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THE NEWS, Established 1871
CLOTS TOPS A! SAP TURNED
A HANDSOME LINE OF
Mgs’ Cloth ftp ml U Tune! fas
Just arrived. We are daily receiving our new fall and winter stock of
MENS,’ LADIES’ and CHILDRENS’ BOOTS and SHOES,
Direct from manufacturers at SATISFACTORY PRICES.
- BOWDOIN & LITTLE.
51 Hill Street, - - Sign of the Big Boot.
(Successor to B.^P. Blanton.)
Merchant Millers,
--Dealers in-
SHINGLES, ROUGH, DRESSED AND MATCHED
LUMBER, SASH AND BLINDS.
Colliding, Brackets & Ballister Work always in stock
GRIFFIN — - - GEORGIA.
Call for Your Mail!
And get the Finest Drink in the City, from
KINARD ¥ BROS.
AT * THE ★ OLD ★ POSTOFFICE.
First-Class Whiskies, Brandies, Gin and Bum
-- ★---
BILUARD AND POOL ROOMS PRIVATE.
One of the best equipped Restaurants in the city,
supplied found with all the delicacies ot the season, can be
at KINARD BROS.
HOW’S THIS P
From tively September 1st., to October 1st,,—Posi¬
no longer—we will make you
ONE DOZEN CABINET PHOTOGRAPHS FOR $3
When Cash Accompanies Order.
M. D, MITCHELL & CO., Photographers.
I AM HERE TO STAY
with the cheapest and most complete stock of
DRY. GOODS, SHOES, CLOTHING, HATS and
Groceries in Griffin,
Our line of Dress Goods, Calicos, Ginghams and other
goods we have just bought and must be sold at some price.
tt IVe A still rtTTT lA^ lead the vro van n 1 in rt Shoes CUar of all ex 11 kinds. Our \ Lames T - ’ >
Shoe for $2.50 is the best fitting ard wearing shoe bold
anywhere Also any other price shoe you warMen’s
Hand Sewed at $3.75, equal to any $5.00 shoe. Every pair
of shoes soldfrom $1.00 up in our store is warranted to be
solid leather; If Kot, we will make so. g^GrvE us a
trial before you buy. r. p. STRICKLAND.
PLENTY OF
Chickens, Butter
Fresh Fish To-Day.
G. W. CLARK & SON.
G-R.IF’F’IN-
IT ALWAYS COMES OUT AHEAD
AND THE
M Griffin Shoe
WILL DISTANCE ALL COMPETITORS
By a Greater Score than which the
Base Ball Club Defeated Barnes-
OUR OF THK WINNERS. ville yesterday—11 toJG.
GRIFFIN GEORGIA, TUESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 15 . 1891 .
^
RNJOY8
Both the method and results when
and Syrup refreshing of Figs is taken; the it Is pleasant
to taste, and acts
gently Liver yet promptly Bowels, on the Kidneys,
and cleanses the sys¬
tem aches effectually, and fevers dispels and colds, habitual head¬
cures
constipation. only Syrup of Figs is the
duced, remedy pleasing of its the kind ever pro¬
to taste and ac¬
ceptable its to the stomach, prompt in
action and truly beneficial m its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy „---- excellent and agreeable D -------substances, its
many to all and have qualities made it commend it
the most
popular Syrup remedy Figs known. <
of is for sale in 50c-
and $1 bottles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE. Kr. NEW YORK, k.t
A Card.^
I will hereafter be with R, W.
glad Champion & Co., where I will be
to meet with all my old friends
and patrons aDd can accomodate
them with the very best drinks, ci¬
gars, etc., that can be found in the
land. John II. Wilson,
neptlOd&wlw.
Ask Your Friends
Who have taken Hood’s Sarsaparil¬
la, what they think of it, and the
replies will be positive in its favor.
One ~ who ’ ’ has be< been cured of indigest¬
ion, another finds it indispensible for
sick headache, others report remark¬
able cures of scrofula, salt rheum,
still others tell youthatit overcomes
“that tired feeling,” and so on.
Truly the b-st avertising received is
the hearty endorsement of the army
of friends it has won by its positive
medicinal merit.
The Effect of Warm days and Ooo
Nights.
has A leading noticed physician writes that he
nights always warm {.affects days and cool
the bowels,
and suggests some preventative
Cordial remedy. is Dr. Biggers’ Huckleberry
the one.
