Newspaper Page Text
COMMERCIAL.
SAVANNAH markbt.
WEEKLY REPORT.
OFFICE MORNING NEWS, I
Savannah, Not 1. 1863. (
Gf viral Remarks. —In the general market
-aring the past week business has continued
active, although among jobbers there was
1 siio-bt falling off in orders, due, no doubt, to
* being the closing of the month, when it is
‘ usual custom of interior buyers to
hold over all orders for the next
mOTth. except in cases where goods are abso
lutely necessary for immediate requirements
Tbe main feature of the week was the contin
ue! h avy movement of cotton to the ports,
while the exports from this port were without
tecsdent. The weather has moderated and
milder, which may be another
reason for the lull in the demand in some quar
ters The volume of business, however, was
considering, and the total movement sat
factory, While a very confident feeling seems
m prevail with jobbers generally. Collections
continue quite satisfactory, and are com
ein freely. The money market has become
rerv easy, owing, no doubt, to the smallness of
T e stock of spot cotton now being carried,
although a pretty fair demand exists still for
money. In the security market there Is a good
demand on the part of investors, with an entire
absence of speculation. The demand from out
of town for groceries has been quite heavy, and
shipping has been active. Sugars have again
declined. In provisions there was a fair busi
neag j n progress, but with some falling
of! in orders, while prices in some cuts of meat
have declined. The hardware trade has been
eomewhat quieter and the demand has slack
ened up. Nails have advanced. In dry goods
there was a fair reassortment trade doing on
travelers' orders, while prices have continued
fairly steady. The demand for lumber and
building materials does not diminish any, and
it remains in remarkably good form. In all
other branches there was a fair to good move
ment had. The following resume of the week's
business will show the tone and the latest
quotations of the different markets at the clos
ing hour to-day:
Naval Stokes.— The receipts of spirits turpen
tine have kept up in good volume during last
week, which has had the effect of weakening
the market to some extent, and prices have
gradually but steadily declined being fully lc.
lower than a week ago, the market closing
to-day firm at 44-Kc. for regulars. There was a
moderate demand, but on the slumps buyers
absorbed a fair amount of stock. The
total sales for the week were
about 3,500 casks. Rosin—The mar
ket throughout the week was firm and ad
vancing. Light receipts, the smallness of the
stock and firm holders have been the chief
factors in advancing prices, while the demand
was also good, and all offerings were readily
taken, the market closing to-day with prices
jo@4oc. higher than since last report. The total
sales for the week were about 9,000 barrels.
Elsewhere will be found a a comparative
table of receipts and exports from April
1 to date, and for the same time last year,
showing the stock on hand and on shipboard not
cleared, together with the official closing quota
tions.
Cotton.— The market was fairly firm during
last week, although there was no material ad
vance. Holders, however, were quite firm in
their views, and were asking and obtaining full
prices on scant grades. The demand, while not
heavy, was very steady, and factors kept pretty
well sold up, in fact there never was such a
small amount of spot cotton offering at this
time of the year as now. At the close
of the market to-day it was steady, prices
being l-16@**c. higher for the better grades.
The inquiry throughout the week was mostly
for middling an i above. The total sales for the
week reached 12.676 bales. The following are the
official closing spot quotations of the Cotton
Exchange:
Middling fair 9 13-16
Good middling 9 9-16
Middling 9**
Low middling 9
Sea Islands. —The receipts for the week up to
4 o'clock p. m., as reported by factors, were only
I. bags, and the sales were 1,554 bags. The
exports were 1,232 bags, of which 506 bags were
to Liverpool, 175 bags to Havre and 501 bags to
northern mills. The market for the most part
was dull, with buyers offering lower prices than
the current quotations, while holders to obtain
business were obliged to make concessions.
At the close today tue market was quiet and
steady on the basis of the following quota
tions:
Good medium 22c
Medium fine 92*4022)*
Fine 22**@23
Extra fine and choice 23**@23**
The receipts of cotton at this port from all
sources the past week were 47,686 bales of up
land and 1,454 bales sea island, against 43,649
bales of upland and 1,616 bales sea island last
year.
The particulars of the receipts have been as
follows: Per Central railroad, 35,71! bales up
land; per Savannah, Florida and Western
railway, 8,477 bales upland and 1,241
hales sea island; per Charleston and Savannah
railway, 2,716 bales upland; per Savannah river
steamers, 648 bales upland: per Florida steam
ers, 80 bales upland and 35 bales sea island; per
carts, 54 bales upland and 178 bales sea island.
The exports for the week were 90,102 bales of
upland and 1,249 bales sea island, moving as fol
lows: To New York, 7.366 bales upland and
461 bales sea island; to Baltimore, 1,334 bales up
land and 281 bales sea island; to Bremen, 18,728
bales upland; to Barcelona, 4,653 bales upland:
to Boston 1,652 bales upland and 40 bales sea
island; to Charleston, 550 bales upland; to
Oporto, 282 bales upland; to Philadel
phia, 575 bales upland; to Liverpool, 22,295 bales
upland and 275 bales s>a island; to Havre. 7,550
bales upland and 175 bales sea island; to Rival,
11, bales upland; to Genoa, 9,775 bales up
land; burned, 4,242 bales upland and 17 bales
sea island.
The stock on hand to-day was 79,426 bales
upland and 3,987 bales sea Island, against 88,089
baie6 upland and 3,660 bales sea island last year.
Rice.—Tbe market was dull during last week,
with buyersofferingfreely at *4® 3 *c. lower than
the current ouotations. Holders, however.
re asking full figures and were not disposed
to force trading, so that business was restricted.
There was a slight scarcity of the poorer grades,
and again considerable quantities of Louisiana
rice were disposed of in this market. The
sales for the week were about 1,200 barrels.
The total receipts of rough from Sept. 1 to Oct.
31 inclusive, were 279,6923 J bushels, of which the
mills have pouuded only 79,14054 bushels, leaving
a stock of rough on hand in the mills of 200,552
bushels, and of clean of 2,153 barrels.
The following are the official quotations;
small job lots are held at **@*4c. higher:
£ air - 5%&4
Prime 5 @s**
{. anc y
Rough—Nominal-
Country lots $ 50® 70
Tidewater., 90® 1 10
Comparative Cotton Statement
Or Gacss Receipts, Exports and Stock on Hand Nev. 1,1889,
AND FOR THE SAME TIME LAST YEAR.
1889. 1887-8.
Sea Sea
Island. Upland Island. Upland
Stock on hand Sept. 1 669 8,648 60 7.166
Received this week 1,454 47,686 1,616 43,949
Received previously 4,362 342,819 4,5:44 280,134
Total 6.483 399,158 6,200 330,949
Exported this week 1,249 90,102 709 — 53,034
Exported previously 1,249 229.625 1,891 189,826
Total 2,498 319,727 2,60.) 242,860
Stock on hand and on ship-! 'll
board Nov. 1 J 3,887, 79.4361 3,6601 88,039 ,
Consolidated cotton statement fob the wkee
p_„ , . ending nov. 1, 1889.
*^ceipt s at ally. 8. pprts this week.... 312,059
, ’t* 1 receipts to date 1.921,199
"*st Ves.- 1,505.043
5-x port! for his week 326,640
oame week last year 188,737
, "t* l exports to date 1,255,188
-ast year 799.441
, r* ka *H United States ports 497.824
l at all interior towns 80,067
£“t ye ar 123,051
at Liverpool 445,010
I*? 1 year 283,090
American afloat for Great Britain 297,000
Lastyear 154,000
or Cotton at Interior Points,
5 y* n ßreceipts and shipments for the weekend
mg Nov. 1, 1888, and stock on band to-nirht
and for the same time last year: ’
'- WeeA ending Nov. 1, 1888.-%
. . Receipts. Shipments. Stocks.
Augusta 9.841 w,200 3.846
Columbus 4.3*4 3 *22 o I*s
gome 3 821 3.661 1.833
Montgomery 6.86 8 744 6 407
f* lma - 4.541 4.461 4.108
Memphis *8,271 15,974 58,071
Nashville 1.467 434 1,454
T°tAl 59,284 47,296 81.896
/—Week ending Nov. 2, 1888 ,
Receipts. Shipments. Stocks.
Augusta 11,764 8.360 11,001
Col umbos 3,166 3. TBO 6,426
Rome 300 2.350 891
JJacon 3,591 3.22 6.081
Montgomery 5,466 S,MS 19.483
Selma 2,226 2 921 6,i87
Memphis 36,280 28.005 67, W 8
Nashville
Total 62,793 54,194 120.606
Comparative Statement of Net Receipts, Exports and Stocks of Cotton at the Following
Places to Latest Dates.
Stock on
Received since Exported since Sept. 1, 1889. hand and on
Ports. Sept. 1. Shipboard.
