Newspaper Page Text
COMMERCIAL.
market.'"*' ' '
office of the morning news. (.
Savannah, Ga.. Oct. 14. ISB7. i
WEEKLY HEPOnT.
General Uemarka—There were no new de
velopments in the general market, and the week
under review lias been practieally an uneventful
one. The depression in most of the staple
articles continues, but the impression prevails
that bottom has been toughed, as in some
of the most. prominent there was a
slight reaction in values. Trading continues fair
but large line-are hard to move; this is particu
lar!'' noticeable in the jobbing trades. Interior
buyers have about fully stocked up. and most
orders now coming to baud are for small re
assortments. There seems to be a general dis
position on the part of buyers not to
take more than enough for current
necessities as the course of the cotton
movement, while extraordinarily large, is
rather uncertain, and gives considerable un
easiness, owing to the prevailing impression of
a short crop and a short season. Collections
are fair. The money market is comfortably
easy. Exchange is tlrm for sterling, while do
mestic is easy. In the security market there is
a fairly active business, with a hardening ten
dency to values. Central railroad stuck and de
lienturts are higher. In groceries
and provisions apart from the usual steady bus
iness at this season there is no special activity,
prv goods, there is little or no inquiry. In all
other branches there is barely a fair business in
progress. The following resume of the week's
business will show the tone and latest closing
quotations of the different markets at the clos
ing hour to-day:
Naval Stores.—The market for spirits tur
pentine during the past week was very firm
and steadily advanced. There was a good de
mand. but holders’ views were somewhat
higher than buyers’, consequently sales were
slightly restricted. Prices have advanced fully
1: „c. and at the close were held higher. The
total sales were about 2,300 casks. Rosin
tbe market lias continued comparatively quiet
and prices very steady . Tile demand was only
fair. The total sales for the week were about
8.000 barrels. Elsewhere will be found a weekly
comparative statement of receipts and exports
from April! to date and for the same time last
year, showing the stocks on hand and on ship
board not cleared, together with the official
closing quotations of the Board of Trade.
Rice.—The market for the week continues
quiet, with only a small volume of business.
Buyers are disposed to operate, but holders do
not show a desire to concede sufficient to tempt
purchasers beyond the tilling of their actual
needs. Stocks of clean are accumulating,
and prices, whilst given as official
are generally shaded upon transactions of any
magnitude. The receipts thus far as compared
with last year is smaller while the outturn by
the mills is larger. The following are the ofti
eial quotations of the Board of Trade. Small
job lots are held at %@)4o. higher;
Fair nominal 4%®
Good 452 a.
Prime 4%®
Rough-
Tidewater $1 10®1 25
Country lots 90®1 00
Cotton.—The report of the Agricultural Bu
reau has had its effect, and the market through
out the week ruled firm and prices w ere grad
ually forced up, clo -ing a full >.40. higher than
11 week ago. Factors receipts arc gradually
falling off, and the current offerings were kept
pretty well cleaned up. although buyers put
their rest efforts forward to resist any advance.
The total sales for the week were 15,050 bales.
The following are the official closing spot quota
tions of the Cotton Exchange:
Middling fair 9 5-13
Good middling 9%
Middling . .... 9
Low middling 813-1 i
Sea Island.—The receipts for the week up to
4p. m., as repoited by factors, were 680 hags
and the sales for the same time were 575 bags,
leaving the stock at 1,709 bugs. The market
has continued quiet and prices unchanged.
Buyers were limited, and any attempt at higher
values met with resistance and restricted busi
ness.
Common 16%@17
Medium 18®
Good 19®
Fine 19%@20
Extra fine 2l®
Choice 22®.
The receipts of cotton at this port from all
sources the past week were 55,864 bales of up
land and 680 hales sea island, against IS, 146 bales
of upland, and s+'l hales sea island last year.
The particulars of the receipts have been as
follows: Per Central railroad, 48,5® bales up
land: per Savannah, Florida and Western Rail
way 10,385 bales upland and 618 bales
sea" island; per Charleston and Savannah rail
road, 455 Imlos upland: per Savannah river
steamers, 598 bales upland; per Florida steam
ers, 128 lialcs upland, and 6 bales sea island:
tier Brunswick and Satilla river steamers !>, 1
bales upland, and 11 bales sea island: per carts
137 bales upland and 45 bales sea island: per
Darien and Altatnaha steamers 38 bales upland.
The exports for the week w ere 81.529 bales of
upland and 298 bales sea island, moving as fol
low's: to Philadelphia. 892 bales upland: to New
York. 9,685 bales upland and 298 bales sea island;
to Boston, 2,064 bales upland; to Baltimore,
2,350 bales upland: to Char leston. 1,354 bales up
land; to Reval, 10,100 bales upland: to Baree
lona. 4,600 bales upland; to Genoa, 3,484 bales
upland.
i he stock on hand to-day was 123.951 bales up
land and l.Pio bales sea island, against 93.832
bales of upland and 1,214 bales sea island last
year.
Comparative Statement of Net Receipts, Exports and Stocks of Cotton to the Following-Places
to Latest Dates.
* I I Stock on ,
Received since j Exported since Sept. 1, 1887. j hand and on
ports. Sept. 1. 1 Sh ipboa rd.
(treat j iO'f/i Fftl Total C si vise
18F6-87 j 1885-86 ,Bi Haiti. France. Ports. Foreign. Pot ts. ! 1887. 1686.
New Orleans Oct. 14 976,390 178,355' 66,05'j! 18,343 20.940 105,33') 5.001 125.(M2j 78.165
Mobile Oct 14 39,2401 21,3541 5,103 : 6,103, 28,180: 18.129 8.811
Florida Oct. 14| 5,949| 3,635 ! j 5,9 .9 1
I Texas Oct. 14 191,063' 184.447 : 46.372 8.201 54.5.3 1 74.548 63..5t0! 74,286
! 0 „. m1 ,,, (Upland ..Oct. 14; 283,449' 195,528: 23,127 a>,o!. 73,225 98.-41 121,951 93.832
..air.nu.iu , (; ea Js’d.. .Oct. 14: 1,065 : 950 i 30 1 30: . 531. 1.709! 1.214
I Upland.. .Oct. 14 143,581: 109.51'.'j 32,385| 10,863 31,4551 74.708 24,592 46.323 50,103
1 narieston (Sea fe'd.- Oct. 7: 731 '3571 1 170 : 825 1.500
North Carolina Oct. 14 57.817 83,81 4| 22.8311 4.0001 26,83! 5.890 25,110 17.311
Virginia Oct. 14' 97,314 67.1:7 : 36.260 8.857 : 45.117 25,114 24,028 23.250
New York Oct. 14 394 1.013 : 83,279 3,213 31.745 118,237 ; 57.042 00.733
I Other ports Oct. 14; 84,565 SO,900: 39,278 2.978; 42,256.1 | 80,90)' 7,993
Total to date j 1,181,068 1 354,717 ! 32,419; 158.274 545,4!0j 310,028 517.884
Total to date in 1866 816,5451 j I i • 443,534./
Comparative Cotton Statement
| Of Gross Receipts, Exports and Stock os Hand, Oct. 14. 1833,
AND FOR THE SAXE TIME I-AST YEAR.
1887-8. 1886-7.
■ ea I ! .SVa j
Inland Upland Inland. Upland
v tock on hand Sept. 1 575 6,818 1,149 • 30
deceived this week 680 65.364' M3 40.14 C
Received previously j 1,015; 218.841 424 143,96;
Total 2,270 2D'.023 2.116 200,411
!Exported tkii week 11l 84,529 CM :;i ? -l
{Exported previously 263 : 32,843 30- 52.231
Total 561 101,072 DO. 100.585
Stock oil hand and on ship-;
board Oct. 14. 1.70D 123,951 I 1.214 Da.SK
Movement ok Cotton at Interior Points.
giving ree dpt* and shipments for the week end
ing Oct. 14 and stock on hand to-night, and for
the same time last your:
r— Week ending Oct. 14. 1887.—,
Receipts. Shipments. Stork.
Augusta 11,446 8.983 12,980
Columbus. 8,408 3,201 45,738
Borne 3.4'1H 2.985 2,605
Macon 4,186 3,4-6 6,055
Montgomery 7,173 9.031 6,881
Selma 5,588 4.364 0.881
Memphis . 85,051 22,360 64.699
Nashville 2,407 1,758 2,229
Total 72,987 56,108 147,128
.—Week Vmding Oct. 18, 1880.-,
Receipt*. Shipment!). Stock*.
Augusta 11,795 10,879 8,693
Columbus 5,458 2,473 9,282
Home 2,080 150 1,570
Macon 4,438 8.866 3.072
Montgomery 8,687 5,689 9,179
Selma 5,321 5,050 5.5.,1
Memphis 24.954 14,920 35.647
Nashville 2,334 919 1.402
Total 05,067 43.946 74,376
THE FOLLOWING STATEMENT SHOWS THE NET RE
CEIPTS AT ALL PORTS FOR THE WEEKS ENDING
pCT. 14 AND OCT. 7, AND FOR THIS WEEK LAST
year:
77) is Last Last
IPeefe. Meek. Year.
