Newspaper Page Text
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WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 1883.
<f utii mr trial.
SAVANNAH MARKET.
OFFICE OF THE MORNING NEWS, I
SAVANNAH. July 17, 1583,1 r, I.)
Cotton.— The market was dull, with sales
( ,j v* bales. We give below the official quo
:snons of the Savafmah Cotton Exchange,
on the new standard of classification,
xh ich went into effect on the 12th :
Middling lair
G,*o*i middling 10%
Middling 9 13-16
Low middling t 9 5-16
ordinary 8 15-16
Ordinary 7 15-16
Comparative Cotton Statement,
Receipts, Exports and Stock on hand .July 17, 1883, and!
FOR THE BAMK TIME LAST YEAR.
ust-ss. must.
Sea I Sea
lelarut ] Cphind. Inland. Upland.
Stock on hnu*t September 1. 66 5,381 878 11,588
if* reived to-day r 1 1 10
Received previously 12,002 806,826] 17.060 708,868
Total. 12,068] 811,72* 17,438 720,11 1 ’
I 5:.. I - ■ r
Kxporteil to-d Ry. I | ] 119
KX|>ortt;d previously. 12,054 { 807, Ho ] 17,379 717,713
Total. 12.054 1 *ll*. I in 17,379' 717.662
\ Stork, oil ban*! uu*l on ship
1 tlit day I H :\,rvHs j M>|
E _i ne marvel lssteadv and unchanged.
v -i, -ali- of I' barrels. YY'euuote:
K 5. :::::::::::::::::::::::::M
> r r — 43m
I'rioi’
nominal.
t miBT lots |1 10rt*l 15
Tide uiter 1 Wstl 45
v aval Stores.—Kosins opened and closed
aritb sales of 605 barrels. We quote: A,
, 1> and K $1 30, F *1 35. G $1 40. II
s■/ .1 ji Ksl 90. M 42 20, X*2 50, win
u *:iass SI 12' v, ami water white St 25.
pcn.-d steady al 34c. for regulars.
\ i ji. m. was quiet at 31c., and tiuallv
, • * urni at 31c. for regulars, with sales of
NAVAL stores statement.
Spirits. Kotin.
Onband April 1.1883 2.105 44.971
Ke. • ived to-day 655 990
Be< eired previously. 5i,:i57 165,47)2
Total 69,117 211,413
Ex;*orted to-day 1,650 414
Exported previously 47,674 154,35 l
Total 49,334 154,795
St, „ -,*i hand and on shipboard
t:e day, by actual count ..... 9,793 . 56,618
Hr. <i pt -same day last year .. 363 1,278
Financial. —Money market is easier, with
demand. Domestic Exchange.—Supply
equal to demand. The banks and bankers
arc buying sight drafts at par and selling
at ‘i ! 4 l>er cent, premium. Sterling Ex
change -Market dull; sixty day bills, with
- hiding attached, bankers, |4 83%; coin
im mal $4 82%; ninety days, prime, *4 81%;
French franks, 55 23%; Swiss franks. 45 23%.
'KU KITIES. —The market for stocks is firm,
u ; moderate inquiry. Bonds steady.
MOCKS and Bonds. —City Bonds.—Mar
ket quiet. Atlanta 6 per cent., 102 bid.
Id .sited; Augusta 7 per cent.. Ins bid,
111 asked; Columbus 5 per cent., 83 bid, *5
a-itcd; MaconO |>er cent.. H>2 bid, lu4 asked;
Sew Savannah 5 ner cent., 80% bid,Bo% asked.
Railroad Stock* —Market quiet. We quote:
Central common. 95% bid, 96% asked. Au
gusta and Savannah 7 percent, guaranteed, 117
i. I. 11s asked. Georgia common, ex-divi
ii'ud 145 bid, 146 naked. Southwestern 7 (>cr
c.ail. giiaranteeil 115% bid. 116 aketl. Cen
tral Railroad 6 i>er cent, certificates. o% bid,
91'. asked. Atlanta and West Point Railroad
stock. 104 bid, 105 asked. Atlanta and West
Point 6 per cent, certificates, 96% bid, 97%
asked.
Bad road Bond*.— Market quiet. Atlantic
X Gulf Ist mortg. consolid'd 7 per cent.,
coupons January ami duly, maturity 1897, 109
bid, 110 asked. Atlantic A Gulf iudorsedcily
of savannah 7 percent., coupons January aud
July, maturity 1879, 100 bid, 104 asked. Cen
tral consolidated mortgage 7 |>er cent..coupons
Jan. aud July, maturity 1893, 109 bid, 110
asked. Georgia 6 per cent., coupons Jan. aud
July, maturity, 106% bid, 107 asked. Mobile A
Girard 2d mortgage indorsed 8 percent, cou
pons January and July, maturity 1889, 109
nut. 111 asked. Montgomery & Eufaula Ist
mortgage 6 per cent. ind. by Central Railroad,
102 but, 103 asked, Charlotte, Colnmbia A Au
gusta Ist mortgage, 106% bid, 107 asked. Char
lotte, Columbia A Augusta 2d mortgage, 97
b:d. 99 asked. Western Alabama 2d mort
gage, indorsed, 8 per cent., 113 bid, 114
asked. South Georgia A Florida endorsed 114
bid, 114-% asked: South Georgia A Florida 2d
mortgage, 100 bid. 102 asked.
state Bond*.— Market quiet for State of
Georgia bonds. Georgia new 6's, 1889, 105
bid, 106 asked; Georgia 6 ;>cr cent., coupons
February ami August, maturity 1863 and 1886,
lid bid, 104 asked; Georgia mortgage
on W. A A. Railroad reirulnr T per cent.,
coupon* January ami July, maturity 18*6,
103 bid, 104 asked; Georgia 7' per
cent, gold, coupons quarterly. 111 bid,
115 asked; Georgia 7 per cent., e"oii;>ons Jan
nary and July, maturity 1896. 123 bid, 124
Asked. Ocean Steamship 6 per cent, bonds,
guaranteed by Central Railroad, 99 bid. 100
asked. Savannah Gas Light stock, 19% bid,
20% asked.
Bacon.—Market steady; demand good,
smoked clear rib sides, 10c.; shoulders
s%e.; dry salted clear rib sides, 9%e.: long
clear. 9c.; shoulders,7%c. Hams,’ 14%c.
Ha no IMi and Ties.—Market dull and nomi
nal. Wequote: Bagging—2% tbs., 11%®12c.; 2
tbs., u®U%e.; 1% lbs.. 10%®10%c.; 1% tbs.,
%®Wc. Iron Ties—Delta and Arrow, 41 55®
1 65 per bundle, according to brand and qtiau
t itv. Pieced ties, 51 20®1 30.
Fruits.—Bananas, red, —. Lemons, stock
ample, demand very good: Messina, 55 sor*t
7On per box. Oranges, Messina, 55 su®7 00
IST lx>x. Peaches, market well stocked with
ordinary, demand limited; we quote: half
peck crates, 10®25c. Watermelons, market
overstocked with ordinary, demand limited,
prices nominal. Georgia apples, a few reds
Ling received in barrels and selling at 53 00®
2 50: the market for ordinary green apples
o'.erstocked, with hut little or no demand.
Grapes, small-lots arriving, demand limited;
we quote prime, sc.® 10c. per pound.
liaiED Fruit. —Apples, evaporated, 14*q,
16%'-.; peeled, 10c. Peaches, 18c.
Dry Goods.—The market is firm with
good ddknand; stocks full. W ■ quote:
Prints, 7%®6%c.; Georgia brown shirt
ing. %, 4%c.; % do., 5%e.; 1-4 brown
sheeting, 6%e.; white osnaburgs, 8® 10c.;
checks, 7(a)7%c.; yarns, 85c. for host makes;
brown ilrillings, "o%®B<*.
Flour.—Market steady; demand fair.
We quote: Superfine, 54 i'.at 05; extra, 55 40
§65; family, 56 15®6 40; Roller Mills, 46 90
65; fancy, 57 15®7 40; choice patent, 46 SH)
•75; bakers. .
Grain.—Market steady; demand good. We
quote in job lots: White corn, 75c.; mixed
corn, 75c.; mixed oats, 55c., steady, demand
good. Meal, 80c. Bran, 41 15. Grist, j>er two
bushel sack, 41 <O.
Hay.—Market well stocked: fair demand.
We quote, in job lots: Hay, Northern, 90c.;
Eastern, |l 10; Western, 41 10.
Hides, Wool, Etc.—Hides—Market dull:
receipts light; dry flint. 13c.; dry country
salted, 9®lie. Wool—Receipts Ugiit, market
t. me; in bale*, prune, 25c.; in bags, prime,
tie.; hurry, 10®l8c. Wax, 25c. Deer skins—
flint, 30c.;"salted, 28c.; otter skins, 35c.®54 no.
Lard.—The market is sternly. We quote:
In lu-rces. 10%c.; in kegs. 10%c".
Pe vs.—Cow liens 51 150i2 25 per bushel.
Potatoes.—Market well stocked, demand
good; prime, 51 50®2 50 per barrel.
Salt.—'The demand is moderate and the
market is easy, with a full stock. We quote:
Car load lots, 85c., f. o. b.; small lots, 95c.®
41 00.
Tobacco.—Market firm; moderate de
mand. We quote: Smoking, 40c.®$l 25.
Chewing— Common, sound, 35<<p40c.; medium,
40(555c.; bright, 50®75c.; fine fancy, 85®90c.;
extra flue, 90c. 10; bright navies, 45®57c.;
dark navies. 40<fli50c.
MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH.
Noon Report.
financial.
London, July 17.—Consols, 7-16 for money;
99% for account.
4:00 p. m.—Consols, 99% for money; 99 11-16
for account.
Berlin. July 17.—The weeklv statement of
the Imperial bank of Germany shows a de
crease in pecie of 494,000 marie*.
New York, July 17.—Stoexs opened firm;
subsequently declined. Money 2@2%|>er cent.
Exchange—long. 54 S3 I '*; short, 54 8%. State
non U quiet. Government bonds generally
flruier.,
COTTON.
1: v ERrOOL, July 17.—Cotton market opened
ca-ier; middling upland* 5 7-16*1; middling
Orleans 5 9-16d; sales 7,Duo bales: speculation
And export 500 bait's; receipts 3,900 bales—all
American.
