Newspaper Page Text
Jltf finrs.
IK IDAY, Jl NR 2. IM*.
ifommnraal.
tVANMAH MARK FT.
‘ O OF THE St'iRNIWG NEW?, l
StTunui, June 1, IS3J, l i
' Therv was a good demand for this
■t. lay at firm value*. Sales 801 bales.
SmtSmbw Ilt'I””’"'"" ” i-m
v • U3K
1 m *4 1 / 11U
. r 10tf
rarr 9
... •' There was nothin* done in this
... ,lr. We quote nominally:
. sn l.- m wn<*eor*lasesrce.trftlß
, „ n ‘ -n lw
v . n F! *n las £1
i Sonias. ...II
V ntv FVwlos. 25
K " J** No stock.
t. ra nne No stock.
Cumpsrslift Cotton Ntalsmsnt.
Receipt!, Export!, and Stock on hand June 1, 1882, and
for the lame time hut pear,
1881-88 1880-81.
Sea Sea
Inland. Upland. Island. Upland.
fttook on had Rapt. 1 *"8 11. win IM 10,888
lleoelved to-day I.•••
Itecelred pre%(oUly ...... I IT,(MVj 696.122 13,770. 888 til 11.
Total 17,4.7! 710,118 lS.Mftj 647.999
| Ei|Kirtl to-day ■ • , J l ® *'
I rtl|M>rUd prsvioiasiy ■..... 17,1811 .01.711 13,5271 616, (60,
lotal ,I J7.Ul] U 12.541; 18/411, 8 8.58,'
l *Oe u • sod and on ship !
K - rh*s grain was in good demand to
.v at Arm values. Sales 91 barrels. We
amoiL ... ......51406
fai* moom
. dd - a?
C. .v.uv.v.'.'.iv/.lts®?*
* miry lots '®*l '■
T 1e water *1 25® 1 0
V* v h-os*s.—Rosin was in very active
ay at steady values, bales 898
. n private terms, and 1.010 barre s at
Fpirit* torpeti ine was in fair de
, ,t steady values. Hales 28") csks at 39c.
•- Kosins Csl 7% Dsl 75 E *lßl,
I til H *2 10. I ft l.ia> 2". K
f. 8 ti 1714. s $2 *Bl4-window glass
t *- irt* •urpentine—mis an 1 whiskys
- . regulars the.
mtu sroaas rraTkMtwT.
Spirit!. R rein.
\n'. spril 1. ISS2 l.t>7<* xi .HAS
-e veit . day 522 1.755
a e.veJ previously 4).lll) 61,89)
T,*© 21.703 89,053
Ev ported today 4 3 1* 8
Export**! previ0u51y............ 17.J54 70,(09
Total 17.917 72.562
v * hsad and r j shipboard
. %v 3.781 13.471
K~ (>ts unn dar last rear... 381 1,781
•*l.—sterna* Excnanim—Sixty nay
v . * tii bills lalin* attoehel. $4 8214; New
1 - • .-at ex change bayilMt at 34 per cent,
j ss 1 astliac \t 34 oer cent, premium.
-- j and Bond*. c *rp ona.—Marxet
weak. < Usau 6 per cent.. 103 bid, 104
s- el Vtifrusta 7 pel cent., IC7 bid,
1 s;-l. v i ran a 4 per seat.. 104 bid. 106
-i j, Cotamva- 7 percent.. 82 bid, S3 asked.
%% • a 7 per 9* old. 1"*0 asked. New tk -
*esh 1 s* r -eot.. 80 bW. 51 asked.
:•* k ata. —Market Arm for State of Oesr
f, its. *>rg.a * s*, las*, ex-coupon. 109
bi. : ukd; :i>rgia 6 per sent., coupons
r-- -is*y sni Auaust, -aaturlty 1/30 ana ,88a,
; . bit, total: ’ asked: Georgia mort
r%e~ m W. 1 i. HiOroad regular? percent.,
s vip ms January and July, maturity 183*5,
ex-- .apon.to9 -.id. 110 asked: Georgia 7 per
e- l. x —l. ooa mas quarterly, ex coupon, 117
bit. 11S asked; Georgia 7 ,>er cent., coupons
Ja Ist and Jnlv, maturity 1196, ex-coupon,
lit old. 125 aske.l
-s.vttr.NAd -Koras —Market quiet, with light
T-rinsts We auote: Central common. 91)4 bid.
, ataasd; AuVuata and Havannati 7 per cent.
. .rvntee i. eadiv.. ’lB aid, I‘JO askei. Ueo-gia
•msM, 145 otd. 14'*’4 asked. Houth vasterd i
p --nr. ruaranteea, exdiv., 115 nld. 116 ssked
e ,trai Railroad 6 per ceat. certificates ind.,
ex-diy.. 91 bid. 92 asked.
-< .< .ra>M s-j* t. Market firm. Atlan 1c Sc
~ f Ist tavrt*a*e con toll tate-d 7 oer cent,
'* ip >ns January and July, natu --ity 1397. ' 1)
L lit acrt A ! an :c £ci f- idorsed city
• Sivtu'.i 7 per tent., cj J ec* Jan. ant
July, nutaritf t/Ti. 75 bid. 78 -ekes?
Oitral cdnadUdated m.<r:*a*e 7 per -ent.
f.w ,3* Jaauary and July. maturity
5- ex coupon, 1.3 bid. 113)4 ask“d
(1 ore.a t> per tent., coupons jan. and
J v maturity, 136 bid. I(V> asked. Mobile
£ i'rarl il aiort(n*e eniorsod 1 per oeit.,
e.>upons jan and luly, mattirity 1889, ex
cr.pr.fi, 1144 bid. 115 asked, ami
K i .~a j*; -n vrt ajte 6 t>-r cent., end. by Cen
trai ta r .ad. 06 bid. 138)4 asked. Charlott-
C '.-m ,:a * antrusta Ist m'tjt’e, 1C9)4 bid. 111
astel Cbar otte. Columbia * Augusta ‘k;
m .rtrak*. U 0 bid. 102 asked. Western Aia
oama td end. 9 per cent., 112, bid. 113
a<t-d. 4mh lonfla 4 Florida enlorsed, 115
bil, I*7 ysv-l: Ho ith Ueonria St. Florida 2*!
m ir-y vcr. *OO bid. till asked-
R*cis.—Market firm aa 1 alvancinx; active
4e:naud; clear nb ..des.: shoulders, 1014 v;
drv salted dear rib sides. 124 c : lon* Clear
It 4* : sbouldera. 9)4t- Hams. 15)40-
Basti.vo avo Tiss.—Market nominal. We
. >te Ra*ein*—24 lbs., 12c.: 2 Iba. 11c.; 144
,e i.v Irm Ti*-Delta aud Arrow, sl6o®
I*l 4 bun lie. accord.a* to brand and quan
tit Pieced ties. s*. 25®’ 60.
i>sT 'linos. -Tte market is firm and un
-0 amced: lemani; stocks amulet Prints.
* i y ; Georgia brown shirtinx. 4- 5’4"-: 34
and . w : 4-* brown sheeting. 7V4c.: white oa-
S*4®l '4<- : checka 7t4>*)4'5.: wt
v atkes: br.wn Iriilmgs. 7t4®Bl4'*
F x-Hts be-n in ac*ive demindat firm
' ,q ntTsjel values. We quote: Superfine,
f . uti. *6 75®7 25; family. $7 2>>tß 2-;
*i- . *- -J5 75. chvice pat m*. $y 75®11) 25;
{.V T 5
1 iauv-i *or.i. —The 'n'>ve-nnt in cor has
Itanal havin' dec-easel.
* rt > th- uni so ily good cr .ps mads in the
- -n of c >un rv tributary to this in xr
.... ;his vea- We q t >te: Crn—white
$ i 07; m.xels[ 00 Oats hive been it
1-rate a- nand; we a lote: 6-s®7Jc. Bran
: 51
Hirers. Wool Etc.—Hides— Receipts improv
1-ive; dry fiint. Is 6 : sal'ed *
®::,- c-Ipts li-ht and market steady;
in bales, j.-i u-*. 2'*c ; M bags, prim-*, 2t>34c ;
3 : -4 ■ ; very ourry W c -
wax. -0.. de-r .leas, J2c ; otter skins. 25c ®
Hat-Market well stocked; gool demand.
■ 1 vte. a r wh .lea-ale. N.irthern. $1 l l J; East
era. 5: Western timothy.
Uaxi..—The market is firm; in tierces. 1244 c.;
tubs and kegs. 15c.
cauv. —The demand is fair and the mat-
c-aly; car load lots, bbc., f. o. b.; sma:
lot* c ®si no
T sacoo.—Market steady; fair demand. We
4 j ■*- Snwkmg-4 k- ®l 25. Chewing—Com
. >n s/.un t, 35®40c.: medium, 40®55c.; bright,
6- 5c.: fine fancy. 55®iklc ; extra fine, 90c.®
I bright navies, 45®57c.; dark navies.
4'®soc-
FREIGHTS.
Lcvbss—fiy Soil—There are hut few ve-'-
•>-< m port, and with a limited demand bu-i
--t.. | restricted and rates general y weak,
c -oc-ssi >ns being frequently deinande.l.
t'ur Igures iucm-ie the range of Savai -
nalt, Harten, Brunswick and Satilla, Croc
5-c. to slO.l being paid here for change of loa -
Igpirt. We quote- To Baitimore and Che--
--vie ports, $6 25 ,£6 5 >; to Philadelphia, |6 50
• to New Vors and Sound ports. *7 So,
: ■; to Boston and eastward. $S 03®9 (X); r
B*. joho, N. B„ $8 M®9 00; PTimbor $1 0
higher than lumber rates!; to the West Indit
and win 'ward. $3 00®!0 00: to South Amerio
s*./ tBJ.I 10; to Spanish and Mediterranean
ports. sl4 50®15 00; to United Kingdom to
orisrx, timber Ms ®355.. 'umber 415 10s.
run ,
norray—The market is fairly supplied wit.-'
foreign tonnage.
Uverpool, via New York, J *> M*
Liverpool, via Baltimore, sl* yi
I2verpx>l, via Philadelphia, 46
Antwerp, via Philaleipnia. V B> 15-’t
Antwerp, via New York, (9 3> vat'
Havre, via New York, b * ‘
Bremen, via New York, 9 S> 5-16!
Bremen, via Baltimore, W $5 9 32
A.-nst--lam, via New York, •
Hamburg, via New York, 46 94 c
host >O. % bale 51 50
Be% Island, bale IT*
Few York, f bale - 1 J®
Sea Island, 9 bale I
Phliale.phia, • ba1e......... • 1 50
Sea Island, f bale I
Baltimore, bale 15®
ipiu ’mwa. bale ITS
Etc—Bt RtxaM.
New York, cask Il 50
New York, f barrel . 00
Phiialelphia, <1 cask 1 50
Philatelphia, 49 bbl *0
Baltimore. 9 cask 1 26
Boston, w cask J 75
R sitoo. bbi 75
4i*ai s-roaxs.—Sail.—Rosin and spirlte
■rk orl*n n f ,
*x 9.1 ®--s M.; Biltic dl eat ame rates; V
*ew lork 45:. on rosin, 6t e. on pints.