Great O’tt F’n Total C’stwise <
1888-89 1887-88 Britain. France. Ports. Foreign. Ports. 1889. 1888.
New Orleans -Nov. 1 543,835 390,516 *18,605 99,9:26 50,872 861,403 50,819 168,263 ~45J>47
Mobile ”Nov.-l 98,076 61,616 7,5e6 ' 7,566 79,105 13,068 16,924
i Florida Not. 1 Sl3 1,809 313
Texas Not. 1 871,484 253,015 105,210 24,121 34.867 164, 198 122,294 81,486 86,753
• I Upland. ...Nov. 1 890,505 223,422 63,048 16,801 98,052 177,901 141,826 79,426 88,089
Savannah j g*, u*d....Nov. 1 4,575 4,597 655 195 850 1,648 8,987 3,660:
J Upland ...Nov. 1 151,154 154,740 27,863 10,100 33,263 71,226 45,890 37,78! 64.825 1
Charleston } Ig , and j gli jjjsi , 97 197 sg3 834 j,073
North Carolina Nov. 1 54,426 59,448 37,545 2,500 40,045 6,024 10,787 20,550
Virginia Nov. 1 235,915 257,903 93,477 7,400 100,877 37,379 25,284 41,812!
New York Nov. 1 18,425 3,106 152,600 11,152 40.263 204,015 72,477 112,304!
Other ports Nov. 1 53,057 48,232 61,858 10,673 72,531 4,431 35,434]
I Total to date 1,922,576 763,624 162,295 277,890 1,203,803 495,611 497,824 !
I Total to date la 1888 1,560,575 607,371
LIVERPOOL MOVEMENT FOR THE WBKk ENDING
NOV. 1, 1889, AND FOR THE CORRESPONDING
WEEKS OF 1888 AND 1887:
18SQ 1888 1887
Sales for the week.. 62,000 48,000 63,000
Exporters took 3,000 2,400 6,200
Speculators t00k.... 1,200 800 4,300
Total stock 445,000 283,000 438,000
Of which American. 270,000 178,000 234,000
T’l imports for week 106,000 09,000 91,000
Of which American. 87,000 78,000 78,000
Actual exports 79,000 60,700 20.400
Amount afloat 314,000 164,000 265,000
Of which American. 267,000 1 54,000 248,000
Price 5 11-16d 5 11-16d 6%d
THE FOLLOWING. STATEMENT SHOWS THE NET RE
CEIPTS AT ALL PORTS FOR THE WEEK ENDINO
NOV. 1 AND OCT. 25, AND FOR THIS WEEK
LAST year:
This Last Last
Week. Week. Tear
Galveston. ....... 54,517 53,513 86,871
New Orleans 100,645 102,711 74.752
Mobile 14,921 16,137 7,183
Savannah. 49,712 53,524 45,064
Charleston 18,833 22,376 22,465
Wilmington 6,241 5,831 12,813
Norfolk 20,874 27,073 35,5*4
New York 8,949 2,876 699
Various 37,364 81,195 40,115
Total 312.050 315.236 275.491
Visible Supply of Cotton. —Below we g.ve
the table of visible supply, as made up by cable
and telegraph for the Financial and Commer
cial Chronicle to Oct, 25. The continental
stocks, as well as t hose for Great Britain and the
afloat, are this week's returns, and consequently
all the European figures are brought down to
Thursday evening. But to make the totals the
complete figures for Oct. 25 we add the item of
exports from the United States, including in it
the exports of Friday only:
1889. 188a
Stock at Liverpool 423,000 258,000
Stock at London 18,000 8,000
Total Great Britain stock.... 441,000 261,000
Stock at Hambure 1.500 2,e00
Stock at Bremen 27,300 8,400
Stock at Amsterdam 4,'000 4,000
Stock at Rotterdam 300 300
Stock at Antwerp 6,000 500
Stock at Havre . 75,000 72.000
Stock at Marseilles 4,000 2,000
Stock at Barcelona 26,000 29,000
Stock at Genoa - 7,000 5,000
Stock at Trieste 5,000 5,000
Total continental stocks 156,100 129,200
r t>
Total European stocks £97,100 389,200
India cotton afloat for Europe. 41,000 23,000
American cotton afloat for Eu
rope 474,000 345,000
Egypt, Brazil, .etc., afloat tor
Europe . 30,000 22,000
Stock in United States ports... 543,543 571,654
Stock in U. S. interior towns.. 121,475 173,396
United States export* to-day.. 33,978 5,370
Total visible supply 1,846,094 1,529,620
Of the above, the totals of American and other
descriptions are as follows:
American—
Liverpool stock 252,000 152,000
Continental stock 52,000 60.000
American afloat for Europe.... 474,000 345,000
United States stock 548,543 571,654
United States interior stocks,. 121,475 173,396
United States exports to-day.. 33,976 5,370
Total American 1,481.994 1,307,420
Total East India, etc 384,100 222,200
Total visible supply 1,846,094 1,529.690
The imports into continental ports this week
have been 58,000 bales.
The above figures indicate an increase In the
cotton in sight to date of 316,474 bales as com
pared with the same date of 1888, a decrease of
393,853 bales as compared with the correspond
ing date of 1887, and a decrease of 15,255 bales
as compared with 1886.
India Cotton Movement.—The following is
the Bombay statement for the week and year,
bringing the figures down to Oct. 24:
BOMBAY RECEIPTS AND SHIPMENTS FOE FOUR
YEARS.
Shipments this week—
Great Britain. Continental. Total.
1889 2.000 3.000 5,000
1888 1.000 3,000 4,000
1887 6.000 6.000
1886
Shipments since Jan. 1—
Great Britain. Continental. Total.
1889 370,000 853.000 1,223,000
1888 218,000 629.000 845,000
1887" 366,000 680,000 1,046,000
1886! 322,000 675,000 997,000
Receipts— This week. Since Jan. 1.
1889 7.000 1,699,000
1888 8.000 1,303,000
1887 8,000 1,497,000
1886 5.000 1,422,000
FINANCIAL.
Monet Market—Money is easy.
Domestic Exchanqe— Steady. Banks and
bankers are buyiDg sight drafts at % per
cent discount and selling at % per cent dis
count to par.
Foreion Exchange—The market Is weak.
Commercial demand, 84 81%; sixty days, $4 78%;
ninety days, 84 77; francs, Paris and Havre,
commercial, sixty days, 85 26%; Swiss, 85 27%;
mams, sixty days, 9396 c.
Securities—The market Is irregular, with a
good demand for city bonds and for South
western stock. Other securities are inactive,
with freer offerings.
STOCKS AND BONDS.
Btate Bondt— Bid. Atked.
New Georgia 4% per cent bonds.. 117% 118
State of Georgia gold quarterlies. 102 103
Georgia Smith’s, maturity 1896... 118% 120
City Bond*—
Atlanta 6 per cent 108
Atlanta 7 per cent 116 120
Augusta 7 per cent 107
Augusta 6 per cent 106 110
Columbus 5 per cent 104 105%
Macon 6 per cent.. 114 115
New Savannah 5 per oent quar
terly, January 106% 107
New Savannah 5 per cent quar
terly, February coupons 103% 106%
Bailroad Bond*—
Savannah. Florida and Western
Railroad general mortgage
bonds, 6 per cent interest cou-
THE MORNING NEWS: SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2. 1889.