Futures: Uplands, low middling clause.
July and August delivery. 5 25 64<1; August
and September, 5 2b-64®5 29-64*1; September
are October. 5 30-64®529-64®5 28-64*1; October !
and November, 5 26-64®5 25-64*1; November
icd December, 5 25-64®5 24-64*1: December
and Jaiuiarv, 5 J5-64®5 24-6 id; January an.i
February. 5 26-64*1; Febrnary and March,
5 2>-64(L Futnresduli.
If* p. m.—Futures: Uplands, luV middling
clause, July and August delivery, 5 24-o4*L
August aud September. 5 26-S4d; >eptcml*cr
and October, 5 27-64)1; October and November,
5 24-64*1.
Sales of American 6,100 bales
■Luo p. nt,—Uplands, low mid*Uiug clause,
March and April delivery, 5 30-64d.
tbit p. m._Futures: Uplands low middling
■ July and August delivery, 5 23-64*1;
August and September 5 25-64d; September
auo October, 5 26-64d; November ami De
cember. 5 23-64*1; January and fVbruarv,
5 ij-64*1. Futures closed ease.
> Manchester, Julv 17.—The market tor
Ixrns and fabrics is dull and rather lower for
Rh ariiclts.
New York, July 17.—Cotton openeil nomi
nal: middling uplands 16c, middling Orleans
“%c; Kales 107 bales.
Futures: Market weak, with sales as tol.-
mws: July delivery. 9 88c; August, 9 92c;
Neotember. 9 83c; October, 9 70c; November,
J We: December, 9 62*-. ,
PRO VISIONS. GROCERIES, ETC.
Liverpool, July 16.—Beef, extra India
tac**, 87 S .
Liverpool. Julv 17.—Breadstuff* market
nrm. Wheat, red winter 86 10d®9s 3d. Corn,
mixed 5%5.
new Yore. July 17.—Floor dull. Wheat
wavy; opened %®%s belter; afterwards lost
the advance and declined %@%c. Corn
Heavy and %®%e lower. Pork arm end
UUiet; mess 515 50®15 75. Lard firmer at 910 c.
Fights firm.
Baltimore, July 17. —Flour unchanged and
quiet; Howard street and Western superfine
13 TO®3 75: extra, 14 00®4 75; city mills #u
nerflne, $3 00®3 76; extra, 54 oO®6 50; Rio
brands, $6 00®6 25. Wheat—Southern higher
and active; Western higher and active;
Southern, red 51 14®1 17; amber, 51 15® 118;
No. 1 Marvland 51 18®1 19: No. 2 W*e6tern
winter red, on spot, 51 16®1 16*% Com—
Sonthem nominal because of its scarcity;
Western higher and quiet; Southern, white
60®62c: yellow 62®65e. ®
naval a,ores.
JulT 17 ’ 4:80 P- ug—Turpentine,
37c N,W Ro}mU'60®i i &.5. 17 - 9pirita tur P*ntine
Evening Report.
FINANCIAL.
New Orleans, July I“.—Exchange firm and
unchanged.
New Fork, July 17.—Exchange *4 ssu
Money 2®2% per cent. Sub-Trewu rv baf.’
ances—Coin, 5115.,70,000: currency, 57.659.000.
Government bonds generallv unchanged; new
five per cents, 101 bid; four and a half per
cents, 112%; four per cents, 119%; three per
cents. 103. state bonds dull.
Share speculation was firmer at the open
ing, with a steady feeling prevailing, but
this was followed by a reaction of
Kansas and Texas leading. About 11 aTm!
Granger shares were bought freely, and
an advance of %®l% took place. Just
before midday New York Central was
forced down to the lowest point
since the present bear movement was
inaugurated. Western Union also weak
ened, falling off to 79%, the decline on other
active stocks being lean effective. During the
afternoon trading was dull, but toward the
close there was more activity and
a general advance in prices of %®l%,
A little stock was taken for long account,
the hulk of the purchases, however, having
been for the pur)>ose of covering bear con
tracts. Short interest sell very large on New
\ork Central, but flat on other active shares
at I®2. Compared with last night's closing,
prices were %®l% higher. Grangers, Lacka
wanna, Michigan Central, Kansas and
Texas, Northern l’acific preferred,
Heading, Wabash, Missouri l'aciflc,
and \\ estem l nion showing the greatest im
provement. In specialities, Alton and Terre
Haute declined 2 to 70, Atchison, Topeka and
Santa Fe 2 to 81%, Chesapeake aud Ohio 1% to
17, ditto first preferred 1 to 27%, Minneapolis
and .*t. Louis preferred 1% to 50, an i Oregon
improvement Ito I*o. Cedar Falls rose 1 to
14. Illinois Central leased liues 1 to 79. Man
nattau lfeach 1 to 25%, Memphis and Charles
ton 1 to 39, and Richmond and Danville 1 to
60. Transactions aggregated 298,000 shares at
the follow ing quotations:
Aia. class A,2 to', 82 Manhattan Elev. 45
Ala. class A,small*B3 Memphis A Char. 38
Ala.claseß,ss *99 Metropolitan El.. 89
Ala.olassC,.4s *Bl Michigan Central 89
Georgians *lO5 Mobile A Ohio. . 14
“ 7s, mortgage 104* Nash. A Chatt’a. 54
“ 7s, gold *ll3 N. J. Central 86%
Isiuisiana consols 64% New Orleans Pa-
N. Carolina, old. 30 eifle, Ist mort. 85%
“ new *l6 N.Y. Central 115%
“ funding 10 New York El 95
“ special tax.. 4 Norf. A W.pref.. 39
So. Caro.(Brown) Nor. Pacific,com. 48%
consols 101% “ pref. 86%,
Tennessee 6s, old J4O OhioAMississipiii 33
“ new 140 “ “ pref..ll3
Virginia 6s *36 Pacific Mail 37
v a. consolidated *37 Pittsburg 133
Va, deferred 9 Quicksilver .... .. 8
Adams Express 132 “ preferred .. 35
Ain’can Express. 89 Resiling 56%
Cb’peake A Ohio. 17 Richm’dAAl’gli’y 5%
Chicago A Alton 133 Richm'il A Danv. 00
Chic.A N’rthw'n 128 Richm’d A W.Pt.
“ preferre*! 147% Terminal 29%
Chic,St.L.A N.0.J79 Rock Island 121%
Consolid’ted Coal 24 St. Louis A San F. 30
Del., Lack. A W 123% “ “ pref . 52%
Den.AßioGramle 40-' s “ “ IstprelMP,
Erie 35% St. Paul 102%
E. Tennessee Rd 8% “ preferred .. .118
Fort Wayne . . .131 Texas Pacific ...34%
Hannibal A St. Jol4l Union Pacific 92%
Harlem 195 U. S. Express .. 60
Houston A Texas. 65 Wabash Pacific.. 26%
Illinois Central 131% *• j,rcf 41%
Lake Shore 106% Well A Fargo 1:0
L’ville A Nash 49% Western Union .80%
♦Bid. $Ex dividend. 1 Asked.
COTTON.
New "York, .July 17.—Cotton easy; middling
uplands 10c; middling Orleans 10%e; sales
410 bales; net receipts 86 bales, gross 3,063.
Futures—Market elosed firm, w ith sales of
11,600 bales, as follows: July delivery, 9 92®
9 93c; August, 9 96®9 97c; September, 9 88®
9X9c; Oetoiler. 9 72®9 73c: November, 9 63®
9 64c; Decemlier, 9 65®9 66c; Januarv, 9 73®
9 74c; February, 9 *4®9ssc; Marclq 9 95c;
April, 10 07®10 08c.
The PoU* cotton reiort says: “Future
deliveries at the lowest " irnint had
lo*t 9-100 for August and September,
and 6 to 7-100 for the later months, but
toward noon tliev assumed more firmness anil
then rallied 5 to 3-100. At the third call sellers
held for higher prices, only 100 bales for April
were bought at 10 06c. Outstauding engage
ment* are daily Iteooming more narrowed,
ami will apparently soon be liquidated, when
the new crop will probably find more atten
tion. Compared with Liverpool, prices are
hehl rattier higher.”
Galveston, July 17.—Cotton dull; mid
dling 9%c; low middling 9%c; good ordinary
*%e; net receipts 93 bales, gross 93; sales 75
bales; stoek 11,072 bales.
Norfolk, July 17.—Cotton quiet; mid
dling 9%c; net receipts 31 bales, gross 31; stock
19.79s bales; sales none; exiiorts coastwise 30
bales.
Baltimore. July 17.—Cotton quiet; mid
dling 10c, low middling 9%C, good ordinary
B%c; net receipts 135 bales, gross 138; sales
none; stock 18,417 bales.
Boston, July 17.—Cotton steady; middling
10%*-. low middling 9%c, good ordinary
8 7-16 c: net receipts 79 bales, gross 288; sales
none; stock 6,280 bales; exports to Great Brit
ain 234 bales.
Wilmington, July 17.—Cotton dull and
nominal: middling 9%c; low middling 9%c:
good ordinary 7 15-ltSc; net receipts 1 bale,
gross 1; stock 1.193 bales.
Philadelphia. July 17.—Cotton dull; mid
dling 10%c, low middling 10c, good ordinary
*%■•; net receipts 42 bales, gross 113; stock
5,968 bales.
New Orleans. July 17.—Cotton dull;
middling 9%*; low middling 9%c; good ordi
nary 8 9-16 c; net receipts 453 bales, gross 992
k-jlcs 500 bales; stock 84,296 bales; exports
to Gnat Britain 5,955 bales.
Mobile, July it —Cotton dull anil nominal;
middling9%c; low middling %c; good onu
nary B%c; net receipts 1 bale, groec l; sales
none; stock 7,115 bales.
Memphis, July 17.—Cotton quiet; middling
! 9%c, low middling 9c, good ordinary B%c;
net receipts 3,1 bales, gross 36; shipments
] none; sales 100 bales; stock 15,171 bales,
j Augusta, July 17.—Cotton quiet; mid
j tiling 9%c, low middling 9%c; net receipts 13
\ bales, gross —: sales 11 bales.
Charleston. July 17.—Cotton dull and
j nominal; middling "10c, low middling 9%c,
j good ordinary 9%c; net receipts 3 bales, gross
] 3; sales lo bales: stock 2,463 bales.