*X>UNTHY PRODUCE
Grown Fowl*, 9 pair 61 ® 75
grown, f pair.. 5 n 71
Half grown, 9 pair *) ® 45
hags, # do tt -
Butter, mountain, V 15 81 A In
Feanaia—Fancy h. p. Va.,4P lb-. *c. ®
“ Hand-picked *lb Sc. O
" Straight Virginia 7c. ®
“ Tennessee Sc. ®
IJorld* Sugar, f 6 ® 6K
F'orlda Syrup, $1 gallon oomlnal.
Juaey A gallon 80 ®
Bwee* Potatoes. 49 bushel T 5 *s!
Pocwrav—Market fairy stocked; dr
inand good. Ssas-Bt<x:it 1 ght; good o> -
tixnl. Bcrrkk—ln moderate lemano: not
Much coming la. Paanirrs -Market lightly
rocsed; demand good. Svrpp -Ifeorgis ano
r -rina-very little in the market; quotation?
nominal. Rcoas —Georgia and Florida quiet,
not much being received.
aiRkkTS MW TEIiKUKAPH.
KOON REPORT.
FIVAXCTAL.
PAkia, June 1,3 p. m—Rente*. BSf sc.
Lovpoa. June I.—The weekly statement of
the Rant of England shows a decrease in
■pede of £ OO.IIUO.
r*me. June l —The weekly statement of
Bnak of France shows a specie increase
, 14 1'.4.*J0 francs in gold and te7,500 francs in
"Iver.
w Wrw Yok. June L—Stocks dull and lower.
"°**T. S per coat. Exchange—tong, $4 86)4;
short, $4 89)4. State bonds Inactive. Govern
ment bonds irregular.
COTTON.
Lnxroou June I.—Cotton opened with fair
demand, which was freely met at previous
prices; middling uplands. 's£l: middling Or
l-ans, 6 13-16d; salee 12.000 baiec. f.w sjsecula
tion and export 2.000 bales; receipt* 8,700 bales
—American 4.700 bales.
Futures: Middling uplands, low middling
clause, deliverable in June. 6 36-641; deliver
able m June and July. 6 36~64d: deliverable in
July and August, 6 40-61®6 41 61®6 40-64d;
deliverable in August and September, 6 45 61d;
deliverable in October and November, 6 28-64d.
Futures steadv.
1:30 p. in.—Middling uplands, 6s4d; low mid
dling uplands, 6 7-16d; good ordinary uplands,
6d; ordinary uplands. 5)4d: middling Orleans.
6 13-16d; low middling Orleans, 6s4d; good
ordinary Orleans, 6)4d; ordinary Orleans.
5 9-16d.
3?M p. m.—Futures: Middling uplands, low
middling clause, deliverable in July and
August, 6 41-64d; deliverable in September and
October. 6 39 64®6 40-64d.
N*w York, June I.—Cotton opened quiet;
sales 729 oaJes: middling uplands, 12 l-16c; mid
dling Orleans. 12 5-16 c.
Futures—Market opened quiet but firm, with
a ties as follows June, ll 93e; July. 12 Otic;
Anvnvt. 12 14c; September, 11 86c; January,
11 45c; February, 11 30c.
GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, ETC.
Liverpool, June I.—Lard, 57s 61.
New York, June I.—Flour opened quiet and
heavy. Wheat fairly ac ive; higher.
Com, cash and June a shade lower; others a
trifle better. Pork quiet but steady at sl9 00
®2O 12)4. Lard easier at 11 55c. Freights dull
and weak.
Baltimore, June I.—Floor unchanged;
Howard street and Western superfine, $.3 23®
4 f0; ditto extra, $4 75®5 75; ditto family, $6 00
O'! 75; city mills superfine, $3 50®4 73; ditto
extra, $5 00®7 80; Rio brands. $7 25®7 37.
Wheat—Southern nominal in absence of re
ceipts; W*eßtern opened duller and closed bet
ter; Southern red. $1 36®1 39; amber. *1 40®
1 44; No. 1 Maryland, $1 41)4 ask“d; No. 2
W estern winter red. on the spot, $1 36®1 36)4.
Com - Southern higher for white,vellow lowerr
Wes’ern stronger but dull; Southern white 91c,
yellow 83c.
NAVAL STORKS.
New York. June I.—Spirits turpentine, 43c.
Rosin, $2 25®2 30.
EVENING REPORT.
PISAN ITTAL.
Rxw Yore June 1— Exchange, $4 8614. Gov
ernment bonds irregular; u-‘w fives, 101)4; fou.
and a half per cen is, 114)4; four per cents,
120-V{. Monev. 3®f, per cent Brate bonds,Ten
ne*s-es mixed rest unchanged.
New York, June I.—mb-Treasury balances
Coin. $92,466,001 Ufi; Currency $4,423,600 00.
Stocks weak; , )4® 1 % per cent, lower than
yesterday, as follows:
Ala.,ciaaa A,ik 5. 90)4 Memphis & Char. 49
Ala,classA,sma.i. 92 Nash. £ Chat 59
Ala, class B, ss. .104 N. Y. Central 126^4
4lA.cla.4sC. 45.. 85 Pittsburg 137*
Cb'-a. £ North’n .*.30 Richmond £ Alle. 17
* preferred . Richm’d£ D’nv’e. 102)4
Erie 35 Rock Island 129
E. Tennessee Rd.. 10 B.C (Brown)con’lsl01
Georgian 165* Wao.,tli.L £ Pac. 2834
Illinois Central ..131)4 W..Bc.L.£P. pref. 514*
lAkeßhore 102>4 Western Union.... 82)4
L’ville £ Nash 74
5:00 p. m.—Following are the closing quota
tions of the New York Stock Board:
Georgians 105 Manhattan Kiev.. 55
“ 7amortgage. 108)4 Metropolitan Ele. 87
“ 7s, gold 114 iuchiganCentral. 86)4
Louisiana consols 6734 Mobile £ Ohio.. . 22
N. Carolina, old.. 27 N. Jersev Oentr’l. 7164
** “ new 18 Norf. £ W’npref. 5014
“ “funding... 10 New York Ele.y’d. 100
“ ** special tax 7 Ohio and Mis’pl.. 32
Tsoneeeee 6s. 58)4 Ohio tMis’pipref.lo2*
** new 58)4 Pacific Mail 41
Virginia 6s 33 Panama
“ consolidated. 61)4 Quicksilver 8)4
“deferred t!4 “ preferred. JSO
Adams Express...l3s Reading 73554
Am’can Express.. 96 Bt. Louis£Ban F.. 38
Ch’peake £ Ohio. 20-M “ “ pref t9)4
Chicago £ A'ton. 131)4 " “lpref. 86ty
Ch’go, Bt.L.£N.O. 73 St. Paul IP %
Cons’dated Coal.. 27 “ preferred...l2o
ne'a-.Lack. £ Texas Pacific 3834
Fert Wavne 133 Union Pacific.... 11 94
Hannibal £ St. Jo. >-'0 U. 8. Express ... 7.3)*
Harlem 203* Wells £ Fargo... 128
Houston £ Texas. t7O
•List. tOfferedat. JBid.
COITON.
Liverpool, June 1, 4:00 p. m.—Sales of
dav included 7.350 bales of American.
Futures: Middling uplands, low middling
clau-e*. deliverable in June. 37 6id: deliver
able in June and July, 6 67-64d. Futures dull
but steady.
New Yoke, June I.—Cotton closed firmer;
sates 1,403 bales; middling uplands, 121-162;
middling Orleans, 12 5-16 c.
Futures closed firm. wf*h sale* of 96,000
bales, as follows- June. 12f-3@12 0lc: July,
12 14c; August, 12 21®12 24c: September, 11 93c;
October. 11 52® 11 53-; November.il 35®11 37c;
December.il 36®11 38c; January, 11 48®11 5Cc;
February, 11 60® 11 62c.
Galveston, June I—Cotton dull; middling
U34i; low middling 1134 c; good ordinery lie:
net receipts 89 bales: gross receipts 89 bales;
stock 9,901 bales; exports e'&stwise 3.870 bales.
Norfolk. June I.—Cotton quiet but steady;
middling 1134 c. net receipts 596 bales; gross re
ceipts 596 bales; stock 15.294 bales; sales 30
bates; exports coastwise 763 bales.
Baltimore, June 1. —Cotton quiet; middling
121-16*: low middling 119-16 e: good nrdinart
10 9 16c; sales 250 bales: stock 23,835 bales; ex
ports to Great Britain 499 bales.
Boston, June I.—Cotton quiet; middling
1234 c: low middling 12c; goou ordinary lie
net receb-tg 550 bates; gross receipts 778 bales;
stock 9 095 I tales.
Wilmington, June I.—Cotton quiet; mid
dling 11*4 ” low middling 11 3-16 c: good ordi
nary 10 5-:6c; stock 1,743 bales; exports coast
wise 31 bales.
Philadelphia, June I.—Cotton dull; mid
dling 12141: low middling 12c; good ordinary
11c: net receipts 6 bales; gross receipts 32
bales: stock 17,263 bales.
New Orleans, June 1 —Cotton quiet;
raiddiin? 12c; low middling 11%-; good or
dinary lH4c; net receipt* 139 baier; gross re
ceipts 149 bales; sales 2,000 bales; stock 90,494
bates.
Mosil*, June 1. —Cotton quiet; middling
11342; low middling 11345: good ordinary 1034 c;
net re'-eipts 509 bales: gross receipts 509 bales;
ral-s 1(0 bales; stock 6,635 bales; exports coast
wise 368 bales.
Mrmp::is, June 1— Cotton quiet; middling
11542: low middling ll)4c: good ordinary 10)4c;
n-t receipts •> bale*: *hipments 1,155 bales;
tales bales: stock 26.611 bale*.
Augusta, June 1 Cotton dull; middling
UV6O; low middling ll)4o; good ordinary 10)4o:
ae: receipts 6 bat*: sa es 159 bales.
fIaiRLtSTON, June I.—Cotton quiet: mid
dling 1154 c; low middling ll)4c; good ordinary
ll)4c; net receipts 335 bales; gross receipts
335 bales; sales 76 balna; stock 7,672 bales; ex
ports coastwise 616 bales.
New York, June I.—Consolidated net re
ceipts to-day for all cotton ports, 2,361 bales;
export*, to Great Britain 1,274 bales, to the
continent 9 bales, to France 793 ba es.
St. Loris, Jme I.—Cotton closed dull;
middling 1)54c; low middling 1134 c; good or
dinary 1034 c; net receipts 91 bales: gross re
ceipts 142 bales: shipments 568 baits; sales 40
bales; stock 14.630 bales.
P to VISIONS. GROCERIES. ETC.
Liverpool. June 1, 5:0) p. m.—Corn, mixed,
6s 2d for old.
New lobE. June I—Flour, Routherc. closed
steady, with fair inquiry; con m >n to fair extra,
$5 65®6 75; good to cuoice extra. $6 80®8 C 5
Wheat- cash lots opened )4®lc lower, but sub
sequently recovered from the decline and ad
vanced 94® )4c. closing firmer but at a trifle
below the higuest points; ungraded spring, 92c,
iastire: uugraderl rel, $1 17®1 45; No. 2 red.
