Newspaper Page Text
12
THE COMMERCIAL
WORLD
SI.MMART OF THE KABXETB,
Silver lower.
" Coffee weak and dull.
Wheat strong and in demand.
Barley easy and quiet.
Oats and Corn dull. Bye weak.
Hay continues soft.
Beans unchanged. I
Thirteen Failures last week.
Coal in fair supply.
Slejt. unchanged.
Provisions active and firm.
Hides in demand and stiff.
No Change in Tallow.
Hops still neglect -d.
Dried Fruit unchanged. .
Cbes nut. neglected and lower."
Young Poultry still higher.
Butter going East again.
. Cheese and Eggs easy.
Potatoes easy. Onions firm.
: Vegetables weak.
•WEATHER BUREAU REPORT.
United States Pkpaktj-EXT op Aoßicrr,.
TUBE. Weather BfRKAf. Sax Fra.«cis-0,
April 19. 5 Synopsis and general forecast:
An extensive area bl high pressure is now situ
ated off the Washington coast, from which section
the pressure diminishes In all directions. This in
sures a continuation of the present fair weather
conditions for a considerable period. A light
shower of rain occurred last night, which ceased
this morning, and showers still continue along
Puget Sound, but these will end shortly: warm,
fair weather, with northerly winds, is expected in
California.
The following are seasonal rainfalls to date as
Com_ared with the same date last season : Eureka
'39.99, last year 50.38: Bed I'lur. 27.07. last year
19.15: Sacramento 22.98. last year 13.85: San
Francisco 23.98. last year 16.10: Fresno 12.69, last
year 6.17; Los Angeles 15.38, last year 6.40: San
Diego 11.39, last year 3.98; Yuma 2.97. last year
2.16 inches.
San Francisco data: Maximum temperature 60,
minimum .48, mean 54.
Forecast ide at San Francisco for the thirty
hours ending midnight. April 20, 1893:
For Northern California— Fair; nearly station
ary temperature, except slightly warmer at Eureka
and Sacramento: fresh northerly winds.
For Southern California— lair; nearly stationary
temperature.
. For Nevada. Utah and Arizona— Fair; nearly
stationary temperature.
.' For San Francisco and vicinity— Fair; some
what warmer during Saturday; nearly stationary
temperature; Saturday evening, fresh northerly
winds. W. li. __A_r_cox, Forecast Official.
>"EW YORK MARKETS.
NEW YORK, N. V., April 19.— The stock market j
was less active to-day than yesterday and the j
tone of speculation was not so strong, although
there were more advances than declines. There
were twenty-six of the stocks traded in which
stand unchanged on the day. The London market
for Americans was in good tone aed the foreign
buying In this market was in fair volume, both of i
which circumstances exercise! a favorable influ- !
ence in the dealings at the opening. - During the j
first quarter of an hour prices generally moved up '
a traction. Sugar was an exception and after
opening FVW higher broke sharply li on sales to
realize profits. The general -market fell off a frac
tion In sympathy with Sugar, but under a brisk de
mand for General Electric that stock advanced 1_
.percent and the rest of the lis* i.g'a'.l per cent, the
latter lowa Central preferred and Lead preferred.
The market became- weak shortly before 11
o'clock, and the trading lapsed into . irregularity,
some shares receding, including Manhattan 1 per
cent, Lackawanna % and New Jersey Central and
Lead preferred, while Canadian Pacific rose I\_,
Rio Grande Western preferred I percental Na
tional Linseed and Baltimore and Ohio 1 per cent.
This gain brought Baltimore and Ohio up tv 55,
which was the price current before the passing of the
dividend, and in the early afternoon the stock j
moved up 1 per cent further. In the late dealings i
there was a reaction of IVi percent, making the
improvement only 3 g per cent. Toward noon
there was a general strengthening of the specula
tion, and under the leadership of the grangers
values appreciated but only slightly.
In the last hour the market was depressed, the ;
active list reacting a fraction. Some of the special- i
ties recorded an advance In the final trading, but
the general market closed heavy in" tone, with a
downward tendency in prices. Compared with yes
terday's final sales the closing prices are irregular.
There was less activity to the bond trading to-day
than yesterday, but the trend of prices contin- ;
ued upward. The sales were 2,347,000. Govern
ment bonds firm." State bonds steady. Railroad
bonds strong. Petroleum easier; closed $2 20 bid.
Grain and Provisions.
Wheat— Firmer: May, 63 v ß c.
: Flour— Steady.
Hops— Steady.
. Wool— Steady.
Petroleum— Nominal; united closed $2 20 bid;
Washington barrels, $9. nominal; do in bulk,
nominal; refined New Tons, $10 75: Philadelphia
and Baltimore, $10 70; do. in bulk, $8 95.
Pigiron— Weak ; Scotch, f19fg,20; American,
$9 50012.
Lead— Quiet; brokers' price, $2 95; exchange
price, $3 07V2-
Copper— Steady; brokers' price, $9 50: exchange
price, $9 50. -
Tin— Barely steady; Straits, $12 80@13 85; plates
slow.
Spelter— Quiet; domestic. S3 20; sales on 'chance. '
25 tons May tin. $13 90; 2i> tons May 31. 913 80;
26 tons do. fl3 75; 10 tons September tin. $13 80.'
Coffee— Options closed irregular with March 10 i
points higher and other months 15®25 points
lower, ruled dull and weak under failure of Europe
to respond to yesterday's advances. Speculators
were cautious on account of a European clique.
