Newspaper Page Text
COMMERCIAL.
market.
WEEKLY EXPORT.
OFFICE MORNING TEWS. 1
Savannah. Not. 15. 1889. (
6c*bai. P.exarKs—There was a fairly active
bis nrsi transacted in the general market dur
r . ' ;iie wec g just passed. There wa >, however,
flight fading off with the wholesale jobbers
“4 3 that of the week previous. This was at
jjuted to the very mild weather, and, as is
c ~j at this time of the year, a sort of
in the demand occurs just before
‘ holiday business opens. which
be in about a week or ten days. In all other
branches trade was active, especially in the
‘ pping movement. Travelers' orders have
not been in as full volume as usual. There was.
however, a number of spot buyers in the mar
tet Collections were very fai* but, not as full
s was expected, considering Re very heavy
wtto n movement. The money market
remarkably easy, indeed there
i= more offering than ever was known
before at this time and cheaper rates. The
security market remains quiet but very firm
for the whole list, business is somewhat re
str cted by the scarcity of desirable securities
for investment. There were no features of
novement in the markets, and values, as a
rll le, were comparatively steady. The grocery
t-aJewas rather quieter than it has been for
some time, and the trading, while
it was in good volume, shows some
tailing off towards the close of the week. In
provisions the demand was good and a very fair
trade was doing. In dry goods the demand was
fairly steady, orders continuing good for filling
in stocks. The hardware trade shows a steady
movement, and there are no signs of any im
mediate slacking off in the demand. The trade
in lumber and building materials is very active,
while in all other departments business is quite
satisfactory. The following resume of the
week's business will show the tone and the
latest quotations of the different markets at the
closing hour to-day.
Naval Stores.— The market for spirits tur
pentine was quiet and easy throughout the
week. Prices were weak and steadily declined,
regulars closing to day at 43(4c. a reduction of
le since last report. The receipts have con
tinued comparatively heavy, which has had
much to do with the weakness in values, while
the demand was rather slow and in
different. The total sales for the week
were about 3.000 casks. Rosin—The market
was irregular. The lower grades were very
strong and advancing, while the better qualities
were dull and declining. There was a good
inquiry for strained to good strained, with
some scarcity of stock. Pales were in
good supply but neglected. The total
sales for the week were about 9.000 bar
rels. Elsewhere will be found a comparative
table of receipts and exports from April
1 to date, and for the same time last year,
sbowiDg the stock on hand and on shipboard not
cleared, together with the official closing quota
tions.
Cotton— The market was rather quiet during
last week, and spot business was limited, owing
to the smallness of the offering stock. Factors
were quite firm in their views, and succeeded in
maintaining quotations, in point of fact full fig
ures were obtained in scaut grades. The week's
receipts were very large, but local receipts were
proportionately smaller tnan usual. Ttie mar
ket closed to-day dull at unchanged prices. The
total sales for the week were only 7,400 bales.
The following are the official closing spot quo
tations of the Cotton Exchange:
Middling fair lfijg
Good middling 9(2
Middling 9->4
Low middling 914
Sea Islands. —The total receipts for the week
were 1,459 bags, of which 1,374 bags were to
factorsand 85 bags were through cotton. The
total sale’s were 1,832 bags. The total exports
were 2,241 bags, distributed in the following
places, 1.599 bags were to Liverpool. 90 bags to
Havre and 572 bags to northern mills. The
market was somewhat irregular during the
week, but closes to-day firm with offerings
pretty well cleaned up. The above business
was on the basis of quotations:
Good medium 23
Medium fine 23J4@23V£
Fine 231J<®24
Extra fine Choice 24)4
Tue receipts of cotton at this port from ail
sources the past week were 53,973 bales of up
had and 1,459 bales sea island, against 43,943
bales of upland and 1,416 bates sea island last
year.
The particulars of the receipts have been as
follows: Per Central railroad, 36,962 bales; up
land; per Savannah, Florida and Western
railway, 14,481 bales upland and 1,211
bales sea island; per Charleston and Savannah
railway, 1.678 bales upland; per Savannah river
steamers, 719 bales upland: per Florida steam
ers. 100 bales upland and 123 hales sea island;
cans, 35 t ales upland and 125 bales sea island.
The exports for the week were 48,585 bales of
upland and 2,241 bales sea island, moving as fol
lows: To New York, 5.909 bales upland and
177 bales sea island: to Baltimore, 698 bales up
land; to Boston 1.2X6 bales upland and 85 bales
f*t island; to Charleston, 4,340 bales upland;
to Liverpool, 15,896 bales upland and 1,579
bales sea island; to Bremen, 16,216 bales up
land; to Reval, 4,240 bales upland.
The stock on hand to-day was 109,048 bales
upland and 4.100 bales sea island, against 109,763
baies upland and 4.491 bales sea island last year.
filCE.—Thd market has continued dull and to
an extent nominal, owing to buyers and sellers
being somewhat apart. There are some few
riders, but buyers are limited in their bids,
while holders were asking the full current
quotations. Avery small part of the
receipts continue to be milled out,
and holders are not inclined to push
business. The total sales for the week were
about 850 barrels.
The following are the official quotations;
small job lots are held at (4®(ic. higher:
Fair 3-54@4
Good 4(J®4(6
Prime . 4(6®1
fancy 5 '@s(s
Head s£J@6
Rough—Nominal-
Country lots 8 70
Tidewater.. 90® 1 10
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'th F’nl Total C'stwise
1888-89 1887-88 Britain. France. Ports. jForeign. Ports. 18S9. 1888,
New Orleans Nov. 15 739,609 645,406 874.972 136,863 109,9581 520.; 93 75,652 832,216 185.924
Mobile Nov. 15 120,868 78,'91 7,566 7,566 98.906 16,059 17,912
Florida Nov. 8 8,928 1,809 1 8.928
Texas ..Nov. 15 456,779 315.135 134,812 24,84! 45.853; 205,642 146,056 103,218 77.143
J Upland. ...Nov. 15 492,241 409,519 85,909 10,801 118,508 221,218 170,623 106 044 109,763
oavannan Is’d....Nov. 15 8.002 7,616 2,364 265 2,649 3,158 4,700 4,491
1 Upland.... Nov. 15 196,906 194,621 38,283 16,159 47,761 97,193 47,433 62,194 61,3 3
unarieston -J Is , and Nqv g B>oso 3.054 197 197 821 1,035 1,376
North Carolina Nov. 15 72,881 76,419 48,521 2,500 51,021 6,108 14,1.38 11,187
!Virginia Nov. 15 326,677 385,305! 131,907 12.899 144,806 62,959 34.642 36,444
New York Nov. 15 27,167 23,0631 180,122 14,569 50.342 245,033 89,9361 126,332
Other ports Nov. 15j 58,226 46,988 92,8891 j 12,6941 105,583 9.4261 41,871 1
Total to .late 2,510,394) I 992,532/ 206,498/ 400,511/ 1,601, 601 011,279/ 076.0ial /
Total to date in 1886 / 1 2, (.87,71*6) / /.- .... / / / / 613,71*;/
C NSOLID -4TEi, COTTON STATEMENT rott THE WEEK
P vor „. . . ENDING NOV. 15, 7889.
bast at ali u - s - ports this week.... 293,927
to date-;:-v.\v;;.v.v.:.v:: 2 ,5io:39i
ToS.! Z- k lasC >'" ar 189,554
Last vS? rtS t 0 date 1,594,309
United States ports 676.012
Ua.“ aa interior towns 103,004
StockikvV, 144.4717
tki at Liverpool 52-;,0o0
Laityear BM.OM
Americas afloat for Grea: Bnta.n . S2y ono
TftAf Ztt'.OdO
Comparative Cotton Statement
Of Gross lUceipts, Exports and Stock on llano Nov. 15, 1889,
and ron Tint 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 1,4591 53,978 1,4 m 43,243
Received previously 7,81 4| 438.263 7,5.-6 366,732
Total 9.942 6 0,889 9,061 417,141
Fk|s>rted this week 2,241 J 48,686 " 1,528 24,594
llxported proviounly 3,001 843,25# 3,041 282,784
Total 6,849* 301,841 _ 4,570 807,1781
Stock on hand and ou ship
-1 board Nov. 15 4,100, 109.048! 4,4911 109,763,
Movement of Cotton at Interior Points
giving receipts and shipments for the week end
ing Nov. 15, 1889, and stock on hand to-night,
and for the same time last year:
r-Week ending Nov. 15, ISB9 ,
Receipts. Shipments. Stocks.