June delivery, $1 43)4® 1 *5)4- Corn opened )4
®lc lower, but afterwards recovered trom the
decline and advanced 34® I)4c, closing firm at
the ouiside rates; ungraded, 75fi8bc: No. 2.
June delivery, 77®79c. Oats )4®H4c higher;
No. 3,57 c. Hips very firm, demand light;
year.ings, 18®v5c. Coffee dull and weak, prices
unchanged: Rio, June delivery, 7 suc. Sugar
dull and rather easier; fair to good refiniug,
quited at 7 5-16®7)4c; refined closed about
steady—s’ADdara A. w)4c: yellow O. 7)4@7)4c;
white extra C, 8 7-16 ttß 9-16 c; yellow ditto,
8®834c; off A, 834®85c; mould A, 9)4c; con
fectioner’s A, 9)tc; cut loaf, lU94c; crushed,
lo>*e; powdered, 10)j,®lo)4c; granulated,
9 5 16®9%c; cubeA 10)4c. Cotton seed oil, 53®
55c. Hides fairly active and firm; New Or
leans. 9®pi)qc; Texas, 10)4il c. Wool firm,
traiie quiet; domestic fieece, 32®4'ic; Texas, 15
®3kL Jl classes unchanged; demand light.
Rice steady, with fair inquiry; I’atria, 6c; Ran
g on, duty paid, *)4c Pork opened a shade
lower but closed strong, with the decline recov
ered: trade moderate; mess, on spot, sl9 00®
:9 25 for old, and S2U 0J®2975 for new; July
delivery, $ w B>®lU 9J. Middles quiet but
strong; long clear, 11540- Lard opened about
7)4c p-r cwi. lower and weak, but subsequently
recovered from the decline and advanced 2)4®
5c per cwt., closing stron.; trade more active;
prime steam, on i-pot. 11 52)4®U buc; June de
livery, 1: 52)4® 11 62)*c. Freignts to Liverpool
dull; co.ton per steam, 7-61®5 32d; wheat, per
ste 1 in, nominal.
Niw June I—Flour quiet but
st-aily; $5 7 - ®6 00; high grades, $* 25®7 UU.
Corn weak: mixed, 94c; white mixed. 97)4c.
Uats in good demand; seedy, 67c; prime, 68c;
choice. 69®?(ic. Fork strong; mess, *2O 50.
Lara quiet but steady; refined, in tierces 11 75
®II BT)4c, in Kegs 12 2>c. Bulk meats scarce
and firm: shoulders, packed. 9c. Hams, sugar
cured, unsettled; canvaaed 14)4® 15c, a- s to size
and brand. Wnisky steady and unchanged;
Western rectified, $1 1 s®l 20. coffee quiet but
firm; Rio cargoes, ordinary to prime. B®lof4 •_
Snaat quiet but steady; common to good com
mon. e3*®7c; prime to choice, B)4©S34c; yellow
clarified, 396©4ic. Molasaet* dul.; common
reboileJ. 45©47c; fair reboiled, sJ©s2c; prime,
•s®sc. Rice steady and in good demand. Lou
isiana. ordinary to choice. 6)4®T34c. Bran In
Tair demand, pricss higher, $1 27)*®1 30.
Cincinnati. June I—rtour easier; family,ss 75
©6 00. fancy, >6 40©7 25. Wheat firmer; No. 2
red winter, $1 30dU 33 on spot; $1 il)4@l I'Ai
for July Corn stronger; No. 2 mixed, 7o**©;7o
on ibe spot; 76©76)4c for June; 76)4®76)4c for
July. Oau firmer; No. 2 mixed, si©so)4c. Pork
dull; mess, sl9 75. Lard dull at 11)30 BulK
meats qiiet; shoulders, 844 c; clear rib, 11c.
Wnisky active and firm; high wines, $1 16;
combination sales of finished goods, 56 ' barrel*,
on the basis of $1 18. fcugar firm and unchang
ed; nards, 10®llc; New Orleans, 7)4@8?4c.
Hogs firm; common and light, $6 OJ©B 00;
paccing and butchers. $7 59®8 50.
Chicago^!une I.—Flour quiet and unchanged.
Wheat active, firm and higher; No. 2 Chicago
spring, $1 25© 1 26 for cash; $1 26 for June;
$1 2734 for July; No. 2 irregular wheat, new
rule option, $1 13 for July. Corn unsettled but
generally higher: 70)4e for cash; 70)4®70)3c
for June; 7l)*@7i)3c for July. Oats moderate
ly Active and higher; 48)4c for cash and June;
4334 c for Jaljr. Porn unsettled but generally
higner; mes.*. sl9 50 for cash and June; sl9 6:)4
©l9 65 for July. Lard unset led and lower;
1. 20c for cash; 11 2J@ll 22)*c for Juqe; il 35©
11 37qc for July. Bulk meats steady and iu
fair demand; shoulders. 9c; short rib, Il 15c;
short clear, 11 76c. Whisky higher, $1 17.
t Louis. June L—Flour dull and unchanged.
Wheat, after the opening, advanced sharply
and closed firm; No. 2 red fall. $1 24)4 f° r cash;
$1 19)4 for June; $1 07% for July. Corn higher;
71®73c for cash; 71)3 for June and July. Oats
lower; sc for cash; 50c for June; 39)3c for
July. Whisky steady at $1 16. Provisions—
Pork dull and nominal. Bulk meats lower;
shoulders. 8 60c; short rib, 11 25c; short clear,
11 75c. Lard dull and nominal.
paltimohi. June I. — uats dull and nominal;
Southern, 60®b3c; Western white 61®63c, ditto
mixed bo®6lc; Pennsylvania, 60®63c Pro
visions closed firm: Mess pork, old >2O, new
s2l. bum meats—should-ra and clear rib
Bides, packed, )3c and l*)*o. Baoon—shoul
der*. 1054 e: oiear rib sides, J3s4c. Hams, 1544
016 c. Lard, refined, 1234 c. vxiffrefirm; tuo
cargoes, ordinary to prime, S)4®9)4c. baser
quiet; A soft. 9%c Whisky quiet at $1 20®
1 21. Freights unchanged-
LoutsviLLa, June I.—Provisions quiet: Mess
pork S2O 00. Bulk meats—shoulders, 8 50o;
clear rib. 11 12)6c; clear sides, 11 80c. Hams, su
gar cured, 14)4®l**c. Lard, choice leaf, 13)4c.
Flour steady and unchanged; extra family,
$17505 2s; A4. $5 750®1l > pa)eou,
$9 00®8 25; choice to fancy. 96 50®7 75. Grain
quiet and nominal: Wheat. No. 2 red winter,
$} Corn—No. 2 white, 84c; No. 2 mixed,
77c. Oats, mixed, 54c.
June 1. —Corn dull; prime
white, 99c; mixed, 92c.
NATAL STORKS.
New York, June I.—Rot in dull and weak at
$2 Yo®< 27)4. Turpentine dull and lower, 42Uc
asked.
Charleston, June I.—Spirits turpentine
quiet, 39c bid. Rosio, strained and good strain
ed, $1 60® 1 70.
Wilmington, June I.—Spirits turpentine firm
at 40c. Rosin quiet at $1 60 for strained, and
$1 65 for good strained. Tar firm at $1 50.
Shipping IntgIUgmceT
MINIATURE ALMANAC—THIS DAY.
Bun Rises 4 ; 52
Sun Sets 7-03
High Water at Ft Pulaski. . 8:17 a m. BG2 p u
Friday, June 2, 1882,
CLEARED YESTERDAY.
Steamship Geo Appold, Foster, Baltimore—
Jan B West £ Cos.
Steamship Seminole. Hallett, Boston—
Richardson £ Barnard.
DEPARTED YESTERDAY.
Bteamer David Clark. Hallowes, Brunswick
—Wood bridge £ Harrimau.
SAILED YESTERDAY.
Steamship Geo Arpold. Baltimore.
Steamship Seminole. Boston.
Bark Konkordia (Nor), Bristol.
Schr Jno B Adams, New York.
MEMORANDA.
Ttbee. June 1, 7:00 p m—Passed out, bark
Konkordia (Nor), schr Jno B Adams
At anchor.outward bound, schr Belle Higgins.
Wind SK. 8 miles; raining.
New York, June I—Arrived, Rhynland, Wyo
noke, Angelica, Lixzie B Willey, Eva L Ferris,
Annie E Stevens, Roanoke.
Arr.ved out, Hibernian. Mariner, Victoria,
Waesland. Xenophone. France, ocean Child,
Romonoff. Runeberg, Demacrazio, G P Pay
sant. Francis. Henry, Gaspe.Waissa, Superior.
New York, May 31—Arrived out, New York,
Breakwater, A R Weeks, Wm Penn, Van ialia,
8t Joseph, Fre'a. Maria, Madre, Judith. Mida.
Boston, May 31—Arrived, Etta A Stimpson.
New York. May 30—Arrived, schr H £ J
Blendermann, Savannah.
Harwich, May 29—Arrived, bark J E Suther
green (Br), Spicer, Darien.
Liverpool. May 30—Arrived, bsrk Boroma
(Br), Thompson, Savannah.
London, May 30—Arrived, bark Geo Davis
(B-), Mallory, Brunswick, Ga.
Halifax, My 26—Cleared, brig Lottie Bell
(°r). Grant, Brunswick, Ga.
Philadelphia, May 28—Arrived, sehrs Kate V
Aitken. Thompson, Feraandina; Mliford.Look,
Jacksonville.
Cleared, brig Sarah E Kennedy, Peterson.
Darien, Ga.
Newcastle, May 23—rassed down, bark Frey
(Nor), for Savannah.
BECEIFTB.
Per Charleston and Savannah Railway, June
I—l car cattle, 10 tierces rice, 8 bbls potatoes.
104 boxes tobacco, 65 caddies tobacco, 59 bkts
tobacco, 30 bags potatoes, and mdse.
Per Savannaa. Florida and Western Railway,
June I—9 bales cotton, 35 cars lumber. 1 car
wood, 2 cars cattle, 808 bbls rosin, 291 bbts
soirits turpentine. 5 bbls syrup, 4 bbls honey, 6
bbls potatoes, 30 sacks rough rice, 2 bales bides,
21 bales wool, and mdse.
Per Central Railroad. June 1—129 bales cot
ton, 3 demijohns wine. 1 case cigarettes. 3 bdls
(12 caddies) tobacco. 16 sacks corn, 1 sack peas,
8 bales domestic -, 1 (boxed) alligator, 25 tierces
hams, 4 pigs k and wardrobes, 1 box glass, 6 bxs
candv, 1 kddesk, 1 case hardware, 4 two-seat
buggies, 2 open buggies (boxed), 6 wrapped
shafts. 2 engines, 16 cars lumber, 8u hf bbls l er,
96 qr bbls beer, 10 pole car wheels, 2 cas-ments,
6 heads. 4 foot plates, 2 caps. 4 boxes bitters, 4
car bricks, 7 racks handles, 16 sacks guano, 1
part sack guano, bales hides, 1 box shoes, 4
bdls tool handles, 3 pkgs, 6 rocking chairs,
bbls rosio, bbls spirits turpentine, bbls po
tatoes, 5 bbl* eggs, 1 bdl wool, 6 sacks wool. 5
bales wool. 7 bales hides,l bbl potatoes, 2 oiops
chickens, 1 box fruit, 1 crate eggs, 1 box mdse.
