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THE WEEKLY TELEGKRPH; TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1888.-TWELVE PAGES.
m i T V r*T? fYlM finite, anil yet a light coming 95,000,000 cornea deeper into the affections of the 208; sales none; stock 5,763; exportzeoaat-
1 UUUiUllfj milea, .it the rate of 200,000 miles a second, people. Children cry out with glee; ‘‘The wise 311.
i is obliged to halt at the gate of the eye doctor ia coming." and the octogenarian.
T T -i , p ii „ waiting until the portcullia he lifted: arching his hand over lna eyes,says: ‘‘Doc- W“**’ i!! ? eiiort. oliren't
At the Long Island College something hurled 95,OOO.OOO of milea ami tor, is that you?” Rome day, through gritalnm “ ' ‘ to Great
atriking an instrument which haa not the overwork or from bending oyer a patient havannah, March 10.—Cotton market
agitation of even winking under the power and catching hia contagious breath, the , t eady; middlings 9 11-16; net receipts 527;
of the stroke. The car was unappre- doctor cornea home and he lies down faint gross 527; sales 150; stock 46,174; exports
elated except by those who had and sick. He is too weary to feel his own , to continent 4,600, coastwise 1,595.
become deaf until your profession pulse or understand his own complaint.! New Orphans, March 10.—Cotton market
Hospital Commencement.
OUR FIRST AND LAST FRIEND.
He Congratulate* Them on the Fart That
Their I*rofe**lon Ha* Revealed the
Wonder* of the Human JJody
and Science of Life.
Brooklyn, March 9.—The Rev. T. De
Witt Talmnge, D. D., pastor at the Taber
nacle, made the address this evening at
the Long Island College hospital com
mencement. A vast audience was present
at the meeting which was held in the
Brooklyn Academy of Music.
It is no strange thing that one'of my pro
fession should be invited to address gen
tlemen of your profession. Our callings
interjoin and are in full sympathy. Shall
we not meet on a congratulatory occasion
like this when so often we meet in the
homes of distress? We shake hands across
the cradle of agonized infancy. We join
each other in an attempt at solace where
the paroxysm of grief demands an anodyne stumbled over the corpses of those whom
was the headquarters to which there came ' never go there again. Ilehas written his
quick dispatches,part the way by cartilage, j last prescription for the alleviation of
part the way by air, part the way by bone, human pain. People will run tip his front
part the way by nerve, the slowest dispatch , steps and inquire: “How is the doctor
plunging into the ear at the speed of 1,090 to-day?” All the sympathies of the
feet a second; small instrument of music ! neighborhood will be aroused, and there
having only a quarter of an inch of sur j will be many prayers that he who has been
face and the thinness of l-250th part of an sc kind to the sick may he comforted in his
inch, and this organ you showed us to he last hour. It is all over now. In two or
the great whispering gallery of the soul, j three days Isis patients, with shawls
And so ail the human liody lias been ex- j wrapped around them, will go to the
plored, and chartered and displayed nntil front window and look out at the proces-
we have come away enchanted and wor- j sion, and the poor of the city, barefooted
shipful. | and bareheaded, will stand on the street
We honor your profession for that which ! corner saying: “Oh, how good he was to
it has done for public hygiene. How often us!” Hut on the other side the River of
have vou stood between this nation mid . Death some of his own patients who arc
Asiatic cholera or tile yellow fever. The . forever tured will come out to welcome
monuments in Greenwood and Mount An- j him, and the old physician of heaven, with
burn and Laurel Hill tell something of the , locks as white as snow, according to Apoca-
slory of those physicians who stood face to ; lyptic vision, will confront him and say:
face witli pcstilei.e in Southern cities tin-1 “Come in, come in 1 I was sick and ye vis-
til, staggering in their own sickness, they ited me."
aa well as a prayer. We look into cacli
other’s face through the dusk as tiie night
of death is falliug in the sick room. God
bless the doctors all the world over, and
let all the domestic circles say, amen.
You, doctor, are our first and last earthly
friend; you stand at the gates of life when
we enter this world, and you stand at the
gates of death when we go out of it. In the
closing moments of our earthly existence,
-when the hand of wife, or mother, or sister,
or daughter shall hold onr right hand, it
will give strength to our dying moments if
we can feel the tips of your fingers along
the pulse of the left wrist. No other call
ing in the world, one excepted, has receiv
ed so great honor as yours. Homer wrote:
A wise physician, skilled our wounds to heal.
Is more that: armies to the public went.
Cicero said; “There is nothing in which
men so approacli the gods as when they try
to give health to other men." The battle
fields of the American revolution wel
comed Drs. Mercer and Warren and Kush.
