Newspaper Page Text
<§>#)CiE0m
flu Telegrapt ani Messenger.
OCTOBER 81 1879.
Tba director! of the Oity of Glasgow
THnV, who fait* Joit been relaxed from
prison, were kept busy at braeb and me,
making daring the term of their confine*
sent.
—The greet Seat Birer bridge enterprise,
to oonneot New York end Brooklyn, baa al
ready ooct $11,078,800, and the trustees want
$1,700,000 more to complete it, which they
fMnir they oan do in eighteen monthe.
—The trooseen of the yoong Qaeen ef
Spain, dee Ignats, to deeoiibed by Farie pa-
pen are exquisite. It tnofudee a number of
dreeeea devised from the fashions of the
time of Xante SB- At the wedding meat
■he will wear a drees of doth of diver, with
g-rimde brilliant with myrtle, orahgefloware,
andlilUea.
—The Springfield Bepnblloan eaye i
“ Against any bnt the beet Bepnblloan can
didate Maeeechneetto le a Bayard StaSe.
The Woreheater Democrats, representing am
orerwhelmiDg majority of the Democratic
voters of this Commonwealth, show hard
sense in choosing Bayard deligates.”
Sonramw as it may eeem, the agrionltaral
prodnote of one year amount to nearly, as
ranch m value aa the products of oor- mines
sinoe IMS. The estimated yield ef the
mines daring twenty-seven years, 1810 to 75
was $1,817,000,000- In 1877 the total vdoe
of the agricaltoal production of leading Ma
ples was $1,504,000,000.^- ->•
r • ..0 «
—Aioim Inxon Mux, to maimfaetaxs
several varieties Of cotton cloth, is projects
od »t Augusta, Qa., and large subeeripttone
to the stock of the oompany have already
been made. Augusta promisee to beoome
the Dowell of the Sontu, and Its newspapers
are enthoalaatio over its rapid development
as a manufaetoriag city.
—At the Palaoe Hotel, Ban Brandeco, Ban-
day evening, Gen. Grant was tendered a
farewell banquet by the oitlzena. The deo*
orations of the banquet hall were of the
inoet elaborate description. The tablee pre
sented an elegant appearance, and the menu
was engraved on solid silver, intended to
■erve tSegueate as eonveoirs of the oaee-
skin. That prepared for Gen. Grant wae
of massive gold.
Tax Pstnoci Fbsb.—Bov. Ur. Sears, agent
of the Peabody educational fond, in a letter
to the superintendent ef pablio instruction
of North Carolina, stales that the schools of
that State need not expect farther aid from
this fond. The trustees of the fond decid
ed at their test meeting that they had at
tained their'premary object of having the
Bouthein States espouse the cause ol pop-
alar education, and they will now devote
their diminished income to elevating schools
already eeublished, by helping supply, more
competent teachers.
—Washington ipeoial says: Advioes from
Mississippi Indicate xnnoh interest in the ap
proaching contest for a senator to suooeed
Brace, whose term Of offloe expiree in March,
1881. Down to within a few daye put
Messrs. Singleton and Barksdale have been
the candidates. The announcement of Gen.
Chalmers’ candidacy puts a new face on the
affair. Bis Congressional district, one ot
the largest in the State, will anpport him
with unanimity, while be developed mooh
strength all over the Bute, and he is now re
garded u the leading candidate.
That Nxxx Was.—General N P. Banks,
of Massachusetts, has recently made a po
litical speech in the intsceat of the Stalwarts
of that State, in whioh he declares that an
other war ia imminent between the Smith
and tbs North. In Minding to the speech,
the Washington Poet makes the following
him®-trust;
Gen. Banks’ prediction of immediate war
has not affected National securities to any
perceptible extant. The General’s prophe
cies were never half so injurious to the pnb-
lio credit ns Me generalship.
A Txamouxaz Mob—A Fredrick town,
Ohio, dispatch of Iho 23th to the Herald
"Bn eon women maro’oed to Kelley’s sa
loon to-day and beat in the door and win
dows with hatchets, and destroyed every
thing within, including several barrels of
MilooiB and-beer, cases, casks, bottles, jogs
demijohns, oonntere, stove and all the
fixtures. The building is a total wreck.
O’Oonner’s .saloon was also visited and all
the liquor destroyed. Drug stores were no
tided to remove their liquors before Monday
or they would be treated like the others.
The women will be arrested on Monday.
They have a strong money broking. Great
excitement prevails.
Tax Louisiana Oaepaiox.—Senator Kel-
[ bad an interview Sunday lMt with Sen
etaiy Evarta on the subject of Iouieiana
olitice. He made a very pieeelng request
of Mr. Everts to eome to Louisiana next
nth and speak in the cimpafgn. He told
. Evarte that there was no doubt th9 Be-
pubhoana wonld oaryr^^ £££
r. Evarte eald be would like very much to
i to Louisiana and wonid do so if he coaid
hia arrangement]. The Bepnbiioan
ommlttee of Louiiiana have determined to
ovite Blaine, Garfield and twenty or
(core other prominent .Republicans to take
■ in the campaign, and some of them
1 bs requeeted to aUy there until the aleo-
ion is over and the votes counted.
—The wealthiest man in Kalamazoo, M'ch.
i approached in (he street by an excited
is boy, who laid: “Mister, my sister ia
[. the flume, over there If yon'll get her out
give yon a dollar.” The man rescued the
^periled child. A few daya afterward the
, >y entered bis office and pnt on hia desk a
•liar in small coin, having broken open a
: y bank and sold a hobby horse to raise
e amount. But, unlike meet wealthy
| Bn, this ono in Kalamizoo wae not penu
f ins, and the f4lthfaintu of the little bey
deeming bis pronfiie made such an Im
on on his mind that he handed back
Jf of the money to the little fellow, and
..mediately invited the gang into the office
|go and have something with the balance
„ the bill.
PopDLixios orNxwTesx An erro
3oe impression seems to prevail in regard
e foreign papulation of New York Oity.
s ooaunonly spoken of as a oity eubsUn
jy foreign, and many informed persons
ik the foreign papulation exoeeda the n&-
J 5 but thto it seems to cot true. The De
population exoeeda the foreign by fully
000. The common belief to that New
tk Oity there are 400,000 Irish, 200,000
mane, 25,000, French, and 15,009 Italians,
j oiarde and Cubans; but this to an exag<
ri ation. The cenaoa of 1870 put the for*
i population ef the eity as follows; Irish,
8W; English, 2i,C« | Icotob, 7,662; Ger.
■s, 151,216 ; French, 8,255; Italians. 2,-
; Austrians, 2,787; Poles, 2,393; Swiee,
’8; Hollanders, 1,187; Russians, 1,161.
> makes a total ef *08,974 a large nun-
cl foreigners, but sot as large by 200,C09
generally supposed. In 1870 there
18,072 colored persona la Hew York
L and there to no dcubl but that this
jber has largely inareased eince that
L The Chines a, teo, have added to
numbers very lugaly. In 1871) there
| only 11 in the eity, and now the number
jtlmaUd at 1,000. The exeees of women
jmen at the late seams was 28,000, and
Relieved the disproportion will be still
»r at the next oonsus. The census next
111 show a large increase of popola-
aevaral enrborban town* have been
within tha corporate limlta since 187
tho natural icarsaa* that has taken
Macons Monument to ear He
roic Dead.
Time and again have we sought,
through the oolamns of the TXLxanAM
to aid the noble work which yesterday
for the first time, having at length been
completed, and unveiled, displayed Its
shapely pm portion! to the admiring gau
of thoq—nda. The- present to a fitting
occasion, therefore, to call to rememb-
ranoe those who have mainly been inslru-
mental through many years of unceas
ing effort, in achieving thto great under
taking. And fimtand foremost, with up
lifted beaver let tu do honor to that grand
woman, now wall stxioken In yean, Mrs.
Winehip. Hera to a record which time
oan never dim, end eternity will bnt per
petuate : 1 ‘
In the terrible days of . the’late strag
gle for independence, when our gallant
soldiery braved unnumbered odds, and
apijt their heartto blood like water for the
oause so dear to m all, this estimable- lady,
abandoning the comforts of home, went
to oar army hospitals, and with skillful
hands and fervent prayers, mialetered to
the wants ot the wonnded and - dying.