New York, July 17.—Consolidated net re
; ceipts for all cotton ports 91*5 bales; e.\|>ortß,
| to Great Britain 5,989 bales.
PROVISIONS. GROCERIES. ETC.
New York, July 17.—Flour, southern,
steady: common to fair extra $4 10®5 00; good
! to choice ?5 05®6 62%. YVheat, cash %®%c
] higher, closing firm at about outside rates;
] No. 2 -pring, 41 09®I 10; ungraded red |1 00®
i I 18; ungraded white 41 03®1 08; No. 2 red
]4l 14 for July delivery. Corn, cash without
j quotable change; ungraded 49®58%c; South
ern yellow 65c; No. 2. 60c: July delivery, 58%
; tsß%e. Oats %®lc lower, dull and heavy:
No. 2, 39%®40e. llops firm. Coffee, spot dull
and weak; fair Rio, 9 1 s®9%c; No. 7 Rio, July
i delivery 7 25c, *|>t 7 40c. Sugar very steady;
] lo** active; Cuba muscovado 6%®6%c, Deme
| rara 6 7-16®7%c, St. t,roix 69-16 c, St. Dom in
, go 7 ,**, molasses sugar 6%c, centrifugal
] 7 9-bs*. fair to good refining 6 ]l-16**ui 13-16 c;
* refined steady—granulated 8 15-16 c. Molasses
-teady. Rice firm; moderate demand. Hides
firm; wet salted New Orleans anil Texas,
-elected, 50 to6o ]n>uu*ls, 9®loc. Wool steady:
domestic fleece, 30®46e; Texas 14®27c. Pork
higher and very strong; mess, on spot,
415 75®16 00. Middles nominal: long clear,
B%c. Lard somewhat excited and 25®30 points
higher; closing very strong; prime steam, on
*l)t, 9 12%®0 17%c, August delivery 9 03®
9 25c, Freights to Liverpool stronger;" cotton.
)M-r steam, 3-lad; wheat, per steam 4%d.
Baltimore. July 17.—oatsquiet lmt steady;
Southern, 42®47c; Western, white 44®47c;
ilitto mixed 41®45c; Pennsylvania, 42(a,4(5*.
Provisions closed dull: Muss i>ork. 416 50.
Bulk meats—shoulders ami clear rib sides,
packed, Se and B%'c. Bacon—shoulders, B%c;
clear rib sides, 9%c. Hams, 14%®lfie. Lard,
rt'lined KB%c. Coffee easier and dull; Rio car
! goes, ordinary to fair, 8%®9%c. Sugar firm;
A soft, B%e. Whisky quiet at 41 16%®117.
Freights dull and unchanged.
Chicago, July 17.—Flour steady and un
changed. Wheat, regular strong a'n*l higher;
41 U3%ia.l 03% for July delivery; No. 2 Chicago
-pring 41 03%®1 (81%'; No. 3 Chicago spring
Mo; No. 2 red winter 41 07%. Corn generally
unchanged; some salesratlier higher; 52%cfo’r
cash arid July delivery. Oats firmer; 33%c
for cash; 33 s *c for July delivery. Pork mode
rately active aud higher; 414 sa®l4 60 for cash
and July delivery. Lard active, firm and
higher; 8 90c for cash and July delivery. Bulk
meats higher and in fair demand; shoulders
6%c. short rib 7%c, short clear Sc. Whisky
steady and unchanged.
Cincinnati, July 17.—Flour firmer; family
44 60**5 00; fancy 25®5 75. Wheat strong
and higher; No" 2 red winter 41 06% on sjiot;
41 06'.. fur July delivery. Corn easier at 52®
■Vi; ,1% Gats dull at 36c. Provisions —Pork
firmer; jobbing at 415 50. Lard firmer at 8 50c.
Bulk Meats stronger; shouldurs 6%c; clear
ribs 7%c. Bacon firmer; shoulders T%c; clear
ribs 7%c; clear sides 9%c. Whisky firm at
41 13. >ugar firmer; not quotably higher.
Hogs firm; common and light, |4'2o®s 70;
packing and butchers, 4* 90®5 50,
Louisville. July 17.—Flour firm and un
changed. Wheat in fair demand; market firm;
oid No. 2 red winter?) 00® 1 02; new ditto9Bc®
41 00. Corn fairly active aud a shade higher;
No. 2 white 54c; ditto mixed, 51%0. Oats,
mixed Western, 35c. Provisloiii in fair de
mand: prices higher. Pork, new mess, 416.
Bulk meat*—shoulders 6%c, clear rib 7%c.
clear sides B%u. Bacon—shoulders 7%c, clear
rib SV*. Hums, sugar cured, 13c. Lard,
choice kettle. 12**. Whiskv unchanged,
St. Louis, July 17.—Flour firmer; top
grades 5e lietter. Wheat excited and higher;
No. 2 red fall 41 07%®1 10 for cash; 4108%®
1 10% for July; No. 3 red fall, 41. Corn weak
..L'i £l-,iy; 4K%<* for cash; 47®47%c for Au
gu*i. Wbuky .toady ;jt 41 14. Provisions
—Pork higher: jobbing fit 50, Bulk meats
stronger but slow; long clear and short rib
7 60c. Bacon in good demand and firmer:
nearly all sales on private terms. Lard
nominal.
Nf.w Orleans, July 17.—Flour steady; high
grade*,<44 50®5 75. "corn in fair demand;
mixed ami whito flqc. Oats scarce and firm
at 45®41m:. 4‘ork iu fair ilexuaini; prices
higher at 415. Lard steady; fierce Cc.iC; keg
Bulk meats higher; shouhlers #c. Bacon
—shoulders higher ut 7%c. Hums, sugar cured,
in fair demand; choice canvased, 13®13%c.
Whisky firm; YVcstern rectified, 41 05® 1 20.
Coffee steady and in fair demand; Rio 7%@
10? 4 c. Sugar iu good demand and tending up
ward: fair to fully fair, 7%®7%c: prime to
choice, 7 , s ®Bc. Molasses, fermenting and cen
trifaealduD. Kice dull: Louisiana, s®6c. Cot
ton feed oil doll and tower; crude. 36®37c:
yellow' refined. 42®,3v
NAVAL STORES.
New Y'ork, July 17.—Rosin quiet. Turiien
’ tine steady.
Chaklestoy, July j7.—^Spirits turpentine
quiet at 34c. Rosin, strained aud good strained
#l3O.
Wilmington, July 17.—Spirits turpentine
firm at 33%c. Rosin steady; strained fl 17%;
good siramed 41545. Tar firm at |1 50. Crude
turpentine steady; $1 25 for hard and ft 00
for yellow dip and virgin.
Northern Markets for southern Frnits
and Vegetables.
Special to the Morning Xomt.
Boston, July 17.—Pears, Bartlett, per box,
44 00®5 00; lic'onte, per box, 42 00®42 50.
tcaaqcs, Georgia, ;>erbox.7se.®42 00. Water
melons. |K*r 100. 410 00®25 00. Irish potatoes,
Norfolk, per barrel. |1 25® 1 50. Tomatoes,
Norfolk, j>er crate, 30®75c,
StHPßino fntrlliofttrr.
MINIATURE ALMANAC—THIS DAY:
Sun Rises 5 3M
SUNSET* 7;07
High Water at Ft Pulaski 5:59 a m,6:23 pm
Wednesday, July is, 1883.
ARRIVED YESTERDAY.
Steamship Nacoochee, Kempton, New Y'ork
—G M Sorrel.
Steamship City of Savannah. Catharine.
Philadelphia—G M Sorrel.
Schr E H Cornell, YVilev, Bath. Me, ice to
Knickerbocker Ice Co—Master.
Steamer Katie, Berill, Augusta and way
landings—Jno Lawton.
ARRIVED AT TY'BEE YESTERDAY.
Bark Minnie Grav Bn. Burrill, Hamburg-
Master.
CLEARED YESTERDAY.
Steamship Win Lawrence, Hooper, Balti
more—Jas B YVest & Cos.
Bark Louise (Ger), Schroeder. Hamburg—
Syberg-Peter9en & Cos.
Bark Norma (Ger), Arfraann, Sydney, N S W
—\Y ilder A Cos.
SAILED YESTERDAY.
Steamship Wm Lawrence. Baltimore.
DEPARTED Y'ESTERDAY'.
Steamer St Nicholas, Fitzgerald, Fernan
dina—YYiMHbridge A Harriman.
Steame”lary Fisher. Giiison, Cohen’s Bluff
—Master.
MEMORANDA.
Tybee, July 17. 6:15 pin—Passed up. steam
ships Nacoochee, City of Savannah: bark
Minnie Gray (Br); schr E JI Cornell.
Wind SW, light; fair.
Later—Passed out, steamship Wm Law
rence.
New Y'ork. July 17—Arrived, Roanoke, City
of Atlanta, Benefactor, Salier.
Arrived out. steamers Schiedam, Odor; ship
Carin; barks Aagat, Laugen, Vigitant.
Bristol. July 6—Arrived, Carl von Dublin,
Brunswick.
I.ibau. June 26—Arrived, bark Nord Amer
ika, Terjensen, Savannah.
Norrkoping. June 30— Arrived, bark Viator.
Gunders*‘ii, .Savannah.
Palma de Majorca, April 11—Arrived, Marie
Isaliel, Pons, Savannah.
Keval, June 29—Arrived, Meteor, Jensen,
Savannah.
RECEIITS.
Per and Savannah Railway,
July 17—30 caddies tobacco, 20 boxes tobacco,
1 car cattle, 30 buckets axle grease, 4 casks
beer, 1 bale hides, and mdse.
Per Savannah. Florida and Western Rail
way, July 17—1 bale cotton. 29 cars lumber,
938 bids rosin, 638 bbls spirits turpentine, 24
cars melons, 1 car iron, 10 bbls rice, 161 sacks
oats, 3 bbls flour, 13 sacks rice, 1 organ, 1 en
gine, 8 bales hides, 20 bales wool, and mdse.
