Hale's weekly. (Conyers, Ga.) 1892-1895, August 06, 1892, Image 7
\Al. CAPITAL, Being ho ne in Congressional L the Country’s Welfare. Ukkomdaytodaybbik^v L IffiASUKES UNDER s and (’DERATION OTHER NOTES. TnE World’s Fair matter —Tte question of privilege ’ bv a e;£3? I of Georgia, re- * fe tire Watson, present congress action of the members I taken by its m nc thrown into a The house was from U confusion resulting U K by Mr. Watson that every in the book to which Ered tod was literally defend every true, word and readv to greeted with The assertion was words charge Ln ft hisses as the the members reel through ia drunken members speak upon easures. Mr. Watson was order by Mr. Tracy, l who w r as greatly over the wholesale charge permitted upon U Ibis jjr Watson was reiterated language. He |on as to the truth of the state L by bim and defied the house Ftb him what it wished. Mr. Introduced a resolution calling Lointment of of a Mr. committee Watson’s to [dative te the truth . to drunkenness of mem the house, and to recommend Ue shall be taken Watson) with respect if the bember (Mr. Filibus (found L to be untrue. Lngs. immediately inaugurated by fof of New York, assuming the filibusters. Mr. Boatner \ ld immediate question action of on its the privilege reso¬ the privi— jnssed and was ruled to be [adopted without division. It 11.30 p. m. when the house re ae consideration of the World’s hdments to sundry civil appro ilis. )A Y,—Xhc World’s fair appro mntinues to deadlock congress, ustering in the house went on until the announcement was the death of adjourned Representative of [be house then out ;o his; memory. Before that, r imd durjng the filibustering bn feti’old reported sundry ! a' civil' resolution appropria . ex El 4 th. Mr. Hopkins, of' y August World’s fair advo fcne Ibjected of the I to its consideration, at the time that a failure to ■overnraent [would leave many departments' | without |r—In sent the resolution over. the house, Monday, Mp. ■moved to suspend the rules and I joint resolution extending ■gust 4th- the appropriations ■ the sundry civil act of last year, llution was parsed without oppo lit its pas-age was preceded by licy j discussion. Hardly had the announced the ' when Is passage an exodus of government prin b the public gallery. No ques le up that required the ascer t of the fact whether there was a juorum present or not. If it had Sessary to test that point the re M probably have been a demon in the negative. But there was in the day’s proceedings that any formal vote. The joint n extending till Thursday last ppropi-iations for government covered by and included in the civil appropriation bill, still in the house, was passed with 'id of remark and without any (at. (have — the Monday effect night’s caucus The anticipated upon p- pt be bound world’s fair people They de¬ by its acts. pave resolved on a rule or ruin lat petermined to secure an appro any cost. As a consequence Etenng Mu’ely was continued Monday nothing This was accomplished puse. pbustering. was the seven:n day Speaker Crisp has Ne possible effort to effect a of some kind between the factions but up to date without .During the day, however a reso .as pud adopted revoking all leaves of jaud in requiring members to return case of failure to do so, Eant-at-arms is instructed to send 1 to all parts of the country and em. pEsday-—F illibustering over the [fair [day and appropriation was resumed I t0 fake no quorum voting on a recess, the house FT and a democratic caucus was fed purnment for two o’clock. Shortly af an agreement between F er s of the two factions was r. K Provided that the entire fair . matter should be stricken r plowed sundry civil bill and that the to nass Then