Augusta 12.580 8,423 4.952
Columbus 2,930 2,162 6 657
Rome 5.130 3,764 3,730
Montgomery 5.407 4.773 7,384
Selma 3,646 3.581 4,201
Memphis 29,003 30,584 77,630
Nashville 2,004 1,371 2,184
Total 60.710 54,658 106.740
,—Week ending Nov. 16, 18S J ,
Receipts. Shipments. Stocks.
Augusta 12,361 11 ,085 19,862
Columbus 2,065 3,055 6,350
Rome 3,654 3,386 1,493
Macon 1,784 1.978 5.662
Montgomery 3,715 3,1-9 19,704
Selma 3,258 2<720 6,929
Memphis 34,619 28,573 81.221
Nashville 3,949 2,007 4,709
Total 65,405 56,293 65.930
THE FOLLOWING STATEMENT SHOWS THE NET RE
CEIPTS AT ALL PORTS FOR THE WEEK ENDING
NOV. 15 AND NOV. 8, AND TOR THIS WEEK
LAST year:
This Last I gist
Week Week. Year.
Galveston. ... ... 41.107 14.188 25,388
New Orleans 92,900 104,374 72.209
Mobile 11,970 11,754 7,777
Savannah 56,089 49,1.54 44,657
Charleston 23,068 24,7:14 19,853
Wilmington 9,515 8,999 8,299
Norfolk 26,440 25,629 28,564
New York 4,785 3,957 6,715
Various 28,112 22,233 48,395
Total 293.927 295.202 261.657
LIVERPOOL MOVEMENT FOR TIIE WEEK ENDING
NOV. 15, 188!>, AND FOR THE CORRESPONDING
weeks of 1858 and 1887:
1889. 1888. 1837.
Sales for the week.. 70,000 69,009 61,000
Exporters Itook 4,500 4,300 6,100
Speculators t00k... 3,500 2,800 9.500
Total stock 528.000 321.000 489,000
Of which American. 311,000 889,000 293.00 C
T’l imports for week 143.000 119.000 129,000
Of which American. 123,000 110,000 110,003
Actual exports 83,000 73,800 30,100
Amount afloat 342,000 248,000 262,000
Of which American. 329,000 233,000 248,000
Price 5 11-160 5 11-16d 5&-16d
Visible supply of Cotton.—Below we give
the table of visible supply, as made up by cable
and telegraph for the Financial and Commer
cial Chronicle to Nov. 8. The continental
stocks, as well as those 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 Nov. 8 we add the jitem of
exports from the United States, including in it
the exports of Friday only:
1889. 1888.
Stock at Liverpool 467,000 280,000
Stock at London 18,000 7,000
Total Great Britain stock 485,000 293,000
Stock at Hamburg 1,600 2,300
Stock at Bremen .. .. 18,000 8,400
Stock at Amsterdam 4,000 3,000
Stock at Rotterdam 300 300
Stock at Antwerp 5,000 500
Stock at Havre... 100,000 90,000
Stock at Marseilles 3,000 2,000
Stock at Barcelona 27,000 30,000
Stock at Genoa 5,000 4,009
Stock at Trieste 5,000 6,000
Total continental stocks 168,900 145,500
Total European stocks 653,900 438,500
India cotton afloat for Europe. 39,000 85,000
American cotton afloat for Eu
rope 672,000 460,000
Egypt, Brazil, etc., afloat tor
Europe 40,000 22,000
Stock in United States ports... 675,505 669,807
Stock in U. S. interior towns.. 179,137 216.313
United States exports to-day.. 28,132 40,499
Total visible supply 2,237,674 1,872,118
Of the above, the totals of American and other
descriptions are as follows:
American—
Liverpool stock 295,000 187.000
Continental stock 95,000 62.000
American afloat for Europe.... 672,000 460,000
United States stock 675,505 669,807
United States interior stocks.. 179,137 216,313
United States exports to-day.. 28,132 40,498
Total American 1,947.774 1,635,618
Total East India, etc 339,900 2 36,500
Total visible supply 2,287,674 1,872,118
The imports into continental ports this week
have been 47,000 bales.
The above figures indicate an increase in the
cotton in sight to date of 415.556 bales as com
pared with the same date of 18S8, a decrease of
268,848 bales as compared with the correspond
ing date of 1887, and an increase of 24,932 bales
as compared with 1886.
India Cotton Movement.—The following is
the Bombay statement for the week and year,
bringing the figures down to Nov. 7:
BOMBAY RECEIPTS AND SHIPMENTS FOR FOUR
YEARS.
Shipments this week—
Great Britain. Continental. Total.
1889 3,000 6,000 9,000
1888 1.000 .... 1,000
1887 8,000 8.000
1886 5,000 5,000
Shipments since Jan. 1—
Great Britain. Continental. Total.
1889 373,000 863,000 1,236,000
1888 217,000 639,003 846,000
1887 368,1 XX) 691,000 1,059.000
1886 334,000 685,000 1,009,000
Receipts— This week. Since Jan. 1.
1889 13-000 1,722,000
1888 3.000 1,309,000
1887 8,000 1.514,000
1886 9.000 1.440,000
According to the foregoing, Bombay appears
to show an increase compared with last year in
the week’s receipts of 10,000 baies, and an in
crease in shipments of 8.000 bales. and the ship
ments since Jan. 1 show an increase of 390,000
bales.
FINANCIAL.
Money Market—Money is easy.
Domestic Exchange—Steady. Banks and
bankers are buying sight drafts at 94 per
cent discount and selling at ® per cent dis
count to par.
Foreign Exchange—The market is firmer.
Commercial demand, 84 82®; sixty days. $4 78®;
ninety days, $4 7634; francs, Paris and Havre,
commercial, sixty days, 35 20*4; Bwiss, #5 27'44;
marks, sixty days, 93 11-16 c.
Securities—The security market is quiet and
firm.
STOCKS AND BONDS.
Stale Bonds— Bid. Asked.
New Georgia 4® per cent bonds .118 11*®
State of Georgia gold quarterlies. 102 103
Georgia Smith’s, maturity 1896.. ■ 118® 120
City Bonds —
Atlanta 6 per cent 106 114
Atjanta 7 per cent 116 120
Augusta 7 per cent 105 1124$
Augusta 6 per cent 104
Columbus 5 per cent 104 101 ®
Macon 6 per cent 114 115
New Savannah 5 per cent quar
terly, January. 106% 107J^
New Savannah 5 per cent quar
terly, February coupons 1064$ 107
Bailroad Bonds —
Savannah. Florida and Western
Railroad general mortgage
bonds, 6 per cent interest cou
pons.:... 112 1H
Atlantic and Gulf first mortgage
consolidated? percent, coupons
January and July, maturity
1897 115 117
Central consolidated mortgage?
per cent, coupons January and
July, maturity 1893 1084$ I<®
Central Railroad and Banking
Company collateral, gold s’s.. 100 101
Georgia Railroad 6s 105®111 IOC© 116
Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta
first mortgage 110
Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta
second mortgage 118 I*°
Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta
THE MORNING NEWS: SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16. 1889,
general mortrace 5 per cent .407 109
Marietta and North Georgia rail
road first mortgage 6 per cent.. 107 107(4
Marietta and North Georgia rail
way first mortgage 6 per cent.. 96 96(4
Montgomery and Eufauta first
mortgage indorsed 6 per cent. 110(4 111
Western A.abaraa second mort
gage indorsed 5 per cent, cou
pons Apr.l maturity 1890 10114 103
Georgia Southern and Florida
first mortgage 6 per cent 95(4 99
Covington and Macon first mort
gage 6 per cent 95(4 97
Soutn Georgia and Florida in
dorsed U 8 120
South Georgia and Florida sec
ond mortgage 116 118
Savannah and Western ss, in
dorsed by Central railroad 10054 101(4
OceanSteamship6 percent bonds,
guaranteed by Central Railroad 103 103t4
Gainesville, Jefferson and South
ern Railroad, first mortgage,
guaranteed 116 113
Gainesville, Jefferson and South
ern, not guaranteed 110 114
Gainesville, Jefferson and Soutn
ern, second mortgage, guaran
teed 114 116
Columbus and Rome, first indors
ed 6s 108 110
Columbus and Western 6 per cent
first guaranteed 110 111(4
Augusta and Knoxville railroad 7
per cent first mortgage bonds . 112(4 113
City and Suburban Railroad, first
mortgage 7 per cent bonds IDS 106(4
Railroad Stocks —
Augusta and Savannah 7 per cent
guaranteed 139 140
Central common 126(4 127(4
Georgia common 197 202
Southwestern, 7 percent guaran
teed 133(4 134
Central, 6 per cent certificates, 101J* 102(4
Atlanta and 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 255 275
Merchants’National Bank 175 ISO
Savannah Bank and Trust Com
pany 119 121
National Bank of Savannah 134 135
The Oglethorpe Savings and Trust
Company 121(4 123
Citizens’Bank 99(4 100(4
Chatham Real Estate and Im
provement Company 52(4 53(4
Factory Bonds —
Augusta B'actory 6s 110
Sibley Factory 6s 102
Enterprise Factory 6s , 110
Factory Stocks—
Eagle and Phenix Manufactur
ing Company 85 90
Augusta Factory 90 _
Graniteville Factory 140
Langley Factory 107
Enterprise Factory common 43
Enterprise Factory, preferred 100
J. P. King Manufacturing Com
pany 98
Sibley Manufacturing Company. 86
Gas Stocks-
Savannah Gas Light stocks 24 25
Electric Light and Power Cos 85 86
Naval Stores.—The receipts for the past
week have been 4,317 barrels spirits turpentine
and 13,508 barrels rosin. The exports were 4.012
barrelsspirits turpentine and 15,0.35 barrels rosin,
moving os follows: To New York, 539 barrels
spirits turpentine and 2,217 barrels rosin; to
Baltimore. 073 barrels rosin; to the interior,
394 barrels spirits turpentine and 4,326 barrels
rosin: to Boston, 186 barrels spirits turpentine;
to Bristol, 1,773 barrels spirits turpentine; to
Rotterdam. 1,150 barrels spirits turpentine and
2,940 barrels rosin; to Garston Dock, 4.879 bar
rels rosin. The following are the Board of
Trade quotations: Rosin—A, B, C and DBl 1 >
E $1 I>, F 81 20. G 81 25, H $1 30, I $1 50, K
$1 60, M $2 10. N $2 75, window glass $2 75,
water white $3 00. Spirits turpentine—regu
lars 43(4c.
