iosvs $ for three min utes between Paris ami Imdon. There are now nearly 200 women prac ticing dentistry in the United Sta es. Kighty-six of the 8o5 towns in Massa chusetts contain no resident physician. There are in the United States more than l,7iJ0distiiictand separate railways. The L'tch lield Car Works in Indiana are alxiut to lai moved to Birmingham, Ala. Over 100 electric cars are to 1 built at once at Pittsburg lor a Chicago com pany. New F'nglan 1 capitalists have pur chased 75 ,M worth of Texas timber lands. Several fleets of river boUa are to be established this year on the Western rivers. The Armour Packing Company has in corporated in New Jersey ; capital, $7, tW.tMK). Wooden-soled shoes are Lein slowly introduced in the cheap shops. l'hila- ln'f,hil lliford. The novelty of the Columbian stamps is wearing off, and tUe old-timers are re turning to favor. Makers of maple sugar in Vermont say that the supply this year will exceed 7,f)..0,OtH) pounds. The Lingham gold mine in Belmont, Hastings county, Ontario, is proving highly profitable. In some of the Eastern shoe-blacking eel ars you can have your high hat pol ished by electricity. Canning factories.it is reported, are lieing erected in large numbers in vari ous parts ol Georgia. It is reported that Melbourne, Aus tralia, isoveillowed with men who want work, but are unable to secure it. Chautauqua county, N. Y., has 14,000 acres of lwaring vines and 5'JO acres of young vines not in bearing. For fifty-two consecutive miles on the Boston and Albany railroad, it is said, there is not a grade crossing. An ounce of pure gold is worth $20.04; therefore, a ton of pure gold, which con tains 24,0 0 ounces, is worth $495,3X). Last esr there was borrowed out of banks and trust companies in New York and Brooklyn on real es;ate I8,OCO,000. It is said that 3,i00 miles of electric road will tie added this yeir. One road in Pennsylvania ia to be e;ghty miles long. A Clearfield (Pa.) lumberman, Simon Flvnn, will run 35,00J,00J leet of logs dawn the Susquehanna river to the saw mills. The turpentine gathereraof Georgia, it is estimated, have during the past five years destroyed 200,00),000 worth of pine timber. Millions upon millions of herring are taken every year It is said that there are more herring eaten than any other kind of fiih. It is estimated, the Pittsburg DitpalcU says, that 41,30o,000 cottages could he erectnl out of the standing timber in the State of Washington. There came into New Orleans in two days of last week nine steamers and one schooner, bearing 102,00) bunches of bananas and bO.OOJ cocoanuts. The largest pumping plant in the United States was that placed in a mine at Iron Mountain, Mich. It pumps 4,000,000 gallons in twenty-four hours. Now that the Pennsylvania miners have an eight-hour law, some people are inclined to th uk they will have to keep well organized to get any good out of it. A strong effort is being made in New Jersey to defeat the law which makes fl ty-five hours the limit of a week's work. It is claimed that the law is unconstitutional. PURELY PERSONAL The fine laces owned by the Vander bilt families are said to be worth f 500, 000. David II. Smith, the son of the Mor mon prophet, Joeeph Smith, has been an inmate of the asylum for the. insane at Elgin for seventeen years. Lady Henry Somerset is about to start a paper, to be called the Woman's Her ald, which will be the organ of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union. Lard Chief Justice Coleridge of Eng land will probably visit ihis country during the World's Fair. He was here in 188 ', and was then a tall, spare man of 63 years. Miss Emily Faithful of London 