Newspaper Page Text
THE MACOH TELEGRAPH: ' ,'iDAT MOBUISG, FEBRUARY 1895.
THE WORLD OF TRADE.
IIefgeto BY WIKS i SOM THE
Great Markets.
New York, Fob. 1.—Money on call firm
2 par «ent; last loan at 2; closing of-
\ at a. Prime mercantile paper, SVfca
4 per cent. Bar silver »?4. Sterling ex
change weak with actxial business In
banker's at for sixty days, and
4.*S\ for demand. Posted rates, 4.8ftaS9*/i.
Commercial bills 4.87a**. Government
bonds steady; state bonds Arm; railroad
bonds stronger. Silver at the board wat
60*i bid.
STOCKS AND BONJ>8.
RAILROAD STOCKS,
Amer. Cot Oil.VJV,
. 19%
up prefd. 6312
Am. Sugar Befan; 9\%
do prefd. 90%
Am. Tobacco Co. 91%
ao prefd.107
A.. T. and R. Fe.
Balt and Ohio.. 09%
Canadian Pacific 51 *4
Chess. and Ohio. 17
Ch». and Alton. .14/
Chi., B. andQ... 72*<
Chicago Oaa. ... 7.V s ,
Dei., it. and W*. 1161
Bis. and Cattle P 8*i
Bne. 18%
do profd. 21
Gen.Electric.... 29%
Illinois Cen 88
Lake Erie and W 15
prefd. 7<» 3 ,
UU U. #S»-A
Lake Shore 137*4
Lou. and Nash... 52%
Lou. sud N. Alb. 7
Manhattan Cons. 108J4
Mem. and Char.. 10
Michigan Cen... U3? 4
Missouri Pacific. 22
Mobile and Ohio. }5%
N., C. and St L.. 64
START BONDS.
Alabama class A.104 Teuno ao old 6s..
*• " B.104
- H G* 01
stamped 4*s..luu
N. Carolina os.... 98
•* is. ...125
U. b.Cordage.... 5*v
do prerd; 9*4
New Jersey Cen.. 88%
New l’orkCen... D9li
N. Y. and N. h.. o J 1 *
Norf. andW.pref 14%
Northern Pacific- _ ,
do prefd. 16%
Ihwtfilorn Of.- 1 :
Northwestern
do prefd. 143 '
Pacific Mail 21%
Reading 9*2
Rock Island 63%
ok PauL 56%
do prefd.117%
Silver Certifie'es. 601;
Tenn.C. and 1... 14 T J
do prof df 70
Texas Pacific ... 6%
Union Pacific... 9%
W., St L. and V. 6
do prefd. 18,y*
Western Uoion.. 87%
WhTg and L. K. 9%
do prefd. 38
Southern R’y 5a. 86%
*• “ con. 10%
“ " pt,d. 32%
8- C. 4%s 103
newset.38*84
Virginia 6a dcf... 8%
** t’ra... 7
" lunded debt 69
today were 33.611 bales, while the exports
were 66,290; the total receipts this week
»<-.« 254.254 lmle#. *e»iit»l 300,832 l««t
week. 115,504 last year and 167.000 In UK.
The market haa shown a disposition to
advance, but the trade Is still on top of
It and prevents the establishment of any
advance by persistently “nagging” at It
and Irlghtntng off would-be buyers. There
Is an old saying that a wise man some
times changes his opinion, but some men
never do. The latter par* of this “say
ing" Is especially true to the b4*rs in
cotton. They ha f, e clung to thw bear
side so long and made so much money
selling cotton short that they have be
come biased, and they see no good in
anything. In fact, they regard anybody
Inclined to buy the cotton In the light of
an imbecile, and they have no use for *t
bull, but we think they are overdoing
the thing, the same as the 1 bears In the
stock market d?d. and that the day ot
reckoning is rapidly approaching. The
financial outlook Is much more promising.
The tFsue of a large block of bonds will
soon bo announced and Wall street Is
already dlcountslng the beneficial result
It will have. As a matter of fact, nearly
all the gold withdrawn from the sub
treasury yesterday by the foreign houses
Intended for export today, has been paid
bkek Into the treasury for the purpose ot
buying some of the bonds.
E. B. Cuthbcrt & Co.
LIVERPOOL.
Liverpool, Feb. L—Spot cotton market
Liverpool, reb. 1—Spot cotton market
demand fair, prices unchanged. American
middlings 2 31-33. Sales 7,UUU bales, ot which
600 were lor speculation and export, and
included 6,500 American. Receipts 44.100
bales, of which 44,100 were American. Futures
barely steady.
February...
I Opened. | Closed.
Fob.-Marcfi
March-April
April-May
May-Juuo
June-July
July-August...
Aug-Sept
Sept-Oct
Oct-Novr
2 67-64
2 59-61
2 C0-64
2 62-64a2 61-64
2 6.1-64
■ 1-61
2-64
1 61
5.61
...•12 67-64
2 56-64x2 57-64
2 57-04*2 58-64
2 59-04
2 60-04*2 61-64
*4 02-64
2 G3-5J&3
9 1 -64
9 2-G4a3 3-64
3 4-61
WEEKLY STATEMENT.
Liverpool, Feb. 1.—The cotton statistics for
the past week st this port sre as follows:
Total sales of the'week...
