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DAILY ENQUIRE!! - SUN; COLUMBUS, GEORGIA. SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER ‘23, 1886.
RANDALL’S LOST ALLIES.
Only TNI of Thirty*#** Tariff Men to lie lie
turned to the Hou.e—They t'nllowed ttniiTn; I
■ml Are Ordered to Wulk the Plank.
Courler-Jouriial.
Washington, October 20.—Thirty-five
.democratic congressmen, with Samuel ,J.
Randall at their head, voted last June
against the consideration of the Morrison
tariff bill. Conventions have been held,
the last of them last night, in all the dis
tricts now represented by these gentle
men. Seventeen have not been renomi
nated—Muller, Dowdnoy, Pindar and Ar-
not, of New York; Green, of New Jersey;
Boyle and Curtin, of Pennsylvania; Find
lay, of Maryland; Martin, of Alabama; St.
Martin, Wallace and Irion, of Louisiana;
LeFevre, Ellsberry and Geddes, of Ohio;
Ward, of Illinois, and Henry, of Califor
nia. Two or three of these alleged demo
crats were not candidates for renomina
tion, and Mr. Green, of New Jer
sey, is a candidate for gov
ernor, but for all that, Randall has
lost seventeen allies. Findlay has gone
completely over to the republicans, and is
a candidate for re-election, with a quasi
republican indorsement. He will be de
feated, as will Muller, of New York, who
will run as an independent democrat. The
other eighteen have been renominated.
Mr. Randall himself has no republican
opposition. It would not be genuine if
any appeared. Mr. Sowden, from Penn
sylvania, also has the official republican
indorsement, on the openly-declared
ground that he violated the national dem
ocratic platform by voting against consid
eration of the Morrison bill. These two
f entlemen will be re-elected, and so will
Hiss, Merriman and Viele, of New York;
Ermentrout, of Pennsylvania? Gay, of
Louisiana; Seney and Wilkins, of Ohio,
and Lawler, of Illinois.
The other Randallites are by no means
safe. The well known Tim Campbell, of
New York, has not yet secured Tammany
indorsement, and will certainly be opposed
by another democrat. Stahlnecker, from
the same state, though representing a
strong democratic constituency, is having
a hard fight. His republican opponent is
talking high tariff all over the district,
and of course Stahlnecker can not take
issue. All he can say is that he is as good
a protectionist as the republican candi
date, which is not a very sure way to hold
democratic votes. The democratic organ
in Sprigg’s district promises that if re
elected he will hereafter vote right on the
tariff, but his goose is probablv cooked.
Nobody knows whether McAdoo, of
New Jersey, was fairly nominated. Any
how, there was a bolt and another demo
cratic candidate; in short, just trouble
enough to make this thoroughly dumo-
eartic district, doubtful. Pidcock, also of
New Jersey, is busily engaged in defend
ing himself from the charge of paying
S1100 to delegates to vote for him for re
nomination. Although this is n strong
democratic district, it went republican in
1882, and may again. J. E. Campbell,
Warner, and Foran, of Ohio, may be re
elected, but the chances are that all will
be defeated. The Randall contingent,
therefore, will be materially reduced in
the next house, certainly to a figure much
smaller than in this or the preceding house.
Of the thirty-five democratic opponents of
the Morrison bill, no more than ten may
be re-elected, and some of them can be re
lied on to do better next time. It is fast
becoming the fashion for democratic con-
f ressioual candidates all over : m country
o come out honestly and heartily for tar
iff reform and reduction.
EX-SENATOR SIMON CAMERON.
Tim Statesman Talks on Polities— President
Cleveland's Strength.
Philadelphia Times.
“I have no hesitation in saying that Mr.
Cleveland has made an excellent president.
He has done some things, purely matters
of administrative detail, about which a
few people in his party are disposed to
grumble, but if any republican thinks that
that will be an element of weakness in the
democratic party in the next campaign he
will be woefully deceived. I know some
thing of the democratic party. I was in it
and of it before our grand republican party
was formed. Mr. Cleveland will be re
nominated because they cannot nominate
anybody else, and he will be a candidate
whom it will require every republican vote
to defeat. Sentiment does very well
in a campaign, but the votes do
the electing. The democrats have
no sentiment. They believe in votes.
All this tale about dissensions in the demo
cratic party on this civil service talk
amounts to nothing. In fact, it don’t exist
any more than it would exist where a doz
en men want an office and only one can
get it. We had the same trouble. When
the campaign of 1888 comes around you
will find the democratic organization at
Cleveland’s back. The democratic man
agers, with the prestige of holding the ad
ministration, will promise the offices, and
you will see the party workers turning in
everywhere. As I say, if the republicans
expect to regain their ascendency they
must do it on other grounds than demo
cratic discord. You will find when the
record of Mr. Cleveland’s administration
is made up it will demonstrate that he
made every effort to stand by the pledges
of his party platform, and he has kept the
government in good running order. We
must, therefore, have a strong candidate,
who can rally the whole strength of our
party, if we expect to win.” ,
“You are friendly to Mr. Blaine ?”