1b en deavoring to organize in one of the sub urbs a home for women who are working for their own living, the idea being to provide each occupant with a private room at a low rent and the use of com mon dining and reception rooms. The Lord Mayor of London, who ia a Roman Catholic, went out of his way the other day to piy a visit in state to the Church of England Young Men's Soci ety in Ludgate Circus, and he not only made an excellent speech, but left a sub stantial gilt in his own and the Lady Mayoress name. Sir Alfred S ephen, the ex-Chief Jus tice of New South Wales, can givepoin's even to Mr. Gladstone in the matter of juvenility. He ia in his 92d year, and keepa two of his daughters busy for six honra daily taking down his remini eences from dictation. Sir Alfred ia the Nestor of Lincoln's Inn. He entered there as a student in 1618, and was called to the bar in November, 1H23. Two years afterward he emigrated to the antipodes as Solicitor-General for the then penal co ony of Van Dieman's Land, now the elf-governing colony of Tasmania. The Bloody Battle of Santa Lucia in Honduras. SOCIAL DEMOCRATS IN GERMANY. The Corinth Cmal Approaching Coroplc Uon Gladstone Favors the Channd Tanncl. London music balls clear from 16 to 70 I per cent. Another is to be erected. In small hotels in Russia each guest is expected to find his own bedclothing. The extradition treaty between Swe den and the United States has been rat ified. The operative cotton-spinners of Man chester, England, have ofTered to com promise. The Kiel Observatory has found an other planet. This is the fifteenth found this year. A mass meeting at Buda-Pesth adopted resolutions favoring Hungarian inde pendence. The Nicarsguan Congress is discussing the proposition to declare war against HonQuras. The foot and month disease has broken out in the Berlin cattle market, and all removals of cattle have been prohibited. The Brazilian Minister at Paris has denied the truth of tbe report .hat there has been fighting in Rio Grande do Sti'. Peleall, a charming Staffordshire vil lage, is in dangerof disappearing throngh a subsidence caused by mining opera tions. The talk of lower wsges for coal min ers in England has occasioned threats that not a pound of coal will be minel for a month. The oil inlustry has changed Baku Irom a village to a large, flourishing town. The Baku oil refinery ia the larg est in existence. A plot to overlhrow President Sooaga of Nicaragua has been frustrated by means of information given by the wile of one of the conspirators. The Congo Free State authorities have organized an expedition having for its object the repression of the traffic car ried on by Arab slave dealers. A number of the famous Oldenburg carriage horees will be sent to the Chi cago Exhibition. This is the most noted breed of horses in all Germany. The Pope has informed the French Bishops of his decision to crown his Episcopal jubilee by the beatification of the French heroine, Joan of Arc. The boundary question between Chili and Argentina has been delayed in its settlement, Argentina wishing to con sult Congress before sign:ng a treaty. The Italian government has just sent the German Emperor a magn fic-nt al bum containing photographs and pict ures of every ship in the I alian navy. It ia the law in D-nrnark that every drunken man shall be taken to his home in a carriage provided at the expense of the saloonkeeper who aold him the last drink. A French anarchist named Barnard has been arrested at Rome. He is sus pected of having caused the explosions at the Palace Antici Mattei and the Pal ace Altieri. The Social Democrats in Germany have decided not to observe May