Newspaper Page Text
She scurs.
FRIDAY, MARCH , 1883.
CTotnmrrriai.
SAVANNAH MARKET.
OFFICE OF THE MORNING NEWS,
Savannah. March 1, 1883, 6 p. m.I
cotton.— The market opened quiet and
eusv, with priqes unchanged, and continued
,o for tne balance of the day. The sale* were
: M‘i bale*. We give the official quotations of
the Savannah Cotton Exchange:
Good middling io%
Middling. 9 9-16
Low middling 9 1-16
Good ordinary 84
ordinary 7%
Comparative Cotton Statement.
Receipts, Exports and Stoce on hand March 1, 1888, and
POU THE NAME TIME LAST YEAR.
1881-83. 1881-8).
Sea Sea
Inland. Upland. Inland. Upland.
StJk on hand September 1.. 06 5,881, 878 11,686
Received to-day 1,769 9 1,680 j
Roccivod previously 11,304 705,808 13,580 841,291
Total 11.370 714,698 _18,17 664,438
Exported to-day 4,180
Exported previously. . 10,ssi) 885,970 10,011 891,34?
Total. 10,380 630,100 10,014 591,988
[Stock on hand and on ship
l board this day I tool KV.I'.KII 3,003 1 02,4141
ittc*.—The market waseasy and unchanged,
-ales 192 barrels. We quote;
Broken
Common 4%®5
Fair 5 e 5%
Good swßgl
Prime 6 ®fi%
Choice nomiual.
Rough—
Country lots $1 15
Tide water 1 2D(®l 45
\ aval Stores.—The market for rosins con
tinues to rule very quiet and unchanged, the
cations of the day being as follows: A, 11,
ind 1> 41 45, E4l 50, Fsl 55, U4l 75, H4l 85,
i <• K $2 50. M 4-3 00, N $3 37',, window
_ *?!87%. The sales for the <iav were only
irrels. spirits turiieutine opened quiet n't
•. for regulars and 47%0. for oils and whis
. At 1 p. m. became nominal, which pre
,..cd throughout the balance of tbe day. \o
transactions.
NAVAL STORES STATEMENT.
Spirit . fi.rtin.
ii nand April I,ISSi 1.076 22.8X3
U rived to-day 78 960
i; Lived previously 85,878 378,375
Total 87.032 397.218
Exported to-day 5,H7
Exported previously 84.510 333,581
Total 84,510 838,728
St ■ -k on hand and on shipboani
tins day. by actual couut. 2,522 58,490
Kei cipts same ilay last year .8 342
lis ANCIAL-—Money very easy. In do
•ii -tn exchange the hanks and bank
. - ar. buying sight drafts at par®' 4 percent.
‘.and seliiug at A. per cent, premium; sup
j, g.md and demand fair. Sterling Kx
vo—Market dull; sixty day bills,
a- bills lading attached, hankers. 44 80;
. imnercial 44 79%; ninety da vs, prime,
M 4 ; French franks, 43 30U: Swiss franks,
; securities—The market closes lirm,
with a good investment demaud for all of our
leading securities.
'Tin S' and Ronds. —City Bond*. —Market
-teady, with some investment demand for all
f good securities. Atlanta 0 per cent.,
1 . t. lw* asked: Augusta 7 j>er cent., 107 bid,
i- a.-ked; Columbus 7 per cent.. 8b bid, 82
-kei: Macon 7 per cent., 101 bid, li)2 asked;
V >v Savannah 5 per cent., 83 bid, 83% asked.
l:ailr>*ni Stock*. —Market quiet. We quote;
Central common, cx div., 99 bid, 99%
Asked. Augusta and Savannah 7 per cent,
/u irauteeif. ex div., 118 hid. 120 asked. Geor
i,i common 147 bid, 148 asked. South -
vi • rn 7 per cent, guaranteed 118 bid, 118' .. ;
i-M-d. Central Railroad 6 per cent, cerlili- i
calcs tud. linn; 93 hid, 93% asked.
Railroad Bond*.— Market strong. Atlantic i
A Gulf Ist mortgage consolidated 7 per cent., j
i-i i|hins January and July, maturity 1897. 112 i
!. 113 asked. Atlantic A Gulf indorsedcitv :
r.t savannah 7 per cent., coupons January and '
July, maturity 1879, 85 bid, 90 asked. Central :
-olidated mortgage 7 per cent., couiiou*
J, unary and July, maturity 1893,113% hid, 114
ndeed. Georgia per cent., coupons Jan. and I
duly, maturity, 106 hid, 107 asked. Mobile A
Giranl 2d mortgage indorsed 8 per cent, cou
p-ms January and July, maturity 1889, 110%
; i. 112 asked. Montgomery- A Eufaula Ist
ni-.rlgage 6 [ter cent. ind. by Central Railroad,
bt 1 bid, 10514 asked. Charlotte, Columbia A
A sgu.-ta Ist mortgage, 1191 ml. 11l asked. Char
a., Columbia A Augusta 2il mortgage, 101
'.id. 102 asked. Western Alabama 2d niort
it.’, , indorses!, 8 per rent.. 114 bid. 115
•A. i. south Georgia A Florida indorsed IHi
. i. 117 a-ked; South Georgia A Florida 2d
in >rtgage, 101% bid. 1 ui l ., asked.
- Band*. —Market Ki u; fi)r State of
t;. rg:.t tionds. Georgia new it's, 18x9, JOJj%
itf aske<l; Georgia 6 percent., coupons
February apd August, maturity 1883 and 1886,
ltd. 107 n*keu; Georgia mortgage
r.t. W . a A. Railroad regular 7 |km- cent.,
r-iup-.i January aud duly, maturity 1886,
in’. Led, lOtj'-v asked; Georgia 7 per
i . lit. gold, coupons quarterly, il% hid,
•j. iidteil; Georgia 7 percent-, coupons Jan
uar" and July, maturity istti. 124 bid. 125
asked.
Bacon.—Market very firm and advancing;
'••:uan.l good; clear rib sides, llj*c.; slioul
>r-, •* ,c.; dry salted clear rib sides, 10%c.;
• lhoa)den,s llams, 11'.,c.
< uy Ties.—Market.lull and nouii
.m; light •leuiauii We quote: Bagging—
.. .; 2 IV-., 9',c., I'. Be.. 8%-*sV
lii 11.-** and Arrow .41 ®1 65 per
Lb,"ill* tT,Wiling “ u< ‘ quamity,
lb.', ed tie,. 41 20® 1 30.
Dkv Goons.—The market is ate* *5 "S'
Inuwi; stocks ML *•.
'ju.t..- .prints, 4J„<..ic.; Georgia lirown
.. ♦ 4'■ |JJ and..., 5%e.; 4-4 brown
mil. t.ng. • white osnaburg.., k%toe.;
k*. 7' Ja.se.% yarns. 85c. for best makes;
ur-oin drillings, 7,'^®S%c.
Flo. a.— Market very firm: fair demand.
V* quote: Superfine, |4 50®5 oO; extra,
*'- a.5 75; family. 46 oo®6 50; choice, 46 75
u 7 fairy, <7 'JO®7 25; choice patent, $8 25
(is 50;’ l>* v r, {7 25.'
gkus— Market very firm; demand good.
Wl quote: l orn, ri’ jC. Gats—market steady;
.mart good; HO quote: We*GT, 60C.
Riots."wool. Etc.—Hides—Mart firmrfe
it- tv an. ing; receipts light. We quote: Wry
t! U : Luited, l9' a tsuTfic Wool— Nothing
-: in ijalt'. prime, 27c.; iu bags, prime, *4c.;
**urrv. Iv.; very imrry. Jal3c.
"s'. Deerskins —tlint, 40e.; salted, Sc,;
otter skins. 25ef544. ,
llav.—Market well stoekeil; fair demand
"e quote, at wholesale: Eastern timothy,
41 L ; Western timothy. 41 10; cargo lots —
Eastern itje.. Northern 95c.
—The market is steady. We quote:
in til-fees. I2‘ a c.; in kegs, 12**0.
Bal,T.—The demand is steady and tllC
market is easy, with a full stock. We quote:
• ar load lots, 80c., f. o. b.; small lots, 90c.<i#
tl 00.
Tobacco.—Market Ann; moderate de
laatM. We quote: S-moking,
tb.-wing—Common, sound. :isit4t*c.; medium,
ght, line fancy. MHb,;
rvtra Unc.
4ark navies, 4v-®SO-.
COUNTRY PRODUCE.
Turkeys dressed, W ft —<®2o
Grown Fowls, pair BWaiMO
Thn-L-qunrters grown, tb pair s<Xi7o
Had grown, pair 4(X^SO
Fig.-, fi dozen 15<a17
rfutter, mountain, pound 20(^9)
Wanut.—Fancy h. p. Va. lb Wb—
Feanut-— Hand picked ft *£—
F- uuts—spanUn, small, ft 8<J —
r. Hints —straight Virginia •(& —
Ft-anuts—Tennessee —(®—
* nda sugar, ft Sd
g-n ia Syrup, Y gallcn 90*40
Honey, ft gallon 90®—
7i et is.tatoes bushel <W. —
itry.—Market well stocked: demand
3 i Enos—Market fully supplied; demand
- t. Ritter—Gooi demand; not much
.g ia. Peanuts —Small stock; demand
El. s vkvr—Georgia and Florida coming
At V ItKKTM BV TELEGRAPH.
Noon Report.
FINANCIAL.
i.i'N'DOX, Maroh I.—Consols, 105 5-18 for
O’kl. v; \ijl\4 tor account.
I Bank of England has reduced its rate
*■! '.-<->&iit to S per cent.
*. in.—The weekly statement of the Bank
t -land shows an increase in specie for
i t weekut £ 167,000. . „
I*aria, March 1, SsOO p. m.—Rentes. Slf 30c.
4 2" p. m.—Rentes 81t 85e. _
Paris, March I.—The weekly statement or
' Bank of France shows ait cf
francs in gold and a decrease of J,050,-
in silver. .
it® Yoke, March I.—Stocks opened quiet
’-"a. Money. 5@5*.; percent. Exchange—
- *1 short, 64 84. State bonds neg
rGovernment bonds generally un
caiDge.t.
COTTOK.
Liverpool, March I.—Cotton in moderate
‘H'luirv. triiich is freely supplied; middling
•' '>-16; middling Orleans 5 11-16*1; sales
' M a'tci—-[tcculation and export 1,000 bales;
I V lpt ' bales—American 1,450 bales.
. atare>: Uplantls, low middling clause,
?**> deliver}-, 5 37-64d; March and April,
April and May, 5 39-64d: May and
5 4£-6ld; June and July, 5 46-64d; July
w August, .I .vi-ud: August aud September,
November and l>ecember, 5 45-*4d.
