Newspaper Page Text
ffhe Ututf.
FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 1884.
Ctmtmernai.
SAVANNAH MARKET.
OFFICE OF THE MORNING NEWS, J
9avanna%, Ga.. April 3, 1894. 5 r. m.I
Cotton.—The market was firm, but quiet
and unchanged. The sales for the day were
107 hales. The official report of the day's
business at the Exchange was as follows:
The market opened at 10 a. m. firm and un
changed, with sales of 4 bales. At Ip.m. it
was firm, the sales being 57 bales. It closed at
4 p. m. firm with further sales of 46 bales.
The following are the official closing quota
tions of the Cotton Exchange:
Middling fair 11%
Good middling 11%
Middling 11 Vi
l.ow middling 10%
Good ordinary 10 3-16
Ordinary 9%
< (iinpiu .it ive Cotton Statement.
Receipts, Exports and Stock on hand Aprii. 3, 1884, and
FOR TIIK BAMS TIMS LAST TKAR.
mu. j ms.
Sea I Sea
* /stand. Upland. \ Inland. Upland.
Stock on hand September 1.. 15 j 4.238 60 j 5,3.81
Received to-day • 87! . 1,130
Received previously 9,230 641,947 11,63:;; 7.v,i,ii17
T0ta1,... 9,245 1 646,269 11,899 766,105
Exported to-day 507 1,617
Exported previously 9,189 632,610 11,4971 719,057
Total 0.189 633.117 ! 1.107 720,674
Stock on hand and on ship
board tills day 06 13,(52 202| 45,431
Rick.—There was a good inquiry, freely
met. the market continuing steady and un
changed. The sales for the day were 452 bar
rels. Appended are the official quotations of
the Board of Trade:
Fair 5 @5%
Good 6%@5%
Prime 6 @6%
We quote:
Rough—
Country lots . 9D@3 20
Tidewater ... ...... 1 25@1 40
Naval Storks.—There is nothing doing in
spirits turpentine, the market lieing dull and
prices weak. The sales for the day were 116
barrels. The official report of the market by
the Board of Trade was as follows: The
market opened dull at 29%0. for regulars;
sales 100 barrels. At 1 p. m. it was steady
at 29c. for regulars. It closed at 4 p. m. un
changed, with sales of 16 barrels. Rosins—
The market continues very quiet and un
changed. The sales for the day were 150 bar
rels at quotations. The official report by the
Board of Trade was as follows: The market
opened dull for pales and firm for all oilier
grades, at the following quotations: A, I!, C,
I) anti E 41 20. F $1 25. G 41 30, II 41 45, I 41 70,
Ks 2 15, M 42 62' N |'3 12(4, window glass
23 50, water white $8 75. At 1 p. m. it was
unchanged anti remained so to the close.
NAVAL STORES STATEMENT.
Spirit*. I'oxhl .
Stock on hand April Ist 5.904 49.369
Received to-day 40 179
Received previously 192 1,0141
Total . .... 6,136 50,63s
Exported to-day .... ::.30l
E.\|iorted previously 693 5,018
Total 693 8,3 iS
Stock on hand and on shipboard
thisday 5,44:1 42,320
Receipts same day last year.. Is 7 704
Financial.—Money is easy. Domestic
Exchange—The banks and bankers are buy
ing sight drafts at 1-16 andselling at 5-ItWi.'
percent, premium. Sterling Exchange—Mar
ket steady; sixty day bills, with bills lading
attached,"commercial, 44 '4Vi; ninety days,
prime, 44 78*4; French franks. $5 27; Swiss
franks. 15 27.
Securities.—Finn, demand fair."
Stocks and Bonds. —City Boml*.—Mar
ket firm. Atlanta 0 per cent.. It g bid,
104 asked; Augusta 7 i>er cent., 117 bid.
11l asked; Columbus 5 per cent., -4 hid, -6
asked; Macon 6 per cent.. 107 bid. 108 a->k,-d:
New Savannah 5 per ceut. July coupons, 83%
bid, 84 asked, savannah 5 per cent. May
coupons, 35 bid, 85% asked.
state Bond*.— Market quiet. Georgia dc;
6’s, 1889, ltJt'j bit!, 107 asked; Georgia 6 per
cent., coupons Feb. ami Aug., maturity lvvi
and ’86,101 bid,lo2 asked; Georgia mortgage
on W. ft A. Railroad regular 7 per cent.,
columns January and July, maturity Ism;,
106*3 bid, 107*3 asked; Georgia 7 per
ceut. gold, coupons quarterly, 114% uni,
115 asked; Georgia 7 per cent., coupon-Jan
uary ami July, maturity 1896, 124(4 bid, 1.6
asked.
Railroad Stock*.— Market quiet but firm.
We quote: Central common 87 bid, b 8
asked. Augusta anti Savannah 7 per
ceut. guaranteed, 121 bitl, 122 asked.
Georgia common, 156% bid, 157)4 asked.
Southwestern 7 per ceut. guaranteed. 115%
bitl, 116 asked. Central Railroad 6 per con:,
certificates, 92* 3 bit!, 93 asked. Atlanta
and West Point Railroad stock. 97 old,
99 asked. Atlanta and West Point 6 per
cent, certificates. 95 bid, 96 asked.
Railroad Bond*.— Market firm, Atlan
tic ft Gulf Ist mortg. consolid’d 7 per cent.,
coupons January and July, maturity 18:17,
11:! bitl, 115 asked. Central consolidated
mortgage 7 per cent., coupons January
am! July, maturity 18143, 112*4 bid, 113
asked. Georgia Railroad 6 per cent., lss:7
102 1 ;, bitl. lu4 asked. Georgia Railroad 6 per
cent.. 1910, lot bitl. 105 asked. Mobile &
Girard 2d mortgage indorsed 8 percent, cou
pons January ana July, maturity 1889, 111
biti. 112 asked. Montgomery & Eufaula Ist
mortgage 0 per cent. iud. by Central Railroad,
104 bitl, 104*4 asked. Charlotte, Columbia A
Augusta Ist mortgage, 108 bid. 108% askea.
Charlotte, Columbia A Augusta 2U mortgage,
100 bill, 102 asked. Western Aiabama 2d mon
tage, indorsed, 8 per cent., ex-conpons, 114
L.d, 115 asked; .South Georgia A Florida
endorsed 114 bid, 115 asked; South Georgia
A Florida 2d mortgage, 100 hid, 102 asked.
Augusta A Knoxville first mortgage, 7 per
cent. 103%bid,101%asked. Gainesville,Jeffer
son A southern Ist mortgage guaranteed, ill
Ititl, 112 asked. Gainesville, Jeflersou A
Southern not guaranteed, 105)4 bid, 107
asked. Ocean Steamship 0 jier cent, bonds
guaranteed by Central Railroad, 19*3 bid, 160
asked.
Savannah Gas Light stock, 16 bid, 17 asked.
Bacon. —Market steady; demand fair;
smoked clear rib sides, 11) „e.; shoulders, 8 7 s ''.;
• lr> salted clear ribsides, 10* „e.: long clear.
lOe.; shoulders, sc. ilams, 14*4c.
i!AOOINO and Ties.—Market steady with a
fair demand. We quote: Bagging—2% lbs.,
10%c.; I*3 tbs., 9%'gi9%v., according to quan
tity and brand. Iron Ties—Arrow ami Della,
*1 3.">@l 50 per bundle, according to quantity
aud brand. Pieced ties, $1 10(i4115. Bagging
and ties in retail lots a fraction higher.
Coveek.—The market is steadier; demand
moderate. We quote for small lots: Ordi
nary, 11*30.; fair, 12c.; medium. 12) 2 c.;prime,
13*30. For large lots about Ic. lower.
Drv Goods.—The market is quiet but firm,
with fair demand; stocks full. \V ; quote:
Prints, 4@oc.; Georgia brown shirt
ing, %> 4%c.; Jg do., 5%e.; 4-4 brown
■hecting, 6‘ 4 e.; white osnaburgs, B@luc.;
checks, 6%@.*%c.; yarns, 85c. for best makes;
brown drillings, 6%@Bc.
Flock.—Market steady, good demand. We
?uote: Superfine, 44 uo@4 25; extra. 45 09;
amily, 46 00; choice patent, 47 Mail 75.
Fkcits. —Bananas,yellow, $1 50@2 50. lem
ons, slock ample, demand very good; Messi
na, 44 50{<45 50 iter liox. Oranges—Market
firm, stock light, demand active; Florida.
$2 50043 00 per box.
Grain. —Market steady; demand good. We
quote in job lots: White corn, 81 %c.:
car-load lots, 77* 4c.; mixed corn, 75c.; car-load
lots, 71c.; oats, 53e.; car-load lots, 49c.,
steady, demand good. Meal, 800. Bran, $1 25
($1 35. Grist, per two bushel sack. 41 05.
Hay.—Market steady; fair demand. We
quote, in job lots: Hay. Northern, 41 00.
Eastern, 41 10; Western, 41 05.
Hides, Wool, Etc.—Hides—Market active;
receipts fair; dry flint. 15c.: dry country
salted, 13c. Wool nominal. Wax, 28c. Deer
skins—flint, 2xc.; salted, 24c.; otter skins,
60c.@44 to.
Lard. —The market is steady. We quote:
In tierces ami tubs. 10c.; in kegs. 10* f c.
Potatoes.—Market well stocked, demand
good; prime. 42 25 per barrel.
SCOab.—Mark*--, quiet. We quote: Cut
loaf. 8)40.; granulated s%c.; powdered 8)40.;
standard A, 7%c.; extra C, 7%c.; C. 6%e.
Salt.—The demand is dull anti the mar
ket quiet, with a full stock. We quote:
Car load lots, 85c., f. o. b.; small lots, 95c.@
$1 00.
Tobacco.—Market firm; moderate de
mand. We quote: Smoking. 40c.@41 23,
Chewing—Common, sound. 85<@40c.; medium,
40@550.; bright, 50@75c.; fine fancy, Ss@2oc.;
extra tine, 90c.@4110; bright navies, 45@37c,;
dark navies. 40<u,30c.
.MARKETS BT TELEGUAFU.
VINAVCiAL. *
LONDOS, April 3, nooi>.—Consols, 102 5-16
for money: 102-'’ s for account.
The Bank of England has reduced its rate
of discount from to 2>j per cent.
Berlin, April 3.—The weekly statement of
the Imperial Bank of Germany shows a de
crease of 21.680,000 marks in specie.
I’akis, April 3. —The weekly statement of
the Bank of France shows an increase of
175,000 francs in gold and 2,700,000 francs in
silver.
London, April 3. —The amount of bullion
in the Bank of England has decreased Xl3, -
OoD during the oast week.
New Orleans, April 3.—Exchange—bank
ers' sterling, $4 S7*,'.
New Yokk. April 3, noon.—Stocxs lower.