the mnn. |° [°te the on a appropriation gift f $2,500,000 agreed to the a Uf- \i d^moWJctaucus 0 S’Vroo' to was taken without filibus ^ i -ssd before appeared; one then Mr. Stewart seiZ'd the op portunity afforded by the colloquy between Messrs. Carlisle and Cock rell to make a silver speech. Mr. Carlisle addressed the senate on Mr. Hale’s,invitation as to the re ative merits of “protection’ and ‘ tariff for Tevenue only,” aDd in resp -nse to the speeches of Messrs. Hale and Aldrich. Saturday. -The anti-optiou bill was finally buried in the senate Saturday, Owing to the hot weather many senators have left W ashington for the summer, Senator Washburn realizes he cduld never get a quorum to vote upon it this session, so he agreed at Saturday’s ses sion for it to go over until December, That practically means its defeat after the election, as but little interest will be taken in the measure, and the opposition will find no difficulty in postponing it indefinitely. Monday.—T he attendanse of senators Monday morning was not indicative of any great success having attended the telegraphic summons of the vice presi dent recalling absentees. Tne vice ores. ident stated that no less than thirty-one such telegrams had been tent out, and he laid before the senate four telegrams re ceived by nm alleging sickness as the cause ot absence. These were from Messrs. Wilson, Ca-ey, Dolph and Paulk ner. Leaves of absence were granted, be sides, to Mr. Platt, for the remainder of the session, and Mr. Gibson, of Louisiana, for Tuesday. On motion of Mr. Hawley, the mvitation-of the Grand Army of the Republic at the encampment in Septem ber was accepted on the part of the sen ate, and a committee of five senators pro Tided for. The house joint resolution, extending the appropriations included in the sundry civil bill till Thursday receiv. ed from the house was laid before the senate and passed. ' Tuesday.—T he attendance of senators day, Tuesday was still smaller than on Mon or during most of last week. The vice president laid before the senate the resolution: reported Monday for the ap pointment* of a- select committee of seven senators on the employment'oTFinkerton detectives in labor troubles. A general discussion ensued. At 2 o’clock the dis cussion was suspended and Mr. Biitldr offered a resolution for the reference-of general appropriation bills at the next ctffiWitre^ sts-ifm'-arfd thereafter to the standing having the subject matter in chavke>1eaVing only to the appropriations Committee the legislative, executive and judiciary appropriation bills, the sundry civil bill, the pensions bill and ficieucy bill. He asked that the resolution be laid ■ on the table, and i he gave notice that he would call it up at the beginning of the next ses sion. Mr. Gormah 'asked leave of .pencp for Mr: Hill for the 'remainder of. the session, audit was granted. further Pinkerton resolution was then discussed and finally adopted without di,vision. It provides for a select com linttee of seven senators to investigate, and rep0 rt facts.in relation t© the ployment fqr private purposes of arm,M jiolMb] oh men of: detectives in connec differences ) between workmen and uauploy-ws-;- reasons for creation of suc h 0 fg?njsied bands of armed men, their cHdrapt.m"a!nd uses; where, been when, how and by.-whom, they have em ployed and paid;-,afad under what au thoritv. Several private bills were passed, and the senate aniaurned., - Wednesday. —There were very few senators present when Wednesday’s ses s i 0 n opened, nor did. there appear to be any pressure of business before the body,, Reave of absence on account of ill health was granted to Mr.