RErF.IPTS,SHrPMSNTS AND STOCKS FROM APRIL 1,
1889, TO DATE, AND TO THE CORRESPONDING
DATE LAST YEAR:
Spirits. Rosin. Spirits. Rosin.
On hand April 1.. 1,94? 73,092 3.670 66,654
Rec’dthis week.. 4.317 13,503 3,884 7,842
Rec’d previously. 147,526 375,871 126,430 328,329
Total 153,790 462 471 1313,984 402,825
Shipments: Foreign—
Aberdeen .... 8,250
Antwerp 4,258 2,950 4,929 8,032
Anjer, for orders 5,500 ... . ..
Barcelona 3,003 .... ....
Bristol 6,316 2,983 1,850 5,300
Buenos Ayres 200 2,300 .... 2,000
Cape be Verde 10
Cardiff 4,186
Dantzic 9.413
GarstonDock 3.300 22.870 400 3.919
Genoa 500 3,427 ... 2.925
Glasgow 2,363 1.744 1,338
Granton 3,980 .... 11,782
Hamburg 3,899 17,293 5,424 2,864
Harburg 14,900
Hull 7,272 3,860 8,748 2,157
Konigsbm.g 3,740
Liverpool 5.435 2,790
London 38,192 11,681 31,888 3,573
Montevideo 1,300
Oporto 5 596 5 831
Odessa .... 5,026 .... 2,447
Pernambuco 1,M)0
Pooteeloff Harbor .... 25,739 .... 10,496
Rio Janeiro 200
Riga 12,433 .... 7,212
Rosario 500
Rotterdam 5,818 30,968 2,410 7,992
San Sebastian .... 1,564
Stettin .... 13,554
Taganrog 2,414 .... ....
Trieste 120 4.226
Coastwise—
Baltimore 3,279 73,233 4,481 69.609
Boston 8.275 6,605 9,110 12,846
Philadelphia 5.682 6,916 4,384 16,348
New York 22,900 116,988 21,236 123,180
Interior towns.... 18,091 8,153 19,395 15,545
Repacking, ulage,
and tanks 5,205 4,003 36 9,436
Total shipments.. 140,991 417,982 113,5)4 333,599
Stock on hand and
on shipboard
Nov. 15 12.799 44.489 20.440 69,225
Bacon—Market steady, good demand;
smoked clear rib sides, (i)4c; shoulders, s)£c;
dry salted clear rib sides, 6)40; long clear, 6Wc;
bellies, 6J4c; shoulders, s®c; hams, 12)4®
12?4c.
Bagging and Ties—The market is easy.
Small lots: Jute bagging. 294 lbs. 1094 c;
2 lbs, 10c; 194 lbs, 9>4<:; according to brand and
quantity; sea island bagging in moderate sup
ply at 14® 15c; cotton bagging, 44 inches, 94
lb, 13®®13)4c; smaller widths, cheaper. Iron
ties —$1 13®1 20 per bundle, according to quan
tity. Bagging and ties in retail lots a fraction
higher.
Butter Market dull; fair demand;
Goshen, 10@18c; gilt edge, 20®21c; creamery,
28®25c.
Cabbage—Northern, 9®loc.
Cheese—Market steady; fair demand; 11®
1294 c.
Coffee —Market higher and advancing. Pea
berry, 21®c; fancy 2014 c: choice, 20c; prime,
19)4c; good. 13c; fair, 1894 c; ordinary, l?9sc;
common, 17c
Dried Fruit—Apples, evaporated, 10c; com
mon, 6c. Peaches, peeled, 12® c; unpeeled, s®?c.
Currants, 7c. Citron, 22c.
Dry Goods—The market is quiet and steady.
Prints. 4®6}4c; Georgia brown shirting, 8-4,
4®c; 7-Sdo, sc; 4-4 brown sheeting, 6c; white
osnaburgs, 7® (©B94c: checks, s®s®c; yarns, 85c
for the best makes: brown drillings, 6®®7®c
Fish—Market nominal. We quote full weights:
Mackerel. No. S, half barrels, nominal, 89 00
®lO 00; No. 2, $lO 00®12 00. Herring, No. 1.
2lc; scaled, 26c. Cod, 6@Bc. Mullet, half
barrels, $5 00.
Fruit—Lemons—Light demand. Choice, $2 50
©3 25. Apples, *3 00©3 25.
Flour—Market very firm. Extra, $4 60: family,
$4 95; fancy, $5 10; patent, $6 00; choice 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
-1 ad lots, sic. Oats—Retail lots. 40c; job lots,
3 V'; carl allots. 34c. Bran—Retail lots, $1 00;
job lots, 90c; carload lots, 85c. Meal, 57®c. Pearl
gnts, per barrel, $2 85; per sack, $1 35; grits,
62®c.
Hay—Market firm. Western, in retail lots,
$1 00; job lots, 90c; carload lots, 85c.
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, 25c; salted, 20c. Otter skins, 50c®
!ioo.
Iron—Market firm; Swede, 4®®sc; re
fined. 2J4'.'
Lard—Market steady; in tierces, 6®c; 50-B>
tins, 6*4c.
Lime, Calcined blaster and Cement—Chew
acala lump lime in fair demand and selling at
$1 25 fer barrel; Georgia and Shelby, $1 25
per barrel; bulk and carload lots special:
calcined plaster, $1 85 per barrel; hair, 4©sc;
Rosendale cement, $1 40® 150; Portland cement,
$3 00.
LiquoßS—Steady; fair demand. Whisky,
perg-iUOn. rectified, $1 03®1 20, according to
proof; choice grades, $1 50®2 00; straight,
$1 50@4 00; blended, $2 00®6 00. Wines—
Domestic, port, sherry and catawba. low
grades, Lo®Bsc; fine grades, $1 00®: 50;
California, light, muscatel and angelica, $1 50
®175.
rg Alts —Market very firm; fair demand; 34,
#3 30; 4d and sd, $2 90 ; 6d. $2 70; 6d. $2 56; lOd,
$2 50; 12d to4od, $2 1.0: lOd to 60d. 2 05.
Nuts—Almonds—Tarragona—lß®3oc; lvlcas,
16©18c; walnuts, Frauen, 16c; Naples, 16c;
pecans, 10c; Brazil. 10c: filberts, 10c: coeoonuts,
Baracoa, 35 00 per 400; assorted nuts,
50 * and 25-* b-xes, !3c per pound.
Onions—Per barrel, $3 00®3 25; per crate,
*1 85.
Ous—Market steady; demand fair Signal,
40®50e; West Virginia black. 9®lJc: lard, 64c;
kerosene, 9(*®loe: neatsfoot. V®7V; ma
chinery 25®30c; linseed, raw. 64c; hol ed, 87c;
mineral seal, 18c; homettght. 15c; guardian.
14c
Potatoes—New, $2 30® 2 a.
Raisins—Demand light; market steady.
Malaga layers, 83 00 per box; London layers,
new. $3 50 per box; California London layers.
$2 75 per box; loose, $2 50
Salt—The demand is moderate and market
quiet ; carload lots. 75c, f. o. b.; job lots 85®90c.