1 Total. | Anicr’n
GOVERNMENT BONDS.
U.8.4s regfst'd..IllI U. 8. 2s regular.. 96
......... 1*41 U. i
t. b. 4s coupons.!!!^ I
* Eid, t Asked. t Ex dividend.
Trad takings,iDeluding for
warded from ships’ side...
Actua exsort
Total import
COTTON.
Jlscon, February 3L
The Macon market for spot cotton is qulot
at the loll owing quotations-
Good Middling 6%
Middling 6
Strict Low Middling 4%
Total Stock
Total afloat
Speculators took.
Purchases for export-
ditto w>* .uiuuuug * 4
Low Middling 4%
Goo<l Ordinary i%
Ordinary —
TORT RECEIPTS.
i-!
12
a
hi
f
K
s i
2
ii
(Saturday.
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
22900
42060
24386
2 H Hr.
350*6
86641
38102
42676
85612
88009
2876U
36833
24149
19292
22758
23659
8559
14914
1010c
16990
23U79
11778
14648
8652
Total this vrook
191.254
220.112
116,503
88,141
CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS.
Chicago, Feb. 1.—The stock of wheat
and flour at Liverpool Increased to the
extent of 976.000 bushels of the former
and 10,000 sacks of the latter during the
month ot January, and this muT-iet
opened weak and lower in consideration
that fact and showed eddlttanal de
clines later on the engagement ot 13,000,-
In gold for shipment by tomorrow's
steamer. The bulls argued their bide of
tho question from the standpoint of a
probability that tihe president would act
with reasonable promptness in the mat
ter of Issuing bonds. There were rumors
something being dne by the cabinet
today, but they were denied later, ns
were likewise reports that the Roths
childs w’ere negotiating for a purchase
the entire Issue of tho proposed bonds.
After noon prices rallied on this gossip
New York. Feb. 1.—Spot cotton «toa< y.
Middling gulf &%•, middling upland 6%.
Sales 1.151 bales.
Tho future market opened quiet and closed
Steady. Sales, 06,300-
January
February
March
April.
May.......
June
July
Annual
Bentember
October.
November
December
| Opened
and on the talk of cash business at St.
Louis. New York was weak during the
morning, but recovered with Chicago.
May wheat opened from 52% to a:
between 62% and 63%aH; closing at 63%a
Vi—% cent higher than yesterday. Cash
wheatwss week and %a% cent lower.
Corn—"Shorta" regretted nn over-con-
na
6 4i "«
6 49
5 45 ! n
6 53
5 49 ke
6 56
& 81 tu
6 Cl
5 54 f»
5 65
l 60 ra
6 68
& 64 41
5 M c!
5 73 tt
•i * • ck
....
ucum asn zxroara.
| To-day
Consolidated net receipt,.. 35,041,
Export, to O. Britain.
- Export, to France....
- Exporta to continent.
Rock on band at New Yor.
tor the
Week.
101,Mt
28,216 118.053
27.033 27)063
H 15,9361 20,900
1,004,227
’iota, aincs sept. X—Net receipt..... 6,152,921
“ •• " Export, to O.B. 2,398,836
- “ “ Exp. to Fratioe. 613,723
" *• - Exp. continent. 1,Mm,936
The table below ahow. the total reoeipta at
the port, named aince September 1, 1894:
Galveston... 1,438,807
New Orleana 1,981,831
Mobile...
Savannah....
Cbarleaton..
Wilmington.
Norfolk-
Baltimore...
New York...
2U8.763
773,has
357,509
217,675
375,697
75,127
140.464
Hot ton 44,177
N'.wn’t Neva 29,411
Fniladelphia 77,138
Weat point.. 236,1«7|
Drun,wick... 81,000
Velasco 592
Port ltoyal... 111,601
that period. The motive in the action of
the market came entirely from wheat und
corn at nil times. The doae was firm
and a shade higher than yesterday for
May. Cash oats were weak, at a de
cline of %a% cent, but participated nom-
ally In the strength of the futures after
trading was over.
Provisions—A decline In provisions at
the start, the outcome of lower quotations
on live hogs at the yards, was only par
tially recovered before the close, it was
but a small amount of interest that was
shown in the business, the trading being
of an ordinary character. At the close
M aypork tu 6 eenta tower then yester
day; May lard a shade lower and May
riba 2% cents lower.
Total 8,152.221
WEEKLY OOWUUT1VE STATgftEET.
TTbW-34. | 1802-9J
Total receipt, at all United
Mutes ports...
Total receipt, to date...
Export, for tho week....
Total exports to dato....
Htock at all C. 8. porta..
Rock at Interior towns..
Htock at Liverpool ■
American afloat for Ob II.
94.254
52.921 4
^^^■>17,1241
6,152,9211 4.861,549
232.916 181,991
4,618.992 8,545,116
1,(411,227 1,315,223
231,017 207,51X1
1,589,031) l.OUO.UOO
muiolMMgn
945,000
S'ewOrlean.. Feb. 1 Cotton futon. cloMd
steady: rate. 42,633 balea
| July. 5 tl
January . —. .
February 6 06 August 5 42
M.ren —— 6 19 | Meptember 6 45
April 6 18 | October... *“
May 6 25 | November.
June.... 6 31
I December..