.Closed barely steady at lOCdt'O points net advance.
.Sales, 12,750 bags, including:. April. $14 35(6}
40: May, 14 15<£14 20; June, $14 10; July,
■$14 35: September, $14 20; December, $14 15®
14 20. and March, $14.
' Spot Coffee— Rio. nominal, $16 50: mild, quiet;
.Cordova, IBi.4ra.i9c. Sales, 1000 bags Rio, No. 8,
to be shipped at 14i /S e; 1000 bags Muracaibo, pri
vate terms.
• Sugar— firm. Sales, 9500 bass Centrifugal
96 test, at 3c: 450 tons 97 test and 1300 bags Mus
covado 89 at 2 11-16 c. Kefined— Steady.
CHICAGO MARKETS.
CHICAGO, lix., April 19.-Wheat to-day went
'op like a rocket and down like the stick. Pardridse
being the Influence both ways. His covering of an
enormous short line of 4,000,000 to 5,000,000
bushels caused the advance, and when his line was
in prices dropped from lack of support, May closing
unchanged after iy 2 c bulge. May corn and oats
each closed i/ 8 c higher, and provisions made slight
.gains.
Wheat was again In good demand when the mar
ket opened, although some little May wheat was
sold at as low an 58c, July as low as 59c at and
around the opening. About two hour? after the
opening shorts were . eagerly bidding 59 Vie and
taking it at. 591 when sellers appeared reluctant.
The influences were largely of a local character,
but Liverpool. London, Paris and Berlin all sent
high quotations at the opening. The demand for
flour was reported from all directions to be good at
' daily Improving prices.
* Primary market receipts were light. The ex- |
ports from the Atlantic ports were much lighter
than on the day before, but the shipping demand
here for wheat to go East was early In the day re
ported to be excellent. ■■■ Among other matters was
the continuation of the dry weather. An advance
to 595/8 C took olaee before the May shorts were al
lowed a breathing spell, but at that price, which
was lV 2 e per bushel more than it was worth at the
close yesterday, there was a genera] taking of
profits, followed by a very quick reaction of lc per
bushel from the top, 5H. r ., c being the trading price
' for May about five minutes after 12. o'clock. The
extra demand for May wheat, as compared with
the desire for July, is seen In the fact that, while
May on the advance . rose from 58c to 59% C, July
In the same time only improved from 59c to 60 Vic.
.the spread thus narrowing to 5/ 8 c per bushel as
against the recent difference of about lc.
, The business in the pit was broad. Pardridge
covered a great deal of May wheat to-day through
'. bouses other than PardridgeA Leeming, his usual
brokers. With the relief afforded by the selling
out at aprofitof much long wheat, the pit quieted
down and ihe few buying orders which came in the
.afternoon were supplied by the scalpers. May
, settled down around 58 y*, and stayed there for a
: considerable time without life enough to move.
In the last twenty minutes of the session, it became
common rumor that Pardridge had covered be
tween four and five million bushels of -May arid
July wheat and was now practically ashore! He
certainly covered freely, but is not supposed in
'< well-informed circles to have bought one-naif of
his line. Tne market became very heavy toward
the end. May sank gradually to 58 and closed at
■ 58y bid.
The commercial market was firm, with a ten
dency early in the day to follow the fluctuationain
wheat, but later, when the friends of wheat had de
-1 sorted it, the corn market did not respond to the !
other's weakness and closed a shade higher for the '
' day, the latest trading in May being at 45%.
Oats met with a fairly good sale. May started at
281/8 and sold up to 38*4. There was rather scant
buying at that price and a drop followed. lhe de
cline went as far as 283/g, at which price the mar
ket closed.
July sold from 27 Vi !o 37*4, down to 273/ 8 «27V-»,
; and rested at '27 . ,%c higher.
The provision market opened weak on receipts
of 3000 more hogs than had been estimated and fie I
decline in their value.; Later the market became I
firm with wheat, and in lots quite strong, with the
early decline turned into an advance. At the end
'porlc closed with a net gain of 12% c. Lard ad
vanced 2V2 and ribs sc. :*=:.- v ".
Theleading futures ranged as follows: •
Wheat So. 2— f^.?- Highest, Lowest.
April sii3/ 8 c 577/gc
May:.. :..;... :...;.."..... .......' :.H9B/ S c 58c
July , 6OV4C .'!»■
September...' .......Glc - tiOc
Corn No. — . ' ■- ■:;?-"> '-■-■*'■'? '\, -'»-'
April..'. .' .....45V 8 c 45s/ 3 c
May..' 46i;»c 45.v 8 c
Ju1y.:........:...:....;....'...:... i 6.y 8 c 4CW:
September 47 Vic 46% c,
Mess Pork per bbi— ■ ' ■ ■ • :
Way ..:.......... .....sl2 35 $12 07y '
July .sl2 60 $12 SO -
■•. lird per 100 lbs—
JUay.;.... ...;....■ ;.....?6 90 ?6 85
... .-;. • . -._ ...... .-Sj-- -:*-;■.
m - ' - J
July ....$7 05 $7 00
September $7 20 $7 20
Short Ribs per 100 lbs— ■
M ., v $6 37y $6 20
July $6 45 $6 35
September $6 60 $6 50
Cash quotations were as follows; Flour— Strong.