Per Central Railroad, July 17—70 bales cot
ton. 7,574 watermelons, 700 sacks cotton seed
meal, 631 sacks corn, 251 crates fruit, 74 boxes
drugs, 200 caddies tobacco, 63 bales yarns, 60
bbls tallow, 35 coils rope, 32 lulls spokes, 30
cases yeast powder, 22 bills willowware, 22
bbls twine, 19 empty beer kegs, 12 cases shoes,
9 bales bides, 11 bales wool, 1 sack wax, 1 lot
li b goods, 7 pkgs mdse, lalwxes tobacco, 2 jars
snufl, 1 box jelly, 1 box li h goods, 1 Ik>\ sun
dries, 5 cases salmon, 1 tee wax, 2 boxes books,
1 case demestics, 1 bale rags, 12 cars telegraph
poles. 1 bale mattresses, 8 cars railroad iron, 6
cars staves, 12 cars lumber, 152 bbls rosin, 144
bbls spirits turpentine, 2 crates eggs. 2 coops
chickens, 1 old boiler, 1 pair shafts.
EXPORTS.
Per bark Louise (Ger), for Hamburg—l,6so
bids spirits turpentine, containing 87,792 gal
lons; 414 bbls rosin, weighing 168,645 pounds.
Per steamship YVm Lawrence, for Balti
more—l 96 bales cotton, 600 bbls rice, 822 bbls
naval stores, 20,000 watermelons, 302 pkgs
mdse.
I’er bark Norma (Ger), for Sydney, N S W—
-1,191 pieces pitch pine lumber, measuring
180,4:n superficial feet; 33,286 pieces pitch pine
flooring, measuring 249.719 superficial feet.
PASSENGERS.
Per steamship City of Savannah, from Phila
delphia—John A Turner, C S Skinner, 51 D
Wartfey, W O Thacher, Miss O Timelier, EL
Chandler.
Per steamship Wm Lawrence, for Balti
more—Rev C II Carson Jr, Mrs L B Cox, Miss
Agnes J Ryan, N England, .1 1! Johnson, John
Falconer, T II Hodgkms, Ilohdn DeLyon, E C
Brogan.
l’er steamship Nacoochee, from New York—
C McAlpin and wife, A S Slocum, J Jones Jr,
Miss 11 Nord, M Marks, T Bovle. II L Philps
and wife, 1 B \\ ilkinsou, A Wilkinson, Mrs
McDonald, R Kolliston, It Collins, II J Reiser,
K B Hilliard, S S Freidlin, B Schener, G Cos
ens, A Gogorza, J O’Kief, Sarah Anderson
(col'd), and 1 steerage.
CONSIGNEES.
Per Charleston and Savannah Railway,
July 17—FordgOffice, II Mvcvs * lire.,, 1 1: K
A la* 11!or, YVoodbridge & 11, A J Miller A Cos!
C 11 Carson, D cox.
Per Savannah. Florida aud Western Rail
way, July 17—Fordg Office, It B Reupard.
A Ehrlich, 11 Myers A Bros, M Y' Henderson,
Lippmau Bros, Kieser A S. S G Haynes A Bro,
Mcinhard Bros A Cos, M Ferst A Cos, H Solo
mon A Son, Jno J McDonough A Cos, A Lcfller.
Saussy, II A If, Dale. 'V Al o, Lndden AB.
A Einstein’s soffi., Lee Roy Myers, t E Stulls,
F M Hull, Holcombe. G A Cos, A H Champion,
T P Bond, diamond M, W s Hawkins, Pea
cock, H A Cos, D C Bacon A Cos, Y\ r C Jackson,
Y\' W Chisholm, Jl’ Williams A Cos, Bald
win A Cos, C L Jones, II F Grant A Cos, But
ler A S.
Per Central Railroad, July 17—Fordg Agt,
Putzel AH, A H Champion, Crawford AL,
S G Haynes A Bro, II Solomon A Son. Savan
nah Guano Cos. C II Carson, A Einstein’s Sons,
A Leffler, J B Reedy, Branch A C, Lovell A L,
F Morgan A Cos, K A Schwarz, Rieser AS,
Lee Roy Myers, Weed A C, M Y' Hendereon,
YV B Mell A Cos, Meinhard Bros A Cos, S Guck
enlieimer A Son. 11 Myers A Bros, L J Guil
martin A Cos, Peacock, 11 A Cos, D 1> Arden,
D C Bacon A Cos, Jos E Reilly, S S Keller,
Southern Tel Cos, Order, W M Lanier, Bren
nan A D, Garnett, S A Cos, W I Miller, J F
Wilson, Graham A H, J P Williams A Cos, M S
Baker, W C Jackson, Baldwin A Cos, B J Cub
lß-ipu, 11 M ( omer A Cos, YVoodbridge A 11.
Per steamship uttv *>f Savannah, from Phila
delphia— E J Acosta, Dt Haoon A Cos, A J
Baldwin, W F Barry, o Butler, I. L livck A
Son, A Campbell, W"F Chaplin Jr, Citv ’A Sub
Ry, Crawford A L, Jno Cunningham, Dicker
son A P, J A Douglass. M J Doyle, I. Fried,
Eckman A V, G Eckstein A Cos, Epstein A B,
I Epstein A Bro, Fret well A N, Frank A Cos,
G C Gemunden, C I, Gilbert A Cos, A Hanley,
II F Grant A Cos, S Guckenheimer A Son. (:‘s
Hess, Cooper Harris, G M Heiilt A Cos. Hay
wood, G A Cos, R s Jones, C Kolsliorn A Bro,
H Kuck, N Lang A Bro, A Lelller, Lovell A L,
Lilienthal A K, Lippmau Bros, Jas Eongliot
tom, Ludden A B, W B Mell A Cos, W M .Mills,
A Minis A Sons, J li Mehrtens, Mohr Bros,
II Myers A Bros, E I. Neidlinger. Son A Cos, G
N Nichols, Jno Nicolson, Jas O'Byrne, Jas
Kay, Jno ltourke, II Sanders, 11 L Schreiner,
Edw Selims, J T Sliuptrine, Southern Ex Cos,
.1 S Silva, E M Towns (care Wm Hunter A
Son), P Tuberdv, L M YVarlield, D Weisbein,
Weed A C, A .Vl A C W West, Agent steamer
Katie, YVoodbridge A 11, S, F A W Ry agent,
C' R R agent.
Per steamship Nacoochee. from New Y'ork—
YV E Alexander A son, E J Acosta, Allen A E,
G W Allen, A It Altmaycr A Cos, C Andrew,
J J Andrew, Gen It 11 Anderson, Branch A C.
O Butler, Bendheini Bros A Cos, J G Butler, J
Belsinger, T 1* Bond, J A Bremer. C If Carson,
B J Cubbeilge, Crawford A 1.. J A Douglass,
Chess, Carlev A Cos, J Cohen, J T Cohen, E M
Connor, Alf Champion, W II Chaplin, E li
Chipman, M .1 Dovle, Paul Decker, W Diers,
J Derst, A Doyle, l)aie. W A Cos, Dickerson A
I’, Eckman A V, G Eckstein A Cos, M Entlo
nian, Einstein A L. I Epstein A Bro. J Ein
stein, Epstein A B, Frank A Cos, A Frieden
berg A Cos, M Ferst A Cos. I I. Falk A Cos, E
Fried, Fretwell A N, J Fernandez, .1 II Fur
ber, C I. Gilbert A Cos, S Guckenheimer A Son,
Gray A O’B, Graham A 11. J Gorham, W M
Gibbons, FL George A Cos. Mrs E K Gordon,
M Goliusky, L s Gazan, I. F Goodsell, S Hox
ter, Holcombe, G A Cos, s G Haynes A Bro, C
Hopkins, !Y Hanley, Haines A'S, Jlt Ilalti
wanger, J R Hamlet. M llogan, I) Hogan,
Harden Bros, G M Heiilt A Cos, J M Hender
son, C M lliilsman, Ilyines Bros A Cos, J A
Ilerscliback, S Krouskoff, Jno Kuck, E La
biche, A I-elller, Jno Lyons, Lilienthal A K,
Lippmau Bros, Lovell & L, Ludden A B, M
Laviii.N Lang A Bro, D li Lester, I. Lippmau,
li H Levy. Meinhard Bros A Cos, Mohr Bros,
Lee ltoy Myers, J McGrath A Cos, II Miller, 11
Myer, B F McKenna, 11 Myers A Bros, Miller
A S, F Morgan A Cos, F H Mclntosh, P E Mas
ters, McKenna A YY'. Meincke A E, I) R My
ers, \Y' li Mell A Cos, E E Neidlinger, Son A Cos.
est Jno Oliver, Rev T O'Hara, Palmer Bros,
G S Owens, G YV Parish. 1) Porter, I’auo, P A
Cos, Pavlo Pano, Putzel .V 11. J B Reedy, P
Posted. Russak A Cos, C D Rogers, J 11 Ruwe,.
J Rosenheim A Cos, J Ray, D J ltyan. Rich A
M. YV F Held, A Kobidcr", Jos A Roberts A Cos.
H Solomon A Son. Solomons A Cos. H Silver
stone, Savannah Cotton Press Association, Sa
vannah Art Cos, P B Springer, S, F A YV Ry.
E Selims, Savannah P P Cos, E A Schwarz, J‘s
Silva, Jno Sullivan. E A Schwerin, ssolomon,
Snyder A G, E A M Schroder, II Sanders, M
Schwatzbaum. s < Si hwatzbaum. Singer Mfg
Cos, L C Strong, 11 Stuck. Southern Ex Cos. J T
Thornton, It \Y' Terry, It H Tate in, E Thomas,
P Tuberdv, J C Thompson, Telephone Excng,
A Y'etsburg, G S Y'an Horn, A M A l' YY’ YY'est,
Weed AC, D YY'eisbein, Wylly AC, L YY
YY'ortsmau, Ga A Fla 1 S 11 Cos,
A Generous Uncle.
Bradford (England) Observer,
X somewhat notoworthy event took
place at the Girlington Hotel, Girlington,
on Monday night, at a party given by Mr.
Benjamin Hammond, of YV aimer V illas,
Bradford, in celebration of his seventy
fifth birthday. The party consisted of
about sixty of Mr. Hammond's relatives,
and thirtyßwo of these, who are nephews
and nieces of Mr. Hammond, were pie
sented, greatly to their surprise and de
light, with £740 each, the total amount
reaching the sum of x23,0h0. It has been
the custom of Mr. Hammond to give an
annual birthday party to his relatives,
or for them to entertain him, and on
sevoial of tneso occasions previ
ously he has presented large sums of
money to them—indeed, he uas disposed
of upward of £12,000 in this way. Mr.