Wrv> quiet. •
I,* f l, —Good middling uplands %and, mid-
S'®* up-antls •*- 16d. low middling uplantls
it, A '-''"‘d ordinary uplands Sd, ordinary up
’ td. middling Orleans 5 ll.lCd, low
"iit.ine Orleans 3 3-lttd, gootl ordinary Or
‘ e*-’ , >d. ortlinarv Orleanssd.
rctarcs; Uplands. low middling clause,
w f ' r -iul Mav deliverv, 5 40-64d(®5 39-64*1;
r.A>"! Jana, 4 iip 42-64*1-
A**.-' ot *ha dap included 3,000 bales of
~***'oßi, March I.—Cotton openetl quiet;
tildL,' middling uplandsU> 3-16 c, mid
~ !*!***: M arket q uiet and steady, with sales
" e,u, w „. Mln| ® delivery, 10 18c; April,
Au ” ; May. 10 45c; June, 10 55c; July, 1068 c;
10 Sic.
*bovißiosh. okocekies, etc.
J- '•ERroot, March I.—Tallow, 445.
V*,-*’ -'larch 1,3 p. m.—Tallow, 47s 6d.
•met *■ l.—Flonr opened Arm but
™r**t fairly active and LjSfiN**' better,
p , rt Moderately active anti better. ;
l' nr arm: “cs*. *l9 601*19 75. Lard steady at
n.?!; freights steady,
March I.—Flour market dull;
ai- . Uri - 14 s7 @* 55; family, |5
R., 'Aferflue. 75&4 50; extra, 64 50;
,>, ” r *“6a. M te@6 60. Wheat—Southern
*m _j " estern steady hot inactive: South-
MaVv?^ 1 K*i|l23, amber |122@17; No. 1
• '*, 61 i3®i 234; No, 2 Western winter
rwl, on spot, and March delivery, |1 21@1 tljfi.
Coni—Southern firmer: Western a shade high
er; Southern, white 65@@9c, ditto yellow 65®
69c.
Evening Report.
FINANCIAL.
New OeleANß.Mareh I.—Exchange.bankers
sterling, 44 82.
New York, March I.—Exchange, 44 81 }£.
Government is.mis irregular; five per cents,
bid; four and a half per cents, 112%; four
per cents, 119%; three per cents, 108%. Money
5®7 per cent., closing at 5@6. State bonds
generally featureless.
Sub-Treasury balances—Coin,4l22.939.ooo 00:
currency, 46.9E1.00G 00.
Tbe stock market opened irregular but in
the main %®1 per cent, above vesterdav’s
closing figures, the latter for Omaha preferred.
In the early dealings there was a reaction of
W S% per cent., after which the market,
though dull, became strong and sold up, with
au occasional fractional reaction till shortlv
before the close, when an advance of 2% took
place m - Paul.'Minneapolis and Manitoba
and Hannibal and St. Joe preferred 1%
in Delaware, Lackawanna and West
ern ’ „ *%, ln Michigan Central. 1%
1? • w e - ln S. „ a “J* " abash preferred.
IV, in Missouri Pacific and % to 1 per cent, in
the femainder of the list, the latter for Louis
ville and Nashville. The market closed gen
erally quiet at a fractional decline from the
highest point of the day. Compared with yes
terday s closing prices, the list is % to % per
cent, higher, the coal and Vanderbilt stocks
being prominent in the day’s advance, while
Hannibal and St. Joe preferred is 2% percent,
higher. The transactions aggregated 321,000
shares, at the following quotations:
Ala. class A.2 tos 82% v a .consolidated '50%
Ala. class A.emairsi *• deferred . 14J
Ala. class B, 5s .*IOO% Adams Express 132
Ala.classC,.4s S3* Am’can Express 89
Den ARi>Graiiile 44y Ch’peake A Ohio. 22%
Chic.A Vrthw’n 132% Chicago A Alton 132
“ preferred 146% Chic,St.L.A N.O. 79>5
Erie .. 37% Consolid’ted Coal 26
E. Tennessee Kd 8% *DeI„ Lack. A W 123%
Illinois Central 144' , Fort Wayne 135*
Lake Shore ... 109), Hannibal A St. Jo 411
I/ville A Nash 54% Harlem .. 195*
Memphis A Char. 4u Houston A Texas. 72
Nash. A Chatt’a. 59% Manhattan Kiev 45
N.Y. Central 126''* Metropolitan EL. 80'%
Pittsburg .. 139* Michigan Central 94%
Richm’dAAl’gti’y 10 Mobile A Ohio 15%
Richm’d A Danv 52% N. J. Central 71%
Rock Island 122% Norf. AW. pref..
So. Caro.ißrown) New York E 1... 100
consolf* 103 Ohio&Mibßisisippi^:{3VM
W FointTermiiial 22W “ “ pref.
Wall.,St.L. A Pae 2i4% Pacific Mail 41
W.,St.L.AI\ pref 47% Panama 167*
vV estem Union . 82% (Juieksilver ... . 8%
Georgia6* . . 104* “ preferreil... 43
“ 7s, <uortgage*lo6% Reading 544^
“ 7a, gold . *ll4 St. Louis A Sau F 29
laiuisiana consols 7* .** “ pref 48 %
N. Carolina, old. :% “ “ Ist pref 89
“ new .15* St. Paul 101%
“ funding .10 ** preferred 120%
“ special tax . *5% Texas Pacific 387,
Tennessi'e 6s, old. 42 Union Pacific .. 94
“ new *4O U. S. Express .60
Virginia tia *33 Well A Fargo .122
H‘d. I Asked.
. COTTON.
Liverpool. March 1, 5:00 p. m.—Futures:
Uplands, low middling clause. March and
April delivery, 5 38-64d; April an.l Mav.
5 40-644tt5 41-64.1; Mav and June, 5 43-64®
5 44-64d; June and Jufy, 5 47-64.1; July anil
August, 5 51-64d; SeptenilKT and October,
5 50-64d. Futures closed steady.
New York, March I.—Cotton quiet but
firmer; sales 364 bales; middling uplands
10 3-10 e, middling Orleans 10 7- 16c; net receipts
152 bales, gross 2.562.
Futures— MaYket dosed quiet, with sales
of ‘.H.Ouo hales, as follows: March delivery,
10 26® 10 27c; April, 10 35®10 36c; May, 10 48c;
June, 10 62®10 63c: July, 10 75®10 78c; August,
lo srt® 10 87c; September,lo 55® 10 57c; October.
10 25® 10 27c; November. 10 15®10 17e.
The Poat’* .cotton report says: ‘•Future de
liveries at the opening lost l-100cja2-100c,,
recovered the decline to lose again 2-lOOe.,
when a gradual advance set iu running the
price 7-looc.®B-100c. aliove the lowest point of
the day. the operators on the hear side for a
short turn being forced to cover shortly lie
fore. aud at the third call there was a drop of
l-100c.(a2-iooe. March sold at 10 25c., April
Mt34c., May’W 47c.,.11ine 10 6 b.”
Galveston, March I.—Cotton easy; mid
dling 9%c, low middling 9%c, good ordinary
8) a ii; net receipts 3,080 bales, gross ::,0s0; sales
1.364 hales; stock 73,790 bales; exports to Great
Britain 1.902 bales, to the continent 2,604 baies,
coa4twi.se 6,135 hales.
Norfolk, March t.—Cotton firm; middling
9f- 8 c; nGt receipts 3,sßti hales, gross 3,886;
sates 1,781 hales; stock 81,643 bales; exports
coastwise 1,463 hales.
Baltimore, March I,— cotton quiet; mid
dling lo 1 *e, low middling 9%c, good ordinary
B%c; net receipts 40 bales, gross 1,000; stock
31,869 bales;sales 150 bales; exports, to France
1,538 bales, coastwise 40 bates.
Boston, >larch I.—Cotton steady; middling
109*c. low middling 9%c, good ordiuarv 9%e;
net receipts 311 bales', gross 1.344; no sales;
stock 4.650 Tales; exports to Great Britain
1,143 bales.
Wilmington, March L—Cotton steady;
middling 9%c, low middling 9%e, good ordi
nary 8 3-16 c, net receipts 408 bales, gross 40s;
stock 13,229 bales; exports, to Great Britain
1,188 bales, coastwise 464.
Full, a Delphi a, March L—Cotton dull;
middling 10%c, low middling 10%e, good ordi
nary 9%c; net receipts 289 halos, gross 477;
stock 11,700 bales.
New Orleans, March-I. — Cotton steadier;
good demand; middling9%c, low middling9c,
good ordiuarv B%c; net receipts 2,726 bales,
gross 3,678; sales 7,000 bales; stock :KW.958
bales; exports, to the continent 5,645 baies,
coastwise 3.413 bales.
Mobile, March I.—Cotton quiet; middling
9%c; low middling 9%c; good ordinary S’“*c:
net receipts 251 bales, gross 256; sales I,ikXj
bales: stock 40,253 bales; exports, coastwise
114 bales.
Memphis, March I.—Cotton quiet; middling
9’ 2 c, low middling Or, good ordinary B%e;
ne't receipts 1.646 bales, gross 1,716: sliipments
3,225 bales; sales 1,600 tiales: stock 77,270 bales.
AUGUST A, March 1. —Cotton quiet; middling
9%c, low middling BJ B c, good ordinary 8®
S%e, net receipts sii7 bales; sales 1,232 hales.
t„'H arleston, Miireli I.—Cotton quiet;
middling luc, low luidilling 9%c, good ordi
nary 9c; net receipts 1,759 bales! gross 1,759;
sale's 500 bales; stock 74,347 bales; exports
eoastwise 1.832 hales.
Ftv York, March 1. —Consolidated net re
ceipts for all cqfton jiorts 14.628 hales; exjiorts,
to Great Qritain 10.163 hales, to France 2,148
bales, to the continent 10,520 bales.
Bt. Louis, March I.— Cotton •{■ill ; middling
9%c, low middliug 9c, gootl ordinary 8%o.;
net receipts 816 bales, gross 1,530; shipments
2.501 bales; stock 58,649 bales.
PROVISIONS. GROCERIES. ETC.
Liverpool. March 1, 5 p. in.—Lard, 58s.
London. March I.—-Tallow, 475.