Shot—Drop. $1 25; buck, SI 59-
Spoab—The market is steady. Cut
loaf, 6 tie; cubes, B(fjc; powdered. 3c; granu
lated, 744 c; confectioners’, 7Hc; standard A,
7(*c; off a. 7c; white extra C, 6(4; golden C
6c ; yellow, 554 c.
Stepp—Florida and Georgia steady at She;
mark’d quiet for sugarhouse at si®4’)c: Cuba
straight goods. 30c; sugarhouse molasses.
16®20c.
Tobacco—Market firm; good demand.
Smoking. 25c®l 25; chewing. common,
sound. 22(4®30c: fair, 30®45c: medium,
3S®soc; br.ght. 50®?5c; floe fancy, 85®90c;
extra fine. 9Ue®l 10; bright navies, 33®45c;
dark navies, !6c.
Lumber—Demand continues good from all
quarters, with increased inquiry from the
west. Mills are all full of work until the holi
days, and prices have a strong and upward ten
dency. There has been improvement in the
tonnage, and the demand is now fairly supplied.
Prices firm at quotations.
Ordinary sizes sl2 75®16 50
Difficult sizes 15 00®25 00
Flooring boards 16 00©21 50
Shlpstuffs 17 i\)®2s 00
Timber—Market dull and nominal We quote:
700 feet average $ 9 OG®ll 00
800 “ “ 10 00®11 00
900 “ •• 11 00®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® 9 00
1,000 “ 9 00©10 00
Mill timber $1 below these figures.
FREIGHTS.
Lumber—There is good business doing
coastwise at the current figures. Rates
may be quoted as within the range of 96 50® 3 00
from this port to Baltimore, Philadelphia, New
York and sound ports, with 25®50c
additional if loaded at near by Georgia
ports. Timber 50c®$l 00 higher than lumber
rates. To the West Indies and Windward,
nominal; to Rosario, $23 00; to Buonos Ayres or
Montevideo, S2O 00; to Rio Janeiro, S2O 00;
to Spanish and Mediterranean ports,
$1150®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 Stores—Very dull. Foreign—Cork,etc.,
for orders, loading, rosin, 3s 9d, and 5s
spirits, Adriatic, rosin, 4s l(4d; Genoa, Ss 9d;
South America, rosin, $1 30 per barrel of 280
pounds. Coast wise—Steam—To Boston, 10c per
100 fits on rosin, 90c on spirits: to New York,
rosin, 7(4c per 100 *s; spirits, 80c; to Philadel
pnia, rosin, 7%4c per 100 tbs; 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.
Liverpool 25-64d
Bremen ... 18~32d
Havre 13-32d
Barcelona 7-16d
Genoa • 7-16d
Reval 29 64d
Amsterdam 13-32d
Antwerp 13 32d
Liverpool via New York lb 23 -64d
Liverpool via Baltimore 25 64d
Havre via New York 19 Ih. . 15-16 c
Bremen via New York ft lb (4c
Bremen via Baltimore !-16d
Reval via New York lb (<d
Genoa via New York (41
Amsterdam via New York $ 1 08
Antwerp via New York 13-32d
Boston $1 bale $ 1 75
Sea Island 18 bale 175
New York K> bale 150
Sea island $ bale 1 50
Philadelphia per bale 1 50
Sea island $1 bale 1 50
Baltimore $ bale 1 50
Providence $1 bale 2 00
By sail—
Liverpool 94d
Rice—By steam—
New York 18 barrel 50
Philadelphia barrel 50
Baltimore 18 barrel 50
Boston, 18 barrel 75
COUNTRY PRODUCE.
Grown fowls |1 pair $ 60 ® 70
Chickens, J 4 grown, (8 pair 40 ® 50
Chickens, (4 grown, pair. 31 ® 40
Eggs, country, $ dozen 20 @ 22
Peanuts, fancy, h. p. Va., 18 lb • 7 ® 7(4
Peanuts, hand nicked, 18 * 6 ® 6(4
Peanuts,small, hand picked, fl *• 6(4®
Peanuts, Tennessee 6 ®
Poultry—Market firmer; demand good.
Eoos—Market firmer, with stock good and
fair demand.
Peanuts—Fair stock; demand moderate;
prices steady.
Suoar—Georgia and Florida nominal; none
in market.
Honey—Demand nominal.
Sweet Potatoes—Nominal; some new com
ing in.
ZZ markets by telegraph.
FINANCIAL
New Y re, Nov. 15, noon.—stocks opened
quiet and heavy. Money easy at 5®6 per cent.
Excnange—long, *4 80>4®4 8094; short, $4 8494
®4 8494- Government bonds neglected. State
bonds dull but steady.
Follo wing were the noon stock quotations:
Erie 2794 Rlchm and& W. Pt.
Coieago A North.ll2® Terminal 249$
Lake Shore 107 Western Union... 849s
Norf. & •>. pref. 609$
5:00 p. m.—Exchange quiet but firm at
$4 81® @4 88. Money easy at s®B per cent.,
closing offered at 6 per cent. Sub-treasury
balances—Gold, $157,673,000; currency, $8,635,-
000. Government bonds dull but steady; four
per cents 127; four and a half per cent, cou
pons 105i4. State bonds dull aud featureless.
The stock market was active and in the main
strong to-day. The bullish feeling, which de
veloped yesterday, was very pronounced this
morning, and received encouragement from
heavy buying of St. Paul by London houses.
Dealing In that stock for the first hour was ex
tremely large, foreign purchases alone being
estimated at upwards of 25.00) shares. The
unusual strength of the market disconcerted
the bears, and they cast around for a weak spot
to counteract the effects of the rise in Bt. Paul,
but found nothing, better than Cotton Oil,
which early became the feature, with its large
transactions and decided weakness A reaction
was brought about, hut it was in all probability
as much due to selling of Louisville and Nash
ville by the foreign element as to the weakness
in Cotton Oil, and while the last named stock
continued to fall steadily, the railroad list re
covered, and St. Paul was up to 72, with others
in proportion. Louisville and Nashville was
one weak point In the regular list, and at one
time it was 194 per cent, below its best figure,
but ended only fractionally lower than last
night. Tennessee Coal made another one of
the jumps for which It has become notable of
late, ana after some wide and violent fluctua
tions, it closed nearly 5 per cent, higher.
Grangers were leaders in the market, and the
covering of shorts in them assumed large pro
portions, while buying for long account was
very marked. Outside of St. Paul, however,
there was little feature. Final changes are
generally small advances, but Tennessee Coal
rose 4®, St. Paul 194, and Manitoba 1 per cent.,
while Cotton Oil declined 2®. The sales aggi e
gated 261,000 shares. The following were the
closing q uotations:
Ala.clasiA,2tos.losl4 Nash.* Chatt’a..loo
Ala.class 8,55... .103 N.O.Pa’flclstmort 92
Georgia 7s, mort. 10214 N. Y. Central 10694
N.Carollnacons6s.l24 Nor. A SV. pref... 6094
N.Carolina cons 4s 9694 Nor. Pacific 8294
80. Caro. (Brown ’* pref.... 7 %
consols) 10394 Pacific Mail. 3.394
Tennessee 0s 10-® Reading 41)4
5s 10194 R cbmond A Ale.. 22
Tennessee se 35... 73>4 Richra'd AW. Pt.
Virginia 6s 48 Terminal 2)
Va. 6s consoll’ted. 37 Rod. Island 9894
Cbes. & Ohio St. Raul 7194
Northwestern 113 “ preferred. .11394
“ preferred.. 142 Texas Pacific 2094
Deia. and Lack.... 1419$ Tonn.CoalA Iron. 70
Erie 28 Union Pacific 6894
East Tennessee... 10® N. J. o-ntral 11914
Lake Shore 10694 Missouri Pacific .. 6994
L’ville A Nash 86)4 Western Union... 84®
Memphis A Coar. *62 Cotton <4l certlll. 3114
MobileA 0hi0.... 14 Brunswick 2794
* Asked,
COTTON.
Liverpool, Nov. 15. noon —Cotton easy;
Am>-rican middling 594d; sales 8,030 bales, for
speculation and export SUO bales; receipts
21,000 bales—American 8,800.
• mures A nencan in Idling, ow middling
clause, November delivery 5 40-64 ®5 39-6 id;
November and Dece nb r delivery 5 37-61®
5 36 04d; December and January delivery 5 37-64
®5 36-64d: January and February delivery
5 37-64®5 86-64d: February and March delivery
5 37-64®5 36-61d; March and April delivery
5 37-64d; April and May delivery 5 39-54®# 38-64d;
May and June delivery 5 49-64d; June and
July delivery 5 42-64d. Market dull and rather
weak.