When the French army was demoralized
at the fear of a plague, the leading surgeon
of that army inoculated himself witli the
plague to show the soldiers there was no
contagion in it, and their courage rose. All
honor and advancement for your profession
from the day when Hippocrates tried to
cure the great Pericles with hellebore and
flaxseed poultices, down to far later cen
turies, wiien Haller announced the theory
of respiration and Harvey the circulation
of the blood, and Ascelii the uses of the
lymphatic vessels, and Jonner balked the
worst disease that ever scourged Europe,
and Sydenham developed the recuperative
forces of the body, and cinciiona bark
stopped the shivering agues of the worjd
anil Sir Astley Cooper and Abernethy am
. Ilosaac and Korney n and the generation
lust passed fought back disease with their
lancets and scalpels, and still later to dis
coveries made by sumo who sit before me
to-night.
If wc who arc laymen in medicine
would understand what the medical pro
fession lias accomplished for the insane wc
must look into the dungeons where the pool
creatures used to be incarcerated. Mad
men chained naked to the wall, a kennel of
rotten straw tlieir only sleeping place,
room unvcntilatcd and unlimited, the
wont calamity of the race punished with
tho very worst punishment. Then come
and look at the insane asylums of Utica
nnd Kirkkride, sofaed and pictured and
lihraried and concerted, until all the arts
and adornments come to coax recreant
reason to resume her throne.
8cc what the great hero of'vaccination
accomplished. The ministers of the gos
pel denounced this use of the enwpox.
.Small wits caricatured its author aa riding
in a great procession on the back of a cow,
and grave men expressed it as their opln
' ion that all the diseases of the brute erea
they had come to save. Y'onr profession
has been the successful advocate of venti
lation, sewage, drainage anil fumigation,
until your sentiments were well expressed
hv Lord Palmerston win 11 he said to the
English nation at the time a fast hail been
iroclaimed to keep off the great pestilence:
‘Clean your streets or death will ravage,
notwithstanding all the prayers of this na
tion. Clean your streets and then call on
God for help.” »
We honor yonr profession for what it
has done for longevity. There was such a
fearful subtraction from human Jife that
there was a prospect that in n few centu
ries this world would be left almost inhnli-
itnntless. Adam started with a whole eter
nity of earthly existence before him, hut
lie cut off most of it, and only compare-
A I.OST COFFIN.
A:: A:ai:-.!::g Story That Coutd Only he
Told About Oncer Folks in Arkansan*.
From tiie Arkamaw Traveller.
A horseback tinveler in Georgia, upon
meeting a man in a lonely road, was
startled by this question:
“Say, mister, hnin’t seed nuthin’ uv a
coffin lavin’ round nowhar, have you!”
“A coifin’.” the traveler exclaimed.
“Yes, a plain sort of everyday coffin,
Yon see, me an’ Jim—that’s lay ’cousin—
wuzsent up about six mile from here to a
woodwork shop to git a coffin fur a ole fel
ler named Giles. that died do\Vn in our
neighborhood yistidy, an’ cornin’ on back,
ige an’Jim got outer, the wagin to git
some water outca a spring. Wall, sir,
whut'should wc find lyin’ right in the
tiveiy few years were left, only 700 years edge of that spring but a quart bottle of
of life, and’then 600, and then 200, ’ and linker. Jim says ’tap her,’ an’ I cays ‘tap
then 50. and then down to an ave:age of' her;’Jin. : ays‘try ner,’an’ 1 says ‘try
18. But medical science cuuiq in, am. j her;’ «o Jim, he then sajrs he’d be dingetl
since the Sixteenth Century tiie average ot' • cf he u du’t, an’ he did. I tried her, an’
human life has risen from 18 years to 41, j Jim says, ‘we’U take her ailing,’ and we
according to some, and it will continue to tuck her. We driv on, an’ ever’ onct
rise till the average of human life will be J in a while we’il tap her, till it ’peared that
50, and 60, and 70, and a man will have no j wc wuz goin’ altogether too slow fnr sich
right to die before 90; and, according to j nachully brash fellers, so we whupped up
the statement of an old clussic, “the child the ole horses, an’ in runnin’ over rocks,
Mobile, March 10.—Nothing doing in the
cotton market; middlings 9)4; net receipts
352; gross 346; sales —; stock 26,535; ex
ports coastwise 1,306.
Memphis,March 10.—Cotton market quiet;
middlings 9)4; net receipts 358; gross 1,971;
sales 1,500; stock 101,405.
Augusta, March 10.—Cotton market nom
inal; middlings 9)4; net receipts 189; ship
ments ; sales 383.
Charleston, March 10.—Nothing doing
in the cotton market; middlings ; net
receipts 848; gross 848; sales none; stock
21,074; exports coastwise 1,6601
Cotton.
Macon, March 10.—Cotton market quiet;
S ood middling 914; strict middling 9)4; mid-
ling 9)4; strict low middling 9; low mid
dling 8%; strict good ordinary 8)4; good
ordinary *'A, sales 38.