Tourists
Whether on pleasure bent or busi¬
ness, should take on every trip a
bottle of Syrup of Figs, as it acts
the most pleasantly and effectually on
kidneys, liver and bowels, pre¬
venting fevers, headaches and other
forms of sickness. For saje ia 50c.
and $1.00 bottles .by all leading
druggists.
Mr. C. A. Thomas, Henry county,
Ala., says: “I suffered with Dys<
pepsia fonJavi) or three years after
despairing bottles Dr. of Holt’s/Dyspeptic getting well. A few
of Elixir
cured me perfectly. For sale by all
druggists.
Another Cashier.
Mr. R. M. Farrar of the Merchants
Bank, Atlanta, says u& to have money
is to save it. In the of Dr. Big-
ger’s Huckleberry Cordial for all
bowel troubles, ho saves doc.or’s
bills and prevents a panic of suffer*
ing.
Dairy Farm For Sale.
124 Acres, one mile from Griffin.
Best place for Dairy Farm in Geor
gia. Such a business will pay, am
6e a nice investment for a younp
man. Price j>20 per.' ffcre. Wil
carry $1000 of amount .“ years at &
per. cent. Bona tor title. A good,
honest tenant on place. Apply at
once or place may lie off the market.
W. E. H. Seakcey,
Griffin, Ga
Ice, Ice, Ice!
I am now prepared to furnish all
my old customers and every one else
with PURE ICE, either in laige or
in snail quantities. Your trade so-
Cite 1. C. P. fllEWTON.
Terrible News of Devastating
Floods in Spain.
Two Thousand People Have
Already Drowned.
An Official Dispatch X. Received at
Madrid Announcing Sweeping floods
In the Country About Toledo— Washed
Out Railroad* Prevent Sending Ae-
• Islances to the Scene of Destruction.
Madrid, Sept. 14.—Official information
has been received from the scene of the
terrible floods now devastating the pro¬
vince of Toledo, According to the news
received, two thousand people have al¬
ready perished, and an immense amount
of damage has been done by the swollen
waters. At present it is utterly impos¬
sible to send assistance to the survivors,
as all railroad communication with the
scene of the disaster is cut off.
DANCING TO DEATH.
News Received of n Protracted Dance
on an Indian Reservation.
Guthrie, Okla., Sept. 14 —News has
been own received received here nere from rrorn Gheyen«e4bat- vjneyetme mat
the Indians on the Arapohee reservation
l holding ,.1 j • a dance .7 on xL the . n Onacheta. L.i.. river. •
A large number of deaths are reported
among those tribes. During the past
few fallen days nearly a hundred during the Indians have
unconscious dance.
The dance was started by the Indians
to appease- the evil spirit and drive
away malarial fever prevalent during
the summer, causing the death of sev¬
eral hundred.
TO ROB A TRAIN.
A Diabolical Plot Between Negroes IS
Overheard and Exposed.
Atlanta , Sept. 14.—As Mr. W. C.
McNabb of this city, was returning to
his residence after dark, he overheard a
conversation between four negro men,
who were plotting to rob a passenger
train near the city. He did not hear
them say on what road or what train
the robbery would be committed, but
their plan is that some night this
week they will display a red signal to
some passenger train and when the
train is stopped they ore to uncouple
the engine and one of the robbers will
take the place of the fireman, cover the
Engineer to the with engine a pistol and compel him
ryn some distance from
the train, then the Atlanta robber is to make
escape, come to and join his
pals. The other
three will stay at the train
with the fireman, comjiel him to open
the baggage, mail and express cars, and
after robbing these three cars they are
to go- through the passenger cars and
rob the passengers. After robbing the
passengers they make are to take to the woods,
separate, and their way to At¬
lanta, meet somewhere on Decatur
street and divide the spoils. Mr. Mc-
Nabb has informed the superintendents
of the different lines entering Atlanta
of the plan, and measures will be taken
to prevent the robber}-.
A Despondent Lover Shoots Himself.
Paris, Tex., Sept. 14.— George Bossier
is a half-breed Choctaw and deputy
sheriff of Kiamiti county, Choctawma^
II___ tlon. rr Re 1 is also a widower, • T . his . first o
a
wife having been of negro blood. For
some time he has been infatuated with
a sister of his dead wife. It seems that
George’s factorily, wooing <Jfd not progress satis¬
spondent. and At his he has home recently been de¬
he near Goodlaud
took nis pistol, placed it to bis heart
and pulled the trigger, but the weapon
snapped. without He made a second effort
result and for a third time he
pull d the trigger. This time the pis¬
tol was discharged, lmt he had let the
muzzle slip and the ball passed through
the left shoulder, shattering-it. Bossier
can hardly survive.
