Newspaper Page Text
COMMERCIAL.
markets^
Office Morxino News )
Savannah, Oa„ June 24, 1391. f
CteTTOS— The market was very dull, with a
light inquiry and a small business ottering. The
total sales for the day were only 74 bales. On
’Change at the midday call, at Ip.m., the
market was bulletined quiet-, at the following
official spot quotations of the Cotton Exchange”
Good Middling ....894
Middling... 13-1 B
Low Middling 7%
good Ordinary..... 11-16
Ordinary 6 3-16
| Comparative Cotton Statement.
Receipts, Exports and Stock on Hand June 24, 1891, and
for the Same Time Last Year.
1890-91. I 1889-90.
' Jan,l V^ nrl Mand_ Wondj
Stock on band Sept. 1 88 11,46 ; 660 8,048;
Received to-day 238 ........ 25
Received previously 45,448 1,066,981 32,117 902,410,
Total 45*471 1.078,682 I 32,786 911,083
Exported to-day 88* 166
Exported previously 43,286 1,073,058; 32,742 909,606
| Total 1 43,286 1,073,8 “6 32,742 j 909,831
' Stock on hand and on ship- 1 I
\ board tbia day 1 2,185 5,2901 44| 1,252
Rice—The market was quiet and steady at quo
tations. The sales for the day were 148 barrels
The following are the official quotations of
the Board of Trade. Small job lots are held
higher:
Fair 5
Prime svf®s^
Head Bjfo%
Rough, nommal-
Country lots $1 05®! 12%
Tide water 1 35® 1 40
Naval Stores—The market was quiet but firm
for spirits turpentine. There was a good in
quiry. bin the business was somewhat nominal,
owing to bu. ers and sellers being apart. At the
Board of Trade on the opening call the market
was reported firm at 86c bid for regulars, with
sales of 573 casks. At the second call it closed firm
at 35c hid for regulars. Rosin—The market was
firm ami active at the decline. There was a
good business doing and fully 5,000 barrels
changed hands during the day. At the Board
of Trade on the opening call the market
was reported steady, with sales of 1.016
barrels, at the following quotations:
A, B, C. D and E, $1 25; F. $1 30:
G. 81 43; H, 81 90; I, $2 00; K, 82 40; M, 82 60;
N, 8- 6C®2 65; window glass, $2 75®2 80; water
white, $lO5. At the last call it closed firm,
with further sales of '1.343 barrels, at for H
$1 80, I $2 00, K S3 30, ’ll $! 45, NB2 60, window
glB3 $2 75, water white 83 06.
NAVAL STORES STATEMENT.
Spirits. Rosin.
Stock on hand April 1 3,902 27,648
Received to-day 429 1,563
Received previously 71,781 172,230
Total 76,112 20L481
Exported to-day f.29 2,162
Exported previously 66,412 155,593
Total 67,0 G 157,755
Stock oh hand and on shipboard
to-day 9,071 43,676
Receive !sa ne day last year 1,763 3,969
Financi \l—Money is stringent.
DomtsUc hire. 3 a ape-The market is steady.
Ban’s ml bankers are buying at par and sell
ing at %® 4 per ceui premium.
n tljchange— The market is woak.
Sterling, commercial demand, $4 86%; sixty
days, 84 82%®1 84%; ninety days, $4 82%;
francs, Paris and Havre, sixty days, 85 22%®
$5 *3; Swiss, sixty days, 85 23%; marks, sixty
d.ivs. 94 9-lOe.
Securities—There are no transactions re
ported and the market continues very dull and
inactive, with quotations nominal.
Stocks and Bonds— City Ronds— Atlanta 6
per cent, long date. 104 bid, 112 asked; At
lanta 7 per cent, 110 bid. 117 asked; Au
gusta 7 per cent, long date, 104 bid, 110
asked; Augusta 6 per cent, long date, 106 bid.
112 asked; Columbus 5 per cent, 104% bid,
Hi'% asked; slaeon 6 per cent, 116 bid, 117%
asked; new Savannah 5 per cent quarterly
July coupons, 101 bid, 101% asked; new Savan
nah 5 per cent, August coupons, 100% bid,
101% asked.
Stale Bonds— Georgia new 4% per cent, 112
bid, 113% asked; Georgia 7 per cent, coupons
January and July, maturity 1896. 114% bid, 116
asked; Georgia 3% per cent, 101 bid, 102
asked.
Railroad SfocJes-Central common,ex-div.107%
bid. 103% asked; Augusta and Savannah 7 per
cent guaranteed,ex-div, 134 bid, 135asked;Geor
gia common, 199 bid, 200 asked; Southwestern 7
percent guaranteed, ex-div. 117 bid, 118 asked:
Central 6 per cent certificates, ex-lot, 91 bid, 92
asked; Atlanta and West Point railroad stock,
109 bid, 110 asked; Atlanta and West Point 6
per cent certificates, 99% bid. 100% asked.
Railroad Bonds—Savannah, Florida and
Western Railroad Company general mortgage,
6 per cent, interest coupons October, 107 bid,
108 assert; Atlantic and Gulf first mortgage
consolidated 7 per cent, coupons January and
July, maturity 1597, 106 bid, 109 asked;
Central Railroad and Banking Company
col.ateral gold ss, 92 bid, 95 asked; Central
consolidated mortgage 7 per cent, coupons
January and July, maturity 1893, 104 bid,
101% asked; Savannah and Western railroad 5
percent, indorsed by Central railroad. 80 b'd,
8: asked; Savannah, Amerlcus and Mont
gomery 6 per cent. 86 bid, 88 asked; Geor
gia railroad 6 per cent, 1697, 105®111 bid, 106
@ll6 asked; Georgia Southern and Florida
first mortgage 6 per cent, 73 bid. 75 asked;
Covington and Macon first mortgage 6 per
cent, 70 bid, SOasked; Montgomery ana Fufaula
first, mortgage 6 per cent, indorsed by Central
railroad, 106 bid, 107 asked; Marietta and
North Georgia railway first mortgage,
5 years, 6 per cent. 65 asked;
Marietta and North Georgia railroad
first mortgage 6 per cent, 82 bid, 86
asked; Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta
first mortgage 107% bid, 108% asked; Charlotte,
Columbia and Augusta second mortgage,
115 bid, 116 asked; Charlotte, Columbia
and Augusta general mortgage, 6 per cent,
195 bid. 106 asked; South Georgia
and Florida indorsed, firsts, 106% bid,
197% asked; South Georgia and Florida sic
ond mortgage, 101 bid, 105 asked; Augusta
and Knoxville first mortgage, 7 per cent, 108
"id, 109 asked; Gainesville, Jefferson and
Southern, first mortgage, guaranteed, 108 bid,
109 asked; Gainesville, Jefferson and Southern,
not guaranteed, 105 bid, 107 asked: Ocean
S.eamship 6 per cent bonds, guaranteed by
C-ntral railroad. 99% bid, 10; asked; Ocean
Steamship 5 per cent, due in 1920, 100 bid, 102
asked; Gainesville, Jefferson and Southern
"ecoud mortgage, guaranteed, 105 bid, 106
asked; Columbus and Rome first mortgage
bonds, indorsed by Central railroad, !01% bid,
10’% asked; Columbus and Western 6 percent
guaranteed, 106 bid, 107 asked; City and Sub
urban railway first mortgage 7 per cent, 107%
hid, ]os% asked; Brunswick and Western is,
firsts indorsed, due 1933, 70 bid, 75 asked.