Money easy at 14.422 percent. Exchange—
long, $1 S7‘i®4 TU; short, *4 89> 2 @4 89?4-
State bon<ls quiet. Government bonds firm.
5:00 p. m.—Excnange, 44 87'.;. Money 2@l'4
per cent. Sub-Treasury balances— ComJf>,-
540,000: currency, 110,474.000. Government
bonds firm; four and a half percents, 1134*;
four per cents, 123 7 j; three i>er cents. 100 bid.
State Winds steady.
Speculation at the Stock Exchange during
the early dealings was quiet. At the open
ing prices ran off l ,'a 1 a per cent., but before
the lirst call this was recovered, and some
shares advanced fractionally. Near midday
Union Pacific weakened, selling downper
cent., and the general list recorded slight de-
Adinca, As the dav advanced the market
gathered strength, and there was an increase
In the volume of business, room traders being
the largest buyers, xud a general improve
ment in prices took place. Reading Western
L’nion, Pacific Mail, Northwest, St. haul,
jjgte shore,Missouri Pacific andCnion Pacific
were especially strong and in demand.
Grangers were higher on the fact that the
decrease in the earning* tor the fourth week
tn March was nothing like a. large as had
been aaitcjpated by the street. VVitu the
exception of Northwest, the advance lu
prices from the lowest point of the day
ranged from >*@3 per cent. Union Pacific ad
vanced 1% per cent., Reading Northwest
J p Northwest preferred 3, St. l'afil Lacka-
wanna I* ~ Louisville and Nashville I*4, Lake
Shore %. Missouri Pacific 1%, New York Cen
tral %. Erie %, Pacific Mail 1%, and Omaha
preferred 1%. The market closed strong at
the highest point of the day. Compared with
last night's closing prices are %@l% per
cent, higher. Sales 283,000 shares, tne market
closing at the following quotations:
Aia.classA,2tos. 81% Manhattan Kiev. 43
Ala. class A,small 81* Memphis A Char. 83
Ala.classß,ss ...102 Metropolitan El.. 100*%
Ala. class C,.4s ... 81% Michigan Centra! 90%
Georgia 6s 103* Mobile ft Ohio.. .11
“ 7s, mortgage*los% Nash. A Cbatt’a 62%
“ 7s, gold 118 N* J. Central 87%
Louisiana consols 15% New Orleans Pa -
N. Carolina, old. .*3O eifle. Ist mort *Bl%
“ few *lB N.Y.Central ....’.14%
funding 10 New York El . 105
special tax 4 Xort. AW. prof. 39%
So. Caro.(Brown) Nor. Paciflc.com. 22
consols 105% “ p re f 4$
Tennessee 6s, old 42% OhioftMWsissippi 21%
“ ?w 42%
Virginia 6s *4O Pacific Mail 52%
Va consolidated *40% Pittsburg 141
Va, deferred 7 (Quicksilver 4
Adams Express.. 129 “ preferred. . 22
Am'can Express. 98% Reading 55%
Ch’peake A Ohio. 13% Richm’dftAl’gh’y 3
Chicago ft Alton .136*4 Richm’d ft Danv. tU
Chic.A N’rthw'n 115% Richm’d A W.Pt.
“ preferred . *142% Terminal 28
Chic, St.L.ft N.O. 85 Rock Island ... 119
Consolid’tcd Coal 20 St. Louis A San F 25
Del., Lack. A W 121% “ “pref... 46
Dcn.AßioGramle 19 “ “lstpref 92
Eric 21% St. Paul *86%
E. Tennessee Rd. 7% “ preferred.. .112%
Fort Wayne ... 128*4 Texas Pacific 19-%
Hannibal A St. Jo 38% Union Pacific— 73%
Harlem 194 U. S. Express . . 60%
Houston A Texas. 41 Wabash Pacific.. 15
Illinois Central 128% *• pref. 24%
Lake Shore *99% Well A Fargo .. 110
L’ville A Nash... 47% Western Union . 70%
*Bid. lEx-division.
COTTON.
Liverpool, April 3, noon.—Cotton firm,
with aetivedemand; middlinguplands,6l-16d;
middling Orleans, 6 3-101; sales 18,000 bales,
for speculation and export 3,000 bales; re
ceipts 15,400 bales—all American. ,
Futures: Uplands, low middling clause,
April and May delivery, 6 8-61@0 7-64d; May
anti June, 6 12-G4@6 11-64d; June anu July,
6 16-6440,0 15-64(1; July and August, 6 2U-64@
6 19-64(1; August and September, 6 24-(4@
6 23-61d; September and October, 6 22-64d;
October and November, 6 12-64d. Market
opened firm, but has since become quiet.
23*0 p. m.—Business large at advancing
prices. Sales to-day included 14.000 bales or
American.
Good middling uplands 65-10d, middling up
lands 6* gd, low middling uplands 5 15-16d,good
ordinary uplands 5 11-16,!. ordinary uplands
5%d; middling Orleans 6%d, low middling Or
leans 0 _l-16d, good ordinary Orleans 5%d, or
dinary (Irlcans 5 7-16d; good middling Texas
6*2*l, middling Texas o%d, low middling
Texas 6 l-]6d. good ordinary Texas 5%d, or
dinary Texas 5 7-16d.
Futures: Uplands, low miiblling clause,
April delivery. 6 7-64d, buyers; April and
May, 6 7-64d, buyers; May and June, 6 11-64d,
value; June and July, 6 15-64d, value; July
and August. 6 19-64(1, value; August and Sep
tember. 6 23-64(1. sellers; September and Octo
ber. 6 21-04d. buyers; September 6 25-64t1,
value.
4:00 p. m.—Futures; Uplands, low mid
dling clause, April delivery, 6 7-lUd. sellers;
April anil May. 6 7-<Sd, sellers; May and
June,6 11-64d. sellers; June and July,6 15-64,1.
sellers: July and August. 6 19-04tl, sellers;
August aud September, 6 23-64d, sellers; Sep
tember and October, 6 21-64(1, sellers; Sep
tember. 6 25-64d, value.
New York, April 3, noon.—Cotton firm;
middling uplands. 11 9-16c;middling Orleans,
11 13-16 c; sales 627 bales.
Futures: Market firm, with sales as follows:
April delivery, 11 00c: May, 11 74c: June,
1183 c; July, 1197 c; August, 12 07c; Septem
ber. 11 70c.
5:00 p. in.—cotton closed firm; middling
uplands, 119-16 c; middling Orleans, 11 13-10 c;
sales 433 bales; net receipts 268 bales, gross 594.
Futures—Market closed steady, with sales
of 166,090 bales, as follows: April delivery,
11 60@U 62c; Mav, 11 71@11 72c; June. 11 82c;
July, 11 93@11 94c; August, 12 03@12 04c; Sep
tember. 11 64@11 65c; October, 11 09@11 12c;
November. 10 93@10 97c; December. I0 93u
10 97c.
The Po*t' cotton report says: “Future de
liveries were in good dem mil. A loss oi
2-looc, after having opened 5-lOOc higher, was
fully recovered, so that before noon prices
ranged 6-loOc higher than yesterday at the
closing. Free offerings to realize then caused
a decline of 9-100@10-100c. At the third call
June brought 1177 c. July 11 88c, September
1161 c, December 10 93c. showing a slightly
improved market.’’
Galveston, April 3.—Cotton firm: middling
11) s l -’, low middling 10 13-10 c, good ordinary
10* 4 c; net receipts 892 bales, gross 892; sales 726
bales; stock 24,407 bales.
Norfolk, April 3. —Cotton firm, offerings
light; middling 11c; net receipts 435 bales,gross
433; stock 14.270 bales; sales 203 bales; exports
coastwise 1.078 bales.
Baltimore, April 3.—Cotton strong; mid
dling 11%t% low middling 11) gc, good ordinary
10%c; not receipts 463 bales, gross 965; sales
none; slock 10,850 bales; sales to spinners 857
bales.
Boston, April 3.—Holiday; net receipts
1,182 bales, gross 1,197; stock "5.710 bales; ex
ports to Great Britain 1,091 bales.
Wilmington, April 3. —Cotton firm; mid
tiling 11* oC, low middling 10%e, good ordi
nary 10* 4 c; net receipts 18bales, gross 18; stock
4,550 bales.
I’aiLADELPniA. April 3.—Cotton firm; mid
dling ll%c, low middling ll%c, good ordinary
10%c; net receipts 121 bales, gross 2,561; stock
17,920 bales.
New Orleans. April 3.—Cotton linn; mid
dling 11 3-lfie, low middling 10 13-16 c, good
ordinary 10 1-10 c; net receipts 1,293 bales,
gross 1,301; sales 4,000 bales; stock 214.324
bales; exports, to France 2,873 bales, coast
wise 1,060.
Mobile, April 3.—Cotton firm; middling
11c, low middling 10%'c, good ordinary 10%c;
net receipts 169 bales, gross 169; sales2oo bales;
stock 21,557 bales.
Memphis, April 3. —Cotton firm; middling
ll'aC, low middling 11c, good ordinary 10%c;
net receipts 572 bales, gross 663; shipments
1,387 bales; sales 1,950 bales; stock 40,744 bales.
Augusta, April 3. —Cotton firm; middling
lie, low middling 10%e; receipts 318 bales;
sales 188 bales.
Charleston, April 3.—Cotton quiet but
firm; middlingll%c, low middling 11c, good
ordinary 10%c; net receipts 88 bales, gross
88; sales 50 bales; stock 17.349 bales; exports
coastwise 367 bales.
New York, April 3.—Consolidated net re
ceipts for all cotton i>orts today, 5,019 bales;
exports, to Great Britain 1,091 bales, to France
2,973.
Manchester, April 3.—The demand for
cloth is good, hut the advance checks busi
ness. Yarns are strong and active; quota
tions of higher grades have advanced %il.
PROVISIONS. GROCERIES. ETC.
santos. April 3.—Coffee—Receipts for the
week, 24,000 bags. .Shipments for the week,
to Europe 3,000 bags, sales 14,000 bags. Stock,
390,000 bags.
New York. April 3, noon.—Flour declin
ing. Wheat l@l%c lower. Corn l@l%e low
er. I’ork dull; mess, sl7 37%. Lard heavy at
9 05c. Freights quiet.
5:00 p. m.—Flour. Southern closed dull.
Wheat, cash lots declined l(!SI%c; ungraded
red 80c@$l 00; ungraded white 85c; No. 2 red,
April delivery 98*2@|110. Corn, spot lots 1(d)
1 *-.,,• lower auil dull; ungraded, 47t.tx.5Sc; NO. 2,
5s r 4 c; April delivery 58@38%e. Oats, %@!%c
lower, closing steady; No. 2. 35%@35%e. Hops
quiet. Coffee, fair Kio. on spot, weak at 10%c;
No. 7 Rio. ou spot 9 10c, April delivery 8 75c.