Many a gallant Confederate in bto last
moments, when no wife, mother or
sweetheart was near to comfort him,
looked wistfully and gratefully Into the
street and pleeid face of this angel in hu
man shape, and blessed her with hie la
test breath. And then, when our people
had auocnmbed to the force of superior
numbers and the struggle was of er, behold
her again tenderly marking the grave,
of the fallen, and finally gathering np
their mortal remain*, and layiog them
away in the consecrated ground of oar
oemeteriea. Surely Mao on and Georgia
ha* reason to be proud of thto noble
Christian mother in IsreeL Bnt single-
handed the pious task oould never have
been accomplished, and it .needed no ef
fort to rally to her side all of the fair
daughters at Macon. Eagerly did they
oome forward, and joyfully and efficiently
bold np the hafidect Mrs! Winehip, their
president—faithfully find zealously co
operating with her in every plan for the
advancement ef the cherished object in
view. At length their efforts were erown-
ed with aaooee?, find yesterday witnessed
its fruition, amid the booming of cannon,
the tramp of oitizen soldiery, the in
spiring oratory of one of Maoon’a favor*
ite sons, and the deafening acclamations
of the multitude.
Nor should we forget to aeknowledge
the patriotic servioes ot the committee of
gentlemen who acted in conoert with the
ladies, and did so mneh to rid in the erec
tion of &e monument, force of them
meat generously contributed from thei c
ova purses large some to the glorious
ork, mnbaB of them were faithful and
unremitting in their exertions to promote
its progress. All honor then say we to
Messrs. L. N Whittle, John G. Card, T.
D. Tinsley, John P. Fort, L. B. Eoglish,
J. F. Grier and W. B. Bogera. To their
nervous hands was entrusted the execu
tive part of the work, and right skillfully
and well did they discharge the duty as
signed them.
All that eould be saved was saved in
the premises, and when anything was
lacking their munifleenoe supplied the
hiatus. This day, thanks to these gentle
men, the Confederate monument rears its
snowy column of Parian marble surmount
ed by the chaste statue of a noble private
soldier—representing the men who did
the work in the imminent deadly breach,
“a thing of beanty to be enjoyed for*
ever.'* ‘
Nor should we forget those ot the com
munity who sympathised with, and aided
in everyway possible this noble undertak-
tag whioh is emphatically the voluntary
offering of an impoverished people. All
did their duty and are entitled to the
meed of praise.
' And now, in eonelaaion, we cougratu
late oar citizens at the happy termina
tion of their labors, and the auspicious
dedication of the proud monument which
we trust will stand to tell to onr children’s
children the glorious story of the achieve
ments and snfferings of their ancestors
inbebrifjof Southern liberty.
The Confederate monument to au fait
accompli, and not one oent ot indebted
ness remains to be cancelled.
Irrepressible.
That’s what they say ot Bates, the Sa
vannah. mnsio man. Centennials can’l
km him and StateFaireare bi| harv.gi
J&ub/'eyeiy family a piano, and now
here he to again with mote instruments
than ever. Any men who will eome two
hundred miles with a train load of in
strnments ought to sell them, and we ar
glad that be to doing it. Hto stand toa
paoked yesterday, and sales averaged one
ustrnment every fifteen minutes. Bates
oan tell at $ glance what a purchaser
needs, and Inn jiffy will anit him exactly.
No long yarns -or humbug arguments,
but square business statements that give
buyers confidence at once. It’s worth a
visit to fiffishlfto seekim. Go and take
a square look at the iivest piano and or
gan man of our day and generation.
— mu
• jc»Personal. < • >»cu«rt
Mr. B. H. Biohardaon.of the Savannah
Nine*, wae fa the eity yesterday, enjoying
the oocadion. We regret fa the press of
matter and the crash ot engagements we
did not have the pleasure of meeting
him.
Hon. T. W. Grimes, of Columbus,
who commanded the Columbus Guards
yesterday, will remain fa the eily several
days. f- •
Lieutenant Cliff B. Grimes, of Colnnt>
bn*,to in the oity at the Lanier Home.
Mr. Lewis, of the Mmoeltfe, of Sparta,
is in the oity, at Kev. Walker Lewis’.
Mr. Herbert C. Hill and wife, of
Monticello, are in the city for the fair
week, at the reaidonoi.of Mr. W. B. Hill,
on Orange street, t- ■ 1
Judge W, L. Grioe, of Perry, Is in the
oity.
Frank Gordon, of the Timtt tod Planter,
is doing the Fair. He arrived last even
ic 0 -. . U —»o_ --1. ■ ■
NuLumso Usubt Laws—The Wane-
borough, Sonth Carolina,Newa[aaya the Geor
gia Legislature has passed a usury law re
stricting the rate to eight per sent, by con
tract, and seven per oent. when no con
tract i] made. The usual argument U now
going the rounds of the State that the banka
will elose and all capital will be ran away.
Gar neighbors aoross the Savannah need
not be alarmed. The earns talk was heard
in Sonth Carolina a oonpte of years ago. Bnt
tho banks all survived, the capitalists didn't
ran away, and borrowers oominued to pay
whatever the lenders demanded, Georgia
coney-lenders are not as shrewd as we
took them to be if they fail to discover the
means of nullifying the law. Indeed, gen
eral experience has shown that where- the
saury law oomee into oollialon with the capital
the former and not the latter ia pit to flight.
revival of prosperity and an Inereaae of
oonfldenoe will do much more than all the
usnsy laws in the world to redone the rate
of in ter sat
I ’Ed Stokes, the ebootar of Jim Fisk, ex
hibited a stable fall of feat hones at' the
N evade Btate fair.
fisittsiieeme, Darwinism and Fes-
•laiim.
This to the title ot a very quaint and
unique article fa the North AmericasI Be
vim tor November. It first treats ot
Bev. T. B. Malthas’ * eeeay on the prin
ciple of population, or ■ view of Us put
and present effects on human happiness,”
published fa 1798, upon whioh several
postulates of political economy have been
constructed.
The author imputes all of onr misery
and crime to the results ot over popula
tion and the consequent struggle for ex
istence. He eaye, “a Mind and Insatia
ble craving urges man to multiply his
kind, and the neoessary oonsequenoa of
gratifying this impulse to, tbit the fa*
oreaae of the population has a constant
tendency to outran the means of subsist
ence^* He proceed* t<>'enforce his argu
ment by statistics showing that popula
tion increases fa a geometrical ratio,
while at best the earth oaanol be made
to yield at a greater rate than an arith
metical ratio. Thto to owing to the lim
ited amount of arable toad on its anrfaoe,
the took of skill in those who cultivate it
and the variableness of the seasons.
For cxamplet A given rate of increase
between 1780 and 1803 added only 1,-
200,000 to the white population of the
country; between 1880 and 1840 the tame
rote of increase added 8,600,000. Again
onr population was more than doubled
between 1790 and 1880; and aleo be
tween 1820 and 1850. But the former
doubling added leas than five millions to
onr numbers, while the latter one added
over fen millions.
Bat this to only tone where food to
cheap and plentiful ns fa this country.
Where there to eoarcity end want, popu
lation as unerringly declines. This is
strikingly apparent fa the case of Ir$
land. In 1845 that toland contained
8.295,000 inhabitants. Then followed
the famine of 1846 7, and after the lapse
of ten years it wee reduced one-fourth,
and fa 1871 had dwindled to 5} millions;
Emigration had much, however, to do
with thto diminntion. Poverty mey be
arid to be the main cause of the
suffering and misery which reaote so
terribly upon human life. When the
famine waa fit its height fa Ireland ship
load after ahip load of food turned aside
from her ports, beoanse there was no
market for their breadstuff*.
It ia a curious foot, also, that in Swe
den, England and other European coun
tries, the rate of increase is six times
greater for the peasantry than of the
middle class, and over fourteen times
greater than that of the nobles. This
is owing fa'part to the entailed estates
and the law of primogeniture. The
artotoeraoy are loth to have large fami
lies, beoanse the yonnger children are nn<
provided for and must shift for them
selves.
We cannot afford space for the consid
eration ot what ofir author ha* to eayoon
oerning Darwinism, whioh at beat Is bnt
idle speculation, and substantiates noth
ing. But it to sad to refleet that the
great Baron Hamboltwas a foe to the
marriage relation, end a soepiio of the
worst description. He says, “I was not
born fa order to he the father
ot a family.- I regard marriage
as a ein, and the propagation
of children as a crime. It to my con
viction also that he to a fool, and* still
more a sinner, who takes upon himself
the yoke of marriage—a fool because he
thereby throws away his freedom, without
gaining a corresponding recompense;
sinner because he gives life to children,
without being able to give them the cer
tainty of happiness.”