No. 2 Spring Wheat, t)2Vs@64Vsc; No. 3 Spring
Wheat, nominal: No. 2 Red, 57y B @sßt4c: No. 2
Corn, 45W<i4.S"'sc; No. 2 Oats, 2S«Vsc: No. 2
White, 82y»#33c; No. 3 White, 32@32VgC;
No. 2 Rye. 60e: No. 2 Barley, 5:%53y..c;
No. 3. ."-j,,.- '.'■_•' .. : No. 4. nominal; No. 1 Flax Seed.'
$1 4»i.>- Prime Timothy Seed, $5 20; Mess Pork,
** bt)).,"sl2 27y»@12 40; Lard, >■ 100 Bis.. $6 87y 2
(5,6 90: Short ilibs, Sides (loose),". $6 ,25@6 27..;
ry Salted Shoulders (boxed), $5 37y ? 60;
Short Clear Sides (boxed), $« 65@6 60; Whisky,
distillers' finished goods, f gal., $1 21. *- - ■-
On the Produce Exchange to-day the Butter mar
ket was firm. Creameries. 1 0(*20 i,Ac; Dairies, S@
18c. Eggs, firm. liy4@liy 2 c. • ' ..- ;
V* • Livestock. ;•••. •
The cattle market wax no better to-day, arid
although only about 3000 head were' market e/1 :
here suies. tiacsed «i the decline. in 'prices recently j
effected.. Sellers called prices about 40@500 lower I
than tli.' highest, this season. The export trade
has fallen off seriously, :is 1 he British markets have
declined instead, of follow .this nirrket in its re
cent advances, and this has tended to weaken
prices .or choice beeves. '. Eastern shippers and
dressed Ueeves- were 'purchased sparingly. Com
mon to strictly, choke. native steers sold at %it§i
4 60, th? bulk selling .'it $5@6. with a few sales m'
extra tine cattle st $6 15@(5 25. Cows sold largely
at $2 ■.'■'.« i 2fi; calves ; were. plenty and 25(&50e
per 100 pound higher, sales ranging at $2 60(a5
per 100 pounds. Texas castlecame forward more
freely and sold chiefly at $3 50fa!4 «0, -'prices being
lower. About 12,000 hoss were carried over last
night, an I as the frosh receipts to-day were in the
neighborhood of 19,000 there.were 30,000 hogs in
the pens. •:• •■ .
Eastern shippers were again very good buyers of
choice droves, but 0 packers hung back and .
refused to buy except at further concessions. This
resulted in a decline of sc -per 100. pounds and
prices closed ■■.'(!,• lower than a week ago, light
weights:suffering the least. day's sales' were at
94 65@5 05 for heavy bogs, few going above $5.
Light logs sold .?4'70@4 90,. pigs at $4 25@4 50,
and culls at $3 25@4 40. The bulk of the sales to
shippers were at $4 90<5.,5, while city ■ packers'
purchases were principally at .$4 So@4 90. Light
weights were chiefly at $4 30@4 90. . ;
In sheep, buyers took liolil better to-day after
their lout: res; and prices were higher than on yes
terday, only about 4000 head -being received. 1 Ex
port sheep sold around $4 50, and sales were made
all the way down to •$-7.*) for common natives.
levins brineine $2 50@3 50: lambs sold at $3 75@
5 50, chiefly at *4 80 and upward.
Receipts: Cattle, 3000; calves, 200; 'hogs,
19,000; sheep, 4000. -•■ r;-:---:^
OMAHA LIVESTOCK MARKET. ■
OMAHA. April Cattle, receipts, 800; mar
ket lower, demoralized; steers, $4 60<a5 80:
bulk, $5(3.5 10; cows- and heifers, ; $1 25<a)4 80;
bulk, $3(|4; feeders, $2 50@4 30: bulk, $3 65.
HOLIDAY IN BOSTON.
BOSTON, April 19.— T0-day being a holiday, no
business was transacted on the stock market.
EASTERN COTTOS MARKET.
NEW YORK, N. V.. April 19.— Cotton, quiat;
middlings, 6 15-16 c; net receipts, 500; gross, 4000;
exports to Great Britain, 5500: to the Continent,
2900: forwarded, 1400; sales, 242; spinners, 142;
Stock, 208.957. .
; STOCKS IN LONDON.
NEW YORK, N. V.. April 19.— The Evening
Post's London Cablegram says: The market to
. day was irregular and Americans had the best of
, it. Opened strong and rushed ip on the Continent
chiefly on German buying. Canada Pacifies were
chiefly favored. St. Paul and Louisviile also were
; largely bought, against heavy options. Prices re
i acted this afternoon on sales of your side, but
closed firm again. The buying of Americans was
chiefly Continental, but for the last two days there
was good buying here in the interest Of. wealthy
operators, but not the usual representative Ameri
can houses. Mining stocks were less excited. It
I is anticipated that large credit Foncier loans at
i Paris on the 27th will diver; the attention m-
I porarily of the French operators from mines.
French exchange has already fallen, Indicating the
usual preparation for huge applications for the
' loan.
I south Americans still dull. The call of 2.000,000
| to-day on the American loan has not affected the
money market.
DUN'S REVIEW OF TRADE.