“Entirely so. Mr. Blaine and myself
have always been on excellent personal
terms, and I do not wish to say anything
for or against any plans that his friends
may have in view for him. It is more than
likely that Mr. Blaine will get the great
bulk of the Roman Catholic vote. If that
fact should become conspicuous it might
overturn all calculations. There is no
telling what the Methodists, Baptists,
Lutherans, and Old Presbyterians might
do. We had a contest like that In Penn
sylvania within my own recollection. It
was in 1821. I was then over 21, a voter,
and took an interest in politics. In a cer
tain Catholic church in Philadelphia the
congregation had some misunderstanding
with the priest and wanted to get him
out. The members of the congregation
made a great deal of confusion, but
the organization of the church natu
rally stood by the priest. Finally the con
gregation carried the controversy into the
legislature by having a bill introduced
permitting them to elect their own priest.
Schultze, who had been a Lutheran
preacher and lived in Lebanon, was in the
legislature and voted for the bill. In 1823
he was a candidate for governor. The or
ganization of the Catholic church repre
sented by the priest did their utmost to
defeat him and thus punish him for voting
for the bill. This got out among the peo
ple. The Methodists. Lutherans, and Old
Presbyterians supported Schultze, and he
was elected by a rousing majority. It is a
bad thing to draw the lines in politics on
religious issues. You never can tell where
they will strike.”
fire t0 mke onough wood t0 make a
“I know you. Widgeon; in my mind’s eve
i see you addressing a large and euthusiiis-
SSi * £ n ? e *2? telling your brethren in
toil to shake off the giant grasp of monop
oly that is crushing the life blood from
them: but you don’t tell them how your
wife is down in the cellar wrestling with a
barrel of apples or trying to plug up the
hole in the stovepipe with a piece of car
pet.
“I can imagine you filling the air with
eloquence about the horny-handed work-
- nn ” an Injury to all being the eon-
cli .; "i on , out I can’t fancy you nailing
a few siii..g., - on the roof to keep the
water from soaking the flour barrel.
“I want you to understand, John Henry,
that you have joined enough orders al-
ready; you are high key hearer of the
Knights of Gambrfnus, past grand chief
tain of the Royal Order of Free Lunch
Hunters, supreme chancellor of tile
Ancient Order of Dog Catchers, and 1 don’t
kuow what else.
“I.have seen you carrying banners and
drilling and attending conventions until
my soul is weary; and unless you stay home
and act as right worthy grand chief coal-
carrier and wood-sawyer, you will think
you are married to an equinoctial cyclone.
“Just drop that book of constitutions
and by-laws and trot down to the butcher’s
for a few spare-ribs, or there will be about
a dozen lodges in mourning to-morrow,
and something else will be grand key
bearer.”
And Mr. Widgeon smiled in a husky
voice and obeyed.
A TALE oV TREASURE.
Thu HcniaikiiMc Sequel to a Tin Peddler's Dream.
Whip.
The Knlirhf anil Ills Wife.
When Mr. Widgeon came home last
evening the first thing he said to his es
teemed wife was : “Mary, I have joined
the Knights of Labor.”
She glared at i.im with an expression
that set his teeth on edge as she cried :
“A Knight of Labor, eh ? You’ll make a
sweet old Knight of Labor !” .
“Why, Mary, it’s a noble organization,
and—”
“Yes, I know it is, and now I suppose
you’ll be a walking delegate or chairman
of the committee on boycotting, wr
am hustling around in the nucayaru
Nashville Union.
There are a great many stories told of
money and treasure buried in the south
during the war being unearthed since, hut
one of the strangest of all has just reached
the auriculars of a Union reporter, it hap
pened about twelve or fourteen years ago
near the village of Brentwood, and just
this side of the Davidson county line. A
tin peddler, who was driving a ivagon for
a firm of house furnishing dealers in Nash
ville, was taken rick one day in summer
as fie was driving on the turnpike,
and he sought shelter in a farm house near
by. He had a spell of fever for ten or
twelve days, and when able to get out
again he said to the owner of the farm:
“I am satisfied that there is a sum of
money buried on your farm. I have seen
the spot several times in my dreams.”
“Oh, pshaw!” replied the incredulous
farmer; “if you can find any treasure here
you are welcome to it.”
“How much will you take to waive all
claims?” persisted the peddler.
“Oh, I don’t know—say $5 worth of your
tinware.”
“If you will go to Nashville and get a
lawyer to draw up the papers in due form
I will give you 825 in cash,” said the
kitchen utensil man, seriously.
The farmer tried to laugh the fellow out
of his notion, but he was so earnest in
wishing to buy all rights to what he might
find that a paper was drawn up, the $25
paid over, and he was told to go ahead.
He replied that he was in no great hurry,
anyway, and so mounted his wagon and
drove off. But in about two weeks he re
turned with a horse and wagon and a com
panion. Giving notice that he had come
to claim his own, he proceeded to dig in a
corner of the front yard, and before the
hole was three feet deep he had unearthed
a small stone preserve or pickle jar, tightly
sealed. It wus broken by a blow from a
shovel, and lying among the fragments
were discovered $3000 in gold and silver
coins. None of the pieces had been coined
since the war, and the natural inference
was that the jar had been buried there
during the dark days of internecine strife
that sweptover Tennessee, but whether by
the former occupant of the place to save it
from the hands of marauders or by some
thieving soldier, all, of course, was specu
lation.