Galveston 37.774 35,155 32,975
New Orleans 81,477 60,996 62,331
Mobile 9,582 8,944 7,75n
Savannah 55,744 62,552 46.313
Charleston 27,518 24,716 29,830
Wilmington 10.308 10,286 7.968
Norfolk 25,339 21,147 26,375
New York 257 25 272
Various 28,306 26,899 15,870
Total 276,304 250.720 229,695
CONSOLIDATED COTTON STATEMENT FOR THE WEEK
ENDING OCT. 14. 1887.
Receipts at all U. S. ports this week 276,304
Last year 239.695
Total receipts to date 1,181,068
Last year 781,745
Exports for this week 138,758
Some week last year 137,102
Total exports to date 561,743
Last year 302,667
Stocks at all United States ports 577,884
I gist year 443,533
Stocks at all interior towns 95,549
Last year 74,955
Stocks at Liverpool 430,000
Last, year 316.000
American atloat for Great Britain 209.000
Last year 180.000
LIVERPOOL MOVEMENT FOR THE WEEK ENDING
OCT. 14. 1887, AND FOR THE CORRESPONDING
WEEKS OF 1886 AND 1883:
1887. 1886. 1885.
Sales for the week.. 77.000 53,000 46,000
Exporters took 7,800 4,300 3,500
Speculators took 2,300 1,700 1,600
Total stock 430.000 316,000 362,000
Of which American. 190,000 150,000 233,0*1
TT imports for week. 30,000 28.000 20,001
Of which American. 33,000 18,000 17,000
Actual exports 7.900 6,100 5,100
Amount, afloat 234,000 250,000 128,000
Of which American. 209.(00 180,000 119,000
Price 51-id S 3-1 (Id 5 7-liid
Visible Supply of Cotton.—Below we g.ve
the table of visible supply, as made up by cable
and telegraph for the Financial ana Commer
cial Chronicle to Oct. 7. The continental
stocks, as well as those of Great Britain and the
afloat, are this week s return and consequently
all the European figures are brought down to
Thursday evening. But to make the totals the
complete figures for Oct. 7we add the items of
exports from the United States, including in it
the exports of Friday only:
1887. 1886.
Stock at Liverpool 475,000 348,000
Stock at London 39,000 23,000
Total Great Britain stock.... 514,000 871,000
Stock at Hamburg 4,800 1,401
Stock at Bremen 39,800 24,800
Stock at Amsterdam 21,000 14,000
Stock at Rotterdam 200 400
Stock at Antwerp 900 1,2X1
Stock at Havre 148,000 108,000
Stock at Marseilles 2,000 6,000
Stock at Barcelona 13,000 38,000
Stock at Genoa 5,000 11,000
Stock at Trieste 12,000 14,000
Total continental stocks 248,700 218,800
Total European stocks 760,700 589,800
India cotton afloat for Europe. 72,000 53,000
American cotton afloat for Eu
rope 295,000 158,000
Egypt. Brazil, etc., afloat for
Europe 19,000 21,000
Stock in United States ports ... 425,896 407,179
Stock in U. S. Interior towns.. 127,560 92,054
United States exports to-day.. 34,203 13,300
Total visible supply 1.734,358 1,337,333
Of the above, the totals of American and other
descriptions are as follows:
American —
Liverpool 212,000 188.000
Continental stocks 78,000 120,000
American afloat for Europe... 2715,0,(0 158,000
United States stock 425,896 407,179
United States interior, stocks.. 127.560 92. (81
United States exports to-day . 34,302 13,300
Total American 1,172.658 953,533
Total East India, etc. 561,700 363,800
Total visible supply 1,734.358 1.387.333
The imports into continental ports this week
have been 12,000 bales.
The above figures indicate an increase in the
cotton in sight to date of 3 )7,025 bales as com
pared with the same date of 1886, an increase of
414,146 bales as compared with the correspond
ing date of 1885, and an increase of 148,193 Dales
ns compared with 188-1.
India Cotton Movement.—The following is
the Bombay statement for the week and year,
bringing the figures down to Oct. 6:
BOMBAY RECEIPT* AND SHIPMENTS FOR FOUR
VEARS.
Shipments this week—
Great Britain. Continent. Total.
1887 4,000 4,000
18,86 2,000 6,000 8.000
188.5 2.000 2.000
1884 2,000 7,000 9.900
Shipments since Jan. 1
Great Britain. Continent. Total
1887 363,000 669.090 1.032.000
1886 .319,000 670,000 9H9.00J
1885 219,090 466.000 685,000
1884 498,000 830,000 1,128,000
Receipts — This week. Since Jan. 1.
1887 8,000 1,474,000
1886 6, (XX) 1,408,000
1885 2.009 1,009.000
1884 3.(XX) 4 1,555,000
According to the foregoing. Bombay appears
to show an increase compared with last year in
the week’s receipts of 2.000 bales, and a de
crease in shimneats of 1,000 bal es, and the ship
ments since Jail. 1 show an increase of 43,000
bales.
FINANCIAL.
Money Market—Money is active, but plenti
ful for all business purposes.
Domestic Exchange Easy. Banks and
bankers are buying sight drafts at. % per cent,
discount and selling at % per cent, discount
to par.
Foreign Exchange-The market is firm.
Commercial demand, $4 84; sixty days
$4 79; ninety days, $1 77%: franc*, Paris
ami Havre, commercial, sixty days, $5 28%;
Swiss. $5 29%; marks, sixty days, 93%.
Securities—TUe market is fairly active for
both stocks and bonds, with light offerings.
STOCKS AND BONDS
State Bonds— Bid. Asked.
New (feorgia 1% per cent bonds 105 106
Georgia new (is, ISS9, January and
July coupons HM 108
State of Georgia gold quarterlies. 105 107
Georgia Smith's, maturity 1896,
ex-interest 180 121
Citll Bonds-
Atlanta 6 per cent 108 110
Atlanta 7 percent. ) ; *
Augusta 7 per cent ns n*
Augusta 6 per cent 110
Columbus 5 per cent 100 10.>
Macon 6 per cent 11l 112
New Savannah u per cent, quar
lerly, January 100 101
New Savannah 5 per cent, quar
terlv, November coupons 10 *Ol%
Railroad Bonds—
Bavunaah, Florida nuJ western
Railroad general mortgage
bonds, 6 tier cent interest con
Atlantic and Gulf first mortgage
consolidated 7percent,coupons
January and July, maturity
1897 1U 114%
Central consolidated mortgage 7
tier cent, coupons January and
July, maturity 18D3 110 111
Georgia Railroad Os Ob 108
Charlotte. Columbia and Augusta
first mortgage 11l 112
Charlotte. Columbia and Augusta
second mortgage . 110
Mobile and Girard, second mort
gage indorsed 8 V* I .’ cent, cou
pons Jannarv and July, matim
ty MS9, cx-niterost 102 103%
Marietta and North Georgia first
mortgage 0 j*r cent 100 101 %
Montgomery and Kufaula first
mortgage Indorsed 0 per cent.. 1006$ 108
Western Alabama second mort
gage indorsed 8 per cent, con
pons October, maturity 1890. ..100 107
South Georgiu and Florida in
domed 113 180
South Georgia and Hernia soc
ond mortgage 11 * 110
OceanSteanisuipO percent bonds,
guaranteed by Centra, Railroad 10— a* 103
THE MORNING NEWS: SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1887.
Gainesville, Jefferson and South
ern Railroad, first mortgage.
guaranteed 115 116%
Gainesville, Jefferson and South
ern, not guaranteed 113
Gainesville, Jefferson and South
ern. second mortgage, guaran
teed 113
Columbus and Rome, first indors
ed Os 164 106
Columbus and Western 6 per cent
first guaranteed 107
Augusta and Knoxville railroad 7
per cent first mortgage bonds.. 111% 112
City and Suburban Railroad, first
mortgage 7 per cent bonds 109 110
Railroad Stocks
Augusta and Savannah, 7 per cent
guaranteed 132 133
Central common, 100 121
Georgia common 193 196
Southwestern, 7 per cent, guaran
teed 126 127
Central. 6 per cent cert ificates.. . 100 100%
Atlanta and West Point railroad
stock 109 111
Atlanta and West Point 6 percent
certificates 103 104
Bank Stocks —
Southern Bank of the State of
Georgia 198 201
Merchants’National Bank 158 168
Savannah Bank and Trust Com
pany 95 97
National Bank of Savannah .... 120 121
The Oglethorpe Savings and Trust
Company 107 108
Gas Stores—
Savannah Was Light stock 20% 21
Mutual Gas Light gO 23
Factory Bonds—
Augusta Factory 6s 105 ....
Sibley Factory 6s 163 ....
Enterprise Factory 6s 101 ...
Factory Stones —
Eagle and Phoenix Manufactur
ing Company 120 121
Augusta Factory . 103
Graniteville Factory 140
Langley Factory .108 ....
Enterprise Factory Company ... 45 ....
Enterprise Factory, preferred .110 ....