How much does such wickedness and
folly sublraot from the symmetry and
neef atoms of this great man and philoso
pher? Better bad it bepn for him to
have been reared in obscurity, and SatfB
the bread of toil, than utter “each senti
ments, even from the standpoint 7 of the
lofty pinnsolo to whioh he had attained
fa the realms of science.
We conclude-by saying that thebible
is the only gnide- afid true counsellor in
the premises. Marriage is -a divine In
stitution which underlies ail real happi
ness, and greatly promotes virtue in this
life. And not even the combine"
attacks of oil the infidels, free
lovedisoipies, and dissolute soientiste on
... ..... ,uti puiars of that sooial
fabrio which to the foundation of the
family relation and which was ordained by
Jehovah himself.
BY TELEGRAPH.
Adah kiehmond.
All who love fine music, and wish to
see one of.the prettiest opera performer*
o be seen in the South will attend tbe
performance of Adah Bichmondat Bal
aton Hall this evening,
’ aaa *
Lows ox, Oot. 29.—The daily News
thinks Parliament will be dissolved be
fore tbe end of tbe present year, for the
reason that tbe resale of tbe new regis
trations are very favorable to the liber
als. As these registrant ns do not go into
effeot until the beginning of next year,
immediate dissolution would deprive the
Liberals of benefit thereof. The Nine*
also mentions other facts whioh it regards' 1
significant of the Government’s intention
to dissolve Parliament at an early day.
LdxBok, Oot. 29.—A dispatch to the
Standard from Kushi, announces the ar
rival there of a convoy front* Shutargor-
dan. The officer to command states there
hoe been hard fighting at the latter
plaee for several days, and that many of
tbe enemy had been killed. The enow
to already beginning to fall in the hill
districts.
A Paris correspondent of the Timtt
reports that everything foreshadows a
change, and Indies tea that the days of
If. Woddfagton’s ministry are numbered.
Without giving any particular reason it
dtolares it to be hto opinion that the ma
jority of the Deputies will vote against
the ministry, and adds it to considered
most probable that M. De Fescloet, now
minister of public works, will be the
fnture prime minister.
The Ddiiy Tdegraph, fa its finaneial
artiole, says: “Private telegrams received
fa thto eity confirm the report of the cap
ture Of the Peruvian iron olad Hoasoar.
One telegram is understood to assert that
the Haas oar orew were all mseiaored.
The HoasOar was captured by .Admiral
Coehrane and another Chilian iron clad,
whioh placed tlje Huoanar-between two
fires, and compelled her to surrender,
after aUthrlM vueSele were seriously dam-
aged.” w t'/-' 1> »jeV ■
A dispatch from Borne to the Daily
Newt saya: “Cardinal Manning will leave
London for Boose on the 6th of Novem
ber to eedeavor ro win the assent of the
’Vatican to the long eoheme, whioh by the
admitting of certain changes fa the exter
nal organisation of the Gatholio Church
fa England, will facilitate the return to
Catholioiam of important groups of Eng
lish Protestants.
Bgohxstxb, Na# Took, Oct. 29.—-
Oaurtoey is not satisfied with the arti
cles ot agreement submitted by Hanlan,
and has returned them unsigned. Han
lan wants the conditions of roo* to be
playorpey. The Union & Advtrtiter,
publishes a six oolumn statement by
Hsbbell, Courtaey’s judge atChatanqna,
exonerating Courtney and explaining his
previous failures. Tbe Hop Bitters com
pany publish a letter to Biaikie, declin
ing to plaoe money in hto hunds as re
quested by Etonian, giving reasons there
for.
Dxraorr, Ootober 29.—The steamer
Amazon, of the Northwest Transportation
Company, with fifty passengers onboard,
was wreeksd to-day on the bar near the
entrance of the harbor of Grand Haven,
Michigan. The passengers were landed
fa a lifesaving oar. The steamer to rn
total loia.
Mxkthu. October 28.—Camp Father
Mathewe was broken np this afternoon.
The people in the camp formed aprocea
eion and marched to St. Bridget’s Csth-
olio Churoh, where services were held
and tbe beneaiotion pronounced. Fath-
era Kelley, Qolnn and Watoh officiated.
The undertakers report one Gtterment
to-day—Hepey Green, who died last
night. The Howards have hod no calls
for nurses in the city. Or. W. E, Rog
ers and a nurse leave to morrow for Har
rison station, Mias., fa response to an.ap-
peal received by the Howards thto af
ternoon,the sick person being T. A. Grow,
The telegram does not state whether hip
sickness to yellow fever or not,
Nxw Yobk, Ootober 29 —The Custom
House officers this morning, in inspect
ing the cargo and baggage .on board the
steamer Bahama, just arrived from Bar>
badoes, found a large sealed tin box
left unclaimed by-fine of her passengers
in his state room, whioh, npon examina
tion, was found to contain a pertly de
composed human body. The box was
taken to the morgue. The passenger in
whose state room it was left has disap
peared, and tire whole ease is, up to this
time, enveloped fa mystery.
Lstxb.—When the mysterious box,
which it was supposed oontained a dead
body, found on the steamer Bahama yes
terday, waa opened at the morgue, it was
found that it oontained rich vestments
sent by some ladies to a popular pastor
named Bev. P. W. Powers, a Roman
Gatholio clergyman. This huge joke was
unwittingly perpetrated on the pablio by
some innocent ladies in Trinidad, and
the ooroner and the offiolals at the
morgue were kept for a short time in
etate of excitement.
St; Louis, Ootober 29.— Judge Baker,
viee president of the 8t Loflta and Sin
Franeieoo railroad, who has just returned
'from New York,"says the preliminary ar
rangements sre now being made for the
completion of the aforesaid road from
Vintta, Indian Territory, its present ter
minus, to the Paeiflo Ooean. Also that
d twenty millions of German capital at fiv-j
per oent. has beeu offered to construct
the rood. If thin urran-en-cnl; is com
pleted me road will be built under the
land grant originally given by Congress
to tire Atlantic and Pacifia railway.
WAsanraxoH, October 29.—The exec
utive committee of the National Board
of Health will hold a conference with the
eommitjtee of the National Academy of
Sciences, fa New York to-morrow, tedis
cuss the various questions pertaining to
the publio health, tbe establishment of
the notional qnarantine system, and the
proper form end powers of the nationia
latter had had a good effeot npon the ool-
end people of Virginia. ’
Wabhinotoh, October 29.—The follow
ing telegram has been reoeiTeds
Aumosa, Con., October 28.—To the
Cammtoinwr of Indian Affairt.— Just
arrived with the eaptives, en route for
Denver. AU papers are burned, and all
money and perwnal property have been
stolen by the Indians. Gen. Adams per
formed a wonderful feat fa getting.the
Indiana when he did.
[Signed^ Ralph Mxbksb.
IfsiDiHiOKSBUBe, October 29.—At
the Beedj astern meeting here last night,
J. L. Powell, Seadjaster candidate for
ilixi
uticura
Humors of the Scalp, Loss
of Hair.
Lotsolhairin thousands of casestodae en
tirely to some form of scalp disease. Serenty-
flve per cent of tbe number ot bald beads mUbt
be covered with hair by a jadirions use of Cuti-
curs, assisted by Outionr* soap, it u the most
agreeable as well as the most effective hair re
storer ever prodneed by sum. it to medicinal
in the iroeet sense of the word. AU others ore
the State Senate, denounced John Taylor, tome olesgemm, mixture or poisonous dye-.
, ... — _ —»— „ . Ha— and a cnwiiid None but usnoum possesses the specino modi*
of the Becordtr, as a lior ana a cowara. <*] properties that enable it to euro all itching
and scaly diseases tbai inflame and irritate the
tcalp ana hair glands and tubes, causing prema
turn baldness. Bedlam doses of tbe Outlcon
d \ ; Harried.
Yesterday evening Rev. O. W, Smith
marriedMr.E. Lather Burdiok and'KiiS
M. Ella Riley, at tha residence of Mr. E.
L, Burdick. Mita Riley has been one Of
the most popular teuohers ia the pnblio
School* and her fneuds extend to her
their best wistrjfor her fnture happiness.
a* -Hun. a serge Pendleton.