Bmk Stocks, etc.— Firm. Southern Bank of
the State of Georgia, 275 bid, 285 asked; Mer
chants' National Bank. 140 asked;
Savannah Bank and Trust Company, 110
bid, 120 asked; National Bank of Savanuab,
133 bid, 1,35 asked; Oglethorpe Savings and
Trust Company, 121 bid, 123 asked; Citizens’
Bank 99 bid, 100 asxed; Chatham Real Estate
and Improvement, 50 bid, 61 asked; Georgia
Loan and Trust Company. 94 bid, 95 asked;
Germania Bank. 104%bid, 105% asked: Chatham
Bank 56% bid, 57% assed; Macon and Savan
nah Construction Company, nominal; Savannah
Construction Company, 85 bid, 90 asked.
Gas Stocks -Savannah Gas Light stocks,
24 bid, 25 asked; Mutual Gas Light stocks,
25 bid; Electric Light and Power Company,
77 bid, 78 asked.
Bacon—Market firmer; fair demand. The
Board of Trade quotations are as follows:
Smoked clear rib sides, 74r0; shoulders, 6630;
dry salted clear rib sides. 6%0; long clear, 694,0;
bellies, 6%c; shoulders, 5%c; bams, 11%®12c.
Baooino and Ties—The market is nominal.
Jute bagging, 2%tt>. 8%®8%c; 21b, 7%@7%c;
1 >4lh. 6%@V%c; 1 aocording to brand and
quantity: sea island bagging at 14%®15c;
cotton bagging, none; prices nominal; pine
straw, 2%1b, io%c. Iron Ties—large lots,
tl 35; smaller lots, 81 40®1 50. Bagging and
ties in retail lote a fraction higher.
Butter—Market steady; fair demand; Goehen,
l"®19c; gilt edge, 20®21c: creamery —%®230.
Cacbaoe—Nominally, 6®Bc .
Cheese—Market steady; fair demand, 12®
13c.
CoFFEE-Market dull and lower. Peaherry,
23c, fancy, 22c; choice, 21 %c; prime, 21 %e;
food. 21c; fair, 20c; ordinary, 19c; common,
18%c.
Dried Fecit—Apnles, evaporated. 15c.; eom
mon, 12®130. Peaches, peeled, 20c; unpeeled,
10c. Currants, 6%®7c. Citron, 20c. Dried
apneots, 18c.
Dry Goods—The market is quiet; good
aemand. Prints, 4@6%c; Georgia brown
7-8 do 5%e; 4-4 brown aheet
white osnaburgs. B%®Be; checks.
s F SS^~-i en V? aR - Fair demand. Messina.
* 75per box oranses ~ Fl °rida, scarce, 8-’ 00®
steady. Extra. $4 70@4 80:
fcgkiAV t! 7 i *5 70; patent,
80 ®5 95; choice patent, $5 96®6 40.
b ish—Market Arm. W© quota full weight*;
No. 8, half harrels, nominal,
89 00®10 00: No. 2. *lO m®l2 nn Herrin,*
ffinLStfS* 2501 Cod -
Grain— Corn-Market firm; white corn,
retail lots, 93c; job loU, 91c; carload lots,
8c: mixed corn, retail lots, 92c; job lots, SOc:
carioad lots, 88c. Oats—Retail lots, 65c; job
lots, 63c; carload lots, 61c. Bran-Retail lots,
51 20, job lots, $120; carload lots. slls.
Meal—Pearl, per barrel, $4 00; per sack. Si 90;
city ground, $1 80. Pearl grits, per barrel, $4 10;
per sack, $1 90; city grits. $1 85 per sack.
, Hay—Market steady. Eastern, In retail lots,
81 05; job lots, $1 00; carload lots, 95c. North
ern, none.
Hides. Wool, Etc.-Hides—Market weak;
receipts light; dry flint. 7c: salted, sc;
dry butcher, 4c. Wool market very weak;
prime Georgia, free of sand and burs,
25°’ Wax. 24c Deerskins, flint, 25c; salted,
20c. Otter skins, 50c@$S00.
Iron—Market Tory steady; Swede, 86i®6c;
refined, 2%c.
Lard—Market steady; in tierces. 6%c; 50-lb
tins, 7c.
Lime, Calcined Plaster and Cement-Ala
bama and Georgia lime in fair demand and sell
ing at $1 2f> per barrel; bulk and carload lots
special; calcined plaster, $3 25 per barrel; hair
4®oc; Rosendale cement, $1 30®1 40; Portland
cement, retail, $2 74; carload lots $2 40; English
standard Portland, $2 75@3 00.
Liquors—Market firm. Highwine basis $! 18;
whisky per gallon, rectified, 81 08®1 25, accord
ing to proof; choice grades, $1 oo®2 sfi; straight
$1 50®4 00; blended, 82 00®5 00. Wines—Do
mestic port, sherry, catawba, low grades, 60®
85c; fine grades, $1 00®1 50; California light,
muscatel and angelica, $1 35® 1 75.
Nails—Market very firm: fair demand. 3d,
83 05 ; 4d and sd, $2 66; 6d, $2 46; Bd, $2 80; lOd,
$2 25; 12d. $2 20 ; 30d, $2 15; 50 to 60d, $2 05 ; 20d,
$2 25; 40d, $2 10.
Nuts—Almonds, Tarragona, 18@20c; Ivicas,
16@18c; walnuts, French, 15c; Naples. 16c;
pecans, 14o; Brazil, B%c; filberts, 12%c; cocoa
nuts, Baracoa, $4 00®4 20 per hundred; assorted
nuts, 50-lb and 20-lb boxes, 13®14c per lb.
Oils—Market steady; demand fair. Signal
40®50c; West Virginia black, 10®13o: lard, 68c;
kerosene, 10*®: neatsfoot, 50®75c: machinery,
!B®2sc; linseed, raw, 54c; boiled, 57c; mineral
seal, 18c; homelight, 14c; guardian, 14c.
Onions—Firm; Egyptian Sacks, $3 75; crates,
$1 75.
Potatoes—lrish, sacks and harrels, old nomi
nal, $3 76®4 00; new, $4 00® 5 00.
Salt—The demand is moderate and market
dull. Carload lots, 62c f. o. b.; job lots, 70®
80c.
SHOT-Drop. to B, $145; drop, to BB and
larger, $1 70; buck, $1 70.
Sugar—The market is dull; demand
good. Cut loaf, 5%c; cubes, sc; powdered.
sc; granulated, 4%c; confectioners’, 4%0;
standard A. 4%c: off A, 4%c; white extra 0,
4%e; golden C, 4c; yellow, 3%0.
Syrup—Florida and Georgia, 25®27%c; mar
ket quiet for sugarhouse at 30@40c; Cuba
straight goods, 80®82o; sugarhouse molasses,
18® 20c.