RRCBIPTS, SHIPMENTS AND STOCKS
Received, to-day by rail 123
“ “ by wagon 4
Stock on hand Sept. 1, 1887... 531
Received previously 50,245-50,903
Snipped to-day 19
~ ipped previously,,,,,,, 47.809-47.828
Stock on hand..
rain amt Provisions.
CHICAOO, March 10.—Cash quotations
were: Flour steady and unchanged, Wheat
-No. 2 spring 75)4a79; No. 2 red, 81)4b82.
Com—No. 2 5154. Oats—No. 2 28)4a30)4.
Provisions—Mess pork $14.00nl4.05. Lard—
S7.66a7.67J4; short rib sides $7.17)4‘, shoul
ders. boxed $6.Q0a6.10; short clear rib sides
$7.00a7.65. Whisky $1.15.
Leading ftttnres ranged:
shall die 100 years old.” ‘Millennium tor
the souls of men will be millennium for
the bodies of men. Sin done, disease will
be done; the clergyman and the physician
getting through with their work at the
same time.
I honor your profession for what it lias
done for the jioor. No excuse now for
any one in this country not having scien
tific attendance. The man who wrote tiie
book entitled “Every Man.IIis Own Doc
tor” ought to write another book entitled
“Every Man His Own Undertaker.” Dis
pensaries and infirmaries everywhere, un
der tiie control of the best doctors, some of
them poorly paid and some of them not
paid at all. A half starved woman comes
out from an old tenement house into the
dispensary and unVrreps the rags from her
baliy—a bundle of ulcers apd rheum and
pustules—and over the little suffert r bends
beam the jig that tiie coffin was a dancin’,
and wc laughed powerful. After a while
tiie Illumed busses run away, nn’ we beam
the coIBn doin’ the buck, a’ml wc hollered
awful. ’Bout that tine I ’gun ter lose my
rcrtilleckshun, an’ tiie next thing that tuck
much oi n holt on me wuz the (act that I
vra’nt in the wagon at all, hut lavin’ agin
a tree. I don't know how long I’d been
tliur, but a right smart while, I reckon,
got up an', sot out to look for Jim.
found him siltin’ side uv the road wander
in’ whut had become uv the ‘can, an’ the
coffin an’ me. Wc knowed it wouldn’t do
to go back home without that coffin, fur
the ole man wuz a net-din, uv it. .-u cs
didn't know whur we’d been drivin , J
lie set out one wny an’ me the other
look fur it. Ho you ain’t seed nuthin’
a ordinary coffin, have yoil?”
“No, I nave not,”
the accumulated wisdom of the ages, from | “Just a plain every-day coffin?”
the first physician down to lost week’s au
topsy. In one dispensary that I know of,
in one year 150,000 prescriptions were
issued. God bless the doctors.
While we honor yottr profession for its
achievements, we sympathize with your
hardships and annoyancea. Dr. Kush
used to say in bis valedjctory address to
the students of the medical college:
“Yonng gentlemen have two -pockets, a
large pocket and a small pocket; tiie targe
pocket in which to put yonr annoyances
and your insults, the small pocket in
which to put your fees.” In the first
place, the physician has no Sabbath. Busy
merchants and lawyers and mechanics can
not afford to be aick during the secular
t i 'M wj.iildbe transplanted Into the human " ^b and so they nurse themselves along
family, and they gave instances where, j ^ lozenge* and hoarbotmd candy until
they,said, actually horas had com* out on ’^ th doming comes, nnd then they
k
aim foreheads ofjlnnocent persons and peo
ple hail bogtlTi to chew the cud. But the
hero of science went on lighting for vacci-
nation until it has been estimated that the
doctors in fifty years hava saved more lives
than ail the battle* of any one century de-
ll *X’as8iug along the streets of Edinburgh
a few weeks after the death of Sir James
Y. Simpson I saw the photograph of the
doctor In the windows of the shop* and
•tores, and well might that photograph be
put in every window in honor of the man
who first used chloroform aa an ancs-
thctic agent. In other day* they tried to
dull human pain by the hasheesli of the
Arabs and the madrepore of the Roman
and Greek. But it was left to Dr. Janus.