pons U* 114
Atlantic and Gulf first mortgage
consolidated 7 per cent, coupons
January and July, maturity
1897 77. 1 W
Central consolidated mortgage*
per cent, coupons January and
July, maturity ISU* 108** 109
Georgia Railroad 6s lOSOUI 106®116
Charlotte. Columbia and Augusta
first mortgage 100*4 110*4
Charlotte, Columbia and Augiata
second mortgage I*o 121
Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta
general mortgage 6 per cent 105)4 107
Marietta and North Georgia rail
road first mortgage 6 per cent.. 107 108
Marietta and North Georgia rail
way first mortgage 6 per cent.. 96 97
Montgomery and Euf&ula first
mortgage indorsed 6 per cent. 110 11*
Western Alabama second mort
gage indorsed 8 per cent, cou
pons Apr 1 maturity 1890 102 103
Georgia Southern and Florida
first mortgage 6 per oent 96*4 98
Covington and Macon first mort
gage 6 per cent 95*4 97
Soutn Georgia and Florida In
dorsed 118 I*o
South Georgia and Florida sec
ond mortgage 116 118
Savannah and Western ss, in
dorsed by Central railroad 100 101*4
OceanSteamshipfi percent bonds,
guaranteed by Central Railroad 103 104
Gainesville, Jefferson and South
ern Railroad, first mortgage,
guaranteed 116 119
Gainesville, Jefferson and South
ern, not guaranteed 110 114
Gainesville, Jefferson anil South
ern, second mortgage, guaran
teed 114 116
Columbus and Rome, first indors
ed 6s 108 110
Columbus and Weetern 6 per cent ,
first guaranteed 110 111
Augusta and Knoxville railroad 7
per cent first mortgage bonds .. 112 113
City and Suburban Railroad, first
mortgage ' per cent bonds. ... 108 109
Railroad Stocks —
Augusta and Savannah 7 per oent
guaranteed 140 141
Central common 126 127
Georgia common 197 20*
Southwestern, 7 per cent guaran
teed 184 135
Central, 6 per oent certificates. 101** 102*4
Atlanta ana West Point railroad
stock 106 107
Atlanta and West Point 6 per cent
certificates 102*4 103
Bank Stocks—
Southern Bank of the State of
Georgia . . 260 *7O
Merchants’National Bank 175 180
Savannah Bank and Trust Com
pany 115 117
National Bank of Bavannah 133 134
The Oglethorpe Savings and Trust
Company 119 I*l
Citizens' Bank 97 100
Chatham Real Estate and Im
provement Company 52 53
Factory Bonds —
Augusta Factory 6s 102
Sibley Factory 6s 102
Enterprise Factory 6s 103
Factory Stocks—
Eagle and Phenix Manufactur
ing Company 85 90
Augusta Factory 90
Graniteville Factory 113 150
Langley Factory 107
Enterprise Factory common 43
Enterprise Factory, preferred 100
J. P. tong Manufacturing Com
pany 98
Sibley Manufacturing Company. 80
Gas Stocks -
Savannah Gas Light stocks 21 85
Electric Light ana Power Cos 85 86
Naval Stores.—The receipts for the past
week have h*v-n 3.263 barrels spirits turpentine
and 78 3 barrels rosin. The exports were 4.892
barrelsspirusuirpentine and 11 233 barrels rosin,
moving as follows: To New York, 371 barrels
spirits turpentine and 3.726 barrels rosin; to
Baltimore, 25 barrels spirits turpentine and
2,623 barrels rosin; to the interior, 199 barrels
spirits turpentine and 314 barrels rosin; to
Boston, 275 barrels spirits turpentine and 80
barrels rosin; to Philadelphia, 172 barrels
spirits turpentine and 145 barrels rosin; to Rot
terdam, 3 631 barrels rosin; to Buenos Ayres,
200 barrels spirits turpentine and 2,000 barrels
rosin: to Glasgow, 900 barrels spirits turpentine
and 1,744 barrels rosin; to London, 2,657 bar
rels spirits turpentine. The following are
tne Board of Trade quotations: Rosin—A, B
C anl D #l, E 81 02*4, F Si 07*4 G 81 15, H
$1 -0,1 $1 50, K 82 00, M 82 35, N $2 85, win
dow glass $3 CO, wat'"- white $3 25. Spirits tur
pentine-regulars 4*943.
Receipts,Shipments and Stocks rom April 1,
1889, TO DATK, AND TO THE CORRESPONDING;
PATS PAST TEAR:
* 1889 , , 1888 ,
Spirits. Rosin. Spirits. Rosin.
On hand April 1.. 1,947 73,092 8.670 66,851
Rec'dthis week.. 3,262 7,863 3,395 8,350
Rec’d previously. 110.258 357,163 130,3)8 318.070
T0ta1..,. 145,467 438.118 127,418 837,674
Shipments: Foreign—
Aberdeen..... .... 3,250
Anjer, for orders 5,500
Antwerp 4,258 2,950 4,929 8,082
Barcelona .... 8,003 .... ....
Bristol 4,543 2,983 1,850 5,300
Buenos Ayres 200 2,300 .... 2,000
Capede Verde.... .... 10
Cardiff * .... 4,186
Dantzic .... 9,413 ....
Garston Dock 8.300 17.991 400 8.949
Gepoa 500 3,427 .... 2,925
Glasgow 2,363 1,741 1.338
Granton 3,980 .... 11,782
Hamburg 8,899 17,293 5,424 2,864
Harburg 14,990
Hull 7,272 3,860 3,748 2.157
Liverpool 5.435 .... 8,790
London 35,720 11,681 81,888 3,578
Montevideo .... .... 1,800
Oporto 5 596 5 831
Odessa...: .... 5,026 .... 2.447
Pooteeloff Harbor .... 25,739 .... 10,496
Pernambuco 1,500
Rio Janeiro 200
Riga 12,433 .... 7,212
Rosario .... 600
Rotterdam 4,668 28,020 2,410 7,992
San Sebastian.... .... 1,564
Stettin 13,554
Taganrog 2,414
Trieste 120 4.226
Coastwise—
Baltimore 3,227 71,181 4,206 65,219
Boston 7.980 6,553 8,865 11,441
Philadelphia 5.595 6,692 4,105 15,446
New York 21,101 108,622 20.966 117,102
Interior towns.... 17,572 7,630 18,195 14,549
Repacking, ulage,
and tanks*...... 5,203 .... 89 9,436
Total shipments.. 132,602 394 933 111.278 319,829
Stock on hand and
on shipboard
Oct. 26 12.865 43.185 16,140 67.845
Bacon—Market steady, good demand;
smoked clear rib sides, 6**c; shoulders. 6**c;
dry salted clear rib sides, 6**c; long clear, 6*lc;
bellies. 6**c; shoulders, s**c; hams, 12*4® 12*®.
Baoginq and Ties—The market is firm.
Small lots: Jute bagging, 2*4 lbs, 10**c;
2 lbs, 10c; 134 lbs, 9*4c, according to brand and
quantity: sea island bagging in moderate sup
ply at 14® 15c; cotton bagging, 44 inches, 34
R>, 13*4® 1334 c; smaller widths cheaper. Iron
ties—Sl 10® 1 16 per bundle, according to
quantity. Bagging and ties in retail lots a frac
tion higher.
Hotter Market dull; fair demand;
Goshen, 16®18c; gilt edge, 20®21c; creamery,
23@25c.
Cabbage—Northern, 9®loc.
Cheese—Market steady; fair demand; 11®
12**c.
Coffee—Market dull and lower. Peaberry,
21**c; fancy. 20**c; choice, 20c; prime, 19**c;
good, 10c; fair, 1834 c; ordinary, 17**o; com
mon, 17**c.
Dried Fruit—Apples, evaporated, 9Uc; com
mon, 6c. Peaches, peeled, lz**c; unpeeled, 5®
7c. Currants, 7c. Citron. 22c.
Dry Goods—The market is autet and steady.
Prints, 4®s**c; Georgia brown shirting, 3-4,
4**c; 7-8 do. 6c; 4-4 brown sheeting, 6c; white
osnaburgs, 7**®B**c; checks, s@s**c; yarns. 85c
for the best makes; brown drillmgs. 6**®7i*c.
Fish—Market nominal. We quote full weights:
Mackerel, No. 3. half barrels, nominal, $9 00
®l6 00; No. 2. *lO 00® 12 00. Herring, No. 1,
24c; scaled, 26c. Cod, 6®Bc. Mullet, half
barrels, $5 00.
Fruit—Lemons—Light demand. Choice, $8 60
@3 75. Apples. *3 00®3 25.
Flour—Market very firm. Extra, 94 60; family,
$4 95; fancy. $5 10; patent, 86 00; oholce patent,
$3 10; spring wheat, best, $6 75; bakers' mixt
ure, $7 15.
Grain—Corn—Market steady. White corn,
retail lots, 60c; job lots, 57c; carload lots, 55c;
mixed corn, retail lots, 58c; job lots, 55c; car
load lots, 53c. Oats—Retail lots, 40c; job lots,
36c; carload lots. 34c. Bran—Retail lots, $1 00;
job lots, 96c: carload lots, 90c. Meal, 60c. Pearl
grits, per barrel, $2 80; per sack, *1 30; grits,
*Hat—Market firm. Western, in retail lots,
$1 00; job lots, 95c; carload lots, 90c.
Hides, Wool, Etc.—Hides—Market very dull,
receipts light; dry flint, 6c; salted, 4c; dry
butcher, 3c. Wool—Market nominal: prime, 20c;
burry, 10® 15c. Wax, 20c. Tallow, 3®4c. Deer
skins, flint, 2bc; salted, 20c. Otter skins, 60c®
$4 00.
Iron—Market firm; Swede, 4*4®sc; re
fined, f**c.
Lard-Market steady; io tierces, 634 c; 50-lb
tins, C**c. ,
Lime, Calcined Plaster and Cement—Chew
acala lump lime In fair demand and selling at
$1 25 per barrel: Georgia and Shelby, $1 23
per barrel; bulk and carload lots special;
calcined piaster, $1 83 per barrel; hair, 4®sc;
Roeeadale cement, 81 40® 160: Portland cement,
83 oe.
