Newspaper Page Text
COMMERCIAL.
~~'^g A VANNAH MARKETS.
OFFICE MORNING NEWS, [
Savasnah, Oa. , March 8,1315. )
_ ITTO> -—The market is held with consider
-7 fteadiaess, blit there is only a limited de
46'a which, however, is somewhat better than
a>a ,'been recently. Holders are not forcing
i: ' (j sre restricting offerings to the actual
•*** of buyers. The total sales for the day
bales. Oa ’Change, at the opening
* rio a. ra., the market was bulletined
elU ' jy ‘ ao d unchanged, with no sales.
second call, at 1 p. m., it was steady,
i: „ sa ?s be! o * 533 hales. At the third and last
~ a[; p m it closed steady and unchanged,
; ur tber sales of 208 bales. The following
* the official closing spot quotations of the
Exchange: t
s*Ki middling - Jg
flLi ordinary 5*4
r, a r:<Js—There is no change in the |mar-
V.t which retains a firm undertone, although
somewhat dull. There were a few sales re
“?od on the basis of quotations:
p ‘ , mn ninominal! 10 ®ls %
SdSS.
Medium fine
Krirndne.::;... wX
Oboioo (DooiiDWi. .•••••*••••••••• •
Comparative Cotton Statement.
Riciipis, Exports a.ve Stock os Hand March 8,1892, and for
the Sake Tims Last Year.
1891-’92. 1890- ’91.
MW. JSZt. |^land
Stock on haud Sept. 1 1,871 10,145 23; 11,483
Received to-daj 2,503 | 2.383!
1 deceived previously 40,011 860,261 40,887! 931,776
Total 41,882 863,614 40,710 . 945,6.2
Exported to-day 610 1,647 1 1 210 4,390
I'Ex ported previously .... 36,176 796,061 jl 82,662 886,480
Total
Stock on hand and on ship*
board thin day 6,107 67,010 l 7.038 65.734
Rice- The market rules dull, buyers are not
Inclined to increase their stocks beyond actual
necessities. There were no rales during the
day. The following are tbe offioiai quo
tations ot the Board of Trade; 5m.,11 job lots
are held at ‘/B®%c higher:
Fair - 4J4
Good 444
Prime 4%®5
Rough, nominhl.
Country lots $ 70® 80
Tidewater 1 00<>l 25
>'aral Storks—There was nothing doiDg
In the spirits turnentime market, which is en
tirely nominal in the absence of demand. There
sere no transactions during the day. At the
Board cf Trade no market was bulletined at
either call. Rosin —The market continues strong
and prices were again marked up. There
war an active inquiry, but owing to the small
offering stock business is confined within narrow
limits. At the Board of Trade on the opening
call the market was reported firm at the fol
lowing quotations: A, B, C, D and E $1 45, F
$l5O, Bsl 55, Hsl 60, I*l 76, Ks 2 20, M
52 90, N $3 15, window glass $3 40, water
white Ji 80. At the closing call It was
firm prices being further revised as foilows: A
H. iD and Esl 60, FBl 55, Qsl 60, HBl 65, I
|: 80; other grades were unchanged.
NAVAL STORES STATEMENT.
Spirits. Rosin.
Stock on hand April 1 3.902 27,648
Received to-day 221 1,960
Received previously 227,461 824,334
Total 231,684 853.942
Exported to-day 470 4,156
Exported previously *28,438 771,946
Total 223.968 776,102
Stock on hand and on ship
board to-day 8,626 77,840
Received game day last year.. 30 504
Financial—Money is In active demand.
Domestic Exchange— The market Is firm.
Pants an 1 bankers are buying at par and sell
ing at %®4i per cent premium.
Foreign Exchange The market Is steady.
Sterling, commercial demand, $4 Bt>44; sixty
days. 84 6444; ninety days. 8 4 834.4; francs,
Paris and Havre, sixty days, $5 21; Belgian,
silty days. 85 2244; marks, sixty days. 9444 e.
Securities—The market is very dull excepting
for a limited demand for Central tripartite
bonds and city of Savannah ss.
Stocks and Bonds— City Bonds—Atlanta 6
percent, long date, 109 bid, 111 asked; Atlanta
■ Per cent, 114 bid, :16 asked; Augusta 7 per
cent, long date, 106 bid, 108 asked; Augusta 6
percent, long date, 102 bid, 106 asked; Colum
bus 5 per cent, 100 bid, 101 asked; Macon 6 per
cent, 113 bid, 114 asked; new Savannah 5 per
cent quarterly April coupons, 108 bid, 10344
asked; new Savannah 5 per cent May
coupons, 102% bid, 103% asked.
State Bonds —Georgia new 444 Per oent, 11044
hi 11144 asked; Georgia 7 per cent coupons
January and July, maturity 1896. 11044 bid. 11144
asked; Georgia 344 per cent, 99 bid. 100 asked.
Railroad Stocks —Central common. 86 bid. 87
asked; Augusta and Savannah 7 per cent guar
anteed, 117 bid, 319 asked; Georgia common, 182
hid, 186 asked; South western 7 per cent guaran
tee!, 29 bid, 10044 asked ;Central 6 per cent cer
tificates, 7844 hid, 79 asked; Atlanta and West
Fomt railroad stock, 101 bid, 102 asked; Atlanta
and West Point 6 per cent certificates, 94 bid, 96
asked
Railroad Bonds —Savannah, Florida and
western Railway Company general mortgage
cant interest coupons, October, 10944 bid.
Lv;e asked; Atlantic and Gulf first mortgage
consolidated 7 per cent coupons. January and
Jn.y, maturity 1897. 109% bid. 11044 asked;
ventral Railroad and Banking Company
collateral gold 6s, 75 bid, S5 asked; Central
consolidated mortgage 7 per cent coupons,
January and July, maturity 1893, 100% bid.
unasked; Savannah and Western railroad 6
C,V' en .t' indorsed by Central railroad, 78 bid,
' H asked; Savannah, Americas and Moat
komery 8 per cent. 73 bid, 75 asked; Geor
t* , railr fad 6 per cent, 1897, 105® 111 bid, 108
asked; Georgia Southern and Florida
™ mortgage 6 percent, 7744 bid, 78% asked;
an 'i Maoon first mortgage, 6 per
ent, ,0 bid, 81 asked; Montgomery and Eufaula
ret mortgage, 6 per cent, indorsed by
ventral railroad, 103 bid. 104 asked;
'-■urlotte, Columbia and Augusta, first
“; ir tftage, 104 bid, 105 asked; Charlotte,
tuirobia and Augusta, second mortgage, 111
asved; Charlotte, Columbia and Au
liii I. general mortgage, 6 per cent, 100 bid,
... e '* : ®°uth Georgia and Florida indorsed
>s, 103 bid, 109 asked; South Georgia and
. irnia second mortgage, 106% bid, 10744 asked;
and Knoxville first mortgage. 7 per
IT?’ c " hid, 100 asked; Gainesville, Jefferson
li • i ollt hrii, first mortgage, guaranteed,
sake 1; Gainesville, Jefferson and Southern,
kuaranteed, 191 asked; Ocean Steam-
Z“.. 5 P® r 00 'R- due in 1920, 100
’ Gainesville. Jefferson and Southern
' mortgage, guaranteed, 101 asked;
tumbus and Rome first mortgage
Mk, indorsed by Central railroad. 99 bid,
I . ■ Columbus and Western 6 per cent,
. “rarway first mortgage 7 per cent, 99
„] asked; Savannah and Atlantic 5 per
“ “‘dorsed, 70 bid, 71 asked.