Tho following telegram was yesterday
reoeived from Eton. George H. Pendle
ton, who 'was expected to attend the
State Fairs
Nhwtobt. R. L, October 29. — To
CMb Thehat Hardeman, Jr.< I regret
exceedingly that it will be impossible for
me to fiutsn my buaintsj here and reach
Maoon daring tho fair. My compliments
and beat wishes ore for your suocess.
Gxoxax H. Pxhplxton.
Value or Ukitud States Fash Fse-
duots.—The following'! ble—home vat
use—show the average per year for tea
years:
Corn..
Wheal
Eye....
Oats...
Barley.........
Buckwheat—™..,
Hay
cotton.....™.™,
Total...,™.,,.,....1,6*AS88.675 175,201
Batter produced this year will be
worth about $170,000,000;* cheese and
milk. $180,000,000; bsef and its prodaota
5280,000,000; pork and produots $250,-
000,000; cotton $270,000,000; corn $419,-
000,000; wheat $400,000,000.
—Over three hundred thousand rankles in
paper money, supposed to be contaminated
with the plague poison, were burned in tbe
the Botsian eity of Tsaritzla on th* 15th of
last month. This monaywas collected for
the district stricken by tbe plague.
Time to too valuable to be wasted in end*
uionsly experimenting with various remedies
whan a 25 oent bottle of Dr. Boll’s Oongb
Syrup will at once oars your oold.
General Tom Thumb owns a meat market
ia Middleboro, Mae*. Hejia so small that it
easy for him to make both ends meat.
A positive benefit to "young children and
infant*” to the popular verdict for Dr. Bril’s
fiab^MByrnp. Sold every where at 25 cento a
pablio health organisation. The National
Board will also hold a meeting at Nash
ville, ,Tennessee, on the 17th proximo.
The American Pablio Health Association
be in session there at tbe same time,
and it to probable that the variotw im.
portent questions which underlie the
preparation of the report for Congress
will be left open for discussion at theEO
meetings. - .
Bichkond, Va, Oct. 28.—Intelli-
iienoe was reoeivwd here to-night-that a
lire was 'raging at West Point, on the
cotton platform of tho Richmond, York
River end Chesspaako Railroad, upon
which were two thousand bales of oo'-ton
awaiting transportation northward, by
the old Dominion Steamship line and
Baltimore boat*. The fire originated in
the ootton, and the flames spread to the
extensive warehouse adjoining the plat
form. One of the Baltimore steamers
being at the wharf, her dummy pempa
were pnt to work aud kept the fire la
ohtek for a time, but at last accounts a
stiff wind was blowing, and the total de
struction of the warehouse was threaten
ed. A steam fire engine from this city
has been sent down. When the lira fr t
broka dht, a heavy forou was at once s-t
to work.moving the ootton, but last re
ports state that one thousand 'bales
were then burning.
Bichmokd, Va-, Oot. 29.—Lateb.—A
telegram reoeived at 1 a. m, from Wes-
Point, reports that the fire which broke
out jb tho cotton platform of tbe Ri .h-
mond, York river and Chesapeake rail
road was gotten nnder central before the
Richmond fire engine reached the scene,
the New York steamship Biohmond
having arrived and put on streams from
her pumps. The first report ef the
amount of ootton burned was exagger
ated, the number being between 250 and
300 bales. None of the sheds or wharves
were burnt. The fire originated from
apatke of a locomotive. Great excite
ment prevailed, the West Point people
fearing the fire would spread to the town.
PsTXosBwaa, Va., Ootober 29.—The
largest and most enthusiastic political
meeting of the present canvass was held
ut the Academy of Musio to-night, under
the anspioes of the Bepnbiioan fnnders
of this plaoe. So great was the orowd
that many were unable to get inside the
door*. The meeting was addressed by
Jno. T. Desendorf, of Norfolk, and J. H.
Von Auken, United States Tobacco In
spector here, and other*. Inspector Van
Auken denounced ae false the statement
made that he had paid Frederick Dong-
lass one hundred dollars for bto letter on
the 8;ate debt, bnt erid he bd'tved the
Taylor then drew a pistol, whioh was
struck down and dtooharged. Powell then
also drew hto pistol, but was disarmed.
A large audienee was present, and great
confusion existed for a short time, bat
after appeals from several leading citi
zens, order was restored, and Powell re
sumed the stand. At the conclusion of
his speech, he denounced the course of
the offending newspaper towards him
self, aud pronounced those who would
not meet him as gentlemen, liani and
cowards. At a late hour the difficulty
was adjusted by the retraction of the
offensive language by tbe newspaper and
a like retraction on tbe pert ef Powell.
Toxohto, ' Ootober 29.—Hanlon eon-
templates u v tort to Australia. He says
he will go it the people of Toronto, or
the men who have made money by hto
races, subscribe part of the expenses of
the journey. He woald allow Trtokstt
fifteen hundred dollars w expenses to
oome here witd»W for ten thousand a
side, bat the Australian declines to allow
the ohampion a oent to go there. Han-
lan declares he will not budge an inoh
from the conditions oontained fa tbe ar
ticle! he sent Courteney. Etonian will
osrtririy not go to Washington, and will
insist upon Blakie being referee, and
will hear ol none other being chosen. He
thinks Courteney very mnoh overrated,
and is fatly persuaded, ae he bee been
from the beginning, that the Union
Springs man never meant to show up
Hanlan will surrender the sportsman
cup rather than go to England this win
ter, bat will protest against Eltiot’a
claim to it until he bee proved himaelf
the best man fa England, by defeating
Boyd.
Pattubsok, N. J„ Ootober 29.—George
Fox, forty-five years old.an old gunsmith,
reputed to have had money hidden in hto
apartment, woe found dead this morning.
He had been shot through tbe heart, evi
dently, while standing fa thehalf-opened
doorway. There were no signs of rob
bery.
Mxkfhis. Ootober 29.—Two oases were
reported this morning, James Heortwell
and Ed. Dabaoh.both at the city hoBptial.
One death oesarred last night, John A.
Glass, two miles east of the oity. The
weather to warmer.. A special train left
at noon with physicians and narees for
Harrison station, Mis*., seventy miles
soutbof here.
Oakland, Calivobmia, October 29.—
Herbert Benton and Frankee Woedtrord
committed suicide .last evening at tho
Nisool House. The sssh shot himself
first, and the woman killed herself with
.'the same pistol—a premeditated affair,
sis eaoh had threatened to take their lives.
Nothing is kuown of the cause.
Nsw Yokx, October 29.—Tog boat
Daniel Brown, while towing bark Henry
Rob bo to her dock in East river this
morning, bnrst her boiler and sank fa a
few momenta. William Van Acker, fire
man Daniel Haviland and a deck hand
were missing. George Noons, engineer,
and John Stewart, the oook, were picked
up, the former soalded and injured about
the head, and the latter eat in the face.
Howlett Smith, .Captain and part owner
of the tug, was on board the bark at the
time. He thinks the cause of tha explo
sien was a flaw fa the boiler. Admiral
Jnd. J. Aberuethy, seventy-live yean of
age, died to-day from prostration. Result
—long naval serrioe and exposure. He
was for many years medical director in
the United States Nary.
Madbid.Oct. 29.—Several Gabon mem
bers of the' Chamber ot Deputies intend
to move immediately after the passage
of the bill for the abolition of slavery fa
Cuba, that the Oortes shall proceed to
discuss other measures for reforms in
Cuba.
Pabis; October 29.—A fete is to be
held at the Hippodrome shortly under
the management of Paris newspapers
for the benefit of the sufferers by the
recent floods fa Spain. It is oxpeoted
that it. will surpass in entertainment and
receipts any previous efforts of this kind
ih P$ris.
London, Oot. 29.—A despatch from
Romo to the Times>ayet “The proceed
ings of the Congress whioh met at Na-
ples on the 26th fast, to promote gener
al disarmament - throughout the world,
terminated with » soene of indescribable
confusion, amidst hissing, applause and
other demonstration*, owing to the op
position .of a section who disapproved of
the objects ot the Congress. “Live
Trieste,” “Live Trent,” “death to Aus
tria," were posted on the walls in tbe
morning,bat were- torn down by the
police.
Pabib, October-29.—A Radical oom-
mitteefrom Tanoluse has offered M.
Humbert, os member of the Chamber of
Deputies, fa place of U, Joseph Gent,
who has been appointed Governor of
Martinique. M. Humbert has signified
his willingness to be a candidate.