Ijot oa*—Quiet: moderate demand Whisky,
per gallon, rectified, 81 08®t ®, according to
proof; choice grades, 81 50®* 00; straight,
81 53®4 00; blended, 82 (tt®6 00 Wines—
Domestic, port, sherry and Catawba, low
grades. 60@8S; fine grapes. |1 iti@l 50;
California, light, muscatel and angelica, *1 50
®! 75.
Nails—Market very firm: fair demand; Sd,
83 40; 4d and sd, $3 00; 6d. $2 *0; Bd, *4 65; lOd,
$2 50; ltd to 40d, *2 40; 50d to flOa. 82 65.
Nrre—Almonds—Tarragona, lSjh'AV-; Ivinas,
16®t8c: Walnuts, French, 15o; Naples, 16c;
pecans. 10c; Brazil, 10c; flberta, 10c; cocoannta,
Baracoa. $5 00 per 100; assoried nuts,
45 lb boxes, 13c per pound.
Onions —Per barrel, 8 s 00®3 25; per crate,
81 83- , At' a
Oils—Market steady ; demand fair. Signal,
40®50c; West Virginia black, 9®lA-; lard. 57c;
kerosene. 9U®loc; neatsfoot. 60®75c; ma
chinery, 25®300. linseed, raw, 64c; boiled, 67c;
mineral seal, lac; bomelight, 15c; guaroian,
14c.
Potatoes— New, *2 00®2 25.
Raisins—Demand light; market steady; lay
ers, $3 00 per box; London layers, new, $3 50
Kr box; California London layers. $7 75 per
x; loose, *2 50.
Balt— Tbe demand Is moderate and market
quiet; carload lota, 75c, f. o. b.; job lots, 3®aoc.
Shot— Drop. 81 25; buck, $1 50.
SfOAE—The market is dull and lower. Cut
loaf, BWc; cubes, 8)ic; powdered. 8c; granu
lated, 714 c; confectioners', TKfcc; standard A,
714 c; oft A, 7c; white extra C,614c; golden C,
6c; yellow, t%c.
Strop—Florida and Georgia steady at 80c;
market quiet for sugarhouse at 3>>q*4oc- Cuba
straight goods, 80c; sugarhouse molasses,
18®20c.
Tobacco—Market firm; good demand.
Smoking, 25c® $1 25; chewing, common,
sound, 2214® 30c; fair, 30®45.’; medium,
38®50c; brigut, 50®750; fine fancy, H3i.9oc;
extra fine, 90c®l 10; bright navies, 33®45c,
dark navies, 36c.
Lumber— Demand continues good from all
quarters, with increased inquiry from tho
west. Orders still run into the more difficult
sizes, taxing the mills beyond their capacity
for such, and keep prices stiff. Orders
for easier sizes are in request at quota
tions. There has been improvement in tbe
tonnage, and tbe demand is now fairly supplied.
Prices firm at quotations:
Ordinary sizes $l2 50®1680
Difficult sizes 16 00®25 00
Flooring boards 1600®21.50
Shipstuffs.. 17 00®25 00
Timber—Market dull and nominal. We quote:
700 feet average $ 9 00® 1100
800 “ “ 10(K>@1100
900 “ “ 1100®12 00
1,000 “ “ 12 00® 14 00
Shipping timber in the raft—
-700 feet 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—Vessels are freely offered to arrive,
and the supply of tonnage in port remains
about equal to the trade requirements. Rates
may be quoted as within the range of $6 50®8 00
from this port to Baltimore, Philadelphia, New
York and sound ports, with 25®300
additional if loaded at near Dy Georgia
ports. Timber 50c®$l 00 higher than lumber
rates. To the West Indies and Windward,
nominal; to Rosario, $23 00; to Buenos Ayres or
Montevideo, $2O 00; to Rio Janeiro, $2O 00;
to Spanish and Mediterranean ports,
$l5 50®16 00; to United Kingdom for orders,
nominal at for timber. £6 standard; lumber,
£6. Steam—To New York, $7 00; to Phila
delphia, $7 00; to Boston, $8 00; to Balti
more, $6 50.
Naval, Storms—Steady. Foreign-Cork, etc,,
for orders, loading, rosin, 3s 9d, and 5s
spirits, Adriatic, rosin, 4s lVyd; Genoa, 3s 9d:
South America, rosin, $1 30 per barrel of 280
pounds. Coastwise—Steam—To Boston, 10c per
100 lbs on rosin, 90c on spirits; to New York,
rosin, 714 c per 100 lbs; spirits, 80e; to I’hilsdel
phia. rosin, 7V<c per 100 ms; spirits, 80c; to Bal
timore, rosin, 30c; spirits, 70c. Coastwise,
quiet.
Cotton—By steam—The market is easy for
vessels to arrive and weak for spot room.
Li verpool 25-64d
Bremen IB 52(1
Havre 13-32d
Barcelona 7-idd
Genoa 7-16d
Reval 29-64d
Amsterdam 13-32d
Antwerp 13~32d
Liverpool via New York $1 lb 13 32d
Liverpool via Baltimore -25-64 J
Havre via New Y#rk $1 lb. 15-160
Bremen via Nw York $ lb 14<i
Bremen via Baltimore ..... 7 -16 J
Reval via New York $1 >4d
Genoa via New York , Vid
Amsterdam via New York .$ 1 08
Antwerp via New York.... 13-32 U
Boston V bale $ 1 73
Sea island bale ... 175
New York n bale 160
Sea island $ bale 1 50
Philadelphia W hale.. 1 50
Sea Island %l bale 1 60
Baltimore ba1e...... 150
Providence $ bale 200
By sail—
Liverpool Jfjd
Rio*—By steam—
New York fl barrel 50
Philadelphia $) barrel 60
Baltimore $1 barrel 60
Boston $ barrel 75
COUNTRY PRODUCE.
Grown fowls 9 pair. ..$ 60 ® 70
Chickens, % grown, pair 40 @ 60
Chickens, grown, fi pair.. 30 ® 40
Eggs, country, # dozen 18 ® 20
Peanuts, fancy, h. p. Va.. $ B>. - 7 ® 7W
Peanuts, hand picked, $1 1b.... . 6 ® 6J4
Peanuts, small, hand picked, sllb. sj4®
Peanuts, Tennessee 6 ®
Poultry—Market easier; demand good.
Eoos—Market steadier, with stock good and
moderate demand.
Peanuts -Fair stock; demand moderate;
prioes steady.
Suoar—Georgia and Florida nominal; none
In market.
Honey—Demand nominal.
Sweet Potatoes Nominal; some new
coming in.
MARKHTS BY TE LS jR A PH,
FINANCIAL.
New York, Not. 1, noon.— Stoplts active and
firm. Money tight at 9® 10 per cent. Exchange
—long, $4 81%; short, 84 85. Government bond*
neglected. State bonds dull but steady.
Following were the noon stock quotations:
Erie 28% Blchm 'd <* W. Pt
Chicago <i North.ll2 Terminal 23%
Lake Shore 107*4 Western Union... 84%
Norf. & W. pref.
5 p. m.—Exchange quiet, heavy and un
changed. Money tight at 6@12 per cent.,closing
offered at 6 per cent. Sub-treasury balimoes—
Gold, 8157,688,000; currency, 89,e<1,000. Gov
ernment bonds dull but steady; four percents
127; four and a half per cent, coupons 105%.
State bonds dull but firm.