day, giving as a reason the impoverished condition of the workingmen throughout the Empire. Several cases of cholera have appeared in a convict prison in Moscow. Russia. The Provincial Council has voted 30'),CO0 franca to be spent in instituting prevent ive measures. TVi nnlirA anthoriflen of "Rlrn-nTicrtiam have served notices upon the small shop- aeepers, lniorming tnem tnat it they continue to trade on Sundays they will be prosecuted. The Mikado has abolished the law in Japan which provided that the author- iHpfl onnlit nieb- nut. a man frvr ftn nnmar. ried woman of a certain age and compel him to marry her. Chancellor Caprivi re'usea to compro mise on the German army bill, and an appeal to the country is very likely to follow the defeat of the measure, which seems now to be certain. Numerous Austrian, Gorman and Prussian Catholics have petitioned the Pope to call an international convention to use their influence in trying to atop gambling at Monte Carlo. The Chinese government , haa dis patched 15,000 repeating rifles to the troops on the western frontier in the vi cinity of the Pamir, and numerous drill inspectors accompany the transports. The works of the ship canal between the North Sea and the Baltic are being pushed forward with such energy and regu arity as to give hope of its being finished in 1895, as originally intended. Bismarck says that all he cares for now is to remain at home with his fam ily. He rarely visits Berlin, because he has no house there, and he dislikes un familiar beds and hotel accommodations. Religious riots have broken out in Amoy. Many native Christians have been tortured, and a few have been killed. An English missionary was at tacked by a mob of fanatics, and barely saved his life by flight. The Corinth canal, which is now ap proaching completion and is to be opened on April 23 next, waB formally com menced on March 27, 1882. The canal is over 3 miles in length, 68 feet wide on the bottom, 80 feet at the water line and 26 feet deep. PORTLAND MARKET. Prortnr.w, rrnit. Kt, Wheat Valley, fl.l2'a'; Walla Walla, 11.05 per cental. F..oi;b standard, $.3.30, Walla Walla, 13.50; Graham, 2.fW; Mi per tine, 12.50 per barrel. Oats Choice, 43'45cper bushni ; fair, 40c; rolled, in bags, ftl.25W6.50j barrels, W.W).76; cases, 13.75. Hav Best, lDcil3.50 per ton; com mon, f!MiUr$l().li0. MaLSTUKfs Bran, Wii,l; snorm, il9 iM; ground barley, 3'ji'4 , cboi !eeil,$l er ton ; whole feed barley, HOCUHic per cental; rnidd ings, $23 t 24 per ton ; brew ing barley, WWi c per cental; chicken wheat, fl.lo per cental. BtmxB Oregon fancy creamery, 273 (d.iQc; fancy dairy, ZZMZa; fair to good, 176 2bc; common, 12'. tit 15c per pound; picxle roll butter, 3J(tf3oc per roll ; California, 404 jc per roil. CiiKKrtie Oregon, U"4l3c; Eastern Twins, 15c; Young America, 16c per round. Eqm Oregon, loc per dozen. Poultby Chickens, mixed coops, $4.00 4.50; oid hens, .r5.00ftio.50; old roosters, 4.i.0x4.50; dressed chickens, 1618c per pound; ducks, 16.5ur?t7.5u; geese, $10.00(311.00 per dozen; turkeys, live, ltt'17c; dressed, ISftt lWi; per pound. Vug btablks Cabbage, $1.5 K? 1 .05 per cental; onions, $l.75t2 0; cut onions, 75w'.Oc; potatoes, $1.00 for Garnet Chilis; $1.25 for Burbanks; Oregon turnips, 75(ii 'JJc per sack ; young carrots, 75c (if I per sack; sweet potatoes, $2.50 M4.U0 per cental; caniirjower, VOc per per dozen, $2 75 per crate, celery, s.'c ptr dozen; artichokes, 85c per dozen; lettuce, 4t)c per dozen; asparagus, 2'c per pound ; parsnips, 85e per sack ; beets, $1.25 per sack; radishes, i5o per doen ; gn en onions, lse per pound; rhubarb, H'c per pound; green peas, luitjllc per pound ; spinach, 3,'c per