Hammond is without children, and his
wife not long ago. in imitation of his ex
ample, distributed between £4,000 and
£5,000 to tlje members of her own family*
Between iuem, Mr. and Mrs, Hammond
have distributed more than £40,000 among
their relatives during the past few years.
Mr. Hammond, who acquired his wealth
in Bradford’s palmiest days, was former
ly in the wholesale cattle-dealing busi
ness, but he has lived in retirement for
some time past. He was born aimoituexi
door to the Girlington Hotel, where the
distribution took place, aud his father—
who was a working man—founded a fam
ily which is now most numerous and pros
perous.
The secret of the univer-al success of
Brown’s Iron Bitters is owing to the fact
that it is the very best iron preparation
wade. By a thoioguh aud rapid assimi
lation with the blood it reaches every part
of the body, giving health, strength and
endurauce to every portion. Thus begin
ning at the foundation it builds up and
restores lost health. It does not oontain
whisky or alcohol. It will not blacken
the teeth. It does not constipate or cause
headache. It will cure dyspepsia, indi
gestion, heartburn, ■ sleeplessness, dizzi
ness, nervous debility, weakness, etc.
WOMEN WHO GO ARMED.
Lots of ’Em Carrying Pops—Actresses
Who Will Shoot—Boarding House
Terrors.
“You may think I atn exaggerating,”
said a New York detective to a reporter
of the Morning Journal, of that citv, “but
! there are more women who go armed than
men. Hundreds of cases come to the no-
I tice of the police department where
women get away with roughs and chase
burglars out of their houses that the peo-
Ele never hear of. Now, when a man
ears anything in the house at night he
throws up the window and yells for the
but a woman, if she’s a game one,
"slips her hand under the pillow and fetches
out a ‘pop.’ If the intruder is smart he
makes tracks, for a woman with a pistol
is the gamest thing on earth.”
“What kinds of pistols do they carry?”
“All kinds; but the nickel plated Smith
& Wesson is most popular among them.
A woman never fires her weapon at long
range. She rushes close to the person she
wants to shoot, and thrusts the barrel
right into his clothes. She never takes
the chance of missing her aim. In everv
case brought to the notice of the depart
ment where a man has been shot by a
woman the clothing has been burned.
You’d hardly think it, but every other
woman who walks Broadway and Fifth
avenue, even in the most fashionable
thoroughfares, has a pistol concealed
about her.”
“Where does she carry it?”
“In the bosom of her dress, invariably.
This gives her a decided advantage over
a man, for she can whip out her weapon
before be can divine her motive. A gay
old beau tried to kiss a young, sweet-faced
girl at the corner of University place and
Fourteenth street. It was late at night,
aud the girl was returning from the store
where she was employed as a saleslady.
He had been annoying the girl lor some
time. Finding it impossible to resist his
gross importunity without creating a
scene, she said to him, ‘1 will give you a
kiss 011 one condition.’ ‘Name it!’ he ex
claimed rapturously. ‘Meet me here at
this hour to-morrow,’ said she. He kissed
her and she passed on. Prompt to the
minute he was at his post the following
night. The girl came a moment later,
and the old codger hastened to embrace
her. She let him get his arm around her
waist, and then, drawing a tiny pistol
from her bosom, she shot her venerable
lover in the hip. Being well known in
the clubs, the man refused to make known
the identity of his fair assailant, and, as
he recovered, the matter was dropped.”
“L*o actresses carry revolvers?”
“Many of them do. Clara Morris is
proficient in the use of the pistol, and is
said to have one always within reach. Ada
Dyas is also a lirst-rate shot, and even
had occasion to employ her skill in Madi
son Park. She had lieeu pursued for a
considerable distance by several roughs.
The hour was late and no policeman was
in sight. Having warned the fellows iu
vain to cease their persecution, she drew
her revolver and sent a bullet close enough
to the head of the foremost to make his
hair rise. The cowards took to their heels
and Miss Dyas has never been troubled
since. Suppose you heard of Mary Ander
son’s adventure, eh ?”
“No.”
“The last time she was in Leavenworth,
Kansas, she was pestered by the atten
tions ol a lot of military officers stationed
at the fort. These fellows have been in
the habit for years of visiting the theatre,
going behind the scenes in squads, and
making violent overtures to the women in
the cast of the piece. They lead idle
lives, draw big pay from the govern
ment, and as they spend all their
money iu Leavenworth they prac
tically run the town. When Miss Ander
son was out that way last vear she Yvas
besieged between the acts. "At first she
treated the bold soldiers with dignified
contempt, but when one of them ventured
to poke his nose into her dressing-room
she picked up her revolver, loaded with
blank cartridges, and blazed away. The
result was the ignominious flight of the
United .States army and the peaceful per
iormance of the remainder of the play.”
“How do you keep advised of these
matters ?”
“It is the business of the department to
know all about people in public as well as
private life, and the easiest people on
earth t*> keen track of are the actresses.
There is Modjeska, for example, sue never
appeared in public, even on the stage,
without being heavily armed, and at night
she slept with a brace of pistols under her
pillow. It would never occur to a woman
like that to look under her bed before re
tiring. She jumps in, pulls the cover
over her head, and takes her chances.
Patti is also a terror with her revolver,
and it is said that she is always around
when Nicolini gets into trouble. I’ve
heard it said that Clara Louise Kellogg
practices everv night by shooting at cats.
I’m told that it would take a live band of
Indians to capture her.”
“Did she ever shoot anybody?”
“1 believe not, but ha've no doubt that
she would if assaulted.”
“Isn’t the law enforced with respect to
carrying concealed deadly weapons?”
“Certainly, as ugainst men, but you
can understand that it would be exceed
ingly hazardous to search every lady
suspectedof having a pistol on her per
son. Nearly all the hoarding-house
keepers iu New York go armed, especi
ally the old-timers, and that is one reason
w hy the boarding-house beat is going out
of fashion.”
How Did the Handkerchief Get There?
Saturday Review.
The great Robert Iloudin went by roval
command to Saint Cloud to give a show
liefore Louis Phillippe and his family. In
the course oi this show he borrowed six
Handkerchiefs from the audience. Then
various members of the audience wrote
down on slips of paper the names of places
w hither they would like the handkerchiefs
to be transported. This done, the con
jurer asked the King to choose three of
these slips at random, and from the three
to select the place he preferred. “Come,”
said Louis Phillippe, “let us see what
is on this slip.” I should like them to be
found under one of the candlesticks on
the mantelpiece. “That is too easy for a
wizard; let us try again.” I should like
them to be found on the dome of the ln
valides. “That is too far; not for the
handkerchiefs, lmt for us. Ah! you will,
I fear, find it difficult to comply with the
request on the last slip.” The request
was that the handkerchiefs should be
found in the box of the last orange tree
on the right hand of the avenue at St.
Cloud.
The conjurer expressed his readiness to
comply with the request, and the King
immediately sent off a party of men to
keep guard over the orange tree. The
conjurer put the handkerchiefs under a
bell of thick glass, waved his hand, took
up the hell, and showed a white dove in
place of the handkerchief. Then the
King, w ith a skeptical smile, sent orders
to the head gardener to open the box of
the orange tree chosen, and to bring
whatever he might find there. “Si toute
fois illy trouvequelque chose.” This was
done, and presently there was brought
in an iron coffer covered with rust.
“Y\ T ell,” cried the King, “here we have a
coffer. Are the handkerchiefs in it?”
“Yes, sire,” replied Robert Iloudin, “they
have been there a long time.” “A long
time, when it was only a quarter of an
hour since they were given to you?”
“What, sire, would he the use of magic if
it could not perform impossible feats?
Y'our Majesty will be surprised when I
prove to you that the coffer and its con
tents have been in the box of the orange
tree for sixty years.”
The King now observed that a key was
needed to qpen the box, and Robert Hou
din asked him to take the key which
was hung by a ribbon around the white
dove’s neck. This was a key as rusty as
the cotter which it opened, and the first
thing found in the cotter was a parohment
bearing these words: “To-day, June 6,
178*1. This iron coffer, holding "six hand
kerchiefs, has been placed amid the roots
of an orange tree by me. Balsamo,
Count of Cagliostro, to aid the accom
plishment of a magical feat which will be
done this day sixty years before Louis
Phillippe of Orleans and his family,” Be
low the parchment lay a packet sealed
with Uagliostro’s seal, which was well
known to the King, and in the packet
were the six borrowed handkerchiefs.
“Ce tour ” says Roliert Iloudin, and we
can well believe it, “me valut de vifs an
plauuissements.”
A good fish story is good, of course, and
we all believe it w ith innocent simplicity
and unadulterated enjoyment, but when
we arc asked to believe that a heavey
shower in .Missouri covered set'eral acre's
six inches deep with cattish, we simplv
say that the weather is too hot for the ex
ertion of believing it .—Hartford. Post,
Hqn;e Items*
- ‘*Aii yuaeowu rault
It you remain sick when you <*au
Get hop bitters that never— Fail.
The weakest woman, smallest child,
and sickest invalid can use hop bitters
with safety and great good
Old men tottering around from Rheuma
tism, kiauey troubles or any weakness
will be almost new by using hep bitters,
My wife and daughter were wade
healthy by the use of hup hitters, and I
recommend to my people.—Methodist
Clergyman.
Ask any good doctor if hup
Bitters are not the best faußlv medicine
On earth,
Malarial {ever, Ague and Biliousness
will leave every neighborhood as soon as
hop bitters arrive.
“My mother drove the paralysis and
neuralgia all out of her system with hop
bitters.— Editor Oswego Sun ,
Keep the kidneys healthy with hop bit
ters and you need not fear sickness.
Ice water is rendered harmless and
more refreshing and reviving with hop
bitters in each draught.
The vigor of youth for the aged and in
firm in hop hitters.
Jfutintra RrmrDiro
AI 11 fIS THE TIME I
rail W ™ CURE
■lll 11 SKIN HUMORS.H
IT is at this season when the Pores open
freely and the Perspiration is abundant
! that Disfiguring Humors, Humiliating Erup
! tions. Itching Tortures, Salt Rheum or Ecze
: ma. Psoriasis, Tetter, Ringworm, Baby Hu
! mors. Scrofula, Scrofulous Sores, Abscesses,
and Discharging YVounds, and every species
] of Itching, Scaly, and Pimply Diseases of the
Skin and Scalp are most speedily and oconomi
cally cured by the CTTicrBA Remedies.