The weekly cotton statistics are as follows:
Total sales 70,003 bales— American 54,000 bales;
trade takings, including forwarded from ships’
side 63,000 bals; actual export 9.000 bales
total Import 180,000 bales-American 123.000:
total stock 322,‘4X1 bates American 341.000
bales; total afloat 342c)00 bales American
329.000 bales
2 p. m.—Sales of the day 6,700 bales of
American.
American good middling 5 IS-IM. raidlllnr
511-lttd, low middling 5(%d, good ordinary
5 1. ordinary sV*d.
Futures— American middling, low middling
clause, November 3 <O-01,1, sellers; Novemtwr
and Decembers S6-<Hd. buyers: December anl
January 3 3;-54d, ell*rs; ,ia mary and Kcort a: y
delivery 5 36-14,1. sellers; February and March
5 36-54d. sellers; March and April delivery
5 36 6id,buyers; April and May delivery 5 3.6-6 ~1,
sellers; May and June delivery 5 40-64 J, seders;
June and July delivery 5 41-84d,buyers. Market
dull.
400 p m Futures: American middU g, ow
middling c.ause .Novo iiber and livery „U'4 !,
s-llers; Votrmber an 1 December .7 6-641,
buyers; December ana January .8 ••,1; sellers’;
January and February 5 39-64d, sellers; Febru
ary and March 5 SB-6id. sellers; -larch and
April 5 37-611, sellers; April au.l Mav delivery
5 38 54d. acll.-rs; May and Juns 5 40-64d, sellers;
June and July 3415 id, value. Market closed
steady.
New York, Nov. 15, noon.—Cotton opened
quiet; middling tii’latids 10'ac: imualing v r
leans 10(4c; -Ales to-dav iS3 ba.es.
Futures—'The market ooen-d steady, with
sales as follows: November delivery 10 06c;
December delivery 10 04c; January delivery
10 02c: February delivery 10 08c; March delirery
10 14c; April 10 21c.
6:00p m.— Cotton closed quiet, middling up
lands lOVqc, middling Orleans lot4e: sale-, to
day boles; net receipts none, gross 3,368
bales.
Futures—Market closed quiet but stoady, with
vales of 77,900 bales, as follows: November de
livery 10 OiiqilO 07c, 1 ocember delivery 10 (-4®
10 05c, January delivery 10 0.1 ®lO 04c, February
delivery 10 09®10 10c, March delivery 10 .5®
10 10c, April delivery 10 22® 10 210. May delivery
10 3U®lO 31c, June delivery 10 1.7® 10 38c, July
delivery 10 12® 10 41c, August delivery 10 16®
10 47c.
Weekly net receipts at New York 4.755
bales, gross 40,145; exports, to Great Britain
12,9 5 bales, to France 1,200, to the continent
7, i00; forwarded 15,421 bales; sales 1,927 bales,
to vpiuners 1,877 bales.
Tue Sun's cotton review says: “Futures
opened at a few points decline under a decided
break in the Liverpool market,where both spots
aud futures were lower as well os quite dull
Some demand to cover contracts, and the belief
that some recovery should follow the recent
decline of 25 points, caused a sligut improve
ment. but the close was flat at about current
figures of the day. Spot cotton was quiet.”
Galveston, Nov. 15. — Cotton easy; middling
9 11-16 e.
Norfolk, Nov. 15.—Cotton quiet; middling
994 c.
BALTmoKiC.Nov. 15,—Cotton nominal; middling
10(80. *
Boston, Nov. 15.—Cotton quiet; middling
10-14 ilOsec.
Wilmington, Nov. 15.—Cotton steady; mid
dling ;%c.
Philadelphia, Nov. 15.—Cotton firm; middling
lOHc.
New Orleans, Nov. 15.—Cotton quiet; mid
dling 9 9-10 c.
Futures—Tbe market closed steady, with
sales of 32,803 bales, as follows: November
delivery 9 50c, December 9 49c, January 9 5.1 c,
February 9 59c, March II 61c, April 9 72c, May
9 80c, Juue 9 tßc, July 9 9.7 c, August '.I 9k:.
Mobile, Nov. 15,—Cotton dull; middling 944 c.
Memphis, Nov. 13.—Cotton steady; middling
9 11-liic.
Augusta, Nov. I.l.—Cotton quiet; middling
9 9-16®9*4c.
Charleston, Nov. 15.—Cotton quiet; middling
9(sc.
Montgomery, Nov. 15.—Cotton firm; middling
9(4c.
Macon—Not received.
Columbus, Nov. 15.—Cotton steady; middling
9Hc.
Nashville, Nov. 15.—Cotton quiet; middling
04kC.
Selma, Nov. I,l.—Cotton steady; middling
9(kc.
Rome, Nov. 15.—Cotton stealy; middling
944 c.
Atlanta. Nov. 15.—Cotton closed quiet.
New York, Nov. 15.— 1 ’onsoli ate 1 - --t receipts
at all cotton ports to-day were 40,671 ales;
exports, to Great lirit.-uii 19,189 bales, to the
continent 13,153, to France 6,133 bales; stock at
all American ports 676,012 bales.
PROVISIONS. GROCERIES, ETC.
Liverpool, Nov. 15, noon.—Wheat steady: de
mand poor; holders offer moderately; receipts
of wheat for the past three days amounted to
180,090 centals, of which 69,000 were American;
California No. 1, ?s 2d®?s 2 and. Corn quiet;
demand poor; receipts of American corn for
the past three days were 134,200 centals.
Weather Is unusualy warm, with rain.
New Tore, Nov. 15, noon.— Flour quiet but
firm. Wheat active and steady. Corn quiet but
firm. Pork quiet and strong at #ll 00© 11 50.
Lard quiet and unchanged. Freights easy.
5:90 p. ra.—Flour, Southern fairly active and
steady. Wheat quiet but firm and 64c u ;
No. 2 red 8494®55c in elevator; options aetive,
96@94c higher and strong; shorts buying freely
as well as foreign houses, partly based on in
creased exports and lighter interior movements;
No. 2 red, November delivery 8ILc; December
delivery 8594 c; January delivery 8654 c; May de
livery 10>4c. Corn firm ana quiet; No. 2,
mixed 4294 c in elevator; options dull, 94c highor
and firm—November delivery 42'4c, December
delivery 4294 c, May delivery 42®4294c. Oats
firm but less active; options fairly active and
stronger—December delivery 2894 c, January
delivery 27®c, May delivery 28>4c; No. 2 spot
2794 c; mixed western 26®29c. Hops closed
steady and quiet; State, new, B®l3c. Coffee
options closed steady 20 9.25 points up, with de
creased crop estimates; December de (very 1510
©ls 45c, January delivery 15 10,61.5 90c; May
delivery 15 15®15 50c; spot Rio firm and fairly
active, fair cargoes 19-4 c. Sugar, raw held
firmly; good demand; higher prices asked; fair
refining 4qc bid; centrifugals, 96° test. r/Ogc
bid; refined active and firm—Cs®@sf 4 c, extra
C f>J4®694c, white extra C 69 4 ®6®c, mould A
794 c, standard A 694 c. confectioners’ A 694 c,
cut loaf 7®c, crushed 794 c, powdered 794 c,
granulated 6 1516 c, cubes 794 c. Molasses For
eign nominal; New Orleans fairly active; open
kettle, good to fancy, 48®52c for new, 28' 146 c
for old. Petroleum Hteady and quiet; crude. In
barrels, Parker's. $7 75; roflned, here, $7 45.
Cotton seed oil dull; crude 29c, yellow 35c.
Pork closed steady; mess, inspected sll 25®
1150. Beef quiet; extra mess $7. Beef hams
dull; quoted at sl3. Tierced beef quiet; city
extra India mess sl3 50®14. Cut meats quiet;
pickled bellies, 12 pounds, 694 c; pickled shoul
ders sc; pickled hams 9®994c. Lard stronger
and quiet; western steam $0 4799, city $6 05;
options—November delivery $6 89 bid. Freights
to Liverpool steady; cotton, 7-32d; grain, 4>4d
asked.
Chicago, Nov. 15.—1n wheat there was a
moderate trade in a speculative way, and no
important changes were developed in prices.
The market opened steady, then prices receded
940, afterward advancing, with some fluctua
tions, %<SMe for December delivery and 94c for
May delivery, closing 9 4 c higher for December
and 9sc higher for Slay than yesterday. In
corn a moderate trade was rejsirted aud the
feeling manifested was easier, though pri s
did not vary materially from those established
toward the close of yesterday’s session. The
speculative market opened at about the closing
prices of yesterday, fluctuated within 94®94e
range, and closed about the same as yesterday,
(data were quiet, with most of the trading in
May delivery- An easier feeling prevailed, but
price changes were confined to a narrow range.