The Ohio “lint” King.
Canton, Aug. 14.— Sam King of Cin-
cinnati, trav eling under the title of " Rat ”
King, created a sensation here by solic¬
iting contracts from hotels and public
buildings for exterminating rats. He
claims to have been in the business for
twenty years, and to have met with
great tions, success. alleged Among have been other Institu¬
to cleared of
rodents, is the White house. He re¬
fuses to divulge his method, but, in ex¬
perimenting in several convince cellars, showed
enough His rats to the skeptical.
base of operations is the cellar, and
be permits no one to witness his opera¬
tions.
Four Children liurnecl/td Death.
Wichita, Kan., Sept. 14r—Word has
been received here of the burning to
death of four children on a farm in
Barton county. Mrs. William Klein,
the mother of the children, locked
them in the house while she went on
an errand. Shortly afterwai'ds the
father, who was some distance off,
was attracted by smoke issuing from
the house; by the time be had effected
au entrance into the house, the interior
was a mass of flames. He found one of
the children, who died shortly after
being the rescued. The feiund charred remains of
others were lb the debris.
The oldest child was only 7 years.
He Died in HI* Wagon.
Mhchanicsbuko, O., Sept. 14—At an
early hour in the morning the family of
W. W. Wing were horror-stricken to
discover him dead, seated in bis spring
wagon in the road in front of bis farm
house. He had been to town on an er¬
the rand, and had died on the road home,
instinct of the horse bringing him
to his destination. Mr. Wing told
friends a few days ago that he felt as
though failure death was not far off. Heart
is assigned as the cause of death.
Deceased was about ($5 years old, & man
,ot means and an extensive land owner.
THE QUILTLNG PARTY.
Bright Piece Well Played
Orillia Amateur*.
‘‘The Quilting Party" was we’j
presented to a good audience nt
Patterson’s Hall Just night, and
again the poor of Griffin will have
occasion to thank the noble daugh¬
ters of the King for well-bestowed
beneficence from the proceeds of the
entertainment.
The following is the cast of charac*
ters, each one of whom played big
part well:
Aunt Patience..................Mica Uoeeljn Reid
Josiuh Allen .......................Frank Flynt
Mrs. Allen................Mias Haydec Asher
Mr. Pimp!*........................,.E Womack
Mrs. Pimple............ .Miss Emma Johnson
Mias Pimple...........'..MfssMaud Johnson
Violet Melrose................Mrs. H. Johnson
8u*an Cutter..............Miss Mamie Mill*
Miss Higgenbottom.....Mrs. M. O. Mitchell
Minervy Mote.............Mr*. Walter Ellis
Madam Slimmings... .Miss Anna Belle Moss
Tommie Tmnpkins...............H. Hardee
John Siyles.................D. J. Bailey, Jr
Peter Snooks..,,..............Douglas Boyd
Dr. Do booby..............,.B. R. Flemistcr
Peter Dobttle....................Chas. Thomaa
Our Postoffice,'
is no third class office is the
United States that is so thoroughly
equipped on n I rmml rvt* or so a/\ n well , n 11 attended — u j 1 x to as
our own. i,Col. T. W. Thurman,
our able postmaster, has spared no
expense in lu fitting uluu B up U P his nl0 presnt P r esnt site site
And bin cleverness is almost prover.
bial. Iu addition to his other Im¬
provements he has just added the
handsomest fire proof safe that has
ever been brought to Griffin, which,
with his office fixtures, command the
admiration of everyone who has vis"
ited the office.
Advertised Letter List.
Miss Kara Denoe, A. H. Dunap,
Miss Annie McCord, Miss Susie Millerl
Mrs. Moggie Miller, Miss Annie
Foux, R. H. Sheffield, Lee Thomas.
Thos, W. Thurman, B. M.
Branson’s Body Recovered.
Vandaua, Ills., Sept. IS.—The
loss and braisod body ot poor
.Branson, who was so unfortunate as
bjsu his life by bei ng entombed in
well, was recovered after five
hurd work on the part of many
men. Branson was at the bottom
the well, standing iu about two feet
water, when the terrible accident befell
him. The mass of dirt and debris,
which was fully two tons, broke
thirty feet above, the immense
bearing him down in the wuter, thus
not only him burying him alive, but drown¬
ing as well. The dirt was tightly
packed about his body and he showed
signs of having suffered terrible agony.