J; tew York, March I.—nour.Southeru,closed
| quiet aiei pnobamted; common to fair extra.
m lios®s 30; gool fo fcljcice
WUetttjCUSh lots a trifle 1 tetter, opriqns'pifncd
I ~,3 c "’•riier; subsequently lost most of ad.
ranee, “dosing strong again; No. 2 red,
March delivery, *1 23V® 1 * <-0™ °l>cncd
,, b"flier, sulweqrfently weak and lost
part of q.fvaimt., p}-.sing firm agmn At best
rates;
March delivery, April,
Oat* V#t higher; So. S, 51’Mbps 0b 11
ami Wholly ahmtoai, Coffee, spot dhiet but
steady; optlim* tngiierj %9r 7; March Uj
livery. 7 10c; April. 1 30®' 4w -t < J°f',
Sugar linn but quiet; cgnlrilugal.t? s c; rcliuc't
Unncr—standard As 1 jo, <otiiiK,th>upr A 8 c,
cut loaf ,c, Crushed h'.c, itovi deod 0(&f : ,
sreijelHtC'l 9c. Molasses quiet and unchanged.
Kieestead.' Hides iirm; demand moderate;
wet salted 'het Orleans selected, 50 to 60
pounds, 9(g, 10c; Te*4- hhIQ. 10<®11c. 'J 00 ?
quiet; held very linn, l'ork vet> ‘.(Bf't: held
urm; new mess.on s]ot, quoted at |l9 50(j5<k w,
Jtubjjcs quiet but firm; long clear,
Lani Mt-css! 3 to 4 points higher; closed weak,
with advance lo.i, f/ade quiet; prime steam,
on .pot, it 050111 *lf*fi ver y, n
II C*| April. J 1 MffSil 80c. FlrcialAS toLtygr
pool firm; cotton, per 6tegm J.'f; woetli. pfcr
steam. s’4 ( ® i /s <l - „ . ,
Chicago. March I.—Flour nnenartgea.
Wheat active, firm and higher; regular, 61 08’ -j
(a 1 teri, for March delivery; 61
April; No. 3 f bieago spring, 6108'.,@1 o**.,;
No. 3 Chicago swivg.—c; No. 2 red winters
61 10',. Corn firmer; for cash;
573 for March; 5s> and for April. Oats strong
and higher: 48c for cash; 41 s gc for March
<Ui|ivary; 41 ;> 4C for April. Dressed hogs steady
and lirifei t~ 00. Fork steady ;618 2091S 25
for cash; iisjoms 21'* fop .March delivery;
518 42’ -(*18 45 for April, Lajrdstoady at 11 4oc
for casnaml March delivery; 11 60 for,
nrii. Bulk meats in fair iletnahd; slioul.
ders, 7 50c; short rib, 10 10c; short clear, 10 25c,
Whisky steady and unchanged at 61 17.
8T Loris,' March I.—Flour firm and 1111-
changed; faaev, 65 30(te6 00; family, 65 550*
5 70. Wlieat hiahsj; No. 2 rc*t fall, 61 |iy^
I 111; for cash; fl for April deliv
ery; No. a red fall, tint Wd- ‘ "ho higher
and fairly active; No. 2 mixed; 6Vejror • sell.
siP4asc for March dslttery. oats Bichor.
40c bid tor cash. Whisky steady. Provisions
—Fork firm: iness, |lB 75 for cash; 1 00 bid
for March deliverv; 618 10 for April, bard
nominal. Bulk meats firm; long dear, 9 90c,
short rib, 10 00c; short clear. 10 25c. Bacon
strong: bmg*!*, IP 75c; short rib 10 B<‘ a c
short clear, 10 23c.
Cincixn ati.March I,—Flout-steady
changed. Wheal stronger at ♦> 11’ j(<(l iff on
spot. Corn firmer at 55956* 4 c on spot; 5, 1 jo,
57 T -for April delivery. Oats active at 42'..(*
43Wc. Provisions—Pork firm at 618 50($18 ,5c
for mess on spot. Lard firm at 11 25c. Bulk
meats in good demand; short ribs 7’ic; clear
rib. 9 87’-c. Bacon firm ami unchanged;
sho’ulder*, clear rib, 10 85c; clear, 11*40.
Whisky stead* a: 61 14. Sugar firm anil un
changed; h a rd. Ssf e New Orleans, 6®
7*a’. Hogs firm: common 68 00; light, 66 Do®
7 15; packing and butchers, 68 Bs®7 50.
Baltirork, March I.—Oats firm but quiet;
Southern, 50®54c; M'astern, white 51(*.Vt<\
mixed t!*oIc; Pennsylvania, 50(*54c. Pro
visions unchStngoi: Mess pork, 620 00. Bulk
meats—shoulders and clear rib sides, packed,
S'kc and UsLc.. Bacon—shoulders, 9J4c; clear
rib sides, ll* 4 c. llams lt(*lsc. Lani. refined,
12*;e. Coffee quiet; Rio cargoes, ordinary to
fair, 8(80'4O. Sugar firm; Aaoft, 9*-. Whisky
stea.lv at 6118V1 19 - lights unchanged.
New Orleans, March I.—Flour quiet but
firm; high grades,6s 37V®6 Wi. Com firmer;
white, 65c. Oats dull at 54(*,-<■. Pork scarce
and firm: mess. 619 35. Lani. refined in tierces
II 87>4c; in kegs 12 :i7‘,o. Bulk meats higher;
shoul.len, packe.l held at 8*40; dear rib and
long clear at 10’*c. Bacon closed steady
ana in fair demand: shoulders, Bl(*9c, clear
rib and long clear, 11V® 1 •Vq Hams, sugar
cured, steady and in goo.l demand; choice
canvased 18®14c, as in size. AV hisky sternly
and unchanged, toffee quiet hj*t ,“ rm j, K ‘®
cargoes, common to prime, sugar
in good demand and tending upward; com
mon to good common, 6®6*4c; fait' to fully
fair. 6?*(®6-'-gC; prime toehoice,6S7®<j7 p c; yel
low clarified. B@B*4c; choice vrhife clarified.
BUc Molasses quiet; centrifugal, 21(®43*-.
prime to choice. 7(*49c. Rice stea.lv; Louis
iana, ordinary to choice, 4V*6' 4 c. Cotton seed
oil. prime crude, 41(®43c; summer yellow,
March 1. —Flour firm and un
changed; extra family,63 75®4 ®°i hig l ’
6<> 2 **o So; good to fancy family brands, 66 00
®6 25T Wheat quiet but flrnti No. 2 red win
ter, $1 10(41 12. Corn steailv; No. S
52t455c; No. 2 mixed, 52®54c. Oats m f** *"*
inan.l; prices higher; mixed Western,44®4oc.
Provisions in good demand at full prices:
Mess ork, new, 619. Bulk meats —shoulders
clear ribs, 10c; clear sides, 10'4c. Bacon
—shoulders, SVc; oisar ribs. 10%e; clear sides,
ll’*c. Hams, sugar cured, quiet. Imnl m
goo.l demand at full prices; choice kettle
rendered, l**c; prime steam, M hisky
ouiet and unchanged. ..
NAVAL STORES.
London, March I.—Turpentine, Sfls Bd@
Os]
new Y'ORE, March I.—Rosin firm but quiet.
1 , 1 Marc^.-Spirits turpentine
nominal; no sale*. Rosin quiet; strained and
r wi^H* loTON,, 1 oTON, ,l Mareh L-Spirito turpenrine
quiet it 48V- Rosin firm; <1 86 for strained ;
2% 40 for good strained. Tar steady at |1 60.
Crude turpentine steady; |1 75 for harU and
s w for yellow dip.
Stiippmg JntrlUgritcr.
miniature almanac—this day-
Sunrises 6 .<>j.
Sunsets s!^
Ht< Water at Ft Pulaski. 12:52 AM. 1:21 pm
Friday. March 2. 1883.
ARRIVED YESTERDAY.
T. S^,a^ hl .P^ ra Crane * Tayftr, Baltimore-
Ja* l\ V, eat & Cos.
Adolphus (Br,. Bryan, Liverpool, with
sa ’ l *° Gilbert ft Cos; vessel to Master.
~chr nm Jones, Chapman, Boston, ice to
Haywood, Gage A Cos; vessel to Master.
Steamer city of Bridgeton, Fitzgerald, Fer
nandma—Woodbridge & Harriman.
ARRIVED AT TYBEE YESTERDAY.
Bark Otus (Nor), Falck, Copenhagen, in
baliast—Master.
ARRIVED AT QUARANTINE YESTER
DAY.
Ship Hoiden (Nor), Jorgensen, Rio de Ja
neiro, with coffee to order; vessel to Master.
ARRIVED BELOW YESTERDAY.
Brig Caroline Grav, Pillsburv, Boston, with
guano to order: vessel to Master.
Schr John R Halliday, Cranmer, New York
with assorted cargo to order; vessel to Jos A
Roberts A Cos.
CLEARED YESTERDAY,
steamship Gate City, Hedge. Boston—
Richardix>n & Barnard.
Ship Mary Stewart Br , Wright, Keval
iiiehardsou A Barnard.
Bark M Smith Petersen (Nor), Kricksen,
Keval—Holst A t,’o.
Bark Minnie Gray (Br), Burell, Hamburg—
Patterson, Downing A Cos.
Schr Norah Bailev, Barker. Satilla, in bal
last to load for Bath-Jos A P.obert* A Cos.
DEPARTED YESTERDAY.
Steamer David Clark, Hallowes, Brunswick
—n oodbridge & Harriman.
SAILED YESTEUDAi.
Steamship Gate City, Boston.
Bark MiDnie Gordon (Br), Livcrpotil.
Bark M Smith Petersen (Nor), Keval.
Brig Antonio Llasat (Sp), Barcelona.
MEMORANDA.
Tybee, March 1, 6:30 i. ni—Passed up. steam
ship \\ in Crane, brig Caroline Grav, ship
Adolphus (Br), schrs Wra Jones, Juo K llalli
dav. _
Passed out, steamship Gate City, barks M
Smith Petersen (Nor), Minnie Gordon (Br).
brig Antonio Llasat (Sp).
Arrived, bark Otus (Nor).
Passed up to quarantine, ship Hoiden (Nor).
alting. bark Oskarsvarf (Sw).
5\ ind S, 8 miles: clear.
Passed out, Wednesday, brig R M Heslen.
schrs Marcia Reynolds, Welaka.
New York, Starch l—Arrived, Canada,
.somerset, Alns, Valletta, Citv of Atlanta,
est CmnlKTland.
Arrived out, Maury L Veniner.
Homeward, Nantis and Northampton, New
< irleans.
Later—Arrived, Roanoke.
Arrived out, Klla*. Gletiratli, Triuiacrin.
New York. Feb 27—Arrived, schrs Hattie
L Sheets, Dale, Jacksonville: Viola Iteppanl,
ogier. Savannah; Mary Freeland, Clark,
Brunswick.