0 , “k.Stack,, etc.— Southern Bank of the State
aacffik, 240 bid, 250 asked; Merchants'
ID 'ial Bank, 129 bid, 131 asked; Savan
lr, d a k and Trust Company, 11) bid,
1, , asked; National Bank of Savannah.
OmUl. 130 asked; Oglethorpe Savings and Trust
la'ifany. 117 bid, 119 asked: Citizens'
Fku' 91 bid. 95 asked; Chatham Heal
;.„7. arm Improvement Company, 4944 bid,
ed ; Uenuania Bank, 100 bid. 101 asked;
Kj r r aa ? Hank, 5244 hid, 53 asked; Macon and
Savi , Construction Company, nominal;
, ““ha.! Construction Company, 55 asked,
till Savannah Gas l.ight stocks, 23
E,7 ,' re asked; Mutual Gas Light stocks, 25 bid;
UiiskUd an<l Power Company, 74 bid.
Arrt^-.,27 s@B M
cj Market firm. Tbe Board of Trade
ritjNHi D -, are ttS follows: Smoked clear
r , q shoulders. dry saltod clear
f xw’ ,on * clear - *26°? bellies, 6%c;
I- J rs> . 544 c; hams. 11c.
j / ".iso and Ties —The market steady.
8 , naggiug, 2%a>, 744 c; 2tt. 7c; l%tt>.
I, 1 1 11 rations are lor large quantities; small
"goer; sea Island bagging at 12®12%c;
*: 5448). 744 c. Iron Tics—large lots!
reta f"? 4; amauer lots, |LSS®I 40. Ties ia
j ''yts higher.
22 ~, Ll£ -MArket firmer: fair demand,Goschen
El” -' 25®26c; creamery, '22®3uc;
'■ ■ !®3jc.
Ci-,: l -"; lt - Sc a r oe;7®Bc.
; 3%,, r -Market steady, fair demand, 12®
ri a*—-Market firm. l’eaberry, 22c; fancy.
c; choice 19%c; prime. 19c; rood, 18c;
** ir l ( 4c; ordinary. 16c; common. !5V%c.
Dp.ikd Frcit— Apples, evaporated. 9c; Com
mon, Peaches.pe-iea.i2t4c;unpeeled,
9c. Currants. 5%®6%c. Qtroa, 22%c. Dried
apricot*. 12%c
Dry Goods—The market is quiet: good d@-
mand. Prints, 4®B%c; Georgia brown
shirting, A4, 4%c: 7-6 do. sc; 4-4 brown sheet
‘“K- -•: white osnaburgs. t-aS)®: checks.
4%®5%c; yarns. 90c for the best makes; brown
drillings, e%®7%c.
Flour Market Arm. Extra, $4
fa.iiily. $4 65 ®4 75; fancy. $5 Us®s IS; patent.
$5 104i8 20; choice patent, s'. 40®, 65.
Fish— Market firm We quote full weights:
Mackerel, No. a. Lslt barrels, nominal, $6 00®
o 50; No 2, $7 00®8 00. Herring, No. 1. 25c;
scaled, 25c. Cod, 6®Bc- Mullet, half barrel.
Grain— Corn—Market steady. Waite corn,
retail lots. 67c; jon iota. 65c; carload lots, 63c;
mixed corn, retail lota, 65c; job lots 63c; carload
lota, 61c. Oats advancing—Mixed, retail lots.
49c; joo lota, 47c; carload lota, 45c; Texas rust
proof, retail 75c; joa Iqts. 70c; carload. 65c. Bran
—Retail lots, $1 20; job lots, 81 15: carload
lots. Si 10. Meal—Pearl, per barrel. $1 90: per
sack, $1 30; city grourid. $1 20. Pearl grits, per
barrel, $3 00; per sack, $1 35; city grit?, $1 25
per sack.
Hay— Market strong. Eastern and western In
retail lots, $1 05; job lots, $1 00;oarloadlois,95c.
Northern, none.
Hides, Wool. Etc —Hides—Market very dull
and declining; receipts light; dry flint, 6t*c;
salted, 454 c; dry butcher, 334 c. Wool market
nominal: prime Georgia. free of sand and burs,
22c. Wax, 2oc. Deerskins, flint, 22c; salted,
17c. Otter skins. 50e®$4 00.
Iron—Market very steady; Swede; 4sl®3c:
refined, 459 c.
Lemons— Fair demand Messina, $3 ?5®4 ).
Lard— Market steady; pure iu tierces, 7%c;
301 b tins 859 c; compound, in tierces, 6%c; in 5055
tins, 6esc
Lime. Caeciskd Pilaster and Cement—Ala
bama and Georgia lime in fair demand and sell
ing at $1 25 per barrel; bulk and carload lots
special; calcined plaster, $2 25 per barrel: hair
4®sc; Kosendale cement, 91 30® 1 40; Portland
cement, retail, $2 74; carload lots, $2 40; En
glish standard. Portland, $2 75 ®S 00.
LiquoßS—Market firm. High wine basis Si 18;
whisky per gallon, recetifled. $l 08® 1 25; accord
ing to proof; choice grades 81 50®2 50; straight,
SI 5U®4 00; blended, 82 00®5 00. Wines—Do
mestic port, sherrv, catswba, low grades, 60®
85c; fine grades, 8l 00®1 50; California light,
muscatel and angelica, 81 35® 1 75.
Nails—Market very firm, fair demand; 3d,
*2 96; 4d and 6d, $2 55 ; 6d. $2 35; Bd, *2 20; lOd.
8215; 12d. $2 10; 30d, $2 05 ; 50dto 60d, $1 95; 20d,
82 10; 40d, $2 00.
Nitts—Almonds. Tarragona, 17®18c; Ivicas,
15® 16c; walnuts, French, 12c; Naples, 16c; pe
cans, 15c: Brazils, 7®c: filberts, lie; cocoa
nuts. Baracoco, 83 20®3 50 per hundred; assort
ed nuts, 501 b and *slb boxes. 12® 13c per lb.
Oranoes— Florida, good stock scarce, 81 50®
2 00.
Onions- Firm; barrels, $3 00®3 25; crates,
$1 15.
Potatoes- Dish, barrels, $2 25®2 75; sacks,
82 00®2 15; seed, 82 50® 2 75.
Shot— Easier: drop, $1 48; drop to B and
larger. 81 73; buck, $1 73.
Salt— The demand is moderate and market
dull. Carload lot*. 65c f. o. b.; job lots 70@80c.
OiLS-Market steady; demand fair. Signal.
40®50c: West Virginia black, 10@13c; lard, 60c;
kerosene, 10c; ueatafoot. 50®75c; machinery,
18®25c; linsei and. raw, 43c; boiled, 45c; mineral
seal. 18c; homelight. 14c; guardian. 14c.
Sugar— Tne market is firm, demand
good. Cut loaf. 534 c; cubes. 4-Vjc: powdered.
4%c; granulated, 4%c; confectioners’, 43®;
standard A, 434 c; white extra C, 4c; golden
C, 354 c; yellow, 3%c.
Syrup— Florida and Georgia, 23®25c; mar
ket quiet for sugar house at 30®40c; Cuba
straight goods. 30®32c; sugar bouse molasses.
18®20c.
Tobacco—Market quiet and steady, Smosing,
domestic, 2244c®8l 60; chewing, common,
sound, 23®25c; fair, 28®35c; good, 36@48c;
bright, 60®66c; fine fancy, 75®80c; extra fine,
Si 00®1 15: bright navies, 22®40c.