pound. Fruits Sicily lemons, o.0j(c5.5) per box; Ca.i ornia new crop, $4.50(5; ba nanas, $2.5(i(4.0J per bunch; oranges, seedlings. $2.iXJi2.75 per box; navels, $3O0i'a3 5J; cr in tarries, $12.50 per bar rel ; ap oles, $1 5 n 2 25 pr box. Hosxir Choice comb, 1617o per pound ; new Uregon, I0'20c Salt Liverpool, 2kjs. f 1 5."0 ; luOs, $16.50; 50s, $17.50; e.., 1U.5O03 11.50. Daiso F'kuits Petite prunes, lUti12c; silver, ll14ci Italian, Zi 14c; German, 10'illc; plums, oid, 5(g6c; new, 79c; appies, 6( He; evaporated apricots, 15(16o; peacties, 12tSl6c; pears, 7ilc per pound. Rick Island, $4.755.0J; Japan, $4.75 per cental. Coffee Coeta Rica, 22c; Rio, 22c; Salvador, 21sc ; Mocua, 2o)(33Uc; Java, 24!(a30c; Arbuckle'a, Midland, Mo kaska and Lion, 100-pound cases, 25 35-lOOc per pound ; Columbia, same, 24 85-100c. Bbajss Small white, 3)iC; pink, 3c ; bayoa, 3Wc; butter, ij; liinaa, 34c per pound. Syrup Eastern, in barrels, 4055c; half-barrels, 42(g57ac; in cases, 35(3 80c per gallon ; $2.25 per keg. California in barrels, 2040c per gallon; $1.75 per keg. SuoAit Net prices : D, 4c ; Golden C, 4lid extra C, 4,'c; Magnolia A, 4?tcj granulated, 54C ; cube crushed and pow dered, 5Jgc; confectioners' A, bc per pound ; maple sugar, 15(3 l ie per pound. Caxnkd Goods Table fruits, assorted quoted $1.75:'.00; peaches, $1.852.10; Bartlett pears, $1.752.O0 ; plums, $1.37 1.50; strawberries, $2.25(22.45; cher ries, $2.25 2. 40; blackberries, $1,850 2; raspberries, $2.40; pineapp.es, $2.25(3) 2.80; apricots, $1.652.00. Pie fruits: Assorted, $1.20; peaches, $1.25; pluma, $1.101.20; blackberries, $1.2di.40 per dozen. Pie fruits, gallons Assorted, $3.153.50; peaches, $3.504.00; apri cots, $3.504.00; plums, $2.753.00; blackberries, $4.25(34.50. Vegetables: corn, $1.50(31.75; tomatoes, $1.101.15; sugar peas, $1.00; string beans, 95c per dozen. Meats : Corned beef. Is, $1.50; 2s, $2.40; chipped beef, $2.55(3 4.00; lunch tongue, Is. $4.00; 2s, $6.75; deviled ham. $1.75(31.85 pr doter. Fish: Sardines, s, 75c(a$2.23; s, $2.154.50; lobsters, $2.303.50; salm on.tin l-lb.talls,$1.251.50; flats, $1.75; 2 lbs., $2.25(32.50; bbl., $5.50. The Heat Market. Bkkf Prinie8teer8,$3.8j34.25 ; choice steers, 3.75(34 00; fair to good steers, $3.00(33.50 ; good to choice cows, $3 15(3 3.50; common to medium cows, $2.50(3 2.75; dressed. $1.5037.00. Mutton Choice, $4.504.75; fair to good, $4.00(34 50; dressed $8.00; lambs, $4.00(34.50; dressed, $3 00. Hogs Choice heavy. $7.00(37.25 ; me dium,. $6.50(36 75; light and feeders, $6.25(36.50; dressed, $7.03. . Veal $4 00(37 00. Smoked Meats Large ham, 17(3 17J-6C; medium ham, 17. 18jC; break fast bacon, 1718c: short clear sides, iA)4bc; dry salt sides, 13i14c per pound. Laed Compound, in tins, 14c ; pure, in Una, 1617sc; Oregon, 110 120 per pound. DllsoeUaneoas. Nailb Base quotationa : Iron, 2 75 , steel, $2.75 ; wire, $2.50 per keg Ikon Bar, 2c per pound ; pig iron, $2325 per ton. Steel 10lc per pound. Tin I. C. charcoal, 14x20, prime qual ity, $3.50(39.00 per box ; for crosses, $2 extra per box ; I. C. coke plates, 14x20, prime quality. $7.50(38.00 per box ; tern plate I. C, prime quality, $6.887.00; 14x20, $14 00. Lead 4?gc per pound ; bar, 6c. Shot $1.80 per sack. Horseshoes $5. Naval Stores Oakum, $4.505 per bale; resin, $4.80(35 per 480 pounds; tar, Stockholm, $13.00; Carolina, $9.00 per barrel ; pitch, $6.00 per barrel ; turpen tine, 65c per gallon in carload lots. Bars and Bairgln?. Burlaps, 7-oz., 40-inch, net cash, 6c ; burlaps, 10-oz., 40-inch, net cash, 7c; burlaps, 12-oz., 44-inch, 7c; burlaps, 15-oz., 60-inch, ll)c; burlaps, 20-oz., 76 inch, 14c Wheat bags, Calcutta, 23x36, pot, 6c; two-bushel oat bags, 7c