- Kenna. A resoiu tion offered by Mr. Pettigrew, calling on the secretary of war for a report as to a n army officers .wfip-, have been tried by court martial during the past, ten years, and their rank, offense,-Verdict rendered punishment imposed, was the subject of considerable discussion., -The resolution ^as finally referred to the eomtnittee on military affairs. The resolution offered p y jr. Call, of Florida, on the 12th of May for the appointment’ Of a joint committee of the two houses to examine and report on the commercial and polit¬ ical conditions of Cuba and West India Islands and their relations to the United States, was laid before the senate, Its adoption was opposed by Mr. Sherman as unwise in every aspect, and as an un¬ friendly act towards the government of Spain, and he suggested a comparison like between the proposed inquiry and a proposition on the part of the British government to inquire into the condition of Utah. It went over again without ac¬ tion. i NOTES. An extra session of congress is possible if the filibusters will not let the fair ap¬ propriation go through, and if the fair people will not let the resolution extend¬ ing the old appropriation from August 4 (as it now stands), to next December an extra sesson would have to be called to meet the emergency or a lot of gov¬ ernment machinery would stop. This situation existed once before and an ex¬ tra session had to settle it. The pres dent, on Friday, vetoed the famous McGarrahan claim bill. The veto message comes in the face of the fact that the bill passed both houses of con P ress by more than a t’* r °- th ' rds majority, For his veto the L president has been se verely criticised Old man McOarrahan had expected it from the president s de Se,° philoropficaHyHeJbX- V ft "can^be S.,cb be ea.de, w. 18 »'s™;re»rr?he I fa'ct tliat"jAdge'^aines *E. CoblT, of ! t he Tuffieeee. Ala., district, was the I i SSSIta ® Sle'SeJL'o^ortr A 11 Mr. Watson’s wit it t0 refute it< nesses expressed the opinion that he was intoxicated when he made his sneech in tne Nnyes-Rockwell c«se. Mr. Rock well, in whose lavoi^ Judge Cobb was arguing, testified,that he had seen Cobb before, after and all during his speech, aud that.be was not in the snialle.'t de gree intoxicated. Co’offtl Oates, of Ala bama, testified that he hatj, known Cobb twenty-seven years; that he was not a drinking mah; that he stood high in his church; that his character was above leproach. He said that Cobb was physi cally week; that he was making a long and careful argument; that some friend sent to his desk a stimulant (whiskey, he supposed); that Cobb sipped it; that his manner brightened up somewhat; that he emoh itically was not drunk. Represen tative Patterson, of Tennessee; Bynum, of Indiana; Meyer, of Louisiana; Heje cate Smith, of Arizona; Peyton W’ise,. of Virginia, clerk to the house commerce committee, and Solicitor Hepburn’bf",the treasury-testified to Mr. Cobb’s'swfjrihty PktteVfe^V^ynum on ■% occasion and in question. two,other ; Mlpfers. one or witnesses?t^st.fied/that• Cobb.V.desk they bad seen a cup on-Mr. and had'seehhim drink opt of it, but from -clo’se 6bst<rva tion and ^pqwledge of Mr. Cobb they knew that be was not under the influence' of liquor. Representative DeForest, of Connectictot, did not think Mr. Cobb at all under the influence of-liquor. .Mr of hew \ork testified, and gave general absolution to member? ot the. house us to Jrnn K euness,>M^Iutch.. ,ler mat -pf of Rental the:.ftfu*. vama, .of -testiff^^ Mr ^splits - charges, and so dffi.Mr- ; - Tra^y. & York .'Thp.members'of this hbusa, Mr., Mutchleiv sa(d,, . were particularly* free from tfie "habit of intoxication;-)tuSd'*were ns siilSef a set' of^me'n' .asdie'eveur saw in his life. He 'would ‘nof sayW he had never