Lumher—There is a slight improvement
in foreign demand, while for domestic, both In
terior and coastwise, there has been considera
ble improvement, the demand being brisk for
quick deliveries. Market is steady, with some
signs of advance in prices. We quote:
Easy sizes sll 50®13 00
Ordinary sizes 12 00®16 50
Difficult sizes 14 00®25 50
Flooring boards 14 50(a22 00
Shipstuffs 15 50@25 00
FREIGHTS.
Lumber—By Sail—The market for coasters Is
very dull and easy owing to the large
offerings of tonnage. The rates from
this and near-by Georgia pons may
be quoted at 84 25®S 00, for a range Deluding
Baltimore and Portland, Me. Timber 505®51 00
higher than lumber rates. To the West Indies
and Windward, nominal; to Rosario, 816 00®
17 00; to Buenos Ayres or Montevideo. sl4 00;
to Rio Janeiro, sls 00; to Spanish and Mediter
ranean ports, sl2 00; to United Kingdom for
orders, nominal for lumber, 1)4 10s standard;
lumber £4 15s.
By Steam-To New York, $7 00; to Philadel
phia, 88 00; to Boston, $3 00; to Baltimore,
$6 re.
Naval Stores—Market is very dulL For
eign—Cork, e tc.. small spot vessels, rosin,
2s 9d and 4s; Adriatic, rosin, 3s; Genoa, 2s
9d; South America, rosin, 80c per barrel of 280
pounds. Coastwise—Steam—to Boston, 11c per
lOOlhson rosin, 900 on spirits; to New Yorn,
rosin, 744 c per lOOlbs, spirits, 80c; to Philadel
phia, rosin, 344 c per lOOlbs. spirits, 30c; to Balti
more, rosin, 70c, spirits. 70c. C oastwise quiet.
Cotton—By Steam—The market is dull.
Barcelona %and
Bremen 21-64d
Revai %and
Liverpool via New York, 79 tb 21-64d
Liverpool via Baltimore, tiff) 21-64d
Havre via New k ork, fflh 13-32d
Bremen via New York, $ lb 13-32d
Revai via New York, $ lb 7-16d
Genoa via New York IS 82d
Barcelona via New York 15 32d
Amsterdam via New York 80c
Amsterdam via Baltimore .... 65c
Bremen via Baltimore 11-32d
Antwerp via New York 5-16d
Boston $1 bale 8 125
Sea Island S bale 1 25
New \ ork 18 bale 1 00
Sea Island V hale 1 00
Philadelphia bale 100
Sea Island bale 1 00
Rice—By Steam—
New York $ barrel 50
Philadelphia $ barrel 50
Baltimore $ barrel 50
Boston $1 barrel 75
COUNTRY PRODUCE.
Grown fowls 78 pair ... 8 75 ® 8f
Chickens % grown 48 pair 60 ®
Chickens 44 grown pair 45 ® 55
Turkeys $ pair 200 ®3 00
Geese pair 100 @1 25
Ducks $ pair 65 ® 75
Eggs, country, dozen 15 ® 17
Peanuts, faucy b. p. Va., $5.... 644®
Peanuts, b. p.. $1 lb 44*®
Peanuts, small h. p., $ lb 444®
Feanu s, Tennessee h. p., f.) Ih . 4 ®
Sweet potatoes, S bush., yellow . 65 ®
Sweet potatoes, W bush., white.. 40 ® 50
Poultry—Market quiet and moderately sup
plied; demand light.
Eggs—Market is steady; overstocked.
Peanuts—Ample stock, demand light, prices
steady.
Sugar—Georgia and Florida nominal; none in
market.
Honey—Demand nominal.
MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH.
FINANCIAL.
New York. March 2, noon.—Stocks opened
dull but steady. Money easy at 244®! per cent.
Exchange—long, $4 85%®4 8544: snort. $4 87®
4 87%. States bonds neglected. Government
dull but steady.
Erie 83% Richm’d & W. Pt.
Chicago A North. .118% Terminal 15%
Fake Shore 12344 Missouri Pacific . .88%
Norf. &. W. pref...
New York, March 3,5:00 p. m.—Sterling ex
change closed quiet but steady at $4 8644®
4 83%; commercial bills, $4 Bi%@4 8744. Money
easy at 144 > 2 per cent ; closing offered at 2
per cent. Government bonds closed dull but
firm; four per cents 11744. State bonds dull
but steady.
Sub-treasury Balances—Coin, $111,895,0X1; cur
rency, $2.',1 (,9,009.
In the stock market to-dav the great featturo
was tbe extraordinary activity in New England,
the excitement in which for the first hour was
most intense. The Chowd of brokers gathered
at the opening to trade in the stock comprised
over one-half of the members present, and ex
tended the whole width of the exchange. The
rumors circulated last evening connecting the
Vanderbilts with the road were made the basis
of the operations in the stock tbi., morning,
and while there was lively bidding at the open -
ing, end the stock sold at different prices from
54 to 69 on different sides of the crowd, the
realizations were so heavy that it rapidly re
tired to 54 before the selling pressure was re
lieved. At 59 it was down 1% percent., and
while it rallied from this point to 5544, it sold
between 54 and 55 for tbe remainder of the day.
The denials or the stories circulated ware re
oeiyed from the Grand Central depot, and after
115,000 shares had changed hands in the first
hour, over 70,000 of which were sold during the
first fifteen minutes, tne stock gradually set
tled down to something like ordinary anima
tion. The most prominent feature of the
market outside of New England were Vander
bilis, all ct which displayed considerable
activity and strength, Lake Shore at one time
being 2 points above its final price of yesterday.
Northwestern wae included In this group, and
Burlington and Rock Island scored substantial
gains; while the coal stocks were suddenly lot
down at noon, Delaware and Hudson losing
nearly 3 per cent. The only other special fea
ture of the day was a rise iu Chicago Gas, but
THE MORNING NEWS: FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1892.
all these movements were spasmodic and of
short duration The general list opened with
a firm temper, and displayed during moat of
the day a firm to strong tone, without material
improvement, price? fluctuating within a nar
row limit throughout the day. The onlv weak
point was Sugar, which gave way over 1 per
cent, in the rooming, but rallied later in the
day Late dealing* saw a renewal of realiza
tions on a large scale, coupled with a vigorous
attack upon both New England and Richmond
and West Point stock to take advantage of sales
for long account. The r rices on stock went off
rapidly, and New England retired to 5114 and
Richmond a-id West Point preferred droDped
from 75 to 68, rallying to 70 at the close Tne
rest of the market sympathize! to some extent,
and the cloee was active and weak, generally at
the lowest prices. The only stocks to show a
material improvement was l ake Shore, with a
gain of ljgper cent., while Richmond and West
Point preferred is down 514. common .34. New
England 334. Delaware and Hudson 29*. New
Jersey Central and Sugar 16, and Reading 1
per cent. The sales of listed stocks were
575.000 shares: unlisted, 19.000 shares.
The following were the closing quotations of
the New York Stock Exchange:
Ala. class A, 2-5... 10-254 Norf. AW. pref . 4934
Ala. class B, 5s 104% Northern Pacific. 2354
N.Carolinacons6s.l24 do pref.. 6734
N.Carolinaconsls. 98 Pacific Mall 3634
So. Caro. (Brown Reading 6834
consols), 6s *97 Ricbm’d A W r . Ft.