Y. Simpson to introduce the great mercy
of the ages. Alas for the writhing subjects
of surgery iu other centuries! Blessed he
Ciod tor that wet sponge or vial ill the
hands of the operating surgeon in the
clinical department of the med
ical college, or In the sick
of the domestic circle,
the battle field amid hundreds of amputa
tions. Napoleon, after the battle, rode
along the line and saw under a tree, stand
ing in tiie snow, Larrey the surgeon, oper
ating on the wounded. Napoleon passed
on, and twenty-five hours afterward came
along the same place and saw the same
surgeon operating in the tame place, and
lie had not leit it. Alas for the battle
fields without chloroform. But now the
soldier bov take* a few breaths from the
sponge, forgets all the pang of the gunshot
fracture, and while the doctors are stand
ing around him he lies there dreaming of
home and niuther and heaven. No more
pxrenta (landing around the suffering
child atruggling to get away from the
sharp instrument, but sltimlicr instead of
excruciation, and the child wakes up and
aays: “Father, what is tire matter? What
is the doctor here to-day for 7’ Oh, blessed
he God for James Y. Simpson and thi
heaven descended mercies of chloroform
We thank you doctors for the fact that
your profession has revealed the wonders
of Ike human body.
We had read in an old classic that we
were fearfully and wonderfully made, hut
you lake us into vour lecture and operating
rooms snd overwhelm us with yonr di eov
cries. The world knew nothing shout tl
human eye, except that it was blue, o
black or haarl, amt z[ii«ful thing to have,
until your profession showed us it hail di
tinct contrivances; that it was it cnnihir
lion of microscope and telescope in tie
some instrument, so delicate, sc semi-in
•ay: “I must hare a doctor.” That
spoils the Sabbath morning church service
(or the'physician. Resides that, there are
many men who dine hut onre a week with
their families. During the scculnr day
they take a hasty lunch at the restaurant,
and on Sabbath they Wake up for their I 1*. IMcree’s Hcasani Purgative Pellets, the
six days' abstinence by special gornis.i-! stsndard remely for bowel and stomach dls-
doctor, Emi they stutl and they stuff ami
they stuff until the food taken cannot lie
assimilated, and in their agitated digestive
organs the lamb and (lie cow lie down to
gether. And that spoils the evening
church service for the doctor. The physi
cians are annoyed by people coming too
iatc. Men wait until the hist fortress of
physical strength is taken. Death lias
digged around it the trench of the grave,
and then they want a doctor. The slight March
fever which might have been cured by a Marih-Aprll
foot bath ha* liecome virulent typhus, and
the hacking congh a killing pneumonia.
Aa though a captain should sink his ship
off Amagansett and then put a. I ire in a
iefo
us
Kali I If l
No.”
“Cheap; made outen pine, an’ intended
to fit a nmn that'll weigii 175?”
“I haven’t seen anything of it.”
“ftidn't know but you mout have seed it
layin’ ’side the road. Must have jumped
out when wc got to runnin’ over the bi„
rocks. Kf 1 ricolhek, it had a knot bolt-
in one side. I spoke to the feller aliout it,
hut he 'lowed, ho did, that a man had to
have a’r. T bate might’ly to go home
without it, f.ir them (client at tin tan
yard will guy me for losin’ it, an’ the dead
man's wife will ho mad enough to fling
Idlin’ water on me, W’y, bless my soul
yander it is!” (pointing at somethin ,
lug near the road.) “I alius did think' I
wiiz the lucki st feller in the »otld. M'
ter, ef you will git down an’ he’p me will;
it up on tnv shoulder, I’ll be oVleegui to
you. Wouldn’t kcer, you see, but I’m
(feted tiie boys will guy me.”
3,075
Opening. Highest. Closing,
Wheat, No. 2—
May
80)4
80)4
80)4
June
81
81)4
SO 54
Corn, No. 2—
Mav
52)4
52 y.
52)4
Jmie.
52)4
52 %
52)4
Jam, No. 2—
May
31)4
31)4
31)4
June
31)4
31 'A
31)4
Mess Pork—
May
14.10
14.22)4
11.17)4
June
14.15
14.25
14.20
Lard—
April
7.67)4
7.70
7.67)4
May
7.72)4
7.72)4
7.72)4
Short Ribs—
May.-.
7.27)4
7.30
7.27)4
June
7.35
7.37)4
7.35
Louisville, March IQ.—Wheat—No. 2red
86. Corn—No. 2, mixed 52. Oats—No. 2
33)4a34. Provisions steady. Bacon—Clear
rib sides $8.00, clear sides $8.50, shoulders
$6.50. Bulk meats—Clear rib sides $7.40,
Mear sides $7.65, partly cured shoulders $5.75,
mess pork $14.75, sugar-cured hams $U.75a
12.25. Lar i—Choice leaf 5.00.
8t. Louts, March 10.—Flour quiet at $2.50
a455. Wheat closed X lower than yester
day: No. 2 red cash 82)4(83)4; May 83Ka84,
closing at 83)4. Corn closed lower: Cash
46)4; Mcv 47)4(47)4, clrtiog at 47)4- Oats
firm: Cash 30)4; May 29)4. Whisky steady
at $1.09. Provisions sternly and unchanged:
Pork A4.15al4.24. lard $7.30a7.35. Dry
salt meats—Boxed shoulders $5.87)4, long
clears $17.12)4, clear riba $7.25, short denrs
$7.45.a7.50. Bin-nil—Boxed shoulders $6.37 )4,
long clears $7.85a7.87)4, clear ribs $8, short
clears $8.12)4(8.20. Homs steady at$10.25n
12.00.