NEW YORK, N. V., April 19.— R. G. Dun * Co.'s
weekly review of trade, which issues to-morrow,
will say: In every speculative department the
business is growing, but this is really the least sat
isfactory feature of the situation. Cotton, oil and
wheat climb above the export price, so that the
marketing of products abroad must be checked,
and money is absorbed which ought to be emptied
in productive industry and in distribution of prod
ucts to consumers. Everybody knows that oil has
not risen 2t'O per cent because It is Intrinsically
more valuable, nor is wheat actually worth more
than it was two or three weeks ago, but the expan
sive and uplifting force has unfortunately taken to
speculation rattier than to production, and so we
have higher prices In all speculative markets with
out a large demand for consumption. Stories of
combinations between the Standard Oil Company
an! Russia as to partition for the consuming terri
tory by no means account for the recent prices of
petroleum, which appear to be entirely fictitious.
There is no evidence that Cotton Is in larger de
-1 | maul than it was when the price was 1 cent lower,
i but the prices have been so low for months that an
upward movement was easy without much reason,
though stocks here and abroad are 300,000 bales
larger than they were at the .same date after the
greatest crop ever produced heretofore, and spin
ners here and abroad have taken about 1.600,000
bales more than they have consumed. The rise
tends to prevent the decrease of acreage, which Is
one reasonable excuse. Wheat has advanced over
3 cents during the past week, and the Western re
ceipts are small, only 1,002,846 bushels, • against
1,766,829 last year, but Atlantic exports for three
weeks of April have been only 5.666,481 bushel*,
flour included, against 5,6b0,366 last year, and
there is no indication that the foreign demand will
Increase, while the prospects 'for this year's crop
are considered excellent. Western receipts are not
targe, and it would be strange If they were, with re
ceipts 80 low, but advancing. Exports continue to
indicate that the Eurppean demand, will not be
particularly heavy this *feaspn.
Outside Of speculative markets the most Impor
tant feature is the rise in the price of beef, which
Is largely due to the control of sources of supply
by a few strong corporations. .- There ought to be,
but apparently Is not, sufficient power in the hands
Of the Government to meet any such conspiracy
against the public, and the proposal of Secretary
Morton to admit Mexican cattle and cattle from
Canada on easy terms for the benefit of consumers
is heartily commended, though it is not likely to
have much Influence. The actual decrease In re
: ceipts of cattle at- the four chief Western markets
has en 200,000 head during the first quarter of
185*6, and the quantity killed has been only 80,000
head l.*.s than last year, about 10 per cent, but
. facts have little to do with prices in this case, as
in the case of oil. - .
In iron and steel the situation Is rather disap
pointing, although the output continues large, as
■ the demand for finished products does not seem to
Increase. Structural forms are In large demand,
, but sales of wire are about 30 per cent less than
■ last year and in other branches there Is no per
. ceptible gain.
It Is still an open question whether the consump
tion will support the manufacture a: the present
rate, which Is at least an eighth below the present
maximum.. The cotton-mills are encouraged by
improving prices and are fairly busy. Sales of
. wool at the chief Eastern markets have been 18,
--, 334,000 pounds for three weeks of April, against
14,602,800 last year, which Indicates that the pro
duction of goods is at. present larger than it has
been at any other time for nearly two years, and
while foreign competition is seriously felt in some
branches the manufacturers are making a vigorous
effort to retain the home market, even in lines they
at one time expected to abandon.
■ Failures during the week have been 241 In the
United States, against 219 last year; 34 in Canada,
against 45 last year.
" IJRADSTREET'S REVIEW.
NEW YORK, N. V., April 19.-Bra<lstreet's to
morrow will say: j The volume of general trade has
maintained the previous week's proportions, and at
some points shows noteworthy increase as com
pared with the total a year ago.
The reaction in petroleum prices appears to have
been overcome, and the tendency Is again upward,
based on a drop in stocks from about 11,000,000
barrels of Pennsylvania oil in January, 1892, to
less than 3,000,000 barrels of merchantable oil.
So marked and rapid has been the appreciation in
; price of patroleum that speculation in It has been
excited.
■Further advances In quotations are noted also for
i wheat on improved demand for export; cotton on a
! wide consumption, present and prospective; print
cloths and other cotton goods, because of higher
raw cotton; Bessemer pigiron, 011 the increase of
cost of ore, coke and labor, and shoes and leather
on the further stiffening of values of hides. .The
upward turn of prices for dressed beef and live rat
tle has been maintained. Coffee is lower, as arelard
and oatn, but Indian corn and pork remain steady
at last losing quotations. Wool is barely steady as
consumers are waiting the new crop before baying.
ports of wheat from both coast* of the United
States this week, flour Included as wheat, show a
I third weekly gain in succession, with the total
amounting to 3,166,000 bushels, against 2,934,000
bushels last week. 3,019,000 bushels In the third
. week of April.' 1894. 4.963.000 in the like week of
1893, 3,107,000 in 1892, and as contrasted with
2,222,000 bushels in the corresponding week four
years ago. ' •.
jlTlic weather is warm in Ontario and Quebec.Jbut
the roads are bad and connections and trade are
slow.
FOREIGN MARKETS.
; WFIKAT IN MVERI'.K'I,.
; LIVERPOOL, Km;., April 19.-The spot market
1 is higher at 4s lld@ss. Cargoes lire higher at
, - 24s 6d, May- June shipment. , .
11TTI."BK8. ' '- '• '• ■
■ he Produce Exchange cable gives the following
Liverpool-quotations for No. 2 lied Winter:
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, APRIL 20, 1895.
April. 4s 11i.4d; May, 4s Uy 2 d; June, 4s liy d;
July, -is ll%d; August; ss.
• *•■ - - • , SECURITIES. *V; ■:;•■-; .'.."•■..'.•
LONDON, Esq., April 19.— Consols, 105 : sil
ver. 303 : French Rentes, 102f 85c. : Bullion Into
'Bank M England, £26,000.