T obacco—Market quiet and steady. Smoking,
domestic,22%c®sl 60; chewing,common, sound,
23®25c; fair. 28®35c; good. 36®48c; bright. 60®
65c; fine fancy, 75® 90c; extra fine, sloo®t 15;
bright navies, 22®45c.
Lumber—The foreign demand is still quiet.
There has been some falling off in domestic
demand. A number of mills throughout the
State have shut down. The mills now running
are fairly supplied with orders. We quote:
Ease sizes sll 75® 13 00
Ordinary sizes 12 00® 16 50
Difficult sizes 14 00®2£ 50
Flooring boards ... 14 50®22 00
Shipstuffs 15 50®25 00
FREIGHTS.
Lumber— By Sail—There are full offerings of
tonnage for all coastwise reqirements, and the
figures run from $4 00 Baltimore up to
$5 00 for a range eastward, including Bos
ton and Portland. From 25®50c is paid
vessels here for shifting to load at nearby
ports. Timber. 50c®$i 00 higher than lum
ber rales. To the West Indies and Windward
nominal; to Rosario, sl6 00®17 00; to
Buenos Ayres or Montevideo, sl4 00; to
Rio Janeiro, sls 00: to Spanish and Mediter
ranean ports, sl2 00; to the United Kingdom for
orders, nominal for timber, £4 2s 6d standard;
lumber, £4 2s 6d.
1 By Steam—To New York, $7 00; to Philadel
phia, $8 00; to Boston, $8 00; to Baltimore,
$6 50.
Naval Stores—Market is firm; good demand.
Foreign—Cork, etc., tor orders, small spot ves
sels. rosin, 2s 9d and 4s; to arrive, 2s 9d and 4s
spirits; Adriatic, rosin, 2s 9d; Genoa, 2s 6d;
South America, rosin 85c per barrel of 208
pounds. Coastwise —Steam -to Boston. 11c per
100 Tbs on rosin, 90c on spirits; to New York,
rosin, T%c per 100 lbs, spirits, 80c; to Philadel
phia, rosin 3%c per 100 lbs; spirits. 80c; to Balti
more, rosin. 70c; spirits, 70c. Coastwise quiet.
Cotton—By Steam —The market is dull.
Liverpool via New York, jp fi> 15-64d
Liverpool via Baltimore, jfllb 15-6 Id
Havre via New York, ?Hb %and
Bremen via New York. lb 19 64a
Reval via New York, ?! 11-SSd
Genoa via New York 19-64d
Amsterdam via New York 55c
Amsterdam via Baltimore 60c
Antwerp via Baltimore 17-64d
Bremen via Baltimore 17-64d
Antwerp via New York %and
Boston ?! bale $ Its
Sea Island bale 176
New York Sbaie 150
Sea Island V bale 150
Philadelphia f bale 1 50
Sea Island $ bale 1 60
Baltimore?! bale
Providence ?! bale
Rice—By Steam-
New York ?! barrel 50
Philadelphia ?! barrel
Baltimore ?! barrel 50
Boston ¥ barrel <5
COUNTRY PRODUCE.
Grown fowls ?! pair $ 65 ® 75
Chickens % grown ?l pair 45 @ 55
Chickens % grown ?! pair 85 @ 45
Eggs, country, ?! dozen 16 ® 17
Peanuts, fancy, h. p. Va., $ fi>... 5 ®
Peanuts, h. p., ?! 1b.... ... 4 ®
Peanuts, small, h. p., $ th 4 @
Peanuts, Tennessee, ii. p. # Ib. -. 4 (&
Sweet potatoes, W bush., yellow. 50 @ 60
Sweet potatoes. ?! bush., white.. @ 50
Poultry—Market overstocked; demand very
* E Eoos—Market easy, stock ample, demand
steady. , .
Peanuts —Ample stock, demand light, prices
St Suoxß— Georgia and Florida nominal; none
in market.
Honey—Demand nominal.
MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH.
FINANCIAL.
New York, June 24, noon.—Stocks opened
dull but firm. Money easy at 2®2% percent.
Exchange—long, $4 86%®4 -6%; short,s4 88%®
4 83%. Government bonds neglected. State
bonds dull but steady.
Tne following were the 2 p. m. stock quota
tions:
Erie. 19% Richm’d &W. Pt.
Chicago & North.. 104% Terminal 14%
Lake Shore ..109 Western Union... 80
Norf.&W. praf...
New York, June 24, 5:00 p. m.—Sterling ex
change closed quiet but strong at $4 87®4 89%;
commercial bills, $4 85®4 87. Money easy at
i %®2% per cent., dosing offered at 2% per cent.
Government bonds closed dull and heavy:
four per cents 117%, four and a half per oenta
100. State bonds closed entirely neglected.
Sub-Treasury Balanoes—Coin, $100,442,000;
ourrency, $18,719,000.
Wall street for the present seems as near to
being asleep as it is possible for the money
center of the continent to be, and the stock
market reflects uncertainties in the situation by
the most intense dullness in transactions and
stagnation in fluctuations. Both sides of the
speculative arena are confident that when the
change comes it wifi be in their favor, and
therefore no desire to liquidate is seen, resulting
in the present dullness. The market is nar
rowing from day to day, and no real activity is
seen. Only Sfc Paul and Chicago Gas were
traded in to-day to any material extent. The
latter and Sugar Refineries w ere also the only
ones to show any change in prices during the
session. While speculation in Silver Certifi
cates seemed to have come to an untimely end,
supporters of the movement evidently haring
chosen the wrong time to start a boom in
metal, a slow but steady depreciation went on.
While the final change was not of special im
portance, the opening of the market was dull
and steady, and the covering of shorts served
to given firm tone to early trading, but no ma
terial chdnge in quotations was made, and dull
ness for the time of day was most excessive.
Gold shipment later reversed the position of
traders on the market, and fresh lines of shorts
were put out, especially in Rock Island, Union
Pacific. St. Paul and Chicago Gas. but only in
the first named was t here any movement ofjm
portatiee, its loss being 1% per cent, to iO%
against 72. This was toe only movement of
importance during tlio session, and .atnr
trading fell away into the same condition tnat
marked the forenoon. No rally occurred, and
the close was dull and rather heavy, generally
at a shade under the opening prices. Final
changes show some irregularity, but small
losses are most numerous and Rock Island and
Pacific Mail are each down 1 per cent. The
sales were 80,000 shares of listed and 5,000
shares of unlisted.
THE MORNING NEWS: THURSDAY, JUNE 25,1891.
The following were the dosing quotations of
the New York Stock Exchange:
Ala.olass A.2t05.100 N.O Pa’floUtmort 87%
Ala. class B. 5a.. .108% N. Y. Central 99%
Georgia 76, mort Norf. AW. pref... 52
N.CaroUnaoons3al26 Northern Pacific 23%
N.Carolinaoons4. 99 •• •• pref. 66%
So. Caro. (Brown Pacific Mail 3%
eonsolsl.es 96% Reading 29%
Tennessee 100 Richmond & Ale..
“ 5s 102% Richm dA W Pt.