IT IS A FACT.
Hundreds of letters in our possession (copies
I ot which may be had by return mail) are our
I authoritv for the assertion that Skin, Scalp,
and Blood Humors, whether Scrofulous, Ini
herited. or contagious, may NOW be perma
nently cured by Ccticura Resolvent, the
! new Blood Purifier, internally, and Cuticura
and Cuticura Soap, the great Skin Cures
i and Beautiflers, externally, in one-half the
i time and at one-half the expense of anv other
1 season. .
I HAVE BEEN
I Connected with the drug business for twentv
I years and have handled every blood purifier
] and remedy of any consequence for the treat
j ment of Blood, Skin and Scalp Diseases, and
unhesitatingly say that no system of remedies
ever devise*l or compounded so completely
and thoroughly eradicates the diseases for
which thev are intended as the Cuticura
Remedies." Many remarkable cures have
I come to my knowledge, and I feel safe in
! warranting satisfaction if directions are fol
lowed. ( HAS. H. MORSE, Druggist.
Hoilistox, Mass.
CUTICURA RESOLVENT,^
The uew Blood Purifier, expels disease germs
from the blood ami perspiration, and thus re
moves the cause. Cuticura, the great Skin
Cure, instantly allays Itching ami Inflamma
tion, clears the Skin and Scalp, heals Ulcers
and Sores, restores the Complexion.. Cuti
cuka Soap, an exquisite Skin Beautifler, is
indispensable in treating Skin Diseases, and
for rough, chapped, or greasy skin, black
heads, blotches, anti baby numors. Cuticura
Remedies are the only infallible Blood Puri
llers ami Skin Beautincrs. Sold by druggists.
Cuticura, 50 cents; Resolvent, 41; Soat, 25
cents.
Potter Drug and Chemical Cos., Boston.
A 1 Sanford’s Radical
mCure cleanses the nasal
passages of foul mucus,
the senses of
’mell, tast>*. ami licar
iiig when affected, frees
bronchial tubes 01 offensive matter, sweetens
and purifies the breath, stops the cough and
arrests the progress of Catarrh towards Con
sumption. Complete Treatment, witli In
haler, 41. Ask for Sanford’s Radical
Ccre. Trade supplied by LIPPMAN BROS.,
Savannah, Ga.
Cotton (Sttto.
To PLANTERS.
“This is the Perfection of my forty years Practical
Experience and Study.” Israel F. Brown, President.
THE IMPROVED
-CffIBO
[COTTON GIN)
FEEDER |&| CONDEHSER.I
FULLY GUARANTEED!
Strong, Simple, Durable, not Complicated, easily
managed, light running with steady motion.
—LOW PRICES. —
1 f t f
fjj | 1 1 j| >
f ?
£) 7 ■ fl) BrgwnCattonGrn Cos., jR f x \
li Irl NeV *' ond ° n ' C *' ** -j* j ®
n**The Brush is driven by belts at both ends.^%
The cylinders are large and stiff, with cast steel
>earings running in anti fl ietion metal boxes.
The saws are made by our own machinery from the
lest Sheffield steel, ot Thus. Firth & Soil, the teeth
Kill not bend, break off, or turn back.
Iron pulleys throughout, brush strongly made, with
idjustable boxes and oust steel journals.
The machine in all parts is well proportioned, strong
ron frame, superior w orkmanship, best material, and
one finish; adjusted to produce best possible results.
Notwithstanding the many added improvements
■hese PRICES will bo kept as heretofore published, via
Rise* Prises of With Self- I With Self,
bizes. Gins. Feeder or Feeder and
Condenser. J Ootwtemer,
"so saw 875 00 8100 00 I tlw, 00
85 “ 87 f>o 115 00 144 50
4 “ 100 oo isa m I i6r> oo
45 “ 112 50 145 00 I 17 so
60 “ 125 00 180 00 195 00
00 “ 140 00 180 00 | 820 00
79 “ 150 00 208 00 I 252 00
“o_y 180 00 _232 00 _| 284 00
tWMore Brown Gins have been sold during the past
four seasons than any other two makes combined
N. B. Our manufacturing anil shipping facilities
are unequalled. Full descriptive circular with hun
dreds of planters testimonials sent on application.
Correspondence Solicited, address,
BROWN COTTON GIN Cos., New London, CL
C. H. DOItSETT, Agent, Savannah, Ga.
(flcrtvic Srlto.
DR. CHEEVER’B ELECTRIC BE rTTwTT*
generator, is matte expressly for the cure ol
derangements of the procreative organs,
whenever any debility of the generative or
gans occurs, from whatever cause, the con
tinuous stream of ELECTRICITY permeating
through tin* parts must must restore them to
healthy action. There is no mistake alxmt
this instrument. Y’enrsof use have tested it,
and thousands of cures are testified to. YVcak
ness from Indiscretion, Incapacity, Lack of
Y’igor, Sterility—in fact, any troubles of these
organs is cured. Do not confound this with
electric belts advertised to cure all ills from
head to toe. This is for the ONE specified
purpose. For circulars, giving full informa
tion, address CHE EVER ELECTRIC BELT
CO., 103 YY'ashington street, Chicago.
Barrel o.
syjgfbdsuf
Mueirul.
JLYON&HEALYd
ie & Monroe Sts..Chicago. ygj
send prepaid to snv address their
AND CATALOGUE, f
Bi>3, YOU pages, 210 Engravings!
Qstruuients, Suit*, Capa, Bells, J*fßL
pons, Epanlets, Cap- Uinta,
d$ Drum Mtyor* Staffs. and
, Sundry Rand OulfaU, Repairing Jm !■
*rU/ al** Includes Instruction and F.i- //
si for Amateur Bauch, and a Catalog
vi v-ooioe Baud Music.
il.uhnafio.
Charleston & Savannah Ry. Cos.
Savannah, Ga„ May 12, 1883.
/"COMMENCING SUNDAY, May 13th, at
\J 5:25 am, and until furlhet . .:cc, trains
will arrive auu dejiart as follows:
tiding North-Trains 47 and i3.
Leave Savannah 4:15 pni 8:45 a m
Arrive Charleston 9:30 pm 11:45 a m
Leave Charleston 8:30 p m 10:55 a m
Arrive Florence 1:20 am 3:00 pm
Leave Wilmington 6:40 a m 8:00 p m
Arrive Weldon 12:50 pm 2:25 am
Arrive Petersburg 3:lopm am
Arrive Richmond 4:40 pm 6:00 am
Arrive Washington 9:4opm 10:30 am
Arrive Baltimore 11:40 p m 12:00no’n
Arrive Philadelphia 3:00 ara 3:00 p m
Arrive New York ... 6.-30 a m 5:30 pm
Coming South—Trains 48 and. ,2.
Leave Charleston 5:25 am 4:00 pm
Arrive Savannah 10:00 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; bvB:4s am
train Vo all points North via Richmond.
For Augusta, Beaufort and Fort Royal.
Leave Savauuah 6:45 am and 4:15 pm
Arrive Ycmassee 9:00 a m and 6:40 p m
Arrive Beaufort 7-45 pm
Arrive Port Royal 8:00 pm
Leave Port Roval 6 -00 am
Leave Beaufort 6:15 am
Arrive Savannah 9:20 p m and 10:00 a m
A first-class Dining Car attached to all
trains, affonliug passengers a fine meal at
small expense.
Pullman Palace Sles era thro igh from Sa
vannah to Washington and New York.
For tickets, sleeping car reserv < 1 sand all
other information, apply to William Bren.
Ticket agent, 22 Bull sticet, and at Charles
ton and Savannah Railway Ticket Gflice at
Savannah, Florida and Western Bail wav De
pot- C. 3. GADSDEN, Sup’t.
S. C. BQTWIOH, G. f, Ai *
Pm CSOODO.
GRAY&OBRIEN
THE GREAT CLOSING SALE
OF
SUMMER DRESS GOODS,
WHITE GOODS,
BUCK AND COLORED SMS,
BLACK SILK GRENADINES,
—COMMENCING—
THIS MONDAY MORNING.
The following lines of goods at greatly reduced prices:
3,000 yards PERSIAN LAWNS reduced from 35c. to 25c.
3,200 yards PERSIAN LAWNS reduced from 50c. to 35c.
- vart | s FRENCH NAINSOOK, 50 inches wide, reduced from 00c. to 4oc.
yards IRENCH NAINSOOK reduced from 75c. to 60c. (50 inches wide.)
yards FRENCH NAINSOOKS reduced from 85c. to 65c. (50 inches wide.)
8,000 yards I RENCH MUSLIN, 40 inches wide, at Bc.
8,000 yards FRENCH MUSLIN, 25c. goods, reduced to 12V^c.
142 pieces REAL INDIA LINEN $2 60, $2 80 and $3; goods we have sold all this
season at 4oc. and oOc. IV e have bunched the lots and marked them all down to 25c.
HEAVYBLACK GROS GRAIN SILKS
5,000 yards heavy extra quality GROS GRAIN at sl.
5,000 yards Supertine Heavy GROS GRAIN SILK at $1 25.
500 yards extra Super, quality High Lustre at $1 50.
5,000 yards extra Superfine goods, worth $2 50; as a job we cut them at $1 85.
All Wool Plain Colored Nun’s Veiling.
7,000 yards just opened, goods that w r e have sold during the season at 45c. and 50c.,
all marked down to 27c.
3,000 yards VV HITE and COLORED \ EILINGS, $1 goods, 45 inches wide, marked
down to 6!)c. Black goods in the same proportion.
BLACK SILK GRENADINES.
The entire stock of $2 50 and $3 goods all cut down to $1 50.
CENTS’ SILK UMBRELLAS.
72 GENTS’ SILK UMBRELLAS $2 50 each
72 GENTS’ HEAVY SILK TWJU ' *™ IIS I J ELLAb $3 2.) each.
72 GENTS’ HE a w wi.iv UMBRELLAS at $4 each. The above goods are the
i„.<. wargarn ever offered by us.
7,500 yards ELASTIC CHECK NAINSOOKS, 32 inches wide, 25c. goods, cut down
to 12c;c. •
8,000 yards FRENCH PROULES, 40 inches wide, have been sold at 25c., now cut
to 12^c.
7,000 yards 4-4 SHIRTING and other Cambric, 12J4c. goods, all cut to 10c.
