The Rome tribune. (Rome, Ga.) 1887-190?, September 25, 1896, Image 3

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.wm of w. Reports by Wire from the Great Markets. Rome Cotten Maiket. By wagon I’t&S Cotton New York, Sept. 24.—The cotton market opened at an advance of la 3 points. Liverpool failed tc decline as much as expei ted This caused a bet. ter demand, which was readily met* however, and prices eased off to yes' terday's closing. The trading was very slack, reaching but ”5,000 bales to 11 o’clock, representing the smallest business on change for many months. Selling was checked by talk -of frosts in South Carolina and Rome, Ga. Sp t cotton from the south, especi ally Texas, is app aHng freely and in some cases, is pressed for sale. At 11 o’clock the market was dull at about yesterday prices. NkwYokk, Sept. 24. The following arn to day’s quotations: Middlings, ettai. ,8 9-16: ea'es, 200. | Colton FeitunS. Opening Clo e Clo=e today, today, yesieiday Jtnnavy. 8 23 s~' .... eebruiry .*.. 834 880 Mach 8 38 8 34 /Will 8 42 8 36 Mt! 8 45 8 40 ,> u ae ’ 8 50 .... July •••• .... Aeifcn«t .... Bwpi. inner... . «>c- bat A 08 « '7 Noven tier B'7 |0 .... December 8 li 8,6 ... lavbkP s L. Sept. 3i. - rhe following were the quotations today: .Sabs, B,COO baits, lone q det. Middlings, 4 1.16 J. > Opening. Close, [January and February 4 23 4 24 February and March 4 21 4 21 M arch and April ,• • • 4 24 April and May 4 25 Mayand June 4 25 June and July 426 July and August .... August and September 4 35 4 36 September and October 4 30 October>and November 4 27 4 27 November and December 4 24 4 24 December and January 4 24 4 24 LOCAL MARKETS. [CORRECTED DAILY.] GRAIN AND PROVISIONS. Rome Sept. 21. The following are the whole sale ....ecu; euijllots to contumely are rela tively higher, MEATS— Smoked bacon C. R. sides, boxed. • V*S d--y salt C. K. sides b-otoi, 4'/ 8 c; sugarenr-d barni nixed eUJ4 to 10% r @ i picnic ham, hoe ed, • ' jo; b-cakfast bacuti sugar cured. Bi. 1. KU—Pure leaf in tierces 4%c; pure leaf in 'BO j> > udti bsand 50 po indtins. sc; compound in iiereits 4'Jc ctinpouud in 80-poutd tub. or 50 pound ties. ‘.*/ < c; cottolene in tie cee, 5%c; ■cott nene in 80 pound tubs or 50-ponnd tine 5%c ■ OltN-Sacked white, less than carload. 45c. O ITS—Sttk d mixed less than carload,3sc. HAY—Choice Timothy, less than carload, $1; No. I Timothy, less than carload, 70c: No, 2, mixed, lees ttian carload. 60 to 65c. Hit AN-Pure wheat bran in ton lots. 55c. MEAL—Best water ground, 36c; beat steam .ground, 36c. fcGRISTB—Hu nuts in barrels $2,50 Highest pitent. $4.10; first patent, s4vO; best st sight, $3 21. SUGAR—Standard granulated. sc; fancy N O. clarified, 4%c;New York cie< in, extra C.4!4c. t COFFEE—Fancy Rio, 18c: pool Rio, 16e; common Rio, 13'jc; best brovn Java 3 c; best Mocha. 30c; Arbuckle, roasted, iu one pound psckages, *lB 10; Levering, xuasted, in one pound paiktges, $lB.lO. SYHUP—Sei Cied Georgia cane. 25c; New Or leans molasses, a q to grade, 10 to 20c. BU I’TER—Fox River Creamery,23c; New Y rk State, none, CHEESE—IIc. RICE-Fancy Carr, lina, 63; good Carolina, sc; medium Carolina, 4c. DIQU. RS. WHISKY-Rye, Si-20 to $3.50; corn, 90i: to $1.40; gin, $1.05 to $1.75. WINES -90 c to st; high wines, *1,22: port and alien y, $1 to $3, claret *6 to $lO per case; Amsr ican champagne. $7.50 to $8.50 par case; cordials >l2 per dozen; bitters, $8 per dozen. HIDES, WOOLS, ETC. Green salt hides, 3g3%c; No. 1 flint hides i6c; goat skins. 