seen a member qp the floor of the houaoriveter the influence of liquor, but he neve* saw. a member drunk there this session. ^IciO’Brjen fit.’Louis Moore, corrcspon d. nt of the talked Republic, testified that he - with Mr. Cqbb immedi ately before and afjer his argument, to which he had listened, and knew Mr. Cobb wasnpt Tinder the influence of liquor. Mr. ■ Andrew Devine one of -the official stenographers of the house, produced the manuscript of the official report- ef Mr. Cobb’ argument.,, and testified that he saw nothing in Mr. Gobb%ffio.fidue) TM'lfeiamination to justify of the charges made. congressional .witnesses^'-prove by cu mul&tive-evidence, of hisi< audience that Mr. Cobb was notundeRtbe- influence of hquor When-- ReVfeliverfi his Noyes .Rockwell,spdijbfi'gteW ]oD tit^some who from made the statements. g ar WJ-.ofAcoWf^Mhen ^Messrs, ^tlAeton of Kan , ^VCutamings^fan^Rookwe ^heeipr, _ ■ oRMichigaar-Dirfigan, 1 !, of New of ‘Ohio; Wise ,and Mereditp, of gffiia; Mississippi;; ; Byrnes, Sperry of M^un of Connecticut, -f and. btump, of Maryland, adtip'r us;^tnes|fes;vfUO ^ testified to .)hat of that;' - P r e they Vi 0 .ljSffined to'Mr argument, and were hsurpnseW at ;the fiharge that he was) under'Mhe • mflil of liauor. \‘ ’ 1 , FRICK ARRESTED t - ...-$ As Were Also Several Htheje-iOorlffigie' Officials and Pinkerton mw.: A Pittsburg dispatch says-: ‘v'The: t •XT reatefied suits against .-.the Carnegie’ officials., and , ithe Pinkertons charging them with, qigrder were begun, Wedoes- • . morhing aqd, issued for the day warrants : - arrest‘of the defendants. At ll o’clock Brennan witnesses' Cox and .Hugh Aldernffin R'os's, prosepu- King’s f-tin’g' went to office on the south side and made infor¬ mation and the warrants were issued for Robert And William Pinkerton, A. heads and of the Pinkerton agency, J. Potter G. A. Corey, superintendents at the works, and Frick, Lovejoy, Leishman and Curry, officials of the company, and several Pinkerton men. During the afternoon Secretary Love joy, Vice President Leishman and Treas urer Curry, of the Carnegie company, appeared before Jud»e Ewing, in the criminal court, and said they desired to | surrender themselves on the charge of murder preferred by Hugh Ross. Judge Ewing refused to h-ar an applica¬ tion for bail until the accused surrendeied .to Alderman King. The magistrate was sent for, and after he had pie-ented his docket a hearing w as held. Leishman, Curry and Lovejoy waived the hearing, as did H. C. Frick, N. McConnell, James’S. Dovey and Su¬ perintendent Potter,who were absent but represented by'Their attorney. Frick; Lovejoy, Leishman and Cfirry were then released on SlO'fltKK bkil'eAcfi 'and .R. B. and A. W .Mellon, went off their' bond. Hearings on the applications of the oth¬ ers were postponed until Thursday morn fng. J. .! 1 ; Cholera Closes the Schools. A St. Petersburg dispatch of Wednes¬ day states that in consequence of the cholera in Russia the ministry of educa¬ tion has issued an order that all schools in the country shall remain closed until September 1st. The course of medical lectures in St. Petersburg will be sus¬ pended until November 1st in order that the students may be enabled to assist in combatting the scourge in the infected districts. ^ ^ Cblnajnan . ^ Jjj-** “S^T.ve^ h s departed Chinese were on ordered the first t ° train leaV * \ “ an ^ n b fe ( J , will spread to the city. THE SOUTH IN BRIEF The News of Her Progress Portrayel in Pithy and Pointed Paragraphs AND A COMPLETE EPITOME OF HAPPEN¬ INGS OF GENERAL INTEREST FR^M, DAY TO DAY WITHIN HER BORDERS. The first bale of Georgia cotton crop "was received at Savannah Monday from Sumter county. It was classed as low middling