Cleared, schrs Silver Spray, Latnsou, Ilruns
wuJt; l annie A Gorham, Welsh, Mavport,
Fla. . * r ’
Bona, Feh I—Sailed, bark Viator (Nor).
Gundersen, Savannah.
Philadelphia. Feb,27-Cleared, schr J Ii Van
Diisen, Booye, Savannah.
MARITIME MISCELLANY.
A totally dismasted schr in the track of
southern bound vessels was passed Feb 21 50
miles south of Hatteras,
v. 1 'iGnHisted and abandoned schr wa* passed
Feh 19, lat 32 N, lou 76 W,
KECEII’TS.
Per steamer City of Bridgeton, from Fer
namlina—lo bales cotton, 4 bales hides and
skins, 1 horse, 20 empty kegs.
Per Charleston aud Savannah Railway. Feb
March I—7 bales cotton, 110 empty bbis, 1 ease
hats, 2u l)oxes tobacco, 25 caddies tobacco, 6
cases plaids, 2US sacks rice, and mdse.
Per Savaunah. Florida and Western Rail
way, March 2 —207 hales cotton. 53 cars lum
ber, jO6 bbls rosin, 36 bbls spirits turpentine,
250 I sixes and 5 bills oranges, 2 refrigerators
berries, 5 bbls g fruit, 14 crates vegetables, 4
cars wood, 1 car laths and shingles, 17 bbls
syrup. 18 pkg* collars, 9 bales moss, 76 sacks
rice, 5 bides hides, and mdse.
Per Central Railroad. Match 1—1,478 bales
cotton, 3,032 pcs bacon, 1,06(5 sacks corn, 480
bbls Hour, 300 bbls lime. 139 caddies tobacco,
104 spirits bbls, 93 lslls g hides, 90 lit blfis beer,
80 qr bbls liter, 60 bills tallow, 70 lxixes lobac.
cq, 36 casks clay, 25 head cattle. 24 tea hams,
20 bales yarns, 19 pkgs mdse, 12 boxes cheese
safes, lo bales paper stock,Tt eases coffee, 9 b\s
soap, 8 pkgs burlaps, 6 bales plaids, 4 bales do
mestics. 4 I sixes s cards, 4 cases g ware, 3 rolls
leather, 3hales bags, 2cultivators and fixtures,
2 bales hides, 2 cans powder, 2 boxes oil, 2
Imixcs.drugs, 2 boxes hardware. 1 piece cast
ing. I )mix wooden frames. 1 bbl i>eas, 1 bbl
coflee, 1 piano, 1 box sundries, 16 cars lumber,
2 cars pig iron, 2 cars hav, 1 ear stone, tear
cooperage, 1 car box stuff, 1 car cement. 104
pul* rosin.
EXPORTS.
Per steamship Gate City, for Boston—l,Bß6
hales cotton, 47 bales paper stock, 79 halos
hides, 34 bbls rice, 109 sundries, 92 gs hides,
495 bbls rosin, 924 boxes fruit, 103 bbl* spirits
turpentine. 79,000 feet lumtier. 600 sacks corn,
29 mils fruit.
Per ship Mary Stewart (Br), for Rcval—
-3,855 bales upland cotton.
Per bark M Smith Petersen (Nor), fur Ro
yal—l,6Bo hales cotton.
Per hark Minnie Gray (Br', for Hamburg—
-2,600 bbls rosin.
PASSENGERS.
Per steamship Gate Citv. for Boston—
Miss Folsom, W G Benedict, Mr Blake, E
Bryant. J S Cresto, Mrs Andrews and 2chil
dren, D H Andrews. Gen Guy C Underwood,
Mrs f uderwood, Alonzo J Andrews, Mrs An
drews, Miss Florence J Andrews. Alonzo An
drews, Mis N Moore. W H Lundy, Mrs
Staner. Mr* E M Cartwright, O B Bantwell,
T II .Metcalf, Mrs Metcalf, I>r J W Goodell, C
B Love, Miss Nellie Foss. L 1$ Bletcher, C C
Harvey, Herbert KadclifT, F WNickerson, Mrs
Nickerson, Rev K A Ilerben, Mrs Ilerlien. W
H Wesson, J L Xewlmll. G H Wyeth, F E
Lauil.au, M l, Stowell, 1: 1* White, WW
W riglit, a F Stone, W A Walker, Leander
Harris, and 5 steerage.
Per steamer City ot Bridgeton, from Fer
nan.lina—Mr and Mrs J K Wood aud 2 chil
tlren, Mrs W F Proctor, Miss Proctor, C K
Proctor, .Mr and Mrs J Elsas. G W Batch, C D
Newell, G S lierrou, S C Lane, F Abbott, l> G
Allen, H Hale, O B Bout well, II Weston, J T
Taylor, G F Hamilton, Kobt 1) Benton, J Gal
laivav. F'H Lbgan. B >' VauEvera, J P Blake,
W G Benedict,'M(3s'FhibdPl, Mr aud Mrs J
Mabbett, J F McCall, G L Bailey, Mrs Milch,
elso and 3 ehil.tren, Juo Straub, and 10 deck.
• CONSIGNEES.
Usv steamer City of Bridgeton, from Fer
npuiut-H W Gordon A Cos, M V Henderson,
Bendhcim Bros £ to. Li i) Venuy, ( Kolsliorn
jfc pro.
Pey Charleston and Savannah Railway.
March I—Fordg Office, Chess, parley & Cos, J
E Morrison. W i|gqx, Cj A L'o. J E Hill. I*F
('qUier, J M Wilson. Riescr 4 S, Eckuian A V,
F M Hull.
Per Savanuah, Florida and Western Hail
wav, March I—Fordg Oflice, It B lieppard. A
A Aveilhe, Dale, "W & Cos, Stoat, B A Cos, Mrs
j E Alexander, Palmer Bros, M Y Henderson,
M 4 e**i *’ to, H Myers A Bros, J T Shup
triue. Granaiu fi. }I, S Guckenheimer'A Son,
W S King. J B Keedv, Juo Oliver, IJaslain A
11, Jno J MoDonough A Cos, Saiissv, H A K, It
B t a**els. Bond A 8, II F Grant A Cos; Beud
hs::n Bros A Cos, I-ee ltey Myers, Mrs M V
TiiThei S S Xtricktainl, JI) Hollister, Man
navis,' A J Mliler ft P’b) wc ‘Jackson, C L
.Tones. Jl‘ Williams 4Ca. ano ilannory A
Cos. D V Dan*y. <- F Stubbs * (V trarCagner
A Cos, M Madeon, Order, Woodbridge A 11.
j s Wood A Uro, W'oods A to. Baldwin Abo,
Geo Walter, Butler AB, W W Gordon A Co*
Per Central Railroad. March I—Kordg Agt,
J! V Comer A Cos, W W Gordon A Cos, Juo
Flannery A ' 3, L J Guilmartin A Cos, Bald
uin A Cos. Fancy, ’ Lath row A Cos, M
Maclean, N A Hardee s Son 4Uo,*ni *• *i
ter 4 F Stulibs A Cos, J S Wood A Bro, Bo
m.i rt A If. Woodbridge A If, Solomons A Cos,
Wt Wheat on. WPhmU A Cos, Order, Herman A
K. X EbrtlcV.A FoedesWjf A ( M *
t apt <t i|uiat, Weed AP, Myintjard t.iigji
Cos Dr I) Cox. If Myers A Bros, C Beifer, W C
Jackson, Julian SclllPlj *Q. Lipp
mau Bros, Richardson A IJ, J if Hsrdcu, L L
Randall. E J Acosta,A Hanley, Joa A Uohprts
A Cos. lfeurv Yonge, S G Havnes A Bro, J E
Ansrle, llolooml>e, ii Cos, M t erst & Cos, M J
HofU). -J C Thompson, J H Von Newton, A H
I Roy Myers, S Guekenheimer
A Son, f A I^qur 1 V.jjdlinger, &
Cos, Wilbur Wagon Cos, rrank *1 ■<>>
liert A Cos, II livers A Bros, West Bros.Mhger
MfgCo. Solomons A Cos, l) C BMPQ Cos, U J
Cubbeoge.
A TKIIITTK TO MR. UKXJAMIN.
The Lpunou ‘.-Hally Telegraph” on the
Pluck, Talent aud KbOHleflge of a
Distinguished Kx-Contederate.
London TtUjraph, February 10.
It is with 110 ordinary regret that the
Judges, the bar and the solicitors of Eng
land will learn that Mr. J. P. Benjamin,
(j. C., has finally reriretl from the active
practice of his profession. For many
months he has passed more of his time in
Paris than in London, and his intimate
friends batl long been aware that the -end
of one of the most distinguished forensic
careers that Westminster Hall has ever
witnessed could nut lie far distant. Nearly
three vears ago Mr. Benjamin had a bad
fall in* Paris front a tram oar on the road
running parallel to the Seine. Forgetting
that he was not quite so young as when
last in New Orleans, he jumped, as had
formerly been his habit when resident in
the “Crescent Citv,” from the ear while
it was still in motion, and, losing his feet,
he held on to the rail and was dragged
many yards, dislocating his shoulder and
breakink two or three ribs. From the
shock thus sustained Mr. Benjamin has
not as vet, we regret to say, entirely re
covered, and one of the worst effects re
sulting from the accident was that it
brought back an internal disorder some
symptoms of which had manifested them
selves at Richmond, in Virginia, during
the American civil war. Moreover,it was
not generally known, and least of all by
those ia theliabit of watching Mr. Benja
min as he argued a heavy appeal ease in
the House of Lords with a vigor and acute
ness, a learning and a persuasiveness
which have rarely been equaled iu the
long and splendid annals of the English
bar. that the distinguished advqeate was
much older than he appeared. It was in
1811 that Mr. Benjamin first saw the light,
and, luckily for him, as a British subject
born upon a Danish island. - Iu that year
his father aud mother, both of them Brit
ish subjects, had set forth from London in
a sailing ship bound for New Orleans.