10 to 2oc each; sheepskins, 10@40c each: beeswax, 15@17%C Wool—washed, 15 to 18c per pound; unwashed, 10 to 13c; b irry 6to 100. TABLE SUPPLIES. ■[Corrected dally. Consumers' prices quoted.] Onions, 15c per gallon. Caobag , 3c per pound. G een apples, IB to 30c per peck. Fears 25c per peck. Grapes 25c@:Oc per basket. Nutmegs, Ift «. 30c dezan. Green corn, 10c. Irish potatoes, 25c per pe<k. Bananas, lOtijlOc per dozen. Evaporated iruit, B@loc per pound. Eggs, I2JJ@ 5c per ocztn. Creamery butter 25@30c per pound. Country butter. 20c per p >und. Cream cheese IScperp iund Bread, large loaf. sc: two smell ones, sc. MEATS. , Enks— porteihouse. ir@'2%c, Icin, lf@l2%c. roasts, 8 to 12%c per pound; beel stew , 5c ner pound; mutton, 7@tOc per pound: , 10@t2>4> p’r pound; liver, 5c per pound; 14@12!4c per pound; bologna,so per pound; d oe< t,;B@ioc per round; dried beef, 150 ound iu quantitvior2se per pound chipped. 1 cured bams, 12% to 15c per pound: coun 1c; Ca if ornia hams. ICC per pound; break fast bauon. l?'A *'sc per pound; country ba con, B%@loc per pound; lard, country, 9c; tierce, pound. FISH. Redsnapper, Ik: pound; crash, 8c pound; Tutt’s Pills Cure All Liver Ills. Secret of Beauty is health. The secret ofhcalth is to digest and assim ilate a proper quanity of food. FThis can never be done v. hen [the liver does not act it’s part, poyoi: know th as ? ■Tutt’s Liver Fills are an abso ante cure for sick headache, dys Ipepsia, sour stomach, malaria [constipation, torpid liver, piles liaundice, ftlious fever, bilious Less and kindred diseases, fcutt’s Liver Pil2s herring, 10c pound: bl. ctba's. 10c ponndl buy Mo. 10c pound; pomoaro 16%c pound; crop pies. 1 c pound; perch. 10c pound, salmon. He pound; fresh sh:lmp, 45c quart; oysters, 40 to BOc quart MIS ELLANEOUS. Hens —Dressed. 25 to BCc; due k>, dressed, 25 to I 30c. Teas—lmperial. 75 to s'c; gunpowder, 35.t0 85c; English bi c kfsst, 311 ■6< c wol-eses—Good corn. 23c; sneer, 30c; N, O. I sugar house, 15 to 30c; country, 22c. I Fanned G-’ods—Tomatoes, 70v®$' peril zen ; corn, 90c to $ I per d< z in; peaches. 900 to $ P» r ' <l. een: table peaches $1.50 to $2 per o-zen; I apiicote $2 per d zen; apples, 75c per diZen; anples. 7ic per de zen; sardines, EOc case oysteis, 55 to 15c. Naval Stores. Savannah. Sept. 24.—Turpentine, firm at 2354 for regu ars; sales. 1 Ouo c sks: rec-ipts. l,' 7o Ro in, iirm; a ile<2.ooob irrel ; receipts, 4.017: A. B, ' * and I), 51.4 I; E and F. 81 4i54. G, Handl, si 55; K 8155; .51, sl.«i; N. SI 90; windowelass. s:u.s waterwhite, s.’.2i. Wilmington, Sept. 24—Rosin, firm; strain-d. 51.85; nod straited. *1.4 i: spirits of turpentine, tinn; machine, 23 54; irregu lars. 2< bid; tar, steady at $1 05; crude I tnrpentine, tirm; hard, $1 3J; soft, sl.s>; vir gin. $165. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago. Sept. 24. open, cooes. Wheat—September .. 6454 WHEAT—October ... 65M ■■ 6154 Cohn—Septeuioer. . 21 >4 Cohn—October 24J4 ... 2154 Oats-September . . 1654 OaTS-October 1954 ... 16te Pohk -September .... 605 Pokk October 7.10 ... 6.05 Liiid -e >tember .... 3.77 Lard October.. 4.05 ... 3.77 Ribs-Sa t 'liber .... 3.22 KIBS-October , ... 3.55.... 8.2? Notice. I want every man and woman in the United States interested in the opium and whisky habits to have one of my books of these diseases. Ad dress B. M. Woolly, Atlanta, Ga.,Box 363, and one will be sent you free. FANNY KEMBLE. The Famous Actress Was a Troublesome Woman on the Stage. Charles Halle once said to me: 1 ‘Fan ny Kemble was the most difficult per son I ever had to deal with. I remem ber one day at Manchester she was to read ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’, with Mendelssohn’s music. Well, some thing in the lighting, or the desk, or the music, or the chair, did