Sugar about steady and moderately active;
muscavado 5%e: centrifugal6%c: fair to good
refining, 5 7-l(i@s 9-10 c; refined dull aud weak
oil' A 6%@6%c, mould A T@7%c, confection
ers' A 6 15-16 c, standard A 6 li-16c, granu
lated 7%c, cubes 7 7-16@7%c. Molasses quiet.
Cotton seed oil. 38c for crude, 41@47c for re
lined. Hides held very strong; wet salted
New Orleans, selected, 50 to 60 pounds. 10®
lie. Wool quiet and barely steady. Fork dull
and heavy; old mess, on "spot, |l6 75@17 50.
Middles "nominally lower; long clear 9%e.
Lard opened unsettled and depressed, de
clined 40@45 points, but closed with a recov
er! of 10@12 points; Western steam, on spot,
8 82%(g,9c, April delivery 8 75@9 10c. Freights
to Liverpool closed firmer; cotper steam. 3-82
@7-64d; wheat, per steam. 1*4(1.
Baltimore, April 3, noon.—Flour quiet and
nominally steady; Howard street and Western
superfine, 42 75@3 25; extra, 43 50@4 50: family - ,
41 75@5 75; city mills superfine, 42 75053 50;
extra, 43 75<0&6 23; Rio brands. $3 62(0,5 80.
Wheat—Southern steady but firm, with light
receipts; Western lower, closing weak at bot
tom prices; Southern, red 41 08@1 12, amber
SI 12@1 16; No. 1 Maryland, 41 09@1 10%; No.
2 Western winter red. on spot, 99 asked.
Corn—Southern quiet but steady; Western
lower, closing dull; Southern, white 57@60,
yellow 52@55c.
5 p. m.—Oats quiet but firm; Southern, 40
@43c: Western, white 40@42c, mixed 38@40c;
Pennsylvania 40@43c. Provisions closed quiet
and easy; mess pork, old 418, new 419. Bulk
meats—shoulders and clear rib sides, packed,
8c and 10%c. Bacon—shoulders B%c, clear rib
sides 11c. Hams, 14%@15c. Lard, refined. 10%c.
Coffee dull and nominal; Rio cargoes, ordinary
to fair, 9%@11c. Sugar unchanged; A soft,
7%c. Whisky unchanged at 41 19@1 19%c.
Freights dull.
Chicago, April 3.—Flour nominal. Wheat,
regular, demoralized and panicky; opened
weak and %@lc lower ami deelined until it
touched a point 2%c lower than yesterday;
April delivery 79%@81%c; No. 2 Chicago
spring 79%@82%c. Corn weak; opened l@l%c
lower and closed l' 4 @l%c under yesterday;
cash lots 48%@31* 4 c. April delivery 48%@49* s c.
Oats opened %@ 1 e lower; closed quiet but
steady; cash 10t527%c; April delivery 27%@
23e. Pork aotive and weak; opeued’ 20@23e
lower, soou declined 75@80c, rallied 25@300
closed steadier; cash lots 416
active and weak; opened 20@25 points lower;
closed steady; cash lots 8 55@8 62%c. Bulk
meats lower; shoulders, 7 10c; short rib,B 60c;
short clear 9 25c. Whisky unchanged. Sugar
unchanged; standard A 7%c, cut loaf S)s@
VJINCINNATT, April 3.—Flour dull; family
-44 40@ l 75. Wheat heavy; No. 2 red. $1 03(g;
1 04. Corn easier; No. 2 mixed, 54'/j@ssc.
Oats in fair demand; No. 2 mixed, 36' /<J3U94c.
Provisions—Pork nominal; mess 417 00. Lard
inactive; prime steam 8 60@8 75c. Bulk meats
lower; shoulders 6 7 „c; short rib8 7 j,c. Bacon
lower; shoulders 7&c; short rib 9&c: short
clear 10'.,c. Whisky firm at $1 15. Sugar un
changed. llogsquiet: common and light, $4 00
@6 3a; packing and butchers. $6 20,'86 00.
■St. Lous. April 3.—Flour unchanged.
Wheal in fair demand aml' 2 <<ilc lower; No. 2
red, 41 06: o fal 07 for cash, 41 06V j for April de
livery; No. 3 red fall, 9>.g@Bbc. Corn unset
tled; closed ',§lc under yesterday; 47'sOS
for cash; 47’*c for April delivery. Oats
inactive and lower; 34c for cash. Whisky
steady at 41 16. Provisions sharply lower;
Pork, jobbing sl7 00. Bulk meats—long clear
s6tX®B 70c; short rib 8 70($8 80c; short clear
895@9 00c. Bacon—long clear 9 70c: short rib
9 75c; short clear 9 75@10e.
Louisville, April 3.— Wheat dull: No. 2
red $1 03<g105. C'orndull; No. 2mixed, 52',c.
Oats dull; mixed Western, Provis
ions dull and lower: Mess pork, sl7 50. Bulk
meats— shoulders 6 Tse, clear rib 9c; clear
sides 9 50c. Bacon—shoulders 7 73c; clear rib
9 75c; clear sides 10 37Uc. Hams, sugar cured,
13c. Lard, steam leaf lQV^c.
New Orleans, April 3.—Flour, high grades
lower, 45 2505 75. Corn scarce; mixed 65c.
white 700'5c. Corn meal higher, la 25. Hay
unsettled; prime4l4 00@16 50; choice sl7 50@
18 50. Oat 9 in good demand and unchanged
at 43U014c. Pork scarce and firm at
418 62V 2 (g18 75. Lard steady; refined, in tierces
9 35c. in kegs 9 75c. Bulk meats in fair de
mand and firmer; shoulders, packed 7 3714 c.
Bacon steady; shoulders Bj-4c; loug clear and
clear rib Hams —choice sugar cured
canvaied 13g.134.jc. Whisky unchanged; Wes
tern rectfuod #1 U)!4@l 13. Coffee dull; Rio
cargoes, common to prime, 9‘4@l2c, Sugar
weak; fair to fully fair 5J4®5J4c; white clari
fied 6s4c. Molasses unchanged; centrifugal 17
(gjpo. Cotton seed oil dull and unchanged;
prime crude 28<jjl}7c. summer yellow 43®45c.
NAVAL STORES.
New YORK. April 3, noon. —Spirits turpen
tine dull at 32'/4c. Rosin steady at fl 45(3150.
5:00 p. m.—Rosin quiet. Turpentine dull
and weak at 32c.
Charleston. April 3.—Spirits turpentine
quiet at 29c. Rosin unchanged; gtrained and
good strained $1 20.
Wilmington. April 3.—Spirits turpentine
firm at 29c. Rosin firm; strained, 41 07%;
goodstramed, |1 12%. Tar firm at 41 10. Crude
turpentine steady; 41 15 for hard and J 1 90 for
yellow dip and virgin.
RICE.
Charleston, April 3.—Market quiet but
firm; sales 115 barrels; fair, 5%@5%c; good,
5%@5%c; prime, 5%@6c. .
new Orleans, April 3.—Market quiet; fair,
5@5%c; good. s*@s%c; prime. 5%@6c.
New York. April 3.—Market dull; fair,
5%c: good, 5%c; prime. 6%c.
New York Fruit Market.
New Y'ork. April 3.—Oranges—Florida, per
crate, $3 50@5 50; Messina, per box, |3 00@4 00;
Valencia, per case. 46 75@9 25. Strawberries—
Florida, per quart, 13@50c.: Charleston, per
quart. 35<8i50C. Peas—Florida, per crate, 25c.
@1 00; Charleston, per crate, 41 75@4 00;
Georgia, per crate, 42 00@4 00. Beans—
Florida, per crate, 41 00@44 00. Tomatoes—
Florida, per crate, 43 OOSS OO; Bermuda, per
6-quart box, 50@75c. Cabbages—Florida, per
barrel, 43 00@4 00. Squash—Florida, per
crate, 41 50&2 00. Egg Plant—Florida, per
crate, 42 50@2 75.
Stuppttta s>ntelUgeitrr.
MINIATURE ALMANAC—THIS DAY:
Sun Rises s:iu
SUNSETS 6:14
High Water at Ft Pulaski.. 2:25a m. 2:55pm
Friday, April 4, 1884.
ARRIVED YESTERDAY.
Steamer Fish Hawk, Schmidt, from Wash
ington, D C—Master. (U S Fish Commis
sion).
Steamer David Clark. Daniel, Darien, Bruns
wick and way landings— C AVilliams, Agt.
Steamer Mary Fisher. Gibson, Cohen’s Bluff
aud way landings—Master.
ARRIVEDITP FROM TYBEE YESTERDAY.
Bark Tikoma (Br). Andrews, to load for
Liverpool—M aster.
CLEARED YESTERDAY.
Steamship City of Macon, Nickerson. Boston
—Richardson ft Barnard.
SAILED YESTERDAY.
Steamship City of Macon, Boston.
Bark Niobe (Nor), Keval.
Sc.br John M Brown, Newark and Jersey
City.
MEMORANDA.
Tybeo, April 3. 7:30 p m—Passed up, steamer
Fish Hawk, bark Tikoma (Br).
Passed out, steamship City of Macon, hark
Niobe Nor), selir John M Brown.
Waiting, bark Svea (Sw).
Wind N, light; fair.
New York, April 3—Arrived, France, Sa
iler.
Arrived out. strs City of Chester, Glenrath,
brigs l’icolet, Saama, barks Alette, Janies
Kenwav,
New York, April I—Cleared, brig It M Hes
len. Fries, Feriiandiua.
Sailed, schr T If Livingston, Jacksonville.
Barrow, March 29—Arrived, hark Sirian
Star (Br), Mann, Apalachicola.
Belfast, March 31—Arrived, bark Donald
Ferguson (Br), Brownrigg, Apalachicola.
Lizard, April I—Off, ship Europa (Bus),
I’ettersen. Pensacola for Truro River, passed
steamers Invertary (Br), Craig, Fernandina
for 1 ;dmouth; Sarah Ann (Bn, Hay, Coosaw,
S C, for Hull.
Papenberg to April I—Arrived, bark Hen
rietta (Sw), Svensen, Pensacola.
Queenstown, April I—Arrived, brig Lojo
(Bus), Harman, Fernandina.
Sharpness, March 30—Arrived, ship Annie
M Law (Br), McCfirthv, Pensacola.
Stettin, March 29 Arrived, bark Litlskjalf
(Nor). (.undersen. Savannah.
st Vincent. C V, March 18—Sailed, bark
President, Von Blumenthal (Ger), Darien.
Y era Cruz, March 20—Arrived, brig Sarah
Wallace (Br), Anderson, Pensacola.
ffio.ilon, April I—Cleared, brig Stockton,
Allen, Fernandina.
Baltimore, April I—Sailed, schr Linah C
Kamminski, Georgetown, S C.
Cape Henry, April I—Passed out, bark Vin
cenzo Accame (Ital). for Doboy.
Philadelphia, April I—Cleared, schr Annie
C Grace, Grace. Savannah.
Wilmington, N C, April I—Cleared, bark
Duen (Nor), Andersen, Savannah.