Tennessee 6e 10534 Terminal 1354
do 6s 99 Rock Island 88%
do se. 35... 70 St. Paul 78%
Virginia 6s t3O do preferred .126-54
Va. oaoons 42 Texas Pacific..... 10%
Northwestern 11834 Tenn. Coal A Iron 443$
do preferred... 14334 Union Pacific..... 4634
Dela. A Lack 16334 N. J. Central 140
Erie 3254 Missouri Pacific.. 6194
East Tennessee... 7 Western Union... 8734
Lake Shore 12314 Cotton Oil Oertl . 38
L’villeA Nash 7:554 Brunswick Cos 1034
Memphis & Char.. 50 Mobile A Ohio 4? 6:534
Mobile and Ohio. 39 Silver Certificates 91
Nashville A Chat 87.34 Am. Sugar Kell.. 86)4
Texas Pacific. Ist. 82 do pref’d.. 94
N. Y. Central 117
♦Asked. +Bid.
cotton.
Liverpool, March 3. noon.—Cotton steady,
with but little doing: American middling 3%d;
sales 8,000 bales—American 7,200 bales; specu
lation and export 8,000 bales; receipts 13,000
bales—American 12,600.
Futures—American middling, low middling
clause. March and April delivery 845 64d,
also 3 4H-C4d; April and May delivery 3 4v-64d.
also 3 49 640; May and June delivery 3 50-64d.
also 3 5L64d, also 3 62-6ld; June and July de
livery 3 54-64d, also 3 55-64d; July and Au
gust delivery 3 57-61d, also 3 53-64d, also
35" Old; August and September delivery
S6!-64d, also 3 62-64d; September and October
delivery 4d. Market firm.
4:00 p. m.—Futures: American middling, low
middling clause. March delivery 345 61d,
buyers; March and April delivery 3 45-64d,
buyers; April and May delivery 3 47-64@4 4S-64d;
May and June delivery 3 50-64®3 51-64d; June
and July delivery 3 54 64d, sellers; July and
August delivery 3 57-64d. buyers; August and
September delivery 3 60-64d, buyers; Septem
ber delivery 3 63-64d. buyers: September and
October delivery 363 64d, buyers. Futures
closed quiet but steady.
The weekly cotton statistics are as follows:
Total sales for the week 54,000 bale? -Amer
ican 49,000 bales; speculators took 1,600 bales;
trade takings, including forwarded from ships’
side, 62,000 bales; actual export 11,000 bales;
total imports 95,000 bales—American 89,000;
total stock 1,709,000 bales—American 1,466,000
bales; total anoat 202,0“' bales—American 190,000
bales; exporters took 12,200 bales *
New York, March 3. noon Futures market
opened steady, with sales as follows: March de
livery c, April delivery 6 86c, May delivery
6 92c, June delivery 7 02c, July delivery 7 13c,
August delivery 7 24c.
New York. .March 3, 6:00 p. m.—Cotton closed
quiet; middling uplands 7 115 c, middling Or
leans 7 7-16 c; net receipts 1,135 bales, gross re
ceipts 7,555 bales; sales to-day 144 bales.
Futures—Market closed quiet, with sales of
47.100 hales, as follows: March delivery
6 72@6 75c, April delivery 6 82® 6 83c, May
delivery 6 92®8 93c, June delivery 7 03®
7 04c, July delivery 7 13®7 14c, August delivery
7 2S®7 240, September delivery 7 83®? 84c,
October delivery 7 43®7 44c, November delivery
7 53®7 54c, December delivery 7 63®7 61c
New York, March 3.—Hubbard, Price* Cos.
siy of the cotton market: “The Liverpool
market by noon to-day bad advanced 2-64d
above last evening’s prices. Iu our inark*t the
improvement abroad ha 1 but little effect, being
offset by the continued execution of large
selling orders for Liverpool account, such or
ders being cabled over in connection with the
arbitrage operations between Liverpool and
New York. The apathy of the New York
market reacted upon Liverpool, and the early
advance there was lost, the dose being quiet
and steady at la t night's figures. The Liver
pool orders above referred to seem to have
been about the only transactions of importance
entered into in New York to day, and trading
during the balance of the session up to 1
o'clock has been very small, and the market
exceedingly dull, fluctuating within a narrow
range of not more than 2®3 points. During
the afternoon the market was dull, and closed
steady at about last night's figures. ’’
Galveston, March 3.—Co'ton dosed steady;
middling 6%c; net receipts 2,338 bales, gross
2,338 bales; sales 127 bales; stock 65,445 bales;
exports, coastwise 3,421.
Norfolk, March 3.— Cotton closed steady;
middling 68®; net receipts 1,392 bales, gross
1,392; sales 567 bales; 5t0ck46,091 bales;exports,
coastwise 1,236.
Baltimore, Maroh 3.— Cotton closed nominal ;
middling 7c; net receipts bales, gross
Boston, March 3.— Cotton closed quiet;
middling 7 l-16c; net receipts 395 bales, gross
1,817; sales none; stock bales.
Wilminotom, March 3.—Cotton closed steady;
middling* 614 c; net receipts 87 bales, gross 87;
sales none; stook 11,434 bales.
Philadelphia, March 3.—Cotton dosed quiet;
middling 7%c; net receipts 99 bales, gross
99; sales bales: stock 14,799.
New Orleans, March 3.—Cotton closed easy
and irregular; middling 6%c; net receipts 3,32
bales, gross 4,592; sales 8,600 bales; stock
432,782 bales; exports, to the continent
bales, poastwise 7,204 bales.
Futures—Tne market closed steady, with
sales of 21,500 bales, as follows: Maroh
delivery 6 37c, April delivery 6 40c, May de
livery 6 51c, June delivery 6 61c, July delivery
6 71c, August delivery 0 80c, September delivery
6 90c, October delivery 7 00c, November delivery
7 lOc.
The actual average weight of the 7,095.056
bales of the cotton crop, embracing the port
receipts and overland shipments for the six
mo iths ending Feb. 29, is 601 9-100 pounds per
bale, against 504 55-100 pounds per bail- la?: year.
Detailed averages by sections are as follows:
Texas 521 22-100 pounds, a decrease from last
year of 9 76-100 pounds; Louisiana. 50 1 21-100
pounds, a decrease of 2 23-100 pounds: Ala
bama, 498 pounds, a decrease of 10 pounds;
Georgia, 484 6-100, a decrease of 10 66-100
pounds; South Carolina, 489, a decrease of
4 81-100 pounds; North Carolina, 495 1-100, a
decrease of 2 82-100 pounds; Virginia,
493 55-100 pounds, an increase of 8 11-100
pounds; Tennessee, including Memphis, St.
Louis and overland, 508 20-100 pounds, a de
crease of 2 93-100 pounds. Net decrease for the
whole compared with the close of January
this year was 1 pound per bale and compared
with the close of February last year was 3 46-100
pounds per bale.
Mobile, March 3.— Cotton closed steady;
middling 6%c; net receipts 940 bales, gross 940;
sales 1,000 bales; stock 84,528 bales; exports,
coastwise 1,362 bales.
Memphis, March B, —Cotton closed steady;
middling 6%c; receipts 1,046 bales; ship
ments 2,100 bales; sales 2,427 bales; stock
139,559 bales.
Augusta, March 3.— Cotton closed steady;
middling 68®; receipts 157 bales; shipments
111 bales; sales 405 bales; stock 20,809 bales.
Charleston, March 3.— Cotton closed quiat;
middling 69®; net receipts 702 bales, gross
702: sales 50 bales: stock 50,716 bales; exporta,
coastwise 301.