BANK CLEARINGS;
; NEW YORK, N. V., April 19.— The following
table, complied by. Bradstreet's, shows the total
clearances at the principal cities and the percentage
of Increase or decrease, as compared with the cor
responding week last year. T-.-D3.V '■?■■
,-;.'.Wi -.-..« :.s . Percentage
Cities. Amount. Inc. Dec.
New York $505,227,671 1.6 '
Chicago 07,778,143 10.1
Bostou 83,871,118 82.1
Philadelphia 63.683,199 2.0
St. Louis ........... 24,144.707 8.9
San Francisco....." 13,524,780 • ........ 8.1
8a1tim0re......... 1 ...... 12, 620,444 10.7 ....;.-
Plttsburg. ... .'.-.: :..;.:. 1 4.824:029 •'..... . 3.9
Cincinnati..... • 12.708,550 -. ......,,-■ 1.0
Kansas City.......-:.... 10,020,074 .. 2.7 ...:..*.
New Orleans..'.: 9.152,372 .15.8 ..:..:
Buffalo .- :. '3,6«8,849 ...... 1.6
Milwaukee........ 3,994,21)0 '„ • 8.0
Detroit....:.. ...; 5,065,121 18.9
Louisville 5,558.738. ...... 7.0,
Minneapolis...:;....'... - 4.«J88,:»-M) .-. -4.0-..:...
Omaha... 3,369.180 ...:;. 37.0
Providence:...-.'.:....... '5,308,700 23.2
Cleveland... '5,985,437 38.5.
Houston :..;....... 4, 562. 1-52 25.0 ......
St. Paul .... " 3,!)15.70H 27.3 ;
Denver '.. 81 1,780 15.0
Indianapolis 4,507,709 7.8
Columbus.... 3.538.900 1.1
Hartford.. 1,976,013 2.0
Rich maud :... 2,167,418 69
Washington-.' -1.832.181 8.9 ....:.
Dallas.. ...; 2,138,912 8.1
St. Joseph... 1,242,882 ....... 9.8
Peorial.-. ....:. ' 1,934,470 • 27.0
Memphis.-. ::... 1,607,315 .......
Portland, Or 1.045,509 ....... ,14:5
Rochester...-......:..... -1,347,632 ...... " 1.1
New Haven 1,331,248 ...... 4.2
Savannah..... 1,988,187 16.0 ......
Springfield, Mass ... * '1,482,439 b 4.0 .:...'.
Worcester 1.336.112 -9.0.......
Portland, Me.:...:.:.... 1,316.993 36.4 ..;...
Atlanta..... ........ 1,137,641 2.3 :.....
Fort Worth 1,526,415. 28.9
•Waco 2,185,063 111.0
Syracuse... ;..... 976,017 19.9 ......
I .Monies 1,211,161 14.4
Grand Rapids ," 823,171 10.6' ;.:.;'.•
Seattle..-..: ■ 1,402.782 27.8
Lowell 626,675 21.8 ......
Wilmington. Del 728,811 ...:.. 8.7
Norfolk :..:...... 941,722 ......15.0
Sioux City..:...'... 508,678 ...... • 28.5
Los Angeles .. 1,140,884 19.5 ......'.
Tacoraa.. 534.807- 6.1
Saginaw, Mich 336,652 39.5
Spokane.../ 860,184 47.0 ......
Jacksonville.... 335,300 •..:... . 7.7
Lfncoin 349,030 17.3
New Bedford 490,366' 50.8
Wichita... ,492.691- ..:....; 4.8
Birmingham 413.798 20.7 ......
Topeka 484,248 : 6.9
Lexington. Ky.... ■'..... 31H.950 ...... 5.3
Binghamton.l;.: 373.000 13.4
•Bay City. Mich.:.:.... 271,676 13.0
♦Fall River ■ 782,578 - 16.4
♦Akron. Ohio 222.541 14.0
♦Springfield. Onto: 191,860 11.7
♦Canton. 0hi0..... 212.306 32.3
•Sioux Falls ' 61.430 50.8
♦Fremont. Nebr .. . 56.867 31.
•Hastings. Neb* 64,::06 ' '21.0
♦Chattanooga 235.000 5.8 ......
♦Fargo 134.645 2.7
•Nashville 1,080,199 28.4
♦Ga1ve5t0n........ . 4,ylß,'_>o 8.4
Sail Lake 1.311.800 4.8
Rockford ..:....... 237,338 4.9
Helena... 451,783 3.8
Serantoo • 744.706 24.4
♦Kalamazoo - 255.521
Littleßock .... . 376.604
. Totals. U. 8 ...f 918.284. 551 1.8
Exclusive of New York 413,046,880
DOMINION (PI CANADA.
Montreal -.......;:..' $8,813,534 ...... 17.7
Toronto 4,214.834 13.7
Halifax 894, 9.0
Hamilton 579.643 6.4
Winnipeg 631,065 - 2.9
Totals :...... 133.370 15.9
* Not Included In totals because containing other
Stems than clearings.
NEW YORK STOCKS. .
Bonds, Exchange, >• onoy and Railroad
Shares.
Money on call easy at 1 1 2^2%; last loan \y»%;
closed lVi;%. Prime mercantile paper, 4(<|.s'/i>%.