Brunswick,Ga,March 31—Arrived,steam tug
Inca. Philadelphia; April 1, schr J K Wood
house. Douglass, New York.
( leared, bark Pope Tono (Sp), Albi, Ali
cante; schr Ann J Trainor, (Jskins, New
Y ork.
Cedar Keys, April I—Arrived, schr Annie
A Booth, Baylcs, Pensacola.
Georgetown, S’C, April I—Arrived, schr E
V Glover, Davis, New Y'ork.
Key West, April I—Arrived, schrs Attic
(Br). Thompson. Abaco; Tlios G Smith, Fos
ter, Philadelphia, with spars and sails for brig
Chas Purves.
Pensacola, April I—Arrived, barks Gru ml -
loven (Nor), Eliingsen, Bremen; Andrea Papa
dial). Carbone, Montevideo; Lina Nor),
Abrahamsen, Bergen.
Cleared, bark Hoppet *Sw), Samuelscn, Dor
drecht.
NOTICE TO MARINERS.
Captain of schr Georgian. - ! Young reports
the bell buoy at Fire Island Inlet goue last
evening (March 31) when he passed.
MARITIME MISCELLANY.
Schr Emma Jane, Martin, at Edgartown,
reports seeing, in lat 27 10 N, ion 74 58 W, a
schooner bottom up. The bottom was paint
ed with copper paint, waist and upper works
black. Length of keel, about 60 to 70 feet.
Spars were attached to the vessel, and were
partly floating alongside.
Key West, April I—The Admiralty Court
decrees 410,500 salvage to the wreckers of the
steamer Alvah (Br), from New Orleans for
Havre. A survey reports her bottom unin
jured, aud the condition justifies the vessel in
proceeding to destination.
Brig Addie Todd—The wreck of the brig
Addie Todd, in lat 38 24 X, lon 74 30 W, will be
blown up by the U S steamer Powhattan.
RECEIPTS.
Per Charleston and Savannah Railway,
April 3 —5 cars lumber, 200 sacks guano, 55
lioxes tobacco, 250 caddies tobacco. 25 doors,
and mdse.
Per Savannah. Florida and Western Rail
way, April 3—40 bales cotton, 9 cars lumber,
152 hols rosin. 23 bbls spirits turpentine, 520
boxes oranges, 450 boxes vegetables, 6 bbls
vegetables, 1 car iron, 10 bales yarns, 400 sacks
cotton seed meal, 13 bales hides, and mdse.
Per steamer David Clark, from Fernandina
and way landings—29 bales cotton. 6 bags seed
cotton, 48 bbls rosiu, 9 casks spirits turpentine,
4 bales hides, 1 bale sheep skins, 1 box nulse, 1
bbl sugar, 3 kegs lish, 36 boxes tobacco, 1 pkg,
4 boxes tools, 1 bbl wine, 1 box b powder, 28
kegs, 14 bbls cabbage, 18 cow hides. 60 fish.
Per Central Railroad, April 3-47 bales cot
ton, 22 bbls spirits turpentine, 7 cars lumber,
55 bills rosin, 3 cars brick, 200 bales hay, 150
bbls lime, 150 bbls flour, 110 caddies tobacco, 70
boxes soap, 60 bids tallow, 55 boxes tobacco, 55
cases liquor, 42 draw bolts, 45 tubs butter, 33
draw plates, 20 pkgs furniture,2o lulls brooms,
20 cases snuff, 16 bales hides. 15 bales varus, 18
bolster hangers, 15 pkgs mdse, 15 sacks meal,
12 chairs, io bills spokes, 10 hf bbls whisky, 25
boxes medicine, 9 doz kettles, 6 furnaces. 5
sacks cotton seed, 5 cooking stoves, 5 bbls
In-asses, 8 boxes hardware, 3 lots h h goods, 3
lulls sacks, 3 leather hose. 5 bales domestics, 3
sacks peas, 2 boxes wax, 2 empty cases, 2 bdls
paper, 5 scrapers, 2 boxes wood in shape, 2
fioxes fruit, 2 casks crockery, 2 bags wool, 10
boxes sundries, 2 pkgs samples. 1 bbl glass
ware, l ease cigars, 1 bbl cordage, 2 bags
horns, 1 bbl corks, I car wood, 14 bdls gs hides,
4 cases shoes.
EXPORTS.
Per steamship City of Macon, for Boston—
-2.110 bales cotton, 179 bales domestics, 12 bales
twine, 93 bdls hides, 7 bales reg cotton, 10
bales paper stock, 40 bbls eggs, 45 bbls rosin,
256 bbls spirits turpentine, 36 casks elav, 10
bbls rice, 200 bdls shingles, 45,000 feet lumber,
219 boxes oranges, 193 boxes vegetables, 4 re
frigerators berries, 118 pkgs sundries.
PASSENGERS.
Per steamship Citv of Macon, for Boston—
Mrs J Hutchinson. 1’ Bovlan, Miss B Hildreth.
J D McClellan, M s A B Hildreth, J G Pitt
man. K Winslow, M YY' Churchill, E E Har
rington, John Shields, E A Warren, G A Col
ley, E Brenner, ( lias Coring, Miss E Brenner,
J E Brenner, TJ Beers, E T Harden, MissD
Allen, Sirs A A Roberts, T C Martin and wife,
G T Littlefield, C I, Coldburn, C N Coldburn,
J YV Roberts aud wife. Miss I! Glover, R B
Brigham, G YY T Smish, Mrs Jas Morrison, May
1, Morrison, Ethel C Morrison, J it Morrison,
C II Joy, T YV Goodwin, C H Lord. A C Stew
art, Edw Holland, Mrs E Sutherland, C P
Headling, A Reynolds, J YY' YY oodberry, D L
Parkhurst, H T YVheeler, Jno Slattery jr, Juo
Crowley, A Pearl, aud 31 steerage.
Pei* steamer David Clark, from Fernandina
and way landings—Sisters of Mercy Cecilia
and Dorelia, Mrs Jolih Fisher, II Appel and 9
deck.
CONSIGNEES.
Per Charleston and Savannah Railway,
April 3—Fordg Office, Lee Roy Myers, A.l
Miller & Cos. A Hanley, M Kerst A Cos, J II
Brennan, Mohr Bros, Weed A C'. Savannah
Art Cos, E \ Sclnvarz, Crawford A L, Davis
Bros, H Gabel, Woods A Cos, Chess, C A Cos, B
M Garfunkle, S Cohen, J G Butler, V A N
Ellis, D C Bacon A Cos.
Per steamer David Clark, from Fernandina
and way landings—H Solomon A Son. F M
Farley, >1 Maclean, Geo Walter.W W Gordon
A Cos, L J Guilmartin A Cos, F J Perkins A Cos,
1)1 Dancy. Baltimore ship, M Kerst A Cos,
Meinhard Bros A Cos, Frank A Cos, CASH B,
Bendheim Bros A Cos, H Myers A Bros, Miss
O’Bvrne, Butler A S. C B It, W C Jackson. J
II Walker, W L S Gignilliat, Kennedy AB,
A Einstein's Sons. S Guckenheimer A 50n,.1 no
Flannery A Cos, Warren A A, Win Hone A Cos,
C Kolshoru A Bro, M M Sullivan, II Hendrick,
Leo Roy Myers.
Per Savannah, Florida and Western Rail
way, April 3—Fordg Office, Peacock, H A Cos,
It B Reppard, J Smallwood, Dale, W A Cos,
llarmou A It. M Y Henderson, M Ferst A Cos,
T Washington, J Barrett, Holcombe, G A Cos.
.1 Rourke, B W Tedder, Lee ltuy Mvers, C II
Dcrsett, S Guckenheimor A Son, Rond AS,
11 Myers A Bros, A E Smith A Bro. J Gardner,
E J Acosta, Max Krausg, Wylly A C, A C Me-
Alpin, C L Jones, J P Williams A Cos, W C
Jackson. W W Gord m A Cos. I Epstein A Bro,
M Maclean, Warren A A, Geo W alter, Butler
A S.
Per Central Bailroad, April 3—Fordg Agt,
II M Comer A Cos, W W Gordon A Cos, Order,
L J Guilmartin A Cos, Jno Flannery A Cos, D B
Hull, Geo Walter,Woods A Cos, Baldwin A Cos,
F M Farley, A S Nichols, W S Cherry A Cos,
E J Acosta. N Lang A Bro, A J Miller A Cos.
II Schroder, Epstein A B, Russak A Cos, Ind
Mfg Cos, A Ehrlich, C Hopkins, E A Schwarz,
A Heller, I L Falk A Cos. Jos A Roberts A Cos,
C H Carson, T P Bond, C L Gilbert A Cos, J F
Kempton, S Guckenheimer & Son, Mrs J C
Whitehead, M Y Henderson, Win Hone A Cos,
J J Gancry, M Ferst A Cos, jLee Roy Myers. W
Fliowc, H Mvers A Bros,Weed A C,A Letller,
Cruwfoari A L, J B Reedy, Jno Cunningham,
K L Markwalter, P F Wilkerson. Rieser A S,
U II Doraeit, W W Star, Frank A Cos, M L
Polk, F Devine, Lipnmau Bros, C L Jones,
D C Bacon A Cos, J P Williams A Cos,
Emory’s Little Cathartic
is the best and only reliable Liver Pill
known, never fails with the most obstinate
cases purely vegetable,sugar-coated,taste
less, harmless, no griping or unpleasant
etiects. Druggists sell them—ls cents.
Durkee’s Salad Dressing is the best
thing of the kind ever sold. With it su
perb salad of any kind can be made with
out delay or trouble. It is also one of the
best sauces tor cold meats, etc.
STRANGERS FROM BURMAH.
The People Who Are to Make Music
for the Sacred Elephant.
People in Burmah get along very com
fortable wearing their tattooing and a few
yards of muslin wound around themselves,
says the New York Times of the 31st ult.
The Burmese bandmen, who make music
for Barnum’s sacred white elephant, were
landed from the City of Richmond yester
day in the ulsters of civilization. They
all went to Madison Square Garden, di
vested themselves of their European tog
gery, and prostrated themselves in their
native attire before Toung Taloung. Then
they huddled around the stove, set up to
keep the elephant warm, and talked about
the weather. The men had streamers of
green gauze, filled with gold spangles,
twisted around their heads to form tur
bans, cloths about their loins, and fabrics
a good deal like Providence prints throw n
over their shoulders and tied around their
waists to make gowns. The Burmese
were all the color of New Orleans mo
lasses. The legs of the men were tattooed
from the hips down to the knees, and to
keep their toes from being frost-bitten
they wore striped stockings and leather
pumps. Their hair was long, like wo
men’s, and coiled in knots on the tops of
their heads.