and sold at 10 cents per pound. A dispatch of Sunday from i Memphis, Tenn., says: The Memphis passenger Association The long threatened is on the verge’of disruption, rate war between' the railroads centering here has broken .out at last and as a consequence, east-' |aound'p«sanger rates have gone all to pieces, of' At a ’at Savannah, Monday, the of the Middle Georgia 8U formation-l*f J Atianfig railroad a plan' for'the syndicated a syndicate was read The to'robe formed of gentlemen already interested’ in the road and will cmnple'e the. road from Macoi to Eaton ton. Subscription books wilfbo opened at once. ’ ' R j s reported ^ from Knoxville. Tenh., tbatas s0 n , a9 the. Knoxville, Southern ^ {ui hM is cfmm ^ Cross' the q, !NroliviHe,->vbW iver - at ^t.jdce .hat the Lmiisvillfe and '.Cincinnati run through trains over u f) ; om to Atlanta. This will purchase. of the Sogtjiern and yiltobbirfHt . Cumberland Gap and Louis ,' Savanna ,, 1 is to have direct trade with Europe before Brunswick, or any other southern port. )u-August loth the steam Might md ‘ q.B?’ ^ 1(i J inc ?- ^ lDC pf Gen«a steau^hijis, fcndq Jirc^te, wilh sail wi fo^'Bmcclona be oli owei l,y th f. •.Kf 1 .W ■ °fher s eam . of Ue . at shl P 8 “???. ;i A, New Jl*e.is.annc^pcod- Qrleans .dispatdfepf Monday of the says: well-known .'cotton' factorage firm of Bickhani. -■>No statement has been;made.as;roj*sse|ft the firm’s -.businekA'was or liabilities;, large.- jjbim houseffias always--.b.ltnqan excellent,.r.epui tation, und;\hb)active parser,, John V Moore;- dSAdq®. of ,the most pop ^arm£p'in the cptton HWdrt ( Tex.,rises’: , . -strffitng: A .special ’ fepip Aw^tip. -, ’ L We; ; wires pleading from the Rant'xvhieh.ljffhls^ ;th^j|ftS^i ng,v,seb-ffimto- the statenji -U' gan e B 8ylumto v^ihg ffiffiM-fucture i th« west* of Wning, at- au' early hour Mop4ar f and that portion dhvotM to fo.nahfs waa 4cs^oy e:d _ remainder ferfrtW^jM^dfsv? of,.the building was paved ; The horntf two bhjmdredCih number, were removed in Jffe'ty/nb'rfe Thejqsf eseapfpg is : $%OttO,. from with the attend- insur no . - 1 - \ ' 4 • > 4 ' Ky^i Sunday, six., biiys were : the j^fbvmed,. oyertqrning; iti.,the of Kentucky skiff. ■river by a Their ftamob Claude: Affi’^eU’by ,‘kged thirteen'; F-arney, aged WaHer, fif¬ teen; Ghdrtqs,-’aged nine,' all aged eleven ;:. sohs. of : Jimins, (^ilii'iiftAlBiMeki'- H.'-Fapney'; Alg)ii Bro'ck, twelSreJ aged rBrocto’.i'nThe' agfed’ soils' of 'Ithv, Henry bdys iweW-bdt'hing out'of tffc-boaf’^fiid i« t tfiqifiyer^iiribiig 'wjei;e, tJ3.»qw& iipand iqtq. a b.ofit overturning f ith panic b'v the some of I he small boys. ‘ ,t ■ - One Of the most extensive: .planters in Texas exhibited at the botfoii.exchange in Houston, Tuesday,'! a' number, had .qf plants, every boll on which been destroyed by the boll-worm. The plants were cut from h field of lSO acres in Fort Bend county, which gave promise a short while-ago of n bate to th-e-acre,;-but destroyed. no\V On the entire crop has been thousands of acres of bottom lands in Fort Beod, Harrison and, other counties the plant has been attacked by the; de¬ stroyers. This is the first appearance of the boll worm in that section of Texas. PEOPLE’S PARTY IN FLORIDA Hold Their State Convention and Nom¬ inate Candidates. The state convention of the pbople’t party of Florida was called'to oidet" as noon Wednesday in Jacksonville.; About thirty-two'6Ut : of the fortyffive, counties were represented. TlmpHriiFy' orjganiz t tion was effected, and -till? ebrnnuttee on credentials retired. The rest 'of the day was consumed in spqcch-'makingS. . • SECOND DAV-/10 . ‘ At Thursday’s session.a^stste-tJcket w»s completed with the. excqpUOri of attor¬ ney general, by tjhe. of .fp).ovp,iqg< agi.icuitpre, ncimina John tions: Commissioner W. Henrv. DeSoto MLidu, CoUrity; comptroller, William Hickson, cditoi' of the Ocala Demands,; superintendent Williams, qf of Orange. public instruction, 0. M. . The state executive committee will make the nomination for attorney general. J. L. Moore, of Clay county, a loading col¬ ored man of the state and president of the Colored Farmers’ Ailiat.c : of Florida, was added to the state executive committee. END OF A FAMILY FEUD In Which Forty-one Men Have Lost Their Lives. A dispatch from Phenix, Arizona, states that Tom Graham was shot and killed Tu sday by Ed Tewksberrv. The shooting was the result of a family feud of five years standing, during which time twenty-seven men have been killed on the Graham side and fourteen on the Tewksberry. Graham was the last one of four brothers, all killed, and Tewks¬ berrv was the last of the six. A posse of officers and citizens are in pursuit of Tewksberry, who will be lynched if caught. COLD IN IOWA. In Strange Contrast with Her Swelter¬ ing Sister States. A di-patch from Ottumwa, la., fays: The excessive heat of the past few days was broken Thursday by a h>-avy thunder storm with a terrific rain. The mercury fell twenty degrees in as many minutes. The night was very cold. DROPPED TWENTY DEGREES. Another dispatch from Dubuque states that a heavy rain Thursdsy afternoon caused a drop of twenty degrees in the temperature. COLD IN MONTANA. A very slight frost was preceptible at Great Falls, Mont., Friday morning. The signal service office n ports the mercury tu uitS have fallen twenty degrees in five miu about midnight. THE INDUSTRIAL SOUTH. ( Progress and Improvement Recorded 1 for the Past Week. luffs review of the industrial situation in the South during the past week, The Ohattar QOoga Tradesman states that its reoorts re¬ ceived from correspondents at all important points in the Southern States, are to the effect that much attention is directed to the condi¬ tion and prospects of the new crop ot’ cotton. In the northern.portion of the backward cotton area plant¬ the reports are to the effect that a ing time, heavy rains which pie voted cultiva¬ tion, and,’in the river valleys the recent exten¬ sive ovei flows will cause tho making of a great¬ ly decreased crop, The hot wentlier which has generally prevailed during the week is doing good, hut has coui^ too late tube of much help in many sections* In the southern manufacturing, mining and iron producing centers it isupported that, there is no change in the steady demand lor and no special increase in the output. 1'here is a marked increase in'tho demand for machinery in every part of the southern states. tablished Forty-two now industries are reported as es¬ Or incorporated during tho week, to¬ gether with four enlargements of mauufacto •ries ai>d;i6hnpoxft»it indnrtrit-sreported new buildings. *100,00(1 Among brick the new area N. and and tilo-cdmviauy at Charlotte, C , one at’ Augusta, Ga., a $500,000 compress development company at Little Itock, Ark.-,- a $100,000 capital company, and one electrical with $50,000 with at $150,- Oov inuton, Ky., an Louisvihe. company Ky., and others at 'K&dmmee, 000 capital at Flat,; and.Caldwell, Tex. A paving 'dcSaparty Vicksburg, with Miss. $100,000 - paint capital works is at reported »I« mphis, at works ; Covington, Ky., OVtinl, powdek at a $300.00Q sugar refinery at Iberville, La., and a Tex..' f . ; The textile plants or are N- O., .Wilts at' Chapel Hill, and Durham, Itidg'oda l !e, Tenn.;'a ticking mill mill at Wheeling, at Charlotte, W. N. 0., a $500,000 carpet and woolen mill at Va., andV$4(),000 ootton A $50,000 tobacco factory Marble Falls, organized Text. Mayfield,.Ky., lumbel