Very little business was transacted in pork.
Prices were steady on all deliveries. The offer
ings of lard were small and the deinaud was
only fair, and chiefly for November aud January
deliveries. Prices were advanced s®7®c on
the former, but other deliver! s were steady.
In short ribs very little attention was paid to
the market. Prices exhibited very little change.
Cash quotations were as follows: Flour
firm and unchauged. Wheat -No. 2 spring
H94®8:44c; No. 2red 8194©81)6c. Corn—No. 2,
34c. Oats -No. 2, 19®®20c, Mess pork $9 (0
6/,9 65. iAr lat $6(766 12>4 Short rib sides,
loose, $5 10@5 60 Whisky $1 02.
Leading lutures ranged as follows:
Opening. Highest. Closing.
No. 2 Wheat—
Dec. delivery... 82 8294 82'4
May delivery... 85)4 85>4 65)4
Cork. No. 2
Dec. delivery.. 32 3294 32(4
May delivery.. 33)4 33)4 83)4
(OATS. No. 2
Dec. delivery... 19% 19)4 19 %
May delivery.. 22)4 22® 22®
Muss Pork—
Year delivery. $9 1794 $9 2294 $9 229$
May delivery.. 9 6794 970 970
I.ard, Per luO lbs—
Year delivery.ss 8294 $5 94 f5 85
May delivery . 6 0> 6 07® 6 O?®
mhort Ki.ts, PerlOOlbs—
Year delivery.. $4 85 $4 90 $4 8794
St. Louis, Nov. 15.—Flour close ! dull but un
changed. Wheat close t ®®®C above yester
day; No. 2 red, cash. 79c; December delivery
7&)4©7994c; May delivery 84®©81®c, closed
at 84)4®84®c asked. <: rn lower, dull and de
grossed; No. 2 mixed, cash, 8094 c bid; Novern
er delivery 30c; May delivery 80)4c. closed at
30)4®3094c bid. Oats lower; No. 2, cash 18940
bid; May delivery 22 4 c. Whisky at $lO2. Pro
visions closed quiet and unchanged: Pork at
$lO 50® 11 00. lArd, prime steam $5 75. Dry
salt meats boxed shoulders #1 60®4 75; longs
and clear ribs $5 50®5 62®; short clear s6®
662 A. Bacon —boxed shoulders $4 73, longs
and ribs $6 37®, short clear $6 60. Hams $lO
©l2 50.
Cincinnati, Nov. 15 —Flour quiet. Wheat
stronger; No. 2 red 78c. Corn easier; No. 3
mixed 374*7)3 'c. Oats easier; No. 2 mixed 22U
©2Jc. Provisions—Pork firm at $lO 90. Lard
firm at $5 92i*®5 95. Bulk meats firm; short
nbs $1 6214. Bacon firm; short clear at $7.
Hogs higher; common and light $3 00®3 65
packing and butchers’ ? ,®3 9
New Orleans. Nov 1.1.-Coffee firm; Rio
(in cargoes! common to prune, 16®19 4 c. Su
gar very active and strong; Louisiana open
kettle, prune Sic. good common 4!t>®4(4c. cen
tri'ugala, plantation granulated 6 13-18 c, choice
white 6-q®'lac choice yedow clarified SH-P
—Louisi%na opea kettie stronr
choice 42c, prime 35®34c: centrifugal* steady,
fancy She, strictly prime 27c, good prime 23c.
byrup 30®12c
vi i-LE, Nov. 11. —Grain closed unchanged:
o beat—No. 2 red, 76c. Corn—No. 2 mixe-t. ,0 ■
uata—Ntk 2, 21Uc. Provisions unchanged
Bacon—clear rib sides SS; clear sides, packed.
86 *>. Bulk meats—clear rib* $1 50. Mess pork
at sl3. Sugar-cured hams $1: 10 *l2 50. Lard
choice leaf 58.
Baltimore. Nor. 15. —Flour fairly active and
Howard street and Western sniierfine $2 35®
2 .4; ditto extra $1 tj®3 80; family ii 00,
4 40; city mills, Rio brand*, extra *4 50®4 6
M heat— Southern firm; Fultz 7*®B3c*. Lonr
berry 74 rtß3c; No. 2, Southern 81c; Western
quiet, closing easy; No. 2 winter red, on spot
and Novembor delivery Bi®(sßov4c. C’oru—
o- utheru nominal; no stock. Western quiet hut
steady.
naval stores.
Nxw York. Nov. 15, noon. —6ulntß rurpentlna
dull and unchanged. Kokin quiet but steady at
$1 07® 1 124.
5:00 p. in Rosin quiet and steady; com
mon to good strained $1 07®1 lie. Turpentine
nominal.
Charleston, Nov. 15.—Turpentine quiet at
*4'c. Rosin firm: g >od si rallied 95c.
Wilmington, Nov. 15. Spirits turpentine
steady at 42(4c. Rosin firm; strained 95c,
good strained slc. Tar firm at $l4O. Crude
turpentine firm; hard $1 20, yellow dip and
virgin 52 33.
RICK.
NkwOrlkans, Nov. 15.—Rice steady; ordinary
to good 3)4®4 We.
nkw Y”-k, Nov. hi —nice steady and in fair
demand; domestic4(4®6(4c.
petroleum. •
Vkw York, Nov. 15.—Petroleum market
opened steady at Si 09(4, and advanced to
tl low in the first hour Realizing sales then
caused a decline to $11)8(4, after wnlch the
market rallied and closed sirong at $1 10(4.
Louisiana Rice.
Messrs Dan Talmage’s Sons A: Cos., New Or
leans, letter of NuV. 9, 1889, state: 'Movement
of rice this week continued light, with sffghl
improvement toward tn close. Rice is now
*°wer from here than from anv other point and
fully (4o per pound under foreign styles. To
this fact is due tha increased inquiry of the past
couple of days.”
SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE.
MINI A.TUKK ALMANAC—mpriMYr ~
Sun Rises
Sun Sets 5: ’ M
High Water at Savannah 2:12 am, 2:28 p H
Saturday, Nov 16, 18591
ARRIVED YESTERDAY.
Steamship Tallahassee, Fisher, New York—C
G Anderson.
Steamship Wm Crane, Billups, Baltimore—W
E Guerard, Agt.
Schr Gen Adelbert, Ames, Jameson, Orient, L
I, with gnauo toCRH Agent; vessel to Jos A
Roberts A Cos.
Schr Benjamin Fla, Steelman, Baltimore
with guano to order; vessel to Jos A Roberts &
Cos.
Steamer Progress, Milligan, Augusta and way
landings- Master.
cleared yesterday.
Steamship Nacoochee, Smith, New York—C
G Anderson.
Steamship Harrogate (Br), Husband, Reval—
A Minis <£ Sons.
Steamship Athabasca (Br), Davis, Liverpool—
Richardson ,t Barnard.
Steamship Carlton (Br), Storey, Liverpool—
-Btrachau A Cos.
Brig Dr Witte (Ger), Zeplein, Bristol-A R
Salas & Cos.
Sour Elwood Burton, Hitchens, Baltimore—
Jos A Roberta & Cos.
DEPARTED YESTERDAY.
Steamer Advance, Strobhar, Augusta and
way landings—J G Medlock, Agt.
SAILED YESTERDAY.
Steamship Nacoochee, New York.
Steamship Coningsby (Br), Reval.
Steamship Lalehaui tUr>, Bremen.
Steamship RoM-shire (Br). Liverpool.
Steamship Carlton (Br), Liverpool,
MEMORANDA.
New York, Nov 13—Cleared, schr Hattie S
Clark, Lane, Key West.
Anjer, Oct 25—Arrived, bark James 8 Stone,
Pettigrove, Brunswick, Ga.
Folkstone, Nov 12—Passed, bark Libemas
(Rus), Eklund, Pensacola for 1 ,i‘lt,lj.
Garmon, Nov 12—Arrived, bark Christina
(Nor), Hansen. Pensacola.
Liverpool, Nov 12-Sailed, barks Italia (Nor),
Isaaceen, Pensacola; Prince Charlie (Nor),
Brunsgaard, do; steamship Cairngorm (Bn,
Dunn, Tvboe.
Bath, Me, Nov 12—Arrived, schr Belle Higgins,
Skolfield. Darien.
Cooaaw, BC, Nov 13—Cleared, steamship St
Andrews Bay (Br), Pryde, United Kingdom.
Fernandina, Nov 13—Arrived, schr Stephen
Bennett, Hathorn, New York.
Cleared, schr Elia H Storer, Simmons, Port
land, Me.
Galveston, Cleared and sailed, schr Jonathan
May. Cook, Apalachicola.
Philadelphia, Nov 13—Arrived, Mary L Peters,
Williams, Darien.