The name of every one was prefaced
with “Moung,’’ meaning “Mister.” Some
of the last names they themselves could
not interpret. The names aud the signifi
cations, so far as they could be made out,
were: Myine, Bo Thain, Po Tsah(Hot),
Shoay Koo (Gold), Htoon Lin (Bright),
Kan Too, Kway Ngvoe (Yellow), Hpo
Goung f Head). There were two women,
whose names were given as Mah Kin
(Miss Fry), the wife of Po Thain, and
Mah Hmet (Miss Ripe), the wife of Po
Tsah. An 18-months baby engaged the at
tention of Miss Ripe. He was called
Htoon Yone, and was as lively as a crick
et. Another older youngster bore the
name of Thit YVoon. There was a Bur
mese dwarf in the party, 3 feet high and
30 years old, named Moung Bouk (Mr.
Fiea). He was tattooed in red. In his
own country he was a goldsmith. He
wore a filigree smile which wrinkled his
lace in delicate tracery extending in all
directions, and a pair of London trousers.
The trousers were the first he ever put on,
and he thought so much of them that he
made his Burmese toilet over them. Mr.
Hutchinson held up the baby in his hand
and said to the assembled multitude:
“Here is the embryo golden-toed heir to
the sun.”
The baby fastened its fingers in R. F.
Hamilton’s Lair and kicked in glee, while
Mr. Flea’s smile became more pronounced.
Miss Fry and Miss Ripe puffed cigars
which their liege lords had lighted for
them, and chatted together. The men are
to play in the great moral show, and the
women are to dance to their music.
Enough of the instruments were put to
gether to make up a respectable band, and
the elephant heard the first music of his
own country since he left London. He
nodded his head and switched his tail
gravely.to express his approbation. The
principal instrument was the kyee w'ine
(brass ring). A double ring of cane held
16 brass plates. A man sat in the middle
of it and pounded on the plates witli
sticks. Two others played a buair and a
pahlways, species of flageolets, a third a
yahgwin (small cymbal), and a fourth
pounded with his hands on drums. The
leader kept clapping a split bamboo called
wajjJet khoat to mark time. The music
wiWsvild and weird and was rhythmic.
There were other instruments which were
not put together yesterday, with no end
of gold emblems and apparatus. The
Burmese will appear in their finerv and
play aud dance to-day.
COSTLIEST OF PULPITS.
A Description of the Marble Structure
Erected as an Offering to Cardinal Me-
Closkey.
The Old World cathedrals have some
wonderful pulpits, says a New York let
ter to the St. Louis Republican. But it
has been reserved for the white marble
cathedral of New York to have the most
expensive pulpit, which is to he con
structed of C’arrarra marble and is to he
erected as an offering of the clergy of the
archdiocese ot New York to Cardinal
McCloskey on the occasion of the anni
versary of His golden jubilee. The pulpit
will be thirteen feet high, of an octagonal
shape, approached by seventeen steps to
tho platform. The pulpit proper will he
three feet six inches in height. The steps
will he of white marble, with an orna
mented Gothic balustrade. The base of
the pulpit will he of YY'estchester marble
four feet wide and thirty-nine inches
high, on which there is to be a moulding
corresponding with the columns of the
cathedral. On the top of this moulding
there w - ill he a central column of white
marble fourteen inches in diameter, sur
rounded by eight columns of colored mar
ble, with white marble bases and caps
ornamented with foliage. Above the
columns there are two rows of rich
foliage, going beyond the lines of the
columns sufficiently to make the base of
the moulding five feet six inches in di
ameter. This base marble moulding is
ornamented with a hall of fiow’ers in the
cove. The ground plan of this moulding
as well as of the pulpit is octagonal. The
pulpit is to rest against one of the marble
pillars ol the cathedral and will have six
sides which arc exposed, one being occu
pied by the entrance to th* stairs.
On the live corners of the pulpit which
are exposed there will he Gothic canopies
and brackets under them, supporting
statues of five great preachers of the
Catholic church. The places" between
the canopies will be richly paneled in
Gothic style, the columns "of which, as
well as of those'of the canopies, will he
polished Mexican onvx. The round of
the panels will he "of a rich Gothic
tracery; the groups above the panels will
he of a rich foliage, surmounted by a table
moulding ornamented, which is the top of
the pulpit.
TEN COUPLES FROM AFRICA.
Gentle Creatures who Kill Lions with
Sticks or Sometimes with Stones.
Ten couples that crossed over on the
steamship Oregon, which arrived from
Liverpool on Monday night, says the New
Y'ork Sun of the 30th ult., went, when
they left the vessel yesterday, to a brick
house on Roosevelt street, near Water
street, where they will remain for some
time to come. Their arrival created con
siderable excitement, and the youthful
part of the community missed their sup
pers while they congregated about the
house trying to get a peep at the new
comers.
The visitors have all brown eves and
long faces. Their hair is dark gray and
their hands are black. They are worth
S3OO apiece. They are lion baboons from
Africa, and are the largest ot their spe
cies ever brought to this country. One of
them is over live feet in height.
Mr. Donald Burns, who imported them,
says that the reason they are called lion
baboons is because they often kill lions in
their native jungles. They either attack
the lions with heavy sticks or crush in
the heads of the lions with heavy stones.
He says that the baboons were snared by
the natives, who found out their drinkiug
place, planted a stake in a pool of water,
around which the rope of the snare was
passed. Wheu a baboon was caught it
was dragged into the water and half
drowned. Before it recovered it was
locked up. There are ten males and ten
females. The males are almost three
times as large as the temales
Mr. Burns also received by the Oregon
the largest boa constrictor in this coun
try. It is beautifully marked, and is thir
ty-three feet long. With it came twenty
other boa constrictors.
Letter from Assemblyman Hoag.
State ok New York, )
Assembly Cuamber, Albany, >
April 13, 1883. )
During my temporary residence here
the past winter I contracted a severe cold,
which for a time confined me to my room
and rendered me unfif to attend to my du
ties. 1 not only suffered all the inconve
niences which usuallv attend a heavy
cold, but was afflicted with a tightness in
the chest, accompanied with a severe pain,
which made breathing difficult and rest
impossible. I tried the usual remedies—
cough drops, cough cordials, etc., but re
ceived no substantial relief until I ap
plied Allcock’s Porous Piasters on my
back and chest.
These.l put on when retiring, and was
delighted to find myself much better the
next morning. In two days I was well.
This, and the experience I have had with
Allcock’s Plasters in my family, has con
vinced me that for coughs, colds, sprains,
biuises, rheumatism and local pains, All
cock’s Porous Plasters are the quickest
and most effective remedy extant.
John Hoag.
Green Apples,
Eaten in the spring time, or any other
season, is liable to give one a bowel trou
ble, which can be speedily checked by
the use of Dr. Bigsrers’ Southern Remedy,
the great specific that will certainly cure
cramp colic, diarrhoea, dysentery, and re
store the little one gradually wasting
away from the effects of teething. This,
with a bottle of Taylor’s Cherokee Reme
dy of Sweet Gum and Mullein combining
the stimulating expectorant principle of
the sweet gum with the demulcent heal
ing one of the mullein, for the cure of
croup, whooping cough, colds and con
sumption, presents a little medicine chest
no household should be without for the
speedy relief of sudden and dangerous at
tacks of the lungs and bowels. Ask your
druggist for them. Manufactured' by
Walter A. Taylor, proprietor Taylor’s
Premium Cologne, Atlanta, Ga,
MONSTROSITIES TO ORDER.
Points on the Spring Trade In Mermaids,
Alligator Boys and Double Babies.
Xew York Sun.
“What is wanted,” said the artisan,
adding a daub of glue to the dorsel fin of the
mermaid, “is something thev can put
on the canvas that will draw folks in. The
side shows are getting ready to start
out. They have their fat women, albinos,
Brazilian apes, big snakes, and that sort
of thing, but they won’t draw. Folks
will stop and look at the canvas, say that
they have seen snakes, monkeys and fat
women enough, and will pass on. But if
the side show can hang out a mermaid or
a sea serpent or any alligator boy, folks
will pay their dimes and step right in.
Usually they find that the monkevs alone
are worth the price of admission, and
they are not disposed to find fault because
the mermaid is not alive. But if someone
does find fault the side-show man says to
him:
“ ‘Look a here, young feller. D’ye
s’pose that if I'd got hold of that mermaid
before she died I’d been showin - her up
country here for ten cent ahead? No, sir;
you’d have to come to the eitv to see her,
and pay yer dollar.’ ”
Cutting a three-cornered piece out of
the codfish skin and neatly drawing it
down around the papier-mache body of the
mermaid, the artisan went on:
“I used to be in the magic line (taking
up his shears, swallowing them, and
picking them from beneath his kneepan),
but magic doesn’t pay any longer. It
pleases the intelligent public, but the pub
lic is small.”
“How came you to go into the manufac
ture of monstrosities and curiosities?”
he was asked.
“Well, over in Brooklyn, one day, I saw
in a show window one of these Japanese
mermaids. The price wass2oo. Up eo jntry,
a little while after that, I saw a mermaid
advertised at a side show. It was one of
Japanese make. I thought if the Japs
could get S2OO lor mermaids I could get
s3o>or S6O for them, and I knew 1 could
manufacture them profitably at those
figures.”
Here the artisan gave the mermaid’s tail
an upward and sidewise twist, put on
some glue, and set it up to hardeu.
•‘This mennaid,” he said, “is made to
fit some expensive canvas that aYVestern
man has got hold of cheap. Here is a
sketch of it.” •
It was a rough pencil sketch of a mer
maid sportingin the ocean, and a lasso de
scending over her head from a boat. In
the distance was the ship from which the
boat came. The scene represented the cap
ture of the mermaid in the Pacific ocean,
400 miles off San Francisco.
“It isn’t a had way,” said the artisan,
“to make the curiosities to fit the canvas
that is to he displayed outside. In that
way the sights fill the hill, and the public
is not deceived.”
“For what are the chief demands this
spring?”
“Mermaids, alligator boys, sea serpents,
and double babies.”
“YYhat does an alligator hoy cost?”
“Here is one,” leading the way to an
inner room and pointing to a creation
which he had recently finished, “that costs
$75. You see it is about four feet long
and covered with leather. The monstrosi
ty is supposed to have been bora by
negro parents in Louisiana, to have made
its escape into a lagoon when about 7-year
old, and to have been found dying on the
bank after a fight with ahull alligator. I
got the idea from the scrofula patient that
was on exhibition in a Bowery museum as
an alligator boy.”
“And the double babies?”
“They are modelled after the one that
was horn of Italian parents here last
year. I went to see it, as Igo to see all
monstrosities that I hear .of. Double
babies have two heads, four arms, four
legs, and only one bodv. It is a job to get
them up as they should be, and they are
rather expensive.”
“About how large do the sea serpents
run ?”
“The biggest I ever made was about 20
feet long, with a sort of dragon’s head and
tail. There is a good deal of latitude in the
matter of sea serpents, descriptions of
them differ so much. I get my best
ideas from the stories of sailors on the
Dutch trading vessels from Holland ports.