Upon reaching the Gulf of Mexico the
Captain found that the mouths of the
Mississippi were closely blockaded by a
British fleet, although what is known as
the war of 1812, between this country and
the United States, had not as yet been of
ficially declared. It became necessary to
“ ’bout ship” and to put into the Danish
Island oft, Croix, where Mr. Benjamin
was born. There be remained for four
years, until the war waa over, wheu kis
parents made their way to Charleston, in
tsouth Carolina, and thence, little later
on, to New Orleans. In that citv Mr. Ben
jamin’s boyhood was spent untiC in 18*29,
he was sent as a student to Yale College,
in Connecticut. He returned in 1832 to
New Orleans aud was immediately called
to the bar, at a time when the Southern
States pf the Union boasted that tbe advo
cates sent by them to plead belore the Su
preme Court of the United States at
Washington were not inferior to such
giants of the North of Webster, Wirt,
Pinckney and Choate. It was not long be
fore Mr. Benjamin’s voice, as clear' and
silvery then as it remained to the last in
Westminster Hall, was frequently heard
pleading before Cnief Justice Marshall
and Storey in the capitol at .Washington,
He was sent a little later by the State ef
Louisiana to the United States Senate at
Washington, and after the death of Web
ster, Clay, Calhoun and Silas Wright it
was the opinion of many, including the
late Charles Sumner—who, as regards
political opinions,stood to Mr. Benjamin in
the relation of antipodean opposition—
that the Senator from Louisiana was the
most eloquent orator ir. the Union.
This is not the time nor the place to es
say a description ot the services rendered
by Mr. Benjamin to the Confederate States
during thosefiveyears of unparalleled trial
aud effort between 1861 and 1860 which
saw the “stars and bars” of the rebellion
floating above the capitol of Richmond, in
Virginia. 3lauy Southerners had been far
more guilty than Mr. Benjamin in bring
ing on the secession of the Southern
States; but when once the fatal step was
taken no man served the cause of the
South more superbly in the Cabinet than
the orator whose last speech in the United
States Senate before taking leave of it for
ever had sent an electric thrill throughout
t he whole civilized world. “Have you read
Benjamin’s speech?” asked Sir George
Cornewall Lewis oflxml Sherbrooke, when
the echoes of that great rhetorical effort
had reached this country —“it is better
than our Benjamin could have done.” If,
as some may jierhaps think. Sir George
Cornewall Lewis gave Mr. Benjamin
undue praise in ranking him as an orator
aliove Lord Beaconsfield, it will be re
membered that iu such fiery aud exciting
times as existed in the United States
when Abraham Lincoln was first elected
President, orators—to quote a tine expres
sion employed by Mr. Gladstone in his
book on “Homer”—“take up from their
audiences in vapor what they return to
them in food.” The labors sustained by
Mr. Benjamin at Richmond as a member
of Mr. Jefferson Davis' Cabinet between
lxoi and 1863, first in the capacity of At
torney General, then of Minister of War,
and finally of Secretary of State, have
never yet been adequately told. If, how
ever, there be truth in the maxim of Mine.
De Genlis—“Tot 011 tard tout se sait"—a
'ime may come when Mr. Benjamin’s dis
patches to Messrs. Mason and Slidell, the
Envoys sent by .the Confederate Govern
ment to London and Paris, will see the
light, To say that they will coulter addi
tional lustre upon a man who, bv the
brilliancy of his career at the Englis'h bar
since 1860, has thrown even his earlier an
tecedents into the shade would l>e not
more than the truth. With the conclusion
of the civil war Mr. Benjamin had to efl'ect
his escape from Richmond, and, more for
tunate than his chief, Mr. Jefl’erson
Davis, he succeeded in making his way
to the coast of Florida. After experienc
ing strange adventures in a small craft
laideu with sponges, on board of which lie
put to sea, Mr. Benjamin landed safelv in
this country, to find that his fame as a
lawyer and a statesman had preceded him
and that the Confederacy which he served
so warmly had still some friends. Mainly
by the advice and assistance of the late
Chief Justice Pollock, Mr. Benjamin con
trived to get called to the English bar
without losing three years iu keeping
terms. He was fifty-five years old when
lie first put on the wig and crown of an
English barrister, and the tremendous ex-
periences through which he had already
passed would have exhausted theenergv of
most public men, With the exception of
a comparatively small sum lodged by him
in the hands of Messrs, Overend & Gur
ney, Mr. Benjamin had nothing where
with to make anew start in life, and he
had come, moreover, at a mature age to
an old country, where to rise Antaeus-like
from the ground is a thousand times more
difficult than upon that young, exuberant
continent which he had left behind him.
The history of the English bar will here
after have no prouder story to tell than
that of the marvelous advance of Mr. Ben
jamin from the humble jiosition ho occu
pied as a junior in 1X66 to the front rank
Of his profession in IXX3. Adversitv, how
ever, had not yet done with hint when she
sent him, broken indeed in fortune, but
endowed with inextinguishable vitality
j and hope, to this country at
the end of 1863. in the follow
ing year there came that memora
ble “Black Friday.” which is not vet for
gotten in city circles, and was caused by
the sudden suspension ot Messrs. Overend
& Gurney. By the fall of that great house
Mr. Benjamin lost the sum of £3,ooo—all
that he jKissessed on earth—and had to
east about for something to do until his
book on the “Sales of Personal Property”
was completed. Having a wife and daugh
ter to maintain in Paris aud himself in
London, he prepared, with that easy
adaptability to circumstances which has
distinguished him throughout the whole
of his versatile and many-sided career, tQ
sustain himself for awhile by writing tor
tlie press, (t was under these circuin
stances that he temporarily joined the
staff of the Daily Telegraph, and con
tributed for many months a series of bril
liant leading articles to the columns of
this journal. The publication of his book
upon “Personal Property” brought him
immediately into notice: nor could any
better evidence of his quick and incisive
diagnosis be adduced than the fact that in
the great and tangled wilderness of Brit
ish jurisprudence he should so readily
haye'discerned one tract vvliicj; was as vet
unmapped. Shortly after its publication,
Baron Martin, when taking his seat 011 c
morning upon the bench, asked to have
Mr. Benjamin’s work handed to him.
“Never heard of it, my lord,” was the an
swer of the Chief Clerk. “Never heard of
itt'i maculated Sir Samuel Martin, ‘imind
that 1 never take my seat here again with
out that book by my side.” It was soon
after this date that, speaking to one of
Mr, Benjamin’s U>ost intimate friend*, the
same able Judge pronounced the new or,
nament of the English bar to be “the
greatest advocate that he had heard since
Scarlett.” It is doubtful, however, wheth
er Mr. Benjamin would ever have been so
effective la-fore a British jury or in the at
mosphere where Scarlett was omnipotent
as he was in the Appeal Courts of the
House of Lords and the l’rivy Council. To
these courts he confined himself exclu
sively the end of bis English ca
refer, and it may be dpubted wjtfefhep auv
Lord Chancellor, assisted by noole and
learned assessors, ever heard an advocate
plead before them In Whom a compre
hensive knowledge of jurisprudence, a
singular force and lucidity of reasoning,
and the most felicitous neatness and flu
ency 04 illustration ajyl exposition were
more happily combined. It was of Mr.
Benjamin that a brother barrister said:
“He makes you see the Wrv bale of cot
tor, 1 hat he i§ describing as it lies upon
the wharf at New Orleans.!’ Many law
yers will doubtless be ready at this jpo,
went to retmll -M>', Heujanilii'a g;eut and
triumphant argument on behalf of the
Captato of the Franconia. Others again,
who have heard him plead in New Orleans
and Washington, will remember that he
was as well acquainted with the French
and Spanish as with the English language.
Sujljcieut, however, will it be for us at
this moment to hope, in the name of the
bar wliioh has watched his brilliant and
oraVe career, that many years of well
earned repose may be Mr. Benjamin’s i>or
tion in the beautiful residence which he
pas built himself in Paris, aud in the cen
tre of that devoted iomdy to which he is
so deeply attached.
Pike’s Toothache Drops cure in one
mihutc.
fiitanriai.
OENSLow, Easton Herts
Bankers and Stock Brokers,
NEW YORK CITY,
70 and 72 Exchange Place and No, 1 Exchange
Court.
STOCKS
BOUGHT and sold on commission for cash
or on margin. Correspondence solicited.
Customers have the benefit of Mr. Denslow’s
twenty years’ experience as a member of the
N. Y. Stock Exchange.
Railroad ami municipal
BONDS
paying the investor sto 6 per cent. Monthly
Investment Circular, with list and full de
scription of bonds mailed on application.
E. H. DENSLOW,
(Member N. Y\ Stock Exchange;.
D. A. EASTON.
H. H. HERTS.
P. O. Box 1589. S. H. NICHOLS.
C. D. & J. H. LEVERICH,
BROKERS,
No. 31 Wail Street, New York,
BUY and sell United States Government
Bonds, Stocks and Investment Securities,
dealt in at the New Y'ork Stock Exchange.
ALSO,
Scrip of the Atlantic Mutual Insurance
Company of New York. This scrip or divi
dend amounts to 40 per cent, for vear 1882,
certificates for which will be issued on and
after May 1. 1883.
f DEATH TO WHITE WASH!
Maxwell’s Prepared Gypsum for
whitening and coloring stores, fac
tories, mills, barns, or any purpose
where White Wash or Kalsoraine is
used; is easily applied; will not
peek crack or rub off. Sanitary
properties, excellent. Packed in
barrels, half barrels, kegs and cans.
Send for circulars.
HAZLETT. FOSTER A CO.,
182 W. Pratt Street, Haiti more, Md
jleertaklt gompotma.
A KtTBD BUT UNTITLED WOMAN.
[From the Boston Globe J
Mean*. Editora
The above U a good Hkeneej of Jin. Lydia E. Pink
ham, of Lynn, Masa, who above all other human beings
may be truthfully called tbe “Dear Friend of Woman,"
1 as some of her correspondents tore to ealTher. She
Is sealously devoted to her work, which U the outcome
of a life-study, and is obliged to keep six lady
assistants, to help her answer the large correspondence
which daily pours ln upon her, each bearing lu special
burden of suffering, or Joy at release from It. Her
Vegetable Compound Is a medicine for good and not
evil purposes. I have personally investigated It and
am satisfied of the truth of this.
On account or Its proven merits. It is recommended
and prescribed by the best physicians in the country.
One says: “It works like a charm and saves much
pain. It will cure entirely the worst form of falling
of the uterus, Leucorrhosa, irregular and painful
Menstruation,all Ovarian Troubles, Inflammation and
Ulceration, Floodings, all Displacements and the con
sequent spinal weakness, and is especially adapted to
the Change of life."
It permeates every portion of the system, and gives
new life and vigor. It removes faintness, flatulency,
destroys all craving for stimulants, and relieves weak
ness of the stoinooh. It cures Bloating, Headaches,
Nervous Prostration, General Debility, Sleeplessness,
Depression and Indigestion. That feeling of bearing
down, causing pain, weight and backache, Is always
permanently cured by Its use. It will at all times, and
under all circumstances, act in harmony with the law
that governs the female system.
It costs only ft. per bottle or sir for $5., and ts sold by
druggists. Any advice required as to special coses, and
the names of many who have been restored to perfect
health by the uso of the Vegetahlo Compound, can be
obtained by addressing Mrs. P., with stamp for reply,
at her home ln Lynn, Mass.