6 53
66»
PORT QUOTATIONS.
Galveston Feb. 1.-Steady. Middling,
6%; receipts, 6A73; stock. 1*2,731.
Norfolk. Feb. l.-8teady. Middling 8%i
receipts. 1.774: stock. 44.013.
Baltimore. Feb. 1.—Nominal. Middling,
6%; stock, 18.06X
Boston, Feb. 1,—Steady. Middling. 6%;
receipts. 246.
Wilmington, Feb. l.-Dull. Middling.
4%: receipts, 463; acock, 14.317 (corrected
Philadelphia. Feb. 1.-Steady. Middling,
6?4; receipts, M3; stock, 10,315.
Savannah. Feb. 1.—Quiet and easy. Mid.
dllng. 6 1-14; receipts. X266; stock. 94.853.
New Orleana, Feb. 1.-Quiet. Middling,
6; receipts. 1.314; stock, f-r.,17*.
Mobile. Feb: 1.-Quiet. Middling. 4 15-14;
receipts -133; stock, 40,431.
Memphis, Fell. 1.—Steady. Middling,
1-14; receipts 381; Mock. 137.443.
Augusta, Feb. I Steady. Middling
3-14; receipt., 1.313; Mock, 33.4K (actual,
Cbarleaton, Feb. 1.—Quiet. Middling,
X%; r.eelnt. *17: Stork. 64.773.
Cincinnati, Feb. l.—Quiet and steady.
Middling. 6%; receipts-7x2.
I-oulaville, Feb. 1.-Quirt Middling, 6%.
Kt. Louis, Feb. 1.—Quiet and steady.
Middling, 6 1-14; receipts, 161; stock, si
COTTON LETTER OF E. B. CUTH
UEir* ft CO.
New York, Feb. r.-topectal.)—Specula
tion la cotton today wms Irregular and
unsettled, prior* opened two points lower
and declined one point further, owing
to disappointing Llvsrpool advices/react
ed and advanced 6 points on lighter re
ceipts and soma local buying, but turned
weak and toM all this under hammering
by the bears, rhe closing prices chowlng
a net delta. of 6 points from yeterday.
There was nothing In the situation tc
warrant the. raid upon (he market; prices
simply declined under vigorous attsrks
mads upon them by the hears who tried
to close the market a. low as possible,
la order to Influence Liverpool unfavora
bly. The receipts of cotton at the porta
56.UU0I 53,060
62%
72.000
0,U»
irwrtin
1,689,000
397,UU)
1,603
2,700
178, non
1,143,000
395,000
MUNICIPAL BOND&
Savannah 6 per cent. L ,nJ. 191 106
Atlanta bonds pries an to rate
of lnterc.it ind maturity 100 U9
Auru.ta bonis, price as to rate
< f I:.!"r ■ util t.lat.irlty 100 ,14
Rome bonds, 8 per cent |.H% IX
C*>lumbus 6 per cent, bonds ... .103 ltd
Macon 6 per cent, bond i, quar
terly coupons U3 in
RAILROAD BONDS.
Savannah, America, an I Mont
gomery railroad • per cent,
bonds Jan. anf July coupon, 61%
Georgia Southern mi Florida
railroad 6 per cent. bond.\ Jau.
and July coupon., <1 to 1*71.... s 86
South Georgia and Florida rail
road lndorwd 7 per cent, txinda,
Jan. and Jui> roupon. m
Northeastern railroad Indorsed
C per cent, bond.. May and
November coupon. toj kb
Macon and Northern railroad
certificate, of bond.. Much
and September coupon. 44 46
Charleston, Columbia and Au
gusta railroad 7 per cent bond. 93 101
RAILROAD STOCKS AND DEBEN
TURES.
Central railroad common stock.. 16 U
Central railroad 6 per cent, de-
beture. 21 33
Southwestern railroad stock.... 70 73
Georgia railroad stock US 157
Atlanta and West Point rail
road debenture. 99 n
Atlanta and West Point railroad
•tock 89 83
Central railroad Joint mortgige
7 per cent, bonda Jaa and July
coupons 130
Georgia railroad 6 per cent
bonds, Ja-. and July coupons,
due 1897 103 1(U
Georgia railroad 8 per cent,
bonda Jau. and July coupona
July coupons, dus 1910 119 111
Georgia railroad 6 per cent,
bonda dan. and July coupona
due 19*3 11* U6
Montgomery and Eufaula rail
road, I per cent bonds. Jan.
and July cousona due U09....103 103
Ocean Steamship bonda 6 per
due 1923 33
Columbus and Western railroad
6 per cent. July coupons UO Ml
Columbus and Rome railroad 6
per ce it. bonda Jaa and July
coupons . ..31 41
Augusta ani Kno.viiie raiiroia
7 per cent, bonda Jaa and
July coupona due 1900 103% 106
■ LOCAL BONDS AND STOCKS,
llacon Qua Lugnt out Mater
consola May and November
coupons r,
Wesleyan college 7 per cent
bonds, Jan. and July coupons.106 115
Macon Volunteer^ Armory 1 per
cent, bonda Jan. and July cou
pons lot ua
Bibb Manumcrurtag Company 6
per cent bonaa“pni and Oct.
coupons 100
Progress Loan and Improvement
Company , H
Southern Phosphate Company
stock 75
Acmo Brewing Company
BANT. (STOCKS.