In answer to the farmer’s inquiries as to
what clues he had worked upon, the ped
dler said that during his illness a very tall,
dark complexioned man, having a scar on
his forehead and a limp in his gait, and
wearing a soiled and tattered uniform of
a federal cavalryman, had repeatedly come
to him in his dreams and pointed out the
spot where the money was buried. Now
the farmer was not a superstitious man
and put little faith in dreams, hut the ped
dler had been so careful to purchase all
rights in advance, and had walked so
directly to the treasure, that he concluded
to investigate the matter further. The
peddler and his companion meanwhile
gathered up the money and drove
off in ’the direction of Nashville and
were soon out of sight and hearing. The
farmer made inquiry among his neighbors
and ascertained that during the war a de
tachment of Stokes’ federal cavalry had
encamped in that very yard, and that a
man answering to the description of the
one who had come to the peddler in his
dreams was convicted of some military
offense and sent to the state penitentiary.
Putting this and that together, he con
ceived the opinion that the peddler was a
pal of the prisoner and had learned of the
buried treasure from the cavalryman’s
own lips. At any rate, the mysterious
peddler was never afterward seen in that
neighborhood, and the story of the treas
ure trove still remains unsolved.
Ilv Dials Ilia World.
Spuing field, Mass., October 22.—W. A.
Rowe, of Lynn, made a mile in 2:29 3-5 on
the Hampden park bicycle track this after
noon. This is the best time on record.
Both Rowe and George M. Hendee have
joined the ranks of professionals.
The I’atli of Glory.
Rangoon, India, October 22.—General
Sir 11. T. Maehherson, late commander of
of the British army of occupation in Bur-
mah, has just been buried here with a
grand military display.
Rufonl Got It.
Washington, October 22.—The presi
dent has selected L. N. Buford, of Missis
sippi, for appointment as deputy of the
fourth auditor of the teasury, vice Davis
resigned.
Mood nml Money.
Buffalo, October 22.—Priuce Victor
Napoleon, accompanied by John W.
Mackay, the bonanza king, arrived this
morning from the west. They went to
Niagara Falls.
Hai'k from tin- Arctic.
San Francisco, October 22.—The Artie
exploration expedition, under command
of Lieutenant Stoney, arrived last night
from Ounalaska on the United States
steamer Bear.
A Hi'iolnillir of Old "Put.”
The famous “Put’s tree,” near Crown
Point, to which Gen. Israel Putnam was
tied by the Indians, and rescuedl’just as
the torch was being applied to the faggots,
was last week sent to Saratoga, where it
will he preserved. It stood on the banks
of Put’s creek, and, since its fall last
spring, was visited by many relic hunters.
—Albany Journal.
Please be Explicit.
When a brother editor calls us a liar we
have a right to demand that he shall pro
duce some other proof of the charge be
side that of our general reputation in the
community.—Clie^ktowagatN. C.) Visitor.
The Girls Didn’t Strike.
The rebellion at the Maine state college
does not include the young women stu
dent-. or if it does these fair rebels have
i-!,,. bounteous Bangor press into
, t... - iitu names.—Boston Record.
THE COCAINE HABIT.
The Won.I Slaveri Known—New UevcUtloilN iif
Power.
Cincinnati Ttinei-Mtur.
When cocaine was discovered the med
ical world exclaimed “thank heaven!”
Hut useful as it is, it is also dangerous,
especially when Its use is perverted from
tlie deadening of pain for surgical opera
tions to the stimulation and destruction of
the human body. Its first effects arc
soothing and captivating, but this thrall-
dom is the most horrible slavery known to
humanity.
J. L. Stephens, M. D., of Lebanon, O.,
was interviewed by our reporter yester
day at the Grand Hotel, and during the
conversation tho doctor said: “The co
caine habit is a thousand times worse than
tho morphine and opium habits, and you
would be astonished,” he said, “if you
knew how frightfully the lmbit is increas
ing.”
“What are its effects?”
“It. is the worst constitution wrecker
ever known. It ruin# the liver and kid
neys in half a year, and when this work
is done.the strongest constitution soon suc
cumbs.”
“Do you know of Dr. Underhill’s case
here in Cincinnati?”
“That leading physician who became a
victim of the cocaine habit? Yes. His
case was a very sad one, but the habit can
be cured. I have rescued many a man
from a worse condition.”
"What, worse than Dr. Underhill’s?”
“Indeed, sir, far so. Justin M. Hall, A.
M., M. D., president of the state board of
health of Iowa, and a fumed practitioner,
and Alexander Neil, M. D., professor ot
surgery in the Columbus Medical College,
and president of the Academy of Medicine,
a man widely known, Rev. W. P. Clancey,
of Indianapolis, Ind., from personal expe
rience iu opium eating, etc., can tell you
of the kind of success our form of treat
ment wins, and so can H. C. Wilson, for
merly of Cincinnati, who is now associated
with me.”
“Would you mind letting our readers
into the secret of your methods ?”
“Well, young man, you surely have a
good bit of assurance to ask a man to give
his business away to the public; but 1 won’t
wholly disappoint you. 1 have treated
over 20,000 patients. In common with
many eminent physicians, I, for years,
made a close study of the effects of the
habits on the system and the organs which
they most severely attack. Dr. Hall, Dr
Neil and Mr. Wilson, whom I have men
tioned, and hundreds of others, equally as j
expert, made many similar experiments j
on their own behalf. We each found that '
these drugs worked most destructively in
the kidneys and liver; in fact, finally de
stroyed them. It was then apparent that I
no cure could be effected until those or
gans could be restored to health. We re
cently exhausted the entire range of medi
cal science, experimenting with
all known remedies for these
organs, and as the result of
these close investigations we all substan
tially agreed, though following different
lines of inquiry, that the most reliable,
scientific preparation was Warner’s safe
cure. This was the second point in the
discovery. The third was our own private
form of treatment, which, of
course, we do not divulge to the public.