J. P. King Manufacturing Com-
Sibley Manufacturing Company 95
Naval Stores.—The receipts for the |>ast
week have been 3.856 barrels spirits turpentine
anil 13.208 barrels rosm. The exports were 4,546
barrels spirits turpentine and 8,089 barrels rosin,
moving as follows: To New York, 2,127 barrels
rosin and .Vi barrels spirits turpentine; to Bal
timore, 870 barrels rosin; to Boston, 225 barrels
spirits turpentine and 225 barrels rosin; to the
interior, 1,782 barrels spirits turpentine and 1,022
barrels rosin; to Philadelphia, 118 barrels spirits
turpentine; to Loudon, 2,371 barrels spirits tur
pentine; to Genoa. 3.845 barrels rositi. The
following are the Board of Trade quotations:
Rosin—A, B, Cand D 90c.. E 95c., F 97V3c., G
St 00, H $1 00, 1 51 05, K si 25, M $1 35, N
$1 53, window glass $2 10. water white $2 CO.
Spirits turpentine—regular bid, 32c. asked.
Receipts, Shipments and Stocks from April 1,
1887, to date, and to the corresponding date
last year:
, 1886-7 , —IBBS-6 ,
Spirits. Rosin. Spirits. Rosin.
On band April 1.. 2,543 77,408 2,116 61,821
Rec’d this week.. 3,856 13,208 2.846 9,3' ;
Rec’d previously. 123,808 313,216 105,648 284,586
Total 130,2U7 4071.832 110,610 355,725
Shipments: Foreign —
Aberdeen 3,080 3,544
Antwerp 11,013 3,486 12,788 5,416
Belfast 250 3,063
Bristol 4,824 3,418 3.449 4,091
Buenos Ayres. ... 200 5.000 1,500
Barcelona 2,1X28
Cork for orders... 1,708 1,935
Cartbagena ... .... 1,103
Cronstadt 8,800
Dantzig 3.133
Garston Dock 6,050
Genoa 9.295 4,O<X)
Glasgow 8,086 2,841 11,000
Goole 2,850 113 6.330
Granton 6,048
Hamburg 2,818 4,000 8,067 12,868
Harburg 6,249 8.290
Hull 4,517 750 3,887 2,640
Las Palmas 27
Liverpool 5,476
London 21,902 16,871 8,980 15,536
Marseilles 3,735 .... 3,800
Montevido 1,400 .... 1,500
Oporto .. 600 .... 596
Paysanda 507
Pernambuco 1,531 .... 2,365
Pooteeloff Harbor. 22,026 .... 3,186
Queenstown for
orders 1,968 57?
Riga 2 12,855 .... 3.700
Reval 1,417
Rotterdam 1,422 15,037 5,801 10,857
Stettin 3,.587 .... 6,200
Trieste 200 10,300 .... 4,840
Coastwise —
Baltimore 58.486 8.447 62.046
Boston *8.785 7,335 7,571 9,306
Brunswick 500 464
Charleston 500 1,500
Philadelphia 5,060 2,414 3,714 7,’132
New York .31, 592 107.022 20.016 107,223
Interior towns .... 15,523 3,826 10,595 2,952
Repacking, ulage,
etc 2,755
Total shipments . 118,746 312,562 100.950 312,317
Stock on hand and
on shipboard
Oct. 14 11.46! 71,270 9.600 43,403
Bacon —Market steady: demand good: smoked
clear rib sides, 9c; shoulders, dry salted
clear rib sides, B%c; long clear. 814 c; shoulders,
6%c; hams, l ie.
Bagging and Ties—Market irregular. We
(piote: Bagging—2j4 lbs. B%(iiß'ijc: 2 lbs, 7%®
i /;,(■: Uq .' s, iff 4®744c, according to brand and
quantity. Iron ties—Arrow and other brands,
noue: nominal, $ I 25 per bundle, according to
brand anil quantity. Bagging and ties in retail
lots a fraction higher.
Burma—Market steady: oleomargarine, 14®
16c; choice Goshen, 20c; gilt edge, 23@25e;
creamery, 25® 28c.
Cabbage—Northern, 11® 21c.
Cheese—Market nominal; small demand:
stock light. We quote, ll®]sc.
Coffee—The market is firm. We quote for
small lots: Ordinary, i9%c; fair, 20%c;gooi,
21c; choice. 22c; peaberrv, 24c.
Dried Fruit--Apples, evaporated, 12c; peeled,
7%c. Peaches, peeled, 19e; unpeeled. s®7c.
Currants, 7c. Citron, 25c.
Dry Goods—The market is firm; business fair.
We quote: Prints, 4®6c; Georgia brown shirt
ing, 3-4, 4%e; 7-8 do. 6%c: 4-4 Grown sheetiug,
ii%c: white osnaburgs, 8%®10c; checks, ol4®
7c; yarns, 85c for best makes; brown drillings,
7® 1 %c.
Fish—We quote full weights: Mackerel—No.
1, $7 .50® 10 (X); No. 3, lmlf barrels, nominal,
£6 00®? 00: No. 2. $7 500.850. Herring—No. 1,
20e; scaled, 25c; cod, s®Bo.
Flour—Market steady: demand moderate.
We quote: Extra. $3 70®8 85: fancy, 81 (Hl®
4 85; choice patent, $5 10®5 35; family, §4 10®
4 35.
Fruit—Lemons—Demand light. 5Ve quote:
$215@300. Apples, Northern, S3 00®:) 75.
Grain—Corn—Market very firm: demand
light. We quote: White corn, job lots, to:;
carload lots, 06.;: mixed corn, job lots, 65c; car
load lots, 62c. Oats steady; deman i good. We
quote: Mixed oats, 4.5 c; carload lots, file Bran,
81 Od. Meal, 72%c. Georgia grist, per sack,
Si 50; grist, per bushel, 75c.
Hay—Market very firm, with a fair demand;
stock ample. We quote job lots: Western,
$1 10: carload lots, $i 00; Eastern, $1 10; North
ern. none.
Hides, Wool, Etc.—Hides—Market dull: re
ceipts light; dry flint, ll%c: salted, 9%c; dry
butcher. Bc. Wool—Receipts light; prime, in
bales, 25c; burry. 10® 1.5 c. Wax, 18c. Tal
low, 3®4c. Deer skins, flint, 20c; salted 16c.
Otter skins, 50c® $4 00.
Iron—Market firm; Swede, 4%@5c; refined,
Vic.
Lard—Market steady; in tierces, 7%c; 50 Tb
tins, 7%c.
Lime, Calcined Plaster and Cement—\ la
baina lump lime is in fair demand, and is selling
at 51 30 per barrel; Georgia, f! 30 per barre .
calcined plaster, #1 50 per barrel; hair, 4c.
Roseudale cement, $1 SJ; Portland cement,
83 50.
Liqiioiw-Fnll stock: sternly demand. Bour
bon. SI 50®5 50; rye. $1 5U®6 00; rectified,
81 00® 1 35. Ales unchanged mid in fair de
mand.
Nails —Market firm: fair demand We quote:
3d. 83 80 ; 4d and sd, $3 15; OU, $2 90; Bd, 32 6,5:
lOd to 60d. $2 40 per keg.
Nuts—Al.nouns-Tarragona, 19r.?.20c; Mena.
17®l8o; walnuts, French, 12c; Naples, B'e; p“-
oans. :0c; Brazil, file: filberts, 12c; cocoauuts,
Barracoa, $5 25 per HX).
Oils—Market firm; demand good Signal,
45c; West Virginia black, 9@loc: lard. 570;
headlight, 15c: kerosene. B%®Mu; water white.
13%o; ueatsfoot, 62®30c: machinery, 25®8bc;
linseed, raw, 4>sc; honed, 48c; mineral seal, 10c;
fireproof.*lßc; liomuiight, 18e.
Onions—Northern, per barrel, $3 50®.'! 75.
Potatoes—Northern, $3 00®3 25.
Peas—Demand light; cow peas, mixed. 75®
80c; clay. $1 (X>®l 15; speckled, $1 00® 1 15;
black eye. 3! 75; white crowder. $1 50®1 i.5.
Prunes —Turkish, 5%c; Fl ench, 10c.
Raisins—Demand light; market steady. Loose
new Muscatel, 82 00: Sayers, new §3 00: London
layers, new i'i 24 per box.
Salt—Thu demand is moderate and the mar
ket is quiet: carload lots. 67c fob; job lots. 7-5
®9oe. e
SHOT—Drop, $1 40: buck. $1 65.
Sugar The murketjia higner; cut loaf, 7%c;
standard A, o%c; extra C, tic; yellow U, 5%c;
granulated. 6%e, powdered. 7%c.
Sybui*—Florida and Georgia syrup. 45c; the
market is quiet lor sugarhouse at 80®40c; Cuba
straight go.ds, 2.3 c in hogsheads; sugarhouse
molasses. 20c
Tobacco -.Market dull; demand moderate.
Woq. Ti, kitez. 24e®$l 35: chewing com- 1
moti, sound, 25@30c; fair, SO®3sc; medium, 38
®soc: bright. 50®75e: flue fancy, 85®90c; extra
fine, 90r®$l 10; bright navies, 45®75e; dark
navies, 40®.50c
Lumber—There is a continues improvement in
the demand over the previous week, aud prices
remain firm at quotations. We quote, fob:
Ordinary sizes sl3 50® 17 00
Difficult sizes 10 60®21 50
Flooring boards 16 00®21 50
Shipstuff 18 50®21 50
Timber—Market dull and nominal. We quote:
71X3 feet average $ 9 00® 11 00
am •• “ 10 oo@ noo
900 “ “ 11 00@12 (XI
1,000 “ “ 12 00® 14 00
Shipping timber in the raft—
-700 reet average $ 6 00® 7 00
800 - •’ 7 00® 800
900 •• “ 8 00® 900
1,000 “ “ 9 00®10 00
Mill timber $1 below these figures.