First National Bank stock IS
American National Bonk stock..
Exchange Bank stock
Union Saving. Bank and Trust
Company stock
Central Oeorgta liank stock......
Macon.Saving. Bank stock
Central City Loan and Trust
Company Mock
tho Miff afternoon and found the mar-
FUTURE QUOTATIONS.
The leading futurea ranged aa follows:
WHEAT— Opnlng. Hlchxt, Lwst. Close.
Fsb
49%
60%
49%
60%
May
K%
6»%
62%
M%
July
LV-.
64%
53%
MTi
CORN-
Ftb
40%
41%
40%
41
May
4r.
43%
42*4
43%
July
43’.
43%
42%
43%
OATS-
Feb
26%
37
36%
2* v »
May
28%
2S%
26%
23%
June
a%
28%
»%
38%
PORK-
Slay
9.82%
9.90
9.77%
9,Ki
LARD-
Msy
6.41%
6.52%
6.47%
6.52%
RIBS-
May
5-12%
5.17%
5.02%
5.15
CASH QUOTATIONS.
Flour was quiet and unchanged vtltat (he
feeling eaay. No. 2 spring whei* . 4.
No. 2 red. 66.
No. 3 corn, 40%.U.
No. 3 oats, 37%.
Pork, 9.«2%a7t.
Lard. 6.37%a49.
Short rib side*, 6.«ta66
Dry salted suoulders, 4.6R4a75
Short clew aides. 6.26O30.
Whisky, 1.33.
NEW YORK GROCERrES.
New York. Feb. 1.—Butter: Quiet and
weak, except for fancy; state dairy Well
creamery, 14aS: creamery, Ha24; el
gins. 34.
Cotton seed oil—Quiet and steady; crude.
33; yellow prime, 36a%; do choice, 37.
Petroleum—Nominal.
Rosin—Quiet and firm; strained, com
mon to good. 1.25a 40.
Turpentine-Quiet and firmer.
Rice—Firm, fairly active; domestic, fair
to extra. 4%af; Japan. 4<4>%.
Molasses-Firm and unchanged.
Coffee-Stead. 30 and » points down.
Mwch. 11.35a 15; May. 14.2000; June. 14.3»x
35; July. 14.30; September, 14.1Sa36; De
cember, I4.l5a20: spot rio dull ind steady;
v- ■ i.t; .
la
Lord—'Tierces, 7 3-4: cans, 8 1-4.
Oil—11c.
enulT—I»ruianl'e Maocaboy t>nuft,
atone Jare, 60c. per pound; glass Jars,
fine, ner pound: 2-onnre nans 39.25 ner
gross; 1-pound cans, 60c; Railroad
anufr, 1-pound glass, 60c; 1-ounce tine,
$5 per gror..
Tomato Catsup—(Pints, 9Cc; quarts,
}1.25.
Hominy—Per foarr»t, 13.60.
Meal—Bolted. 65c; plain, 56o»
WUheut—Bran, 96c.
H;vms—10 l-2c to 11c. u
•brouldera—9 l-2e.
V
DRY GOODS.
Corrected Every Saturday by S. Waxel-
laum At Son.
Prints—Berwick. * l-3c; standard 4 1-2
to Gc; turkey red. 4 to 6 l-2c; Indigo blue,
4 to 4%c.; solllx. 4 to 6 cents
SheR.'ugs—3-laS%, -talc.: t-kit-k, 6 eenta.
Tlcklnge—From 6 to 12c.
Checks—3 5*3 to 6c.
Bleachings—J'rult of the Loom, $ 3-4
to 1 1-fc.
FRUITS AND NUTS,
Cullen.
Corrected by
Flg»—Dry. choice. 12 1-3 to 15 cents.
Peanuts--North Carolina. I 1-3 cents;
Virginia. 4 and b cents
Lemons—3.50x4.00.
Nuts—TArragonla almonds, it cents pet
pound; Naples walnuts ;6 cents: Frenci
walnuts l. cents; pecans 13 cents
Apples—Sun dried. C to 7 cento per
pound
Raisins—New In market, 1.76 per box;
London layers 3.00 par box; looxo Mux-
catel, 33 ner bog.
Irlib Potatoes—32.25 per sack.
SIGNS OF THE TIMES.
OUTLOOK FOR BUSINESS AND LEGIS
LATION THE COMING YEAR.
A Wide Range of Opinion—Views of Lead
ing PopullMx—The Financial Situation.
Lafe l’enco Mid III. Constituents—Talk
About an Increase of Gold.
M-EATS.
Corrected Every Saturday by X7. L.
Henry.
Fresh Meata-Westera beef. 6% to 6c;
Georgia beef. 4 1-3 to 6c; dressed hogs
6 to 0%c; Western mutton. 7% cents; na*
tlve mutton. 6 l-2c; cmolced pork sau
sage. 8 l-3o: fresh pbrk sausage. Sc; Bo
logna sausage. 6c.
POULTRY,
EGGS AND
PRODUCE.
COUNTRY
(Corrected every Saturday by E. A. Wax-
elbauro & Bro.)
HARDWARE.
Corrected Every Saturday by Dunlap
Hardware Company,
Axes—16 to 67 per doern.