4,000 yards PRINTED 4-4 LAWNS, 12%c. goods, at Bc.
5,000 yards REAL FRENCH ORGANDIES, Dark Cachmere colors, cost ‘2714c., we
have cut them down to 10c.
Linen Drilling for Men and Boys' Wear.
2,000 yards all put in a heap at 12)4c.
TO OPEIY THIS WEEK.
300 pair BOYS’ NAYY BLUE PANTS (short) at $1 25 per pair.
An entirely new line of LADIES’ UNDERWEAR just opened.
C i 1 1 A V (feO’BRIEN.
tTinitlto, Satrljclo, Qrte.
SARATOGA TRUN KS
SARATOGA TRUNKS!
Those contemplating a trip to the Mountains or Seaside, will find it to their interest to
examine our stock of
TRUNKS & SATCHELS.
Ladies Saratoga Trunks, in Leather Zinc
FROM THE LOWEST TO THE BEST GRADES.
LADIES’ FINE GRAIN LEATHER SATCHELS I
Gents’ Sole Leather Trunks, all Sizes.
GENTS’ LEATHER COVERED MONITOR TRUNKS.
Gents’ Fine Grain Leather Satchels.
AT THE SHOE STORE OF
JOS. ROSENHEIM & CO.,
141 CONGRESS STREET.
818 SATCHELS!
FOR LADIES AND MISSES.
Ladies’ & Gents' Traveling Satchels & Bags.
Gents’ Sole Leather Trunks, all Prices.
W. B. MELL & CO.,
MARKET SQUARE. SAVANNAH, GA.
furniture and ffarpcto.
MOTHS ! IVIOTHS !
CALL AT
Allen & Lindsay’s Furniture Emporium,
169 AND 171 BROUCHTON STREET
JUST ARRIVED,
CEDAR CHESTS ! CEDAR CHESTS!
cJXSyx i&; afts^r.K„s'iuro e „r r w or w,MT cMh “-
. A HIG DRIVE !
MAiansisaa“ra?***™*. mosquito nets, baby car.
hi A MAITI.X.S, and all other seasonable Goods marked low down,
as e?en Bto< * ° f FARLOR aud CHAMBER FURNITURE is just as complete
BARGAINS IN BRUSSELS CARPET AND WALL PAPERS!
•A-LLEPT Ac LIAU’iSAY.
3 (tipping.
OCEAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY
—FOR—
NEW YORK AND PHILADELPHIA.
Passage to New York.
CABIN no
EXCURSION i 32
STEERAGE lo
Passage to Philadelphia.
CABIN $lB
EXCURSION 30
STEERAGE 10
CABIN TO NEW YORK, VIA PHILA
DELPHIA 20
THE magnificent steamship* of this Com
pany are appointed to sail as foUows:
XO NEW YORK.
CHATTAHOOCHEE, Capt. E. H. Dag
gett, WEDNESDAY, July 18, at 5:00 r. if.
NACOOCHEE, Captain F. Kkmpton,
SATURDAY, July 21, at 7 p. m.
TALLAHASSEE, Captain W. H. Fisher,
WEDNESDAY', July 25, at 11:00 A. M.
CITY’ OF AUGUSTA, Captain K. S. Nick
erson, SATURDAY. July 28, at 1:80 P. m.
XO PHILADELPHIA.
CITY' OF SAVANNAH, Capt. J. W. CATHA
RINE, SATURDAY', July 21, at 7:00 p. m.
C s^Ti*' > ifn'f v C i <£ a|>t - s ’ L ' Nickerson,
SATL RDAI, July 28, at 1:00 r. m.
Through hills of lading given to Eastern and
Northwestern points and to porta of the United
Kingdom and the Continent.
For freight or passage apply to
G. M. SORREL, Agent,
City Exchange Building.
Merchants’ and Miners’ Transjiorta
tatiou Company.
FOR BALTIMORE.
CABIN PASSAGE *ls 00
SECOND CABIN 77
excursion
THE steamships of this Company are ap
pointed to sail from Baltimore for Savan
nah XV ERY FIVE DAYS at 3p. m., and from
Savannah for Baltimore as follows:
;v- £?v N . K : Captain J. C. Taylor,
MONDAY, July 23, at 10 A. M.
T - A - Hooper,
SATLRDAY, July 28, at Ip. m,
- O ;\ N v- K ’. Captain J. C. Taylor,
lIIUKSDAY, August 2, at 5:30 p. m.
Captain T. A. lloopy
TUESDAY, August 7, at 10:30 a "
Through bills ladino- to all points
West, afl the m a-iacturing towns in New
England- ana to Liverpool and Bremen.
'THpough pansenger ticket* issued to Pittsburg.
Cincinnati, Chicago, and all points West and
Northwest.
JAS. B. WEST <£ CO., Agents,
Boston and Savannah
STEAMSHIP CO.
FOR BOSTON DIRECT.
CABIN PASSAGE 820 OO
EXCURSION 33 OO
STEERAGE 12 OO
Through and Excursion Tickets
AT LOW RATES
To the principal
SUMMER RESORTS,
SEASHORE and MOUNTAIN, of
New England, Canada
and the Provinces.
The first-class iron steamships of this com
pany are appointed to sail every Thursday
from Boston at 3 P. M.; from Savannah as fol
lows :
GATE CITY', Capt. D. Hedge, July 19, at
6 p. M.
CITY OF COLUMBUS, Capt. S. E. WRIGHT,
July 26, at 11 a. m.
GATE CITY', Capt. D. Hedge, August 2, at
5:45 A. M.
THROUGH bills of lading given to New
England manufacturing points and to
Liverpool.
The company’s wharves in tioth Savannah
and Boston are connected with ail railroads
leading out of the two cities.
RICHARDSON & BARN ARD, Agents.
By Daylight to Florida and Bruns
wick, Georgia,
—VIA THE—
ISLAND KOUXE.
TICKETS UNLIMITED.
Comfort and Scenery Unexcelled!
The Swift Saloon Steamer
SX. NICHOLAS
1 EAVES,. Savannah every TUESDAY,
A THURSDAY a id SATURDAY atß A.M..
touching at thevanous landings on the line.and
arriving at Fernandina in the evening. Trains
leave Fernandina for .Jacksonville and points
on the Florida Transit and Peninsular Rail
road every morning. Returning, the steamer
leaves Fernandina for Savannah, via Bruns
wick, 011 SUNDAY', WEDNESDAY and FRI
DAY' MORNING, after the arrival of Jack
sonville train.
STEAMER 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.
Freights for St. Catherine’s, Doboy, Cane
Creek, St. Mary’s and Satilla river payable in
Savannab.
Freights not receipted for after twenty-four
hours of arrival will be at risk of consignee.
O. S. BENSON, Gen. Freight Agt.
WOODBEIDGE & HARRiMAN,
General Agents.
J. A. MERCIER, Gen. Pass. Agt.
Offices:
Corner Bull and Congress streets, at Osceola
Butler’s Drug Store, Savannah, Ga.
For Augusta and Way Landings.
STEAMER KAXIE,
Captain J. S. BEVILL
WJ ILL leave EVERY TUESDAY, at 6
V V o’clock P. M., for Augusta and way land
ings.
Positively no freight received or receipted
for aftei* 5 o’clock p. m.
All freights payable by shippers.
JOHN LAWTON,
Manager.
SEMI-YVEKKLY LINE
FOR COHEN’S BLUFF,
AND YVAY LANDINGS.
1 HIE steamer MARY FISHER, Captain W.
T. Gibson, will leave for above every
FRIDAY',BP. M. Returning, arrive BUNDA
NIGHT. Leave TUESDAY, at 9a. m. Re
turning, arrive THURSDAY, at 11 a. m. For
information, etc., apply to W. T. GIBSON,
Manager.
Wharf foot of Drayton street.
NEW YOR,.
—TO—
AMSTERDAM iND ROTTERDAM.
The first-class, full powered. Clyde-built
Dutc steamships of this line—AMSTERDAM,
ROTIEKDAM. SCHIEDAM, LEERDAM,
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
$26.
* ocEA,i
SAME RATES TO AMSTERDAM AND
ROTTERDAM.
H. CAZAUX, General Agent,
V South William street. New VnA
(fommiooiutt ftterrtianto.
£LAM JOHNSON. JOHN W. M’PHEKSON.
STEVE R. JOHNSON. JAMES B. WILBANKS.
Elam Johnson, Son & Cos.,
WHOLESALE GROCERS
—AND—
Commission Merchants,
Dealers in foreign and domestic
FRUITS, VEGETABLES and MELONS
in season, BUTTER, CHICKEN'S and EGGS,
Sweet and Irish POTATOES, 12 Decatur ami
13 Pine sts., ATLANTA, GA. P. O. Box 615.
CoßßignmenU and orders solicited.
Central & Southwestern R. Rs
Savannah. Ga., June 30. 1888.
ON and after SUNDAY' Jnlv 1, 1888, pas
senger trains on the Central and South
western Railroads and branches will run as
follows:
REAP DOWN, READ DOWN.
No. I- From Savannah, No. fit.
9:00 am Lv Savannah L%f :S0 p m
4:15 pm Ar Augusta Ar e :00 am
6:25 p m Ar Macon Ar 3:00 a m
11:20pm Ar Atlanta At 7:00 am
At Columbus Ar 1:50 pm
Ar - Albany Ar 4:05 pm
Ar WSedgevHle.... Ar 10:29 a m
Ar.. Eatonton Ar 13:30 p m
No. 16. from Avgusta, No. IS.
9:00 a m Lv ... Augusta Lv 7:Bopm
3:45 p m Ar—Savannah Ar 7:00 am
6:25 p m Ar—Macon Ar 3:00 am
11:20 pm Ar—Atlanta Ar 7:00 am
Ar Columbus Ar 1:50 pm
Ar... .Eufaula Ar 4:48 pm
Ar .. Albany Ar 4:ospm
Ar ... .Milledgeville Ar 10:29 a m
Ar Eatonton Ar 12:80pm
A't>. 4, From Macon. No. it.
7:30 p m Lv Macon Lv 8:15 a m
7:ooam Ar Savannah Ar B:4spm
6:ooam Ar Augusta Ar 4:lspm
Ar... Mifie’ville Ar 10:29am
Ar Eatonton Ar 12:80 p m
No. 1. From Macon. No. 101.
|9:35 am Lv Macon. ~ Lv ~
4:48 pm Ar Eufaula Ar
4:05 p 111 Ar . Albauy Ar
-Ye. S. From Macon. No. 15.