A pretty fair sea serpent can he got up
for $00.”
“A while ago,” the artisan continued.
“I advertised, -‘Send your orders for a
first-class mermaid, alligator boy, sea
serpent, Egyptian mummy, or double
baby.’ Here are some of the letters I have
got.”
One of the letters came from an Illinois
town. It said: _
“Is your sea serpent in good condition?
How large will he grow, and what does
he eat? If he is O. K., and not too ex
pensive to keep. I think we can strike
up a bargain. Please name lowest price,
delivered healthy, and warranted sound.”
“I will give the alligator hoy a home,”
wrote a woman front lowa, “if you think
he would appreciate kindness and a
chance to get away from evil surround
ings. It is a shame to make his misfor
tune a source oi profit.”
“I couldn’t help answering this letter,”
the artisan said, “though most of the let
ters of this kind I leave unanswered. I
told the woman that the alligator hoy,
though but seven years old, drank
whiskey, chewed tobacco, and had twice
been arrested for stabbing his widowed
mother; that if there was anybody who
needed reforming it was the alligator boy,
and that if she was willing to take him in
hand she could let me know by return
mail. I haven’t got her reply.”
smoUituji (ToUarro.
When you come to think of it, it is not
odd that literary people prefer a pipe to a
cigar. It is handier to smoke when they
are writing, and ever so much cleaner.
And then it Rives them the true essenco
and flavor of the tobacco.
The most fastidious smokers anions: all
nations and all classes of men agree that
the tobacco grown on the Golden Tobacco
Belt of North Carolina is the most delic
ious and refined in the world. Lighter
than Turkish, more fragrant than Havana,
freer from nitrates and nicotine than any
other, it is Juft what the connoisseur
praises and the habitual smoker demands.
The very choicest tobacco grown p— —*
on this Belt is bought by Black
well’s Durham Tobacco Cos., and JP
appears in their celebrated Bull
Durham Smoking Tobacco. It is /
known the world over. r-— M
Get the genuine,with Bull / V
trade-mark, then you will /
be sure of hating abso- /
lutely pure tobacco. / "'Vjggfg
* yumr.
GEO, V. HECKER&CO
170 BAY STREET,
SAVANNAH. Ci A.
Heeler’s Superlative Flour.
Heeler’s Perfect Baling Pewder.
Heeler’s Self-Raising Hoar.
Oaltrv’o (Fliorolatr.
COLD MEDAL, PARIS, 187a
t BAKER’S
ygnilla Cliocolate,
Like all our chocolates, is pre
pared with the greatest care, and
consists of a superior quality of
cocoa and sugar, flavored with
pure vanilla bean. Served as a
drink or eaten dry as confec
tionery, it is a delicious article,
and is highly recommended by
tourists.
Sold by Grocers everywhere.
W. BAKER & CO.,
Dorchester, Mass,
Paints, (Silo, etc.
JOHN G. BUTLER,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
Paints, Oils, Etc.,
HAS REMOVED TO
NO. 6 WHITAKER STREET.
iEatttqero.
M.'j. O’CONNOR.
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
Morning News Building, No. 3 Whitaker street,
Savannah, Ga.
Al r II.L practice in the several State and
Tv Federal Courts of Georgia.
Prompt attention given to collections.
3nM>lto, Samfoo, @tr.
E. L. NEIDLINGER, SON & CO.,
DEALERS IX
SADDLES, HARNESS and BRIDLES,
PLOW LINES, BACK BANDS, TRACE CHAINS,
Concord and Georgia Wool Collars,
Rubber, Leather and Gandy Belting 1 ,
HUM, HEMP AND USCDURIAN PACKING.
GARDEN HOSE AT JO CENTS PER FOOT.
ARMY M’CLELLANS A SPECIALTY.
TRUNKS, SATCHELS and TRAVELING BAGS.
CAREFUL ATTENTION GIVEN TO COUNTRY ORDERS.
156 ST. JULIAN and 153 BRYAN STS., SAVANNAH, CA.
W. 33. IVLEILL & COT,
(Successors to N. B. KNAPP),
I<o CONGRESS STREET (Market Square), SAVANNAH, GA.,
DEALERS IN
Saddles, Bridles, Harness, Belting, Trunks,
VALISES, TRAVELING BAGS,
RUBBER and LEATHER BELTING,
Packing, Hose, Calf Skins, Sole Leather, Shoe Uppers, Findings, Etc.
Gin Bands, Roller Leather, Gin Bristles, Etc.
SPECIAL ATTENTION.—We would call tlie attention of merchants and planters visiting
our city to lay in their Fall and Winter supplies to our assorted stock of the above men
tioned goods, which we are prepared to offer at low prices. Call amt examine our prices
when visiting the city, or write for prices N. B.—Stock Saddles for the Florida trade a spe
cialty. Agents for GATHRIGHT’S PAT HINT SXDDLES, just the tiling tor old men. HILL’S
CONCORD TEAM COLLARS the best.
•Pianumßo, iUatriiro, (Pit.
Diamonds! Diamonds!
THE undersigned begs to acquaint his many patrons and the public at large that he has
purchased one of the largest and most select stocks of these precious stones which were
evo under one roof in this city. I invite an inspection, and feel satisfied that 1 can suiteverv
,ts e. I guarantee every article as 1 represent them to be, besides I DO NOT CHARGE
FANCY PRICES, but sell my goods at a very small advance above cost and at strictly but
one price, theieby placing the amateur and the judge upon the same footing.
11l 1 I “f* || I || 111 | V Ai|F A 1 have every grade of these celebrated
Anl 11 8 1 Uit fall IMf fl I I'U L V Watches, in Gold and Silver Cases, and
fiHL I nHm fin I unto.ssssr ->• rai ‘ m,v
I Fulfill* I \l There is no better assortment of all kinds or Jewelry to be found,
Ig_ SSI I |J W and I can suit everybody, whether it he for a BRACELET, EAR
IrSWI In I RINGS, PINS, CHAINS, LOCKETS, or anything else that may be
r h II lal.il I I wanted in the jewelry line.
C n |iH Ciii/orufaro ,1 ° S ool * B f handle are from the most reliable manufacturers. 1 in-
OUIIU Oil VOl YVctl C. vite comparison in quality and price. I mean Strictly Business.
M:. STE33INri3ER.Gr,
22 1-2 BARNARD STREET.
TUTTS
gill—B—rwniiwaq
PILLS
‘WWIt-—TT T ~ ~TT*M— —|
TORPID BOWELS,
BORDERED LIVER,
and MALARIA.
i corn tiioso sources arise three-fourths of
mi diseases of tbo liunian race. These
y lnptoms Indicate their existence: JLoss of
1 ppetlte, Itoivt-ls costive, Mck llead
ht , fullness after eating, aversion to
xertion of body or mind, Eructation
food, Irritability of temper, Low
plrits, \ feeling of having neglected
nine duty, Dizziness, Fluttering at the
• t! rt, Dots before the eyes, liitrltlv col
ned Urine, CONSTIPATION* and do
nand the use of a remedy that acts directly
on the Liver. As aLivor medicine TI TTS
J. * LLS have no equal. Their action on the
iudneys and Skin isalso prompt; removing
ail impurities through these three “ scav
engers of the system,” producing appe
iite, sound digestion, regular stools, a clear
skin and a vigorous body. TUTT’S P11.1.S
cause no nausea or griping nor interfere
with daily work and are a perfect
ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA.
HE FUELS LIME A NEW MAN.
‘‘l have had Dyspepsia, with Constipa
tion,two years,and have tried ten different
kinds of pills, and TITT'S are the first
that have done me any good. They have
cleaned mo out nicely. Hy appetite is
splendid, food digests readily, and I notv
have natural passages. 1 feel like anew
man.” W.. 1). EDWARDS, Palmyra, O.
Sold every where,asc. Office,44 Murray St.,N.Y.
TUTTS HAIR DYE.
Grat Haib or YVhiskkbs changed in
stantly to a Glossy Black by a single ap
plication of tli is Dte. Sold by Druggists,
or sent by express on receipt of $ 1,
Office, 44 Hurray Street, New York.
TUTT’S BfiAHUAL OF USEFUL RECEIPTS FREE
mineral lUatcv.
gR
Flows from the Mamnum Mineral Fountain
of Saratoga Springsr ami is in the opinion of
the most eminent medical men Nature’s Sover
eign Cure for Constipation, Dyspepsia.
Torpid Liver, Inactive Conditions of the
Kidneys, and a most salutary alterative in
scrofulous affections. With ladies, gentlemen,
and bon vivants everywhere it has become the
standard of dietary expedients, fortifving the
digestive functions and enabling free-livers to
indulge with impunity at table. The world of
wealth, intelligence and refinement testifies
to its sparkling, naturally pure and delightful
qualities as the beverage incomparable, and
accredit it with being the surest and speediest
source of clear complexions, high health and
exuberant spirits. Hathorn Spring Water
is sold only in glass bottles; four dozen pints
are packed in a case. It may he obtained at
all hotels, and of druggists, wine merchants
and grocers everywhere. E. 11. HATHORN,
Hathorn Springs, Saratoga, N. Y.
Jrun lUorito.
Novelty iron Works,
NO. 2 BAY & RIVER STREETS,
SAVANNAH, GA.
JOHN ROURKE, Proprietor.
Iron and Brass Foundry
AND MACHINE SHOPS.
I am prepared to do all kinds of
Machine, Boiler A Biacksniith Work.
CYAN also furnish at shortest notice and at
J lowest market prices all kinds and sizes
of IRON and BRASS CASTINGS, PULLEYS,
SHAFTING, etc. SAYV MILL YVORK A
SPECIALTY. Manufacturer of
Sampson Sugar Mills & Pans
Estimates furbished on all kinds of NEW
WORK and REPAIRS.
J. W. TYNAN,
Engineer and Mariiinisl,
SAVANNAH, GA.
Cor. West Broad and Indian Sts.
VLL kinds of Machinery, Boilers, etc., made
and repaired. Steam Pumps. Governors,
Injectors, and Steam and Water Fittings of all
kinds for sale.
OLIVER’S
Paint and Oil House,
NO. 6 YVHITAKER STREET,
SAVANNAH, - GEORGIA.
SASH,DOORS,
Blinds, Mouldings, &c.
Slattj ffulio, Utatrv (Toolrro, Ctr.
A Nice line of Hip, Sponge and In
fants’ Bath Tubs just received.
Water Veter Coolers
A beautiful assortment, at prices astonish
ingly low. KEROSEN E OIL STOVES, KED
ZIE'S FILTERS and COOLERS combined.
CORMACK HOPKINS,
167 BROUGHTON STREET.
Tjooc at& Sprat It lero.
• PERFECTION'
—■K)
Lawn & Garden Sprinkler!
Tile best means obtainable for watering
your gardens. Price, Nickel-plated, $1 25.
ALSO, A LARGE STOCK OF
RUBBER HOSE,
All sizes and prices. Quality guaranteed.