Bar Lead—(*. vor pound.
Buckets—Palnta 61.25 per dozen; ce
dar, three hoops 62.il.
Cards—Cotton. 64.
Chains—Trace. 53.60 to 64.0 per
dozen.
Well buckets—13.23 per dozen.
Rope—Manilla, 19c; steel, 8c; cotton, 12a
12 cents.
Fhoei—Horxe. 64: M'U». J5.
Shovels—Ataev 61b per dozen.
Phot—Drop. 11.16 pet sack.
Wire—Barbell. 2%c per opund.
Corn Beet—X pound cam >2 per doxen.
Nails—6LC6 base, wire; cut, 31.35 base,
base
Tubs—Painted, 63,35; cedar, 64.60 per
neut.
nrooms—31.25 to 35 rpr dozen.
Itame., iron bound. 63.
Measure*—Per neet. 31.
plow Itisdes—4 cents per peuna.
Iron—Swede, 4 l-2o per pound; refined,
2o basis.
Plow etock—Halmen. 61; Ferguson,
tOC.
DRUGS. PAINTS AND OILS.
Corrected Every Saturday by Henry J.
Lamar & Sous.
Ctnamon Bark—Per sound. 12 to 15c.
Cloves—Per pound. 16 to 25c.
Drug* end Chemicals—Gum sssifoe-
tlda, 25c pound: camphor gum. 55 to C5c
pound; gum opium 63.43 to 130 pound;
morphine. Ms. 62.35 to 624$ ounce; qui
nine (according to size) 61 to 90 cents
ounce; eulpbur. 4 to to pound; oalts Ep
som, 2 1-2 to 2c pound; copperas. 2 to 2c
pound; salt petr- -.9 * 12c pound; bo
rax. 15 to 12c sound; bromide potash, 50
to 56o pe. pound i chlorate, 25 to 20c per
pound: carbolic acid, 60c to 61.75 pound;
chloroform. 75o to 31.40 pound; calomel,
S5s to 61; logwood. 16 to 20o pound
creim tartar, commercial, 25 to 30o.
CANNED GOODS.
Corrected Every Saturday by
Javuea A Tinsley Co.
Apples-e-pound eons. 3L35 per dosen.
Blackberrlee—2 pound cans. 61 per
dozen: 5 pound etnx. 6:.06 par dozen.
Corn—t bound const 90 cents to 6L50
per dosen.
String Beans—2 pound cans, 90 cents
per dozen.
Tumatoee—3 pound cans, per dozen, 89
cents; 2 pound cam. 6L
Okra and Tomatoes—2 pound cans,
21.10 pe* daxsn.
June Pcas—5 pound cans, 31.25 per
Red Cherries—2 pound cans, 61.60 per
dozen
White Cherries—3 pound cane.SLTi per
dozen.
Lima Beans—31.25.
Peachto—2 pound cans, 61.50 per
dozen.
Rlticapples—1 pound cans. 61.50 tc 5225
pet doxen; grated. P. A W„ 32 25.
lUspbemc—2 pound cans, 6LS5 per
dbzen. h
Straaberrl^
dozen.
Reiches, pie—2 pound cans. 31.35 pc:
-2 pound cans, 61.64 per
Hens, 25-27 1-2.
Chickens. 15-20.
Turkeys. 65-6L09.
Geese, 49-50C.
Eggs. 18.20c.
Butter, 15-lSc.
Sweet Potatoes 3545c.
Irish Potatoes. 23.26.
Rutabegars, 61.75.
Cabbage, 61-69.
Onions, 62.50.
White Peas, 75-1.60.
Country Urcund Pear, 60c.
Evaporated Apples, 10c.
Georgia Syrup. 23-2Sc.
HIDES. WOOL. ETC
[SpecLd Correspondence.]
Washisotan, Jan. 81.—“Is tho re
cent trouble _A Brooklyn to be taken as
a mere local outbreak, a sort of isolated
accident, or does it indicate tho open
ing of another year of labor troubles, to
be followed, aa usual, by a winter of
great suffering and many appeals for
charity?”
This question, and in substantially
these, words, has been asked many a
time in the capitol during the past ten
days, and the range of opinion devel
oped is quite curious. Despite the evi
dences, there are still many who insist
that onr business troubles are substan
tially over, and that we are about to
enter on an era of prosperity, and I ob
serve that they all base their opinion on
SENATOR J. H. KYLE.
three facts—that consumption is now
rapidly gaining on prodnotion in the
world’s grain markets; that the gold
supply is increasing at an unprecedent
ed rate, and that the wild projects and
labor tronbles of last summer have
proved effective lessons. I am particu
larly interested in the answetB of the
Populists, and without exception they
deprecate the Brooklyn strike and de
plore its possible consequences in legis
lation.
Views of Two Senators.