Cincinnati, March 10.—Flour unchanged.
Family$3.30a3.50; fancy $3.50a3.90. Wheat
firm—-No. 2 red 82. Corn—No. 2 mixed 63.
Oats—No. 2 mixeil 34a34J4. Provisions;
Pork $14.50. Lard firmer at $7.60«7.62)4.
Bulk meats <n fair demand. Short rib sides
$7.45. Bacon—Short clear $8.50. Whisky
(toady at<L0$. Bog* dating: Common and
light $400(5.30, packing and butchers'
$5.36*5.70. ■
Baltimore, March 10.—Flour steady and
quiet: Howard street and Western super
fine $2.37a2.75; extra $3.00a3.75; family $4.00
(4.60-, city mills superfine $2.37(2.60; er.tr*
$3.00w3.75; Rio brands $4.75*5.00. Wheat-
Southern firmer anil quiet; No. 2 red 8181)4
amber 94(96; Western lower and neglected.
No. 2 winter red, spot 88)4. Corn—Southern
higher; white 56*57)4; yellow 66a57.
New York. March 19.—Southern flour
quiet but steady and unchanged; common
to fair extra $3.50a$4.10: good to choice
" - a. May
Grand Spring Opening
TAKES PLACE T0-M0RR0I.
OF NEW SPRING GOODS
—AND—
Bargains in Every Depai-tment.
We cordially invite the ladies of Macon ahd vicinity to attend our grand ■
of spring goods which takes place to-morrow. *rann opening
We have a larger stock, greater variety and better styles than we ever carried iJ
addition to this we have more bargains and better bargains than was ever offered iU
trade. ” ln9 l
DBESS GOODS.
This is a pet department of onr. Gur stock of Dress Goods would do credit to ann
retail house in New York City. We have everything new in all the latest color* ,„il
when it comes to PRICES, we down them all. |
. READ BELOW A FEW PRICES
which justify us in making the assertion.
India Cashmeres, Ail Colors . I0C J
Double-width Congo Cloth 121-2J
Double-width Wool Cashmeres j- c 1
38-inch Wool Cashmeres (lovely goods) . . ...
Onr 35 and 40 cents Dress Goods can’t be matched anywhere for less than 50 and f
cents.
But next comes something that downs them all.
46-ineh Henriettas SOej
Lovely goods they arc, and in all the newest colorings.
Our Silk Warp Henriettas are by far the most beautiful goods ever shewn in tliJ
market.
We have everything new in Trimmings—Beads, Gimps, Braids, and Moires, in all
the latest colors to match our Dress Goods.
SILKS! SILKS!
A world of SILKS 1 SILKS 1! SILKS!!! SILKS 1!! I
Look at the stock of Silks that other houses carry and then at ours, and you will
readily see that ours is almost as 1 irge as all of the others combined. Special print
for opening day will be made on tills lnrge stock of Silks,
ill-inch Surahs, ail silk^at 75c.
24-inch Sarahs i all the new shades at 85c.
2‘2-inch Ilnadam . at 8o"., worth $1.16.
22-inch Rhadama at $1.99, worth $126.
22-inch Khadzimer at $1.00, worth $1.25.
The above Silks are in Black, and all the new shades of Goblin, Surpont and Mshoi
any._ We guarantee our Black Silks at $1.00 can’t be matched anywhere for less thaij
S1.25. We also guarantee the wear of every piece of Silk we sell at ONE DOLLAR
Remember this.
NEW SATTEENS.
A Trial by Jury,
The great American jury, the people, have
rendered a unanimous verdict in favor of
LtVBRPOOL.Mareh 10.—12:30 p.m.—Cotton
bifrincas fair at unchanged prices; uplands
6)4; Orleans 6 7-16; sales tO.OOO; speculation
and export 1,000; receipts 18,nqo, American
19,200; futures quiet. 1 p. m.—Sales of
American 8,700; futures dosed barely steady.
The following table shows the opening and
dosing quotations.
Op* in. j ipui. Closed
extra $4.10n$5. No. 2 red, May 91)4(9114;
June 90 15-16(91, closing at 91. Corn—No. 2,
March and April 60, May 60 7-16(60)4, clos
ing *t 60)4. Oats, without quotable change
—No. 2, May 37)4*37K, closing at 7X.
tern 37n40. Hops dull.
This is certainly a great Sattccn season.. Our trade in this department is sinq.ll
immense. • ’
We have the largest stock in tho city, nnd our prices are the lowest.