“ se-Ss... 6.t% Terminal.... 14%
Virginia Ss 50 Rock Island. 70%
Va eseonsoli’ted *5 St. Paul 63
Lhee. 3k Ohio “ preferred.. .111
Northwestern . .104% Texas Pacific 13
" preferred 132 Tenn. Coal * Iron 32%
Dels. & Lack ...135% Union Pacific 43%
“Tie is% N.J. Central 108%
East Tennessee. 5% Missouri Pacific *66%
Lake Shore 109 Western Union... 79%
Lville&Nash.... 73 Cotton Oil certi... 21*4
Memphis A Char. 34 Brunswick 13
Mobile* 0hi0.... 40 Mobile ft Ohio 45.. 65
Nash. A Cuatt’a.. 107 Silver certificates. 100%
*Ex-dividend.
COTTON.
Liverpool, June 24, noon.—Cotton steady
and in fair demand; American middling 4%d;
sales 12,000 bales American 9.800 bales, specu
lation and export 1,000 bales; receipts 100 bales
—ail American.
Futures— American middling, low middling
clause, June delivery and; June and July
delivery and; July and August delivery
429 64d; August and September delivery
4 31 64d, also 4 32-64d; September and October
delivery 4 36-64d; October and November de
livery and; November and December delivery
4 42 64d. also 4 43-64 J; December and January
delivery 4 45-64d; January and February de
livery 4 46-64d, also 4 47-64d. Futures steady.
The tenders of deliveries at to-day’s clearings
amounted to 100 bales new dockets and
bales old.
4:00 p. at —Futures; Amcrioan middling, low
middling olause.June delivery 4 26 64®4 27-64d;
June and July delivery 4 i6-64®4 27-64d; July
and August delivery 4 26-64®4 7 Md; August
and September delivery 4 31-64®4 32-64d; Sep
tember and October delivery 4 86-64d. value;
October aud November delivery 4 39-64®
4 40-64d; November and December delivery
4 42-64d, sellers; December and January de
livery 4 44-64d, value; January and February
delivery 446 64d, buyers. Futures closed quiet.
Manchester, June 24. —The Guardian’s com
mercial article says: "There has been little
alteration in business. Asa whole, the market
is fairly steady, despite occasional weakness.
There Is no marked increase in business, but
buyers appear to have increased confidence,
and although no large orders are mentioned,
the aggregate of sales in most of the cloth de
partments have reached moderate dimensions.
Tidings of the breaking of the monsoon at Bom
bay is satisfactory. To this and the rise in
rates of Eastern exchange may bo attributed to
somewhat freer inquiry for India. For China
new business is not abundant, but some manu
facturers have made fair sales during the last
fortnight. The demand for minor foreign
markets is variable, and is hardly sufficient to
absorb the current production. Home houses
are taking fair supplies of plain staples, but are
doing little in fancy sort. There is a moderate
export yarn business Supplies of most kinds
are so abundant that prices in many cases are
barely steady.”
New Yore, June 24, noon.—Cotton opened
dull; middling uplands 3%0; middling Or
leans 8 13-16 c: sales 219 bales.
Futures—The market opened barely steady,
with sales as follows: June delivery 7 90c,
July delivery 7 98c, August delivery 8 09c. Sep
tember delivery 8 22c, October delivery 8 330,
November delivery 8 42e.
8:00 p. m.—Cotton market olosed quiet;
middling uplands B%c; middling Orleans
8 18 I60; net receipts bales, gross 2,024;
sales to-day 382 bales.
Futures—Market olosed quiet, with sales of
108,400 bales, as follows: June delivery 7 86®
7 88o; July delivery 7 89®7 90c; August de
livery 8 Uo®B 01c; September delivery 8 12®
8 13c; October delivery 8 28®S24c; November
delivery 8 33®S 34c; December delivery 8 43®
8 44c; January delivery 8 53®8 54c; February
delivery 8 63®8 K4c. March delivery 8 78®8 74c,
April delivery 8 83®8 84c, May delivery 8 93®
8 94c.
The Sun's cotton review says: "Futures
opened at 4®5 points advance, presently de
clined, further declined, partially recovered,
closing quiet at 3®4 points decline fromyester
day’s closing prices. The early advanco was in
response to an advance of 2-4®3-64d for
futures at Liverpool, and much more activity
in spot cotton there. But a slight reaction
there caused heavy selling to realize. Best
prices were made in the first call, when prices
broke. The decline was not checked until they
had receded 12® 13 points. August dropped from
8 10c to 7 97c and January from 8 63c to 8 50c.
The buyers of yesterday tumbled over each
other in their eagerness to sell. Til ■ lowest
ft gums were made about noon, after which
speculation was desultory and values uncer
tain, partial recovery not being well sustained.
Crop accounts were good; excessive rains in
northern belt had ceased. Bpot cotton was
steady.”
Galtbston, June 24.—Cotton olosed dull;
middling ; %o; net reoelpts 237 bales, gross 237;
sales 79 bales, an to spinners; stook 8.241 bales.
Norfolk, June 24.—Cotton olosed dull; mid
dllng iro; net receipts 114 bales, gross 114; sales
249 bales; stook 8,728 bales; exports, ooastwise
457 bales, to Great Britain 549.
Baltimore, June 24.—Cotton closed weak;
middling 8%o; net reoelpts bales, gross
Boston, June 24.—Cotton closed quiet; mid
dling B%c; net receipts 296 bales, gross 688;
sales none: stook bales.
Wilmington, June 24.—Cotton nominal;
nothing doing; middling 8c; net reoelpts 1
bale, gross 1; sales none; stook 4,508 bales.
Philadblpqia, June 24.—Cotton closed quiet;
middling B%c; net receipts 65 bales, gross 65;
stock 8.142 bales.
Nsw Orleans, June 24.—Cotton closed easy;
middling 7%0; net receipts 449 bales, gross
453;sates9u0 balee; stock 86,751 bales: exports
ooastwise 1.854 bales, to Great Britain 2,769.
Futures—The market to-day closed quiet but
steady, with sales of 24,100 bales, as follows;
June delivery 7 43c, July delivery 7 51c, Au
gust delivery 7 63c, September delivery 7 73c,
October delivery 7 88c, November delivery
7 95c, December delivery 8 03c, January de
livery 8 12<_\ February delivery 8 210, March
delivery 8 31c.
Mobile, June 24.—Cotton closed dull and easy;
middling 7%c; net receipts 26 bales, gross 26;
sales 200 bales; stock 8,825 bales; exports,
coastwise 225 bales.
Memphis, June 24.—Cotton closed easy; mid
dling 7%0; receipts 130 bales ;shipmants 75 bales;
sales 154 bales; stook 10,821 bales.
Augusta, June 24.—Cotton closed quiet but
steady; middling 7%c; receipts 58 bales; ship
ments 187 bales; sales 55 bales; stook 13,582
bales.
Charleston, June 24.—Cotton closed quiet;
middling 8c; net receipts 89 bales,
gross 89; sales bales: stock 5,905 bales.
Atlanta, June 24.—Cotton olosed dull;
middling 8c; reoelpts to-day 15 bales.
New York, June 24.—Consolidated net re
receipts at all ootton ports 1,463 bales;
exports, to Great Britain 3,369 bales, to France
halos, to the continent bales; stock at
all American ports 310,156 bales.
GRAIN AND PROVISIONS.