I talked an hour or so the other day
with Senators Kyle nnd Allen on tho 80
called "new departure of tho Popnlist
party, ” and in tho oonrso ot it tho for-
_____ „ _____ ___ mer said;
peusd:‘ unWaibsd; 10 to if "cents;' burry. ! “I am very sure that the Brooklyn
7 to 10 cents. j matter is an accident and unpromeditat-
| ed, for I have bnt recently talked with
| all the labor leaders. After tho Chicago
Corrected Every Saturday by L. Cohen affair ended they said to me: ‘This is
* Co - I onr last strike. We have gone through
enough in this lino, and heroafter wo
think I had time to give to finch tiib,
gaid he, “if you oonld know tu .
mands made on me from home to
struct all creation and rectifv thw
general. Just look at these letten*!
soo what they ask mo to da j n „
what confidence my constituents aaj
western publio generally have in
power to fix things. ”
I looked, and amoa* Qany gem,
radicalism found this ore from San
ego. Cat:
Most Hoborsd RspBtsEWtKTivx-Win
introduce s Bill for the Hm-prauion of r
Breeding In Our Saloons and Publio 01L
And for the teaching chtk)*en howo to 1,„
be taught in Our publio Schools oePrJl
life. Yors for God and Home.
"Theyaro talking about Hawaii
the other end of this bnilding and m
ins highfalutin predictions that L
American people will be thorongul
aroused over it,” Baid Champ cm
"and that shows how little they fa,,
about the beloved people. Not
American in 60 will bother his hi
about Hawaii this year, for they
have plenty of their own trouble to t_
about The farmer, if he lies ntr
nights over anything, will do it thiu
ing how he is to get something tor hj
staff to pay taxes and interest on
gages, and as for oity laborers my’
is that where they think once al
Hawaii they will think a thou?'
times abnnt how they are going to
the wherewithal to line their individ!
insides. No, the senators need not wi
themselves over what the people
think abont Hawaii. As to strikes
labor tronbles—why, the main thoi
that occurs to me is that despair
times prevents strikes as effectual!;
would contentment”
And with this view qnito a numb
of members coincide, Abont the tis
this talk was rife the pooling bill wbi(
had passed the house was up in the is
ate, and expressions were frequent &
the interstate commerce law had open*
♦tjft Wjy Knurififnllw fra> Fhn Tr_;.
States to take charge of all the railrw!
running throngh different states. I hat
several times heard the old allegory 1.
effectually used by Abraham Lincok
abont Stephen, Franklin, Roger t
James framing the separate timben i
a house quoted to prove that thenn
an understanding from the first iba
this bill. “One-third of the railra
mileage,” said one member, “isiuthi
bonds of receivers, and, according to th
latest rulings, tho federal jndgei are
assnmo jurisdiction from hell to Beer-
sheba, with a federal prefect like Gen
eral Miles in each 6ity to enforce their
deorecs. ”
:ockg
Corrected Every Saturday by Q. EeraJ
At Co.
Green salt hides, 3%.
No. 1 flint hides. «%.
Goat skins—10 to 20 cents each.
Uheen Sktua—20 to 60 cents each.
Beeswax—M to 23 cents.
Wool—7\ashed, is .to__20 cents per
LIQUOR9.
Whisky-Rye 61. U. to 63.tO; corn. 61.21
to il.50: gin. 51.10 to 61.76; North Carolina shall seek the desired end by votes.*
coru.tl.19 t» tl.50; Georgia torn, 6LC0. And tho lost olootion shows that they
2L181** Portland “snsrry, *U toTS; ei£% have kept their word. I do not desire to
:un champagne arrogate anything to myself, but I was
16 to 310 case: American champagne,
37.60 to 38.50 per csss; cordials, 612 per
dozen; bitters, 39 per dozen.
AS VIEWED BY A NOVICE.
the instrument in concluding the Chi
cago trouble. It wns agreed that tho
commission was to bo appointed to ex
amine the wbolo matter and other con
cessions mode, nnd theronpon tho striko
was to be callod off. As soon as that
was dono all tho labor leaders went to
Football Discussed From tho Standpoint
of One Not on Knlliaslast.
Modern football Is in one respect like W ork for the election, nnd the cnomy,
baseball, in that It affords nbundant facll- wary u qsqs], prepared to .decelvo tbo
itles to kick Oil the umpire, but otherwise bli(J tQ onr , tren gth. Thoro has
ltlsn’t ilkaMythingriM enswth. The ^ „ donble reaotlou on that matter
ara selected wlri. great i£ie, notady tetag *»Mcb is really funny. Bight nfter the
eligible who cannot withstand the kick of election the monopolist organs raised a
a niulo between the eyes or In the pit of great cry that tho Popnlist party was
tho stomach. Other requirements are n wiped ont and actually made na bolievo
luxuriant growth of hair, any color, nnd our vote was light Then we found that
tnuxeular tluue sufficient to meet a freight (twos nearly donblo that of 1803, and
train on the down grade and kntKik It off tbatW0Woro attracting reemits. Since - , _ „ „„„
the_tMofc._ The fcotball Is an oval, leather A „ cn t forth h „ latform minister there, Hon. Wi l am
there has been another reaction against «• wjoiced gipatly that the
■Ion of whloh seems to be n subject of
continual contention.
Two corpulent youths, callod ths center
rushes, taku tbs ball between tbem, each
being in a stooping posture, heads togeth
er and legs very wldo apart The teams
bunch up In the rear of their respective
Treasury Officials Encnnmgtd.