In the stock market to-day trusts were again
the all-absorbiDg feature, and Cotton Oil in
particular attracted interest, which threw all
other stocks into the shade. Out of a total of
372,000 shares of stock traded in on the New
York Stock Exchange to-day, the unlisted de
partment furnished 205,000 and the regular list
only 167,000, while Cotton Oil alone contributed
129,000 shares of business. This difference was
specially noticeable In the first hour, when the
sales of unlisted stocks were in tha proportion
of three to one of railroad stocks, and of Cot
ton Oil 50,000 shares ohangeil hands in the first
half hour’s business. The fact that to-day was
a holiday in London accounted for a portion of
this discrepancy, but uncontradicted rumors in
regard to Cotton Oil far more. The annual
meeting of the shareholders of Cotton Oil was
held to-day and was well attended, and it de
veloped the truth of the story that the earn
ings have fallen about $1,000,000 short ofthe
estimates given out and have reached only
si, .Ou.OOD. The utterances of Gen. Thomas,
ohtx. to the effect that the properties in trust
are worth about 812.000,000 to $15,000,000, show
ing that the shares have been selling far in
exoess of tbeir worth, gave an impetus to the
further dec.ine established. The crowd in the
Stock Exchange at the opening this
morning was very large, and the announce
ment that the three gentlemen selected to
positions in the board had refused to serve
gave the impression that something must be
wrong with the trust, and selling assumed ex
tremely heavy proportions Immediately. Bears
and traders were on hand, and pursued the
usual tactics of offering the stock down in ad
vance of regular sellers, and numerous stop
orders being reaohed, the downward movement
did not cease until 32% was touched—a net loss
of S% from last night’s figures. Liquidation
seemed to be completed for the time being at
that point, and a rally to 35% followed, but
this was followed by a renewal of selling in ‘be
last hour, and it closed at 33%. Lead Trust was
attacked in sympathy with Cotton Oil aid
forced off to below 20, which dislodged consid
erable long stock. Trading was very large in it
also, reaching 57,000 shares, but it was over
shadowed by Cotton Oil, anil its movements
were comparatively small. Bugar was like the
railroad list, inclined to strength in the fore
noon, and actually did rise nearly 2 percent.,
but felt the pressure at last, and all of the im
provement was wiped out. Railroad stocks, as
long as they were left to their natural 4>ent, ad
vanced slowly, though the gains were generally
confined to fractions. Tennessee Coal, how
ever, reeched 62 on its early spurt, a gain of
about 5 per cent. This, however, was after
ward wiped out. About noon bears and traders
turned their attention to the regular list, and
Missouri Pacific was raided and its price was
broken nearly 3 per cent., followed by Chicago
Gaa and Granger*. Other groups of stocks
were almost neglected, although there was
soma animation In Lackawanna and Lake
Shore, which was, with other Vanderbilts, coo
s- tcuous tor strength. Union Pacific was also
active, and after an early fractional advance
declined 1 per cent., closing a fraction lower
than last evening. News with bearing upon
values of railroad stocks was generally of s
favorable tenor, but bad so effect agaiust the
raiding list received. The close was fairly
Active anu heavy to weak at about the lowest
of the day. Final changes show a large ma
jority of losses, and while Chicago and E Ist
Illinois preferre 1 is up 1 per cent.. Cotton Oil is
down 3t 4 . Chicago Ga* and Missouri Pacific 2*L
each, 1-eo.l Trust l 7 s and Burlington and Quin
cry 1. The following were the closing quota
tfoas:
AlaolasL A, *to 3 105 Nash. A Chart's. 99
Ala.olaasß.3s... 11l N.O.Ps'ffcUtmort 91
Georgia ,s, mort. 102 N. Y. Cen raL 106 w
JJ.UaroUnacons6e.l26* Nor. AW. pref. 55
“•UaroU'iaooue 4* 95 Nor Pacific si
80. Caro. I Brown •• prof 7214
consols) lravg Pacific Mail. . !. 33
Tennessee 65.... 10014 Reading 4214
“ 5* 101‘s Richmond 4 Ate . 2IU
Tennessee ea 3s. .14 Rlcbm’d AW. Pt.
Virginia 8s 48 Terminal *i
vaOsconsollted 35 Rock Island 07U
Ches.* Ohio St. Paul . .654
Northwestern.. . Ill* “ preferred ,11212
onferred .141 Texas Pacific 19X
Dela and L00k... 110 7 4 Tenn Coal A Irou. 59
5™ • 28*4 Union Pacific 67U
East Tennessee 10 N. J. Central 122
ID7T4 Missouri Pacific .. 63K
L ville k Nash— 81lJ Western Union... H 414
Memphis A Oaar. 62* Cotton 'll certld. 33 w
Mobue4 0hi0..., 12 Brunswick 2714
•Asked.
oorroM.
Liverpool, Nov. 1, noon.—Cotton easy
American middling 5 11-19d; sales 8,000 baefor
speculation and exp irtSiK) bales; receipts 11,000
bales American 6,100.
Future*—American mdliing. ’ow middling
clause, November delivery ft 30-4d: November
and I looemb-r delivery 5 33-644 ; December and
January delivery 5 33-64d; January and Feb
ruary delivery 5 38-64d; February and March de
livery 5 32-64d; March and April delivery
5 SA64d; April and May delivery 5 35-64d; May
and June delivery 5 37-64<1. Market quiet.
There were no tenders for delivery at to-day’s
clearings. j.
The weekly cotton statistics are as follows;
Total sales 07,0(k) bales—American 57,000 bales;
tradejakings. including forwarded from ships’
sane 10,000 bales: actual export 6,000 bales
total import 106,000 bales—American 87.000;
total stock 445,(W0 bales American 270,000
bales; total afloat 314.000 bales - American
29,,P00 bales.
2:00 p. m.—Sales of tbe day iaoluded 6.800
bales of American.
American middling 5 11-16d.
Futures—American middling, low middling
clause, November 5 36 4d, sellers; November
and December 5 ,33-64d, sellers; December and
January 588-old, sell -rs; January aud February
a* T r U ,7 5 r ller,: February aud March
? BoI1<,rs; Marcll aid April delivery
6 33-64d, buyers; April and May delivery 5 35Ald
sellers; May and June delivery 5 37^64d sellers-
Jiine aud June delivery 6 38-64d, value. Market
quiet but steady.
4:odp. m.—Futures: American middllig, low
middling clause, November delivery 55, Aid
sellers; November and December 5 3i-64d,
sellers; December and January 5 34 64d, sellers;
March and April 5 34-64d, buyers; April and May
5 36-64.1. sellers; May and June 6 8-64d, sellers;
June and July 589 64d, buyers. The market
dosed firm at the adyance.
New York, Nov. 1, noon.— Cotton opened
*lmd middling uplands 1034 c; middling i -r.eaus
Futures—The market opened quiet but firm,
with sales as follows: November delivery 9 3o;
December delivery 10c; January delinry 10 08c;
February douyery 10 He; March delivery
5:0o p. m.—Cotton dosed quiet; mid ..ug up
lands 10%c, low middling 9?4c; sales to-day
bales ; net receipts none, gross 158 bales.
1 Iti1 t il r ?T llUrlrat ■ t ®<ly, with vales of
“ fjllow: November delivery
10 UJ ,4.10 010, December and livery 10 Ol AiO 03c
January delivery lo 02® 10 03c, February de
*jTBrJ’ bl 09.510 100, Marchdehvery 101U®10 17c,
I® 2i®lo 25c, May delivery 10 32®
@lO 83c, June delivery 10 89@10 40e, July do-
lO 45®10 47c, August delivery 10 49®
Tho Sun'i ootton review says: “Futures
were buoyant to the last call, when the market
weakened, and in the closing dealings part of
the advance was lost. Yet the bulls had a
triumphant innings on the report by a Mem
phis house that the crop in the northern Doit, is
muoh below last year. The bears got scared,
and the advance was not chocked until prices
had risen 14® 15 points above the lowest figures
of yesterday. Then it was know u thnt in receut
years this Memphis firm made a similar mis
take, putting the crop at 6,000,000 bales when it
proved to be over 6,300,000 bales. Buyers re
tired, and prices receded B®l points. Cotton
on spot was >4c lower.”
Net receipts at New York to-dav were
Dales, gross 168; exports, to Great Britain
2,899 bales, to the continent 1,800 bales, for
warded Ml bales; sales 248 bales, all to spinners;
Stock 72,477 bales.
Weekly net receipts at New York 8.919
bales, gross 68,605; exports, to Great Britain
18,566 bales, to France 1,846, to the continent
8,998; forwarded 18,986 bale3; sales 1,717 bales,
all to spinners.
Oadyeston, Nov. I.—Cotton dull; middling
0 716 c. • *
Nov. L—Cotton steady; middling
Baltimore, Nov. I.—Cotton nominal; middling
lOWic.
Boston, Nov. I,—Cotton quiet; middling
K)fe@lo?4c.
Wilminoton, Nov. I.—Cotton firm; middling
DWo.
Philadelphia, Nov. I—Cotton quiet; middling
l °Tw Orleans, Nov. I.—Cotton steady; mid
dhng 9 9- 16c.
Futures —The market closed barely steady,
with sales of 56,600 bales, as follows: November
delivery 9 45c, December 9 49c, January 9 54c,
February 9 59c, March 9 65c, April 9 72c, May
080 c, June 9 87c, July 9 93c.
MomtE, Nov. I. — Cotton firm; middling 9?4c.
Memphis, Nov. I.—Cotton steady; middling
9 9-16 c.
AuausiA, Nov. I.—Cotton firm; middling
Charleston, Nov. I.—Cotton firm; middling
Nov. I.—Cotton firm; middling
9J4c-
Macon —Not received.
Columbus, Nov. I.—Ootton in good demand;
middling 9c.
Nashville, Nov. I.—Cotton quiet; middling
Nov. I.—Cotton steady; middling 9>4c.