Pretty Satteens at 10 cento; Beautiful Satteens, 34 iachro wide, 16 cents. LortlJ
Satteens, 34 inches wide, 25 cents. I
We call especial attention to our 25 cents Satteens. They are excellent quilitJ
and the patterna are very exquisite. 1
At .10 cents we sell all of our finest Frencli Satteens. No American good* ptliutl
"II ■ itlu-r . :i tlic trade as I'Kl'.M II. Wln-n \ST. -av I K KM 11 it means FBI il |
If you want a pretty Sattccn and something really tony, y 0 u will find it to j<
in.-rest to consult us.
lO Yitrcls ibi- r>OCVntsJ
Our SPECIAL OFFER will be 10 yards of Checked Nainsook for 60 cents.
10 yanls to a customer. In addition to this we will tell
Twenty-five Yards Toilet Crash for $1.50.
This offer is also special, and will not be duplicated after to-morrow. Think J
buying 25 yards of nice Toilet Crash for One Dollar and Fifty Cents.
We are always rushed on Monday, and would advise those who have shopping |
do to call as early as possible.
ORDER TRADE.
Our Order Trade last week was immense. Orders for Samples receive prompt >
tention, and express charges paid on all Cash Orders of $8.00 and upward.
c.
and closing quotations.
yawl and hasten up to the marine office to
get his vessel insured. Too late for the
ship! Too late for the paticut! Theiuhe
doctor get* blamed becauic the people
die. Oh, how easy it is to cry out: “Mai-
practice!”
Then the physician must bear all the
whims, and the sophistries, and the decep
tions, and the stratagems, and tiie irrita
tions ol the shattered nerves and beclouded
brain of wuitten, and 'more especially of
men, whA never know how gracefully to ;
W Kick, and who, with salivated mouth.-,
mix* the doctor. Riving him hi*, due*, a*
they way. about the onlv due* in that cam*
tube collected. The fact U, that §ome
men who, when they are well, are notngcl.
ic in db*ijo*ition you expect win** to come
out from under their nnnpit*, when aick
are like a hyena *orc headed. The Ia*t
bill that i* paid i» tho doctor’* bill. It
Nvm* ho incoherent for a restored patient
with ruddy check* and rotund form to he
bothered with a bill charging him for old
chloroform and jaiop. The pjiyiiciam of
thi* country do more robiopiry work
without charge than all the other profes.
lion* put t* ^eth»*r. From the concert
room and a merry yarty and the comforta
ble couch on a com n'*ght, the tlicror*me
ter five degree* below xero, the doctoi u*t
go right away. He alway* moat K'» fight
away. Under thi* oerrou* train tow
many have perished.
Hut I mu*t congratulate the doctor* mi .
their pnwcnl and future reward*. No one]
1
15 'AMU
! il(*
2.VM
27-64
2*-*H
2H-4VI
l‘.MW
■IMV4
New VOR:., March it).—Cotton market
quiet; Bale* middling upland* 10 3-16,
Orlean* 10 5-i*
Kveaing—Nei receipt* 8,062; grot* 8,062;
futures closed steady: sale* 70,900.
The following table shows the opening
•LMVt
5 22-6!
„ h 2» M
wmm hM-44
— 5 »-*4
r »
r . ?7-64
■ill 5 11*-64
IJV27-CI
'
Opened
Closed |
Opeu’d
closed.
Way
June,..-
'•.tr—
Aug
9.7
UOT
10.1*
10.19
10.23
‘♦.90*" - J ^ p|...
•iW . *|6/.:t
lu.rtiMO'Vov......
lo.ift.j- iiec
lu.JI-i 1 fsn
10.2VO>|reb
zZE
9.67f*
9.6V 67
quiet; sale* M; uplands,' io .3-16; Orlenns
10 5-6; net receipts at all ports 777;
exports to Great Itriuin 4,7c!; to France
7,3H\ to continent I,fifty; sp. a'fiff.fifir
UaLVJWTOK. March 10.—C alio a murk^t
steady; middling * 104; Pel receipt* 2,3>0:
grot* tales :i07; stock 17,806; expoit*
coast* ijm?
Noufolk, M*r> h in.—Cotton market
q iet; wibMliftg*9^2; receipt* »W?6; gr«»M
6* 6; sales 138; stor k H,i!ty; export* to Great
brisjlio ; export? c .a* vise 162.
HaitiWMtK, Ma«rti In.— Cotton idirlct
quj. i. Midi*.’ngs IQ V16; net receipts 12;
ir*osH 6-t*; awi-M ; *toc\ 18,103; to *
ue*s ; export- to Great oritalft 1,096
ports * omtwise 3ftk
Rc ,' -s, M-r.-h P -Latt'.a irxrkctquiet;
mid.I i" • v 10 ni* Kpi t ;';grm«
k n...e; ..ports |i 9
ItriUlr
VrT.