For Kidney Complaint of either sex this compound is
unsurpassed as abundant testimonials show.
“Mrs. Pinkham’s Liver Pills,” says one writer, “are
the bead in the tcirlil for the cure of Constipation,
Biliousness and Torpidity of the liver. Her Blood
Punfiei 1 works wonders In its special line aud bids fair
to equal the Compound in its popularity.
All must respect her as an Angel of Mercy whose sole
ambition is to do good to others.
Philadelphia, Pa. 01) Mrs. A. M. B.
Sold by all druggists. Trade supplied by
LIFTMAN BROS., Savannah.
gooftg.
Books! Books! Books!
—AT—
fYLLY & CLARKE’S
SCHOOL BOOKS,
Bibles, Testaments,
PRAYER BOOKS,
HYMN BOOKS,
HISTORIES, .
„ NOVELS,
ILLUSTRATED BOOKS,
COOK BOOKS,
BOOKS FOR PLANTING,
All Kinds of Books!
PAPER-NOTE, LETTER, CAP, LEGAL
CAP, BOX PAPER, CORRESPOND
ENCE ( ARDS, LEGAL BLANKS,
AND ENVELOPES.
Ms, Pencils and Pea Holders,
PENS—THE FALCON MAMMOTH PEN
LETTER BOOKS. PRESSES
AND PRESS STANDS.
BLANK BOOKS,
LEDGERS. JOURNALS, DAY AND ( ASH
BOOKS AND MEMORANDUM BOOKS.
Croquet, Indian Clubs, Dolls, Skates,
Marbles, Gaines.
Any one purchasing a book or any article
will lie entitled to one ol our Standing Picture
catds,
JituDmital.
lmSSfljk it* nniiuiinjf uuui inruin
1 a
DOSES AND 4 '" Alrol’ioUsm'Opium*K*t’.
Ming*. Spo n natorrhoeu,
Svminal wmJcmw, Itxi-
JM*tioT,Svnhills. Scrof.
lilAHjvl ail N enrolls ani
Blood DiwA-xes. To Clei •
gr.vnen. Lawyers. Lltei
ary Men. Merchant*.
IbtnkerH, Ladies and all
whose sedentary em
ployment causes Nen
ouh Prostration. Irresru
la pities of the blood,
stomach, bowels oi
Kidneys, or who re
quire a ai
netir.er or stimulant.
SAMARITAN NERVINS
1* invaluable Thouj
MriTP rAii r . ands proclaim it tba
m* fcVtK PAILS. most wonderful Invip
jfM __ orant that ever sustain-
If JR Kfl T3 fir J BcJf fTd ‘d the sinking system.
w rS Vl|v “ JSV* b * 1111
THE DU. H. A. RICintOM) MTIIIOAL CO.,
Hole Proprietor*, Ku Joseph, \(j
P'! 1 ; gale by SOLOMONS A CO. aud LIPP
MAN BROS., Savannah, Ga.
NERVOUS DEBILITY.
A CUBE GUARANTEED.
DR. E. C. WEST’S NERVE AND BRAIN
TREATMENT: A ttpeclfic for Hysteria,
Dizzine-KS, < 011 vuloions, Nervous Headache,
Mental Depression, Loss of Memory, Spernia
torrluea, Impotency, 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
resent eases. Each box contains one month’s
treatment, 21 a box, or six boxes for $5; sent
by mail prepaid on receipt of price. Wc guar
antee 6 boxes to cure any case. With each or
der received by us for 6 boxes, accompanied
with t-j, we will send the purchaser our writ
ten guarantee to return the money if the treat
iiient docs iK'j effect a cure. Guuranteesissued
bv OSCEOLA BUTLKIt, Druggist, Savannah,
Ga. Orders by mail promptly attended to.
Manhoodßestored
nw in t> ***]!* imprudence, causing Nervous
Debility. Premature Decay, etc., bavins tried in
ma"in*n nf°.' V | B f lemed f , . i 's*discovered s mm-
Fi, n of *elf-cur# which he will semi free
43 Cbltoy£"Y? J ' • REEVES,
VHHilirationo.
THE SAVANNAH
DAILY MORNING NEWS
—AND—
SUNDAY TELEGRAM
DELIVERED FOR
25 CENTS PER WEEK.
Subscriptions also received by the vear or
for a shorter time. Leave orders at
ESTILL’S NEWS DEPOT,
ilatlroaftp.
Charleston & Savannah Ry. Cos.
Savannah, Ga„ January 15, 1883.
COMMENCING MONDAY, January 15th,
at 7:30 am. and until further notice, trains
will arrive and depart as follows:
Going Forth—Train* 47 and 45.
Leave Savannah 4:15 pm 7:30 am
Arrive Charleston 9 :S0 p m 1:00 pm
Leave Charleston 8:30 p m 11:40 a m
Arrive Florence 1 :*) a m 4:30 p m
Leave Wilmington 6:40 a m 9:30 p m
Arrive Weldon 12:50 pm 4:06 am
Arrive Petersburg 3:10 p m 7:10 a m
Arrive Richmona. 4:40 pm 8:22 am
Arrive Washington 9:40 pm 1:30 pm
Arrive Baltimore 11:40 p m 2:00 p m
Arrive Philadelphia 8:36 a m 6:30 p m
Arrive New York 6:50 am 9:35 pm
Coming South—Train* 48 and 42.
Leave Charleston 6:00 am 3315 p m
Arrive Savannah 11:10 am 9:20 pm
Passengers by 4:15 p m train connect at
Charleston Junction with trains to all points
North and East via Richmond and all rail
line, or Weldon and Bay Line; by 7:30 am
train to all points North via Richmond.
For Augmta, Beaufort and Port Royal.
Leave Savannah 7:3oam and 4:lspm
Arrive Yemassee 10:05araand 0:40 p m
Leave Yemassee. ... 10:10 a m and 6:40 p m
Arrive Beaufort 8:00 p m
Arrive Port Royal B:l6pm
Arrive Augusta 3:25 pm
Leave Augusta 1:110 pm
Leave Port Royal 6:00 a m
Leave Beaufert 6:20 a m
Arrive Yemassee 6:10 pm and 8:15 am
Leave Yemassee 6:40 pm and 8:48 am
Arrive Savannah 6:20 p m and ll:lu a m
A first-class Dining Car attached to all
trains, affording passengers a fine meal at
small expense.
Pullman Palace Slee era thro tgh from Sa
vannah to Washington and New York.
For tickets, sleeping car reserr * 1 (and all
other information, applv to William Bren.
Ticket agent;, 22 BuU etioot, and at Charles?
ton and Savannah Railway Ticket OSce at
Savannah, Florida and Wes'tern Railway De-
P°‘- C. S. GAD3PKN, Sup’t.
B.C. BoTWTOK.Gh P, A.
_ Ulatrtjro ant s rtttrini.
SAMUEL P. HAMILTON,
IMPOUTER OF
Jewelry.
SAMUEL P. H AMILTON, Corner Bull and Broughton Sts.
M. STERNBERG-,
>24 BARNAHD STREET.
CHOICE GEMS IN SOLITAIRE AND CRITICALLY MATCHED
DIAMONDS, RARE PEARLS, RUDIES,
SAPPHIRES, EMERALDS,
rorn U i g KWK e i B H^?f'^ C H M^ os ’fV''’i n a , rt ' stic Bettingß, AU of the latest
f*- styles or OULU JLn ELRi, of standard quality, for both Ladies’ and Gentlemen’* wear
in great variety, at close prices. WATCHES, noth Foreign ami American (W ALTH \M) in
desired style of ornamentation. CHATELAINE WATCHES and CHATE
INSPECTION INVITED. -
M. STERNBERG,
< 24 BARNARD STREET.
THE EXCITEMENT NOT OVER.
THE GRAND DRAWING HAS TAKEN PLACE, BUT THE PUBLIC ARE STILL BUYING
HOLIDAY GOODS AT
JAKE STERNBERG’S JEWELRY STORE,
No. 159 Broughton Street.
MY STOCK EMBRACES THE MOST MAGNIFICENT SELECTION IN
Cold Watches, Waltham and Elgin.
THE LATEST STYLES !N COLD BRACELETS,
And the largest assortment in GOLD RINGS, LADIES’ NECK and OPERA CH VINS SETS
SLEEVE BUTTONS and STUDS.
SILVERWARE IN GREAT VARIETY. .
JAKE STERNBERG, 159 BROUGHTON STREET.
HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR OLD GOLD AND SILVER.
A. L. DESBOUILLONS.
JEWELER AND DEALER IN
WALTHAM, ELGIN AND PIONEER WATCHES
AGENT FOR ROCKFORD QUICK TRAIN WATCHES.
STERLING [QN TRIPLE-PLATED
blL> WARE.
MANUFACTURER
31 BULL STREET, OPPOSITE SCREVEN HOUSE.
SPECIAL SWEEPING REDUCTION
DURING THE CENTENNIAL IN
Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry, Silverware, Clocks,
And a Large Variety of Novelties,
—AT—
PETER LINDENSTRUTH’S,
101 Broughton Street, Under the Marshall Honse.
__ Juvnitiivt and CTav;*cto.
“Down With the Tariff."
THE PEOPLE DEMAND CHEAP GOODS!
And in response to that demand, ami being determined to continue to ea*l in low trices, I
offer the balance of my v
target Steel;, Rugs, Nats, Oil Cloth,
SHADES, ETC.,
At such prices as will effect speedy sales. Come and examine for yourselves.
Tapestry Brussels, worth sl, for 85c.
Tapestry Brussels, worth 75c., for 00c.
All Wool Ingrains, worth 00c., for 75c.
English Body Brussels, worth $1 05, for $1 35.
Do not fail to see my magnificent stock of FURNITURE. Pronounced by all the largest, the
most complete, the handsomest and the cheapest in Savannah. I shall at all times lake
pleasure m showing visitors through my extensive establishment. Note the address.
E. A. SCHWARZ,
125 AND 127 BROUGHTON STREET.
FINE DECORATIONS.
We take pleasure in calling attention to onr unexcelled line of
FINE PAPER HANGINGS,
COMPRISING all the newest designs and eolorings. We make a specialty in FINE CEIL
ING DECORATIONS. Having secured the services of a competent Paper Hanger, MR.
A. E. RATCLIFFE, we shall guarantee'entire satisfaction in all work entrusted to us. Esti
mates cheerfully made. Don’t forget that we have a stock of FURNITURE, CARPETS.
MATTING. WINDOW SHADES, UPHOLSTERY GOODS and BABY CARRIAGES AT
LOW PRICES,
A. J. MILLER & CO.,
Paints, <flUe, <gtr.