Sterling exchange firm, with actual business In
bankers' bills at $ 4 Bfis g i 891/2 for demand and
£4 88S/s@4 *K>/2 for sixty (lavs. Posted rates,
$4 88V2@4 89V2 and S4 i»o(a4 9oy 2 . Commercial
bills, ?4 87 1 ,' 2 (a4 87* 4 . Silver certificates, 66<a,67c.
CLOSING STOCKS..
A tch150n.. ...... 6 Northern Pacific... 4%
Adams Express. 143 | Preferred 1 ?' ' *
Alton.Terre Haute; 38y 2 ''. P. Den. it Gulf.. 5S/ 8
Preferred - — Northwestern '9 S3 /4
American Express.ll2 Preferred HO
American Tobacco. 99V2'N- Y. Central:....; 99 Iti1 ti
Preferred 107% X. Y. 4 New Eng.. 39
Baltimore* Ohio.. 54' /■> Ontario «fc Western 17'
Bell Telephone - — Oregon Improvmt. 9Vi
Canada. Pacltlc 45 Oregon Navigation 18
Canada Southern.. 52% Oregon Short Line. •)'•>
Central Pacific l". Pacific Mall 23y 3
dies. &Ohio i* l l'eorin 1). A Evans. 4y 3
Chicago Alton... 147 Plttsburg 157'
Chicago, B. in. ... 73% Pullman Palace 1641/2
ChlcayoGas 7ls/ Heading 1 iy 8
Consolidated Oas. . . 1 34 1/2 Richmond Termini
C. C. C. & St. Louis 40 V3 Preferred —
Colo. Coal * Iron.. 16%'RloUrandedtWestn 16
Cotton Oil Cert '-'7 :! < Preferred 48
Del. Hudson '..1*46% Rock Island 88%
Del.Lack<&Weßternl69*4 St. L. A S. F. lstpf.
Denver <v f:. <;. pfo. 40U. St. Paul 90%
Distillers 15 t Preferred 117V4
East Tennessee St. Paul it Omaha. 34y 2
Erie 11 . Preferred 108
Preferred 24% Southern R. B 11*4
Fort Wayne 157 j Preferred 34
Great ortnern pfdlO3 si. P. M. <t M lt)iy>
Chicago <& E lll pra 9t>y 2 Southern Pacific... 16* 3
Hocking Valley.... 263/» Sugar Rehnery IOGV4
Illinois Central Trim. Coal & iron. 31V« .
st Paul Duluth.. 26 Texas Pacific 10% I
Kansas <£ Texas pf. 80>4!Tol. it O. Cen.pfd.. 77V 3
Lake Erie (feWestn 20%: Union Pacific 13'
Preferred 773,1' U. S. Express 41%
Lake Shore 14iy 2 Wab. S. 1.. i Pac.. 6U 2
Lead Trust: 34i 2 ! Preferred 15.V
Louisville Nash. 54% Wells- Fargo 105
I.i) ■il.KVilletfNe'. Al , W.sli-rii Union.... 88Va
Manhattan Consol.ll7S 4 .V 1..X... 126/»
Memphis & Chads. 10 i Preferred. ■. 4:u +
Michigan Central.. 100%lMinn.&Rt. Louis.. 28*4
Mexican Central... — Denver *. R10G.... 13y 2
Missouri Pacific 25W<.;eneral Electric... 333/ a
Mobile* Ohio. ....■ 18 National Unseed.. 241/4
Nashville Chatt. .. . 70 Colo. Fuel <& Iron.. 24y a
National Cordage.. 538 Preferred 65
Preferred.... ' 9y B H. & Texas Cent... liA
N. .1. Central 94% ToI.A.A..V:N.Mich_ 13 /4
Norfolk & West pf. 15ViTol.St.Louis&K.U.. 1
North American... 6%' Preferred 10
cxosino BONUS.
V s 4s, registered.. 119% Cen Pac lstsor '95.102
Do, 4s coupon 120%' Den <v H <; 7s 116
D 8 ss, registered.. 114% Do, 4s 833/
• 1)0, 5s coupon 116 Erie 2ds 64
Do, 4s registered. lll*/. 11 &3 A 6».... 95
Do, 45c0up0n....112i. ' Do, 7s 98
Do, 2s registered. 95 U * Tex Cent 65... 107
Pacific 6s 01 95.. 100 : Do, 99
Ala, ClassA 108 MX T first 45...... 84'/ 8
Do, Class B 106 | Do, second 15. ... 576/8
Do, Class C 95 Mutual Union 65.. .116
■ Do, Currencies... 95 ' N 3 Cent Gen 55:..112y<>
La, New Consols 4s 94 • Northern Pac lsts. 116
Missouri 6s ...100 Do, 2ds (KM i
N Carolina 6s 124 ■ Northwest Consols.
Do. 4s 100 Do, S Fdeb 55...ie9y
si Non-fund iy« R Grande West lsts 70
Term new set 6s. .. 84 St. Paul Consols 7s. 127 y 8 I
Do, 5s 100 I Do, C &PW 55 ; . 1121,4
Do, 3s !StL<felronMtGen 5s 75y 2
Term old 60 St. L. &S.F.Gen Cs.lOtJ
Va Centuries Southern H. H. 65.. 80
Do.deferred 6 Texas Pacific firsts. 90
A r chiton 4s 70 Texas Pac seconds. 26%
Do,2d A.......:.. 224* fnion Paclstof '97.104y 4
Canada South 2da.. 103 1/3 West Shore ..1053/»
;• PORTLAND AND SEATTLE.
