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THE ALBANY DAIt Y HERALD! TUE8DAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1906.
CLARK & CO.,
TTON FUTURE BROKERS.
ALBANY, GA.
Members Leading Exchanges. Private Leased Wires
to New Orleans, Chicago andJNew York.
INSTANTANEOUS EXECUTIONS.
New Orleans Correspondents, Gibert & Clay.—Cotton.
New York Correspondents, C. D. Freeman & Co.—Cotton.
Chicago Correspondent, Pringle, Fitch & Rankin—Grain.
New York Correspondents, Marshall, Spader & Co.- Stocks
gpd Bonds.
Correspondence Invited
H&ve Your Horse’s
Haii; Cut.
We have fitted up a first-class horse barbershop at our stables
. on Broad street. Having installed an electric clipping machine,
we are prepared to clip your stock promptly nnd satisfactorily
and at a low price.
Livery
Feed
’ our business
with the
r _ I. and modem
vehicles and easy driving, gentle
horses, All orders executed
iptly. When you want a
i phono 26; you’fi get it.
The stock Besson beiug partially
over we now have room and fa
cilities for handling, transit trade.
When yoff are in town for the
day and want your horse to
have good square m, ' ’
' 'oirbrir
s .- pr attention 1
E. W. LIVINGSTON & CO.
LEADING LIVERYMEN
Local Cotton
Good Middling
Middling
Low Middling
Market
NEGROES REFUSED
TO WORK WITH WHITES.
101-2
•a
Now York Cotton Market
Prev*
Op'd High Low Close Close
1019 J0.27 10,18 10.26 1016
10.48 10.48 10.42 10.48 10.42
10,08 10.06 1069 10 64 1060
Ootober 10.20, 10.28 10.19 10.21 10.16
Spots steady. Mid. 10.86. Sales 900.
Futures closed steady.
Liverpool is due 2 down tomorrow.
March
Liverpool Cotton MarksL
liar-/
Prev.
Close
6.67
6.61
664
8 67
jaeUe, 10,000-Middling., 5.M; Receipt. 17.060,
Futures opened steady and closed steady.
r-Apr..
•r-May..
iy-Juns
June-July. 6 64
Op’
2PM
OlOM
6.66
666
6,56
5JHJ
6.68
6.60
6.61
6.62
6.68
664
6.64
6.66
CORN—WHEAT—MEAT.
Chicago, Feb. 27.—
Opening,
Wheat—May 81 3-8
Corn-May 43
Oate-May. 301-4
Pork-May 15.35
Lard—May 7.75
Ribs-May. 8.10
Close.
817-8
431-4
30 1-2
15.37
7.77
8.12
Stage Carpenters at the Rawlins The
atre on a Strike.
COTTON
COKE.
COAl
CARTER & CO.
warehousemen^ and Goal Dealers
COME TO US FOR COAlj.
Wo Are «t Same Old Stand on Pfne Street.
We keflp In stock Montevallo, Climax, Tip Top and Blockton, the best
from the Cnhaba, Ala., coal fields. Also the celebrated REX and other
high-grade Jollco coala. Accurate wolghts and satisfaction guaranteed on
all coal sold by us. ,
WAlso Hard Coal tor Furnaces, and Blacksmiths’ Coal.
WASHINGTON'S PLUMBING
CLARK A CO’8 COTTON LETTER.
Early advices from Liverpool were
very encouraging; wh(le spots were 2
lower, sales totaled 16,00 bales, halt of
which went to the continent. Cables
denoted a very much better feeling in
the market due chiefly to the limited
offerings from America and fear that
the financial condition of holders
would enable them to carry over con
siderable cotton unsold. With New
Orleans closed, the New York market
held verj^Bteadlly all day. At no time
was there any great pressure on the
market, and the efforts of floor scalp
ers to scalp one another was about
the only excitement of the day. March
shorts busied themselves buying In
their sales and re-lnvestlng in October.
In fact',, the trading In tjie new crop
positions has become active, and there
appears to bl quite a demand for Oc
tober anywhere below 10 cents. Spots
In the South are quickly snapped up
when offered at 26 points above the
ruling Aptlon In Now York. This ex
traordinary condition of affairs can be
attributed only to the scarcity of of
ferings and the consequent anxiety of
exporters that they will be unable to
fill their engagements. ,
It is not easy to forecast the mar
ket for the Immediate future, but cer
tain It Is that - Southern banks will
soon forec holders to turn loose, and
when- this Is done, we may expect,
temporarily, at least, a lower range of
values. Distress cottonjs the market’s
worst enemy, and It Is to be hoped
there is little of this kind In the
South. CLARK & CO.
must have been done by men like us,
fop we never hear any complaints
about the work. _ We don’t hear any
about\>ur8; because we' tako'good care
not to leave any grounds for fault
finding.
I WE DO PLUMBING
on the prompt service, quick-work,
quick-get-away basis. We find men
appreciate that kind. So would you if
you tried it once.