Rome. Nov. I.—Cotton steady; middling
9 5-16 c.
Atlanta. Nov. I.— Cotton closed firm; mid
dling 9 516 c.
New Tore, Nov. I.—Consol! tatod net, receipts
at all ootton port* to-day were 58,831 I ales;
exports, to .reat Britain 58,992 bales, to the
oontiueot 52,444 bales, to France 4,965 bales;
stock at all American ports 497,824 bales.
Weekly consolidated netreeelpts 312,059 bales;
exports, to Great Britain 178,705 bales, to France
34,663 bales, to tbe continent 118,272 bales Total
net receipts since Kept. 1, 1889, 1,921,199 bales;
exp >rts, to Great Britain 776,921 bales, to France
162,632, to the oontiuent 315,626 bales.
PROVISIONS. OaOOERIES ETC.
Liverpool, Nov. 1. noon.—Wheat steady: de
mand improving; holders offer moderately;
California No. 1, is 2d®7s 3d; receipt* of wheat
for the past three days were 159,000 centals,
of which 82,000 were American. Corn firm;
demand fair; receipt* of American corn the
past three days were 82,200 cental*. Weather
wet and stormy.
New Tore, Nov. 1, noon.— Flour quiet but
steady. Wheat quiet and easier. Corn quiet
and firm. Pork quiet and unchanged at 111 75
@l2 50. Lard dull and unsettled at $6 80.
Freights steady.
5:00 p. m.—Flour, Southern closed dull
and unchanged. Wheat unsettled and weaker;
moderate export demand; No. 2 red 84@8444c
in elevator; options fairly active but irregular
and lower, closing weak; No. 2 red. No
vember delivery B3c; December delivery 64ike;
May delivery BJ%c, Corn Irregular, closing
easier and fairly active; No. 2, 4!44@4194c in
elevator; options more active but weaker—No
vember delivery 41L4C, December delivery 4114 c,
May delivery 414®. Oat* firm and moderately
active; options inoierately active and weaker
—November dehvery ZYUe, December delivery
8644 c, May delivery 27j14c; No. 8 spot 26c;
mixed Western 24@27c. Hops steady and quiet.
Coffee—options opened steady but lower and
closed steady and unchanged to 5 points up and
quiet; November delivery 14 35@14 40c, Decem
ber 14 50@14 60c, May dehvery 14 60@14 70c;
spot Kio dosed steadv and quiet; fair cargoes
190. Sugar, raw dull and depressed; fair re
fining 414 c; centrifugals. 96“ test, 514 c asked;
refined dosed quiet Molasses—Foreign nomi
nal; New Orleans quiet; open kettle, good to
fancy, 28@46c. Petroleum steady; un juoted.
Cotton seed oil easier at 30®31c for crude aud
37®38c for yellow. Wool steady and quiet; do
mestic fleece 32®39c, pulled 23®41c, Texas 14®
28c. Pork closed q'U“: mess, inspected, sl2®
12 25; mess, uninspected, $ll 75. Beef closed
firm. Beef bams strong. Tierced beef quiet;
city extra iDdia meat 813 .’.O per 100 pounds.
Cut meats slow. Middles strong. larJ easier
and quiet; western steam $0 70®6 75, city
$6 25; options—October delivery 16 46, closing
at $6 46 asked; December delivery $6 28 asked
Freight* weak: cotton. 44<1: grain, 5d bid.
Chicaoo, Nov. I.—ln wheat there was a fair
volume of busmen to-day, and the market,
although see-sawing back and forth within <44®
lc range, showed some firmness. The opening
was about the same as vestenlay'a closing, ad
vanced 4®t*c. receded 4®Hc, and closed Uc
lower for Dromber and Holower for May than
the closing figures of \ eaterday The market
at times rather Indicated that operators were
m ?r deposed to r-tiize for May delivery, of
which ofreringi wee rather larger And the pro
niium over December was reduced trom 4® Wee
to 3 N®3*4c. For December t or* was moderate
Inlying and offerings sere not large, keceipts
continue 00 a liberal kcoK Rain was reported
In MiohiffAD, W 1 hooll mu, iniaoti, lowa, Mio
ncwotA, Aud Misouri. and suow in KAn*Ai* And
NfbrAtka. Btock of in tho country ele
vators in Minnesota and Dakota were reported
as showing an increase of ti,oQo,ooa dur-
P*** Month. In corn a fair speculative
and a srood skipping business was transacted.
Ihe market opened sOTon* at over the
closing prices of yesterday, was firm, November
advancing sc. iufluen *ed by the weather, small
receipts anf good shipping demand. Tbe reao
lion later on was due to free relliu* of Decern
her, by a prominent local operator supposed t >
be largely of year do very, around tlVic.
The market then rallied, became very weak,
and close : lower for November, about
V,c over for Do e-nber, and lower for Msy
than yesterday. Cables were firm and domestic
markets easier. Oats were traded in quite
freely for May, but the other deecriptioua were
quiet. A weaker feeling develops 1 and price
receded *4®63c, and the market closed easy at
about inside prices and 6s®*4c lower tha 1 yee-
Jorday. In mete pork tradiug was only m der
ate. The early feeling was stronger aud prices
were 7*t® tOc higher, with some buying by
shorta later the market was easier, with more
pressure tu sell, and prices receded 15®17*4c on
November and s®7t4c on January, and closed
rather quiet. In lard very little attention was
given to this market aud the trading was I gbter
than for several days l ast. Prices averaged a
trine higher, but outside figures were not Billy
supported to the close. In short ribs hariilv a
sufficient busiiiese was transacted to establish a
market. The prices exhibited but very little
change, rattier favoring eellers.
Oasn quotations were as follows; Floor
unchanged. Wneat—No. 2 spring 7*4*®79c;
No. * red ib-V,®79c. Corn—No. 2, ; *2 : iic. Oats
—No. 2. 18tic. Mess pork at $9 i 20,®9 75.
Lard at $6 10®6 1214. Short rib sides. TwOse,
$5 20®5 40. Dry salted shoulders, boxed, $4 50
®4 621*. Short clear sides, boxed, $5 50®5 62*1..
Whisky $1 02.
Loading tuturos ranged os follows;
Opening. Highest. Closing.
No. 2 Wheat—
Deo. delivery... 80*4 80 80U
Jan. delivery. „ 80*2 soij 80*4
May delivery... 84*4 8414 8374
Corn, No. 8— ™
Dec. delivery.. 31** 321* 32U
Year delivery.. 32 gu 31U
May delivery . 33** 3.1*4 83i„
Oats. No. 2
Dec. delivery... 173* m* 1874
Jan. delivery.. 19*4 . . jq*4
May delivery.. 22** *2** 2l?s
Mesh Foma—
Year delivery. $9 00 |9 05 $8 97*4
Jan. delivery... 925 930 925
May delivery.. 960 965 9 62*4
Card, Per lUOlbs -
Yoar dell very . $5 87** $5 87** $5 85
Jan. delivery.. 5 87** 5 90 6 85
May delivery.. 610 610 6 07*4
Short Kian. PerlOOlbf—
Year delivery..s4 70 $4 70 $4 70
Jan. delivery.... 4 72** 4 75 4 70
May delivery.... 4 97** 5 00 495
Cincinnati, Nov. I.—^Wheat steady and firm;
No. 2 led 78c. Corn strong; No. 2 mixed 35c.
Oats strong; No. 2 mixed 21**®28c. Pork dull
at $lO 75. bard weak at $6. Bulk meats quiet;
short ribs $5 60. Bacon quiet; short clear $650,
Whisky firm at $1 OH Hogs easy; common and
light $3 26®4 10.
St. Louis, Nov. 1. —Flour quiet and un
changed, but firm. Wheat—Trading was light
early in the day, owing to confusion arising
from an attempt to trade in new and old style,
a difference of **c a month reduction in storage
■atos wav maintained for awhile, but was re
duced about tgo later, and the close was about
the same as yesterday; No. 2 red, cash, 78c for
old: new December delivery 78**®78>4c, dosed
at 78**®78>*c; May delivery 3;)*i®B334c. Corn
lower; No. 2 mixed, cash, 29**o for old; Year
281rc, dosed at 28**c asked; new, November de
livery 290, dosed at 29c asked; December
delivery 28**®28**c, closed at 28**c asked.
Oats dull; No. 2, casli 17**e bid for old; May de
livery, new style, 22®g2**c; old style, 22e.
Whisky at {1 02. Provisions qniet and weak,
with little done; prices unchanged.
Louisville, Nov. I.—Urain closed unchanged;
Wheat—No. 2 red, 76c. Cora—No. 2 mixed, 35c.