The mission at Vienna of Messrs.
Barring and de Blognieres, recently ap
pointed comptrollers of Egyptian finan
ces, has failed. The failure may seri
ously compromise tbe action of France
and England in Egypt.
, Thus the first resnti of the rooent Ane-
tro-Garman allliance is opposition to tbe
settlement of Egyptian’hffaire. There
slstanoe of Turkey to the reasonable ar
rangement of the Greek qtreation, is at
tributed to the same osnse.
' London, October 99. —A London oor-
respondent of the Manchester Guardian
says: “The dissolution of Parliament is
widely talked of and will continue to be
diaousisd 1 until after the issue of a proc
lamation fa reference to Parliament,
rendered necessary by tbe expiration of
the present period of its prorogation on
Tuesday.”
Pabis, Oitober 29 — M. De Lesseps, in
a lecture delivered here on Monday, eald
he wonid start tot Panama early in De
cember.
ulus
Resolves* will purity tbe oil and S-Cit 'land;
ot the virus ot scrofulous humor ot the blood sod
insure • permanent cure, when token in connec
tion with the application ol Gntieora,
Salt Hheum and Dandruff
Cured that several Physicians had fall*
edto treat succeisfuilv.
: Mxsias Waxxa A Pottsb—GtnUwnen: I have
had the Salt Bbeum on my head and all through
my hair, and also on my bn for the past four
years, having suffered .exceedingly with it The
dandruff falling from my bair was very annoy*
tog. 1 consulted several distingniehel physi
cians in regard to it, and have taken their pre
scriptions as ordered bnt did not And any earn
and bnt little relief. 1 waa told by many persona
who have the Halt Rheum, and who hate been
doctored foryeers, that them was no cure for its
that it waa in tbe blood, and 1 should always
have it. and I was almost inclined to agree with
them, burn friend wanted me to try Cnticnra,
madebyyeurflrm, I did, and to my astonith-
ment, ia less than three weeks my head waa en*
tireiy free from all Salt Rheum and Dsn trufl,
and 1 cannot see any apnearanee of Salt Rheum
onmy person,: I think it a wonderful remedy.
Respect’rily your*.
' „ J GBOUGH A HUDGB,
Portsmouth. N H, February 0,1878.
HUMOR OF THE SOALP
THAT WA8 DESTROYING 1HB HAIR CUR
ED WITH ONR BOX OF OUT ICO BA.
Mxssxs Wbsxs A Pottbb— Gentlemen: I.
want to tell you what Catieura has done f jt me.
About ten years ago my hair began falling ont,
caused by Humor of the Scalp, i tried various
remedies too numerous to mention, without re-
lief until 1 began using Catieura. one box o
which has entirely carta me and new heir Is be
ginning to grow. Respectfully.
MRS O I ROOT.
887 W Late street, Chicago,Nov 18,1878.
wo know the above to be true.
MARY BTOWN8HND.41S W Jackson street,
MRS O A GRAY,811 Fulton street,
SCALD HEAD
FOR NINE YEAR8 CURED WHRN ALL
OTHER REMEDIES FAILBD.
Vbssbs Wbsxs A Poxiie—Gentlemem Since
July 1st11 have been using Cuticnra for scald
head shdk has cured me when all medicines
that I hare taken for nine years did me no good.
I am now using it as a hair dtetsing, bnt my
head is well. It kesps the hair in very nice con-
diticn. Yours trail,
HA RAYMOND,
Auditor Fort Wayne, Jackson a t'nginawRB.
Jackson, Mich, December 20,1878.
Tne I
FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL.
MACON COTTON STATEMENT
OFFICE TELEGRAPH AND ME88HNG1R
Octobib 28,1*7*.—Enms
The market to-day wae quiet at 10 eento for
middling.
Received by rail to dav™™..™ S
by wagon 808— 811
Bplff US
STATEMENT-
Stock on hand September 1,1878...... 880
Reoeived t^day Sit
previously ™™„ 20818—21217
Shipped to-day,
previously.
21487
Stock on band this evening,
Reoeived same day last year
A Potter, Chemists and Druggists, SCO „
ton Street, Boston, and are for sale by all Drug,
gists, Prioeof Catieura, small boxes, 50 cents;
large boxes, containing two and one half times
the quantity of small, $1, Resolvent tl per bottle.
CuticuraSoap 25 cents per cake; by wish so cents i
Scakes.76:cent*.
LATEST TELKGKAPH2C REPORTS
Cotton. :
lampoon—Noon—Cotton quiet and nominal;
middling uplands 7>$ atiddling Orleani lit
-tales 1800 baled, ot whioh 1000 were taken by
speculators end for export: receipts 12700—ail
American.
Futures opened 118 better:
Uplands low aiiddlina clause October delivery
7%a7 IS Si. October and Novembers 15-31a8Hn
-617 32, November and December 6 8*Sta6 5-1S,
January 6 8-22, February 8 8-10, June and July
8J4.
180pm—Middling uplands 78*18, middling
Orleans 7 7-18. kuturer, uplands low middling
clause November delivery 88- H, November and
December! ll-st. December and January SC-1S,
March and April t%.
480 pm—Sales of American StOO. Uplands low
middling clause October and November delivery
4 17-Slat 7-1*. Deonaber and January 011-8*.
January and February SU-32, February and.
March S11-82. Jnne and July 815-52,
Haw Took—Ootton firm sales ISIS mid
dling aplai.St 113-15. middling Orleans 11718.
Futures opened steadier: October ll.to. Novem
ber 11.10. December U.09, January 11.22,February
1 Ootton—Net rtoetpta 860; gross 8118.
Futures rioted flrmi sale* 10.000. October de
livery 11.SO, November 1L10. December lLOfi—
00. January ll.lf, February 11 At—82. March 11. to
April 11.80—61, May 11.75—77, June 11.88—04,
July 12.01—06.
Cotton closed quiet: sales 4S8t middling up
land] 11E-1S. middling Orleans 117-lfi,
Consolidated net receipts 28380; exports to
Great .Britain 5002. Franoe 1107. Continent 4800,
S. ism.
Gaivistoh—Cotton easy; middling 10% low
middling 10% good ordinary 10% net receipts
5455; gross ; sales 60*. stock 27884.
Nobiolk—Cotton steady, middling 10% net
receipts 48SS. sales 1250. slock 55,80.
Baltikou—Cotton quiet: middling 11K low
middling 10K- good ordinary 10K : net receipts
—. gross 750. sales 280, to spinners .SO, stock
5052,
Boaros — Cotton firm: middling 11K. low
middling 11J4, good ordinary 1C% net receipts
1088: grass -h. sales—. stock 230.
WIIJSIXOTOS—Cat ton nrm: middling 10k;
low middling 10%. good ordinary 10; net receipts
707. gross —, sales 750, stock 15100.
PsuiADSlPKXA—Cotton firm: middling 11%;
low middling li% good ordinary 16%. net re
ceipt] 208: grosausS, sales—.spinners 205, stock
6321.
8AVAKXAH—Cotton in good demand: middling
10 11-16. low middling 10%. good ordinary 10. net
receipts 5053; gross : sales 4600. stock 85464
Now OBLSAirs—Cotton firm: middling 10%;
low middliug 10%. good ordinary 10% net reoripto
2851. grots . sales 123U0,.Btock 172066
MOHDUt—Cotton firm; middling 10%, low mid
dling 11%, good ordinary 10%. net receipts 1626,
gross , sales 2500; stock 28785.
M3MPHIS—Not received.
Augusta—Cotton firm middling 10%. low
middling 10% good ordinary 8%: receipts 1345,
shJpmen's —, sales 1265.
Ckabxjutos—Ootton quiet: middling 10% low
, , ’eoks middling 10%, good ordinary 10%; net receipts
ashing* 3614,gross—,sales 1890; stock55485
COtUNS* Pain* and 1 Weakness! rouse
r/4CT?RS Liver and Kidneys, cure
”0916™ Dyspepsia, Irdiveition,
Bilious Colio, Cramps and Faina, Rheumatism,
Neuralgia, Baatica. Weak Spine. Weak and Bore
Longs, Coughs and Colds, Weak Back, Ague and
Liver Fains.