Every case that we have treated first with
Warner’s safe cure, then with our own
private treatment, and followed up again
with Warner’s safe cure for a few weeks,
has been successful. These habits can’t
he cured without using it, because the
habit is nourished and sustained in the
liver and kidneys. The habit can be kept
up in moderation, however, if free use be
also made, at the same time, of that great
remedy.”
“Yes, it is a world famed and justly cel
ebrated specific! Like many other physi
cians, I used to deride the claims made for
it, but ' know now for a fact that it is the
world’s greatest blessing, having sovereign
power over hitherto incurable diseases of
the kidneys and liver, and when I have
said that, young man, I have said nearly
everything, for most diseases originate in,
or are aggravated by, a depraved condi
tion of the kidneys.”
“People do not realize this, because,
singular as it may Mem, the kidneys may
he in a very advanced stage of decomposi
tion, and yet owing to the fact that there
are but few nerves of sensation iu them
the subject will not experience much
pain therein. On this account thou
sands of people die every year
of kidney disease unknowingly. They have
so-called disorders of the head, of the heart
and lungs and stomach, and treat them in
vain, for the real cause of their misery is
derauged kidneys, and if they were re
stored to health the other disorders would
soon disappear.”
Dr. Stephens’ experience, that can he
confirmed by many thousands whom he
has treated, adds only more emphasis to
the experience of many hundreds of thou
sands all over the world, that the remedy
lie refers to is without any doubt the most
beneficent discovery ever given to human
ity. _
Cold Comfort.
During fair week in St. Louis the people
from the rural districts in attendance on
the fair were insulted by the Globe-Demo
crat by being sneeringiy alluded to as
“hayseeds,” “clod-hoppers,” “snipe-hunt
ers” and “pumpkin raisers,” who had
come “to St. Louis to see how civilization
was progressing.” Such insults must be
cold comfort for the “rural roosters” who
read that paper.—Roclieport Commercial.
A TIHKLY UKSCUK
From a Most KcurFwl Dentil.
The Wilmington (Del.) Morning News of
September 8th, 188H, gives the following j
histo y of a prominent business man’s i
plucky fight and terrible experience with !
that muck-dreaded and always to be feared j
disease, cancer:
Some five years ago a barber accidentally
cut my lower lip whiles having me. The
E ain was very slight, “and for some time j
ardly gave it a passing thought. Finally j
it assumed the condition of a wart, which
refused to heal entirely with all my < Hurts ■
in that direction. I went to one of the
leading physicians in Philadelphia, who
treated me three months f r cancer, and I
! sent me home cured, as he said. Hut I I
. was apprehensive. I was told by a uroini-
nent physician of Wilmington that I would
surely die of cancer. About that time I I
' heard of the wonderful cures effected by
| Swift’s Specific, known as S. S. S. 1 was
I ‘Differing with perfect nervous in ostfation.
I After I had given S. S. S. a fair trial this
all disappeared, and I felt like myself
again.
! I continued to take the Swift’s Specific
medicine regularly for several months,and
before I could realize how it came about, I
was a new man again. In fact I was cured
—never felt better in my life, and from that
time up to the present J have |never felt
the least evidence of a return of my old
trouble. The cancer disappeared over a
year ago, but I refrained from making tho
cure public before this, as I wished to be
certain that I was •urea. My condition
is perfectly normal; I have none of those
annoying symptoms which followed e ery
other treatment ured. I honestly believe
that I have been cured of one of the worst
afflictions that can be visited upon the
human family, and by the medicine known
as S. S. S. I do not wish my name to .ap
pear in this connection, for business
reasons only, bu you are at liberty to give
my name and address to any fellow-suf
ferer, or anyone interested in the cause of
humanity. _ ,
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases
mailed free. 0 . .
The Swift Specific Co., Drawer 3, At
lanta, Ga. t
Two New Tints.
The latest two purples are called sunset
and licorice.
An Town to Lome.
When Indianapolis had nine railroad
outlets it was known fur and wide as a
great ruilroad centre. Fort Worth has
eight now, will have the ninth within a
month and the tenth is offered to the city.
Fort Worth is the railroad centre of Texas.
—Fort Worth Gazette.
4 Frau runt Breath and IVnrly Tooth
are easily attained, and those who fail to
avail themselves of the means should not
complain when accused of gross neglect.
SOZODONT will speedily eradicate the
cause of a foul breath, beautifying and pre
serving the teeth to tho oldest age.
tu tli sat se&w
MAUKKTM IIY TKI.KGUAPH.
linn mini.
NISW YORK MONEY MARKET.
New York, October 22.—-Noon -Stocks dull
and steady. Money active, 6. Exchange—lone:
at $l.S() v< $4.89%, shert at $4.83 V $4.HI. State
bonds dull mi l steady. Government bonds are
steady.
New York, October 22.—Exchange at $4.80' ..