FREIGHTS.
Lumber—By sail—Vessels are freely offer
ing; and tonuAgo is in good supply.
Freight limits are from s•*> 00t$6 2f> from
this and the near Georgia ports to the Chesa
peake ports, Philadelphia, New York. Sound
ports and eastward. Timber, 50e(&$l 00 higher
than lumber rates. To the West Indies and
windward, nominal; to South America, sl3 00($
14 00; to Spanish and Mediterranean ports,
sll 00® 12 00; to United Kingdom for orders,
timber. 27(&255; lumber, £3 15s. Steam—To
New York. $7 00; to Philadelphia, $; 00; to
Boston, $0 00.
Naval Storks—Firm hut nominal. Foreign-
Cork, etc., for orders, Bs, and, or, 4s 0d;
Adriatic, rosin, 8s 3d; Genoa, rosm, 3s. Coast
wise-Steam—To Boston, 50c on rosin, $1 00 on
spirits; to New York', rosin 50c, spirits 80c; to
Philadelphia, rosin 800. spirits MOc; to Baltimore,
rosin 30c, spirits 00c. Coastwise quiet.
Cotton —By steam—The market is steadier.
Liverpool direct 0-3‘M
Antwerp 10-<>-!d
Bremen direct liMttd
Reval direct l!-38d
Havre direct 5-Kid
Genoa direct 11 -82d
Barcelona direct 11 -32d
Amsterdam direct 10 6 td
Liverpool via New York : {8 0-32d
Liverpool via Baltimore lh 9-32d
Liverpool via Boston 0-32d
Antwerp via New York V* ®> 10 64d
Havre via New York R lb 11-10 c
Bremen via New York # tb 11-liU*
Reval via New York 35-64(1
Bremen via Baltimore lb 19-64d
Amsterdam via New York 60c
Boston bale $1 75
Sea island W bale 2 00
New York finale 1 50
Sea island $ bale ... 1 75
Philadelphia bale 150
Sen isiand 13 bale 1 75
Baltimore t J bale 1 25
Providence $ bale 1 50
By sail—
Genoa 5-16d
Rice—By steam—
New York $ barrel 60
Philadelphia V barrel 60
Baltimore barrel Go
Boston $ barrel CO
COUNTRY’ PRODUCE.
Grown fowls y pair $ 70 (rh 80
Chickens, %to H grown 40 (§> *5
Springers 35 (& 40
Ducks $ pair 60 (fo 8
Geese pair 100 (q,l 2ft
Turkeys p pair 1 25 (n:2 00
Eggs, country, per dozen 20 ({u 22
Peuuuts—Fanev h. p. Va. tb Ca\ 7
Peanuts—Hand picked, 1b (& 6
Peanuts—Ga. Imsliei, nominal 75 90
Sweet potatoes, yel. reds bush 50 ($, 6(
Sweet potatoes, yel. yams $ bush .. 50 (& 60
Sweet potatoes, white yams ip bush 40 <ln 50
Poultry—-Market steady: receipts fair; de
mand light for grown; half to three-quarters
grown in good request.
Eggs— Market very firm, with a good demand
and in good supply.
Peanuts—Fair stock ;tlemand moderate ; mar
ket steady.
Sugar—Georgia and Florida nominal; noue in
market.
Honey—No demand; nominal.
Sweet Potatoes—ln fair demand; receipts
light; demand fair.
SAVANNAH MARKET.
OFFICE OF THE MORNING NEWS, I
Savannah, Ga., Oct., 14, 4p. m. f
Cotton—The market was very firm. There
was a good inquiry, but holders were strong in
their views ami buyers and sellers were more or
lass apart. The total sales for the day were
1,928 bales. On ’Change at the opening call,
at 10 a. m.. the market was reported firm and
nominally unchanged, with no sales. At the
second call, at 1 p. m., it was firm and un
changed, the sales being 422 bales. At the
third aud last call, at 4 p. m., it closed firm at
an advance of 1-lGe all round, with further sale-,
of 1,506 bales. The following arj the official
closing spot quotations of the Cotton Exchange:
Middling f lir 9 5-16
Good niddling OV£
Middling 9
Low middling 8 13-16
Rice—The market was quiet aud easy, but
not quotably lower The sales for the day were
23.5 narrels. At me Board of Trade fair was re
l>orted is nominal and other grades quiet, at
the following official quotations, though small
job lots are held higher;
Fair 4W<& —
Good
Prime : 4%<&0
Rough-
Title water $1 lOtJftl 25
Country lots 9CU£I 00
Naval Stores—The market for spirits turpen
tine was strong and held higner. The sales for
tne day were 240 casks at 31V*jjC for regu
lars. At tne Board of Trade on the opening
call the market w.is reported firm ar. Bls£c bid
for regulars aud 32c asked. At the ciosiug call
it was firm at 3ls£c bid and 32c asked for regu
lars. Rosin —The market was quiet and steady.
There was a good inquiry, and about 1,820 bar
rels changed hands during th- day. At the
Board of Trade* on the first call the market
was reported steady at the following quota
tions; A, B. Cant D 90c. E sc, F 9TUc, U
and H $1 00. T $1 05. Ksl 25. M $1 35. N $1 55,
window 2lass $2 10. water white $2 60. At the
last call it was unchanged.
MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH.
FINANCIAL.
New York, Oct. 14, noon. -Stocks quiet but
heavy. Money easy at 4f0,5 i>er cent. Ex
change—long, $4 short, $4
4 8 iSjJ. State bonds ni*m. Government bonds
dull i>ut HUindy.
5:00 p. m.—Exchange steady to firm and ac
tive at $1 82(7/.4 H6J4. Money easy at per
cent., closing offered at 5. Sub-Treasury bal
ances—Gold, $132,144,000; currency 814,29< .OtU
Government bonds dull but firm; four per cents
12 '8; four and a half i>er cents 108. State
bonds dull but firm.
Tne stock market to-day was very active but
weak in the forenoon, and though a material
rally occurred in the afternoon, it was not
enough to wipe out the losses made. The bears
made free use of an interview with Chauncey
L*epew. published in the morning papers, and
succeeded in frightening holders to si;cu an ex
tent that prices were forced down from 1 to '2%
per cent. There is grave doubt in Wall street
t hat I>epew spoke precisely as he is reported to
have done, and denials put out later in the day
go far t make this a oertainty.N The Vander
bilts and Western Uuiou were lue heaviest suf
ferers in the dec ine, a special drivd i>eirjg made
against them In early dealings. The decline
met with no serious check until near 2 p.m.,
when from %to 1 per cent was regained: but
sidling was renewed in the last hour an.l the
close was active and weak at nearly the lowest
prices yf the day. Almost everything is lower,
the only exception being Manitoba, with a gain
of 1% pv*r cent., and Oregon Nav*.g tionl; but
Omairn 10->t 3 per cent., Sew York Central
Shore 2*4, Northwest 2%. Missouri Pacific
and Western Union 2 each. Nort.ieru Pacific pre
ferred Erie, Louisville and Nashville, No
lolk and Western preierreu and Lackawauua
each; St. Paul and Colorado U each. Union
Pacific, Reading, Richmond and West Point and
New Jersey Central \V\ each; New England and
Consolidated Gas 1. and others fractional
amounts. Total sales 503.009 shares. The fol
lowing were the closing quotations:
Ala. class A. 2to 5.105 New Orleans Pa-
Ala, class B, ss. 112* eifle, Ist mort... 81
Georgia 7s. mort. .105 N. Y Cent a) ...101%
N. Carolina <>.. .*12 1% NOIT. &. \V. pref... 3<5
N. f’aroima Is ... 95 Nor. Pacific 2 0%
80. Caro. (Brown) ** pref... 4,3^*
consols 105 Pacific Mail 34
Tennessee set 69>$ Reading. ..... GO%
Virginia6s Richmond A Ale.. 5
Va. consolidated. 45 Kicbmon i *t Danv 150
Oh’peakeA Ohio KichuFd S: VV. Pt. 21^
Northw n 106*4 Kovk Island 112 1 -*
“ preferred... P>k St. Paul 70%
Dela. x ski Lack 123*4 “ preferred .111 %
Erie 21 -Z Texas Pacific 22‘4
Fast Tennessee. 9 '2 Tenn. Coal & Iron. 23
lAke Shore H9W Union Pacific 44%
I/ville Nash 54>4 N. J. Central 72
Memphis & Cuar 46* Missouri Pacific... 89
Mobilext Ohio 9 Western Union... 74*4
Nash. A Cbatt’a.. 07 Cotton Oilcertifl.. 204 {
♦Asked.
oonv.v
Liverpool, Oct. 14, 12:30 p. m.—Cotton—
Business good at hardening rates; middling up
lands 5 3-16d, middling Orleans st6d; sales 14.000
bale**, for speculation and export 8,000 lales;
receipts 10,200 bales—all American.