2 bags wool, 1 old frog, 1 pair old car wheels, 1
car oak wood, 1 lot houehold goods.
Per Morrison’s flit, from Bryan county—loo
bbls rosin, 60 casks spirits turpentine, to J P
Williams & Cos.
EXPORTS.
Per steamship Seminole, for Boston-269
bales cotton, 94 bbls rice. 315 bbls spirits tur
pentine. 496 bbls rosin, 184 bales hides, 5 bales
wool, 10 bales moss, 33 bales dome-tics, 685
crates and 25 bbls vegetables, 110,000 feet lum
ber. 75 pkgs sundries, 180 bales paper stock, 25
casks clay.
Per steamship Geo Appold. for Baltimore
-553 bales upland cotton, 183 bbls rice, 1,457 bbls
rosin. 88 bbls spirits turpentine, 2,969 boxes and
*914 bb!s vegetables, 8,500 feet lumber, 406 pkgs
mdse.
PABBENGERB.
Per steamship Geo Appold. for Baltimore—
Ja* Collins aad wife, Mrs A B Dyer, John Le
inau, John Connor, Jas Martin, Chas Novle,
Antonio Bonino, It Reid.
Per steamsnip Seminole, for Boston—Mrs W
8 Whilford, Mrs W F Gray, Mrs Phebe Putney,
J Plummer and wife, Mr John Bresnan, Mrs
Richar.ison, Mrs Lord, Mrs Hazrltine, Mrs N
Underhill, Mrs J M Barnard and family, C W.
Robertson J J Johnson. Rachel Hunter, Annie
P Tattinall, and 6 steerage.
CONSIGNEES
Per Charleston and Savannah Railway. June
I—Fordg Office S. F£ W Ry, Jas Thomas. H
Solomon, R Habersham's Son & Cos, W G Mor
rel, D O'Connor, F J Kuckert, Solomons £ Cos,
\ J Miller £ Cos, 8 Cohen, M Boley £ Son. H A
Uimo, H Myers £ Bros, Rieser £ 8, Mobr Bros.
Per Savannah. Florida and Western Kailwa*,
June I—Fordg Office, W C Jackson, Lee £ L, E
T Roberts. C L Jones, Peaccck, H £ Cos, J P
Williams £ Cos. Chess, C £ Cos. W W Gordon £
Cos. A H Champion, 8 Guckenhelmer £ Son,
81 oat, B & Cos, Rutherford & F, A A Aveilhe, R
B Reppard. D C Bacon £ Cos. Saussy, H£ R,
McDonough £ B, Lee Roy Myers, H Myers £
Bros, DafHn £ D. M Y Henderson, W E Alexan
der £ Son, Weed £ C, J W Nieolson, Graham
£ H, R Roach £ Bro. Bendheim Bros £ Cos, J W
Tynan. M Maclean, W B Mell £ Cos, Bacon & B,
D C Bacon £ Cos.
Per Central Railroad. June I—S P Shatter,
Bendheim Bros £ Cos, H L Ba: nard. G Eckstein
£ Cos, D L Georg, Loeb £ E, A Friedenberg £
Cos, Allen £ L, J H Ruwe, E J Acosta, Palmer
Bros, S Cohen, C Seiler. R M Barthelu ess. Solo
mons £ Cos, Ocean Steamship Cos. Lovell £ L,
W C Jackson, H Myers £ Bros, Savannah
Guano Cos, Lee Roy Myers, 51 Y Henderson, J
B Abrams, Woodbridge £ H, Peacock, H£ Cos,
A Einstein's Sons, Henry Yonge.W M Heyward,
51 Boley £ Son, J S Collins £ Cos, J P Williams
£ Cos, D C Bacon £ Cos, T P Bond, Frank £ Cos,
RRoas'n £ Bro, F M Farley, Chas Patterson, J
H McGriffln, J J Crowley, H 51 Comer £ Cos, C
F Stubbs £ Cos, Jno Flannery £ Cos.
Dr. Holmes 011 Emerson.
Extracts from an Address.
"What could we do with this unex
pected, unprovided for, unclassified, half
unwelcome new comer, who has been
for awhile potted, as it were, in our Uni
tarian cold green house, but had taken to
growing so fast that he was lifting off its
class roof and letting in the hailstones?
Here was a protest that outflanked the
extreme left of liberalism, yet so calm
and serene that its radicalism had the ac
cents of the gospel of peace. Here was
1 n iconoclast without a hammer, who
took down our idols from their pedestals
so tenderly that it seemed like itn act of
worship.
The scribes and Pharasees made light
of his oracular sayings. The lawyers
could not find the witnesses to subpoena
and the documents to refer to when his
case came before them, and turned him
over to their wives and daughters. The
ministers denounced bis heresies, and
handled his writings as if they were
packages of dynamite, and the grand
mothers were as much afraid of his new
teachings as old Mrs. Piozzi was of
geology. We had bad revolution
ary orators, reformers, martyrs; it
was hut a few years since Abner Knee
land had been sent to jail for expressing
an opinion about the great First Cause;
but we had had nothing like this man,
with his seraphic voice and countenance,
his choice vocabulary, his refined utter
ance, his gentle courage, which, with a
different manner, might have been called
audacity, his temperate statement of
opinions which threatened to shake the
existing order of thought like an earth
quake.
It always seemed to me as if he looked
upon this earth very much as a visitor
from anolher planet would look on it.
He was interested, and to some extent
curious about it, but it was not the first
spheroid he had been acquainted with by
any means.
Few poets who have written so little
in ver. e have dropped so many of those
“jewels five words long” which fall from
their setting only to lie more choicely
treasured. E pluribus unuvi is hardly
more familiar to our ears than “He
huilded better than he knew,” and
Keats’ “thing of beauty” is little better
known than Emerson’s “beauty is its
own excuse for being.”
Speech seemed like a kind of travail
to Hawthorne. One must harpoon him
like a cetacean with questions to make
him talk at all. Then the words eirne
from him at last, with bashful mani
festations, like those of a young girl,
almost —words that gasped themselves
forth, seeming to leave a great deal more
behind them than they told, and died
out discontented with themselves, like
the monologue of thunder in the sky,
which always goes off mumbling and
grumbling as if it had not said half it
wanted to, acd meant to, and ought to
say.
Emerson was sparing of words, but
used them with great precision and
nicety. If he had been followed about
by a short-hand-writing Boswell, every
sentence he ever uttered might have been
preserved. To hear him talk was like
watching one crossing a brook on step
pi jg stones. His noun had to wiit for
its verb or its adjective until he was
ready; then his speech would come
down upon the word he wanted; aud
not Worcester nor Webster could better
it from all Ibe wealth of their huge vo
cabularies _
Useless Frlgbt.
To worry about any Liver, Kidney or Uri
nary Trouble, especially Bright’s Disease or
Diabetes, as Hop Bitters never falls of a
core where a cure U possible. We know
tblf.
MR. CHRISTIANCY’S MARITAL
WOES.
Ttoe Ex-Senator’* Story of His Tron *
bles Supported by Documents.
In the Christiancy divorce suit the testi
mony of ex-Senator Christiancy Is now be
ing taken. In connection with it several
Important letters htve been put in evidence,
which, it is thought, will have weight in the
decision of the case. Among them is a
long letter written by Mr. Christiancy on
August 18,1878, to his wife’s father, John
W. Lugenbeel, with regard to Mrs. Chrls
tlancy’s alleged bad conduct. It begins with
a reference to the correspondence between
the writer and Miss Lugenbeel before their
marriage—a correspondence in which, Mr.
Christiancy says, he endeavored carefully
aud scrupulously to convince her
that she ought not to marry him, and In
which he insisted many times that she
should reconsider the matter. He urged
particularly, he savs, his own unflfness on
account of age, and said to her that be bad
comparatively a short time to live, while she
at his death would be young. He admitted
that he loved her, and said that If, after full
and mature consideration, 6he stlU wished
to marry him he would consent. He sup
posed and believed, he says, that she would
see the unsuitability of the match, and
abandon all thought of It, but when, after
all bis expostulations, she declared that she
still wished him to make her his wife, he
had, as a gentleman, only one course to
take. The marriage took place, and if
the love which she professed for him
had really existed, nothing, he says, could
have made him bappler. On the morning
of the wedding, however, she heard of the
return of James Lugenbeel, and fainted
upon receiving the news. When they
reached Philadelphia and were alone sbe
told him that she had been engaged to Mr.
Lugenbeel; that the engagement had been
broken off, and that she did not know how
deeply she loved him until bis name was
mentioned. Sbe said she had perjured her
self In her marrlige vows; that she was
miserable, and that she wanted a divorce
forthwith. When they returned to the city
all went well until she met Mr. Lugenbeel
in the art gallery, and from that time
she seemed dejected and desperate,
and again asked for a divorce. Soon after
this Mr. Frank Anderson became attentive
to her, and her effectlODS seemed to attach
themselves alternately to him and to Mr.
Lugenbeel, and again came the frenzy for
divorce. Finally she quieted down and ap
peared to think more of her husband. Af
ter she returned home lu Aujust, 1870, her
love for Anderson broke out afresh and her
hatred for her husband increased. She also
had a fondness for Sam Register, of Balti
more, and for a Mr. Mayer. Bhe often de
clared that she wished her husband was
dead, and said that he was all that stood
between her and happiness.
Mr. Christiancy then refers to the fact
that his wife went to the healing springs in
preference to going to Saratoga or Kansas
with him, and says that he felt suspicious"
that she had gone to the springs with some
old lover. When she wrote to him she
taunted him with beiDg old; did not pre
tend to love him; said she would not live
with him again; tnat she could spend all the
money she pleased; that she would run him
in debt, and that sbe wanted a divorce. The
husband replied that he would not quarrel
with her, nor would he be ruined
in the way she proposed. He
was willing to receive her at
home, treat her kindly, and provide for her
In proportion to his means, but from that
time forward he would make no apology
for any conduct of his. In referring again
to Frank Anderson, Mr. Christiancy says
that he has received a letter of caution from
Mobile, Mr. Anderson’s residence, and that
reports are already in circulation with re
gard to the Intrigue between the latter and
Mrs. Christiancy. He closes his letter by
appealing to Mr. Lugenbeel to interest him
self In his daughter’s welfare, to check her
downward course, and to save her from
ruining her reputation.
The letter of cau'ion referred to by Mr.
Christiancy In his letter to Mr. Lugenbeel Is
dated Mobile, April 26, 1878, and signed
Mollle F. Lyons. It s’atesln substance that,
a man in Mobile nam'd F. Y. Anderson bad
told the writer that he had been criminally
intimate with Mrs. Christiancy before her
marriage; that he was still in correspondence
with her; and that he could, through her,
control the vote of her husband in the Sen
ate in the contest then pending with regard
to the United States Marshalship In Alabama.