JOHN NICOLSON,
0 and 32 Drayton Street,
syamo.
ASK YOUR GROCER FOR
AND BONELESS BACON
NONE GENUINE
Unless bearing our patented 'Trade-Marks, a
light metallic seal, attached to the string,
and the strined canvas as in the cut.
Uoltaic Brito.
pn
]
(BKFORE.) (AKTKR.)
TT'LuCTRO-VOLTAIC BELT and other Electric
Xh Appliances are sent on 39 Days’ Trial TO
MEN ONLY, YOUNG OR OLD, who are suffer
ing from Nervous Debility, Lost Vitality,
Wastiso Weaknesses, and all those diseases of a
Personal Nature, resulting from Abuses and
Other Causes. Speedy relief and complete
restoration to Health, Vigor and Manhood
Guaranteed. Send at once for Illustrated
Pamphlet free. Address
VOLTAIC 11ELT CO.. Marshall. Mich.
Ittr&iraJ.
Manhood Restored.
A vict4m of early Imprudence, causing: nervous
debility, premature decay, etc., having tried in vain
every mown remedy,has discovered a simple means
of self-cur*. which he will send FREE to his fel
low-sufferers. Address,
J. H. REEVE*. 13 Chatham St., Hew York.
Ptuorreo.
A GOODRICH, Attorney at Law, 124
• Dearborn street, Obicago. Advice free.
18 years’ experience. Business auieiTv aad
legally transacted
Shipping.
OCEAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY
-FOR
NEW YORK AND PHILADELPHIA.
Passage to New York.
CABIN *2O
EXCURSION 82
STEERAGE 10
Passage to Philadelphia.
CABIN 118
EXCURSION SO
STEERAGE 10
CABIN TO NEW YORK, VIA PHILA
DELPHIA 20
THE magnificent steamships of this Com
pany are appointed to sail as foUows:
TO NEW YORK.
CITY OF AUGUSTA, Capt. K. S. NICKER
SON, SATURDAY', April 5, at 2:30 P. M.
CHATTAHOOCHEE,Capt. E. H. DAGGETT,
WEDNESDAY', April 9, at 5:00 P. m.
NAOOOCHEE, Capt. F. Kemftjn, SATUR
DAY', April 12, at 7:00 a. m.
TALLAHASSEE, Captain YV. H. Fisuxk,
YVEDNESDAY', April 16, at 10:00 a. m.
TO PHILADELPHIA.
JUNIATA, Capt. H. C. Daggett, SATUR
DAY', April 5, at 2:00 p. m.
CITY OF savann ah, Capt. J.W. Cath
arine, SATURDAY', April 12, at 7:00 a. m.
Through bills of lading given to Eastern and
Northwestern points and to jiorts of the United
Kingdom and the Continent.
For freight or passage apply to
G. M. SORREL, Agent,
City Exchange Building.
Boston and Savannah
STEAMSHIP CO.
FOR BOSTON DIRECT.
CABIN PASSAGE *-20 00
EXCURSION 35 00
STEERAGE. 12 00
J?
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—standard time:
GATE CITY'. Capt. D. HEDGE, THURS
DAY, April 10, at 6:30 p. y.
CITY OF MACON, Capt. S. L. Nickerson,
THURSDAY’, April 17, at 11 A. M.
GATE CITY', CAPT. I>. Hedge, THURS
DAY, April 21, at 5 P. y.
THROUGH hills of lading given td New
England manufacturing points aud to
Liverpool.
The company’s wharves in both Savannah
and Boston are connected with all railroads
leading out of the two cities.
RICHARDSON A BARNARD, Agents.
Merchants’ anil Miners’ Transporta*
tiou Company.
FOR BALTIMORE.
CABIN PASSAGE 115 00
SECOND CABIN 12 00
EXCURSION 25 00
THE steamships of this Company are ap
pointed to sail from Baltimore for Savan
nah EVERT YVEDNESDAY and SATUR
DAY' at 3 o’clock p. m., ami from Savannah
for Baltimore EVERY TUESDAY and FRI
DAY' as follows (city time):
JOHNS HOPKINS, Captain MARCH,
FRIDAY', April 1, at 1 r. y.
YY'M. LAWRENCE, Captain HOOPER,
TUESDAY'. April 8, at 4 p. m.
WM. CRANE, Capt. Taylor, FRIDAY',
April 11, at 8 a. m.
JOHNS HOPKINS. Captain M arch, TUES
DAY, April 15, at 10 a. m.
Through bills lading given to all points
West, all the manufacturing^)was in New
England, and to Liverpool and Bremen.
Through passenger tickets issued to Pittsburg.
Cincinnati, Chicago, and all points West and
Northwest.
JAS. B. W.EST & CO., Agents,
Good News for Florida Travelers.
New Montgomery Route!
Georgia and Florida Inland
Steamboat Company.
No Heat! No Dust! hut a delightful sail along
the PICTURESQUE SEA ISLANDS, in
cluding the charming resorts of
Montgomery and Fernandina.
A PERFECT DAYLIGHT SERVICE!
LEAVE Savannah every Tuesday, Thurs
day anil Saturday.—City ami Suburban
K’y, Anderson Street Depot at 8 A. M., stand
ard time; leave Montgomery,
BY STEAMER ST. NICHOLAS,
8:40 A. m.; arrive Fernandina, 6 p.m.; arrive
Jacksonville, F. & J. It. It., 7:30 p.m.
From Savannah lor Darien,Brunswick, Fer
nandina and way landings
STEAMER DAVID CLARK
From foot Lincoln street every Monday and
Thursday at 4 r. M.
All fix-st-class tickets on Montgomery route
include meals; baggage checked through.
For regular and special excursion tickets to
all points in Florida, Cuba. Mexico, etc., ap
ply to I,eve & A I,DEN, cor. Bull and Bryan sts.
Brunswick passengers either way will be
transferred at St. Simon’s by steamer Ruby.
J. N. HARKIMAN, Manager.
C. Williams, General Agent.
For Augusta and Way Landings.
STEAMER KATIE,
Captain J. S. BEVILL,
WILL leave EVERY TUESDAY, at 5
o’clock?, m. (standard time), for Au
gusta and way landings.
All freights payable by shippers.
JOHN LAWTON,
Manager.
SEMI-WEEKLY LINE
FOR COHEN’S BLUFF,
AND WAY LANDINGS.
THE steamer MARY' Fl.>llEli, Captain W.
T. Gibson, will leave for• above every
FRIDAY,3p.m. Returning, arrive SUNDAY
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.
UailroaDo.
Charleston & Savannah Ry. Cos.
Savannah, Ga„ Feb. 23, 1884.
ON and after SUNDAY, February 24. the
following schedule will he in effect.
Railroad standard time 36 minutes slower
than city time:
Trains 35, 43 and 47 wait indefinitely at Sa
vannah for connection with 8., F. & YV. R’y,
Xorthuard.
Xo. 95.* Xo. 4 9* Xo. 47.*
Lv Savannah 33)0 pm 6:00 am 8:37 pm
ArCharleston 8:50 p m 11:45 a m I:4sam
Lv Charleston 10:50 a m 12:15 a m
Lv Florence 3:35 p m 4:31 a m
Lv Wilmington 8:00 pm 8:53 am
Ar Weldon 2:20 a m 2:31 p m
ArPetersburg 4:soam 5.00 pm
Ar Richmond 6:00 am 6:30 pm
Ar Washington 10:30 a m 11:00 p m
Ar Baltimore 12:00no’n 12:23 a m
Ar Philadelphia 3:00 p m 3:50 a m
Ar New York 5:30 p m 6:45 ain
Southward.
Xo. 95. Xo. 42. Xo. 49.
L v Charleston—9:oo a m 3:30 p m 4:3C a m
Ar Savannah... 1:00pm 7:4opm 8;00am
Passengers by 8:37 pm train connect at
Charleston Junction with trains to all points
North and East via Richmond and all rail
line; by the 6:00 a m train to aU points North
via Richmond.
for Augusta. Beaufort and Fort Royal.
Leave Savannah 6:00 am and 3:00 pm
Arrive Yemassee 7:49 a m and 5:05 p m
Arrive Beaufort 9:15 a m and 6:45 p m
Arrive Port Royal ... 10:00 a m and 7:10 p m
Leave Port Royal 8:00 p m and 6:20 a m
Leave Beaufort S :18 o m and 6:32 am
Arrive Savannah 7:40 p m and 1:00 p m
A first-class Dining Car attached to all
trains, affording passengers a fine meal at
small expense.
Pullman Palace Sleepers through from Sa
vannah to Washington and New York on
trains 43 and 47.
For tickets, sleeping car reservations and aU
other information, apply to William Bren,
Ticket agent, 22 Bull stioet, and at Charles!
ton and Savannah Railway Ticket Office at
Savannah, Florida and Western Railway De
pot- C. S. GADSDEN, Sup’t.
S.C. Boyloton. G.P. V.
J. W. CtAitf,Master Transportation.
Kaitroafrp.
Savannah. Florida & Western Ry.
[All trains of this road are run by Central
(90) Meridian time, which is 86 minutes slower
than Savannah time.]
tUPXKINTENDXNT’S OPFIC*, ,
Savannah. Dec. 9, 1883. <
ON AND AFTER SUNDAY! DEC 9
1883, Passenger Trains on this road will
run as foUows:
FAST MAIL.
Leave Savannah daily at S:3O a m
Leave Jesup daily at 10:U a m
Leave Waycrosedaily at 11:50 am
Arrive at Callahan daily at 1 :S5 p m
Arrive at Jacksonville daily at 2:30 p m
Arrive at Dupont daily at 12:56 p m
Arrive at Suwannee daily at 8:15 pm
Arrive at Live Oak daily at 3:45 p m
Arrive at New Branford daily at 5:00 p m
Arrive at Newnansville daily at 6:50 p m
Arrive at Hague daily at 7:05 p m
Arrive at Valdosta daily at 1:56 p m
Arrive at Quitman daily at 2:22 p m
Arrive at Thomasville daily at 3:25 p m
Arrive at Bainhridge daily at 5:lo p m
Arrive at Chattahoochee daily at 5:36 p m
Leave Chattahoochee daily at 11:16 a m
Leave Bainhridge daily at 11:30 a m
Leave Thomasville daily at 1:35 p m
Leave (Quitman daily at 2:26 p m
Leave V aldosta daily at 2 :59 p m
Leave Hague daily at 0:20 a m
Leave Newnansville daily at 6:35 a in
Leave New Branford daily at 8:25 a m
Leave Live Oak daily at 9:40 a m
Leave Suwaunee daily at 10:02 a m
Leave Dupont daily at 3:55 pm
Leave Jacksonville daily at 2:20 p m
Leave Callahan daily at 8:15 p n
Arrive at Waycrose daily at 5:05 p m
Arrive at Jesup daily at 6:38 pm
Arrive at Savannah daily at 8:17 p m
Between Savannah and Wayeross this tram
sto; s only at Johnston’s, Jesup and Black
she'r. Between YVaycross and Jacksonville
stop's only at Folks ton and Callahan. Be
tween YVaycross aud Chattahoochee stops
only at Duuont, Valdosta, Quitman, Thomas
ville and all regular stations betweeu Thom
asville and Chattahoochee. Between Dupont
and Hague at all stations.