PORTLAND, Ob., April 19.— Exchanges, 129,
--652: balances. 1,637.
Wheat— Va' ley, 80:<j)82c 1» ctl; Walla Walla,
46®46y 2 c ■$ bushel.
SEATTLE, Wash., April 19.— Clearings, $73,
--763; balances, $26, J 72.
EXCHANGE AND BULLION.
Sterling Exchange, 60 days — $ 4 88 14
Sterling Exchange, sight — , 4 89%
New York Exchange, sight — 05
New York Exchange, telegraphic. — 07%
Fine Silver, spot, '<$ 0unce...... — 60S/ 8
Fine silver, 30 days .........:.. — 66 V*
Mexican D011ar5. ..:...:.......... 5514 651/2
THE WEEK'S FAILUKKS.
. The Bradstreet Mercantile Agency reports 13
failures In the Pacific Coast States' and Territories
for the week ending yesterday as compared with
12 for the previous week and 11 for the correspond
ing week of 1894. The failures for the past week
are divided among the. trades as follows: 3 general
stores, '.! hotels. 2 contractors. 1 drugs, 1 photog
rapher, 1 saloon, 1 lumber, 1 bakery and 1 dried
fruits.
' . . ; ■ FOREIGN IMPORTS.
* The value .of ■ foreign Imports at San Francisco
for March was $3,866,102, against' $3,517,422 In
March. 1894. The imports during the first^quarter
of 1895 were 510,376,000, against $10,659,000 for
the same quarter in 1894. Of last quarter's im
ports we received $2,093,000 from Japan, $2,609,
--500 from the Hawaiian Islands. $1,280,000 from
China, $1,199,000 from Great Britain and $1,196,
--500 from Central America. ..:.
'.-.: : . r J:i? i i- — - — *■ . .
PBODUOE MARKET.
WHEAT AND OTHER GRAINS.
WHEAT-- Was stronger yesterday and futures
opened higher, though there was no advance In
actual Wheat. The demand, however; was good.
No. 1. 86087^0 ?. ctl; choice, 88% cl* Ctl; lower
grades. 75(<i33%c ¥ clI: extra choice for milling,
90@92y s c. - ■■-.■■. ' - ■ : ' '•' ' ■
»•' i . ' CALL' BOARD SALES. ' •
Informal Session*— lo o'clock— December—
500 tons, 98y c: 2300, 98i/ic: 1600, 98c; 600, ;
97V»c; 600,' 973ic May— soo, 89% C. . ' ;
l.tiai.AK aioxNiKO Skssion— December— 7oo
tons. 97 Vic; ; 3400, - 97V*c May— loo, 89y 8 c;
1200,89V4c. - - • . /
. Afternoon Session— May— loo tons, 89c; 100,
89y2C. December— loo, 973/gc. ■.■ ■ • , .
■ BARLEY— Quotations showed no change. Feed,
65@67y 3 c ■# ctl for ordinary and 683,4 c for choice
briglit: Brewing, BU@B7y 2 c f> ctl.
' ' •.■ .CAIX BOABD SALES.
- Informal Skssiox— lo o'clock — December—
700 lons, 70V.C, v .„.
Regular Mobkhto December— 600
tons, 70c; 200, 6»%c; 100, 693/4 c.
Aftkknoon Session— sales. ■
OATS— There is no change to report. Mill
ing. $1 O7i/?.(&1 171 a- fancy Feed, $1 02y ? @
1 07 i 2 ; goodto choice, 92y 3 c@sl; common to fair,
86@90c; Red, SI 15@1 20; Black. $l"12y 2 @l 25;
Gray. 95c@$l 02Vot Surprise, $1 07y 2 @l 17 x /3
"e 1 ctl.
CORN— lnactive at former prices. Large Yellow
quotable at $1 12Vo®l I' 1 -' Small round ellow,
$l'l2i/ 2 @l 17%: White, $1 05®l 15 Well.
»YE— Quoted weak at 82y 2 '«« r "' J ctl.
BUCKWHEAT— at 85@95c "$ ctl.
FLOUR AND MILLSTUFFS. .
FLOUR— cash prices are: Family extras,
$3 2r>(»3 35 $ bbl- Bakers' extras, $3 15@3 25;
superfine, $2 10@2 86 3 bbl. -.»__«,
• MILLSTUFFs— Rye Flour, 3y c ~f lb: Rye Meal,
3c; Graham Flour, 3c: oatmeal, 41/4 C; Oat Groats,
Be; Cracked Wheat, 3 l /><-: Buckwheat Flour, Be;
Pearl Barley, 4i4(g)43ic V "'•
- CORXMKaI, irrc'.-Table Meal, 3@3y 2 c; Feed
Corn, $25t0'25 50; Cracked Corn, $26@26 50 ~& ton;
.Hominy, 4Ty a @4^c^ >- .
HAY AND FEEDSTUFFS.
BRAN-sl3 50@14 50 ? ton.
MIDDLINGS-^-$17@19 $ ton.
FEhI>STUFF3 — Ground and rolled- Barley,
$15 50@16; Oilcake Meal at the mill, $25 ton;
Cottonseed Oilcake, 821 "P ton.
. : HAY— No further decline. Wheat, $B@l l ii* ton;
Wheat mid oat, . SB6UI: Barley, $7@B 60; Oat,
$B@lo 50; Alfalfa. ?6 60@8 . »0; Clover, $7@S;
Compressed, $ B©lo 60 ; Stock, $ 6®7 '?■ ton.