Cleared, steamship Panama (Br), Cowing,
Savannah; sebr Julia S Bailey, Otis, do.
Prlnoetown, Nov 12—Sailed, schr Belle Hig
gins, Skolfield, Darien for Bath.
Vineyard Haven, Nov 13—Arrived, schr John
C Gregory, Killen, Brunswick, Ga, for Dlgby, N
S. (See miscellany).
Pensacola,Nov 13-Arrived, barks Sigrid (Nor),
Gregersen, Cape Town; Nostra Signora del
Sacre Cuore di Gesu (Ital), Buenos Ayres.
Cleared, bark liuca dl Galliera (Ital), MagUo,
Tyne.
Port Royal, 8 C, Nov I.3—Cleared, schr Wm M
Bird, Baltimore.
Brunswick, Nov 13—Arrived, schr Penobscott,
Carter. Boston.
Sailed, schr* Ann J Trainor, Derricksen, Phila
delphia; A P Nowell, Coil well, do.
Barbados, Nov I—Sailed, barks Dalmazia
(Aus), Orbanovich, Savannah; Bpes (Nor), Gun
derson, do; Henry A Burnham, Ross, Mobile;
4th, Augusto (Ital), Cilento, Savannah.
New York, Nov 15—Arrived, steamships City
of Berlin, Liverpool; TYave, Bremen.
Arrived out, City of Chicago for Liverpool.
MARITIME MISCELLANY.
Vineyard Haven, Nov 13—Schr J O Gregory,
from Brunswlcx, Ga, which arrived here to-day,
reports: Nov 7, about 20 miles southeast of Cur
rituck. passed the hull of a large vessel, dis
masted. with broken spars lying alongside,
waterlogged and abandoned, and a dangerous
obstruction to navigation: also panned a lot.of
sawed yellow pine timber in vicinity; no name
could be discerned.
NOTICE TO MARINERS.
A branch of the United State* Hydrographic
office has been established in the Custom House
at Savannah. Notice to mariners, pilot charts,
and all nautical information will be furnished
masters of vessels free of charge. Captains are
requested to call at the office.
John 8 Watters,
Ensign U 8 N, in charge, pro torn.
RECEIPTS.
Per Charleston and savannah Ry, Nov 15—
653 bales cotton. 25 bbls spirits tuepentine, 20
bbls rosin, 105 bbls potatoes, 1 box Bacon. 2 cars
einp'y bbls, 1 lot h h goods, 8 cases lanterns, 3
bdls buckets, 48 pkgs tobacco, 3 cases cigars, 4
pkgß castings, 9 pkgs w paper, 1 box chimneys,
1 case cheroots, 55 doz brooms, 6 nests trunks, 1
case perfumery, 25 boxes bats.
Per Savannah, Florida and Western Railway.
Nov 1.3—2,554 bales cotton, 1,213 bbls rosM, 408
bbls spirits turpentine. 1 car hay, 5 bales Hides,
4 boxes tobacco, 28 boxes butter, 8 bbls p ap
ples, 5 bales feathers. 2 cases cigars, 1 car brick,
41 cars lumber, 4 cars wood, 5 cases clothing. 2)
bbls oranges, 6,700 boxes oranges. 10 bbls syrup,
7 Baers potatoes, 8 nests tubs, 1 car cotton seed,
1 tc hams.
Per Central Railroad, Nov 15—5,333 bales cot
ton, 124 bbls spirits turpentine, 335 bbls rosin,
56 bales yarn, 137 bales domestics, 30 bdls paper,
8 bale* hides, 17 bdls leather, 93 pkgs tobacco,
625 lbs lard, 32,009 lbs bacon, 20 bushels oats. 500
bales bay, 15 bbls whisky, 4 hf bbls whisky, 809
hf bbls beer, 8 bbls syrup, 49 pkgs furniture, 25
bbls flour, 14 cars lumber. 80 busuels rice, 1 car
and lumber, 13 bdls hollow ware, 75 cases liquor, 3
cars iron, 248 pkgs mdse. 16 bales paper stock, 29
bbls grease, 260 empty bbls, 20 cars cotton seed.
251 bbls cotton seed oil, 29 boxes hardware, 315
bbls grits, 2 cars brick. 32 bales plaids, 4 carts,
1 bbl eggs, 132 tons pig iron.
EXPORTS.
Per steamship Nacoocbee, for New York—
-2,030 boles upland cotton, 73 bales domestics, 342
bales sea island cotton, 31 bbls rice. 55 bbls pitch,
256 bbls rosin, 12 casks clay, 38,659 feet lumber,
301 bbls cotton s -ed oil, 50 bbls r oil. 39 bbls fish,
59 bbls oranges, 7 713 crates oranges, 166 crates
vegetables, 16 bbls vegetable*, 98 tons pig Irou,
18? p„gs mdse. 3 bbls terrapins.
Pi r steamship Carlton (Br), for Liverpool—
-4,453 bales upland cotton, weighing, 1.909,476
pounds; 997 bales sea island cotton, weighing
397,665 pounds.
Per steamship Athabasca (Br), for Liverpool
—3,037 bales upland cotton, wetrhing 2,891,4*1
pounds; 50 bales tea island cotton, weighing
30.543 pounds. a
Per steamship Harrogate 3rk for Reval
4 401 bales upland cotton, weighing 3,148.863
pounds.
Per brig Dr Witte (Ger), for Britol—l,77*
bbls spirits turpentine, measuring 90,373 gal'
lons—Jaa Fane, Jr.
Per schr Elwood Burton, for Baltimore—362,-
110 feet p p lumber—Dale, D & Cos,
Passengers.
, P* r tteamihip Nacoochee, for New York—
Mr* J O Walker, x B Nation, A Gorman, Mre
llnskee, E 8 Harris, H E Burgess, and 3 steer-
Wm Crane, from Baltimore-
Mrs c F sparger burg. N Gazan, C F Perpall E
Boulanger. Mrs E Gartman and mft, A HBeek
and wife, S Roberts. Mrs O Haines, O Schlater.
T Connelly, Mrs Groover, Ellen Lee, C Semmes.
L oemraes, G 8 Bemmes, P Gaston, A Perkins!
A F Thompson, C C Crane.
H D McClue G Terry, E C Terry, Miss Maude
Terry, \\ J Kennedy. C W Bugdofer, J McFall.
wife and 2 chil Iren, E Baines and wife. Elia
Gilmer (col). F Weller, W H Thompson. G San
,“sy r £ r i , M , r * E D Pieroe and son. W H Gordon
“D ” J Delon and son. Miss letna Scott, F B
Trent. J S Burns, C J Wingate, 8 H Garick. Miss
Mainin Gomm, Miss L Gomm, Mrs T \ Grant
* ni -’‘"khter. Mias L Gill, J Redpath. Miss Jen
me Willidk. a Dickinson, Rev Dr Thos Rambert
and w ife, F B Trott, Rev J K Wright, Miss Jaa
or" E,nm * Wright, C R Gill, Mias
Mary Gill, J Gill, Misa F Gill, L D Dunbar W
Buchier.C Nicholson, wife and child, H Oom
me L S H ( ady, C Booker, E A Wean, C Bates,
N Brown (col). E Elesie. F Hosier. W Mudeay
and 19 steerage.
CONSIGNEES.
Per Charleston and Savannah Ry, Not 15-
Transfer office, W W Gordon A Cos, J W Norton
Jno F armery £ COj w w Chisholm, E Ills, Y *
Co.J P Williams A Co,Montague & Cos. Johnson
U Cos. Woods St Cos. C Seiler,
Baldwin ACo Warren AA, HM Comer A Cos.
" r o. n *9- Hammond, H A Cos, Palmer Bros.
D K W ay. Lee Roy Myers A Cos. O W Parish. J F
Torrent, H Solomon A Son, W 8 Cherry A Cos J
Ha v. Byck A S O Davis A Son, H Myers A Bris,
J R Einstein, Geo Derst, Mary Burch. Miles A
B, D J Morrison, O M Ryals, J T Thornton.
Per Savannah, Florida and Western Railway.
Nov 15—Fordg Office. G W Tiedeman A Bro, J
Smallwood.Jno Flannery A Co.Kavanangh A B
(V W Gordon A Cos, Standard Oil Cos. Miles Ab!
J 8 Collin* A Cos, P B Springer. H Myers A Bros,
Baldwin A Cos, F M Farley, Garnett. S A Cos, W
5 Hawkins. Warren A A, Butler A S.D Y Dancy.
Woods A Cos, M Y A D I Mclntyre. Herron A Q.
J 8 Wood A Bro. Ellis. Y A Cos. Strauss Bros j
H HenuoKsy, J P Williams A Cos, W C Jackson.