CUTICUKA REMEDIES
can be had at ELLIS* DRUGSTORE, Trian
gular Block
Tub Banqust or tub Macon Volun.
tsxbs.—This wae ono of the grandest so
cial gatherings it has ever been onr good
fortune to witness. There wae food
enough of the choicest description to
feed a brigade, and to jadge by the ar
ray of long stoked battles, champagne
sufficient to float a man of war’s jolly
boat, j
Speeches, sentiments, eto., were con
stantly circling round, and never have we
seen a company that seemed happier and
more jubilant.
The gallant Volanteers did their whole
doty by their guests from other
citieB. Macon may well be proud of this
nobto company and her ether citizen sol
diery.
All did their whole doty, and the un
veiling ot the monument on tbe 29:h of
Ootober, will be an event never to bs for
gotten.
To Prerent sutd care Coagbs
and Colds
reliable. remedy to neoeaaary fa every
household. Parker’s Ginger Tonlois just
tha medicine needed. It radically cores
coughs, ooids, sore throat, brcnohicia and
eveu oonsnmption if used in time, by its
Miwerfal specific action on the stomaoh,
ddneys, skin, liver and mucous surfaces of
tbe throat and lungs. It accomplishes the
ours in a wonderfully short time, and re
moves all pain and soreness of tho longs It
to also a most valuable atomaehio remedy,
tffectaslly lemovtog dyspepsia, headache,
liver disorders, eostiveness, nervousness,
low spirits, wakefrineas, heartburn, cramps,
palpitation of tbe heart, sour stomach, etc.,
ana gives a cheering comfort and freedom
from pain that surprises every one. Sold by
ail flrat-elasa druggist*. For sale by Bolend
B. Hall, druggist KIM cc 2 8m
VMM
' Blood Purifier.
Shbskak, N Y, May 22;
HRSnvmrs-.
Dour Bra—I have need the Vetetine,andaa*
Blood purifier think it cannot bo excelled.
Wonid recommend it to all as an excellent medi
cine. Youw very truly, hldormaN
GREAT RELIEF.
Sicb Headache
Sabdu. Miss! April 24,1878,
H R Stavssb.'Bobxos:
Deab Sis.—I oertify that my wife has fre
quently used your Vegetinefor sick Headache
and experienced great relief from it.
LADORR.
WITS GOOD StJOOEiS.
Dropsy and Sidney Complaint,
Dm Morass, Iowa, September 10,1878.
H R 8TXVS2TS, BOJION;
Darn Six.—I think vary highly ofyon?Vege-
tine for Dropsy and Kidney Complaint with good
success. I have alto recommended it to others
who have been greatly benefited br its use.
DB EGGLESTON.
No 102 Walnut street,
■VJBG5-ESTXWE.
It Is What is Reeded,
FEMALE WEAKNESS.
Dsi Moms, Iowa, Sept e, 1878.
H R Srxvsss. Boston:
DSak 8».—For a long time I hare been
troubled with Female Weakness and a weak
sinking feeling at the stomach, and, through tha
advice of a friend, I tiled year Tegs tine, and And
It juat what is needed. lean recommend it to all
suffering from those complaints.
Yours respectfully.
MBS ANNA BELL k HARWOOD.
812 Fourth street.
a splendiFmedicine
Heart anJ Sidney Disease, - Female
Weakness.
GEre a amis, Isa, July 25,1878.
H R Sieve SB. BojtoS:
Dbas Sis.—I was afflicted with Heart and
Kinney Disease and other Female Weaknesses,
and doctored with several physicians and re-
re.ved no bencSt, -mill 1 tried your Vogetine,
and after taking two bottles 1 was completely
cured, and hare beeu a healthy woman ever
since, although 1 am in my sixty-sixth year, r
do heartily reoommend it as a splendid medi
cinotoall afflicted a: I hare beeD, and I bless
the day that it fell into my hands.
MRS MARIA HOBSON.
FEMALE ’WEAKNESS,
l’jHEADBLrnii, July 21,1377.
H R SSBVKXB;
Dais Sib.—I have been afflicted with Female
Weal ness and Womb Disease for many years,
l ast March ray husband got me a bottle of your
Yegetine. and before I had finished taking it I
found relief: the second and third bottle* gave
me still further relief, and 1 heartily recommend
it to all females suffering from Female Weak
ness. Respectfully yours.
MBS ELIZABETH H JOHNSON,
2245 No 7th strati.
I am personaly acqsaiutsd with the above
persons and sold them a number of boillsi of
Yegetine.
J O BBERHARD, MD.
VEGETIMB
PreVrod by
H . B. STKVENS, Boston, Maes.
Yegetine is soldby aUDruggists-
ROLLER GUM
-AND-
TTTB call the attention of our brethren «f the
T V Southern Press to tha faet thaSwwase
now having manufactured in our office, by MrW
SPWlkle.
fIKLB'8 ROLLER 6UI,
which, for toughness, elacticity and durability,
cannot be exeelled. We are now sting it mid
pronounce it THE BEST. Send to yoar order]
to this offlee for BoUemsr composition. Boilers
tor the Country Press oast to ardsr in recall*
3% inch Hand-Press mould. Where parties
prefer Roller Stocks will b* furnished at 50 rents
each.
Have your Boilers packed properly to a box
iu which they oan be returned, or we will have
to charge for Boxing.
Bend u your orders, and we guana toe satis
faction,
CL1BBY, JONES * RBISE.
angis tt Kseafls.
A TEAR and expenses to ageato.
(fill / Outfit free. Address P OY10X-
2a Y, Augusta, Maine.
FINANCIAL
Losnow—Neon—Consols 87 IS 18 Brie 40%
Pabis—3 per cent Rentes 81 francs ana 37%
«^Ha—.
Nsw Yobs—Stocks opened strong; money 6a
7: long 480% short 4 82%. State bonds dull;
Government secorities firm.
Money active at 7, exchange steady at 480%,
government securities strong, flow 6 per cents
ies%. 4% per oents 185%, 4 per cents 102%.
State bonds dal).
Si&fcs closed buoyant; Hew York Central
130%. Erie 39%; Lasv Shore 101; Illinois Cen
tral 87% Pittsuurx 103. Chicago and Northwes
tern 89%. do preferred 103: Rbck Island 147.
Weetere Union Telegraph Company 105%.
Sub-Treetury balances; Gold 129.673.664; cur
rency 13.983,214
PBODUCZ
BALTUtOBS—Flour [dull and weak: Howard St
and Western superfine 4 60® 5 25: extra 5 to® 6 CO;
family 625®7 00. City Mill] superfine 4 50* 5 25;
extra 6 25(46 50: Rio brands 7 62. Paispsco family
8 25. Wheat—southern dull and lower: Western
dull and lower, southern red 123*133; amber
185*145: No 1 Maryland red 184: No 2 Wes
tern winter red spot and October 180%. Novem
ber 130%. December 141% Southern corn quiet
and lower: Western weak; white (9x61, yellow
60- Oats. aontbem<2t4S Western white 42*43;do
mixed 38010: Pennsylvania 42&4S Hay steady
crime to choice Pennsylvania, Maryland 15018.
Provisions firm: Pork 11 £0. Bulk meats, loose
shoulders 4, clear rib 7%: do packed 4% and
6%. Bacon—shouldeis 5. clear rib 8%. Hams
10x11. Lard, refined in tierces 7%. Butter firm;
prime to choice Western Decked 13016. Coffee
strong; rio in cargoes 15*18. Whisky firm
at 118. Freights firm.
Owicxao—Flour quiet and unchanged; double
extra Western spring 5 25a8 50; Minnesota 501a
575; winter wheat 6 60x6 75, extra SCOaSfiO:
superfine 4 00x5 60. Wheat active but lower: No 2
red winter 119, No 2 Chicago spring 112%n%
cash.l 12%all3 No amber, 115 bid December;
NoSdolOl. Corn active and lower; 41 cash
and November, 38% December and all tbe year.
Oats dull and lower at 31% cash, 31% November,
Pork acliTX but lower; 1100 cash- 1112% Oo>
tober, 8 80a 9 SS'Noromber and December. 1017%
10 20 January. Lard active and lower at 6 20
cash and November. 630x8 30 December.
Balk neats heavy, shoulders S 76, abort ribs 5 55,
short clear 5 60.
NswYobk — Southern flour lower, common
to fair extra 5 7Ex* 50, good to ehoioa 66507 75.