Money 7 <i 2 per cent. Government bonds dull;
new four per cents 128%; three per cents 99%.
State bonds dull.
SUB-TREASURY BALANCES.
Gold in the Sub-Treasury *125,959,000; currency
$22,808,000.
STOCK MARKET.
New York, October 22.—The following were
closing quotations of the stock exchange:
Ala class A 2 to 5.... 104 CAN 06
do class B 5s 109 |N. O. Pac. lsts 77
Oa G’s N. Y. Central 113
Ga S’s mortgage.... 109 | Norfolk&W’u pre.. 44
N CO’s 123 Northern Pacific... 28%
do4‘s 97% do preferred 63%
S C con Brown 109 .Pacino Mail 63'..
84:«
Rich. & Alleghany 8'.,
Virginia consols... 06 1 Richmond «& Dan.. 140
Chesap’ke <& Ohio 10 |Rioh & W. P. Ter’l 33
Chicago & N. W
do preferred
Del. A Lack
Erie
East Tenn
Lake Shore
L. AN
Memphis & Char.
Mobile & Ohio....
Rock Island 125
140 St. Paul 94
14>' 11 do preferred 121
35% Texas Pacific 20%
13 'Union Pacific 01%
93 IN. J. Central 48-%
54% j Missouri Pacific 114%
39 " Western Union.... 76%
16 I "‘Bid. g Asked.
Colton.
Liverpool,October 22.—Noon.—Cotton market
steady and there is a fair demand; mid
dling uplands 5 5-10d, Orleans 5 7-16d; sales were
10,009 bales—for speculation and export 1000
bales.
Receipts 16,100 bales—all American.
Futures opened steady, at the following quo
tations :
October 5 10-0 Id
October and November 5 5-Old
November and December 1 6‘2-04d
December and .January 1 02-04.1
January and February 4 62-r»ld
February and March I 02-04(flil 03-G4d
March and April ti 5-6ld
April and May 5 3-64d
May and June 5 0-61d
Tenders of deliveries lor to-day's clearing 00
bales of new docket and 00 bales of old docket.
Sales of the week 60,000
American 47,000
Speculators took 2.000
Exports took 4,200
Forwarded from ship’s side direct to spin-
37,000
2 p. m.—Sales
American.
to-(lay include 8,900 bales of
Futures: October delivery, 5 ll-01d sellers;
October and November, 5 l-04d buyers; November
and December. 4 02-64d buyers; December and
Janury, 4 02-04(1 sellers; January and February,
4 02-04d sellers; February and March, 4 63-01d
sellers; March and April,5 l-61d sellers; Apnl
and May, 5 3-01 d value; May and June, 5 5-Old
buyers. Futures quiet.
London, October 22.—Imports into Great Brit
ain of cotton during the past week were.. 48,403
Exports 9,108
Imports for the year this far have been . 2,073,991
Exports lor same period 316,054
New York, October 22.—Cotton quiet, steady;
sales 400 bales; middling uplands at at 9%cj
Orleans 9 7-16c.
Consolidated net receipts 45,085 bales; exports
Great Britain 17,199,continent 14,904, France 5216,
stock 545,456.
Weekly net receipts 612, gross 48,704; exports
to Great Britain 13,146, to France 1691, continent
1299; sales 2220; sales to ^pinners ; forwarded
—; stock SKI,131. H
NEW YORK FUTURES.
New York, October 22—Net rcceiutn 00, gross
1,733. Futures closed steady; sales 97,200 bales,
as follows:
Green &Co., in their report on cotton futures,
says: Under continued depressing influences
unloading of long cotton was fiiiler and more
general, with another break of some 4'tv5 poiuts
m pretty much all months. Liverpool contrib
utes to the weakness, but the most decided in
fluence was the large movement of supplies and
continued pressure to realize from the south —
the interior towns in particular showing increas
ed anxiety in this respect, modifying rates to
closer parity with those of the ports.
TOTAL NET RECEIPTS AT TI4E PORTS.
New York, October 22.—The following are
the total net receipts of cotton at all ports .since
September 1, 1H86:
Galveston ,.. 225,433
New Orleans 240,080
Mobile 30,551
Savannah 250,583
Charleston 130,013
Wilmington 41,271
Norfolk 89,538
Baltimore 4,430
New York 1,051
Boston 1,322
Newport News
Philadelphia 2,217
West Point 32,061
Brunswick 5,730
Pori Royal 3,436
Pensacola 4,030
Indianola
Total 1,082,152
Galveston, October 22.—Cotton firm; niid-
lings 8 13-10c; net receipts 7076, gross 7070; sales
652; stock 71,187; exports to continent 00, Great
Britain 00.
Weekly net receipts 40,986, gross 10,986: sales
8898: exports to continent 4110, to Great Britain
21,552.
Norfolk, October 22.—Cotton steady; mid
dlings at 8%c; net receipts 5523, gross 5523; sales
—: stock 31,918; exports to Great Britain 00.
Weekly net receipts 31,291, gross 31,291; sales
10.320, exports to Great Britain 7038, to continent
00T
Baltimore, October 22.—Cotton easy: mid
dlings 9c; net receipts 490, gross 1117; sales 199,
spinners —; stock 5325; exports to Great Brit
ain 00. to continent 00.