In his testimony Mr. Christiancy said that he
showed this letter to his wife and fur
nished her with a copy to send to
Mr. Anderson for explanation; that the lat
ler denied the truth of the 6tat(mnts and
said that the letter was a political trick.
With this denial he (Mr. Christiancy) was
forced to be content, but he was Dot satis
fied. Subsequently he opened accidentally
a letter addressed to bis wife by her confi
dential friend, Miss Lillie Meloy, and found
in it another letter In the handwriting of
Mr. F. Y. Anderson, addressed to “Mrs. K.
K. Wharton,” and signed “Nannie.” The
letter was unimportant, but began “My
Darling Chit,” and closed with an assurance
that he would write again upon reaching
Mobile. It is though that Mr. Cbristlancy’s
testimony will be finished thl6 week.
DUELING SAT DOWN UPON.
Mr. Lonbti Expelled from (be Union
Club aud Mr. Turnbull Censured.
The New York Iribune of Friday morning
sayr: “Tbe Governing Committee of the
Union Club met. last evening to take action
in the cases of Messrs. Loubat and Turnbull,
who have been agita'lng the club for a few
weeks with vague threats of fighting a duel
to settle a dispute bet ween them.
“The Governing Committee consists of
Wm. H. Appleton, Sunuel D. Babcock,
Christopher C. Baldwio, John H. Draper,
8. N.cholson Kane, J. Bowers Lee, William
B. Rice, Gouverneur TlllotsoD, Samuel V.
Blagden, John L. Cadwallader, ex-Vlayor
Cooper, Thomas M. Foote, Pul S. Forbes,
Herman R. Le Roy, James Y. Parker, Fred
erick SheldoD, Jules E. Brugiere, William
Constable, William M. Evarts, Peleg Hall,
Oliver K. King, Isaac Townsend, William
Turnbull, and Lawrence Wells. There was
a remarkably full meeting, only two mem
bers betog absent. These were Mr. Evarts
and ex-Mayor Cooper.
“The members of the committee of five,
of which Peleg Hall was Chairman, which
was appointed on Thursday of last week to
Inquire Into the facts of the case and make
a report to the Governors, were on hand.
Many of the Governing Committee, it was
stated, had resolutely refused duririg the last
week to hea r anything of the matter trom gos
siping members of the club, and bad skip
ped all the accounts In the newspapers, in
order that their minds might be unula?ed.
The report of the committee of five was
very full and detailed, but revealed noth
ing of the origin or progress of the
quarrel which has not already been
made public. It condemned Mr. Liubat’s
action In the matter with great severity. It
stated that the club had nothing to do with
any expressions which Mr. Loubat may
have used in a private conversation in the
club rooms, but declared that Mr. Loubat’s
letter to Mr. Turnbull, which he wrote after
his return from California, was highly
reprehensible and deserving of the strongest
'censure. This was the letter in whtch Mr.
Loubat wrote that he was Informed that Mr.
Turnbull had given out that he had called
him (Loubat) “a low, dirty blackguard.”
This statement Mr. Loubat, characterized as
a lie. The report also declared that Mr.
Loubat’a further action had been calculated
to bring the club into disrepute.
“After Mr. Louhat’s course had been
scathingly denounced Mr. Turnbull was
taken up and his connection wl*-h the affair
was considered. He was criticised for re
peating the conversation publicly which had
taken place between himself and Messrs.
Loubat, Kimball and Willing, and the pro
priety of the circular which he prepared and
sent out was brought Into question.
“After the report had been heard the sub
j tet was discussed at considerable length
and with great earnestness by the Governors.
The strictures made In the report were re
ceived with favor on all tides. It was appa
rent from tbe first that the opinion of all
present was unanimous In condemnation of
both men. The discussion lasted from 9
o’clock until nearly 10:30. A vote was then
taken on tbe cases of tbe two men separate
ly, Mr. Loubat was expelled without a dis
senting voice. Mr. Turnbull was cenmred
with equally prompt unanimity. Mr. Lou
bat was a life member of the club.
“There was a good deal of interest mani
fested at the club on Wednesday evening at
the election of eight Governors for three
years from June 14. Three hundred and
seventy seven members cast vote*, a larger
number than have been cast at any previous
election for several years. Of these William
H. Appleton received the full number. The
others elected were Samuel D. Babcock, C,
C. Baldwin, John H. Drape', R iland Red
mond, John A Lowery, W. W. F. Mall and
Cornelius Fellowes. B. H. Bristow was
elected for two years to till a vacancy caused
by resignation. There are twenty-four
members of the Governing Committee,whose
terms run three years. Eight are chosen
each year.
“A friend of Mr. Loubat stated yesterday
that Mr. Loubat would shortly sail for
Europe. He has not been at the c’tib since
the publication of the Turnbull circular. A
prominent member of tbe club, whom a re
porter surprised last evening by the news of
Mr. Loubat’t expulsion, said; ‘This result
has not been wholly unexpected In the club.
For some days the opinion has been growing
that, under the circumstances, the expul
sion of one or both men was the only proper
and manly thing to do.’ ”
Dr. Leon de Bremoii* who died m
New York recently, was a French noble
man, bearing the titles of Count de Brc
mont, Viscount d’Aubigy, and Baron de
Malieux. He served with distinction as
a surgeon in the Crimean and Franco-
German wars. After the misfortunes
that befell his family during the reign of
the Commune, be emigrated to this
country and settled in New York, where
he has since been engaged in the practice
of me4icine,
HEADLONG FROM TENDOXE
COLUMN.
Frightful Suicides In Paris by Leap*
Inc from the Famous monument.
Paris Letter to Chicago Herald.
I bad just passed the Column Ven
dome on my way to the Hotel Conti
nental, when I heard a cry of horror
from every corner of the place, and a
woman fell insensible at my very feet. I
saw the upturned face, and before I
could turn half way round I heard an
awful, sickeniDg sound, the meaning of
which was easily guessed. Then I learn
ed that some poor fellow had thrown
himself from the topmost point of the
grand and stately column to the paved
roadway, more than a hundred feet
below. StraDge to say he was not dash
ed to pieces. He had struck upon the
jointed iron railings, and there he hung
pierced through the neck by the sharp
and gilded picket. There were very little
signs of blood, but the features, which
once upon a time a mother's lips had
pressed, were terribly disfigured.
“That is the third one within a fort
night,” said the manager of the hotel
when he was told of the suicide.
“Why do they let visitors go to the
top of the column alone?” I asked. “It
is shameful for the authorities to be so
indifferent to such a state of affairs. Lib
erty is all very well, but one has no
right to throw one’s self from the Ven
dome column simply because one has
uot drawn a prize in the lottery or for
some other equally foolish reason.” The
manager said, with a shrug of his shoul
ders, that it always had been and always
would be, so there was no use of worry
ing over the matter. My business at
the hotel finished, I started for my apart
ments. When I had reached the corner
of the Hotel Bristol I saw be
fore me a crowd of perhaps
a thousand persons, and in a
few moments I was in their midst.
It was a crowd of bareheaded men,
women and boys, who had rushed from
all the neighboring shops and houses of
idlers, glad to find some excitement to
refresh their laziness; of strangers, with
red books under their arms, the British
ones of the number soberly jotting down
in their memorandum book the sad fact
that “a suicide occurs every day, in the
Place Vendome, at about four o’clock
in the afternoon;” of soldiers in red
trousers, dirty, ill-fitting blouse, shoes
turned over at the heels, hardly tall
enough to pass muster iu the “pony
squad” of a company of Western militia;
ot stately, dignified, aristocratic gentle
men from the Circle de V Union Artis
tiijue (vulgarly called the Moihtons) over
tfie way, where a fine reception was
being given to the ladies, and where
some of the best paintings in Paris are
now on exhibition; of officers from the
headquarters of the post commandant,
Major General “Three Stars,” who occu
pies the building at the side of the one
occupied by the Minister of Justice, and
of policemen.
In my time 1 have seen many misera
ble, sad and disagreeable sights, but
never before was I so shocked as on yes
terday afternoon, when I found myself
in that crowd at the base of the mighty
pillar, from the top of which a colossal
statue of the great Napoleon overlooks
all Paris. It was a crowd utterly lost,
so it seemed to me, to the horror of the
situation. “It is droll,” said a young
woman to a man who works in a jewelry
shop at the corner of the Rue de la Paix,
and both of them strained their eyes to
examine in every detail the hideous blot
of blood on the gilded iron paling.
“Yes, my little one, it is quite a dis
tance to fail,” said an ugly, brutish look
ing coachman addressing himself to the
cocotte iu his voiture. “It would have
been better for monsieur if he had fallen
upward,” and a roar of laughter greeted
this humorous remark. The people
pushed each other rudely iu their efforts
to catch a glimpse of the poor dead mau,
whom a policeman had covered with his
cloak. There was no hurry about taking
away the corpse, and for two or three
hours the crowd kept on joking and tell
ing each other of similar tragedies which
they had either seen or heard about.
The percentage of suicides in Prance
is greater than that of any other country.
One of the most eminent French authori
ties, who examined 4,595 cases of suicide,
said: “There were among them G 97 per
sons of ample and independent foituue,
2,000 persons who earned a handsome
livelihood in trades or professions, 25C
persons in pecuniary difficulties, 159 who
were comparatively ruined, considering
their circumstances with regard to their
previous position, and 760 poor persons.
Of the total number, 1,376 were women.
French physicians have discovered that
suicide belongs to the class of epidemics,
while others tell us that suicide is
hereditary. As to the manner of
these innumerable cases of self murder, I
am not in a position to speak autbonta
lively. lam assured, however, by the
police authorities that the number who
precipitate themselves from this same
Column Vendome is 10 per cent, of the
whole. I wa9 also informed that of the
457 of such deaths in the Place Ven
dome, 145 had their heads fractured and
no visible wound of limb or body ; while
iu 38 cases there was no apparent injury
at all, and death took place merely from
ike shock of falling When one remem
bers that the column is 132 feet high, it
seems impossible that such a statement
should be a true one; and when I asked
for an explanation I was assured that the
victims had been caught on the iron
pickets by their clothing!
Cheap Italy.
Cornhill Magazine,
Italy remains of all countries in Europe
the cheapest. Money goes very far there
when people spend it rationally, but
English families who want to live eco
nomically must be very careful not to let
it be suspected that they are rich, else
they will be fleeced with a shamele sness
hardly to be credited by those who have
not witnessed it. An Italian becomes
utterly demoralized when he sees a
chance of making money out of a sun
pleton. If he succeeds in one overcharge
his oniy regret will be that he did not
ask for more; and he will move away
grumbling, so that the more you give
him the less pleased will he appear to be.
Partly from ignorance, partly from vul
gar ostentation, Englishmen and Ameri
cans in Italy pay for many things
ten or twenty times more than they
ought to do. The basket of fruit which
the Marchese living sumptuously for
£IOO a year in the upper rooms of his
ancestral palace may buy for 4 soldi will
be sold for as many francs to the
Signora Brown, who will declare it
cheap, reckoning by Covent Garden
prices; and the same discriminating
lady, in bargaining for apartments, will
allow he head to be turned by accounts
of the distinguished persons w*ho have
inhabited those apartments in old times,
and will readily pay three times more
thau the rooms are worth. People who
mean to live in Italy must do business
on a very different plan; they must take
pattern by the Italians themselves.