Wheat feverish and unsettled, and decidedly
lower: ungraded winter red 1 20alS5, No 2 do
1 37x183. Corn fairly active demand and lower,
ungraded 69. Oats heavy and %al cent lower;
No 3 83%. Coffee quiet bat vejy strong: rio in
cargoes quoted at 15al8; do in job late ISalB.
Sugar quiet and strong; fair to good refining
quoted at 7%*8. prime 8x9%; refined firm end
to lair demand: aiandard A 9%: granulated
and powdered 10, crashed 10% Molasses firm,
Riee moderate inquiry and steady; Carolina 6%
*7% Botin firm at 167%. Turpentine higher at
45%. Wool firm and fairly active: domestic
fleece 33a46, polled 25x48, unwashed 9a3S, Tessa
16x31. Pork dull and lower, new mess spot
quoted 1100. Middles dull, long clear 610, short
clear 630. Lard very depressed: prime steam
spot 710 cash. Whisky —
firmer.
JjOPKvnXB—Fleur quiet; extra 4 25a4 50: family
6 0005 00: No 15 7506 25;patent 6 6007 80. Wheat
steady: red and amber 125 Cera firm: white 51,
mixed 49. Oxtx steady, white 33, mixed 35. Pork
steady 10 50, Lard steady; choioeieaf in tierces
flap
SMi
Whiakyflrm at 108.
OacrawxTi—Flour weak; family 5800675.
Wheat lower at 128al 23. Cora lower at 46 j. Oats
dull; No 2 mixed 23x34. Pork dull St 11 £0. Lard
dull and lower: current nuke 615. Bulk meats
dull; shoulders 375; short rib new 5 75. Bacon
firm; thoulJeri 4%.clear rib 8%. clear sides 8%.
Whisky active at 108. Hog] quiet, packing 5 60
aS 90.
8t. LouiS-r-Flour easy; double extra fall 4 90
a520, treble do 685, family 56045 60 choiceIto
fancy 5 50a6 03. Wheatlower; No 2 red toll 116a
116% cash, 120*120% November. 120%al23
December: No 3 do 110%. Corn easier at 35%
c*sh, 35%a35% November, 35*35% December.
Whisky steady at 108. Pork cuter at U B0.
Bulk meats dull; shoulders 3 70x3 SB. clear ribs
6 £5x0 SO, clearsides 6 60. Bxoou d ul); shoulders
4%, elf&r rib 8%, short dear 8%,
NAVAL STORMS
Wixjcra&ion—spirits turpenr.ee firm at 43
Rjxin firm at 1 40 for strained, Credo lur-
p inline firm at 150 for hard; 2 50 for yellsw
dip; Tar firm at 1 43.
SHOT— Drop _
Back
PEPPER
SPICE...™ .......
GINGSR....™...........
vUTMKQSS.,.............
GLOVES
CIGARS—Per M™
iriBOOOTfi
SNUFF—Loriiixrd’s. tor™™™™..
Iierillffird’i.fou.
TOBACCO—Common
Medium™..,,..
Lucv Hinton
Fine™™... ™™....™™.
Shell Read™.™..™™™.,
CHEESE 1(%0U
RICE (new crop) 7%x7%
POTATO K8 8 00*3*5
ONIONS 850
RnaaeKS—There seems to be an upward ten
dency on all goode. Chee> e advanced 2% cents
to-day.
1 88
. 110
17%
=»im
™.™ IS
20 OOaSS
.... UOO
... 65
... 70
-™. 40 a
...« 50 a 60
...... 51
..™ 75 al 20
sdoors ana Jtioncu
ooxaxcnro idultey
li.HIPL.HY, BROKER,
Georgia 6 percent bonds™...™ 101 a 116
Georgia 7 pel oent. bocilx (gold) ...112 a 112%
Georgia 7 per oent. bonds7regnlar)™„.Ulalll%
Georgia 7 per cent, bends (andorsed) ....110 a 111
GeorgiaT per oent.bonds (Smith)..™.Ill a 115
Georgia S per cent ( Ad) -101 a 105
Georgia 6 per cent, bonds fnew)™.™.107%al06%
City of Mason 7 per cent, (long)...™™™ 73 a 7s
City of Mason 7 per cent (short)...™™... 70 a 7S
City of Angnsta 7 per oect..„.,..,.„ M ....100 a 10k
Oity of Atlanta 7 por cent™™- -101 a loS
Oity of Atlanta 8 per cent™ ..........ICS a 105
Oity ot Sareabah™....™. to a 70
Central Baiiroan leant mortgage ™...106 *1108
Georgia Railroads per cent. bond*...™100 a 101
Macon and Western RR bonds ™.pw aod int
Northeastern RRbonds (endorsed)™...104 a 165
Southwestern Railroao ...par and int
Booth Ga. xml Fla. lit mortoafie.™....™. 107 a 168
A. a G. B. R. td mortgage (endorsed)..,10 a 1681
Bout Ga and Fla™...™™™....-„™..™....™81 a 83
Western R. R. of Aiabamalst mertgagellO a 112
Weitern R. R af Alabama td mortgage™110 11
M a A R.R. lit mortgage (not endur’d SO SO
HUSK, Id mortgage (endorsed)...par a 101
Southwestern R Ritook 102x103%
Georgia Railroad, stqrin.....™...™™™™ Slats
Central Railroad stock..™ SU72
august* and Savannah railroad stock...l 106
Maca!} wholesale Maikst.
CORBXCTID DAILY ST
JAQUES & J0HKS0N.
■WHOLESALE GEOCER3.
EICON—Clear nb ildes,,,..,..™ 8%®9
Bhouldcrs S)(05 :
Hoik clear rib sides 7%08
Perk Strips..™..,..™,
Bulk shoulders
Bellies i',™..
Choice 8 O hams......
LARD—in Obis,..;,..™,..,
Leaf, in tubs
Leaf, in buokets..,..,..,...™ 10010%
GRAIN-
Cosy, white, by car land,,,™,,.™— 78
mixed, by car load„.„„„„, 73
Oats, feed 65S6D
.... Bast pioof seed...™™,.,™,. none
SALT—Virginia. 160
Liverpool 1 2001 25
H HAI. 80
boited 85
_Grita .-. 450
FLOUR—Fancy per bbi„,.„™™„„„ 7 5008 00
Choice 7 (0
Extra family. Per bbl.....,™™.., 7 0007 25
Family, per bbl 6 5008 75
Xxtra per bbl..,,., 6 (0
COFPBB—Common™.,,™...™....,.... u
Fair™ -
Good..,.™
Prime.
Java...........™.........™
OAFS— Perlb
ttOLABSBB—C jcicc Cuba, bbds.,
Choice Cuba, bbla..,™.
™. IS;
IB'.i
16016
. 16M017
, 26081
•% a 8
35
™. 3(037
Sugerhoueo, hhds 23024
Bug&rhouso. bb!j. Is
Choice Maw Orleans.,.,,™,™™,., none
8UGAR—Golden C 8%®8
krcwti 7%0»%
O. cofree ....,■ 808%
Extra O. white 9%®10%
Standard A 10010%
Granulated 1D%011
Powdered and crushed,.™,™,.™. 1O%011
ORAOKERS-Boda 7010
Cream 8*70
Ginger.. 10 11
Btnwberry 14
lt®i4
MATCHES—R W, in paper 170
in wood™...™™ 97S
NALLS—Basis 10t™.. 4 00
STARCH
ATLANTIC ^JULF B, B
GMxaAX.SuTSsraraxpmrr’sOrrrcs, )
AiLAirrio as ix Gnu Raiuoad >
Bavavsab, Oct Sd^lSTSj
O N and after WEDNESDAY, Ootober 5th.
Paseenger Trains on this Road will nmas
follows: 1 ^
NIGHT EXPRESS.
Leave Savannah daffy at ™™™™™4A0 p X
Arrive at Jcsup 7.00IX
Arrive at TbomaaviBo^™ ™8E5 A X
Arrive at Bainbridgo, .IM... ™......9AO A a
Arrive at Albany——..™™™™™«™..,40.46 AX
Arrive at LiveOak..™.™™™™...™...™ t:C0 A It
Arrive at Tallahassee...™... ...7.00 A x
Arrive at Jacksonvilto....™ ..™.7.50 A 2K
Leave Tallahassee (.43 p x
Leave JackscnvUle„.™™„™™.™^ .....3A0> x
Leave Live Oak.........™™„................ UlfilPX
Leave A :hany™...™..™..™....i..™™™.™400P X
Leave BainbndjM..,™™™.^ 4.00 PX
Leave Thomasviile .......7.33 Px
Leave Jesnp „,...6.80Ax
Arrive at Savannah ........................... 9.00AX
No change of otora between Savannah and Jack
sonville and Savannah and Albany.