New York, June 24. noon.—Flour "dull and
weak. Wheat quiet and easy. Corn dull and
steady. Pork quiet and steady at JlO 50®
12 50. Lard quiet and steady at $6 32%. Freights
steady.
New York, June 24,1:00 p. m.—Flour, south
ern, dull aud weak; common to fair, extra,
83 *s®4 50; good to choloe, extra,
$4 50®5 50; superfine $4 75®4 20; buckwheat
flour, 83 25®2 35. Wheat lower; No. 2 red,
$1 05® 1 05% in store and elevator; s’. 06%
Hfloat; options were weak all day and closed
I®%c below yesterday through free interior
movement and increased receipts here. Report
of large decrease in supply had no influence;
No. 2 red, June delivery $1 05%; July deliv
ery $1 02%; August delivery s—; Septem
ber delivery 96%c. Com lower and active;
No. 2, cash, 67®67%0 in elevator; ?2%c
afloat; ungraded mixed, 64%®68c; steamer
mixed. 79c; options very dull and lower on
increased supplies; June delivery —c; July
delivery 61%c; August delivery 59%c; September
delivery -c. Oats lower and active; options
dull and lower; June delivery —c: July
delivery 39c; August delivery 35%c; September
delivery-c; No. 2. spot, 39®400; mixed west
ern, 37®44c. Hops quiet and steady; Pa
cific coast 25®32%c; new 48®48c: state, oom
mon to ohoioe, 26®32c. Coffee—Options
opened firm :.®SS points up, closed steady 15®
40nointsup; Juno delivery 16 70®15 80; July
delivery 16 15®16 35; August delivery 15 *5
®ls 50; September delivery sl4 90®15 10;
spot Rio dull and firm; fair oorgoes 18%c; No.
7. 18%c. Sugar—raw in demand and firmer;
fair refining 2 1516@Sc; centrifugals, 96°
test 3%c asked; refined active and higher;
off A, 4%®4%c: mould A. 4%c; stand
ard A, 4%; confectioners’ A 4 3-16 c;
cut loaf, 5%0: crushed, 5%c; powdered,
4 9-16 c; granulated, 4 516 c: cubes. 4%c.
Molasses—Foreign quiet and dull; 50° test, 11%
®l2c in hhds: New Orleans steady and dull;
common to fancy 25®36c. Petroleum lower
and quiet; refined. New York, 86 9i>®7 05;
Pniladelphia and Baltimore, 86 85®7 00:
In bulk, 84 45®4 50. Cotton seed oil dull and
steady; crude prime 2 ®29e: crude off grades
25®29c; ’* off grad’ l ■ 3’c. Wool
dull a” domestic V‘C 32®37c:
pulled - • i>xns 17- . 2 Hides dull
and easy, • . cittel. New Orleans selected.
46 to 50 IBs, 7®Bc; Texas selected. 50 to
60 lbs, 7®Sc. Provisions—Pork weaker, active;
prime sll 50®2 00; old mess, $lO 0®
11 00; new m“ss sll 50® 12 25; extra
prime sll 00. Beef steady and quiet; family
12 75® 13 50; extra mess $lO 50®11 00. Beef
hams strong; slsoo®lß 58. Tieroed beet quiet
and unchanged; city extra, India mese, sl9 00®
20 00. Cut meats firm sal active; pickled
bellies 5%c; plokeled shoulders sc; piokeled
hams 10%®10%c. Middles dull and rosy;
short clears $5 25. i ard stroug and weak;
western steam $6 80; city $> 05®6 70: op
tions June delivery $6 32%; July deliv
ery $6 28; August delivery s<> 42; Sep
tember delivery ; refined weak; con
tinent $6 oo®B 85. South America ST 25.
Butler quiet at 18®25c. Cheese active;
light skims s®B%c. Peaauts quiet; fancy
hand picked. 4%®4%c; farmers’, 2%®3%c.
Freights to Liverpool irregular and moderate
demand: ootton. per steam, 3 3-d; grain 2d
asked.
Chicago, June 24.—Wheat was apparently
friendless 10 day having evened up tueir deals
in dangerous months. The shorts were ready
for scalping trade* and proceeded to offer e
lected lota on the descending scale, while longs
were with them in an effort to get rid of their
holdings. The result was a very weak and de
cling market. July opened at 93®93%c. sold
up to 93‘V.c. reacted to 92%c, grew steady for a
time, but w eakened again, sellm’g off to 92c and
close i at 92%c. July corn opencil at 54c, against
54%c at the close yesterday. There was little
or no demand, but selling was persistent and
aggressive almost from the atari. Long corn
was sacrificed freely. Short •ellmg was on an
enormous scale, and the execution of ston loss
orders completed the demoralization. After
touching 54*tjC tho decline began, and with one
or two minor reactions dropped to 53%c. Then
there was a rally to 53%c, and at the close it
was 53%c. Oats had a strong start, owing to
the fact that only 64 cars were received, when
160 had been expected. July sold early at 85%
@36c, then broke in sympathy with corn and
sold off to 35c, reacted to 35%c, again w eakened
and closed at. the bottom price of the day.
Provisions ruled wvak. influenced chiefly by
weakness in the grain pita. Trade was gener
ally dull and fluctuations confined within an
extremely limited range
Chicago, June 24,—Cash quotations were as
follows: Flour unchanged: spring patents $4 70
®5 40; winter patents $5 00®5 10; bakors’
$4 10®4 >5; straights $4 85®5 10. Wheat—
No. 2 spring, 95c: No. 2, red, 98®9lic. Corn-
No. 2, 56%c. Oats—No. 2, 45%e. Mess pork,
Ser barrel, $lO 00. Lard, per 100 lbs, $5 05.
hort ribs sides, loose, $5 80®6 85. Dry salted
shoulders, boxed, $6 5®5 15. Short clear
sides, boxed. $6 25®6 35. Whisky at 81 16-
Leading futures ranged as fellows:
Opening. Highest. Closing.
Wheat. No. 9
June delivery.. 95 95% 94%
July delivery.. 93 98% 92%
Aug. deli very.. 88% 88% 87%
Corn, No. 2
June delivery.. 56% 56% 56%
July delivery.. 54 54% 63%
Aug. delivery . 51% 61% 51%
Oats, No. 2
July delivery , 35% 36 85
Aug. delivery.. 31% 81% 30
Se-it. deliverr 30% 80% 29%
Mess Pore—
July delivery..slo 05 810 05 $lO 00
Sept delivery. 10 80 10 32% 10 27%
Lard, per 100 S>s—
July delivery.. $8 07% $5 10 $6 10
Sept delivery.. 6 32% 635 6 32%
Short Ribs, per 100 ibs—
July delivery.. $6 82% $5 85 $5 82%
Sept delivery.. 6 07% 6 07% 6 07%
Baltimore. June 24,—Flour dull: Howard
street and western superdne $3 50®3- 75;
extra $4 00®4 60; family $4 7S®5 15; city
mills, Rio brands, extra. $6 00®5 25; winter
wheat patent $6 40® 00; spring patent $6 00
®6 25; spring straight, $5 35®.5 85; bakers’.
$4 85®5 10. Wheat easy; No. 8 red, on spot,
and month, $1 03®l 03%: Southern wheat
nominal: Fultz. $1 03®1 07; Longberry, $1 05
®1 08. Corn—Southern steady; white at 750;
yellow at 700.