Most of the Italian gentry, sporting
high sounding titles, are not only
poor but miserly. They dress
well out of doors, frequent
the theatre (which can be done
for a small cost by taking a yearly sub
scription, and now and then they are to
be seen driving about fn antiquated ba
rouches; but in their homes they make
no show, and they bargain for every
article of food they buy till they reach
the lowest sum at which the seller will
frnrt with his merchandise. If an Eng
ishman wants to make quite sure of not
being cheated, he had better begin by
offering one-third of the sum demanded
of him for anything, from a house to a
bunch of grapes. When he has been a
little time in the country he will discover
that even in this way he will be made to
pay considerably more than a native. It
may happen that at first his offers will
be refused, as tradesmen will be anxious
to prove him; but if he perseveres he
will quickly acquire the reputation of
being a sensible man, and will get the
fat of the land for Its marketable value.
Rome, Naples, Turin and Fiorence
should be avoided by people with small
purses; but there is only an embarras de
ehoix with respect to other cities suitable
for settling. There are twenty towns in
the peninsula which have fallen from
a high estate and abound with empty
palaces. Genoa, Milan. Venice, Pisa,
Ravenna, Terrara, Modena, Parma, Bo
logna, Siena stand in tb is case, and the
further you go south the more opportu
nities have you of renting lands, as well
as houses, on low terms. The country
wears a look of ruin, but it is wonder
fully fertile; very little capital is needed
to work its rich soil, and many of our
countrymen who carry their money
to America or Australia at great risk
of getting no return for it Would find
ft much safer investment in those sunny
fields of Italy, where the crops of wheat,
grapes and olives never fail. The Italian
climate, moreover, promotes economy,
for there is no necessity of taking stimu
lants there, or for eating meat more than
once a day. The natives are strangely
abstemious. A cup of chocolate with
some pastry in the morning; a dish of
meat and vegetables at midday: some
fruit and salad, or macaroni, in the eve
ning, will form an Italian nobleman’s bill
of fare for the day; and the only extras
will be an occasional ice or cup of coffee
at the cafe. The social life of the
country is most pleasant, for you get
as much society as you please there
without its costing anything. The
Italians do not, like the French,
give elaborate breakfasts and dinners.
The richer among them give musical par
ties at their own houses, serving ices and
coffee to their guests; but the majority
meet their iriends in the open air prome
nades, in the cafes, and at the theatre,
which is the chief place for paying vis
its. Manners are free and easy; morals
are not perhaps all that they might be;
but English people at least have no rea
son to complain that they are received
with coldness. They are liked and re
spected all over the peninsula in propor
tion that the French and Germans are
hated. It is an understood thing that the
Englishman is an “eccentric” and a
“heretic,” but he is credited with the
possession of all the serious qualities
which the Italians themselves lack, and
his very oddities are supposed to be
amusing.
A CALIFORNIA ROMANCE.
A Foot-Pad Falla Heir to a Great Es
tate in Eastland.
Woodland (Cal.) Democrat.
A few days ago a gentleman by the
name of Ilodery Eldridge arrived in
Woodland and took rooms at the Capital
Hotel. He stated that he was an Eng
lishman, and that his object in visiting
the United States was to find a man by
the name of Algernon Brauningsford,
who had left his home in England in the
year 1850. Mr. Eldridge, who is a
cousin of the missing man, arrived in
San Francisco about one month ago.
Last evening he happened to step into
the Capital Hotel saloon, and overheard
the barkeeper, Patsy Donnelly, inci
dentally mention the name of “Old Ag.”
Mr. Eldridge, thinking that possibly
this was an ellipsis of the name of the
man for whom he was in search,
made further inquiry about him. Mr.
Donnelly informed him that “Old
Ag” was a sort of “dead beat” whom he
had known for years as a tramp, and
supposed that every saloon keeper in the
land was equally familiar with him, but
he knew nothing of his history. At
present he was engaged in sawing wood
tor a gentleman near by, and managed
to spend his money for drink about as
fast as he earned it. Mr. Eldridge, hav
ing been directed, sought out the man in
question, whom he found engaged in
the healthful occupation, and at once
recognized him as a man of English
birth, which greatly increased his
hope of success. After a series of
questions were answered by “Old Ag,’*
it became very apparent to Mr. Eldridge
that he was the same person he was look
ing for, notwithstanding his forlorn and
dilapidated appearance. Finally Mr.
Eldridge—who, by the way, is an Eng
lish gentleman of the strictest type—
ventured the remark: “Well, ‘Old Ag,’
as they seem to call you here, allow me
to introduce myself as your cousin,
Hodery Eldridge. I have come to tell
you that your old father, Lord Brannings
ford, is dead, and that you are heir to
four-fifths of his estate, which is about
$2,000,000. To say that “Old Ag” was
started by the unexpected news would
not express one-half, and the scene which
followed can be better imagined than
described.
Lord Branningsford, who was very
wealthy, had two sons, one named Lion
aid and the other Algernon. In 1847
Lionald was married to a young lady of
high birth by the name of Elizabeth
Stratton. Algernon was a frequent vis
itor at the family residence, and, owing
to a quarrel between the two brothers
over the young wife, Algernon embarked
for America, and arrived in San Fran
cisco in the fall of 1850. According to
his own story, he first engaged as book
keeper in the wholesale house of A. P.
Hotaling, in which position he remained
for the space of a year and a half, when
a defalcation in his accounts caused his
discharge. He went to mining and his
history from that epoch down to the
time he wa3 found a penniless tramp in
this city is but the story of the many who
have gone the same way. About two
years ago his brother died, leaving him
heir to four-fifths of the immense estate,
one fifth going to the cousin, who was
made the residuary legatee if he could
prove Algernon’s death. This he set out
to do, but coming to San Francisco he
found the living he ; r a vagabond.
sron sit tt(s.
Summer
Complaints
At tills season, various diseases of the
bowels are prevalent, and many lives are
lost through lack of knowledge of a safe
and sure remedy. Perky Davis’ Pain
Killer is a sure cure for Diarrhoea, Dys
entery, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Summer
Complaint, etc., and is perfectly safe.
Bead the following:
_ Bainbridge, N. Y., March 22,1881.
Perry Davis’ Pain Killer never fails to ajford
instant relief for cramp and pain In the stomach.
Joseph Burditt.
Niohoivtlle, N. Y., Feb. 2,1881.
The very best medicine I know of for dysentery,
cholera morbus, and cramps in tho stomach. Have
ÜBcd it tor years, and it is sure cure every time.
Julius W. Dee.
Moingona.lowa, March 12,1881.
I have need your Pain Killer in severe cases of
cramp, colic.and cholera morbus.and it gave almost
instant relief. L. E. Caldwell.
Carnesville, Ga., Eeb. 28, 1881.
For twenty years I have used your Pain Killer
in my family. Have used it many times for bowel
complaints, and it al tcays cures. Would not feel safe
without a bottle in the house. J. B. I vie.
Saco, Me., Jan. 22, 1881.
Have used Perry Davis’ Pain Killer for twelve
years. It Is safe, sure, and reliable. No mother
should allow it to be out of the familv.
v H. I. Nates.
Oneida, N. Y., Feb. 19,1881.
We began using it over thirty years ago, and it
always gives immediate relief. Would hardly dare
to go to bed without a bottle in the house.
W. O. Sperry.
Conwayboro, S. C.,Feb. 22,1881.
Nearly every family in this section keeps a bottle
in tho house. Dr. E. Morion.
IT. S. Consulate,
Crefej.d, Rhenish Prussia. Feb. 8,1881.
I have known Perry Davis’ P.\in Killer almost
from tho day it was introduced, and after yearn of
observation and use I regard its presence in my
household as an indispensable necessity.
1. S. Potter, If. 8. Consul.
Burton-on-Tbent. Eng.
I had been several days suffering severely from
diarrhira, accompanied with intense iiain, when I
tried your Pain Killer, and found almost Instant
relief. H. J. Noone,
21 Montague St., London, Eng.
During a residence of twenty-three years in India,
I have given it in many cases of diarrhcEa, dysen
tery, and cholera, and never knew it to fail to give
relief. .. K. Claridge.
No family can safely be without this
invaluable remedy. Its price brings it
within the reach of all.
l’’or sale by all druggists at 25c., 50c.
and SI.OO per bottle.
PERKY DAVIS & SON, Proprietors,
Providence, R. I.
s&ostfttrr’s gSitttrs.
KOSTETTEHJj
w STOMACH
BITTERS
The feeble and emaciated, suffering from
dyspepsia or indigestion in any form, are ad
vised, for the sake of their own bodily and
mental comfort, to try Hostetter’s Stomach
Bitters: I-adies of the most delicate constitu
tions testify to its harmless and its restorative
properties. Physicians everywhere, disgusted
with the adulterated liquors of commerce, pre
scribe it as the safest aud most reliable of all
stomachics.
For sale by all Druggists and Dealers gener
RUTTY’C Organs. 27 stops, *9O; Pianos
DEH I I I 0 $125. Factory running davand
night. Catalogue free. Address DANIEL F.
BEATTY, Washington, N. J,
iron Wovhs.
SixfpoS
WM. KEHOE & CO.,
Manufacturers of
Arclecliral Iron Work
Of all kinds. CEMETERY, GARDEN, VER
ANDAH and BALCONY
RAILINGS
Sugar Mills and Pans
A BPECIALTY. Hawing unsurpassed facilities,
we are prepared to fill orders for
Castings
Of ail kinds at the shortest notice and on the
most reasonable terms. Greene’s Vertical Top
and Under Running Corn Mills.
* WM. KEHOM & CO.,
SAVANNAH. GA.
N. B.—The name PHCEXIX IRON WORKS is
cast on all our Mills and Pans.
J. W. TYNAN,
Engineer and Machinist,
BAVANNAH, GA.
Machine, Boiler and Smith Shops
COR. WEST BROAD AND INDIAN STB.
AU kinds of Machinery, Boilers, etc., made
and repaired. Steam Pumps, Governors, In
jectors, and Steam and Water Fittings of all
kinds for sale.
THB ‘^KINNEII”
Portable, Stationary & Ginning
ENGINES & BOILERS.
The presses in this office are run by one of
these engines. Send for Catalogue.
SKINNER ft WOOD. Erie, Pa.
McDoiil k Ballantyne,
MACHINISTS,
IRON FOUNDERS,
Boiler Makers & Blacksmiths.
ENGINES and BOILERS for sale and made
to order. GIN and MILL GEARING, bU
GAR MILLS and PANS.
SAVANNAH, - - GEORGIA
Savannah Machine Works
J AS. MANNING,
Manufacturer raw®!
and Dealer in Steam rjgj '■ ’
Engines and Boilers, Iff ttSEwS?
Saw Mills. Grist Mills, *1
Cotton Gins, and Press- ffia.
es. Mill Rocks, Iron and
Prompt _ jttention^g^^^^pjjjjj|j^
st,
Waltham Watches
—i*—
HU Uaßt (ASK
AN ELEGANT ASSORTMENT OF
DIAMONDS, JEffELST
-AND
SILVERWARE,
the lowest possible prices, at
M. STERNBERG’S,
24 BARNARD STTtRTJT.
NEKVOUS DEBILITY.