E B Hunting A Cos, McDonough A Cos. Dale, D A
Cos, Palmer Bros, Lee Roy Myers A 00, Order J
F Justin. W D Simk!ns,C O Haiti**. Decker A F
A Ehrlich A Hro, Heppard A Cos, Frierson A Cos!
Stillwell. M A Cos. II H Levy A Bro. Frank A 1 o!
Meinhard Bros A Cos. M Feral'* Son* A Cos, AO
Long. Llppman Bn-s, E A Schwarz, E Oeffcken,
4 S Thomas. Epstein A W, G V Becker A Cos J
O'Byrne. M Y llenderson. J A Phillips.
Per Central Railroad. Nov 15-Fordg Agt.
M Y A D I Mclntyre, F M Farley. Warren A A,
Jno Flannery A 00, H M Coiner A 00, Baldwin
A 00. W W Gordon A Cos. Garnett, s A Cos, a J
Coleman, Herron A O, Woods A Cos, Decker A F,
M Maclean A Cos, Butler A S, J P Williams A Cos.
W I> Simklns, Jno Nicolson Jr, W H Price. C A
Drayton, T J Davis A 00. J D Weed A Cos. Theo
Steffen, Blodgett, M A Cos, W H Connerat. J R
Oooner, Southern Cotton Oil Cos, Palmer Mfg Cos.
Heidt A 8, J TChristian. A J Miller A 00. H Me-
Graham. M D Thompson, J K Garnett, Barbour
A Cos. Savannah Furniture Cos, W B Mall A Cos,
A B Hull A Cos. Tecple A 00, AS Thomas, J P
Nettles, W E Guerard, D A Altick’g Sons, May
Cummings. Eckinan A V, K A Schwarz, Winter
A B, I O Haas, Palmer Bros, McGillis A R. Bar
th ui a Small, G W Tiedstnan A Bro, Thos West,
C P Connelly. Byck A S. J 8 Silva, W D Diqon,
Mendel A D, Planter* R Co.M Ferst’s Hons A Cos,
5 Cohen, 8 Guckeulieimer A Son, W H Rorai, J
J Riley, I EpaU-in A Bro. Standard OU Cos, KH
McGee, Mine A Lewis, Savannah Steam Bakery.
M Holey A Son, Harms A J, G Eckstein A 00, R
Judge, N Paulsen A Cos, II McAlpln,Frank* Cos.
A F.hrlicti A Bro, H Solomon A Son, Smith Bros,
Meinhard Bros A Cos, McDonough A Cos, W B
Brennan.
Per steamship Tallahassee, from New York—
G W Allen, A K Altmuyer A Cos, Miss L Adams,
Appel AS, Blodgett, M A Cos, M Boley A Son,
Byck A 8. 8 W Branch, M L Byck A Bro. Bosch
Bros, Butler A R, K Butler, E Brown, M Bono,
E S Byck A Cos. J llreasnan. Brush E L A P Cos,
(I J Baldwin, M A Bradford, Byck Bros, < ’olgate
A Co,A II Champion,J H Collins A Co.T M Clark
A Cos, Cornwell A C, Clarke A D, J T Collier, J
Collins, Cohen A Cos, A H Coben, E M Conner, T
M Cunningham, W G Cooper. W H Cherry A Cos,
Cliarrler A Cos, Collat Bros, C K It A Bkg Cos, A
Doyle, Geo Deiter, M J Doyle, Jas Douglas, Jno
Deist, Drvfus Bros, A L Desboiiillons. O Ebber
woin, Kelt man A V. J R Einstein, Ep.tein A W,
Wm EstiU, A Ehrlich A Bro. I Epstein A Bro,
Ellis, YAOo.fi Eckstein A 00. Frank A Cos, J F
Freeman, A Faik & Sous. M Ferst's Sons A Cos,
H N Fish, J H Furber, Fleischrnan A Cos, G A
Farnham, Fretwell A N, T Gadsden, F Gutman,
B M Garfunkel, P J Golden, C M Gilbert A Cos,
E C Germaine, 8 Guckenheimer A Son, W Gold
stein. E C Gleason, 11 HesNe, A Hanley, Mrs P
Herman, G A Hudson, E Haynes. M D Hlrsch,
DeHoto Hotel. A B Hull A Cos, D Hogan. C Het
terich, E Y Ham, Heater A K,Jackson, M A Cos,
J J Joyce, 8 Krouskoff, Kavanaugh A B. W A
Kent, G Kelsling, E J Ketffer, J F I-a Far, H F
Luba, J Kelly, Lindsay AM.D II tester,N Lang,
M Lanky, J J Lutz, B H Levy A Bro, B Lasky,
Lloyd AA, K Lovell's Sons, Jno Lynns A Cos,
Launey A G,Llppman Bros. Lovell A L, M Muhl
burg, Geo M yer McDonough AB, Mohr Bros.
R D MoDoneil, McGillis A R, D P Myerson, P E
Masters, McKenna AW, Lee Roy .Myers A Cos,
Memhard Bros A Cos, Morrison, F A Cos, Mather
A B, W B Mell A Cos, Mutual Co-op Asso’n, W E
Mitchell, Morning News, J McGrath A Cos, Meh
ken A A, Neidlinger A R, Savannah Nat’l Bk,
A 8 Nichols, J W Norton, Jno Nicolson Jr, T J
O’Brien. Nathan Bros, W W (Jordon, Order J
Qillelsohn, A O Oelchig. Order J Toboco, Order
J Lutz, Palmer Bros, N Paulsen A Cos. Pulaski
House, L Putzel, C 1) Rogers, Reich Bros.
A Runbacher, C E Stults A Cos, W F Reid, L O
Strong, J T Hhuptrine A Bro, W D Blmkins, H D
Stevens, Savannah Brewing Cos. Smith Bros, M
Sternberg, Solomons A Cos. H L Schreiner, J J
Sullivan, E A Schwarz, Jno Sullivan, J 8 Silva,
1* B Springer. Strauss Bros, Max Stern, Jo* Sog
nier, Miss G B Screven, Southern Cotton Oil Cos,
H Solomon A Son, II Schroder, Savannah Wat
Wks, O T Shaffer, stmr Katie, T P Townsend,
G W Tledetnsn A Bro,(l Frenchfleld.J W Tynan,
ti M Heidt & Cos, M T Taylor, Theus Bros, A D
Thompson, R D Walker, Watson A P, H Wilin
sky, J D Weed A Cos, J J Wilder, WyUy A C, F
Werrn, A M A C W West. F Zaller. ship Yuba,
Southern Ex Cos, 8, FA W Ry, G* A Fla IS B-
Cos, J J Relly.
For Shipping List See Third Page.
A Harvest of Weddings.
The ordinary’s office has done a big bust*
ness this month, and so have M. Sernberg A
Bro., supplying handsome wedding presents.
* * * * * *
A feast for artistic eyes is exhibited in the
immense display of fine Opera Glasses in M.
.Sternt erg & Bro.’s window —probably the
largest stock of these fine goods outside of
New York.
***** * *
It is often a puzzling question with lots of
people what to give as a wedding present.
A glance through M. Sternberg & Bra’s
Jewelry Palace will reveal a multitude of
appropriate artioles at modest prices.
* * * * * * *
Solid Silver Sets of Spoons or Forks are
exceedingly suitable for wedding presents,
and possess the great merit of being a ne
cessity in housekeeping. This immense
stock of Solid and Plated Wares at M.
Sternberg & Bro.’s affords room for easy
and fit selections.
***** * *
Diamonds and Diamond Jewelry are a
leading specialty with M. Sternberg &
Bro. “Gems of purest ray serene” abound
there in great profusion.
****** •
Bronzes are lasting and handsome deco
rations for a home, and M. Sternberg &
Bro. offer some handsome and unique con
ceits ia this line.
****** *
Those Oayx Clocks and Tables are fast
disappearing from il. Sternberg & Bro.’s
immense Jewelry Palace. Their novelty and
artistic finish attract universal attention.
***** * *
Every ladv should have a Watch that is a
good one. M. Sternberg & Bro. display
the most extensive line of Ladies’ Watches,
Chains, Charms, and Lockets in the city.
Savannah
Is now reveling in the Rochester Beer. Wa
are only surprised it was not brought here
before. It is sold in bottles only. If you
wish a fresh, delicious beer, drink only the
Rochester Beer. For sale by ail first-class
grocers and bars.
Made only by the Rochester Brewing
Company of Rochester, N. Y., and sod
only in bottles. For sale by John Lyons
& Cos.. J. McGrath, 8. W. Branch, W. G.
Cooper, Moehlenbrock & Dienes and John
Lynch.
VV holesale Agents, Lippman Bros., Sa
vannah, Ga,
7