He had not been in the well fifteen min¬
utes when the cave-in occurred. Bran¬
son was 45 years old, a bachelor, and
well thought of in the settlement where
he lived.
Money 1 in pro; trly Applied
Ottawa, - -- —.—*— Sept. 12. —• -The —--...... railway j com-
of the Wllale 1, ** s prepared its
Teport rfiVVWT on fY»! til the A act IIf»f VUkTwTftnTf res; eting tlin the Bale TIaIa dea
Chaleurs Railway company. Regard¬
ing the charge th .t, out of certain
moneys ized amounting to ■•fSHO.OOO, author¬
by the goyernm ut of the province
of Quebec to be paid to the company on
account of subsid.A granted by the
legislature, had a sum amounting to $175,000
been retained . J improperly ap-
plied to purposes and otiur than the con¬
struction completion of said rail¬
way. the committee ml that the charge
is proved, and that among those who
profited by the mi application, were
Mr. Meroier, presid ut of the province
of Quebec. O. A.IVT her. Hon. Charles
Langetier, Hon. Francois Lnngotois, J.
I. Tarte and Ernest l’ecand.
They Were Vox Kcalpa.
Salem, Ills., Sept. 12. —Quite a sensa¬
tion was created before the county
board of supervisors in session at this
place. Some time ago the board ordered
the county clerk to pay a premium on
wolf scalps, $15 for old wolves and $10
each for pups, A few ^jeeks ago a
farmer of Corrigan townstrip came to
the clerk’s office with four scalps, ac¬
companied by an affidavit that they
were those of wolves. Forty-five dol¬
lars were scalps paid to him. Now it appears
that the are those of foxes and
not wolves. The scalps were exhibited
to the board and created quite a stir
among them. The board has not de¬
termined what to do, but it is supposed
that the party will lie prosecuted.
Additional National Park Proclamation.
Washington, Sep‘. 12.— An additional
proclamation, signed by President Har¬
rison and Assistant Secretary of State
Wharton, has been issued from the state
department in rega 1 to the timber re¬
serve of Yellowston Park. In the proc¬
lamation the preside .t says that as tome
doubt has arisen ; s to the boundaries
proclaimed last, he issues in his the pi< proclamation lamationof to March make
the boundary lin x more clear. The
boundaries are the name as described in
the first proclamai ui. warning The proclama¬
tion concludes with a to all
persons not to enter or make settlement
m the section reser ved for the Yellow¬
stone Park,
Three Hundred ICIlIod In Hattie.
Zanlibar, Sept. H.— In a fight be.
tween a German c ups under Captain
Zelewski and a bo ly ^killed of natives, 800 of
Zelewski's blacks \v and all
guns and munition* lost. Among the
ntxiV'x killed are a»v the mv Zelewski Mo*v » officers wuxovio rxxicHiD Zitewitz
and Pierch, Dr. Dunuhow and four non'
commissioned officers. Only two com'
missioned officers—-Tattenborn and Iley-
debreck — and two
officerg are known ft- to have -A.-* esr-£>ed.
— •* ,k
THE SUN. Established 1877
Highest of all ia Leavening Power.—U. S. Gov’t Report, Aug. 17 , 18 %
ABSOLUTELY PURE
For Sale in Griffin by. It. BLAKELY.
TALKS ABflUTWAR
An Informed Statesman Speak¬
ing of European Affairs
Says the Czar Will Wuse the
Next War. ~ '
.......
Sir Charles Bllke on tho Political Situ¬
ation in the Old World—Germany
Take* an Expedient Stand—Tlia Em¬
peror Has Good Judgment—Russia to
Hake One More Effort.
London, Sept. 14—Sir Charles Dilke,
one of the best informed statesmen on
Eu^fipean "The disclaimer affairs, in of an all interview, warlike inten¬ said:
tions on the part of Germany is a good
thing, as it indicates that Germany will
be very carefnl to put herself right with
European feeling before she embarks
upon war. In other words, no such at¬
tacks upon France as that which was
only prevented by England and Russia
in 1875 is any longer probable. The
young emperor quite understands that
France is a great deal stronger than she
was then, and would probably be rein¬
forced by Russia if there were any
prospect of an unprovoked attack upon
her. But above all he recognizes the
increasing power of European opinion
and sees the necessity of deferring to it.