Weekly net receipts 2233; gross 7702; sales 486;
to spinners 372; exports to Great Britain 1623,
continent 891.
Boston, October 22.—Cotton quiet; middlings
9 7-10c; net receipts 60, gross 221; sales 00; stock
—; exports to Great Britain 00.
Weekly net receipts 030, gross 11,910; sales 00;
exports to Great Britain 1013.
Wilmington, October 22. - Cotton steady; mid
dlings 8%c; net receipts 1425, gross 1425; sales
00; slock 24,340; exports to Great Britain 00.
Weekly net receipts 7,957, gross 7,957; sales 0;
exports (Jre.it Britain 1128.
Philadelphia, October 22—Cotton dull; mid
dlings 9%c; net receipts 65, gross 129; sales 00;
stock 8233: exports to Great Britain 00.
Weekly net receipts 982, gross 8204; exports to
Great Britain 1743.
Savannah, Oa., October 22. -Cotton easy;
middlings 8 9-10c; net receipts 8855, gross 8855;
sales 2450; stock 112,507; exports to Great Britain
00.
Weekly net receipts 51,100, gross 64,532; sales
13,70f; exports to Great Britain 12,009, France (X),
continent 11,850.
New Orleans, October 22.--Cotton market
steady; middlings 8%c; net receipts 7052, gross
8150; sales 5250; stock 118,722; exports to Great
Britain 00, to continent 00.
Weekly net receipts 68,331 } gross 80,461; sales
25,000; exports to Great Britain 19,158; continent
21,387, France 47.
Mobile, October 21.—Cotton market quiet;
middlings 8%c; net receipts 1026, gross 1131; sales
600; stock 11,827.
Weekly net receipts 15,197, gross 10,369; sales
4050; exports to continent 00.
Memphis, October 22—Cotton steady; middlings
at 8%c: receipts5311; shipments 1700; salej 5000:
stock 50.023. »
Week!' net receipt-t 35,331; shipments 17,450;
sales 28,500, to spinners 00. *
Augusta, Ga., October 22. Cotton qttfet; mid
dlings 8%(v receipts 2102. shipments OJ; sales
1687; •stock 11.503.
Weekly receipts 11,810; shipments 8990; sales
10,494—spinners 00.
Charleston. S. C., October 22.—-Cotton steady:
middlings 8‘„c; net receipts 3005, gross receipts
3093: sales 000: st ick 00.116: exports to Great
Britain o<*. to continent 00. France 00.
Weekly net receipts 20.107. gross 20,107; sales
9000; exports to Great Britain 1201, France 4170,
continent 3979.
Montgomery, Ala., October 22.—Cotton dull;
middlings 8'..c; weekly receipts 73-10; shipments
0955; stock this > ear 9570, lust year 12,014; sales
6655.
Macon, October 22 Cotton steady; middling
8%; receipts 3809; sales3903; stuck this year 4240,
lust year 5081; .shipments 3873.
Nashville, October 22.—Cotton steady; mid
dlings 8%c; receipts 3351; shipments 50: sales
2171, spinners220;stock this year 752, last year
3819
Port Royal, October 22—Weekly net receipts
1541; stock 2310.
Selma, October 22.—Cotton easy; middlings
8%c; weekly receipts 5027; shipments 4172; stock
6586.
Rome, October 22.—Cotton steady: middlings
8%c; weekly receipts 3934; shipments 3551; stock
2959.
Atlanta, Ga., October 22.—Cotton rece pis 1279
bales; middlings 8%o.
l*rovlMion««.
Chicago, October 22.—Cash prices were as
follows: Flour steady and firm southern winter
wheat $1 15^4 50. Mess pork $8 90. Lard
$5 70. Short rib sides,loose,$6 80. Dry salted shoul
ders. boxed, $5 15(n 5 50, short clear sides, boxed,
?0 85(<i 0 90.
Futures opened and dosed at follow*ug prices:
Highest. Lowest. Closing.
Mess Pork—October....! 9 00 !8 72% !h 90
November 9 02% 8 75 8 90
December. 9 00 8 75 8 90
January... 9 87% 9 07% 9 so
Lard—October 6 75 5 67% 6 70
November 5 77% 5 07% 6 70
December 5 85 6 so 5 ho
January 5 95 5 87 % 5 92%
Short ribs—October 0 87'.J 6 87% 0 92%
January 5 00
St. Louis, October 22.—Flour quiet and steady-
choice $3 25(4)3 40, family $2 55 <i 2 70. Provisions
flrmernndin good demand: Mess pork $9 37%.
lard luglier—$5 05hi>6 70; bulk meats—boxed lots,
long clear sides $0 Gu.dO 05: short rib sides $0 65«»
6 70, short clear sides $(> 95 ( 7 09; bacon long
clear $7 30«'i 7 50, short rib sides $7 25, short clear
sides$7 00'»c7 62%.
Cincinnati, October 22. Flour, market quiet
family $3 30m 3 60. Pork quiet -$9 50. Lard
scarce—$5 75. Bulk meat i quiet-short, rib sides
$0 75. Bacon quiet short rib sides $7 37%, short
clear sides $7 75.
Urain.
ho, October 22. - Cash prices were
Wheat, No. 2 red at 75%c. Corn 35
Chic
follows
Outs 2f
Futures ranged and cloned at following prices:
Highest. Lowest. Closing.
Wheat—October
November...