bging at mills are to be ■built at Ashdown. Ark., Dur ham, N. C., and Tyler, Tex., furniture facto¬ ries at Cullman, Ala., and-Brunson, S. C., and saw mills at Thomson, Ga., and Cumberland City, Tenn. worts . to be built at ‘ Alexandria, Water are Tonm, and La., BheLbyville, and Harrinian, Caldwell and Palestine, Texas. The cotton mills at Trenton, Tenn.. are to be enlarged as are the lumber mills at Now Berne, N. C,, and Wheeling, W. Va. AmoiiK-ihe new buildings of the week aid . Buren,Ark., business houses at Ocala, Fla., Van and Roanoke, Va., churches at Decatur, Ala., and, Oxford, N. C., a $50,000 college bull-ling A’ Atlanta, Ga., and others at Newport, Ky., Jo»eshoso, Ark., aud Greenville, Ala., a $10, 000 depot at Milan, Tenn , and a government building"at Tallahassee, Fla* • 1 1 . 1 bn Atlanta markets. ,.i CORRECTED WEEKLY. ■ ; . , Grocerlea. Coffee—Roasted—Arbuckle’s 19.60 $ 100 lb. cases, Lion 19.60c; Levcring’s 19.60o. Green-El tra choice'lOo; choice good 19o; fair 18o; com mon lated Ui£(c. powdered Bugar-Granulated 5V4c cut 5c; loaf off 6>^c; grant whit -ro; 43^0; Now Orleans ; yellow clarifla extra 0 4%c; Wtow extra C -4c. Syrup —Nei Orleans, 30@35t'i phoicQ ’Mblksses—Gonnine 48@50; prime 85@40c; 35l<P8c[imi¬ commoi Cuba tation 22@25. Teas—Black 35@55c; green 40®60c. Nutmegs 65@70c. Cloves H5@30o. Cinnamon W@l2%e. Allspice 10@llc. Jamai¬ ca ginger 18o. Singapore pepper 14c; Maoe $1.00. Rice fair 7'Ac; good OAc; common 6 (®7o 5'/®6c; imported Japan Virginia 70c. Salt—Hawley’s dairy $150; flats Cheese—Full cream, Cheddars -c; 12c-, White fish, half bbls.$4 00; pails 60o Soaps—Tallow, 100 bars, 75 lbs $3 00a 3 75$ turpentine, 60 bars, 60 lbs, $225 a 2 50 ; Candies—Parafino 12c; star U>%c. Matches— 400 » $4 00; 300s $3 00a3 75; 200s $2 00a! 75; 60s, 5 gross $3 75. Soda—Kegs, bulk 5c; do I lb pkgs gi^c. 5Vic; cases, 1 lb 5%n. do 1 and %lt>s XXX 8c, doVilb butter Crackers—XXX soda 6J^c; 6?4c; XXX pearl oysters 6cj shell and excelsior 7c;lemon cream 9c; XXX ginger snaps 9c; corn hills 9c. Candy—Assorted stick 8%°; French mixed 12%o. Canned goods—Condensed milk SGOOaSOO; imitation mackerel ®3 95a4 00; sal¬ mon $6 00a7 50: F. W. oysters ®l 75a--; L.W. $125; corn $2 50 a 3 50; tomatoes $160. Ball notash $3 20. Starch—Pearl ‘t^c; lump 5c- nickel packages $3 50; celluloid $5 00. Pickles, plain or mixed, pints $1 OOal 40; quarts $1 50ai 80. Powder—Rifle, kegs $5 50; 14 keg# $3 00; % kegs-it l 65. Shot $1 70 per sack. Flour. Uraiu anil .Vleal. Flour—First patent $5 50; second patent $5.00 ; extra fancy Corn—No. $4,50 ; fancy $4 2 5; family $3 50@$4 00. 1 white 63c. No. W white 63:; mixed 65c. Oats— Mixed 44a~c; white 44c; Kansas rust large . hates, , proof 51c. Hay—Choice timothy, choice $1.00; No. 1 timothy, large bales, 95c; small timothy, small bales, 95c; No. 1 timothy, bales. 90o; No. 2 rimothv, small bales, 85c. Meal— Plain 67cbolted 58a. Wheat bran— Large sacks 85c, small sacks 87c Cotton seed meal—$1 10 per cwt. Steam feed—$1.35 per cwt. Grits—Pearl $3.50. Country Produce. Eggs 9al0c. Butter—Western creamery grades 2(m22*Xc ; choice Tennessee 16al8c; other 10al2%c. Live poultry-Turkeys 10@12%c per lb; hens 30o, young chickens large 2Ca25c ; small spring 10a 15c. Dressed poultry-Turkeys 18a20c; ducks 15a 18c; chick¬ ens I5al6. Irish potatoes, 1 A’)@2.00 per hbL gweet potatoes new—$2.00a2.50pcr bu. Honey Strain d 8al0c; in the comb 10al2c. Onions $2 50 per bbl. Cabbage—Green Florida l/^@2c. per lb. Louisiana Provisions. Clear rib sides, boxed SX C ; ice-cured bel* lies 10c. Sugar-cured hams 13J£a!5%,according ifornia 9c; to brand and >vcr-. r • Oa breakfast bacon - Bni -- Purs ieaf c; leaf 8J^: refined none. Cotton. Maiket quiet.—Middling 7c.