Oliver’s Paint & Oil House
JOHN LUCAS & CO.’S
PURE TINTED GLOSS PAINTS
WHITE and COLORS, per gallon $1 50.
GREEN, per gallon 12 00.
JOHN G. BUTLER,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
WHITE LEADS, Colors, Oils, Glass, Var
nish, Wall Paper, et. Ready Mixed
Paints, Railroad, Steamer and Mill Supplies.
Sole Agent for Georgia Lime,Calcined Piaster,
Cements, Hair and Land Plaster.
22 DRAYTON ST., SAVANNAH, GA.
(Zotton Tactoro.
T. W. ESTES. A.C. M’ALPIN. P. C. (iARMANY.
ESTES, McALPIN & CO.,
Cotton Factors
—AND —
Commission Merchants,
108 BAY STREET, SAVANNAH. GA.
KIESLING’S NURSERY
WHITE BLUFF ROAD.
PLANTA ROSES and CUT FLOWERS fur
nished to order. Leave orders with
DAVIS BROS.,
Bnil and York streets.
Empty Syruo Barrels For Sale.
OAA SELECTED SYRUP BARRELS cheap
OW for cash. Address
KENNER, TIBBS A EAKIN,
Atlanta, Ga,
Stripping.
| OCEANSTEAMSHIP COMPANY
—FOR
NEW YORK AND PHILADELPHIA.
Passage to New York.
! CABIN. S2O
; EXCURSION .32
| STEERAGE 77777777..... 10
Passage to Philadelphia.
EXCURSION..
STEERAGE
r |''HE magnificent steamships or this Com-
JL pany are appointed to sail as follows:
TO NEW YORK.
NACOOCHEE, Captain Kempton, SATUR
DAY, March 3, at 1:30 p. m.
T £?f LAHASSKK * Captain Fisher, WED
NESDAY, March 7? at 5:00 P. u.
CITY OF AUGUSTA, Captain K. S. Nick
erson, SATURDAY'. March 10, at 7:00 p. m.
CHATTAHOOCHEE, Capt. E. 11. D.VU
<ett, WEDNESDAY,March 11, at 11 a. m.
TO PHILADELPHIA.
JUNIATA, Captain 11. C. Daggett, SAT
URDAY', March 3, at 1:00 p, m.
CITY OF MACON, CaptaiU S. L. NICKER
SON, SATURDAY', March 10, at 6:30 r. m.
Through hills of lading given to Eastern and
Northwestern poiuts and to |iortaof the United
Kingdom and the Continent.
For freight or passage apply to
G. M. SORREL, Agent,
City Exchange Building.
Merchants* and Miners’ Tran sport u
tatiou Compauy.
FOR BALTIMORE.
CABIN PASSAGE sir, 00
SECOND CABIN 12 50
EXCURSION 23 00
THE steamships of this Company are ap
pointed to sail from Baltimore for Savan
nah EVERY' FIVE DAY Sand from Savannah
for Baltimore as foUows:
JOHNS HOPKINS, Capt. J. S. March, Jr.,
TUESDAY', February 27, at 10 a. m.
\YM. CRANE, Captain J. C. TaYI-OR,
SATURDAY', March .3, at UOO p. m.
JOHNS HOPKINS, Capt. ,T. S. MARCH, Jr.,
THURSDAY', March 8, at 5 p. m .
WM. CRANE, Captain J. C. Taylor,
TUESDAY', March 18, at 10 A. M.
JOHNS HOPKINS, Capt. J. 8. MARCH, Jr.,
MONDAY', Marsh 19, at 4 p. m.
WM. CRANE, Captain J. C, Taylor,
SATURDAY, March 24, at 8 A. m.
Through bills lading given to all points
West, all the manufacturing towns in New
England, and to Liverpool and Bremen.
Through passenger tickets issued to Pittsburg,
Cincinnati, Chicago, and all points West ami
Northwest. s
JAS. B. YYEST & CO., Agents,
Boston and Savannah
STEAMSHIP CO.
FOR BOSTON DIRECT.
CABIN PASSAGE S3O OO
EXCURSION 35 OO
STEERAGE 13 00
FIRST-CLASSJSTEAMSHIPS (2200 tons each)
GATE CITY,
Captain D. HEDGE.
CITY OF COLUMBUS,
Captain S. E. WRIGHT.
Sailings are appointed for every Thursday
from Boston at 3 p. m.; from Savannah as fol
lows 1
CITY OF COLUMBUS, March 8, at 8:30
P. M.
GATE CITY, March 18th, at 11:15 A. m.
CITY OF COLUMBUS, March 22, at 3:30
P. M.
THROUGH bills of lading given to New
A England points and to Liverpool.
The company’s wharf in Boston is connected
witli all railroads leading out of the city.
RICHARDSON & BARNARD, Agents.
Reduced Rates of Fare.
Fare: Savannah to Jacksonville $5 00
Excursion (j 00
TICKETS UNLIMITED.
The above rates include meals and state
rooms.
Sea Island Route to Jacksonville
AND ALL OTHER POINTS IN FLORIDA.
THE CITY OF BItIDUETON
YXfILL leave Savannah every TUESDAY
T> THURSDAY and SATURDAY at 4P.
u., connecting at Fernaudina with
STEAMBOAT EXFRESSTKAIN
Via the new Fernandina and Jacksonville
Railroad. Returning, will leave Fernandina
SUNDAY, WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY eve
ning.
ST’R. DAVID CLARK
Every MONDAY, and THURSDAY for Da
rien, Brunswick and intermediate landings.
THURSDAYS for Satilla river.
Through bills of lading and through rates of
freight issued for all stations on the Bruns
wick and Western Railroad. Special rates to
Waycross and Albany.
Freights for St. Catherine’s, Doboy, Cane
Creek, St. Mary’s and SatiLfa river payable in
Savannah.
SPECIAL NOTlCE.—Freight received after
8:30 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 at risk of consignee.
O. S. BENSON, Gen. Freight Agt.
WOODBRIDGE * HARRIS!AN,
General Agents.
J. A. MERCIER, Gen. Pass. Agt.
Offices:
Corner Bull and Congress streets, at Osceola
Butler's Drug More, Savannah, Ga.
Corner Bay andOcean streets, at Geo. Hughes’
Drug Store, Jacksonville, Fla.
For Augusta and Way Landings.
STEAMER KATIE,
Captain W. H. FLEETWOOD,
TXTILL leave EVERY TUESDAY, at 6
T v o’clock p. m., for Augusta and way land
ings.
Positively no freight received or receipted
-for after 5 o’clock P. M.
All freights payable by shippers.
JOHN LAWTON,
Manager.
INSIDE ROUTE
CHARLESTON and BEAUFORT,
Via PORT ROYAL. COOSAW, EDISTO and
WAY LANDINGS.
THE STEAMER CLARENDON,
Captain C. TOWNSEND,
Will leave Florida Steamboat Wharf as fol
lows:
SATURDAY, March 3, 5:00 A. m.
SATURDAY, March 10, 5:00 A. M.
SATURDAY. March 17. 5:00 A. u.
SATURDAY’, March 24, 4:30 A. M. v
SATURDAY, March 31, 4:00 a. m.
WOODBRIDGE & lIARRIMAN, Agents.
NEW YO K K
—TO—
AMSTERDAM AND ROTTERDAM.
The first-class, full powered, Clyde-built
Dutch steamships of this line—AMSTERD AM
ROTTERDAM, SCHIEDAM, LEEKDAm’
Z A AND AM. P. C ALAND, W. A.SCHOLTEN*
MAAS—carrying the United States mail to
Netherlands, leave Company’s Pier, foot of
Sussex street, Jersey City, N, J., regularly
every Wednesday for Rotterdam and Amster
dam, alternately.
First Cabin S7O, Second Cabin SSO, Steerage
S2O.
For freight apply to Agents of OCEAN
STEAMSHIP COMPANY.
SAME RATES TO AMSTERDAM AND
ROTTERDAM.
H. CAZAUX, General Agent,
SEMI-WEEKLY LINE
FOR COHEN’S BLUFF,
AND WAT LANDINGS.
THE steamer MARY' FISHER, Captain W.
T. Gibson, will leave for above every
FRIDA Y,B r. M. Returning, arrive SUNDAY
NIGHT. Leave TUESDAY, at Ba. m. Re
turning, arrive THURSDAY, at 11 a. 11. For
information, etc., apply to W. T. GIBSON,
Wbarßoo rayton street. Manager.
itailtoaDo.
Central & Southwestern R. Rs.
( y,.... aSttmfbSfe feft.Y’A'%.
v J passenger trains on the Central and South
western Railroads and branches will run us
follows:
R K A I) DOWN. READ DOWN.
- v<) . I. _ From Savannah. No. SI.
9:00 am Lv Savannah . .Lv 8:00 pnL
4:15 pm Ar Augusta Ar 6:10 a in
6.25 pmAr Macon Ar 4:54 a m
U.2opm Ar Atlanta Ar 8:45 am.
m a m Ar Columbus Ar 1:40 p m
f am Ar Eufaula Ar 4:21 pin
4:16 am Ar Albany Ar 4:05 pm
Ar Milledgeville... Ar 10:24 a m
Ar. Eaton ton Ar 12:10 p m
No. 16. From Augusta, No. 18.
9:00 a mLv Augusta Lv ll:oo p~m
8:50 pm Ar—Savannah Ar 7.-00 am
6:25 p m Ar... Macon Ar
11:20 pm Ar ... Atlanta Arl
6:06 a m Ar Columbus.. Ar
2:53 a mAr... Eufaula Ar
4:lßamAr—Albany Ar
Ar Milledgeviile. . Ar
_Ar_ Eatonton.... Ar i
A<l - *• From Macon. No. St.
7:80 pm Lv Macon Lv 8:06 a m
coo am Ar Savannah Ar 3:60 pm
b:loaraAr Augusta Ar 4:16 pm.
Ar.. MiQo’viUe* Ar 10:24 ain
Ar Eatonton . .... Ar 12:10 p m
Wo. 1. From Maeon. No. 101.
0:35a mLv Maedh. 7. ...Lv 8:00 vat
4:21 pm Ar Eufaula .Ar 2:58 am
4:05 pm Ar .Albany.. . .Ar 4:16 a m
Mo. 3. From Mown. V7/J7~
9:00 a m Lv... Macon i.v y;SS
1:40 pm Ar .C'oluinlms . .Ar 6:05 ain
No. 1. From Macon. No. S. No. SIV~
8:00 am Lv Macon Lv 7:00 pm "TioFa m
12:25 pni Ar Atlanta Ar 11:20pm 8:45 a m
-V o. Si*. From Fort 1 'alloy. No. S7.