Atlanta, March Cotton closed steady;
middling 099 c; receipts 151 bales.
New York, March B.— Consolidated net re
ceipts at all cotton ports for the day were 13,685
bales; exports, to Great Britain 873 bales, to
France bales, to the continent bales;
stock 1,168,513 bales.
ORA IN AND PROVISIONS.
New York, March 8, noon—Flour quiet and
steady. Wheat active and strong. Coro quiet
and firm. Fork quiet and firm at $975®10 50.
Lard was quiet and firm at $6 SO, Freights
strong.
New York. March 3, 5:00 p. m. — Flour,
southern. 3teady and active; common to fair
extra. $8 20® 3 85; good to choice, extra,
$3 65®5 10; superfine, $4 75®4 SO; buckwheat
flour $2 25®2 35. Wheat was unsettled,
closing higher; No. 2 red, $1 04%®1 06
in store and elevator; $1 07®l 07%
afloat: options closed weak at under
yesterday; No. 2 red, March delivery Jl 03fl$;
May delivery $1 02; July delivery W,%c.
Com opened strong and closed weak, with fair
trades; No. 2 cash, 49t*®49j4iC in elevator; 50P4,
®sop4c afloat; ungraded mixed, 48®52j9c;
No. 2 white, 53c; steamer mixed 4S®4)4c;
options steady, )4;®99C under yesterday; March
delivery 49)4c; May delivery 493®; July de
livery 49Vrc. Oats active and steady; option*
were dull and steady; March deliv
ery 36$£c; May delivery 37c; No. 2 white,
—o: No. 2 spot, 644®37Hc; mixed western
*7 @3B)ic. Hops are fairly active and
firm; .State, common to cboice, 15®22c.;
Pacific coast. 15®22c. Coffee—option* closed
firm and unchanged to 10 up; March
delivery 13 o@lß 65; May delivery 12 85
®l3 10: July delivery 12 40®l 60; gpot
Kin dull and nominal; No. 7,13 c. -Sugar,
raw, quiet and steady; fair refining
3®3 l-loc; centrifugals, 96” test, B>*c; No.
6. S4c; No. a, SSc; refined firm, fair demand;
off A. 3Mi®3 16c; mould A. 44*c; standard A,
l ,(J|i,c; confectioners’ A, 4 116 c: cut loaf.
s®.'Ac; crushed. s®sVfec; powdered. 4-z®4c:
granulated, 4tg®4agc; cube* 4t4®4tjc. Mo
lasses—Foreigu nominal; 90* teat. Ills® 1214 c
in hhda; New Orleans steady and quiet; com
mon to faneV 28®S6c Petroleum quiet, steady;
crude in bbls , Parkers’, $5 80; crude in bulk
$3 30: refined New York $6 40; Phila
delphia and Baltimore $6 35®6 40; m
bulk, $3 85®3 90. Cotton seed oil steady and
quiet; new crude 2544 c: crude off grades
—c; new yellow 23®29V40 W'ool quiet and
steady; domestic fleece 30®36c; pulie.l 26®33c:
Texas If®24c. Provisions—Pork was quiet
and firm; new mess. #9 76®10 50; ex
tra prime $lO 00 Beef was strong;
family sll 00®12 00; extra men $9 00®
10 00. Beef hams strong at sl3 50. Tierced beef
steady, quiet; city extra India mesa, best. SIBOO.
Cut meats dull; pickled shoulders s®s)gc;
pickled bellies 64 c; haras 9c. Middles slow;
short clear. Maroh delivery $6 600. Lard
dull and lower; western steam $6 57;
city steam $6 SO®—: March delivery
$6 71; May delivery $6 78; refined autet;
continent $7 00®7 10; South America $7 50.
Peanuts were steady; fancy handpicked 4lj®
4V4c; farmers 26a®3V4c. Freights to Liver
pool quiet and easier; cotton, per steam.
5-Aid asked: grain, 3?jd.
Chicago, Maroh 3,— Wheat wabbled a little at
the opening, then became strong and marked a
substantial advance, but weaksneu again later,
closing easy at about the lowest figures of the
day and at a decline of Jjo compared with the
final figures yesterday. May opened lower
at 91c. sold at 9044 c, improved slowly to 9iM,c:
then on heavy short selling aud liberal realizing
on long wheat there was some yielding in prices
and May touched 9 Die. but there seeme l to be
no loss of confidence and buying again became
sharp, followed by a reaction, during which the
lost ground was recovered. Then during the
last hour the crowd, which bad loaded up on
strong cables, undertook to resize, but found
little demand About the same time some pri
vate advices quoted lower prices abroad, and
some of the leading houses turned sellers
aud weakness ruled. May went off
to 905® aud closed at 90)4c. The
break in pork was also a weakening factor.
Corn was quiet, steady and nearly featureless;
there was little business and fluctuations were
narrow. The firm tone in wheat had a tendency
to hold corn steady until it broke in the aft
ernoon, when corn weakened some in
sympathy. Fluctuations of tbe day were
confined to 44° range, and the close
was unchanged compared with 3 esterday.
Oats were dull and within %c range and
closed t® lower. Hog products opened
higher, especially for pork, due to smaller re
ceipts of live hogs and an advance of s®loo in
prices. Early sales were at sll 45, but there was
a rush to sell, packers being in the
lead, and the price steadily declined
to $!1 2214 in the forenoon During
the last hour the pressure was increased and
prices went off to sll 1214, but rallied near the
close to sll 20, a hiss of 20c compared with
yesterday. Lard and ribs sympathized with
pork but with less marked fluctuations. The
former shows a loss of 7)4" aud the latter of sc.
Chicago. March 3. —Cash quotations were as
follows: Floureaier. not qiiotably lower: spring
patents $4 40®4 75; winter patents 4 30®4 56;
bakers', $1 50®4 60; straight* $4 80
®4 90. Wheat No. 2 spring, 88c; No.
3 red. 92c. Corn—No. 2, 4lijc; No. 3.
89®3')J4c Oats—No. 2,29 c. Mess pork, per
barrel, sll 00. Lard, per 100 Dm. $6 37)4;
Short ribs sides, loose, $5 80®5 82j4.
Dry salted shoulders, boxed, $1 75®5 50
Short clear sides, boxed, $6 25. Whisky at
$1 11.
Leading futures closed as follows;
Opening. Highest. Closing.
Wheat, No. 2
Mch. delivery.. 88V4 -2944 88
May delivery.. 91 91% 90j4
Corn. No. 2
Mch. delivery.. 41W 41*£ 41%
June delivery . 41% 4154 41 %
Oats, No. 2
Mch. delivery .. 29 29 29
May delivery.. 30% 80% 80%
Mess Pork—
Mch. delivery . 11 25 11 25 11 10
May delivery.. 11 46 11 45 11 20
Lard, per 100
lbs—
Mch. delivery.. 6 45 645 6 87%
May delivery.. 6 55 655 6 47%
Short Ribs,
per 100 lbs—
Mch. delivery., 5 87% 6 87% 5 82%
May delivery 6 95 5 95 5 90
Baltimore. March 6.-Flour unchanged ;Howard
street and western superfine sßlo®3 40; extra
$3 50®4 00; extra family $4 35®4 75; city
mills, Rio brands, extra, $0 00®6 25; winter
wheat patent $4 85®5 16: (springpatent $5 00®
5 25; spring straight, $5 25® 5 35; bakers', $4 85
®6 10. Wheat strong; Jio g red, on s|>ot and
month $1 04%®1 04%: Southern wheatrlrm;
Fultz, 97c®$l 04; Longberry, $1 00®105. Corn-
Southern steady; white at 49®500; yellow at
4744®50c.