Futures—Uplands, low middling chttise, Octo
ber delivery 6 145 is 04d; October aud No-
vember 5 11-63@5 10 Old: November find Decem
ber 5 11 64@5 10-04d; December and January
5 10-64®5 9-6-td; February and March 5 12-64®
6 1 l-Otd; March and April 6 13-64d; April and
Maysls-64d; May and June 5 17-64d. Market
steady.
No tenders.
Sales tor the week 77.000 bales—American
54,000 bales: speculators took 23,000 bales: ex
porters took 78,000 bales: forwarded from ships'
side direct to spinners 79,000; act ual export 02,000
bales; total import 30.000 bales—American 88,000
bales; total stock 480,000 bales—American 190,-
000 bales; total afloat 284,000—American 209,000
bales
Middling uplands sVid, middling Orleans
5 7-ltxi.
2 p. m.—The sales to-day included 9,900 bales
of American.
Futures—'Uplands, low middling clause, Octo
ber delivery ■> 13-04d, sellers; October and No
vember 5 10-G4d, buyers: November and Decem
ber 3 9-G4d, buyers; December and January
5 9-64d, buyers; January and February 5 9-tMu,
buyers; February and March 5 10-040, buyers;
March and April 3 12-04d, buyers; April and May
5 14 64d, buyers; May and June 5 16 64d, buyers.
Market barely steady.
4 p. m.—Futures': Uplands, low middling
clause, October delivery 5 12 Bid, sellers; October
aud November I> 10 Old, sellers; November and
December 3 9-64d, sellers; December aud Jan
uary 5 9-64d, sellers; January and February
3 9-04(1, sellers; February and March 5 10-tHd,
sellers; March aud April 5 12-64d. sellers; April
and May 5 14-04d. sellers; May and Jime 5 10 Old,
sellers. Market closed barely steady.
New York, Oct. 14, noon.—Cotton steady; mid
dling uplands 95s>c, middling Orleans 9s£c ; sales
1,108 bales.
Futures—Market opened weak, with sales as
follows; October delivery 9 51c, November 9 44c,
December 9 44c, January 9 50c, February 9 50c,
March 9 00c.
5:00 p. m.—Market closed steady; middling
uplands 9tjic, middling Orleans 9&gc; sales to
day 347 bales; net receipts none, gross 4,250
bales.
Futures—Market closed steady, with sales of
284,100 bales, as follows: October delivery 9 08
@9 690, November 9 30(7z9 57c, December 9 50©
9 57c, January 9d!(ji;9 life, February 9 I('('s9 71c,
March 9 79; i 9 80c, April 9 80®9 87c, May 9 94®
9 95c.
Green A Co.'s report on cotton futures savs:
"Animation anil excitement continue upon cot
ton options, t he dominating features of the situ
atiou being the latent absorbing power that ap
pears to take up the offering without difficulty.
After opening 10® 12 points oft* iu some cas s
prices commenced ou the advancing scale, ami
from the lowest made a gain of 1967 20 points,
especially noticeable on mar mouths. There
was nothing pa tieularly new apparent in the
way of stimulating influences, except possibly
better cable accounts, bat there was evidently
general (right among Is ars, who no; only cov
ered freely, hut took the long side oa tl.eir con
version and put the market tip through sheer
force of demand. Some S(,/ i points were shaded
from the highest, but the rime stood steady."
Weekly net receipts 257 bales, gross 14,470 bales;
exports, to Groat Britain 9...8 bales, to the
continent 8.885, to Fiance 1.742, sales 2,947 bales,
stock 5 ,042 bales.
Galveston-, Oct. 14.—Cotton firm; middling
9c.
Norfolk, Oct. 14.—Cotton firm; middling
9 1-iflc.
Oct. 14.—Cotton steady; middling
9 5-if*.
Boston, Oct. 14.—Cotton quiet but firm; mid
tiling 956 c.
YVilminoton, Oct. 14.—Cotton quiet; middling
9c.
Philapelphia, Oct, 14.—Cotton quiet; mid
dling 9*60.
New Orleans, Oct. 14.—Cotton firm; middling
9c.
Mobiijc, Oct. 14.—Cotton quiet; middling 87rc.
Memphis, Oct. 14.—Cotton very Arm; middling
s%e.
Augusta, Oct. 14.—Cotton firm; middling
8 13-ioc.
Charleston, Oct. 14. —Cotton firm; middling
9C.
Montgomery, Oct. 14.—Cotton Arm; middling
me.
Macon, Oct. 14.—Cotton firm; middlingß?dc.
Columbus, Oct. 14.—Cotton steady; middling
BKc.
Nashville, Oct. 14.—Cotton firm; middling
me.
Selma, Oct. 14.—Cotton strong; middling 87gc
Rome, Oct. 14.—Cotton steady; middling
BWc.
New York, Oct. 14.—Consolidated net receipts
for all cotton ports t la 14,193 bales; exports,
10 Great Britain 11,400 bales, to tue continent
13,778 bales; stock at all American ports 517,844
bales.
provisions, oro series, etc.
Liverpool, Oct. 14, 12:30 p. in.— • Wheat quiet,
with fair demand; holders offer moderately;
receipts of wheat for the past three days were
02,000 centals, including 17.000 centals of Ameri
can. Corn firm, but nothing offering; the
receipts of American corn for the past three
days were 41.000 centals. Weather cold and
rainy.
New York. Oct. 14, noon.—Flour quiet and
unchanged Wheat dull and lower. Corn
easier. Fork steady: mess sls. Lard steady
at $0 85. Old mess pork steady at sl4 25® 1150.
Freights steady.
5:00 p. m.— Southern flour quiet and un
changed. Wheal •.]■<*' linn: No. 2 spring 82c;
No. 2 red, October delivery 81c, November 81%
(7hßl%<\ I’orn— sj>M: firm and fairiy active; op
tions lower, closing steady: No. 2, Ocf.o
ber delivery ■: ! ; November 5 1 \ •. * * < >at
(luiet and generally steady: No. 2, October de
livery 32%c; Noteinber 32%e; mixed Western
ify£<<£: ; Ai\ Hops quiet and weak. Coffee, fair
Rio” on spot steady at 19*h,c; opt .ohm points
lower, closing steady; No. 7 Rio. October de
livery 17 45c: November 17 45(7/* 17 55c. Sugar
Arm but quiet; fair red ring iv fined Arm.
Molasses st<-a iy. Cotton *,i ol quoted at 32%c
for crude, retinal nominal. Hides, fair inquiry.
Wool quiet ami rat i• weak; oo r.e-tic fleece 26
(q* i4c, pulie 1 14<hJ12c, Texas DQi&V Pork dull
and barely steady: mess sls oO:(i;r 25 for new.
Beef in iight r quest. Middles dull. Lard a
shade easier; only loderat dy act i..■: Western
steam, on spot $6 85, October delivery $3 74®
u 7.>, November $6 57®8 01. Freights steady.
Chicago. Oct. 14. -The grain and provision
markets to-day were very discoura .• n; to s;>eeu
iators, the evil influence being depression in
stocks, making operators timid and sulky in a
remarkable dullness. The wheat market opened
at about yesterday s closing p:\ce.s There was
continuous sagging ail the n ny. a, and during
the last half hour, when cei tan l i\uiers. disap
pointed in their expectation* *.l’ proAt on earlier
purcnascs and apparemiy worr.e l by weakness
in the stock market, to get out,
prices fell away iuitil .i decline from the open
ing prices of was scored. The market
at 1 p. m. was weak at the Invest point of the
session. On aftenn/oii hoard there was u%e
reaction. Corn showed some short-lived
activity and strength at trie opening on account
of light receipts, 370 cars, being 00 cars less than
was expected and & liberal mo. e umt out ward,
the inspection sued showing 3-j.j,000 busbeis
corn inspect’d out of store and smpments of
.’h4,oO> bushels being reported from Chicago.
There was also a fair demand for cash property
early. Opening prices were the highest or the
session, lipwevcr, except for May, which ad
vanced he, then the demand for cash corn fell
off on account of the scarcity of vessel room
lure, aud m ; refusal of the (hand Trunk road
to accept any more corn tor lake and rail ship
ment on account of the lack of cars, and the
market sagged. The loss on the day wr.g 14®
%c. Tuere was not a large volume of business,
the gr *ater part of trading being done by the
Ifutciiinsons" brokers. The close was at a frac
t.oual advance lrom the lowest point. Oats
were dull ail around. Speculative orders were
light, anil there was less than the usual ship
ping demand for cash oats. A weak feeling
prevailed fur ev< rything but Octolxr, which
ruled steady, while other future* declined, and
at 1 j>. in. were about %c lower. At aiternoon
session %e of this was recovered. Provisions
were weaker and prices a shade lower. Receipts
of hogs were larger: iight hogs higher. Trading
in products was moderate and euiedv local, ana
Auctuatious narrow. January pork received
ta r attention. Cash lard was Arm.
Cash quotations were as follows: Flour In
letter di-mand. Wheat. No. 2 spring (50 '<< 69V4c;
No. •> spring oj<L' fi*‘c: No. 2 red 7i*c. Corn, No.
2,41 bid. Oats, No. 2. 2;V%'(&2Kc. Mess
pork 513 50'</ 13 7., Laid, per UK) lbs, $0 40.