Deedmher ...
January
May
Corn — October
November....
December....
.January
May..
(3 :1 hC.
JiS*
30! M c.
40_ : ‘c.
77c.
77 ,e.
83 %c.
35',c.
35%c.
37c.
37 1 |c.
44*,e.
October
January
February
March-
9 28 100(4)9 27-100
tu."}
•July
August
9 61-lG0to 9 02-100
Oats -October 26 ,
November 25%c. 21 %c. 25%o.
December 20%o. 20c. 2fl%c.
May 30 %c. 80%C. 80% c.
St. Louis, October 22. — Wheat, market
higher — No. 2 red, cash 75%c, November
74\|4i»fct76%c. Corn stronger but quiet—
No. 2 mixed, cash 33'di33%c, November 33%mj
33%c, January c. Oats firm—No. 2 mixed,
cash 25%c, November 20c bid.
Cincinnati, October 22. — Wheat strong —
No. 2 red 77%4y7Hc. Corn easier—No. 2 mixed
38c. Oats in moderate demand — No. 2 mixed
27%c.
Sugar an<l Coffee.
New York, October 22. — Coffee mark t
firm— Rio, in cargoes, common to prime,
ll%c. Sugar steady—C 4 : %'4)4%c, off A 5 3-10,h)
5%c, yellow 4(<£4%c
'Chicago,October 22.—Sugar — standard A
5% c. ,
Cincinnati, October 22.—Sugar easy—New Or
leans 4%@5%c.
ItoNin anil TiirtM‘nlSno.
New York. October 22. -Rosin steady—strained
?j 003 i 07%. Turpentine firm-37%m.37%o.
.Savannah, October 22. - Turpentine firm—
3*1 %c; sales 100 barrels. Rosin firm—good strained
90o;e-$l 05; sales 00 barrels.
Wilmington, October22.—Turpentine steady—
34%c. Rosin quiet—airained 75c: good 80c. Tur
firm—$1 30; crude turpentine firm -hards $1 00,
yellow dip $1 90, virgin !1 90.
Charleston, October 22. -Turpentine firm—
34%c. Rosin firm-good strained 80c.
(Jotton Moetl Oil.
New York, October 22.—Cotton seed oil, 22$
26c for crude, 38m ; 39c for refined.
Wool and IIIdeM.
New York, October 22. -Hides firm-New
Orleans selected, 45 and 60 pounds, 9%'qilOc;
Texas selected, 50 and 60 pounds, 10<#10%c.
New York,October 22.—Wool firm—domestic
fleece 30(4)35c, Texas 9m*25c.
WlaiNky.
Chicago, October 22.—Whisky $1 08.
St. Louis, October 22.—Whisky firm—$1 13.
Cincinnati, October 21.—'Wbtaky steady-$1,18.
IreightN.
New York, October 22. -Freights to Liverpool
steady—cotton per steamer 3-16d; wheat per
steamer 4%d.
BAO BLOOD,
Scrofulous, Inherited and Con
tagions Humors,
Witli Loss of Hair. Glandular Swellings. Ulcer
ous Patches in the Throat and .Mouth, Abscessed,
Tumors Carbuncles, Blotches, Sores, Scurvy,
Wasting of the Kidneys and Urinary Organs,
I )ropsy, iOniemia, Debility, < 'll runic Rheumatism,
(Jonstipati
from an in
Blood, arc
SOLVENT, t
Misled by .•
TIC! HA SO.
nally
ind Pih
osl d
overfilled c«
ed by the <
d Purifier, i
idition of the
in rurc n und T
Beautifier, exter-
< llton 1.04 S I M IiltS.
Jumes E. Richardson. Custom House, New Or
leans, on oath says: In 1870 Scrofulous Ulccra
broke out on my body until 1 wus a 111a.-.- of cor
ruption. Everything known to the medical facul
ty was tried in vain. 1 been
uld not lift my bands to my bead, could
t turn in bed ; was in constant pain and looked
upon life
yeo
use
Nd
elief
1 to before U. S,
OXi: Of Tin: WiHtSi CASKS.
We have been selling your < 'ctici’ra Remedies
for years, and have the first complaint yet to re
ceive from a purchaser. One of tlie worst cases
of Scrofula I oversaw wus cured by the use of
five bottles of ('uticura Resolvent, Cuticura and
Cuticurn Soup. Tlie Soap takes the “cake” us a
medicinal soap.
TAYLOR A TAYLOR. Druggists,
Frankfort, Kan.
Baby Humors,
KIDNEY PAINS
And thnt weary, lifeless, all-gone sen
sation ever present with those of ii.-
flanicd kidneys, weak back and 101ns,
uching hips and sides, overworked or
it by disease, debility or dissipation, are
relieved in one minute and speedily cured by tlie
Cuticura Anti-Pain Pi.aster, a new, original,
elegant and infallible antidote to pain and in
flammation. At all druggists, 25c; live for $1.00, or
of Potter Drug and Chemical Co.. Boston.
GEORGIA, MUSCOGEE COUNTY.
•Whereas, M. M. Moore, administrator of the
estaU of David Z. Ward, deceased, makes appli
cation for leave to sell all t..e real estate belong*
ingto said deceased in the State of Georgia;
These are, therefore, to cite all persons con*
cerned, kindred and creditors, to show cause, if
any they have, within the time prescribed by
law, why leave to sell said property should not
be granted to said applicant.