A CURE GUARANTEED.
DR. E. C. WEST’S NERVE AND BRAIN
TREATMENT: A specific for Hysteria,
Dizziness, Convulsions, Nervous Headache,
Mental Depression, Loss of Memory, Sperms
torrhoea, linpotency. Involuntary Emissions.
Premature Old Age, caused by over-exertion,
self abuse, or over-indulgence, which leads to
misery, decay and death. One box will cure
recent cases. Each box contains one month's
treatment. $1 a box. or 6 boxes for $5; srnt
by mail prepaid on receipt of price We guar
antee 6 boxes to cure any case. With each or
der received by us for 6 boxes, accompanied
with J 5, we will send the purchaser our written
guarantee to return the money if the treat
ment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued
by OSCEOLA BUTLER, Druggist, Savannah.
Ga. Orders by mail promptly attended to.
A CARD.
& Athens, Ga., February 22d, 1878.
W Sir —My child, five years old, hading
symptoms of worms I tried Calomel
y and other worm medicines, but failed
m to expel any. Seeing Mr, Bains’certifl df
% cate, I got a vial of SMITH’S WORM '
OIL, and the first dose brought 40
a worms, and the second dose so manj $■
were passed I did not count them A
( ) 8. H. ADAMS. a
v For sale by druggists generally. Pre-*r
pared by E. 8. LYNDON, Athens, Ga.
HABIT CVTKK.-
A - 1 ™- By B. M. WOOLLEY,
Atlanta, Ga. Reliable evidence given,
and reference to cured patients and phy
sicians. Send for my book on the Habit and
Its Cure. Free.
ftamnmfesi aufl Ire (Hirsts.
HAMMOCKS,
ICE CHESTS
—AND—
WATER COOLERS
For sale by
PALMER BROS.,
148 CONGRESS STREET.
Tamuirti.
Shipping & Family Laundry
I SOLICIT Washing, Ironing and General
Laundry work. Orders from ships or
families will receive prompt attention. Wash
ing called for and delivered in any part of the
city. Satisfaction guaranteed.
MRS. R. E. ROBBINS.
8. K, cor. of Bull A New Houston ate.. Savannah.
Shipping,
SAVMMBMDIWMK.
Ocean Sloamsi Cemnany.
CABIN .S2O
EXCURSION 32
STEERAGE j 0
("pHE magnificent steamships of this Company
JL are appointed to sail as follows:
CITY OF MACON, Captain Kwh-ton,
SATURDAY, June 3, at 8:00 a. m.
CITY OF COEUITIHUS, Captain Fisaan,
WEDNESDAY, June 7, at 11:00 A. m .
CITY OF AUGUSTA, Captain K. 8. Nica
issoN, SATURDAY, June 10, at 1:30 r. M.
OATH CITY, Captain Dcggktt, WEDNES
DAY. June 14, at 5:30 a. m.
Through bills of lading given to Eastern and
Northwestern points and to ports of the United
Kingdom and the Continent.
For freight or passage apply to
G. M. SORREL, Agent.
City Exchange Building.
Merchants’ aud Miners’ Trans
portation Company.
FOR BALTIMORE.
CABIN PASBAGE sls 00
SECOND CABIN 12 50
EXCURSION 25 00
THE steamships of this Company aro ap
pointed to sail from Baltimore for Savan
nah EVERY FIVE DAYS and from Savannah
for Baltimore as follows:
GKO. AFPOLD, Captain H. D. Fostkr,
THURSDAY, June 1, at 5 p. K.
SAItUiOSSt, Captain T. A. Hooper,
TUESDAY, June 6, at 11 A. M.-
GKO. APPOI.D, Captain H. D. Fostkr,
MONDAY, June 12, at 3 p. m.
SAK*GOA, Cants la T. A. Hoopku,
Saturday, June i~, at 9 a. m.
Through bills lading given to all points West,
all the manufacturing towns in New England,
and to Liverpool and Bremen Through pas
senger tickets issued to Pittsburg, Cincinnati,
Chicago, and all points West and Northwest.
JAB. B. WEST & CO., Agent*.
114 Bay street.
FOll BOSTON DIRECT.
Boston and Savannah Steamship Line
CABIN PASSAGE $lB OO
The steamships of this line are appointed to
sail from Boston every Thursday at 3 p. m., and
from Savannah as follows:
C. W. I.OHD, Captain J. W. Blankenship,
THURSDAY, June 8, at 12:30 p. m.
BEFHINOLK, Captain H. K. Hall kit,
THURSDAY, June 15, at b p. m.
C. \V. CORD, Captain J. W. Elankenship,
THURSDAY, JuDe 22, at 12 M.
SEHINOCK, Captain H. K. Hallkxt,
THURSDAY, June 29, at 6 p. m.
C. it LORD , Captain J. W. Blankenship,
THURSDAY, July 6, at 11 A. M.
THROUGH bills of lading given to New
England manufacturing cities. Also, to
Liverpool by the Cunard, Warren and Leyland
lines.
The ships of this line connect at their wharf
with all railroads leading out of Boston.
RICHARDBON & BARNARD, Agents.
F. W. NICKERSON & CO., Agents, Boston.
OCEAN STEAMSHIP CO.’S
Philadelphia & Savannah line,
Leaving' Each Port Every Satnrday.
CABIN PABSAGE ....$lB
STEERAGE 10
EXCURSION 30
CABIN PASSAGE TO NEW YORK VIA
PHILADELPHIA 20
Through bills lading given to all points East
and West, also to Liverpool by steamers of the
American Line, and to Antwerp by steamers of
the Red Star Line, sailing regularly from Phila
delphia.
THE FIRST-CLASS BTEAMSHIP
I AT A,
Captain R. M. HOWE,
TYTIDL leave Savannah on SATURDAY,
TV June 3, 1882, at 7:00 o’clock r. m.
For freight or passage, having superior ac
commodations, apply to
WM. HUNTER & SON, Agents.
SUMMER SCHEDULE.
Sealsland Route to Jacksonville
AND ALL OTHER POINTB IN FLORIDA.
A DELIGHTFUL sail through a strictly In
land watercourse, insuring a full night’s
rest and good meals at regular hours.
CITY OF BRIDGETON
After WEDNESDAY, 3d May,will leave Savan
nah every Wednesday and SAturday at 4 p. m.,
connecting at Fernandina with
STEAMBOAT EXPRESS TRAIN
Via the new Fernandina and Jacksonville Rail
road. Only 70 minutes by rail. Close connec
tion mate at Jacksonville with steamers for
all points on St. John’s and Ocklawaha rivers.
Connection also made at Fernandina with the
Florida Transit Railroad for Waldo, Silver
Springs, Orange Lake, Ocala, Gainesville and
Cedar Key, thence by steamer to Tampa,
Manatee, Key West. Havana. Pensacola aud
New Orleans, and with steamer for St. Maiy’s
river.
For tickets and staterooms apply at office
LEVE & ALDEN. corner Bull and Bryan sts.
STEAMER DAVID CLARK
Every MONDAY and THURSDAY for Darien,
Brunswick and intermediate landings.
STEAMER HOWARD DRAKE
Will sail every TUEBDAY AFTERNOON at 4
o’clock for the SATILLA RIVER, touching at
Brunswick.
Freights for Brunswick and the Brunswick
and Albany Railroad forwarded direct Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday.
Freights for Darien forwarded Monday and
Thursday.
Through bills of lading and through rates of
freight issued for all stations on the Brunswick
and Albany Railroad. Special rates to Way
cross and Albany.
Freights for St. Catharine’s, Doboy, Cane
Creek, St. Mary’s and Satilla river payable in
Savannah.
SPECIAL NOTlCE.—Freight received after
3;:i0 o’clock p. m. on sailing day will not be
forwarded till following trip.
Freights not receipted for after twenty-four
hours of arrival will be stored at expense of
consignee.
WOODBRIDGE & HAURIMAN,
General Agents.
Q. LEVE, G. F. A.
For Augusta and Way landings.
Steamer Alice Clark,
Capt. W. T. GIBBON,
WILL leave every FRIDAY at 6 p. it., from
wharf foot of Drayton street, for Augusta
and way landings. Positively no freight re
ceived after sp. u on day of departure. All
freights payable by shippers.
JNO. F. BOBERTBON,
Agent.
For Augusta and Way landings.
STEAMER KATIE
Captain W. H. FLEETWOOD,
TT7ILL leave EVERY TUESDAY at 6 o’clock
vv p. m. for Augusta and Way Landings.
Positively no freight received or receipted
for after 5 o’clock p. M.
All freights payable by shippers.
JOHN LAWTON.
Manager.
Driven Wells Vfe.
PUT down and ma- -||
terial for same fii
furnished. Points 1)4. iW H.
ami 2 inch of ex- jßSUt'mf- .*Mi U
tra quality and make Vt iatiriaßr w
always on hand. The wv
Cucumber Pump, all ft!
other kinds and re- y jffi \
pairs for same to be iilifWlt.
had at A. KENT’S, 13 f
West Broad stre*t,
Sivannah.Ga., Horse
shoeing. Carriage
Painting and Repair- \r
iig Establishment,
%aitrpgrts.
Central & Southwestern R. R’tf*
Savannah, Ga., April 29th, 1882.
ON and after MONDAY. May Ist, ltM,
passenger trains on the Central and Boat v>
western Railroads and branches will ran a]
follows: j
READ DOWN. READ 7:0*1 4.
No. 1. Prom Navannak. No. a.
9:2b a. qj. Lv Savannah Lv 7:3u p a
4:27p.m. Ar Augusta Ar 5:20a a
6 30 p. m. Ar Macon Ar 7:20 a h
3:40a. m. Ar Atlanta Ar 12:50 r *
3:00 a. m. Ar Columbus Ar 1:40 p OB
7:17 a. m. Ar Eufaula Ar 2:40 p W
8:40a.m. Ar Albany Ar lto3p*,
■ Ar.....Millcdgeville Ar 9:44 a ra
Ar Eatonton Ar 11:30 a a
No. 13. Prom Augusta. No. 15
9.0) a. ui. Lv Augusta Lv. 800 p. m
3:45 p. m. Ar Savannah.... Ar. 7:15 a.
8:30p.m. Ar Macon Ar. 7:20a.m.
3:40 a. ra. Ar Atlanta Ar. 13:50 p. ni.
300a. m. Ar Columbus..... Ar. 1:40 p. to.
J:i7a.m. Ar Eufaula Ar. 2:10 p. m,
8:40a. m. Ar Albany Ar. 1:03 p, --u
Ar....Milledgeville....Ar. 9:44 a.m.
Ar Eatonton Ar. 11:30 a, 't
No. 2, Prom Macon. No. I.
7:10 a. in. Lv Macon Lv. 7:36 p. in.
3:45 p. m. Ar Savannah Ar. 7:15 a. nu
4:27 p. m. Ar Augusta, Ar. 5:20 a. m.
9:44 a. m. Ar... Milledgeville....Ar .
11:30 a.m. Ar Eatonton Ar
No. 1. Pram Afaoon.