Short rib sides, loose. $. 6)v, 7 or} .. Dry wilted
Hiiuuld'irs. noxed, .>> 0O(</..‘) 70. Short clear sides,
boxed. $7 40®7 45. Whisky $1 10.
Loading futures ran gal as follows:
Opening. Higuett. Closing.
No. 2 Wheat—
Oct. delivery.... 60% 62% 69%
Nov. delivery.... 7U% 70% 70%
May delivery — 77% 77 fu 77%
Corn, No. 2
Oct. delivery 41% 41% 41%
Nov. delivery.... 41 % 41 % 41 %
May delivery. . 4i% 44?# 44%
Oats No. 2
Oct. delivery..., 26 ...
Nov. delivery.... 25% 25% 25%
May delivery 29% 29% 29%
Mess Fork—
Jan. delivery... sl2 27% sl2 27% sl2 25
Lard—
Oct. delivery... . $0 30 $0 (40 $6 27%
Nov. delivery 1* 27% 6 27% 6 25
l>c. delivery... 6 30 6 30 6 26
Short Unis—
Oct. delivery $7 05 $ $.. .
Jan. delivery 6 22% 6 22% 6 20
Baltimore, (Jet. 14.—Flour steady and quiet;
Howard street and Western superfine $2 37®
2 75, extra $3 oO®3tio. family $3 73(7//4 35. city
mills superfine s■( 37®2 02, extra $3 00®3$0;
Kio brands $1 16®4 50. Wheat Southern
firm but quiet; red 80®82c; amber 82®84c;
Western easier; No. 2 winter red, on spot 7rt%
®7uc. Corn—Southern easy aud quiet ; white
6MSMO.
Louisville, Oct. 14 —Grain and provisions
unchanged.
bT. Louis. Oct. 14. —Floor ..uged. Whest
—No. 2 red, cash 7056®7044c, October delivery
71®7156c. Corn 3vc lower; cash 8956®3994c;
October delivery 89J4@3956e. Oats easy; cash
24(<524->.je, October delivery 23>rc bid. Whisky-
Si 05.
Cincinnati, Oct. 14.—Flour easy. Wheat,
neglected: No. 2 red 77c. Corn lower; No. 2
mixed44c. Oats quiet: No. 2 mixed 2856 c. Pro
visions—Pork dull at sl4. Lard easy. Bulk
meats quiet: short rib 756 c Bacon steady;
short ribs $8 25. short clear $8 75. Whisky
steady at $1 05. Hogs firm
New Orleans, Oct. 14.—Coffee steady and
firm; Rio cargoes,common to prime 1836@215fce.
Cotton seeil products dull and nominal. Sugars,
Louisiana open kettle, good fair to fully fair
sl6<'; Louisiana centrifugals, choice white 6 5-16
®o3ie, off whi e 056®0 8-160, choice yelle *•
obraed 515 in , tic Molasses - Louisiana open
kettle, choice 510, strictly prime 50c: ceutiifu
gat, strictly prime 37c, fair 29c; Louisiana syrup
38® 42c.
NAVAL STORES.
New York, Oct. 14, noon.—Spirits turpentine
steady at 84c. Rosin steady at $1 05®1 1256.
6:00 p. m.—Rosin steady at $1 05@1 1256- Tur
pentine dull at 84c.
Charleston, Oct. 14.—Spirits turpentine Arm
at 31c. Rosin firm: good strained 85c.
Wilmington,Oct. 14.—Spirits turpentine steady
at 81 b,c. Rosin firm; strained 80c, good
strained 85c. Tar firm at $1 15. Crude turpen
tine firm; hard $1 00; yellow dip $1 65; vir
gin $1 65.
RICE.
New York, Oct. 14.—Rice quiet but firm.
New Orleans, Oct. 14.—Rice in fair demand
aud firm; Louisiana, ordinary to prime 454®
554 c.
Circular from Hubbard, Prico & Cos.
(Through John S. Ernest, Southern Manager.)
New Y’ork, Oct. 14.- The great activity of
yesterday- afternoon was but a precursor of a
more nervous market to day, though at the
opening the failure of Liverpool to take special
note of the spasmodic advance here caused
some disappointment. Local operators, believ
ing that the advance had been due to the cover
ing of large short interests, were anxious to
sell this morning, and heavy orders were in
brokers’ hands at prices above the opening.
From outside sources, however, orders were re
ceived which speedily absorbed all the cotton
offered, and at one time during the afternoon
created a feeling that was akin to a panic, no
cotton being for sale excepting at ad aiming
figures, and these buyers were compelled to
ay. October was noticeably in demand, anil
the feur of a possible corner iu that month, ex
aggerated by the small stook here anil the lim
ited amount of certificated cotton,brought about
a demand which could uot. lie supplied The
sellers, however, regained courage when prices
were at their highest and supplied the market
freely, the larger houses proving to be the
source from which the supply came. The ad
vance was chocked, partially lost and prices
closed only steady. It is not thought that to
morrow will show any improvement. The short
interest has largely covered, and unless Liver
pool takes fright and gives much higher quota
lions our market will decline. Atthesame time
we oilvi.se our friends to use grout caution in
selling the inside position.
SHIPPING INTELLKIENL'B.
MINIATURE ALMANAC—THIS DAY.
RuNRtsES 6:03
Sun Sets 5:29
High Water at Savannah . 6 38 a m. 6:57 p 11
Saturday, Oct 15. 1887.
ARRIVED YESTERDAY
Steamship Chattahoochee, Daggett, New Y’ork
—CI G Anderson.
Steamship Wm Lawrence. Snow. Baltimore—
J B West 4 Cos.
Bark Brabant (Belg), Beauman, Antwerp, with
cement and empty bills to order; vessel to A R
Salas A Cos.
Hchrs M V B Chase, Pinkbam, Boston, in bal
last—Jos A Roberts 4 Cos.
Schr June Bright, Barter, Boston, in ballast—
Jos A Roberts A Cos.
Steamer Katie, liovill, Augusta and w-ay land
ings—J G Med Jock, Agent. (See local.)
ARRIVED AT TYBEE YESTERDAY.
Steamship Wylo (Br), Rogers, Montreal, in
ballast—Strauss 4 Cos.
ARRIVED AT QUARANTINE YESTERDAY.
Bark Themis (Nor), YVeybye, Bahia, in ballast
—A R Salas & Cos.
CLEARED YESTERDAY.
Steamship Tallahassee, Fisher. New York—(!
Ci Anderson. Agent.
Steamship Georgia (Br), Green, Revai—
Richardson 4 Barnard,
Bark Pomona (Nor), Ommundsen, London—
A R Salas 4 Cos.
DEPARTED Y’ESTER D YY
Steamer St Nicholas, Usina. Fernandina and
way sliding* -C Williams, Act.
Steamer Pope Catlin, Swift, Doboy and
Darien—Master.
SAILED YE >rERD AY.
Steamship Tallahassee. New Y'ork.
Schr Belle Hooper. Baltimore.
Schr George Walker, Providence.
MEMORANDA.
Fernandina, Oct 14—Arrived, bark Allgustinus
(Non, Flagstadt, Sligo: brig John Shay, Conk.
New Y ork: schrs Peter II Crowell, Olsen, Port.-,
mouth; Jessie Lena, Ross, Boston; Mary B
Judge, Magee. New London.
Cleared, schr Samuel B Hubbard, Mehafty,
New Loudon.
New Y’ork. Oct 12—Cleared, steamship Glen
Tatmr(Br). Fas,on, Savannah; sours Tom Wil
liams. Mills, Fernandina; Can-ie E Woodbury,
Bryant, do; Wm H Fredson, Biddle, Savannah;
YVaceamaw, Georgetown Mild Buctsville, SC;
Geo it Congdcm. Buyles, Georgetown, S C.
Liverpool, Oct 12—Sailed, bark Tikoma (Br),
Pugh, Tybee.
Lizard, Oct 12—Passed, steamship Blue Jacket
(Brl, YY'ehh. Coosaw, for .
Marseilles.Oct 10 Arrived, bark Bakrau (Aus),
Miculicich, Pensacola.
Buenos Ayres, priot to Sept 22, chartered ship
Undine (Aus), to load lunitier at Pensacola; bark
Axel (Nor), 891 tons, to load lumber at Bruns
wick for Buenos Ayres.
Boston. Oct 12— Cleared, schr Normandy, Wy
man, Fernandina.
Cot saw, Oct 12— Cleared, steamship Romanby
(Br). Parker, United Kingdom.
Darien. Oct 9—Arrived, schr Herman B Ogden,
Church, Portland.
Cleared, schr Lillie F Schmidt, Eldridge, Perth
Amboy.
Georgetown, S C. Oct 10—Arrived, schr D K
Baker, Hall, New York.
Jacksonville. Oct 10—Below, sebr Lois V
Cbapies, Ross, from Baltimore.
Sailed from Fort George 10th, schr Frank M
Howes, Rich. Baltimore.
Pensacola, Oct 12-Cleared, bark Coauabo(Br).
Garner, Plymouth, E; Tziapara (Nor), Ander
sen Barrow.
Philadelphia, Oct 12—Arrived, schr Ada A
Kennedy. Kennedy. Pensacola.