Cincinnati. March 3 FI urtnederatc demand;
family $3 60®.3 75; winter patent s—;$ —; fancy
$4 60@4 85. Wheat was capier; No. 2 red 95.
Corn was strong; No. 2 mixed 42c. Oats
were In good demand and stronger; No. 2
mixed 89%c. Pfovisiona—Pork barely steady;
new mess Jlf Y 5. Lard dull at $6 *d7 Bulk
meats weak and lower; short ribs $5 75.
Bacon was easier; short clear at $6 80.
Sugar stronger. Hogs quiet; common
aDd light. $2 75®8 75; packing and butch
ers, $3 70®4 00. Whisky steady at sll4.
St. Louis, March 3 —Flour was firm but
unchanged; family $3 15@3 20; choice $3 50
®3 60; fancy ?3 0®125; extra fancy $4 50; new
patents 84 45®4 55. Wheat—No. 2 red, cash,
93%0; options closed 440 below yesterday; March
delivery closed at —c: May delivery closed
at 92%®92%c; July delivery closed at 86%c.
Corn, cash, higher; No. 2 cash, mixed,
37%c; Maroh delivery closed at 37c; May de
livery closed at 38a Oats were firm;
No. 2 cash. S44e; May delivery closed atßl%c.
Bagging 6%®7%c. Iron cotton ties $1 20®1 25.
Provisions lower—Pork new standard mess
811 25®11 50; old, $9 25. Lard—prime steam,
$6‘.5®6 30. Dry salt meats-Boxed shoulders,
loose, at $4 55: longs 85 8$;, ribs, $5 85;
short clear $6 06 Bacon—Boxed shoulders
$5 50; longs $6 45®6 56; ribs $6 65®6 50; short
clear #5 45 <a 6 50. Ham*—Sugar-cured, at $9 00
®lO 00. Whisky steady at $1 14.
New Orleans, March 3. —Coffee ftrm- Rfo,
ordinary to fair, 15®1744e. Sugar very strong;
open kettle, strictly prime and prime, 2%;
fully fair. 2 13-16®3c; fair to good fair, *>4®
2%c; fair. 2Jf,o; prime 2 15 lC®fo; fair to
prime 215-16®3c; inferior 2%0; centrifugals,
choice to prime yellow, 344®S%ct white,
4c; off white, 3 13-16®3%c; choice yellow
clarified, 3%®8 11-l6c; prime yellow clarified,
344®3 9-16 c; off prime yellow clarified S%®
3%c; seconds, 2%®3%c. Molassessteailv—open
kettle, there were no sound, good offsriugs;
fermenting 15®22c; strictly prime, 19c
good fair to prime, 23®35c: centrifugals*
prime to good prime. 15®17c; prime 17c;-
good common to good fair, 23®2Sc; choice
to fancy, 32c; good prime, 15®17c: common,
6®9c; inferior, 544@6c; prime, 20®21o; fair to
good fair, 23®25c; good common 7®9e;
syrups 21®29c. Bacon, boxed shoulders, $6 25;
longs $7 25; ribs $7 25. Whisky quiet; western
rectified $1 04@1 08.
NAVAL STORES.
New York, March, 3, noon.— Spirits turpentine
dull and easy at 4144®420. Rosin quiet and
firm at $1 80®1 35.
New York, March 3, 5:00 p. m. Rosin
firm and quiet: strained, common to good
81 30® 1 35. Turpentine dull and weak at
4144®12c.
Charleston, March S.- Spirits turpentine
steady at 40c. Rosin firm; good strained at
$1 10.
Wilmington, March 3. Spirits turpentine
nothing doing. Rosin firm; strained at 81 15;
good strained $1 20, Tar steady at $1 80. Crude
turpentine steady; hard $1 (W: yellow dip $1 90;
virgin $1 90.
RICE.
New Yore, March 3.—Rice firm and In fair
demand; domestic, fair to extra 444®6%c;
Japan, new, 5%®5%c.
New Orleans, March 3.—Rice firm;
prime to good, 444®4%c; ordinary to good
<44@4%c.
The Fruit and Vegetable Market.
New York. March 3.—Tbe orange market was
steady; Indian rivor. s3<E@4 00; hrights. select
ed, $2 00®2 50; straight, $1 75®2 25; russets,
81 50®2 00; grape fruit, $2 00®3 (X; straw-
U>rrles, 50®75c. Beans, $3 00®5 00; tomatoes,
$1 50®2 50: cabbage, $1 30®2Q0; eggplant,
$lO (K‘®ls 00; lettuce, $2 OJ®4 00; cucumbers,
SSIX® 10 00; Charleston asparagus, $1 50®2 00,
per bunch. Palmer, Kivaiuicao & Cos.
Rice.
New Orleans, Feb. 27.—According to the
Planter the rough ric 1 market Is dull, the trust
endeavoring to put down prices and competi
tion and holders being unwilling to part with
their stocks at ruling prices. The clean rice
markot is quiet and some concaesions have to
be made to effect sales. Some toil milling has
been done, which has resulted in the appear
ance of clean rice on the market in opposition
to the offerings of the trust.
SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE.
Sunßises 6:44
Sun Sets ...6:20
Hioh Wateb at Savannah. 11:08 a. m. 11:48 r. m.
(Standard Time.)
Friday, March 4, 1892.
ARRIVED YESTERDAY.
Bark Belamloo fArgj, Arelos, Brunswick via
Sapelo for Wo Janeiro (waterlogged) to Geo
Hamas & Cos.
Steamer Bellevue, Garnett, Darien and
Brunswick—W T Gibson. Manager.
ARRIVED AT QUARANTINE YESTERDAY.
Bark Marco Polo INorl. Bernt Demerara. in
ballast to Chr G Dahl A Cos.
CLEARED YESTERDAY.
Steamship Chattahoochee. Daggett, New
York—C G Anderson
Bark Francisco Nadal ICr], Font, Palma de
Mallorca—Esteve A 00.
DEPARTED YESTERDAY.
Bteamer Ethel. Carroll. Cohen's Bluff and
way landings—W T Gib* m. Manager.
Steamer Alpha, Strcbhar, Beaufort and
Port Royal—C H Medlock. Agt.
SAILED YESTERDAY
Steamship Gate City. Boston.
Steamship Dessoug. Philadelphia.
Bark Nicollna [ltalj, Trieste.
Bark Svalen [Nor], Rotterdam.
Schr John G Schmidt Philadelphia.
MEMORANDA.
New York. March 3 Arrived out, Britannic,
New York for Liverpool
New York, March 3—Arrived, Lahn. Bremen;
arrived out, Devonia. New York for Glasgow;
Suevia, New York for Hamburg
Barry, March I—Sailed, Cimbrl for Charles
ton.
Bremen. March I—Arrived, steamship Bleville
[Fr], Blonde!, Savannah.
Granjon, Feb 29-Arrived, bark Hampton
Court [Gerl, Borgwoldt, Savannah.
London, March I—Arrived, bark Arica [Fr],
Lebe. Fernandina.
Los Palmas, Feb 26—Sailed, steamship J M
Lockwood [Br], Jenkins, Port Royal,
Cardenas. Feb 22—Sailed, sclir j B Martin [Br]
Card Savannah.
Havana, Feb 25—Arrived, schr Shenandoah
[Br], Gibson. Pensacola.