9:251> m Lv. Fort Valley Lv lUOsTm
10:10pm Ar I’erry Aril:ssam
-Vo. 2. From Atlanta. No. 4. .Vo. St.
2:40 pm I.v Atlanta 7Lv 9a p m 4:15 am
8:55 pin Ar Macon Ar 5:00 a m 7:47 am
2:63 a mAr. Eufaula Ar 4:2lpm 4:2lpm
4:10 ain Ar. Albany. Ar 4:05 pm 4apm
6:05 ain Ar Columhns.Ar 1:40 pin 1:40 p m
Ar.Milled'ville.Ar 10:24 a m 10:24 am
• , ■ Ar Eatonton. ArlJ:lopm 12:10pm
8:10 a mAr Augusta Ar 4:15 pm 4:15 pm
7:00 a m Ar. Savannah.Ar 3:50 pm 3:sopm
Wo. 4. From Columbus. No. 16.
12:00 noon I.v Columbus Lv 8:0u i> m
5:10 p mAr Macon Ar 4:05 am
11:20 pm Ar ... Atlanta . f Ar 8:45 a m
2:53 am Ar Eufaula Ar 121 pm
4:16 amAr Albany Ar 4:05 p m
Ar ...Milledgeviile Ar 10:24 am
... Ar . Eatonton Ar 12:10 pm
6:10 a mAr Augusta Ar 4:15 pm
7:00 ain Ar .Savannah Ar 8:60 p m
-Ye- 2- From Fa/aula. No. 103. "
12:01 p m I.v Eufaula ~ I.v 12:39 am
4:05 p m Ar—Albany . Ar 4:16 a m
6:85 p m Ar. Macon Ar 7:30 am
6:05 am Ar Columbus Ar 1:40 p m
11:20pm Ar... Atlanta Ar 12:26 pm
Milledgeviile Ar 10:24 am
•• ... Eatonton Ar 12:10 pm
6:10a mAr ...Augusta Ar 4:16 pm
■ :00 a m Ar. .Savannah Ar 8:50 put
-Vo- 18. From A Ibany. No. 10o7“
12:00uoonLv... Albany . Lv 10:40 p m
4:21 pm Ar Eufaula Ar 2:53 a m
6:35 pm Ar Macon Ar 7:30 a m
6:05 ani Ar . .Columbus Ar 1:40 p m
11:20 p m Ar—Atlanta Ar 12:25 pm
Ar Milledgeviile. Ar 10:24 a m
, - Ar Eatonton Ar 12:10 p m
am Ar • Augusta Ar 4:15 p m
1:00 am Ar ...Savannah Ar 3:50 p m
No. SO. From Eatonton and MiUedytmiUe.
2:15 pm Lv Eatontou
3:58 phi I.v ... Milledgeviile...
6:25 p m Ar Macon
6:05 a mAr... .Columbus
2:53 a nx Ar Eufaula
4:l6am Ar Albany
11:20pm Ar Atlanta 77
8:10 a m Ar Augusta
7:00 a m Ar —Savannah 77777!*
No. SO. From Perry. No. tB. ~
5:10 a m Lv. • Perry.............Lv siisu m
5:55 am Ar . . .Fort Valley Ar 8:85 pm
Local Sleeping Cars on all night trains be
tween bavannan and Augusta and Savanuali
and Atlanta, and Maeon ami Albany.
Pullman Hotel Sleeping Cars between Chi'
cago and Jacksonville, Fla., via Cincinnati*,
without change. ’
Pullman Palace Sleeping (Jars between Lou
isville, hy., and Savannah, Ga., without
change. ’
..... Connections.
The Milledgeviile and Eatouton train runs
aaily (except Monday) between Gordon and
Eatontou, ami daily (except Suuday) between
Eatonton and Qprdou.
Eufaula train connects at Cuthbert for For
Gaines daily (except Sunday).
The accommodation train between Macon
and I erry runs daily (except Sunday).
lhe Albany and Blakely train runs daily
(except Sunday) between Albany and Blakely 7 .
The Albany Accommodation train runs daily
(except Monday) from Smithvilie to Albany
SmithvilVe (eXCept Sun(la y) from Albany U
At Savannah with Savannah, Florida and
Western Railway; at Augusta with all lines
to North and Rant; at Atlanta with Air-Lino
and Kennesaw Routes to all poiuts North
Last and West.
Cars can to secured at
SCHREINER s, 127 Congress street.
G. A. Whu-khkad, WILLIAM ROGERS,
Gen. I ass. Agt. Gen. SiipU Savannah.
J. C. SHAW, W . F. SITeLLMAN,
Gen. I rav. Agt. Supt, S. W. R. R..Macou, Gn.
Savannah, Florida & Western Ry.
SUPERINTENDENT'S OFFICE, I
0„ . Savannah, January 17, 1882. i
N . AN D AFTER THURSDAY, January 18,
1883,1 assenger Trams ou this road will
run as follows:
_ „ fast mail.
Leave Savaunah daily at 11 *4O am
Leave Jesup daily at. 1 las n m
Leave \V aycross daily at 3:00 r> 111
Arrive at Callahan dailv at 4 : 45 n m
Arrive at Jacksonville daily at 5:25 r>n
Arrive at Live Oak daily at 7:06 p m
Arrive at New Branford daily at 8:50 p m
Arrive at Valdosta daily at 5-30 n m
Arrive at Quitman daily at G : lßum
Arrive at Thomasville daily at 7 25 u m
Arrive at Albany daily at 11 -00 p m
Leave Albany daily at 4 40 a in
Leave Thomasville daily at 8-15 a m
Leave Quitman daily at " 9120 0 m
Leave \ aldosta daily at a'-ju a
Igiave New Branford dally at. ” ” ’'. 0:15 am
Leave Live Oak daily at 8 : 05 a m
Leave Jacksonville daily at ' 9-30 a 111
Leave Callahan daily at ... ' jotE a m
Arrive at Waycross daily at 12-in u
Arrive at Jesup daily at 1-56 u m
Arrive at Savannah daily at 3:40 u in
Between Savannah and VYavcross this train
stops oniy at Fleming, Johnston’s, Jesup and
Blackshear. Between Waycross and Jack
sonville stops only at Folkston and Callahan.
Between Waycross and Albany stops only at
stations*^ 1 aiu * on k’gn&l at regular
LSraraiajsssf" •
This tram connects at New Branford with
steamer Caddo Belle, leaving tor Cedar Key
and Suwannee river points every Tuesday and
Friday mornings. 3
ALBANY AND NEW ORLEANS EXPRESS.'
Leave Savannah daily at 4 -00 n m
Leave Jesup daily at "! 6:80 pm
Arrive VV aycross daily at 8:05 p m
Arrive Callahan daily at 10-32 pm
Arrive Jacksonville daily at . 11:16 !, m
Leave Dupont daily at 12-80 a in
Arrive Thomasville daily at 6:45 a m
Arrive Bam bridge daily at, 10:45 a m
Arrive Albany daily at 11-15 a
Leave Albany daily at 4 : 40u
Leave Bainbridge dailyat " 4-;io o.
Leave Thomasville daily at. .. B : ssum
Arrivc Dupont daily at 12 : 10 a m
Arrive Waycross daily at I:SC a m
Leave Jacksonville daily at .. m-40 n m
Leave Callahan daily $. ”!!!!!!Ji Jsi p m
Leave VV aycross daily at... 2-20 a m
Arrive Jesup daily at 4 : 2oan.
Arrive Savannah dailyat 7loOam
Punmau Palace Sleepers between Savannah
and Thomasville daily.
Pullman Drawing Room Cars from Savan
nah to Jacksonville daily.
Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars from Jack
sonville to Vt ashington, and from Jacksonville
to Savannah daily on this train.
Connection at Albany double daily with
passenger trains both ways on Southwestern
Railroad to and from Macon, Eufaula, Mont
gomery, Mobile. New Orleans, etc
JACKSONVILLE EXPRESS,
leave Savannah dailyat... 11-oonm
Leave Jesup “ ‘ o'.,*, *, ‘
Leave Waycross “ 4 : 4oam
Arrive at Callahan “ .... B '. 4 r a “
Arrive at Jacksonville “ ... 7-60 am
leave Jacksonville “
Leave Callahan *• P £
leave VV aycross “ . u-tr.L m
Arrive at Jesup ;;;;;;;;
Arrive at Savannah “ 4 :30 am
Cars on this train
daily from Washington to Jacksonville, Sa
vannah to Jacksonville, between Cincinnati
and Jacksonville via Jesup, and Chicago and
Jacksonville via Albany.
Passengers leaving Macon at 8:00 p m con
nect at Jesup with tills train for Florida dailv
Passengers from Florida by this train con
nect at Jesup with train arriving at Macon at
w2rt and Newest ‘" g COnneCt ‘ OU
Passengers for Brunswick take this tram
arriving at Brunswick at 5:85 a in dailv
Le . av . e J“ runßwick 8;ao P m- Arrive Savan
nab 4:30 am.
Passengers from Savannah for Gainesville
Cellar Keys and Florida Transit Road “xcep
Fernandmaj take tliis tram ' p
Passengers for the Florida Southern Kail-
ItPalatka anVe n,ake clouv “Meet.on
1 Bleam ®fß leave Bainbridge for Apa-
Hon at Savannah daily with Charles
N^handEHs a t niJal ‘ for 1111 ***
Connection at Savannah daily with Centra
Railroad for points West and Northwest.
Close connection at Jacksonville daily (Sun
days excepted) for Green Cove Springs, St.
Augustine, Palatka, Eutenrrise, Sanford und
all landings on St. John’s River.
Trains on B. and A. R. R. leave junction
going west, at 12:20 p. m., and for Brunswick
at 3:43 p. m., daily, except Sunday.
Through tickets sold and sleeping car berth
accemmodations secured at Bren’s Ticket
•?* antl at the Cmnpa
nv s Depot, foot of Liberty street. Tickets
also on sale at Leve & Alden’s Tourist Offices.
A now restaurant and lunch counter lias
been opened in the station at Waycross, and
abundant tune will be allowed for mealsby all
passenger trains. 3
, JAS - L. TAYLOR,
Tnum n. Gen’l Pass. Agent
Superintendent
GEORGE SCHLE Y,
(Successor to J. W. SCHLEY' A CO.),
WHOLESALE DEALER IN
Hay, Grain & Provisions
172 BAY STREET, SAVANNAH, GA.
T CALL the attention of my country and ritv
RYE and CLAY PEAS, FLOUR. All’ orders
ywWwvX*'* attent,uo ’