Cleared, bark Anita Bet-wind. Mcßride, Savan
nah; sebrs Annie Bliss, O'Donnell, do; Jennie
Rosaline, Saxton, Palatka
Satilla River, Ga, Oct 7—Arrived, sebrs Wilson
and Hunting. Potter, Baltimore
New Y’ork, Oct 13— Arrived, steamships Trave,
Bremen; Germanic, Liverpool.
Arrived out, steamship Wyoming, New York
for Liverpool.
MARITIME MISCELLANY.
St Johns, N F. Sept 23—A telegram received
this morning by her owners states that the brig
W II i,atitner (Br), Davis, from Fernandina, Aug
12, for Demerara, with linniier, has been lost ou
the coast of Demerara. Crew saved.
NOTICE TO MARINERS.
Philadelphia, Oct 12 —C'apt Bernard, of schr C
II Foster, of Caraliella, Fla, reports, under date
of Sept 28, licit the buoy off Cupl George was
missing; pilots slate that it has boon gone some
time.
RECEIPTS.
Per Charleston and Savannah Railway, Oct
14-82 bales cotton. 24 bbls rosin, 01 bbln rice. 8
bags coal, 8 bbls whisky, US caddies tobacco. 00
kegs nails. 1 car cotton seed, 1 car furniture, 22
sicks fertz, and indue.
Per s.nminaii. Florida and Western Railway,
Oct 14—1.190 bales cotton. 2.076 bbls rosin. 3it2
bbls spirits mr)M ntiue, 28 oar lumber. 1 cur iron,
10 bales hides, 100 sacks rice. 2 cars wood. 1 ear
poultry, I car seed, 55 boxes 1 -moas, 25 cases
preserves. 20 bales sponge, and mdse.
Per Central Kn Iroad, Oct 14 7.114 bales cot
ton, (13th 7,038 bales rotton), 23 bales domestics.
6 bate* yarn, 26 bale* hide*. 80 rolls leather, 140
Ills fruit, 5 pkgs paper, 09 pkgs tobacco, 50,970
lbs bacon, 2,790 bushels oats. 5 bbls beer, 12 case
liquor, 3 bbls whisky, 19 bbls whisky, 150
pkgs furniture anil h h goods, £0 ears lumber. 1
ear wood. 0 bushels rice, 3 bbls syrup, 1 car ilriors
andsasli. 50 pkgs wood in shape, 18 tons pig iron,
8 pkgs vegetables, 2 pkgs machinery, 11 pkgs w
lead, 12 pkgs carriage material. 85 doz brooms,
270 pkgs mdse, 1 pkg plows, 5 cars cotton seed,
2 pkgs empties. 70 pkgs hardware, 07 cases eggs,
85 bids spirits turpentine, 94 bbis rosin, 40 boxes
starch.
EXPORTS.
Per steamship Tallahassee, for New York
-89 bales sea island cotton, 51 (tales domestics,
8,309 bal ■ upland cotton, 27 bales hides. '2OB
bids rice, 100 bbls spirits turpentine, 2 bills fish,
880 bbls rosin, 7 bills fruit, 198 boxes lruit. 491
pkgs mdse, 5 bbls vegetables, 53 boxes vegeta
bles.
Pur steamship Georgia (Brl, for Revai—4.3oo
bales 11 ''in,id rotton.weighing 2.068,173 pouuds.
Per bark Pomona (nor), for London—2.B7l
bbls spirits turpentine, measuring 121,074 gaV
lons —Jos F'arie, Jr.
PASSENGERS.
Pej- steamship Tallahassee, for New York—YV
A Whalen. R K Boardman and wife, Mrs Isaacs,
Mrs M 1’ Brown, Rev S Rose, Miss E A Walker,
M Golinsky, B Tanjick, Jas P Thompson, HS
Byniiig. \\ R Torranor. and steerage.
Per steamship Chattahoochee, fro.n New York
- Mrs it and 1 .usi 111, .UrsG W Garin my, Mrs R An
derson aud hut., 11 F K ll 111. L 11 Jones, W E Val
entine. J It Warren and wife. G if Moriey, MrsK
A Reiley, C Asendurf. Mrs Tietjen children and
nurse, Rev O W Morrill, W L Bull, Mrs Graham
and inft, W YY'Seheiug. Miss Scheine, Alex Glass
and wife. Miss S A ee, Mbs J Hamilton. Miss
A Pierce, Miss M Rich, J O Dixon, C J Vedder,
N Sieinheiraer, H P Blount, J J Bresnahan, Rev
C C Thorne, Mrs J B Walker, Mrs J A Rogers, F
Y’edder. Mrs liilgarton, .Mm Vedder, Miss Ved
der. Mrs S Hicks, Miss C Harris. W W Gilbert. T
YV Henderson, H H Gilmer, C A .Miller and wife,
T F Gain, James McCullough. D H Lawson, H A
Smith, Jas McCormick, M Neerian, Geo Faucet,
J Graham, Mrs H Simpson, J 51 Hawley. A Lin
ton aud wife. F P Walker, Miss R Sams (col). E
P Stoney (col). Steerage -YV H McCloud, FC
Keinpton, Y’iola Brooks. R Graoe.G K Owens. H
YY’ Goodman, E Burns. C B Loomis, A Fish. H H
Caswell, YV Brownell, R I, Lamp. C D Y’oung. C
Dewees, H S Thompson, H J Cleveland. L Suiter,
J B YY’alker, YY’ D Stultz, J Reybert, H Ranee, if
Heidlinger, M Kalkev, J Aisendorf, E Suage, J
Schonfeeld, F Weslennan, 0 Muhlenbrook, G A
AI bury-, P Fitzpatrick, G YVailblock, J Dillon, E
Corknell, H Holtz.
CONSIGNEES.
Per Charleston and Savannah Railway. Oct
14—Transfer Office, Jno Flannery 4 Cos, S Reed,
Bendheini Bros 4 Cos. Southern Cotton Oil Cos, C
Ellis. Lee Roy Myers 4 Cos, Peacock, H & Cos. A
R Salas 4 Cos. J P Williams & Cos, Woods 4 Cos,
Hammond, H 4 Cos, Montague 4 Co,Decker 4 F,
H M Comer 4 Cos, 51 Y 4 D I Mclntire, Garnett,
S 4 Cos. J S Wood 4 Bro.
Per Savannah, Florida and Western Railway,
Oct 14 -Transfer Office. Jno Flannerv 4 Cos,
Bendheini Bros 4 Co.T P Bond 4 Cos, H Myers 4
Bros. G V flecker 4 Cos. A It Hull. Pearson 4 S,
A A Aveilhe,Graham 4 II.W I Miller,.! P Halen,
J O'Byrne, Dale, I) 4 Cos, McDonough 4 Cos, E
(ieffken. Butler 4 S, J S Collins 4 Cos, Order, J
C Bruy 11, Lee Roy Myers 4 Co.H Solomon 4 Son,
S Guckeuheimer 4 Son. Southern Cotton Oil Cos,
J K Clarke 4 Cos, Meinhard Bros 4 Cos, Cohen &
B H Levy 4 Bro, D B Lester. Epstein 4 YV,
J McGrath 4 Cos, C E Stulls, Stillwell. P 4 M. C
Ellis, J P Williams 4 Co.YV W Gordon 4 Cos. E T
Roberts. YV YY' Chisholm. Peacock, li 4 Cos. Per
kins 4 Hon, Ellis. Y 4 Cos, C L Jones. Chesnutt
4 O’N. YV C Jackson, Dale, D 4 ( o.YVoods 4 Cos,
Baldwin 4 Cos. G YValter 4 Cos, Garnett, S 4 Cos,
Herron 4 G.YVarren 4 A, Butler A S.M Maclean,
H M Comer 4 Cos. F M Farley, Montague 4 Cos,
DY r Dancy,M Y’ 4D I Mclntire, Jas Hart 4 Bro,
L Hart shorn, G YY' Garmauy, H Levy 4 Son, B
J Davant.
Per Central Railroad. Oct 14—Fordg Agt,
G YValter 4 Cos, Garnett, S 4 Co,Montague 4 Cos,
II M Comer 4 Cos, YV YV Gordon 4 Cos, J D YY’eld.
F M Farley, Herron 4 G, Savannan Guano Cos,
Warren 4 A, YY'oods 4 Cos, HainmouH, H 4 Cos,
M Maclean, Baldwin 4 Cos. J S Wood 4 Bro, J B
Flovd. YY' YY' Chisholm, Butler 4 S, R I) Bogart,
M Y 4 D I Mclntire. YVarnock 4 YY’, Pearson 4 S,
J C Thompson, .Moore, li 4 Cos, E A Schwarz, 0
Fill*. Pom hern ('otton (>il Cos, Jno Lyons 4 Cos,
J G Butler, Smith Bros 4 Cos, H Bolomon 4 Soil,
G W Tiedeman. Palmer Bros. J it YVeed 4 Cos, J
J Reilly, S Guckeuheimer 4 Son, Epstein 4 YV,
H Myers 4 Bros, J H Estill, Lindsay 4 M, Times,
M Ferst 4 Cos, Lovell 4 L. YV G Cooper. DeLeon
Guano Cos, Ludden 4 11, A Hanley. I G Haas. W
A Taylor, R B Habersham, A J Miller 4 Cos, Miss
Ida Hampton, I Epstein 4 Bro, .Yl V Henderson,
Baldwin Fertz Cos, C II Carson. C E Stults, H A
Crane, Llllenthal 4 Son, I, Putzel, Herman 4 K,
Lee Roy Myers 4 Cos, A Einstein's Sous, Frauk
MeCaw, Stillwell, P 4 M. BJCubbedge, E Sim
mons, D I) Arden, T L Kinsey, YV K Pearce. W
Gaiiahl. J J Gross, J P YVilliams 4 Cos, O'Connor
4 It. Peacock, II 4 Cos. YY' c Jackson, A 1. Rees,
I) B Lester, C Graham, J H YY'utson, 1) Y Dancy,
G YY' Parish, JAG Carson, YY' A Tidwell, Ray &
Q, G A Penton, S L Newton.