Gate—No. 2, 21**c. Provisions uuchangeil:
Baoun—dear rib sides $6; clear sides packed,
$6 25. Bulk meats -clear ribs s:> 50. Mess pork
at sl3. Sugar-cured hams sll 50® 12 50. Lard,
choice leaf SB.
New Orleans, Not, I.—Coffee quiet, steady;
Rio (in cargoes) common to prime, IB® Uibe.
I Sugar closed strong; Ixmlslana mien kettle,
fully fair 4Hc, good fair 4**e; lAmisianaoeutrif
ugal, plantation granulated 6 9-16®U*4c, off
plantation granulated 6®6**c; choice white 654
®6 7-lOc, choice yellow clarified s**®s 13-16 c,
prime yellow clarified 5 9 16c. Molasses easy:
Louisiana open kettle, strictly prime 47c: good
prime 43®46c, primo 40®42c, good fair 38®39c;
contrlfugals, good fair 2ic; fair 23c. Syrup at
3 2® 35c.
Baltimore, Nov. I.— Flour dull. Wheat-
Southern steady; Fultz 77®83c, Longberry 77®
84c; Western dull; No. 8 winter red, on spot
and November delivery 80®80**c. Corn —South-
ern quiet and steady; white 42®43c, yellow 410
42c; Western easy.
NAVAL STORES.
Liverpool, Nov. I, noon. -Spirits turpentine
35s lid.
Nvw Yorx, Nov. 1, noon.—Spirits turpentine
dull and unsettled at 483*®49c. Rosin quint but
firm at $1 1001 15.
5:00 p. m.—Rosin in fair demand and steady;
straibed, common to good $1 10®1 15. Turpen
tine steady.
Chasi estom, Nov. 1. - Turpentine quiet at
45*4c; nothing doing, ltosin firm; good Htrulnuil
9754 c.
wiLMiNivruN, Nov. I,—Spirits turpentine
firm at 44**o. Rosin firm; strained 86c,
good strained 90c. Tar firm at $1 50. Crude
turpentine firm; hard $1 20, yellow dip and
virgin $2 25.
RICE.
New Ort.eans, Nov. I.—Rico dull and lower
to sell; ordinary to good 3**®4**o.
PETROLEUM.
New Yore. Not. I.—The petroleum market
Sd strong at $1 06*4, but after a gain of
came weak and declined steadily until tho
>ur. when a slight res tion occurred, aud
the market closed steady at $1 05**.
SHU* P IMG ikl’B LLI UK NCR.
MINIATURE ALMANAJ— THIS DAY.
Sun Rises 8:40
Sun Seth .5:20
Hioh Water at Savannah 3:40 am, 4:06 p m
Saturday, Nov 2. 18S9.
ARRIVED YESTERDAY.
Steamship Iximuria <Br), Pottinger, Teneriffe,
in ballast btraclian & Cos.
ARRIVED AT QUARANTINE YESTERDAY.
Steamship Truro City (Br), Koope, Ceara, in
ballast— Straclian & Cos.
Bark Vesta (Nor), Olsen. Santos, In ballast,
ordered to Charleston —Holst & Cos.
Bark Pandora (Nor), Knudsen, Buenos Ayres,
in ballast —Holst & Cos.
ARRIVED UP FROM QU ARANTINE YESTER
DAY.
Bark Maria (Sd), Jaune, to load for Canary
Islands —Cuyas & Curtis.
Bark Progreso (Sp), Fuentes, to load for South
America—A R Salas & Cos.
CLEARED YESTERDAY.
Steamship City of Augusta, Catharine. Now
York—C G Anderson.
Steamship Timor (Br), Hodge, Liverpool—A
Mime & Sons.
Steamship Inchgarvie (Br), Cairns. Liverpool
—A Minis 4 Sons.
Schr John A Griffin, Hand, Newport Nows.Va
—Jos A Roberts & Cos.
DEPARTED YESTERDAY.
Steamer Advance, Strobhar, Augusta and
way landings—J G Med lock, Agt.
SAILED YESTERDAY.
Steamship City of Augusta, New York.
Steamship Albania (Br), Reval.
MEMORANDA.
New York, Oct 81—Arrived, schrs Helen L
Martin, Fountain. Darien; George R Congdon,
Bayles. Georgetown, S C; James E Woodhouse
(of Jacksonville), Douglass, Milk River, Ja.
Cleared, schrs Horace P Shares, Mount, Pen
sacola; Stepnen Bennett, Hathorn, Feraandina.
Chartered, steamship Henry Annlng (Br),
cotton.New Orleans to Liverpool, 27 srd; steam
ship Sir William Armstrong (Br), cotton. New
Orleans to Bremen. 7-16d; steamship Lisnacrieve
(Br), cotton. New Orleans to Genoa, 15-32d;
steamship Robina (Br). cottoi. New Orleans to
Reval, ** 1; steamship Knutsford (Bri, cotton,
Galveston to Liverpool, 60s.
Ayr, Oct 29 Arrived, bark Aimed la (Nor),
Chris.ensen, Pensacola.
Bristol, Oct 30—Arrived, steamship Thomas
Turnbull (Bri. Page, Port Royal, 8 C.
Buenos Ayres. Oct 28-Arrived, bark Nereid,
Griffin, Brunswick.
Cape Town, Oct 3—Sailed, ship Ugglan (8w),
Gadtf. St Simon a
Denis, out 23—Sailed, bark Ihana (Rus),
Ekholm, Pensacola.
bungeiinase, Oct 30— passed, bark Osmo(Rus),
Paneiius, I/ondon for Pensacola.
Greenock. Oct 28— Sailed, steamship Holy
rood (Br), Savannah.
Liverpool. Oct 30— Arrived, steamship* Cairn
gorm (Br>, Dunn, Savannah; Florence <B.*a
Suuley, do.
Port Natal. Sept 97—Sailed, bark Alert (Nor),
Aas. Kernandl na.
Lew Point, C B. Oct 27—Passed, steamship
River Mersey 'Bri, Cooaaw, S C. via North Syd
ney for Aberdeen.
Rio Janeiro. Oct 7 —Sailed, bark White Rose
(Nor), hafon. Pensacola: Sept 29, ship City of
Lucknow <Br), Halley, Cooeaw, 8 C.
Brunswick, Oct SO— Arrived, tiarks Anna (Nor),
Olsen. Cora; Stella (Ger), Hogemann, Buenos
Ayres.
Fernanlina, Oct 30 Cleared, bark Daisey
Reed, Mitcbel, New York; schrs Wm C Green,
Doone, do; M try B Jones, Mcfiee, Philadelphia.
Jacksonville, Oct So ('leared. schrs St John's,
Gilmore, Baltimore; Lois V ( liaples, Ross, New
Y ork.
Norfolk, Oct 80—Sailed, schrs S W Hall,
Savannah; Dudley. Farlin, Beaufort. SC.
Port Royal, SC, <Jct 30—i beared, schr Fanny
Brown, Stiarrett. ('harieston.
PhtUdelptiia. Oct 30 Ai rived, brig John
Wesley, Van Gilder, Port Reval. B C.
Cleared, steamship Njwuham (Br), S(abell.
Savannah.
Vineyard Haven. Oct 29- Arrived, schr June
Bright, Barter, Port Royal, S (', for Boston
New York, Nov i—Arrived, .-teaunship* Aller,
Br men: Adriatic, Liverpool.
Arrived out, steamship* city of Berlin and
Wisconsin, Now York for Liverpool.
MARITIME MISCELLANY.
A cablegram from Jamaica, received in Balti
more, state* that schr Spotless, from Savannah
Oct 15 for Baltimore, was lost at sea. AU hands
saved and arrived at Jamaica.
New York, Oct 39-Schr Helen I, Martin.
Fountain, Darien, Ua, report* the following:
Oct 24, off Hattor.is, had a hurricane from north
in ivmeh carried away malnboom, mainsail and
maingaff.
Schr James E Woo lhouse (of Jacksonville).
Douglass, Milk River, Ja. is bound to Providence,
aim jut infcti this port a supply of provisions,
london, Oct 40 Hark Giano (Aus), from Pen
sacola for Tunis, before reported abandoned,
was passed Oct 13, lat 40 S, lon 61 W.
NOTICE TO MARINERS.
A branch of the United State* Hydrographic
office has I won establtihed In the ('ustorn House
atSavannah Notice to mariners, pilot chart*,
andall nautical information will bo furnished
masters of vessels free of charge. Captain* are
requested to call at the office.
John S. Wattkm,
Ensign U 8 N. in charge, pro tom.
RECEIPTS.