"In the next great war the power
which is as decisively condemned by
the public opinion of Europe as was
France in the first few months of 1870,
will fight under a real, though invisible,
disadvantage. Of course it will still be
pOBBible for a mouter of diplomacy to
give his country all the appearances of
~*the provoked and injured party,
at at the the bottom bottom the the ff first provoc ation
aggression comes from her. In the
the cently friend published life of Max Duncker,
of the late Emperor Frederick
and historian of the Mediterranean peo¬
ples the then in antiquity, there is a letter from
Crown Prince in which, writing
after the Danish war and before the
Austrian one, he says : ‘ War is desired
as a means of escaping from the diffi¬
culties of domestic policies. That is
perfectly plain. And even were Duke
of Augns ten burg to yield and accept
still harder conditions than those which
have been offered |o him, we have a
man who would (Prince Bismarck) in our midst
know how to manage so to
have bring about new complications and to
the war they want.’
"That is one of several admissions
which we have had from German
sources lately The and a particularly inter¬
esting France one. common theory is that
will attack Germany as soon as
she considers herself ready, but I am
of the France opinion will tliat deliberately neither Germany
nor and con¬
sciously bring about a war. And yet
we all expect a -struggle that will
involve most of Europe, and he would
be a very sanguine man who expected
the Nineteenth Century to close with¬
out its taking place. The real danger
spot is not, in the first place, either
France or Germany, but Russia. In
the first place, there is a profound
race antipathy lietween the German
and the Russia Russian which has hardly a
parallel elsewhere in Europe. Cer¬
tainly there is no such antipathy be¬
tween tiie Erenchmen and those who
would, indeed, understand and appre¬
ciate each other well enough if they
were not divided by unfortunate his¬
torical events. In the second place,
the temptation to escape from internal
difficulties by foreign war is almost
con.-tant with the Russian government.
la^AhfcAhmL mbice. Russia h as bef ore
her the prospect of having to renounce
tier secular ambitions iu Southeastern
Europe, and she gains nothing by jiost-
ponemont. —-R-is
-hardly-eooe-eivable that Russia
will not make at least one desperate
effort to recover the ground that she
has lost and stand at least M well in the
Balkans as she did before the war of
1877. In other words, she and Austria
will come to blows, for the way to Con¬
stantinople Germany lies throngh Nienna; and
will, by the inevitable force
of circumstances, take part with Au¬
stria. Then will come the day of trial
for the French statesmen and the
French people, and then will bo seen the
danger of such effusions as those of
Cronstadt. It will be practicably iin-
possible bee for France, after all that has
leen said and done of late, to look on
while Russia is involved in a great war,
and the first movement of German
troops to the Russian frontier will see
the advance of France upon the Rhine.
Foreigner's View of the McKinley I.aw.
London. Sept. 14.-The Spectator, in
an article on the McKinley law, says
the new law has furnished a new proof
of the old law that protection does not
protect. It has merely driven trade
into the different channels and has
raised prices. Its bristling schedules
and elaborate provisions have failed to
exclude the competition of the much
abhorred "pauper labor" of Europe.
Certain products are excluded, but oth¬
ers flow past the McKinley breakwater.
The final verdict of the writer is that
the law results in the collection of a
revenue that is not needed, while it
does not, as was doubtless hoped by
many of its partana, ruin European
trails, which is merely temporarily im-
I 1 * 3 * 1 - * ,
_
BURGLAR ANDERSON
In Prison at Cincinnati, Threatens to
Cincinnati, Sept, 12.-The escape of
Burglar Anderson, which is nosy folly
understood to have been effected by
bribery, is causing no end of excite¬
of ment Anderson, throngh the threatened confession
which will disclose tho
guilty men. The matter is also becom¬
ingmixed up with campaign politics by
reason of assertions that Republican of¬
ficials are delaying Anderson’s confes¬
sion in order to screen Republican
bribe-takers until after the election.
One indictment has been found
against Cal Tucker, and his n»m« ha*
been the only one so far mentioned, ex¬
cept county that of L. M, Haddon, assistant
solicitor. It 1s said he had a kef
made which was intended to be lost by
Anderson, to make it ap ppear that be
unlocked his own door, Haadon teh-
dered his resignation r.----- untjl —itH he he could
vindicate i himself. County Solicitor
Spiegel lieved refused to receive it, but re¬
him from duty pending threati-
gation.