Witness my official signature this October 6th,
18H6. F. M. BROOKS,
oct5 oaw4wl Ordinary.
& CO.
AT THEIR
New Stand.
OUR MAGNIFICENT STOCK
—OF—
Fall Millinery
Now on Exhibition.
All I he novelties in Felts,
Astrakhan anefr Plush Hats
can be found at our store.
We are displaying the most
eleganl line ot Fancy Feathers,
Birds’ Wings, etc., ever shown
in this market.
Special bargains in Ostrich
Tips and Pinnies.
25 Dozen Misses' and Chil
dren's Trimmed School Hats
at from 50 cents up.
Our Pattern Hats are now
on exhibition.
& COi
M. Joseph's Old Stand.
Absolutely Piiro and. ijnndulterated.
HOSPITALS,
CURATIVE INSTITUTIONS,
INFIRMARY,
Ano Prescuioiid uy Physicians vciiYWHene.
CURE3
CONSUMPT> N,
HEMORRHA jES
And nil M'nstinu J)'i. :rsos;
DYSPEPSIA, INDJG v “>TION,
IViALARIA.
-PORE SOTUI.&HT
. For the Sick, Invalids,
CONVALESCING PATIENTS,
AGED PEOPLE,
Weak and Debilitated Women.
For cnlo by Druggists, Grocery and Bottlers.
Pile©, One hollar J»er llottle.
rr* -•'.! ! only In Honied and none prnnln
rept hiii'Ii nH bear our trad o-inurk In!n4 ol tlie old die
uh above, and tho iinmo ofroiNpHny blown In bottle.
tyM'i f mHeimtoftlio Ito. ky Moiii.NIi.h (except
T' liitnrle-i imablo to nroriire It from their deal* .
call have l ilt Do/.cn Kent, in plnin cnae, ni,marked, Ex-
pirns dial^eti prepaid, by rcriiittiiiK Mix Dollars to
T he Duffy Malt Whiskey Do., Baltimore,Md.
■Fend2~c<mt tlrnnp for our L’hfailh>q f'nunumption Form-
ula,conn(nllng nrtncipaHu oj ran- brrfM. uW
/.*•;/. h’nnallu valuable for ntiwt'itiun, 4y»jJ
recover u from all Waul lug Pi cam *. It ran b> . .
by any huiuiekeener. AlHnqufries concerning thin formula
and the tme of our tvhlekey tn any dlucate, will bt cheer*
fully answered by *’ J '* ’ " ' *
Dutly’s Pure Malt Whiskey
and
Duffy’s Formula.
For DyapepKia and Indigestion.
34ft 1’ark Avrxot?, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Dear Sirs—I have bad dygpppdti for 11
reconurn luled .’
eight
clues
find
Dear 8lrs--A.il Imj pv
Formula ts of the gmttes
dyspepsia. I have hi
Dufly’s i'urc Malt Whiskey
itiMy It cures where ail
thankful to you for It: have
and niv friends are icing It.
as. KVKLINK TARLTON.
< and have tried pii
s whoiiv unsatisfactory, i
Pure Mall Whiskey a most
aiunble to those «uf.
L>. W. MORGAN.
k, Wii
Rkkdsville, Wis., .June ft, 1R8A.
say that your Duffy’s
‘ value as a cure rot
. . . ubled with indiges
tion for about four years, and after using on«
bottle of your DuflVs Pure Milt Whiskey,
with the other Ingredients named, I teel much
better. J. E. ME ANY.
629 Virginia Avk., S.W., W
Duffy
nla. 1 was a great
und severe pains lq
>29 • inoiviA Avk., S.W., Washington, D. O
1 have Improved rapidlv since taking you*
huffy’s Pure Malt Wlu.-key and DulIVs Form-
have it 111
r from indigestion
esi and back, and
h-' ly disappeared
in four
it is ai:
There i
I’ll d.
taking both and are do
ni-ii t. I have gained 11 pound!
It doe- not seem possible, bn1
to Dully’- Pure Malt Whiskey.
PlULADRLPHTA DEPOT. 1
umastkk Dkpaktmknt U. 8. A.,v
Schuylkill Arsenal. )
•n T am a firm believer In Duffy'i
Pup* Malt Whiskey. It has made me a nefft
being a chronic sufferer from dys-
Gentlen.
Pure J ■ ‘
pepsin
THOMAS H. MCGINN1SS.
East Orange, N J.
Dear Sirs -1 have used Duffy’s Pure Mall
Whiskey and Dully’s Formula for disordered
stomach, and have found them to be all vou
Claim. I feel so much better that after taking
w taking anythin
have recommended them toothers, who have
Unproved. t> S. M. LONG.
• Agent.
Real Estate and Insurai
Consumption. liyyprpxiu Imlujestion, M ilaricb,
General Debility and all Wasting Diseases. In
addltum to the. tonir effect of our whiskey* it fnr-
msbes uneqnllrd blond-forming material, whereby
the Weight and Stretigth are increased. It fs
made in accordance with a specially prepared
formula and consists principally of Duffy's /*urf
Malt Whiskey and Raw Beefsteak combined
liquid form, the nutritious elements of the beef
being extracted without conking or chemical
changes by a new process, mol die ’ most
palatable air* > • -n