Boston, March I— Cleared, schr Dora Mat
thews, Rrown. Brunswick, Ga.
Brunswick. March I—Sailed, bark Arlington
[Br], Davis, Rio Janeiro.
Schrs—M A Nutter [Br], Burns, St Vincent;
Lizzie B Willey, Rivers, New York; Lester A
Lewis. Burgess, do; William Jones, Fuller, Bos
ton
Cleared—Bark Helda [Nor], Andersen, 8t
Petersburg.
Darien, Ga, Marcb I—Cleared, schr Cliarlos K
Buckley, Townsend, New York.
Fernandina. March 1 Sailed, steamship Cov
entry [Brj, Dornand, Stettin.
Brig—L F Munson, McKowan, Barbados.
Norfolk, March 1 -Sailed, steamship Bessa
rabia [Br], Martin, from Charleston for Rremen.
Newport News, March I—Arrived, steamship
Raleigh, Sears, Darien for New York, and pro
ceeded.
Sailed—Bark Levi S Andrews, Key West.
Nobska, Feb 27—Sailed, tug Right Arm for
Port Royal, BC, via Norfolk, to tow disabled
schr Viola Reppard to Boston.
Philadelphia. March 1— Cleared, schr Addle B
Bacon, Haley, Charleston.
Perth Am by. Match I—Sailed, bark Altamaha,
Hickman, Darien.
Wood* Hall, Feb 27—Sailed, tug Right Arm,
Davis, Port Royal via Norfolk.
Sagua. Feb 24—Arrived, brig Aoadla [Br],
Morrell, Apalachicola.
MARITIME MISCELLANY.
St Thomas, March I—Sohr Adelene [Br], Will
lams from Jacksonville for Demerara, has put
in here leaking.
Bermuda, Maroh I—Schr S C Tryon, Gaul,
from Brunswick Feb 19 for St Michaels has put
In here with loss of rudder
SPOKEN
Sehr Mary F Corson, from Jacksonville for
New York Feb 28. lat 33,10 lon 76,49.
NOTICE TO MARINERS.
Notice to mariners pilot charts and all nau
tloal information will b furnished masters of
vessels free of charge in United States Hy
ilrograDhic Office in the Custom Honse. Cap
lalnsare requested to oall at tiie office.
Lieut F H Sherkah,
In Charge Hydrographic Station.
RECEIPTS.
Per Central Railroad. .March 8—2,188 bales
cotton, 385 bales domestics, 24 caddies tobacco,
.10 noo lbs ore, !W bbls spirits turpentine, 269
bbls rosin, 2 cars lumber, 91 cords wood, 7,350
lbs railroad Iron. 219 pkgs mdse. 15 empty bbls,
6,880 lli furniture. 00 oords wood ill shape, 278
bbls cotton seed oil, 22 pkgs hardware, 171
tons pig Iron, 2 cars coal.
Per Charleston and Savannah Railroad. March
B—ls bbls tar, 1 case stationery, 1 bdl paper, 1
box confectionery. 1 trunk. 6 fans, 5 pcs i plats,
9 wheels, 8 axles and rig. 2 boxes. 2 couplings, 2
bolsters, 2 dbe trees, 2 boxes hacks, 48 bags p
nuts, 9 boxes tools, 1 bbl tel battery, 2 cars
guano, 1 car wood, 1 cow, 1 bbl crockery, 19
household goods, 1 1 irgan and 5t001,2 case cigars
10 1 boxes tobacco. 4 bales cotton.
Per Savannah, Florida and Western Railway,
March 3—15 cars lumber, 16 sacks rice, 11 sacks
potatoes, 11 pkgs meat, 7 bbls whisky, 1?.0 pkgs
furniture, 4 bales hides, 69 pkgs mdse, 2,774
boxes oranges, 747 bbls rosin, z3 bbls oranges,
72 boxes vegetables, 221 bbls spirits turpentine,
324 hales cotton, 150 bbls flour, 628 pcs bacon,
983 hales hay.
Per South Bound Railroad, March B—2
cars brick, 300 lbs furniture, 336 bbls rosin, 2
bales cotton.
EXPORTS
Per steamship Dessour. for PhlladelDhia—
-73 hales upland cotton, 69 bales paper stook, 223
hales domestics and yarns, 822 bbls rosin, 44,516
feet lumber. 106 bbls spirits turpentine, 116 bbls
ore, 6 bbls fish, 1,382 boxes oranges, 18 bbls
vegetables, 10 boxes vegetables, 100.(100 shingles,
10 bbls rosin oil, 182 bales straw, 92 sacks rice
chaff. 74 bbls oysters, 435 bids empty bottles,
100 pells cane reeds, 261 pkgs mdse.
Per steamship Gate City for Boston—l.olß
bales upland cotton, 510 bags sea Island cotton,
320 bales domestics and yarns, U 7 bills rosin, 57
bales hides. 600 sacks cotton seed meal, 38,000
feet lumber. 815 bbls spirits turpentine, 3,515
boxes oranges- 96 tons pig Iron, 213 bales paper
stock. 2 refrigerator brrries, 138 pkgs mdse.
Per bark Francisco Nadal [Ur], for Palma de
Mallorca—2s7,lßß feet p p lumber, 9.195 feet
poplar and oypre.-is lumber—Esteve A 00.
PASSENGERS.
Per steamship Gate City for Boston—John
Kent, Jr, F W Jordan, F Gould, Henry S Estis,
John G Carter, and 3 steerage.
CONSIGNEES.
Por steamship Wm Crane from Baltimore—
Steamer Alpha, J R Anderson. Antimigraine
Co,Steamer Bellevue, M Boley A Son, M Bons
A Bros, Est 8 W Branch, W G Cooper. B A W R
R, Clarke A D, Cohen A 00, M J Doyle, Rustin
Bros, A Doyle, City A Sub Py, Jas Douglas, D
lie.gnan, A Ehrlich A Bro, Eckman AV, J W
Estes, I Epstein A Bro, Frank A Cos, Jno H B'ox,
M Kerst’s Sons A Cos, 8 Uuokenheimer A Son, I
Fried A Cos, J E Grady A Son. M Y Heuderson,
F Gutman, Hatilsier A H, Haynes AE. Benry
Juchler. C Kolshorn A Bro, Lovell AL, C K
Ludaze, B H levy A ltro. Jno Lvone A Cos, Lee
A Bothwell. D B Lester Grocery Cos, Murphy A
Cos, Lippman Bros, Lee Roy Myers A Cos, J
Fineyer. N Lang. Morning News, McDonnell A
Cos, j McGrath A Cos. Mohlenbrook A D, J
O’Byrne, order notify Liuz.-r A o, order notify
Davant A H, order not.fy Fleming A E, order
notify D H Hall, order notify I 'uLedloetter or
il.ir notify Moore A J, order notify Moore A Cos,
G W Parish, Peacock. H A Cos, Berrien Bros, J
R Pell, Palmor Hardware Cos, Phosphate Mfg
Cos, Bositi Fert Cos, W F Reid, Russel A W, Riv
ers A S, Southern Ex Cos, Bavannah Grocery Cos.
Savannah Steam Bakery. Savannah Burn Cos,
Savannah O A W Cos, Solomons A Cos, Shaffer's
Pharmacy, H Solomon A Son, Smith Bros, O K
Sauls, C E Stull* A Cos, Southern Drug A Chera
Cos. J S Silva, Tidewater Oil Cos, Leidtnan Bros,
T West A Cos, J D Weed A Cos, Wilson A Cler,
W B Short, D N Thomson A Cos, Watson A Cos.