ON THE WATERS.
Collision of Steamships In Which Forty
Elves Are Cost.
Athens, Sept. 12.—A collision has
taken place off Cape Colorma, the mogt
southern point of Attica, between the
Italian steamship Taormina of the Ital¬
ian Mesageries company, and the Greek
steamship Thessalia. The Taormina a ‘
soon after tho accident, drownin,
of captain, the several of her The crew second and pi
of the Taormina passengers. officer
who. and a number of ]
sengers, bridge the were time standing the collision
uge at at
salia. enrred, were saved by boats ot the
JAILED FOR MURDER.
Two Whit* W«nw» and • Hu Charged
with the Mnvder of Kennedy.
Rkidsvilue, Ga,, Sept. 12.—The ver-
diet of thecoroner’s jury in the Kennedy
murdwFcase, tEatTias been surrounded
somewhat with mystery, was that;
"We, the jury, find that Alfred Kennedy
came to bis death from a gunshot fired
from Henry Futch. The said killing ia
murder iu the first degree; and that
Sarah DeLoach and Mary Jane DeLoach
are accc-Mori-*!, ”
It has been develop’ * bat Mr. Ken¬
Henry nedy was Futch decoyed away from home by
he would writing depart after him such dark, a letter
as Futch opportunity to slay him, giving baa
been told aa
already The in these columns.
two women indicted acted as ac¬
complices in aiding Futch in disposing
of creek, the where body by throwing discovered it in Bull
it was only a
few days since.
THE BASEBALL WORLD.
National League.
At New York— First game—
New York.....2 1001000B— 4
Cleveland.....0 00 0 02000—2
Second game. #
New York.....0 00304000—7
Cleveland.....0 02120003—8
At Boston-
Boston ........4 0 t 0 0 3 0 I 1—9
Cincinnati.....0 0000000 O— 0
Philadelphia. At Philadelphia— .0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 2—2
Chicago.......0 At Brooklyn-First 000011 1 «— 3
Brooklyn...... 2 1O0O0OOO— game.
Pittsburg.....0 0 0 8
8 0 4 0 0 *—13
Second game.
Pittsburg.....0 Brooklyn...... 0 0101010 0—3
14020100—8
American Annotation.
At Milwaukee—
Milwatikee... T 5 — 10
WaahingUni. At Louis- ..0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 1—4
St.
St. lioujs.........0 0 0 1 2 0 0 1—4
Boston.............1 000000 1—3
At Columbus—
Columbus.....4 5 0 2 1 0 3 1 £—18
Athletics......0 00200120—5
At Louisville—
Louisville.....0 0002005 *— 7
Baltimore.....0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1— 1
DAILY MARKET REDOUTS.
Naval Stores,
Savannah, Kept. H.—Turpentine quiet at
36c; Rosin firm at
I |New Vou*, Sept. U.—Pork in moderate de-
mand and firm; mess old 910.00^10.76; new
91i’JKr&B:.!5; extra prime 9il.uuktH.su, Middle*
firm; short clear September 7.75. Lard firmer
bat quiet; western steam 7.405 citjr steam
$.80; options, October 7M; January 7.05.
Produce and Provisions.
Atlanta, Sept, 14.-E«g* au@2S. Batter-
Western creamery 2 choice Tea isosee
other grades lc&lSHc. Live poultry—
liens 38@;»c; young chickens, large D)®»o;
small 10®1A Dressed poultry—Turkeye
—c; ducks —c; chickens—c. Irish pota¬
toes new 92.A©93.00 per bbL Sweet po¬
tatoes 90c<a91,00 per bushel. Honey—Strata*
ed aaiOc; In the comb lOQttc. Onions
93.00®94.00 per bbl. Cabbage So per 1>.
drapes mac per Ifc.
N«W York Cotton it area.
New >>RK.A#pt. U.
Opening, Close.
November............... De 2:3
cern Is 1 r................
January February ................. ............ $8
March .. ................. 9 28
April May........................... • •*••«**#*•***•*»»*•*»*• .A.86 9.43 IS
Tone, barely steady, I| ! 9
dull. Middling, tK.
Chicago Market.
Wheat-Sept., Chicago, Sept. 14
.. DfiC»V«44.
Corn—Sept., CS. Oct, 54.
OaUr -Sept.....;
ork—Jan. 18.05; Oct., 10,48.
Ribs—Bept......; Lard -S«pt„ Oct, 70S.
Oat^TM