Cincinnati. June 24.—Flour steady; family
$4 15®4 35; winter patent $5 00@5 35; fancy
$4 10®4 80. Wheat firm; No. 2 red $lO4.
Corn quiet; No. 2 mixed. 580. Oats easy; No.
2 mixed 40®41c. Provisions—Pork lower at
$lO 62%. Lard dull at $5 80 Bulk meate
quiet; short ribs at $6 00. Bacon steady;
short dear $7 00. Hogs, common aud light,
$2 75; paoking and butchers’ $3 60®a 85.
Whisky firm at $1 16.
Sr. Louis, June 21.—Flour dull; family
$3 70®S 80; choice $4 <X>®4 20; fancy $4 40®
4 50; extra fancy $4 60; patents $4 85®4 95.
Wheat opened %@%c lower, closed I%® i%c off
from yesterday: No. 2, red, cash. 96®98%c;
June delivery closed at —c; July delivery closed
at 87%®57%c; August delivery closed at 85%o;
September delivery closed at at—c; December
delivery closed —o. Corn closed %®%u be
low yesterday; No. 2 red. cash 57%®58c; June
delivery closed at —c; July delivery closed at
52%0; September delivery closed at 48%c;
Oats lower and aotive; No. 2 oash, 36%c;
July delivery closed at 31%c; August delivery
closed at 2i%c; September delivery closed at
—c. Bagging 6%®6%c. Iron eotton ties
$1 35®1 40. Provisions dull and weak—Pork,
standard mess, at $lO 37%. Lard, prime
steam, at $5 80. Dry salt meats, boxed shoul
JWFW, at $4 07% 1 longs * 00: v-L*. *6 10:
short clear $6 20. Bacon, boxed Bhoulders,
$5 30®5 37%; longs, $6 55; ribs, $6 65: short
clear, $6 86. Hams, $lO 00® 12 00. Whisky
steady at sll6.
Naw Orleans, June 24.—Coffee dull; Rio,
ordinary to fair, 18® 19c. Sugar nominal;
Rio, open kettle, good common to fair. B%c;
inferior 2%c; centrifugals, granulated,
4%c; seconds B®4%c; fully fair to prime, 4%0;
prime to striotly prime, 4 il-16c; choice, 4%c;
fair to good fair, 3%®%c; good oommon
3%c; oommon, 2W®2 18-16 c; centrifugals, plan
tation granulated 4 5-16@4%c; choice white
4c; off white, 4%0; choice yellow clari
fied. 4%0: prime yellow clarified, 4%c: off
Srirae yellow clarified B%c; seconds. 2%®Sc
[classes dull open kettle, fermenting,
qood fair to prime. 28®25c; centrifugals,
.crime to good prime, 20o; prime 12®!3c;
good oommon to good’fair, 10® 12c; choice
to fancy, 27®39c; good prime. 14®15c,
common, 7®8o; Inferior, 5%®6c: prime, 90®
tic; fair to good fair, 14® 15c; good common 10
®l2.
NAVAL STORES.
New Yore. June 24. noon.—Spirits turpen
tine dull and easy at 38%®38%c. Rosin
quiet and unchanged at 81 42%® I 45.
5:00 p. m.—Rosin quiet and easy; strained,
oommon to good 81 40® 1 47%. Turpentine dull
and easy at 83®3e%c.
Oharlsston. June 24. Spirits turpentine
steady at 34%c. Rosin firm; good strained
$1 25.
Wilmington, June 2i. Spirit* turpentine
dull at 85c. Rosin firm; strained $1 17%;
good strained $122%. Tar firm at $1 65. Crude
turpentine firm; hard $1 40; yellow alp $2 40;
virgin $2 40-
rice.
New Yore. June 24.—Rice steady and quiet;
domestic, fair to extra, s®S%c; Japan
6%®6c.
New Orleans. June 21.—Rice steady; ordi
nary to prime 4%®5%c.
New York Market Bevlew.
Reported bu O. S. Palmer. 166 itcdde St., Revs
York.
New York, June 22.—Watermelons are now
arriving regularly by every steame;,} but the
quality is most inferior, and selling from sls 00®
80 00: fancy large ore wanted. Le Conte pears,
$3 00®400 per barrel; peach**, $1 50®3 50 per
orate: tomatoes, carriers, 75c®$l 25; crates,
50c®$l 00; onions, $2 00 per crate; potatoes,
new (firm selling from $150®5 00 per barrel;
pineapples, Indian River fancy, 15c; medium,
10®12c; Charleston cucumbers, 50c®gl 00.
SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE.
M IN IA/njRE~ ALM AN A C —THIBD AY.
Sun Rises .4:53
Sun Sets ~..7:05
High Water at Savannah—9:sl am. 10:12pm
Thursday. June 25, 1891.
ARRIVED YESTERDAY.
Steamship Chattahoochee. Daggett. Ne wYork
—C G Anderson.
Bark Nina [Nor], Hansen, Port Royal, in bal
last to Holst & Cos.
Steamer Progress. White. Brunswick and
intermediate landings—C Williams, Agt.
Steamer Alpha, Strobnar. Beaufort, Port
Royal and Bluffton—C H Medlock. Agt.
Steamer Ethel, Carrol, Cohen’s Bluff and way
ldgs—W T Gibson, Manager.
OMSARED YESTERDAY.
Schr John H Tingue. Burdge, New York—Geo
Harriss, Nephew & Cos.
BAILED YESTERDAY.
Steamship Wm I.awrence. Baltimore.
Steamship Tallahassee, New York.
Steamship Dessoug, Philadelphia.
Schr John H Tingue, New York.
Schr Melissa A Willey, Boston.
MEMORANDA.
New York. June 22—Arrived, schrs Laura L
Sprague, Nixon, Mobile; May O’Neill, Watts,
Brunswick. Ga; Horace PShares, Whitt, Savan
nah; S A Rudolf, Mullin, do; Eleanor, McCoy,
Georgetown. 8 C.
Fleetwood, June 20— Arrived, bark Dronnlng
Sophie [Nor], Lundegaard. Pensacola.
Granton. June 20—Arrived, bark Battistina
Madre [ltalJ. Olivari. Pensacola.
Kinsalo. June 22—Passed, steamship Hexham
[Brl. Adams, Port Royal for Dublin.
Sharpness, June 20—Arrived, bark Gemma C
[ltal], Basso. Pensacola (not previously).
Shields, June 22—Sailed, Amazon for Pensa
cola
Whitehaven. June 22--Arrived, bark Haakon,
Haakonsen [Nor], Salvesen, Pensacola.
Low Point, C B, June 10—Passed, steamer
Wandsworth [Brl, Mitcheli, Port Royal via Syd
ney for United Kingdom.
Baltimore, June 22—Arrived, Rhrs Napoleon
Bougnton, Stiles, Savannah; Wm H Allison,
Kenniston. Apalachicola; Nellie W Howtett,
BUukaloo, Charleston. _
Brunswick, Ga, June 22 Arrived, brig Emma,
Hogelund. Havana.
Coosaw, SC. June 28—Cleared, schr Adele
Thackers, Kimmey. New York.