Per steamship YVm Lawrence. from Baltimore
—A A Aveilhe.G W Allen,E A Abbott, Byck 4S,
Bond, Fi 4 E, H A Boord, S YV Brancu, Brush E
L Cos, Baldwin Fertz Cos, I, E Byek 4 Son. Tbeo
(’has 4 Sav Ry, Benilheim Bros 4 Cos, J Cohen,
City 4 Sub Ry, YV G Cootler, W S Cherry 4 Cos,
Crohan 4 D, Clark 4 D, k C Connell, B Dub, W
E Dutifey, Jno Derst. I Epstein 4 Bro, P D Baf
fin. A Ehrlich 4 Bro. Epstein 4 YY’, M Eisemati,
8 Guckeuheimer 4 Son, YI Ferst 4 Cos, L Fried,
C M Gilbert 4 Co,Grady, Del, 4 Cos, Haines 4 D,
i G Haas, Ali Hull, G M Hindi 4 Cos, H Hesse,
M G Helmken, M Jenkins, E Lovell 4 Son, JJ
Lutz, B H Levy 4 Bro. Lindsay 4 M.D B Lester,
Jno Lyons 4 Cos. A Leffier, Lillenthal 4 Son, J if
I JiFar, Lippmau Bros.H Logan,A J Miller & Cos,
J McGrath 4 Cos, McDonough 4 B. Me iillis 4 M,
It D Mcitoneil. Jno Nicolson Jr, Neidlinger 4 R,
Mendel 4 D, G N Nichols, 1 iriler A B Hull, Order
G S McAlpiti. Order T P Bond 4 Cos, ,) H Ruwe,
1 inter ((blander Bros, Order Obendorf 4 (}, L
Rendon, Pearson 48. N Paulsen 4 Cos, stmr
Katie, Palmer Bros, H Solomon 4 Son. Savaa
uau Guano Cos, schr Pe.tha, Southern Ex Cos, YV
-icheihing, atmr ! (avid Clark,J P Williams 4 Cos.
E A Schwarz. GYV Tiedeman, PTuberdy, JT
i'horuton, Toeple Bros, A514 CYV West. JD
Weed 4 Cos, .1 B YVest 4 Cos, D YY'eisbein.
Per steamship Cliattahoocliee. from New York
—A R Altmayer 4 Cos, Ajipel 4 S, G W Alien, L
Blustein, Blodgi-tt, 51 4 Cos, J G Butler, Byck
Bros, Bendheim Bros 4 Cos, L E Byck & Son, 51
T Brown, Byck 4 S, ( Butler, T P Bond & Cos,
5 YV Branch, C R R 4 Bkg Cos. ,1 S Collins 4 Cos,
A II Champion. YV G Cooper, Crohan 4 D, S
I ohen, YV S Cherry 4 Cos, City 4 Sub Ry, E 51
Connor. T Cooley 4 Cos, Cohen 4 B, Coleman &
B, RC Connell, F Chandler Dr T G Charlton, A
I > Canning, Convent of Mercy. A Doyle, J E DeL
Grine 4 Cos, J A Douglass 4 Cos, M .1 Doyle. G
Davis 4 Son, L Desbomil ms, I Dasher 4 Cos, J
Derst, Decker 4 F, A Ehrlich 4 Bro, Davis Bros,
urn Dessuug, O Eckstein 4 Cos, 1 Epstein 4 Bro,
J 11 Estill, Y\ ill Estill. Epstein 4 YY\ YV Efskiue
4 Cos, Eckman 4 Y’, T II Enright, G Ebberwein,
M Ferst 4 Cos, A Falk 4 Son, Fretwell 4 N, Jno
Farrell, Frank 4 Cos, J 11 Furher, J T Freeman,
1 Fried, J F Freeman, S Guckenheimer 4 Son, J
B Fernandez, Fowler Mfg < C M Gilbert 4 Cos,
J Gorham, Grady, DeL 4 Co,YV YY' Gordon 4 Cos,
Gray 4 O'B, I' Gutman, (' F Graham, J Gardner,
!. J Gazan. sirs E J Gustin, I(iirmou 4 C, Mrs S
Herman, D Hogan, Hlrscb Bros, Harnett House,
A Hauley. G .31 lieidt 4 Cos, 1 G fi.ias, Wm Har
den, C Hettrick, J 11 Helmnen, Kavauaugh 4 B.
.1 4 L C Hartfelder, P T Haskell. J S liainus, R
5 Jones, A Krau -s, Knapp 4 Cos. E J Keiffer, J
F Luba, stmr Katie, Jno Lyons 4 Cos, A Leffier,
I Jpptnnn Bros, K Lovell 4 Son. S K Lewiu, H
Logan, Ludden 4 B, Litidsay 4 M, D B Lester, J
F I-a Far, N I-atig, J McGrntb 4 Cos, Mendel 4 D,
L A McCarthy, Lee Roy Ylvers 4 Cos. .Marshall
House, RDMcDoneli, Mutual Co-op Asso'n, E
"loyle, s!uir. D 4 Cos, Mohr Bros, D P Myerson,
Yleinhard Bros 4 Cos, slcKei.ua 5 YV. D J Morrl
sou. H Mitchell, H 51y< rs 4 Bros.Neidlinger 4 R,
Jno Nicolson Jr, J G Nelson 4 Cos, A S Nichols,
J J Nipsou, A C Oelsciiig, N Paulsen 4 Cos, Order
II Miller, L Putzel, Dr S C Parsons, H Porter, G
YV Parish, K Platshek. Palmer Bros, YY’ A Price,
.1 J Reilly, 51 Rovelsky, YV F Reid, T ikiderick,
Emma Rolierts, C D Rogers, YV D 1 lice. Screven
House, Southern Ex Cos, H Solomon 4 Son, J H
Schroder, Strauss Bros, Si Yl iry s Home, J H
Shun trine, E A Schwarz, M Schwarzlxium, Wm
Scheiliing, S Steridierg, YV D Simkins 4 Cos, 11
Suiter, Savannah Steam Bakery, Savannah Bk
4- T Cos. L C Strong. Solomons 4 Cos, J 0 Snyder,
P B Springer, Jno Sullivan, G W Tiodeman, J F
Torrent. Singer slfg ('o, p Ttmerdy.Teeple 4 Cos,
T P Townsend, B F Ulmer. Vale Royal slfg Cos,
J A HUin I Midi, A 51 4 C YV YVest, D \Y'eul>ein,
J D YY'eed 4 Cos, J I’ YVilliams 4 Cos, Watson 4
P, Thos West, R D YVilker, Oa 4 Fla I S B Go,YV
U Tel Cos, 8, F 4 YV Ry,
BROKERS.
A. L. 1 lAItT iVI D C3i>"
SECURITY BROKER.
BUYS ANT) SELLS on commission all classes
of Stocks and Bonds.
Negotiates loans on marketable securities.
New York Quotations furnished by private
ticker every fifteen mmuu s.
VII. T. WILLIAMS. W. fTMMJNO.
W. T. WILLIAMS & CO.,
33 ir'olkiex's.
ORDERS EXECUTED on tho New York, Chi
cuko and IJv.'iTjool Exchange*. Private
direct wire tp our office. Constant quotation*
fjom Chicago ami New York.
COTTON EXCHANGE.
BANKS.
KI SSI MM EE Cl T Y BAN K,
Kissimmee City, Orange County, Fla.
CAPITAL - - 150,000
r r'RANSACT a regular benktm? business. (live
1 particular attention to Florida collection*.
Correspondence solicited. Issue Exchange on
New York, Now Orleaua, Savannah and Jack
sonville. Fla. Resident Agents for Coutts .£ Cos.
and Melville, Evans & Cos., of London, England.
New York correspondent: The Seaboard
National Rank.
MUSICAL.
3LYON&HEALYA
State & Monroe Bt>. CHICAGO,
wlllD)aiifr?.‘.tblrtie l.vrnlar<*d
rtkloi<ue"f Rand lufltruniPtita. W
Uuilurim and Kviulplucbto.dCO f
Kiue iMuntraiiou* tL-ircHbliig a xjlfcAu
ev*rv article roquiredbt bands!
or Drum Corps iucludluft Rck
pairing Material*,
etc Cou(aiu limtm -tion Tor
(Amateur bend* i;'’rcl"<MaDd Scale* fm 11.
(Druiu .Major'* Tactic*, By Law*.and If Bi
a Selected Lial ef Band Huai3. (fiM
7