8:25 a m Lv... Macon ~~.Lv "
1:5o pm Ar . .Columbus . .Ar
No. 1. From Macon. No. .1. No. 51.
8:30 a 111 Lv Macon Lv 7:00 pm 8:15 am
12:55 prnAr Atlanta Ar 11:20 pm 7:00 am
No. 18. From Fort Valley. No. 27.
Lv Fort Valley.... ..Lv 11.-05 a m
Ar Ferry Arll:ssam
No. i. From Atlanta. No. i. No. St."
2:40 p m Lv.. Atlanta...Lv 9:30 pm 4:20 am
6:55 pmAr Macon Ar 6:16 an> 7:67 am
• • Ar Eufaula .Ar 4:48 pu. * :43 pm
• Ar..Albany...Ar 4:ospm 4:ospm
Ar. Cohiuibus.Ar l:supm 1:50 pm
Ar.Milled’vllle.Ar 10:29 a 111 10:29 a m
Ar Eatonton..Ar 12:30 p m 12:30p m
6:00 am Ar Augusta Ar 4:15 pm 4:15 pm
7:00 am Ar Savannah.Ar 3:45pm B:lspm
No. j, From Columbus. No. 16.
11:37 ainLv Columbus ..Lv ’. !
6:19 p m Ar Macon Ar
11:20 pm Ar ... Atlanta Ar
Ar Eufaula Ar
Ar ...Albany Ar
Ar Milledgeville Ar
Ar—Eatonton Ar
6:00 amAr Augusta Ar ... ...”
7:00 a m Ar Savannah Ar
No. !. From Kufaula. No. lOtT
12:01 pmLv .. .Eufaula ........ ,£v~ ’ ”
4:05 pmAr Albany Ar
6:45 pm Ar . Macon Ar
Ar Columbus Ar ... !
11:20 p m Ar ... Atlanta . Ar
Milledgeville Ar
Eatonton. Ar
6:00 am Ar Augusta Ar
7:00 ain Ar .Savannah Ar
No. 15. From Albany. No. 1007~
12:00noonL v... Albany Lv ~
4:43 p m Ar .. Eufaula Ar .
6:45pm Ar ...Macon Ar .
Ar Columbus Ar
11:20 pm Ar ... Atlanta Ar
Ar—Milledgeville Ar
Ar—Eatonton Ar
6:00 a m Ar—Augusta Ar
7:00 am Ar .. Savannah Ar
——— =- ttz —Mhda&mUe.
No. SO. From Katonton
o ru ... il i Hedge ville
Ar... .Columbus
Ar Eufaula
Ar Albany
11:20 p in Ar Atlanta
6:00 am Ar Augusta
7:00 am Ar Savannah
No. SO. From Perry. No. SB.
Lv... Ferry Lv" 2:45pm
Ar . . .Fort Valley Ar 3:35 pm
Local Sleeping Cars on all night trains be
tween Savannah and Augusta, Savannah and
Macon, Savannab and Atlanta.
I’ullman Hotel Sleeping Cars between Chi
cago and Jacksonville, Fla., via Cincinnati,
without change.
Connections.
The Milledgeville and Eatonton train rune
daily (except Monday) between Uordon and
Eatonton, and daily (except Sunday) between
Eatonton and Gordon.
Eufaula tram connects at Cuthbert for Fort
Gaines daily (except Sunday).
The Perry mail train between Fort Valley
and Ferry runs daily (except Sunday).
The Albany and Blakely mail train runs
daily (except Sunday) between Albany and
Blakely.
At Savannah with Savannah, Florida and
Western Railway; at Augusta with all lines
to North and East; at Atlanta with Air-Line
and Kcnucsaw Routes to all points North.
East and West.
Tickets for all points and sleeping car berth*
on sale at City Office, No. 20 Hull street.
G. A. Whitehead, WILLIAM ROGERS,
Gen. l'ass. Agt. Geu. Supt., Savannah
J. C. Shaw, W. F. SHELLMAN,
Gen. Trav. Agt. Supt. S. VV. It. R., Macon, Ga.
Savannah, Florida & Western Ry.
SUPERINTENDENT'S OFFICE, .
Savannah. May 11, 1888. \
ON AND AFTER SUNDAY, MAY 18,
1883, Passenger Trains on this road will
run as follows:
FAST MAIL.
Leave Savannah daily at 10:30 atn
Leave Jesup daily at 12:25 p m
Leave Waycross daily at 2:05 p 0;
Arrive at Callahan daily at 4:00 pm
Arrive at Jacksonville daily at 4:45 p m
Arrive at Live Oak daily (except
Sunday) at 6:00 pin
Arrive at New Branford daily (ex
cept Sunday) at 7:40 p m
Arrive at Valdosta daily at 4:25 p m
Arrive at Quitman daily at 5:05 pm
Arrive at Thoniasville daily at 6:10 p m
Arrive at Bainbridge daily at. . .8:45 pm
Arrive at CUattahoocliie daily at 9:30 p m
Leave Chattahoochie daily at 4:40 am
Leave Bainbridge daily at 5:30 am
Leave Thomasville dally at 8:06 a m
Leave Quitman daily at 9:13 a m
Leave V aldosta daily at 9:50 a m
Leave New Branford daily (except
Sunday) at 6:30 am
Leave Live Oak daily (except Sun
day) at 8:10 am
Leave Jacksonville daily at 9:30 a m
Leave Callahan daily at 10:15 a m
Arrive at Waycross daily at 12:10 p m
Arrive at Jesup daily at 1:60 p m
Arrive at Savannah daily at 3:40 p m
Between Savannah and Waycross this tram
Mops only at Fleming, Johnston’s, Jesup ant'
Blackshear. Between Waycross and Jack
sonville stops only at Folkston and Callahar..
Between Waycross and Chattahoochee stops
only at telegraph stations and on signal at
regular stations.
Pullman Palace Cars on this train between
Savannah and New Orleans daily.
This train connects at New Branford with
steamer Caddo Belle, leaving for Cedar Key
and Suwannee river points every Friday morn
ing 4 A. M arriving at Cedar Key 4 P. m.
ALBANY EXPRESS.
Leave Savannah daily at 4:00 p m
Leave Jesup daily at 6:30 p m
Arrive Waycross daily at 8:80 pm
Leave Dupont daily at 12:86 am
Arrive Thomasville daily at 6:45 a m
Arrive Albany daily at 11:15 a m
Leave Albany dailv at 4:15 p m
Leave Thomasville’ daily at 8:45 p m
Arrive Dupont daily at 11:63 p in
Arrive W aycross daily at 1:30 a m
Leave W'aycross dally at 2:00 a m
Arrive Jesup daily at 3:50 am
Arrive Savannah daily at 6:30 a m
Pullman Palace Sleepers between Savannah
and Thomasville daily.
Connection at Albany daily with pas
senger trains both ways on Southwestern
Railroad to and from Macon, Eufaula, Mont
gomery, Mobile. New Orleans, etc.
JACKSONVILLE EXPRESS.
Leave Savannab daily at 11:00 p m
Leave Jesup “ 3:lsam
Leave W' aycross “ 5:05 a m
Arrive at Callahan “ 7:05 am
Arrive at Jacksonville “ 8:00 am
Leave Jacksonville “ 6:45 pm
Leave Callahau “ 7:00 pm
Leave Waycross “ 9:85 pm
Arrive at Jesup “ 11:25 pm
Arrive at Savannah “ 3:45 am
Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars on this train
daily between Jacksonville and Washington,
D. C.
Passengers in Sleeping Cars for Savannah
are permitted to remain undisturbed until 6
o’clock a. m.
Passengers leaving Macon at 8:00 p ni con
nect at Jesup with this train for Florida daily.
Passengers from Florida by this train con
nect at Jesup with train arriving at Macon at
7:00 a m daily, making connection for points
West and Northwest.
Passengers for Brunswick via the East Ten
nessee, Virginia and Georgia Railroad, take
this tram, arriving at Brunswick at 5:35 a
m daily. Leave Brunswick 8:80 pm. Arrive
Savannah 3:45 a m.
Passengers from Savannah lor Gainesville,
Cedar Keys and Florida Transit Road (except
Fernandina) take this tram.
Passengers for the Florida Southern Rail
road via Jacksonville make close connection
at Palatka.
Mail boats of the People’s and Central Line
leave Bainltridge for Columbus on Tuesdays
and Saturdays at 12 o’clock noon.
Mail boats of People’s Line leave Chatta
hoochee for Apalachicola Sundays, and for
Columbus Tuesdays at 10 p in, after arrival of
train.
Mail Imats of Central Line leave Chatta
hoochee for Apalachicola Thursdays, and for
Columbus Saturdays at 10 p m, after arrival
of train.
Passengers for Pensacola, Mobile, New
Orleans, Texas, and trans Mississipp. points
make close connections at Chattahoochee
daily with trains of Pensacola and Atlantic
Railroad, arriving at Pensacola at 9:30 a.m.,
Mobile at 5:00 p. m., New Orleans at 10:25
p. m.
Connection at Savannah daily with Charles
ton and Savannah Railway for all points
North and East.
Connection at Savannah dailv with Central
Railroad for points West and Northwest.
Close connection at Jacksonville daily (Sun
days excepted) for Green Cove Springs, St.
Augustine, Palatka, Enterprise, Sanford and
all landings on St. John’s River.
B. & W. passenger trains leave Waycross
for Brunswick ana for Albany at 2 p m, from
passenger station of this company.
Through tickets sold and sleeping car berth
.ccommodations secured at Bren’s Ticket
Office, No. 22 Bull street, and at the Compa
ny’s Depot, foot of Liberty street. Tickets
also on sale at Levc & Alden’e Tourist Offices.
A restaurant hae been opened in the sta
tion at Waycross, am. :>bundant time will be
allowed for meals by all passenger trains.
J. S. TYSON, JAS. L. TAYLOR,
Master-Transp’n. Geu’l Pass. Agent
R. G-FI.EMING, Superintendent
(Cotton Jartovo.
T. W. ESTES. A. C. MCALPIN. F.C.GARMANY.
ESTES, McALPIN & CO.,
Cotton Factors
—AND—
Commission Merchants,
BAY 108 STREET, SAVANNAH. toA.