Fernandina, June 22—Sailed, steamer Clara
Singheim (Ger[, Burckmann; schr William C
Wickham, Ewing, Philadelphia.
Jacksonville, June 22-('leared. schr* Wm H
Jones, Fownier, Port Castries, St Lueia; Nellie
e Pickering. Warren. Naw London.
Norfolk. Va, June 28—Sailed, steamship Glen
devon [Br], Read (from Pensacola). Delfzyl,
Newport News. June 22—Sailed, schr W H
Bailey, l ane, charleston.
Nobska, June 22—Passed, sohr Richard S
Spofford. Hawes, from Apalachicola for Boston.
Port Royal, SC, June 22—Cleared, schr Fan
nie E Wolston, Marr, Boston.
Philadelphia, June 22—Cleared, schr Oscar C
Schmidt, Bacon, Charleston.
Pi rt Amboy. June 21—Sailed, schr Nettie
Langdon, Ross, Jacksonville.
* Sat ilia River. Ga, June 17—Sailed, schrs Ida E
Latham, Blatchford, New York; Harry Pres
cott, Gilmore, Boston.
New York, June 24—Arrived, steamships
Aller, Bremen; Teutonic, Liverpool.
Arrived out—Trave, New Y’ork for Bremen.
SPOKEN.
Bark Tremont, from Pensacola for Boston,
June 20, lnt 40 35, lon 69 30.
Bark Aukathor [Nor|, Notteson, from Bruns
wick for Rotterdam, June 10, lat 47, long 12.
Schr Susan B Harding, from Pensacola for
Champeachy, June 18, lat 24 30, lon 87 -0.
MARITIME MISCELLANY.
Captain Daggett of the steamship Chattahoo
chee reports that on June 23, off Cape Hat
teras, passed fifty sailing vessels, bound south.
NOTICE TO MARINERS.
Notices to mariners, pilot oharts and all
nautical information will be furnished masters
of vessels free of charge at the United states
Hydrographic Offloe in the Custom House.
Captains are requested to call at the offloe.
Lieut F H Shkrmax,
In charge Hydrographic Station.
RECEIPTS.
Per Central Railroad, June 24—127 bales cot--
ton.
Per Charleston and Savannah Railway. June
24 -1 oar lumber, 3 cars wood, 2 hbls bams. 1
can lard, 1 lot h b goods, 1 case notions, 1 case
cigars, 4 cases berry baskets. 1 coil lead pipe, 2
bales ex malts. 1 bdl hides, 250 kegs gun pow
der, 8 pkga tobacco.
Per Savannah. Florida and Western Railway,
June 24—364 bbis spirits turpentine, 9,422 bbls
rosin. 186 bales cotton, 2,488 boxes vegetables,
47 bbls vegetables, 12 cars melons, 39 oars lum
her. S bales hides, 21 bales wool, 3 sacks wax, 2
cars bacon, 1 car cattle, 35 crates onions, ! case
cotton jeans, 42 bbls rioe, 10 cases domestics, 1
case clothing, 1 car sash, doors and blinds, 8
cars wood, 1 lot furniture. 3 pkgs beds, 3 pkgs
bedspringa, 1 bbl empty bottles, 25 crates can
laloupes, 10 boxes drugs, 2 buggies, I wagon, 1
lot h h goods, 25 bbls crude, 75 car wheels, 1 box
hardware.
EXPORTS.
Per steamship Tallahassee, for New York
-283 bales cotton, 11 balee domestics, IS bbls r oil,
125 bags chaff, 882 bbls rosin, 50 bbls pilch. 34
bales bides, 614 bbls spirits turpentine, 10,320
melons. 20 bbls c rosin. 62 pkgs fruit, 32 bales
moss. 28 bbk* vegetables, 1,406 crates vegetables.
40 tons pig iron, 11 bales paper stock, 70,500
shingles, 5i pkgs mdse.
Per steamship Dessoug. for Philadelphia—
-114 bales upland cotton, 52 bales paper stock. 21
bbls rice, 213 bales domestics and yarns, 209 bbls
rosin, 250 bbls spirits turpentine, 1.431 empties,
102 casks clay, 2,466 watermelons. 478 crates
vegetables. 124 tons pig iron, 48 roils leather. 91
sacks wool, 15 bales sponge, 224 pkgs mdse, <OO
sacks g rock.
Per steamship Wm Ijiwrence. for Baltimore
-946 bales cotton, 15 bbls spirits turpentine, 1,800
bbls rosin, 462 pkgs vegetables, 8i 1 pkgs mils*,
15.000 feet lumber. 52 hales hides. 16 casks clay,
15 bales moss, 6 hales deer tongue, 17 bales do
mestics, 27 rolls leather.
Ter schr John H Tingue, for New York—434,-
620 feet p p lumber—McDonough & 00.
PASSENGERS.
Per steamship Obattßbooohee. from New York
—B F Simmons, J Sullivan, 8 Hopper, Mrs S
Hopper, Miss O Hopper, Mls* A B Bookie, J Ull
man, R S Pearson, A A Daggett.
Per steamship Wm I*awrence, for Baltimore—
I. H Harris, R P Webster, Mrs E l’urener, J R
Short. Mrs Alfred Fatnian, Alfred Fatinan, Mrs
Dew, Mrs J Higgins, William B Stoll, Robert
I,oiler.
Per steamship Tallahassee for New York—
Mr 0 I' Furness, wife and child, J J Graham and
wife, 00l John Screven, Miss Lizzie Meibom,
Miss Nellie Grahum. Mr and Mrs TP Branch,
nurse and Infant, Miss fsilrd Branch, Master
Krvine Branch, Master Austin Branch, J H Wil
son, H R Sfcomer. J Kendall, Mrs Walter Curtis,
Geo Stewart, N W Polk and wife, C 8 Hall. Mn>
T F O’Donnell, Geo Budge, Mr Welles, Mr Whit
ney, Mr Gates, 1 colored and 8 steerage.
CONSIGNEES.
Per Central Railroad. June 24—Stubbs &T,
Woods. G & Co.W W Gordon & Cos. Warren * A.
Per Charleston and Savannah Railway. June
24- M Ferst’s Sons & Cos, H Solomon ft Son. Tom
McCabe. A Buokenholz. Wimpy 4 TANARUS, Brown
Bros, N Paulsen 4 Cos, A Leffier A Son. A B Hull
ft 00, Savannah Grooery 00, J S Collins ft Cos,
Heuisler ft H, Lemon 4M, McCauley, 8 4 Cos,
J C Sanders. J H Hennessy.
Per Savannah. Florida and Western Railway,
June 14—S P Shotter Cos, Savannah Grocery Cos,
Lippman Bros. Jno Flannery ft Cos, Stubbs 4 T.
Peacook, H 4 Cos. 8 Guckenhelrasr 4 Son. H L
B Wiggins. Herman 4 K, C T Coopsr, Green 4
Cos, A H Champion’s Son, M J Doyle. Frank 4
Cos. Arnold 4 H'. Meinbard Bros 4 Cos, Savannah
St 4 R R Ry, Lloyd ft A, Smith Bros, C F. San
berg, A G Rhodes ft Cos, M Y Henderson, A S
Thomas, J S Collins ft 00, M Fei-st's Sons ft Cos,
L Putzel, I Epstein ft Bro. A P Brantley ft Cos,
W M Mills. Barbour 4 Cos, Mrs K Girens.