Because white men were employed
to assist them in setting the scenery
for “Monte Cristo’’ yesterday, all the
negro stage hands of the Rawlins the
atre went on a strike, and would not
return to work until the white men
were forced to quit.
Stage work Is an art, which is ac
quired only after much experience, and
it was impossible for Manager Gorta-
towsky to secure men to take the
places of the negroes who went out on
a strike. On the other hand, it was
Impossible, said the manager of
"Monte CrlBto,” to present the play
without the scenic effects.
The substance of the matter, as re
ported to a,representative of The Her
ald la as follows;
“Monte Cristo" has two full carloads
of scenery, which on a stage like that
of the Rawlins theatre requires nearly
a full day for setting. It was urgently
necessary, therefore, that all the stage
hands should keep at work-ail day.
Yesterday afternoon about 2:30
o’clock, Manager Gortatowsky found
that his hands had not reported for
duty, and he employed two white men
to do the work in their absence and
to asslBt after they came. When the
negroes arrived at the theatre they
found the white men at work and
walked out, saying that they would
not work with white men.
Manager Gortatowsky tried to’ ar
range to do without the negroes, but
found it Impossible. It was necessary,
therefore, if the performance was to
he given, to get rid of the white men.
They saw the situation, and willingly
vacated the stage for the negroes. The
negroes then took charge, the scenery
was set, and the performance was
given without a hitch, as far as is
known.
Negroes striking because they were
asked to work with white men Is some
thing entirely new In the history of
strikedom In this part of the coun
try. As far as is known, it was not
the personality of either of the two
white men that the negroes objected
to, but Just the fact ’that they were
.white went against their grain.
Enamelware— ,
Turquoise Blue' and Steel.
Cleanliness in the kitchen is con
ducive to health in the household.
Nothing is more conducive , to cleanli
ness than our Turquoise Blue and
Steel Enamelware. Sightly, strong
and durable-y-“the kind that won’t
crack off.” Better see them.
SPARKS-SAXON
Hardware Coi
>mpany.
COTTON PICKINGS.
Furnished for Daily Herald Readers
by Clark & Co.
Liverpool opened at due, 2 down on
near positions and unchanged on dis
tant. Sales of 14,000 bales were not
to be overlooked.
Harris Plumbing Co.
E. P. HARRIS, Mgr.
102 Pine Streol, Eut Store ol Rumney Building.
’Phone 255
LIBEL FOR DIVORCE.
-State of Georgia, Dougherty County.
The defendant, Fuago Hill, is here
by required, personally or by attorney,
to be and appear at the next Term of
the Superior i Court of said County, to
be held on the first Monday In April
next, then nnd there to answer the
complaint -of Bosey Hill vs. Funge
Hill, Libel for Divorce.
Witness the Hon. W. N. Spence,
Judge of said Court, this 19th day of
February, 1906.
R. P. HALL, Clerk.
L. W. NELSON.
/ Defendant’s Atty. 2tam-2m
LIBEL FOR DIVORCE.
Georgia, Dougherty County.
Lucy Orr vs. Ben Orr, Libel for
Divorce.
To the defendant, Ben Orr;
You are hereby required to be and
appear* at the April Term, 1906, of the
Superior Court of Dougherty County,
-Georgia, to be held on the first Mon
day In April. 1906. to answer the com-
~ plaint of Lucy Orr In an aqtion for di
vorce. Hereof, fail not
Given under my hand and official
- signature, this the 26th day of Febru
ary, 1906-
witness the Hon. W, N. Spence.
J. S. C A., by R. P. HALL, Clerk.
h! W. NELSON,
Plaintiff’s Attorney.
- -
* 1 A.M
JOS. L. RAREY,
THE OLD RELIABLE TAILOR.
Is still doing business at his old
place over the First National Bank,
samples of all the new colorings In
all and winter fabrics are ready for
nspection. Our styles appeal forci
bly to well dressed gentlemen, and
our prloes are as low aB is consistent
with good workmanship.
JOS. L. RAREYv
The Tailor.
FOR THE BEST
Values in Marble and
Granite for artislic work
manship, and the finest
material in
MONUMENTS
Headstones, etc., try
The Albany Marble and
Granite Works.
W. H. MILLER,
Proprietor
I -
Our opening._wa.-i dull, with no dlspo
sltlon to sell.
Many people suffer for years from
rheumatic pains, and prefer to do so
rather than take the strong medicines
usually given for rheumatism, not
knowing that quick relief from pain
may be had,‘simply by applying Cham
berlain’s Pain Balm and without tak
ing any medicine internally. Rev.
Amos Parker, of Magnolia, North Car
olina, suffered for eight years with a
lame hip, due to severe rheumatic
pains. He has been permanently
cured by, the free application of Cham
berlain’s Pain Balm. For sale by Bus
man-Sale Drug Co.
The Drawback.
“How do you like being civilized?”
asked the philanthropist
“Well.” answered the simple child of
nature, “civilization is great for the
mind, but It is mighty hard on' the di
gestion.”—Washington Star.