Mixed western 37tt40. Hops dull. Uotiee,
fair Rio nominal; options SUa40points lower,
and fairly active; No. 7 Rio, March $9.90a
9.96, April, $9.65(9.67, May $9.60(9.85, June
$9.50(9.75. Sugar dull; fair refining
4 13-16; C 6)4, extra white cat loaf
and crushed 7)4, powdered 7, granula
ted 7, standard A 6)4, confecliouers A 6)4,
C 6)4, yellow steady, oil A5«6, mould A
6)4, Cubes 7. Molasses grades 4a4>4;
refined dull. Molasses steady; 60-test 20a
20)4. Klee steady. Petroleum firm: crude
in barrels 6’4(7)4; refined 7)4 at all poi
(V.tton sc. -doil, crude 35; refined 41. Tallow
steady atV/4. Eggs, Southern 17(17)4. Hides
l moderate request. Potatoes steady. Pork
quiet. Beef quiet and easr. Beef hams dull
at $16.50. Tierced beef steady. Cut meals
dull au l barely steady; middles nominal.
lArd, it’estein steam, $8.06; Mur :h $7.97,
Mar, $7.97(7.98. Freights dull; cotton 6-14d.
Nkw Orleans, March 10.—Coffee weak
ar I lower; Rio (cargoes) common to prime
12)4(16)4. Rice in fair demand; Louisiana,
ordinary to prime 4>4a6)4. Cotton seed pro
ducts nominally unchanged. Sugars quiet
and steadv; Louisiana open kettle, choice 6;
stri"tlv prime 4)41 prime 4 13-16, fair to good
,4Ka’i 7-16, good common 4J4a36-16, common
!3X*4‘> Louisiana centrifugals: Choice white
6 5-16(6)4; choice yellow clarified 5)4(5 15-
16; prime yellow clarified 5)4; off yellow
clarified 5J4a5 9-16, seconds 4)4(4 5-16. Mo
lasses quiet hut steady; Louisiana open ket
tle, choice 33a35, strictly prime 29a30, good
prime 25*26, prime 21(23, fair to good fair
I9u20, common to good common lswl7‘, Lou
isiana centrifugals, strictly prime 23x22,
prime to good prime 18, fair to good fair 16
(17, inferior to good eomiuou 14(15.
Nasal Stores.
IViLWNOTOK, March 19. -r-Turpentine
steadv at S5’4. Bosin firm; strained *5,
sood strained 90. Tar firm at $1.17)4. Crude
turpentine firm; bard, $1.00; yellow dip and
rirgin, $2.00. _ ,
Savannah, March 9.-TurpenUne quiet
at 36. Rosin steady st 97)4-
Ngw York, March to.—Rosin quiet at
$1.17)4(1.23)4. Turpentine dull at 3i.
Wools
Nrw York, March 10.—Wool market Iu
steady; Domestic fleece 22a37, pulled 15*33,
Texas I3a22.
EMORY COLLEGE,
OXFORD, OA.
Tbe'lostp.iti.
L. O’GORMAN & CO
Canned Goods.
Apples—1 lb cans, $1 per dot.
Bfackberric
Bleached Shirtings—5'ard wide, Fruit j
Loom, 9)4e; Wamautta, llRe; Uinsusl*p]
Cahot, 8 ’4e. , I
Oanaburga—Corinth snd other itam 1 ]
brands, 6 os, 8c; 7 ot, 8)4c; 8 ot, 9e.
Corset Jeans—Androscoggin, 6)4e; I
port, 7)4c; Laconia. R^eiNanmkeagisH*
7)4o , ,
Kentucky Jeana, 25)4 to 40c per yard. J
Printa—Pacific, 6)4e; Windsor,
Arnolds, 6a; Aliena, 6)4c; A ?.T
cans, 5)4c; Hamilton, 6)4e; Conesto**i "j
Lodi, fie; Charter Oak, 5c; Berwidfi 4.^
Apples—Dried 4)4e; evaporated 8e. j Shirting Print-—Merrimae.SHeiAmeH
Cabbage—5 to 12c tier head. 1 5)4c; Anchor, 5e. ,,, u *
Dried Peaches—Strictly No. 1 peeled, 10 | • Checks—Rescue, 6)4c; Auburn, 6)(c, »l
tol2operlb. I
Eggs—I lto 13
Fes there—Choice geese, 50 to 55; mixed 25
to 30c.
Onions—Yellow, $3 75 to $4 00 per bbL
Peas-White, $1 25; field, 75c to $1.00.
PnlnfA*. TvIwK 3‘1 LA Ia 4*1 $Ksh*s Khl
ackberrics—2 lb cans, $1 per dot.
Chetriea—2 lb cans, $1.15 per dos.
Corn—2 lb cans, $1.25 per doz.
Potted Ham—70c. for and $135 for }4«.