Est A J Miller.
Per Savanuan. Florida and Western Railway,
March 3 -Lemon A M, H M Comer A 00, Dwelle
CA D, Dale, D A Cos, W W Gordon A Cos, Rep
£ard A Cos, McDonnougb A Cos, Pemberton A G,
ckman AV, H Traub. A H Champion’s Son,
Lovell A L. Tidewater Oil Cos. Ludden A B, A C
Wilkinson. M Ferst’s Sons A Cos, 8W Branch es
tate, Ida Wood, A R Altmayer A Cos, P Schafer.
Solomons A Cos. W D Dixon. J H Fox, J H
lemkeraan. A J Miller A Cos, E A Schwarz, D T
Elliot, R D McDonald, Smith Bros, Haynes A E,
G Eckstein A Cos. Standard Oil 00, K Kirkland,
Lovell AL, Savannah Brewing Cos. D B Lester
Grocery Cos, J E Grady A Son, W D Himklna, G
W Kosslgnol, J S Collins A Cos, Chaa Coleman A
Cos, Appel AS. H Solomon A Son. L Putzel,
I,ee Roy Myers A Cos, M Y Henderson, Butler A
S. Melnhsrd Bros A Cos, Savannah CA W Cos,
A Ehriiob A Bro, MSADAByck, MY ADI
Mclntyre.
Per Central Railroad. March B—^Woods, G A Cos
Baldwin A Cos, Jno Flannery A Cos, W W Gor
don A Cos. < Dwelle, CAD, Montague A Cos,
Maclean A Cos, Warren A A, Butler AS. M Y A
D 1 Mclntyre, S A Tlson, H M Comer A Cos,
John Wood, E Lovell’s Sons, McMillan Bros, T
Klslnger M Ferst’s Sons A Cc, Lippman Bros,
Solomons A Cos, Barbour A Cos, J D Weed A Cos,
Palmer Hardware Cos, Appel AS, Ludden A B,
Frank A Cos, A K Altmayer A Cos, Eckman AV,
Savannah Grocery Cos, Lee Roy Myers A Cos, T
W Canoway A Cos, Savannah Brewing 00, Ellis,
Y A Cos, 8 Guckenbeimer A Son.
Per Charleston and Savannah Railway, March
3—Henry Jackson, Memeal Office U 8 MH,
Smith Bros, Solomons A Cos, F W Storer, WP
Green A 00, Peacock, H A 00, J D Weed A Cos.
Lee Roy Myers A Cos. Ellis, Y A Cos, C R Walker
Savannah Grocery Cos. Wilcox, G A 00. Mrs W
O Whetstone, Ludden A B, GM D Riley, B 0
Kireh, Commercial Guano Cos. T P Wlckenberg.
Per South Bound Railroad. Maroh B—W T
Chaplin, W A Moore, E A Schwarz, Mrs PC
Williams.
Many Persons are bro**
down from overwork or household cares.
Jirown’s Iron Bitters Rebuilds the
system, aids digestion, removes excess of Ulu,
and cure* materia. Get the genuine.
FURNITURE, FTC.
Oir PriMipal Ain SSS
* vlnced, too, that we never mis*
A the mark. Here are a few shot!
K that hit the bull’s eye.
- ft 1 Aslong as they laet we will offer
Entire Line of Goods
GREATLY REDUCED PRICES
NEW MATTING
>—-■*. Arriving on every steamer.
rsH@S = FURNITURE
||y -—ln all grades and varieties.
* *■“ ... d*: I. BOLEY & SOI.
186, 188 and 190 Broogbton Street
WHISKY.
SOLOMON’S ANSWER
To tbe many inquiries of numerous friend* and patron* out of the
city. We are in full blast again with everything fresh and new.
We are receiving large quantities of GEORGIA BELLE and
MOTHER BHIPTON FLOURS. One hundred varieties of the
celebrated zE CRACKERS, those are the best that are made; w*
are receiving other makes wbioh we sell at very low nrioe*. W*
have alio CANDIES In all styles and qualities.
Coffees, Teas, Cigars and Soaps,
also
Old-Fashioned Rye and Knickerbocker Rye Whiskies in CaMSi
W e have from the reserved stock* of the best distillers of whom
we have drawn supplies of liquor* for many yean. WHISKIES,
GINS, RUMS and BRANDIES in bulk; of these we have a very
large and complete aaaortment at lowest prioes.
SEND YOUR ORDERS ALONG, OUR GOODS ARE Ale
WAYS RELIABLE AND AT BOTTOM FIGURES.
HENRY SOLOMON & SON,
102, 106, 170, 188, 190, 192 Bay St., Savannah, Ga.
HOTELS.
6TC ‘ C J. ONE OF THE MOST ELEOANTLY^Ap!
. I [Y/I . I J/I.NAiA.. POINTED HOTELS IN THE WORLD. ACJ
OOMMODATIONS FOR <SOO GUESTS.
V , > \ Special rates for families and parties remain*
**' •* M r\T\ C\J\ .Tourist* will lE!d Savannah on* of the me*s
, C w WWW ■ l *U \wa *\ VAfca interesting and beautiful cities la the entire
** _ r-, 'e j" 'v# South. No place more healthy or desirable a* a
yiM/bH &. winter resort. Send for
DESCRIPTIVE ILLUSTRATED BOOKLET.
"PUL ASIv L H OTr 8E, q
SAVANNAH, C+A„
j j aS( o, Sangster,} PROPRIETOR,
(FORMERLY OF THE BROWN HOUBE, MACON, GA.)
This Hotel has been renovated and put In first-claw order In every particular. All the latest
convenience* and modern improvement*. Special accommodations for tourists.
STEAM PRINTING. LITHOGRAPHY, BOOK BINDING, ETC.
THE LARGEST LITHOGRAPHIC ESTABLISHMENT IN THE SOUTH
the
Morning News Steam Printing House
SAVANNAH. GPEORGHA.
—— -J HR
THIS WELL KNOWN ESTABLISHMENT HAS A
Lithographingand Engraving Department
which is complete within ltseir, and the larges® concern oi
the Kind In the South. It Is thoroughly equipped, having
five presses, and all the latest mechanical appliances In
the art, the best of artists and tbe most skillful lithog
raphers, all under the management of an experienced
superintendent.
It also has the advantage of being a part of a well
equipped printing and binding house, provided with every
thing necessary to handle orders promptly, carefully .n<i
economically.
Corporations, manufacturers, banks and bankers, mer
chants and other business men who are about placing
orders, are solicited to give this house an opportunity to
figure on their work, when orders are of sufficient mag
nitude to warrant it, a special agent will be sent to
S-T-E-A.-M.
Stan Piiiiij E#h of Mwfftirs
larsend your orders whore they cen be filled expedltioiulr endecononeioelly by tem. -M*
MORN'SQ NKtfra BUIfcOtWO. BA.TAMMA.aaA
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoriao
6TEAM PRINTING PRESSES.
£TE*M LITHOGRAPHING PKHaS&I
STEAM RULING MACHINES,
STEAM SCORING MACHINES
OTEA H BACK FORMING MACHINES
STEAM STAMPING PRESSES,
STEAM NUMBERING MACHINES.
STEAM CUTTING MACHINES,
STEAM SEWING MACHINES,
STEAM BOOK SAWING MACHINES,
STEAM STEREOTYPING MACHINES,
•TEAM PAPER DAMPING MACHINE*
AT THE—
7