Per Savannah, Florida and Western Railway,
Nov 1—2,257 bales cotton, 810 bbls rosin. 331
bblsspirits l urpontine, 343 sacks rice, 18 pkg*
meat, 20 bbls syrup, 42 cars lumber, 3! cases
corn, 1 car cattle, 15 cases shoes, 23 sacks rico,
I oar cotton seed, 5 cars wood, 5 bales hides, I
car iron, 14 pUg* mdse, 125 bbls flour, 1 car oats,
125 bbls Hour, 968 boxes oranges, 51 boxe* vege
tables, 10 bbls oranges.
_l’er Charleston anil Savannah Ry. Nov I-,
473 bales cotton, 6 bbls spirits turpentine, 1 car
trees, 1 bbl rosin. 534 sacks rough rico, 21ot* b h
goods, 1 car coal, 1 tank oil, 1 bbl drugs, I bale
cloth, 1 case clothing, 5 bbls flour, 1 box bats, I
<‘ar empty bbla, 78 pkgs tobacco, f box bras*
lilting, 100 bdls baskets, 9 bdls wheels, 1 casts
bouts aud shoos, 5 cars wood, 1 case printing
unpor, 10 calves
Per Central Railroad, Nov 1—32 bales yarn, 11
bates hides, 114 bales domestics. 5 bI Is leather,
3 bills paper, 87 pkg* tobacco, 121,2851b* bacon,
270 lbs bird, 181 bbls spirits tur|**n!lne. 1 bo*
eggs, 273 bbls rosin. 200 bbls fruit, 276 bales bay,
15 bbls whisky, 7 hf bids whisky, 4 empty bbls.
70 bales paper stock, 55 bids cotton seed oil 39
boxes hardware. 1 car brick, 13 bales plaids, I
car nails. 2 bbls grits, 10 tons pig iron. 5 head
horses, 8 bbls syrup, 93 pkgs furniture, 2 bag*
vegetables, 135 bbls Hour, 16 cars lumber. Near*
iron railing, 78 cords wood, 158 bushels rice, IS
hills willowware, > casks clay, 229 pkgs mdse, 1
hales twine, 3 cases liquor, 25 buggies.
EXPORTS.
Per steamship Cty of Augusta, for New
York—l,BoB hales upland cotton, Id casks Hay,
244 bales sea island cut ton, 75 hales domestics, 9
bales paper stock, 557 bbls cotton seed oil, 1,540
bbls rosin, 240 bbls spirits turpentine. 850 oases
c meat, 74,781 feet lumber, 43 bales bides, 1,807
crates oranges. 12 bbls (lsb, 78craies vegetable*, ‘
27 bbls vegetables. 3.91 pkg* mdse. 79 hags bark.
Per steamship Timor (Br), for Liverpool—
-0,120 bales upland ootton, weighing 2,938,041
pounds.
Per steamship Inchgarvle (Br), for
—6,965 bales upland cotton, weighing 8.418,499
pound*; 150 lialcs sea island cotton, weighing
57,887 pounds. *
Per schr John A Grlffln, for Newport News,
Va—200,601 feet p p lumber—Southard A Cos,
PASSENGERS.
Per steamship City of Augusta, for New
York—Jas K Clarke, J K Clarke Jr, RL Ireland,
H 8 Ames, E Ames, H Dougahary, Dr C V
Burtis, Dr J A Packard.
CONSIGNEES.
Per Charleston and Savannah Ry, Not 1—
Fordg Office, M Y A D I Mclntyre, Warren A A.
Baldwin A Cos, W W Chisholm, Garnett, 8 A Cos,
Montague A Cos, J P Williams A Cos, Johnson A
Cos, W W Gordon & Cos, Ellis, Y A Cos, Franklin,
D A Ci, F Buchaunan, II A (Tlmo. 8 Huckwald.
I. R Harrison, Cohen A Cos, W H Pendergast, J
F Torrent, Baker A Y, B II Levy A Bro, W W
M itched, J R Einstein, Mutual G L Co.Byok A 8.
Chesnutt A O’N, E Lovell's Sops, Browfl Bros, and
Budget t, J Rosenheim A Cos, Baker A 8, Decker
A F, H L Schreiner.
Per Savannah. Florida and Western Railway.
Nov I—Fordg Office, Savannah Brewing Cos, J
Grimier. W W Gordon & Cos. MY Henderson. G
M D Riley, O W Tladenwn A Bro, Strauss Bros,
M Ferst’s Sons A Cos, Iwe Roy Myers ido.Wf
Ainair, C 0 Haines, A Ehrlich A Bro, Blisr- AS
Met,, Meinhard Bros A Cos, K B Hunting * Cos,
W C McDonough, Date, D .t Co.Oarnett, 8 & Cos,
McDonough A Cos, Ueppard A Cos, Ludaen A B,
A ElasteiuM Sons, Butler AS, AH Hull A Cos,
Savannah Steam Bakery, Frierson A Cos, C u
Montague A ('o, Warren AA,.I S Wood A Bro.
M Y A D I Mclntyre, Woods A Cos, Herron A O.
Peacock. II A Cos. Baldwin A Cos. Ellis, Y A Cos.
J P Williams & Cos, W W Chisholm, M MacUaa
<S Cos, H M Comer A 00, Jno Flannery 4 Cos.
Per Central Railroad, Nov I—Fordg Agt.
II M Comer A Cos, W W Gordon A 00, 6 Cohen,
F M Farley, Baldwin * Cos, J S Wood * Bro, C L
Montague & Cos, Woods & Cos, Garnett, 8 & Cos,
J P Williams A Cos, Hammond, II A 00. D B
Anwlorf, Butler AB, Jno Flannery & Cos, J M
Gnami, II Traub, lterron A G, Warren A A, J P
Ashton, M Y A I) I Mclntyre, Strauss A 00, W
D Dixon, Heidt AH, Decker F, Pll Ward. ,1
A Silva, Mrs L F Floyd, J D Davis, McGUlis A R,
A B Elarbee, A B Girardeau, Jackson, M A Cos,
Meinhard Bros A Cos, Eckmau A V, J A Ingram,
H Cohen, W II Logan. J lieiutz A Cos, Mrs A B
Blltcb, K A Schwarz, Lippman Bros, J D Charl
ton, Herman <t K, M K Moore. A Hanley, G A
Whitehead, Lindsay A M. H Myers A Bros. W U
Tel Cos, 8 Uuckenbeimer A Son. A Lelfler A Son,
Peacock, II A Cos, O Davis 4 Son. A S ( anuet.W
E Griffin, M A Prune, S L Newton. W I Milter,
W Johnson, Teeple 4 Cos. M Ferst’s Sons 4 Cos,
I) A Altick's Son*. Cl W Tiedeinan A Bro, 8 K
Lewiu, II I,ogan, Southern Cotton Oil Cos, W H
Grubb, J B Weed 4 Cos, Grady, DeL 4 Cos. Wip
Bouban, Harms 4J,W II Price, L J Ihinn, B
RuthweU, Jos A Robert* 4 Cos. Matt O’Connell,
I G Haas, Kavanaugh 48, E B Hunting 4 Cos,
W H Connell, J Kline.
Advice to idomers.
Mug. W inblow’s Soothing Syrup should
always be used when children ore cutting
teeth. It relieves the little sufferer at ouoe{
It produces natural, quiet sleep by reliev
ing the child from pain, and the little cheruUl
awakes as “bright as a button.” It is very*
pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, soft
ens the gums, allays all pain, relieree wind,
regulates the bowels, and is the best known
remedy for diarrhoea, whether arising from
teething or other causes. Twenty-fire oeati
a bottle _
A Disastrous Failure.
Mobley—l see Spickins has gone wrong.
Dalsey—That doesn’t surpr iso me—it’s in
the blood.
Mobley—That is just wher j you’re right.
It is in the blood— Rheumatic, you know.
Daisey—Oh! I thought you meant a finan
cial failure. If it is ouly the blood, a few
bottles of P. P. P. (Prickly Ash, Poke Root
and Potassium) will cure him. Its the best
remedy that I over heard of for an j/ blood
trouble. It works on Gout, Syphilis,
Scrofula or Bkin Eruptions of any kiud like
a charm, and the beauty of it is, that it ia
always accessible. Every drug store sells it.
Sparkling, Pure, Delicious.
Tho great Rochester Beer is conceded In
New York where all Beers are sola to be
superior to them all, and as the par excel
lence of a healthy, palatable and delicious
article.
Made only by the Rochester Brewing
Company of Rochester, N. Y., and sold
only in bottles. For sale by John Lyons
& Cos.. J. MoGrnth, S. W. Branch, W. G.
Cooper, MoehJenbrock & Dierka and John
Lynch.
Sanitary underwoar, $1 a snit less than
you can buy anywhere. I don’t merely
say it, but Ido it; come and look at my
goods aud satisfy yourzelf. “The Famous,'*
141 Congress street.
7