Startling But True ^
People the world over were horrified
New . Orleans observed the Mardi
Gras festivities by closing for repairs.
•Dick Bros., the shrewdest straddlers
in the business, were heavy buyers
of October.
on learning of the burning of a Chica
go theatre in which nearly six hundred
people lost their lives, yet more than
five times this number, or over 3,000
people, died from pneumonia in Chi
cago during the same year, with
scarcely a passing notice. Every one
of these cases of pneumonia resulted
fyom a cold and could have been pre
vented -by the timely use of Chamber
lain’s Cough Remedy. A great many
who had every reason to fear pneu-
It is not much
Orleaus closed.
market with New
Ring gossip was conspicuous by its
absence.
A Crippled wire service did not serve
to enliven matters.
/ Liverpool
down.
closed steady, ouly one
For the first time in the history of
the trahe we see futuYes almost at a
standstill, while spots are in great de
mand.
Trade conditions in Europe were re
ported ns healthy beyond compare.
The continental spinners were heavy
buyers in. Liverpool.
A Healing Gospel.
\he Rev. J. C. ‘Warren, pastor of
Sharon Baptist Church, Belalr, Ga.,
says of Electric Bitters: "It’s a God
send to mankind. It cured me of
lame back, stiff joints, and complete
physical collapse: I was so weak it
took me half an hour to walk a mile.
Two bottles of Electric Bitters have
made me so strong I have Just walked
three miles in 60 minutes and feel like
walking, three more. It’s made a new
man of me." Greatest remedy for
weakness and all Stomach, Liver and
KIdnev {complaints. Sqld under guar-
n. -Price 50c.
monia have warded it off by the
“ til
prompt use of this remedy. The
lowing is an instance of this sort:
"Too much cannot be said in favor of
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy, and es ;
peclally for colds and Influenza,
know that It cured my daughter, Lau
ra, of a severe cold, and I believe
saved her life when she was threaten
ed with pneumonia.”. W. D. Wilcox,
Logan, New York. Sold by Hllsman-
Sole Drug Co.
KOPPEL’S ANNUAL
sry Opii
Will commence TUESDAY, MARCH
6, 1906, at Morris Koppel’s Store.
A stock of Artificial Flowers larger
than ever, also Chiffons and Ribbons,
will be shown at New York cost. The
ladies are especially invited to exam
ine the goods. Everything will be sold
for cash only.
MORRIS KOPPEL.
Albany, Ga., Feb. 27.
JVetef Albany
Albany, Georgia.
NEW YORK, Feb. 27.—According to some reports, one. extensive
short interest has been making strenuous efforts to keep the market
down? force out those who have been buying, for an improvement following
\he March liquidation and covered their cotton at lower prices. Careful
observers state that, to the best of their judgment, 50,000 or 60,000 bales
of cotton have been sold in the last two days, In the effort to carry the
downward movement as far as possible. Those who are familiar with
cotton speculation realize that, in nine cases out of ten, an improvement
follows such liquidation as has been seen in this market the last six
weeks. It may be that there Is bo much cotton in the South, so much cot
ton In the visible supply, and the coming acreage Is to he so large, that,
at 10% cents even, there is no possibility of any improvement. If this
Is so. It will he one ot the first cases on record where the cotton market
has not shown rallying powers after the liquidation of an extensive line
ol long cotton. ,
We do not wish to he, misinterpreted in our attitude on the market.
We are firmly of the opinion that July cotton two or three months from
.date will be selling lower than it is today. This is with the understand
ing that the new crop attains a fairly good start. But, at the present
time, every conservative argument that should be made on a market under
normal conditions favors a rally of greater or less extent. For this reason,
we would not sell cotton until such a rally has taken place.
WARE & LELAND.
MOVED
Our'Office to No. 317 Davis-Exchange
Bank building, where we will be pre
pared to attend to business even more
promptly than heretofore.
Th
—07“
OF GEORGIA,
CONSERVATOR OF PROSPERITY.
'Restaurant
Elk* Hull ding. Tine SI.
Open 5 n— m. till Mldalfht
Quick Service.
treasonable Trices.
I '
/
e Bacon Equipment Company.
-J08EPH 8. DAVIS, JNO. ft. WH ITEHEAD, R. H. WARREN,
President, V.-President. Sec’y-Treas.
Capital Stock $100,000.oo
Now open and ready for business at southeast corner of Broad and Wash
ington streets,-Albany, Ga.
SOLICITS APPROVED L OANS ON REAL ESTATE
PAYS INTERE8T O N TIME DEPOSITU
CHARTERED to give surety and act ns executor or administrator and i
perform all, the functions of a safe y managed TruBt Company.
HICKS'
CAPUDINE
IMMEDIATELY CUAET
HF.ADACH 1‘ '
No P1U Is as pleasant and positive
aa DeWltt’q Little Early Risers.
Those Famous Little Pills are so mtld
and effective that 1 children, delicate
bulk's ami weak people enjoy their