Per steamship Chattahoochee from New York
—A R Altmayer ft 00. E S Byok 4 Cos, M Boley
ft Son, H M Branch, Adra, Cornwell SO. L J
Dunn, Commercial Guano Cos, C K R ft Bkg Cos,
W S Cherry ft Cos, Dryfus Bros. Kckrnnn ft V,
G Eckstein ft Cos, I Epstein 4 Bro, J R Einstein,
A S Eichberg, E Eicholz, Engel ft R, Geil &Q,
Frank 4 Cos, A Ehrlich & Bro, J B Fernandez,
Irieischman ft Oo,M Ferst’s Sons 4 Co,D Hogan,
S Guckenbeimer 4 Son, Hexter 4 K, A Hanley,
J J Joyce. Kolshorn & M, B H Levy 4 Bro, str
Katie. Lippman Bros, Lindsay ft M. Lovell ft L.
H II Livingston. Lloyd & A, A Leffier 4 Son, J
Lynch, Jno Lyons ft Cos, N Lang, Mohr Bros, E
Moyle, Morrison. F 4 Cos. E D Moyle. Geo Meyer,
Morning News. L Muehlenthal, Norton 4H,
Mutual Co-op Asso’n, J McGrath 4 Cos, Order H
Miller, Agt, Order Not Bank of Savannah, Order
W W Chisholm, Palmer Hardware 00, Order
Muore ft J. Peococz. H 4 Cos, A G Rhodes & Cos,
J S Reynolds, C P Rogers, E A Schwarz. R P
Wimberly, J S Silva, Screven House. L Stem,
Smith Bros, Bolomons ft Cos, Savannah Milk and
Cream 00, P B Springer, Jno Sullivan, Savan
nah Grocery Cos, H Solomon ft Son, J Verst,
8. F ft W Ry. G W Tiodeman 4 Bro, T A Ward,
Thos West, Woods, Gft Cos, Dr J A Wegeforth,
White 4 S. stmr Alpha, Southern Ex 00, Ua 4
Fla IS B Cos.
Elastic seam drawers, gauze underwear in
variety, at LaFar’a— Ad.
Puff bosom shirt*, lawn and Scotch goods
at LaFar’s. — Ad.
Newnansville, Fla., June 5, 1891.
Messrs. Lippman Bros., Savannah, tea.
Dear Sirs: I wish to give my testimonial In
regard to your valuable medicine, P. P. P., for
the cure of Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Dyspepsia,
Biliousness, etc.
In 186* I was attacked with bilious muscular
rheumatism, and have been a martyr to it ever
since. I tried all medicines I ever heard of, and
all the doctors in reach, but found only tempor
ary relief; the pains were so bad at times that I
did not care whether I lived or died. My diges
tion became so impaired that everything I ate
disagree i with me. My wife also suffered so
intensely with dyspeDsia that her life was a bur
den to her; she would he confined to her bed for
weeks at the time; she also suffered greatly
from giddiness and loss of sleep.
Some time in March I was advised to take P.
P. P.,and before we (my wife and I) bad finished
the second bottle of P. P. P. our digestion be
gan to improve. My pains subsided so much
that I have been able to work and am feeling
like doing that I haven't done before in a num
ber of years. We will continue taking P. P. P.
until we are entirely cured, and will cheerfully
recommend it to all suffering humanity. Yours
very respectfully J. 8. DUPRIBS.
Neglige shirts, elegant new patterns in
light summer goods, at LaFar’x — Ad.
Belts and sashes, all colon and width*, at
La Far’A — Ad.
Notice.
Parties leaving the city for the lummer
can have the Morning News mailed regu
larly to them at the following rates, pay*
able invariably in advance:
1 week $ 25
2 weeks. 50
1 month 1 00
2 months 2 00
3 months 2 66
The address can be obanged as often as
desired. When ordering change of address
give old as well as new directions.
CLOTHING.
SORRY, EVER SO SORRY,
That we did not have enough of those White Jean
Drawers and Gauze Undershirts at 25 cents to
supply all who called, but those who were disap
pointed will have a chance at
THIS WEEK’S BARGAINS.
50 DOZEN
STRAW HATS,
Former Price 75 Cents,
Now 25 Cents.
Our Sale of Ladies’ Oxfords and
Gents’ Low Quarters at 25 per
cent, reduction will be continued
this week only. Men’s Finest
Kangaroo and French Calf Hand-
Sewed Low Quarters Reduced to
$3 75; regular price $5.
DRYFUS BROS.,
Congress and Jefferson Streets.
JSTo. 528.
- STOVES.— *
so- \ "'(g ■? v y ■~'s
\ u
ffb MPOSSIIBILITiIk'
An elephant cant climb a tree.
. A WHALE CANNOT LIVE. ON
THE SHORE
A COOK CANNOT COOK QUITE HER
BEST
IF THE RANGE HAS NO
6auz e Door>j
- ' ' SrOX7 W ' fiUsrr TELEJ bidht.
Buy the CHARTER OAK,
VWitldi C3-?=>t Ott&tx Doors.
Hade only by Ejrcehsior Manufacturing C*., Bt. Vouia, Mo. Sold by
CLARK & DANIELS, Agents, - - Savannah, Ga.
CLOTHINS.
MORE BARGAINS THIS WEEK!
L BOYS’ RUBBER BOTTOM LACE SHOES, sizes 6to 18, worth $1 00, only 4?o.
2. ALT, SILK WINDSOR TIES, worth 25c., only 10c.
3. INFANT SHOES (not pieced), worth 40c., only 25c.
4. THRKE FINE TIES, worth $1 50, for only 85.
5. FINE DUCK VESTS, worth $1 50. only 75c
6. FINE DOUBLE-BREASTED DUCK VESTS, worth $ 00. only $1 00.
7. ALL SILK OPEN WORK WINDSORS, worth 50a, only Ssc.
8. WASH FOUR-IN-HANDS, worth 15c.. only Bc.
9. GENTS’ SCARFS, worth 25c., only 100.
10. FRENCH SILK SCARFS, with wide ends, worth 50c„ only lflo. '
11. SILK STRIPE FOUR-IN-HANDS, worth 50c„ only 16c.
12. FRENCH STRIPED BALBRIGQAN SUITS, size* 84 to 38, worth sl, only 60a p*T (ulk
COLLATES, BROUGHTON ST.
FPRXITUKK A> J) CAKFITS.
the race, call'at~
LINDSAY & MORGAN’S
FURNITURE and CARPET STORES.
AGENTS FOR BICYCLES.
See the New Mail, Colum
bia and other patterns. Easy’ -t c >‘\\
terras made to responsible
{>arties wishing to purchase aOB. _
Bicycles on time. ? /jgßfi
All seasonable goods for f /Al\i \
sale cheap. Refrigerators, fxvbO;? -'A /
Baby Carriages, Mosquito
Nets, Hammocks, etc. Mat
ting, Window Shades and
Carpets cheap. Don’t forget
us. We are right on the " 1 h - m*sU.Alter
corner. ,
.Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorla. \
7