7:45a.m. Lv Macon
2:f.0 p. m. Ar. Eufaula ,
1:03p.m. Ar Albany...
A’o. 3 Pr„m i/aoon Ho. 13.
3:15 a. m Lv Maoou Lv. 8:00 p. in,
1:10p.m. ar .. ..Columbus. Ar. 3:00 a. vn,
.VO. 2,3 fa.-c-v Ho i
8:00 a. m. Lv Macon Lv. S:10 p. and,
12:50 p. n Ar Atlanta Ar. 3 4(1. it,
An. tr>-om Atlanta No i. I
2:15 p. so. lv ttiauta Lv. 12:20 a. nZ
:55p. m. Ar Macon Ar, 6:30 a tu.
7:17 a. m. Ar Eufaula Ar, 2:40 p. m,
8:40 a.m. Ar Albany Ar. 1:08 p vc.
3:00a. m. Ar ....Columbus .... Ar. 1:40p.m.
Ar... Mlliedgevilla. ..Ar. 9:44 a. ra.
Ar Eatonton Ar. 11:30 a. m
5:20 a. m. Ar Augusta. Ar. 4:27 p. m.
7:15 a.m. Ar Savannah Ar. 3M5 p. n
No. 4, prom Qulumtnu. No. i<
11:50a. in. Lv....Columbus ....Lv. 12:00 night
5:10 p. m. Ar Macon Ar. 6:45 a. ut.
3:40 a. m. Ar Atlanta. Ar. 12:50 p. oa
7:17 a. m. Ar Eufaula Ar. 2:40 p. to,
8:40 a. m. Ar Albanv Ar. 1:03 p. ni
Ar.. .Milledgeville...Ar. 9:44 a. iu
Ar Eatonton.... Ar. 11:80 a. m
5:20a. tn. Ar Augusta Ar. 427 p. m
7:15 a. m. Ar Savannah..... Ar. 3:15 p. di
No. 2. Prom JCu/auia.
12:05p. m. Lv Eufaula
1:28 p.m. at Albany
7:10 p. m. Ar Macon
3:00a.m. Ar....Oolumbus
3:40 a. m. Ar Atlanta
5:20 a. rr., Ar \iignti(a
7:15a.m. Ar Savannah *
No. 15. Prom Albany, No. 2t>.
10:25 a. m. Lv Albany Lv I:4t p. at
2 40 p. in. Ar Eufaula Ar
7:10 p. m. Ar Macon Ar 7:10 p. m
3:U)a. rrt. Ar.... Columbus Ar 3:00a. m
3:40 a. m. Ar Atlanta Ar 3:40 a. at
Ar... Milledgeville.... Ar
Ar Eatonton Ar
5:20 a. m. Ar Augusta Ar 5:20 a. m
7:15 a in Ar Savannah Ar 7:lf a, m
No. 17. From Katanian and MiUedoexn.le.
2:15 p. nx. Lv Eatonton
3:53 p. m. Lv.. .MllledgevilJs
6:30 p. m. Ar Maeon.
3 00 a. m. Ar Columbus
8:40a.m. Ar Albany,.,,
3:40a. m Ar Atlanta.
5:20 a.m. Ar Augusta .........
7:15 a. m Ar.... Savaunah
Locai Sleeping Cars on all night trains o
tween Savannah and Augusta and Savanna
and Atlanta.
OonneoUoru.
Eufenia train connects at Fort Valley fc
Parr, daily (except Sunday), and at Cathbei
for Forf Gaines dailv (except Sunday).
The Albany and Blakely train runs dally be
tvreea Sinithville aDd Albany,and dally (excep
Sunday ) hot ween Aibauy and Blakely.
The Albany Accommodation train runsdatli
(except Monday) from Smithviile to Aibauy
and daily (except Sunday) from Albany t<
Smithviile.
At Savannah with Savannah, Florida an
Western Railway, at Augusta with all Unes t
North and East, at Atlanta with Air Line an E
Kennesaw Routes to all points North, Eas
and West.
Berths in Sleeping Cars can be secured j
BCHREINER’B, 127 Congress street.
G. A. Whitshsad, WILLIAM ROGERS,
Gen. Pass. Agt. Gen, Bapt, Bavannal
J. 0. Shaw. W. F. BHELLMAN,
Gen, Trav. Agt. Bnp’t S, W. R. R.. Macon, Gc
Savannah, Florida & Western R<
SCPKRINTKNnKNT’S OWCK,
Savannah. December 8, 1881.
ON AND AFTER SUNDAY, December •
1881, Passenger Trains on this road will u
as follows;
FAST MAIL.
Leave Savannah dally at 11:15 A.
Leave Jesup daily at 1:20 P
Leave Waycross daily at .... 3.00 P.
Arrive at Callahan dailv at 4:57 P. ;
Arrive at Jacksonville daily at 5:40 P. i
Leave Jacksonville daily at 9:00 A. J
Leave Callahan daily at 9:45 A. i
Arrive at Waycross daily at 11:45 A. I
Arrive at Jesup daily at 1:40 P. 1
Arrive at Savannah daily at. 3:40 P. I 1
Passengers from Savannah for Brunswlcs
take this rrain arriving at Brunswick 6:19 i
m. daily except Sunday.
Passengers leave Brunswick at 6.46 a. m
arrive at Bavannah 3:40 p. m.
This train stops only at Jesup, Waycros!
Folks ton Callahan and Jacksonville.
JACKSONVILLE EXPRESS
l .cave Savannah daily at II :00 P. j
Leave Jesup “ 8:00 A, I
• .cave Waycross “ 5:00 A. i
Arrive at Callahan “ 7;go a, t
Arrive at Jacksonville “ 8:15 A.
Ar rive at Live Oak daily (except Sun
day) at... 12:10 A,
Leave Lave Oak daily (except Sunday) 1:20 P.
Jacksonville daily at 5:40 P.:
Leave Callahan “ j6:45 p!
Leave Waycross “ 9:40 p'.
Arrive Jesup •• 11:25 p|
Arrive at Savannah “ 2;30 a!
Palace Sleeping Cars on this train daily b<
tween Savannah and Jacksonville, Waahiogtc
and Jacksonville. Cincinnati and Jacksonvill
Passengers leaving Macon at 7:50 p. m. coi
nect at Jesup with this train for Florida dallj
Passengers from Florida by this train coi
nect at Jesup with train arriving at Maco
at 7 a. m. daily.
Passengers from Savannah for Gainesvii!
Cedar Keys and Florida Transit Road (excel
Fernandina) take this train.
ALBANY EXPRESS.
Leave Savannah daily at 4 -45 p, j
Leave Jesup daily at 7;30 p’ ;
Leave Waycross daily at 10:00 Pj >
Leave DuPont daily at 1:00 A.
Arrive Thomasviile daily at 6:30 A,
Arrive Baiubridge daily at 9:45 a.
Arrive Albany daily at 11:30 A
Leave Albany daily at 4:40 P."
Leave Bain bridge daily at 5-00 p‘ j
Leave Thomasviile daiiy at 8:30 P*
Arrive DuPont daily at " 1-00 a!
Arrive Waycross daily at 4:00 A.
Arrive Jesup daily at 6:25 a.
Arrive Savannah daily at ... ! 9-05 A. P
Sleeping cars run through bet ween Bavaunt fi
and lhomasville daily without change.
Connection at Albany daiiy with passengc -l
trains both ways on Southwestern Railroad IJ
rom Macon, Eufaula, Montgomery, M I
bile, New Orleans, etc. * * I
Moil steamer leaves Bainbridge for Apalact I
cola aud Columbus every Thursday and Sul
day.
Close connection at Jacksonvllle dally (Bus!
days excepted) for Green Cove Springs, HI)
Augustine, Palatka, Enterprise, Sanford atv
ah landings on St. John’s river.
Trains on B. and A. li. R. leave lunctloi
going west at 12:20 P. M., and for Brunswkfi
at 3:43 P. M., dairy, except Sunday.
Through Tickets sold and Sleeping Cw
Berths and Drawing-room Car accommodi;
lions secured at Bren’s Ticket Office. No. wf
Bull street, and at the Company’s Depot foct
of Liberty street.
Anew Restaurant and Lunch Counter hif---
been opened in the station at Waycross, act
abundant tine will be allowed for meals by t ,<
passenger trains.
J. S. TYSON, JAS. L. TAYLOR, 1
Master Trans. Gen’l Pass’r Agenfef
R- Q. FLEMING, Supt.|
Charleston &_Savannah Ry. Cr
V 3:05 a.m., and until further notice, trai.
will arrive and depart as follows:
Going North—Trains 47 and 48,
Leave Savannah 4:IJ p. m. 3.-06 a.
Arrive Charleston 9:30 p. K. 8:45 i,.
Leave Charleston 8:30 p. tr. 7 ; 50 a.l
Leave Florence 1:55 a. m. I’oo pj
Leave Wilmington 8:40 a. m! 5-35 p!1
Arrive Weldon 12:50 p. m. 12 nig‘
Arrive Petersburg 3:10 p. m. 2'Si a. 1
Arrive Richmond 4:40 p. m! 834 A.i
Arrive Washington 9:40 p. mI 7 ; 4t a I
Arrive Baltimore 11:40 p. m. 9:30 a *
Arrive Philadelphia 8:30 a. m. 12-50 p i
Arrive New York... 8:50 a. m. 3:50 pj
Passengers by above schedule connect 1
Charleston Junction with trains to and fre
the North, and for the North and East, vis 3
rail Bay Line and Old Dominion Line. I
fu Passengers by the 3:05 a. m. train me’
procure tickets at Bren's office before 9 p. i
train? P°* ticket offlce xIM not b* open for th.
Coming South—Trains 40 and 42.
Leave Charleston 5:55 a. m. 400 p 1
Arrive Bavannah 10:45 a. h. 9:40 pi
The 4:15 train from Savannah, and 5:55 a.l
train from Charleston, make no stops becwel
Yemassee and Charleston. |
For Port Royal and Beaufort. I
Leave Bavannah (Sunday excepted) 4:15 p !
Arrive Beaufort “ - ....6:40 pi
Arrive Port Roial “ “ ...!yOO pi
Leave Port Royal “ •* ....4:00 pj
Leave : eaufort “ “ ....4:2opj
Arrive Savannah “ •• .".!.9:4OpT
IST On Saturdays trains will arrive at Pi
Royal at 11:55 p m instead of 9 p. m , and lea
Port Royal at 3:30 p y instead of 4p. m.
For Tickets, bleeping Car accommodati
and further information, apply to Wm. Bren.
BuU street, and at Ticket Offlce Savanna
Florida and Western Railway Depot.
_ _ D „ C K GADSDEN, Supl
R. C. Boyuston. . P. a.
PERSONS WISHING TO OPERATE IN
STOCKS
to the extent of SSO to SI,OOO or upwards,ahoi
write to
Henry L. Raymond & C<
COMMISSION STOCK BROKEHS,
No. 4 Pine street, New YorK.
Stocks carried on 3 to 10 per cent, marii
r ractional orders executed satisfactorily Cc
plete information relating to Wall street tra
actions trailed free; also our Weekly Finant*
Reports. Our junior partner is a
the Mining Stock Exchange, and orders i ;
mining stocka will also receive special