Raspberries—2 lb cans, $1A0 per doz.
Salmon—1 lb cans, $1.70; 2 lb cans, $2.60.
Strawberrries—2 lb cans, $150 per doz.
String Beans—2 Ia cans, $1.50 per doz.
Tomatoes—2 lbs, per doz, 96e, 8 lbs $1.25
per doz.
Country Produce.
Potatoes—Irish, $3 50 to $3 75 per bbl.
Ponltry —From first binds: young chick
ens 29<1. to 25e; hens 30e each; live turkeys,
$1 60 to $2 00 per pair; live geese 50c; ducks
25c.
Hay—Choice Timothy, $115.
Drags, Pntms nnd Oils.
Drugs and Dyestuffs—Indigo, best, 76 to
80c; madder, 11 to 12c; salts, 3)4 to 4c; coch
ineal, 33 to 40w magnesia, flour
sulphur, 4)4 to oc; roll sulphur, 3 to 4c;
camphor, 28 to 36c; copperas,2 to 2)4c; assa-
iidalSto—'
copev, 6)4e.
Ticks—Coneats, extra, He; ConetU, '
tra,J4,7)4c; Shetucket, 1,
Thorndike, O O, 9c; Thorndike, 0«,I
130, fancy, 10)4c; AmosacaV 8 A, 1«-
Yams—Flint River. 82Rc per bund.
Fruits nnd Nuts.
Apples—1.75 to 6.00.
Bananas—150 to 2.00 per bnneb.
Citron—60c.
/'AKIHSAHY**OFFICE, Jones Counly./j'J
U February 2Mh. ;res.-Wh-rcss. “• 1 • ^
adnitoUtrator of tutnte of ” * 1
cil. applies for ilUmUslon therefrom. J
Thtne are to rite ami ailmonLb »» r,!
rf>nr»*rru‘«l to Khowiwune st .jf
they have to tho contrary, on or l»y • *.3
ilnv in June next Witness: my' Jg® *
Mar. 13-w it. H. T. W
yyu>isARY’8 OFFICE, J';n«
U Fc’iro.iy aNh. .UW,-Wberes. th'L J
(u .ilia 25 to 30c.
Medicines—Oplnm, $5 to $5.60; qninlne,
80 to 90c; ,35 to 40c; iodide potash,
$1 to $250; rhubarb, 75c to $2; ipecac, $1.25 J ) Fchr.isn-;r.tb. ,'*>”• T”' 1 "'
to $150; aloes, 95c to $1; calomeC75e to $1; ‘ Martin K. Ifslonc. late ol thi. coun .
blue mass, 45 to 60e; surphine $4 to $4.25;. r *?g^’. re therefore lo cite -ml f'f
chloroform, 60 to 75c; castor oil, $1.75 to $2.' M twu concerned to .how «>•"*."
Paints, etc.—White lead, atHetly pure; | Imre totticc.’trary.at thH‘db'T’, ,
$5.50 io*7! furniture varnish, $150 to $2; (Wt Monday In April next. "‘'I.,,
coach varnish, $250 to $3; cabinet glue, 10c . |L7 H lr 0^™ cSo^W.'oTl'me . i ’
to 40e; white glue, 30c to 35c. I , , , H . r „ ir i. wiim-- my band v* 11 ’,^3
Oils—Linseed, raw, 58c; linseed, boiled,! Mar.foisit. RiH.ANPT.POS 8 -
.lK<iTc,.-r, Mar '..'.
nei t
ttnn 1
arket |
•fill'
th «
r^wfang Linimsrei Maalan* totang Linimant
r.rxwxt must a so ukirext. sroti-i »>»• |. ,n '' : ■* L " •• *rr ri,-. n »*->-, I xustami liniment, r.w l.j amt
mx.) isOmrbla*wln*sy,Wlnac*lls»fc.i>B»I .1 v e .>HaHoews.. ;aaui h<— 1 1 (U.T ormtaeX^rattMdiaeontysTnriawiw
Dry llfHMls.
Ball Thread— Eagle and Phenix. perfect,
25c.
Browr Hhirtlugs—Waynmanville, J4,5)4c;
Avonala, %, 654c. | Ol
Brown.tieetings—Wayamanrillt,4-4,6).e; '
Avonala, 4-1, 654c.
Bleed mil Shirtings—Frail of Loom, J4, ,
6Xc; Cabot, )4, 7Xe. j
7.1. mM
NOVICE LEAVE TO 8F
IA.JOSB*<’nrNTY-l^'”;
Ss'jSiwtafaSSpw
ra*cl. T'
Mar. U-
*11 1
narv Kih. I**'
7 s iij*Tr Liniicaot . Ltnune 1
r r I %Af . . rr#
iU IV LSKHTUm
UUa Hasxaa axul su I>