It is a ploasnro to add that the fint
really encouraging remarks cotne fm
the treasury department, and they in
all the moro charging bocauso wo hx
got in tbo habit of expecting somethii|
else from that quarter. They assure | ■
that reoeipta ore rapidly gaining 01m
penditures, and that, to their certaii
knowledge, February will equal
them. They add that January wooK
have done so had not the expend!!;
been heaviest, as usual, in that month |
and moro than 13,000,000 in Cenl
Pacific railroad bonds paid besides. Tbt
big interest payments aro mado in Jaa-|
nary. Tho officials add that, with tbt
certainty of increasing receipt?, tho
reserve may bo allowed to go as Iowa
350,000,000 without danger. Tho dil
or of tho mint continues to a ?.ire
that tho gold supply of Jho world is
creasing rapidly, and to oach sncccsa
estimnto ho adds n little. Ho is
positivo tho world’s yield will be
least 1200,000,000 this year, and as
amount used in tho nrta will not
crease in proportion tho coinage will et ]
coed $100,000,00a Let’s all hope ilk
truo, for it would only tako six or sent
years of that sort of thing to abate ths
gold famine.
Certain Matters#
There was a good deal of cacklint
over the new tariff of tho Argentine Re
pnblio whon it reaejied here, and 00
L Bnchxn-
tariff eon-
mission bad listened favorably to all hi
■aid and favored tbo United States. Tin
committee on agriculture, however, can
not find mneh in it for the fanner. Tin
Argentines havo reduced tbo tariff 01
pino lumber by a percentage wbicl
wonld mako $360,000 less doty on the
there has been another reaction against
the old system, and I am now pretty
well satisfied that tbo liberal elements
in the west can nnite in 1806. ”
“And what will congress do on the
finances?”
... "Ask me an easy one. This congress
2esit». a «sssx». aswBsaiasiB
formation not only when the ball Is to t>o next congress, they are making great “J
■napped, but also whloh player is to tako promises that it will fund the green- [ Thedntyon farm wagons and sow
it and attempt to get around or break backs and Hherman silver notes, bnt I ° thor , iniploments of hosbandry is re-
through tho line of the opposition. Tbo know it will do no snch thing. It j dn ° od ftom «<> per °ent to 10 _Pff
troublo begins in the corner of tho field, wil i not jo anything that Cleveland nnd on canned fruita and vegetables th
captain whoso team has the ball calls off “°* daro ^ tak ® that Bcti °. 0 '
bis Jargon of numbers, and a riot is forth- ,alkod with to ° many senators to bo-
witn tnangurated. i Uevu auch a thing Forcible, and stal-
Tho unfortunate youth who has been wart Bepublicona have told me thoy
■elected to curry tho bull makes u break at oonld stand on the Allen platform, bnt
the Una of the enemy and is at once as to that a bill tc retire the $408,000,-
pounced upon by the other 91 men end 00 o could never be got throngh the
the referee, alt of whom fall down on him house. ••
FopnlUt Policy.
« Senator Allen was not so confident as
his colleague that the Brooklyn trouble
was
pound
No. 7. 14%.
Kusur—Haw, firm end mere active: fair
refining, 2%: ’ centrifugals, 94; test, 2%;
refined, quiet, steady and unchanged.
Freights to Liverpool—Quiet and steady;
cotton, by steamer, 7-4ld.; grain, l%d.
NAVAL STORES.
Wilmington. Feb. 1.—Rosin firm;
strained. 1.(8%: good strained. 1.07%.
Pplrits turpentine firm at 34,
Tar Com at 21.
Crude turpentine, steady; lunL 1.19;
soft. 1.99; virgin. 1-78.
MACON BOND AND STOCK REPORT.
STATE OF GEORGIA BONDS.
rti lam
T per ceoL bonds. Jn. and July
coupons, maturity UN tot in
4% per east, bonda Jan. and
July coupona, maturity 1912....US 111
4% per cant, bonds Ian and July
coupons, maturity 193. m uj
6% per cent bonds. Jan. and July
coupons, maturity long dats.,109 in
dozen.
Apricots. California—3
3ia pa' dozen.
Pozcb** LaUfoenU—1X26.
Rig Feel—2 puuno cans, 6X21 per
dozen.
Roan! Bief-.-l pound cans. 61.30 per
dozen: q pound :mna. 13 per d-izcn.
Coni Beef—2 pound czzz, 51.45 per
dozen.
Potted Ham—1-4 mend etna. 46 cent*
per lozrn. z-2 poured cans. 5L26 per
dozen.
Lunch Tongues—1 pound car.a. 53 per
dozen.
Tripe—2 poun/l cans. 61.86 per dozen.
MISCELLANEOUS GROCERIES.
Corrected Every Week by the
R. Jaquea ft Tinsley Co.
The following are strictly wboleeale
prices. No goods sold eorammera:
Fsh-KIt. white fish, 40c; In half bar
rels. $4. NO. 2, 25.76; No. 2, In kita. 16c.
Flour—Best patent, per barrel, 22.26;
second patent, 22fl5; * might, $3.90;
family. $2.60.
Hugar—Standard granulated, 4 l-4c;
extra C New York, 2 5-4c; Now Orteana
clarified, 3 3-4C.
May—We quote today: No, I timo
thy at 212 and fancy 219.
Meats—Bulk aide*, 8c.