Passengers for Fernandina take this train.
Passengers for Brunswick via Wayeross take
this train.
Passengers for Madison, Mouticello, Talla
hassee aud ail Middle Florida points take
this train.
Close connection at Jackson ville daily (Sun
day excepted) for Green Cove Springs, St.
Augustine, Palalka, Enterprise. Sanford and
all landings on St. John’s river.
Pullman Parlor Cars between Savannah aud
Jacksonville.
Pullman Buffet and Sleeping Cars Jackson
ville tv Pensacola, Mobile and New Orleans.
This train connects at New Branford with
steamer Caddo Belle, leaving for Cedar Key
and Suwannee river points every Monday and
Thursday morning, arriving at Cedar Key the
same afternoon. Returning, ieaves Cedar
Keys every Tuesday and Friday morning after
arrival of Gulf steamships.
Passengers for Peusacola, Mobile, New
Orleans, Texas, and trans-Mississippi points
make close connections at Chattahoochee
daily with trains of Pensacola aud Atlantic
Railroad, arriving at Pensacola at 11:15 p. m..
Mobile at 4:45 a.m.. New Orleans at 10:19 a. in.
EXPRESS.
Leave Savannah dally at 8:20 u m
Leave Jesup “ 5:30 pm
Arrive at YVaycroas “ 7:05 pm
Arrive at Callahan •* 9:15 p m
Arrive at Jacksonville “ lu:00pm
Leave Jacksonville “ 8:30 am
Leave Callahan “ 9:16 a in
Arrive at YVaycross “ 11:00am
Arrive at Jesup “ 12:31pm
Arrive at Savannah “ 2:35 pm
This train stops at all stations between Sa
vannah and Jacksonville.
Pullman Parlor Cars on tUU train Savannah
to Jacksonville.
Passengers for Waldo, Gainesville, Codar
Key, Ocala, Wildwood and all stations on
Florida Transit and Peninsula Railroad lake
this train.
Connections at Savannah daily with
Charleston and Savauuah Railway for all
points North and East, aud Central Railroad
for all points West and Northwest..
ALBANY EXPRESS.
Leave Savannah daily at 6:40 pm
Leave Jesup daily at 11:05 pm
Leave YVaycross daily at 2:35 nm
Arrive at Callahan daily at.... 5:35 a ni
Arrive at Jacksonville uaiiv at ... 7:no ain
Arrive at Dupont daily at 3:2Jaiu
Arrive at Thomasville daily at 7:15 am
Arrive at Albany daily at H:ls a m
Leave Albany daily at 4:10 p la
Leave Thomasville daily at 7:40 Din
Leave Dupont daily at ...ll:oopm
Leave .Jacksonville dany at . 9:30 pm
Leave Caliuliau daily at io :17 pm
Arrive at Wayeross daily at 12:20 a m
Arrive at Jesup daily at 2:55 am
Arrive at Savannah daily at 5:25 a m
Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars Savannah to
Jacksonville.
Passengers for Brunswick, via Jesup, take
this train, arriving at Brunswick 6:45 4. m
Passengers for Macon take this train, ar
riving at Macon at 7:45 a. in.
Passengers for Fernandina, YValdo, Gaines
ville, Cedar Key, Ocala, Wildwood and all
stations on Florida Transit and Peninsula
Railroad take this train.
Connection at Jacksonville daily (Sun
days cxccpte-W for Green Cove Springs, Bt.
Augustine, Paiatka, Enterprise, Sanford and
all landings on St. John’s River.
Connecting at Albany daily with pas
senger trains both ways on Southwestern
Railroad to and from Macon, E.ifauia, Mont
gomery, Mobile, New Orleans, etc.
Connection at Savannah daily with Charles
ton and Savannah Railway for all pointa
North and East.
Connecting at Savannah daily with Centra
Railroad for pointa YVest and Northwest.
Through tickets sold and tloepmg car berth
accommodations secured at Bren’s Ticket
Office, No. 22 Bull street, and at the Compa
ny’s Depot, foot of Liberty Blreet.
A restaurant has been opened in the sta
tion at Wayeross, and abundant time will bo
allowed for meals by ail passenger trains.
JAS. L. TAYLOR,
R. G. FLEMING. Superintended.' AgenU
Central & Southwestern 07.
(All trains of this system are run by Standard
(9o) Meridian time, which is 36 minutes slower
than tune kept by City.l
Savannah,'Ga., March 29, 1864.
ON and after SUNDAY', March 30, 1884, pas
senger trains on the Central and South
western Railroads and branches will run rs
follows:
HK AD DOWN. Kb AD DOWN.
Xo. SI. From Savannah. Xo. 53.
10:00 am Lv Savannah Lv 7 ::tup m
4:30 pm Ar Augusta.. Ar 6:15 am
6:15 p m Ar Macon Ar 2:45 a in
11:20pm Ar Atlanta Ar 7:00 am
Ar Columbus Ar 1:50 p m
2:32 am Ar Eufaula.. Ar 4:28 pm
11:48 p m Ar Albany Ar 4:06 p m
Ar Milledgeville... .Ar 10:29 a m
Ar .Eatonton Ar 12:80 ptu
Xo. 18. From Auyueta. Xo.to. Xo.it!
8:30 am Lv.Augusta...Lv 10:*) pm o:2opm
8:23 p m Ar Savannah.Ar 8:00 a m
8:15 p m Ar Macon ....Ar 2:45 a in
11:20 p m Ar. Atlanta.. Ar 7:00 am
Ar.Columbus.Ar 1:50 p m
2:32 ain Ar. Eufaula.. Ar 4:2s pm
11:16pm Ar.Albany....Ar . I:ospm
Ar.MilPville..Ar 10:29 a m
Ar E.'itontoj..Ar 12:30p m
Xo. 55. Froto Macon. Xo. st.
1:10 am Lv Macon Lv 8:15 aiu
8:00 am Ar Savannah Ar 3:25 p m
Ar Augusta Ar 4:30 pm
Ar... MilTe’ville Ar 10:23am
Ar . .Eatonton Ar 12:30 p m
Xo. 1. From Macon. Xo. 9.
9:35 ain Lv... Mac0n............. Lv 7:10 and m
4:28 pm Ar—Eufaula Ar 2:32 am
:07 pm Ar Albany Arll:40 p m
.Vo. 5. From Mown. Xo. liT"
8:25 am Lv Macon ..Lv ) ... ""
1:50 pm Ar Columbus Ar
Xo. 1. From Macon. No. 51. No. 59.
8:30 a ffi Lv Macon To 7 7:00 p m 3:00 am
12:55 pm Ar Atlanta. Ar 11:20 p m 7 :o0 a m
No. it. From Fort Valley. Xo. tl.
8:35 pinLv Fort V alley Lv li :05 a m
9:20 pin Ar Berry Ar 11:55 ain
Xo. t. From Atlanta. Xo. 55. Xo. 6t.~~
2:20 p m Lv..Atlanta..Lv 9:00 p m 4:00 am
8:81 pin Ar. .Macon... Ar 12:56 am 7:52 a m
2:32 a m Ar. .Eufaula . .Ar 4:2Bpm
11:46 p m Ar. Albany.. Ar 4:05 pm
Ar. Columbus. Ar 1:50 Dm
Ar.Milled’ville.Ar 10:29 am
Ar. Eatonton..Ar 12:80 pm
Ar. Augusta. Ar 4:30 pm
Ar Savannah.Ar 8.00 am 3:25 p m
At). S. From Coluanlru*. Xo. 90 ~
12:10 pm Lv Columbus. Lv ‘
5:19 pm Ar Macon Ar
11:20 p m Ar... .Atlanta Ar.....
2:32 am Ar Eufaula Ar
11:46 a m Ar—Albany Ar
Ar—Milledgeville Ar.. . .. ’
Ar—Eatonton Ar.
• Ar—Augusta Ar
8:00 am Ar Savannah Ar
Xo- 1. From h'ufnalaT Xo. s!^
ma pmLv Enfauia Lv 1:02 a m
4:05 p m Ar. ...Albany Ar
6:35 p m Ar—Macon Ar 7-25 a m
• Ar ...Columbus Ar I:6opm
11.20 p m Ar.... Atlanta Ar 12:55 pm
Ar....Milledgeville Ar 10:29 a m
Ar Eatonton Ar 12:30 pm
- ' Ar.... Augusta Ar 4:3onm
8:00 amAr Savannah Ar 3:25 pm
Xo. t 6. From Albany. Xo.tyT
12 00 noon Lv Albany i,v 2-25 a m
4:28 pm Ar—Eufaula Ar
6:35 p m Ar—Macon Ar 7:25 a m
Ar Columbus Ar 1:50 pm
11:20 pm Ar ... Atlanta Ar 12:55 p m
Ar. ...Milledgeville ... .Ar 10:29 a m
Ar....Eatonton. Ar 12:30pm
•• •••• Ar ...Augusta Ar 4:Bopm
8:00 a m Ar—Savannah Ar 3:25 pm
Xo. St. From Eatonton and MilUd-jevilie.
2:15 pm Lv Eatonton ] “
3:42 pm Lv Milledgeville .
6:lspm Ar Macon
Ar Columbus ..!!
2:32am Ar©...Eufaula....
11:48 pm Ar Albany
11:20 p m Ar Atlanta
Ar Augusta ...."I"
8:00 a m Ar Savannah
Xo.tU. From Ferry! Xo. tt!~~
5:15 a inLv....Perry Lv 2:45 pm
8:00 am Ar Fort Valley Ar 3:35 pm
local Sleeping Cars on all
tween Savannah and Augusta, Savannah and
Macon, Savannah and Atlanta.
Bull man Hotel Sleeping cars between Cin
cinnati and Jacksonville, without change
Connections. 6 *
•*he Milledgeville and Eatonton train runs
daily (except Monday) Utween Gordon ana
I^S^a a n'd d on? XCCJ,tSU “ aa y>
Sunday).*' 0 ’ ** tna Augusta dai ‘y (except
Eufaula train connects at Cuthbert for Fort
Gaines daily (except Sunday).
i’erry accommodation train betwee
Fort \ alley and Perry runs daily (except Su
The Albany and Blakely accommodation
Affiany'ami BlakVy? o61 * Bunda
wtrtern V RAd a i)<. Wlth f Savanna lb Florida and
£d&; at Atlant a* vri th* Air - line
Iwtfnd wSr KOUteB *° 411 P° lnu Nor °’
™ SP ia H Rnd keeping car berth#
6n. Trt v. Agt. Traffic Marnier, Savannah
Georgia