not quite suit her, but at that late hour nothing could be altered. So Fanny Kemble sim- 1 ply sat down outside on the stairs in j the passage and cried. Nothing, she de clared, would induce her to begin until everything was exactly to her taste. I implored her to go in, as the place was crowded and the people impatient. At last I got’her on to the platform. I nev er saw a woman in such a passion about such a trifle. ” How deep was the impression she made upon me as a boy. I heard her read that same “Midsummer Night’s Dream,” with Mendelssohn’s lovely music played by a full orchestra, only a year or two aficr Mendelssohn’s death. The famous orchestral’player, Mr. Wil ly (now forgotten) led the first violins. Fanny’s versatility, her rapid changes as she sat with the book open before her on a crimson velvet cushion, were phe nomenal. Her only successor is Mrs. Croive, the once famous Leah. Neither Brandram nor Mrs. Dallas Glynn could touch her as a Shakespearean reader. Her rendering of Bottom and his crew is among those memories which will take rank with old Harley’s gravedig ger. Why Fanny svas never a brilliant —i. e., a real “Kemble”—success on the stage I could never imagine. Os course, I never saw her act. Her dra matic career was a short one and over be fore my time, but all the Siddons was in her platform Lady Macbeth, nor shall I ever forget the thrilling and pathetic pathos of the closing scenes of her “Ro meo and Juliet. ” She was then (about 1856) not so stout as she afterward became. Her dark face and black hair, piercing black eyes and long black velvet dress gave her a strange and tragic appearance, which she entirely shook off in the early love scenes, but which served to color profoundly the terrible poison tragedy of the close. Fanny Kemble had an imperfect appreciation of hiusic. She was for leaving out this and curtailing that. But Halle was firm about Mendels sohn, and she had to give iu.—Contem porary Review. Your Boy Wont Live a Month. So Mr. Gilman Brown, of 34 Mill St., South Garden, Mass., was told by the doctors His son had lung trouble, fol lowing Typhoid Malaria, and he spent three hundred and seventy-five dollars with doctors, who finally gave him up, saying: “Your boy wont live a month.” He tried Dr. King’s Neiv Discovery and a few bottles restored him to health and enabled Mm to go to work a perfectly well man. He says he owes his present good health to use of Dr. King’s New Discovery and knows it to be the best in the world for Lung trouble. Trial Bottle Free at D. W. Curry Drug Store. MOTHER NATURE. Nature, the gentlest mother, Impatient of no child, The feeblest or the way wardesX Her admonition mild In forest and the hill By traveler is heard Restraining rampant squirrel Or too impetuous bird. How fair her conversation A summer afternoon, Her household, her assembly! And when the sun goes down Her voice among the aisles Incites the timid prayer Os the minutest cricket, The most unworthy flower. When all the children sleep, She turns as long away As will suluee to light her lamps, Then, bending from the sky, With infinite affection And infiniter care, Her golden finger on her lip, Wills silence everywhere. —Emily Dickinson. IlonT you think <»t buying nny dry goods nut ill yon have seen J. Kiitiner’i* wtock and learn bls uew price?. THE EOMtf TBIBUNE FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1896. Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, carrying good news of relief from pain. Allcock’s Porous Plaster stands at the head of all remedies for congestion in the chest, the first result of taking cold, and for all lameness and stiffness of joints or muscles. “Just as Good as Allcock’s.” Not at all. No imitation approaches the genuine. Allcock’s Corn Shields, Allcock’s Bunion Shields, Have no equal as a relief and cure for corns and bunions. Brandreth’s Pills are free Lom injurious substances. They give universal satisfaction. Buy a Smooth White “W Skin For Your Face! It probably needs renewing, for it is rough, red freckled, blotched or pimpled, until it has become repulsive instead of attractive. Healthy skin is always beautiful. The sun and wina, impure soaps and 3usmetics injure the skin. Viola Cream cleanses, nourishes and restores the skin, making it soft, white and beau iful. It is not a cosmetic —does not cover up, Lut removes blemishes. It is harmless and ahvnys does just what we claim for it. The only preparation -hat will positively remove Prec'de A, Blackheads, Tan, bunburn and Pimples. Hundred »< f testimonials from promi nent ladies. 50 cents u jar ut druggists. O.C. BiTTNHP CO., Tni w, OKIC. HTWH FAMILY AND FANCY GROCERIES 420 Broad Street, Lloyd’s Old Stand ROME, GA. Keeps always a fine stock of sea sonaLle goods and offers them to the trade at prices and terms as low as honorable compe.ition will permit. 9 23 Iw Announcement. MRS. M. E. THORNTON Over Roark’s Jewelry Store, in vites the attention and patronage of the ladies of Rome to the best equipped Dress Making Rooms in the city. Best work, prompt delivery, and economical prices. Take the stairway between Roark’s and Stoffregen’s stores. J. E. WINFREY’S C’GAR FACTORY. 0 ■'HAND-MADE and HOME-MADE.” o Pure Havana, Winfrey’s Hand Made, W. & A. Cigars. The best Five Cent cigars on the market. There are none better, because none better can be made The manu facture of all cigars personally superin-- tended. Your patronage solicited. Care fulattention given to all orders. No 22 Broad Street, .PQMF ca. I. F. Greene Co., Livery, Feed and Trade Stable. (Colclough’s old staud.) 324 Broad St., - Rome, Ga. First class teams and vehicles at rea sonable rates. Satisfaction guaranteed. Patronage solicited. . Special accommodations for wagoners and stock dealers. nov 1. Tn B 1 Treated With Politeness and courtesy go to J. T. Keown’s New Restaurant, in Robinson’s old bar, 513 Broad street. Hot meals, lunches and good beds. Special rates by the week. Barbecue and Brunswick stew from 13 noon tc 11 p. m. 9-20-lm GREAT STOCK-JUST «T WANT! II is About Time You Were Thinking About a Winter Suit Hat or Underwear. It is Fun for Us To watch our competitors trying to meet our prices. But our customers and the public say THEY CAN’T. We already know it and want you to find it out. Take a Glance at These Prices. And hold us responsible for what we say: We can sell you an All-Wool black, brown, blue or gray mixture Clay Worsted Suit for slo.oo—not for $15i.5O — that’s the price others arc asking. These goods are handsome in finish and design and are perfect-fit ting. Cheviots, Serges and Worsteds of various colors at $7.50, SB, ssl and SIO. Not shoddy goods, but up-to-date for the price you pay. Each one is a big bar gain by itself. Our finer line of suits is comprised of novelties of the very best of manufacturers. I , I Agents for Dunlap’s Celebrated Hats conceded to be correct in style "" and comfortable as well as du- rable. We also carry a full line of other makes of hats, varying in price from $2.00 to $4.00. Soft hats of all kinds. Everything guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction. When you read this tell your friends about it. They’ll appreciate it after having pat ronized us once, and they’ll thank you and us, for we wilb.deal honestly and fair with them and sell them low. J. A. GAMMON & CO. The One Price Up-tc-Date Clothiers, - - - - 237 and 239 Broad Street, Rone, Ga. JOHN H. REYNOLDS, President, B. I, HUGHES, Cashier P. H. HARDIN Vice President. t FIRST NATIONAL BANK ROME, C3r<A.