OdU—(Mixed, 45c; whites 4 1c.
and kill or crlppk him if possible. Then
the referee, who Is provided with a cane
for self, defense, pokes around among tha
wriggling arms and logs, ascertains who
has the ball and aunouncca In a line tenor
Tolco so many yards lost or gained. The
fellow who is on tho bottom of the pile Is
brought around with artificial respiration,
the teams line up, and tbo good work goea
on. A broken leg or fractured skull en
titles a player to withdraw in favor of n
substitute. Occasionally a dispute arisen
over some technical point, whereupon the
partisans of the respective sides flock
■ronnd the disputants and howl for a rope
to lynch the reforoo. It Is entirely Imma
terial which way he decides. Thera is al
ways throughout the game a manifest dis
position to kilt him, and every man’s band
Is against him. The Ufa of a football
referee Is not a happy one. It Is consider
ed a great joke to accidentally fall on him
and above a No. V bob nailed shoe down
his throat
There are a great many Cun pul u la about
fcotbnlL One cf them is to pick out for
slaughter tho bast player ot theopiiosltion.
The mnfc-.d-- ot doing this are varied and
unique. Tbo point of an elbow applied
to the pit of a man’s stomach when bo Is
running at full speed bos been found to
be very effective. Bnt It Is useless to enu
merate further. The foregoing hint Is
sufficient A touch down Is made when
odd aide sdceeed* In carrying tha ball be
hind Its goal. This counts four points. Aft
er ths touch down the bah is carried ont a
certain dUunca lntotbe field, and the roy
al arch kicker of the team attempts to
■end It over tha goal bar. If ha succeeds,
two additional points are secured.—Paris
(HI*-) ~
reduction is one-half. It is to be hope!
that onr farmers will find some oomlofi
in these items, as they certainly stast
in need of it
It is foreign to the immediate subject
bnt worth noting in conclusion, ti*
member* elect to tho next house an u-
riving in daily increaiing numbers, soi
the applications for office* at tbe dia
poeal of that house outnumber any is
our previous history. One of the ia
elected Bopubiicans tells us that he ks
to M^d aTn^ butThoughV there ! n^ly 100 applications, thoo^
were too many foetbra in the national he cannot hope to secure more than««
labor situation for any man to master ** three places at the best He has b*J
them alL A* to party action he said; 20 application, for tho appointment of
"The strike is no part of onr policy, and {•R** ** ono - Few holdover member*
wo just now regret such thing, even ^ eo completely snowed nnd«
— nm.i w, .m nfflvrnnflihnt ft he, hut all are badly beset
J. H. Beadle.
more than nsnal. We ore now confident
of a union ot forces for n more liberal
policy—that is, a onion in tbe campaign
of 1806."
“Why is there ench distraction in the
present congress?’*
“Well, it,is as Senator Kyis said—
men are face to face with alternative*
His Accounts With Ills Brother,
On Jnly 17, 1768, Washington (
ed an account, still extant against Mrs
Mary Washington. There are mac?
charges in this accgnnt. chiefly for moo-
. . , . . ... — . . ey lent his mother annually or oftenerM
which they bate to admit It must be thecloreof her life. Beneath theW
the gold basis and » cimtraction of the mtry u ..settled.”
currency one-half, or the opposite, bnt
A Golden Opportunity.
If kissing Is deadly, as the scientists as
sert, that* Is a fortune awaiting tbo girl
who Invents and puta on tbe markrt an
aromatic brand of car bo 11 zed naonUtinn
—Chicago Dispatch.
they dread tbe decision so moch that
they are trying all aurta uf quack medi
cines to get away from it In fact, they
are trying to revive an obsolete system.
Banka of issue are obsolete. The world
baa outgrown them, or if It hasn’t it
isn’t for want of painfnl experience. ”
I never bad realized how big Senator
Allen is till he stood over mo nnd talked
thus earnestly. It is a great episode in
tbe history of the senate that daring the
fight over the Sherman silver law he
talked for IB boors and felt no ill cfWots
from it The other day be talked 4 hr*xr*
and 10 mlnntes, but he nsnally utters
only abont ISO words a minute, and it
really teems to me as if the first two
hours of his speech merely rests him.
or rather wake* him up and makes bit
voice musical.
Xafa Peace's Untie*.
Bon. Lafe Pence was not in the talk
ing humor when I laid tha Brooklyn
basin*** War* him- "Vow would not
Beginning Early.
“Thank you, my deer,” said th»r*** ,T
young woman to the bright eyed boy wbs
bad risen In tbe crowded car to give bef
his seat
n# stood a few moments with bit *■*
very wide aport, and then be said:
“If I was u man and a little girl bad (<•
np to glv* mo a seat, I’d take her on at
lap- ’ ’—Chloego Tribune
Anything that adds to tho neatnee* ss6
beauty of tbe home and Ha belonging* not
enly increases ths owner's pleasure. ™*
foatets refinement asd nut betterment *
the household.
ANSWER TllfA QUESTION.
Glv da m tnnnv noodle WS ***
around us aeem to prefer to suffer
be made miserable by Indigestion.
aUpatlon. dizziness, loss of aw* 8 ””
coming up of the food, yellow •«»
when for 76 cents wo will set! the*
Shiloh's ViulUer. guaranteed to cur*
tbetn?
Sold by Ooodwm ft Small Dree
Company, comer Cherry street
Colton avenue.