Sleeping care ran through to and from Savan
nah and Albany.
Passengers from Savannah for Feresniina,
Gainesville and Cedar Key* take this train.
Passengers for Darien take this train.
Passengers from Savannah for Brunswick
take thto train, arriving at Brunswick at $0$
am*
Passengers leave Brunswick at 8.-00 p m, ar
rive at Savannah 8:10 a ....
Passengers tearing Macon at 7JSA x (daily ex-
eept Sunday) connect at Jesnp with this train
forRoridt.
Passengers bom Florida by this train connect
t Jeaup with the train arriving in Maoon al6JS
px. (daily eioeptSundxy.) ’.
Palaoe sleeping cars are ran through to and
from Savannah and Jacksonville.
Ommnto at Albany with passenger trains both
ways on Southwestern Railroad to and tram Ma
con, Bufauto, Montgomery, Mobile, New Or-
loans, etc.
Hail steamer leave* Bainbridgo for Apalachi
cola avery Monday at 9.50 am; for Columbus
every Wednesday at 9A0 am.
Close connection fit Jack sonTill© daiij (Sun*
days excepted) for Green Cove Springs, 8t.Au-
gustme, Patotka, Bnterprise, and all landings ox
3t John’s river-
Trains on B. and A. Railroad leave junction,
going west, xt 11.87 a m, and for Brunswick at
A40 Dm.daily,except Sunday.
ACCOMMODATION TRAIN—EASTERN DI-
VISION.
Leave Savannah, Sundays exoepted,at 7.00 A X
Arrive at McIntosh " “ 9.28AX
Arrive at Jesup 12.00 AX
Arrive atBladuhear • X05PX
Arrive at Dupont " 6.15PX
Leave Dupont “ 6J5AX
Leave Blackahear " “ 9.35 A x
Leave Jeaup “ ” 1X50PX
Leave McIntosh « “ 2A2^x
Arrive at Savannah “ “ 6.40 p X
WESTERN DIVISION:
Leave Dupont Sundays exoepted..™™
Leave Yaldoeta.....
J—ave Quitman
Arrive at ThomasvUle..,,
Leave Camilla...
Arrive at Albany.
Leave Albany...™.
Leave Camilla
Arrive Thomarrille..
Leave Thomasviile ,
Leave Quitman.
.7.30 AX
10.02 AX
11.41 AX
2.10 AX
. ' PX
.......5.24PX
M0PX
(.00 AX
7.20 A X
10.20 AX
10.50 PX
1.10 PX
™.™ S.15.PX
5.45 p x
Leave Valdostn
Arrive at Dupont
J 8 TXBOP, Master cf Transportation.
H 8 HAINES,
octl7 tt General Superintendent.
Central-ails Soatmesters KaiMs
SAVAnAB, Ga. Sept. 15,18*8-
O N and after Monday Sept. 15.187'' a——
trains on the Central and vouthwostern
RaUroad] and branches will run as fallows:
run ro. l.—sores vosth xjtd mat.
Leaves Savannah..™.,.™,...™.......... ...9:10 A X
Leaves Augusta™ .9:30 ax
Arrives at Affgusta™™™™™™..™ -4:46 p x
Arrives at Maoon .6:46 p x
Leave* Macon tor Atlanta. .8:16px
Arrives at Atlanta 8:50 AX
Leave* Macon fur Columbus daily except
Sui-day 8:15 PX
Arrives at COlumbut daily except Sunday 4 45 A X
Leaves lor Albany daily except Sunday 10-.0OPX
Arrrive at Albany daffy exbept Sun
day - i 8:51 AX
Xaktog close connection at Atlanta with WesP*
era and Atlantia and Atlanta Charlotte Air-Line
for all point* West and North.
ooxisa sorxu in iast.
Leave* Atlanta.„..™.™..............™....™ll:40P x
Arrives at Macon™..,...™ 6:00 ax
Leaves Columbus lor Macon daily ex-
oent Sunday 8:(5PX
Arrive at Mason daily except Sunday 5.-00 AX
Leave Albany for Maoon daily except
Sunday 5:04PX
Arriveai llacoiidailyexoept Sunday 4:67AX
heaves Maoon 72)0 AX
Arrives at Mfftodgerilla™™™™^™™.™ 8:44 AX
Arrives at Batautan™„,.,.™™ n .™™™™ll;S0 a X
Arrives at Augusta..™...™ 4:45PX
Arrives at Savannah.,™ 4:00 p x
Leaves Augusta™™..
Mak)
ton tic i
^ TXi
Leave]Savannah™.™..™...™...™...™... 7:30 P1
Arrives at Augusta.,.™.. „..,™...™..A:40 AX
Leaves Augusts,,.m....•••.** ™*..8:80 r X
Arrives at HilledgavUla..™.™..™.. 9:44 A.X
Arrives at Batinton ..„™™i....Al:S0 A X
Arrives at Macon™ 3.-00 A X
Leaves Macon for Atlanta.,™ 8:40 A X
Arrives at Atlanta™™..™.......... 1:15 P X
Leaves Maoon for Albany and Enfanto, 8 85 A X
Arrives at Eatsala.™.,™. S:4fi p x
Arrives at Albany........,.™......™™,.™ 3:43 p X
Leaves Macon (or Cclumbus 8,45 A X
Arrive* at Columbus 2J5 p :
8-.S0A J
the At
close oonaecuon at Atlanta witn western ana
Atlantic and Atlanta and Charlotte Air Line.
At Eufaula with Montgomery ft Enfanto Rail
way; at' Columbus with Western Rajlraad; at
Augusta with the Charlotte. Colombia and Au
gusta Railroad for all points North and East.
Eufaula Tran connects at Fort Valley for Fer
ry, daily except 'Sunday, and at Cnthbert for Fort
Gaines daily except Sunday.
Train on Blakely Extension leave] Albany
Mondays, Tuesdays Thursdays and Fridays,
OOXXI8 SOUTH APS BAST.
Leaves Atlanta ..1:15 p X
Arrives at Macon from Atlanta™ 6.55 P x
Leaves Albany ■*—- T - 11:23 A x
LeavesBufanto .11:27 A x.
Arrive] at Macon from Entonla and Al
bany 5:38 P X
Leaves Columbas .................12:65 A X
Arrives at Ma&rn from Columbus 64)8 P X
Leaves Maoon... .7:35 v x
Arrives at Augujjta..™ 5:40 Ax
Leaves Angnsta,™, 8 JO p x
Arrives at Savannah™.,™™ 7u5 A x
Passengers for Milled goville and Batonton will
take train No. 2 from Savannah, and train No. 1
from Macon, which trains connect daily except
Monday, for thene points.
Through Bleeping Cart on all Night Trains
between Savamuh aud Augusta, Augusta and
Micm.xnd Savannah and Atlanta.
B H SMITH, WILLIAM ROGERS,
Gen Tiekot Agt. Gun Sapt. U R R. Savannah.
J O Shaw, W. G. RAOUL,
Gen Trav Agt. Sant. 8W£fi. Maeon.
anStf
W E have the (aclusive sale in this market.
The money must accompany the order or
he prepared to pay the driver on delivery,
ts per ton.
cct25 St W H MANSFIELD ft CO,
Pnce
Mjtlii Fresit end Bev.
.IAN0Y and Oyxter Crackers, a large and fine
■f assortment ol'fancy Oradies, Oranges, Ap*
pics, Lemons. Grapes. Reserves, the finest ever
put up, Brandy Cherries. Jellies in buckets, cans
and tumblers, canned Goods of every kinds such
a; Blue Barries, Ciams, Crabs, Lobster,. Mack
erel Tomatoes, Fears, Pineapples. Cherries,
Beaches, ate. the latter the finest ever m this
market. Try them and be convinced. Sour
Kraut. Cider. Cabbage. Chickens. Bggs. Butter,
everything good and will make you fejn good
when you sot them before you, snd will pleas*
your hosts at iho’ooming oeremonies and fair.
Coffee I parch frexbi everr day ana. it is adver-
*tislHg itself. You will always find fresh goods
and reasonable prices at
w .25 2( GBDETTSB’8.