- vA-lNria SURFLiUS, $300,000 A.ll Accommodations Consistent With Safe Banking Ex tended to Our Customers 1 V DOUGLAS & CO., Livery and Sale Stables, Broad Street, Bo me, Ga. Finest turnouts in the city furnished at the most reason able terms Give us a call. Telephone 102. HI » ■ ■ _ 11. I ■!■■■■ ■ I. ■ I I I The Leading Tailors of the South IN H'GH GRADE GOODS AT MODERATE PRICES. 727 Mai ket Street, CHATTANOOGA, TENN. E. B. YOTTTsZCJLISrS —DEA.LE FL TINT Staple and Fancy Groceries, No- 10 Broad Street, Rome, G-a. Yon can find everything kept in a first-class grocery store. Goods all fresh. 1 will not be under old by anyone. Give me a chance at jour bill before buying. < It is with both pleasure and pride that we come before you with the MOST COMPLETE LINE OF Men, Boys’ and Children’s CLomnc ever brought to this market. We have spared neither time nor energy in selecting our fall stock, and we can, with out boasting, say that there is no better bought stock in the country. For the fat men were bought stouts, for the slim, slims, and we can almost fit anybody. It Makes No Difference to us whether you wish a cheap business suit, a fine Scotch or Cassimere, or a fine Worsted Dress Suit. You CALL OR WRITE FOR WHAT YOU WANT. Many People Who have heretofore had tailors to make their clothing are today our cus tomers. Why ? Because they nave found the place where there is no trouble to get a fit, thus saving from SIO to sls on a suit. Besides the handsomest and cheapest line of Cloth ing made, our store is filled with the latest and newest Shirts, Collars, Cuffs, Neckwear, Underwear, Hosiery and such like. Youths’ Suits All Wool Blue and Black Serge Cheviots at $5.00. Fors6, $7, SB. $9, $lO and $12.50 we can show you a line of suits unequalled in value and make up in this part of the country. All Wool Boys’ Suits $2.48 and $2.08 — the greatest bargains ever of fered. Don’t miss them. From the Factory to your head W AN UP-TO-DATE STYLE FOR Fall a? WINTER Special Low Rales VIA Southern Railway. FOR MONTHS OF June, July and August Brunswick, Ga. Tickets on sale daily at sl4, good until O-to oer 31st. St. Simons Island, Ga Tick ets on safe daily at $14.50, gooj until Oct. 31st Cumberland Island, Ga Tick ets on sale daily at sl6, good until Oct. 31 st. Tybee Island, Ga. Tickets on sale daily at sl6, good 15 days— can be extended 15 days. Lookout Mountain, Tenn. Tickets on sale every Saturday, good tn return Monday iollowing date of sale; rate of $2.00 for round trip. Lithia Springs. Ga. Tickets on sale every Saturday, good to return Monday following date of sale; ra*esl.2s for >ound tr.p. For full particulars call at city office. 14 Armstr ng building, or write to T. U. Smith, P. & L’. A., Rome. Ga C. A. Benbcoteh, A. G. P. A., Chattanooga, Tenn. Dr. M.T. SALTER SPECIALIST. Dr. Sa’ter is engaged in a general prac tice of the treatment of all forms of chronic di <eiises of men, women and children. Diseases of the blood, liver, lungs, heart, kidneys, eje and ear; also nervous dis eases successfully treated. Cancers, tumors and ulcers treated and cured without the, knife. Whatever tour disease be. Dr. Salter invites consultation in person or by letter. Dr. Salter prepares medicines himself for each case treated. If interested, call on or write to M. T. SALTER, M. D., 9 20-3 m 68 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.