STRAW— SO@7Oe 'r» bale.
BEANS AND .SEEDS.
-'BEANS— Prices show no change. Bayos, $1 50®
1 80; Small Whites, $2 75@2 95; Pea, s2 75@2 95;
Large, Whites, $2 50@2 70; Pink, $1 50@l 76;
Reds, $1 60@V75:..Blackeye, $3 25@3 50: Red
Kidney, nominal; Limas, $4 Hora"4 65; Butters, $2
(a? 25 for small and $2 25®2 50 "£ ctl for large.
" SEEDS— Yellow Mustard is quotable at $ 1 75@2
f. ctl; Trieste, $1 50@l 75 <$ ctl; Native Brown,
$1 25fa.l 75; Flux. $2 23(0,2 50; Canary, 3@4o $ Ih;
Alfalfa, 7©73/, c; Rape, 13,4@2y 4 c; Htmp, 3®
3%c « lb. : . .. ,':
DRIED PEAS— Split Peas, sy c; Green Peas,
$1 60; Niles, $1 25@1 35; Blackeye, nominal.
POTATOES, ONIONS, VEGETABLES.
POTATOES— SaIinas Burbanks have about disap
peared for the season. .Receipts of new were 343
sacks,' Belling at 75c@l 25: Early Rose, 30@40c;
River Reds. 25@35c; Petalumaand Tomalea Bur
banks, 40@t;0c: River Hurbanks. 40@50c; Oregon
Burbunks, 40@85c r> ctl.
• ONlONS— Continue firm at 75@90c for good to
choice and 40@66c for cut; Nevadas, $I®l 26
,- ctl.
VEGETABLES— Peas and Beans are lower.
Rhubarb is In large supply. A few Mushrooms
are coming into the market and bring 16@20c r lb.
Hothouse Cucumbers. 50e@$l %> <loz. Arrivals were
950 bxs Asparagus, 536 bxs Rhubarb and 397 sks
Peas. Asparagus 50c@l 25 V* box for ordinary,
$1 5092 for No. 1 and 6@Bc %> tb for fancy;
Rhubarb. 25@40c > box for ordinary and 50@75c
C* box for choice: Green Peas, 2c for common
and 2 'a.3.- for sweet: String Beans. 6@loc « it;
Dried Okra, 15c $ lh; Dry Peppers, 12V 2 ®lse;
Cabbage, 75(<£85c « ctl; Feed Carrots, 30(g,40c;
Garlic, 10c $ Ib.
BUTTER, CHEESE AND EGGS.
BUTTER— Occasional shipments to the East are
being made, but not enough to relieve the market
of its large surplus, which keeps prices low.
CitiAMKUY- Fancy, 13@13y 2 c; seconds, 12®
12y c V tb.
Dairy— Eancy, 11@11.%C; good to choice, 9®
10c; mediu m grades, b@By 2 c *& Ib; store Butter,
7<a>"y a c 'r Hi.
CHEESE— No change to report. Fancy mild
new is quotable at 6Va@" c V lb; common to good,
4V 2 (&tsc; Young America, 7(0.9c; Eastern, VIW§
14Voc, ■ latter tigure for cream; Western, B<g(flc
■,-' ib. . .
EGGS-rContinue ill free supply and cheap. Any
Eggs that sell below the lowest quotation must be
pretty poor. Duck Eggs, 16c: store Eggs, 10%@
]]!...■; ranch Eggs, 12y 2 @l4c V do/.., the latter
figure obtainable only for strictly fancy.
POULTRY; AM) GAME.
POULTRY— Turkeys are steady. Young Roost
ers, Broilers and Fryers have again advanced, being
very scarce. Hens, Ducks and Geese unchanged.
We quote California stock: Live Turkeys, ll@l2c
>■ n> for Gobblers: ll@l3c ? lb for Hens; Geese,
'f! pair, $1 fK%175; Goslings, $'_»fdi2 60: Ducks.
; $4 50(ati 1* dozen for old and $7®9 ,- dozen for
! young; Hens, ,sl(as 60 ~? doz; Roosters, young,
$BrailO V dozen:" do. old, $4 50®5 %* dozen;
Fryers, $7 ')oiaß V 4 doz : Broilers, $b<g>7 for large
and SS@4 for small; Pigeons, -f2to2 26 for young
and *1 75@2 for old.
G A ME— Nominal.
DECIDUOUS AND CITRUS FRUITS.
ORCHARD FRUITS— No Cherries arrived yes
terday. Apples, $2 60S :> SI box for choice to fancy
and 75c@$2 for common to good. •'," '":'
BKKIUF.X— Receipts of Strawberries were 58
(lie sts, selling at !J10(il3 for Long worths and $7®
8 V chest tor Sbarpless.
CITRUS FRUITS— At auction 71/2 ears sold as
follows: Fancy Navels, $1 45@2 25; choice do,
$1 30@.5l 73: standard do, ?1 15@1 55; Fancy
Seedlings, 80c@f] 20: choice do, 65c@$l 10;
Malta Bloods, *1 85; Ruby Bloods, ?1 80; Tiwi
gerines, quarters, We; Mandarins, quarters, 50c;
Grape Fruit. $2 10: Lemons, 75o(ii$l 30.
The market is quiet and sufficiently supplied
I with all kinds. California Navels quoted at $1 75®
2 2.1 >' box: Seedlings, 75c@$l 25: Sicily Lemons,
' ifl '■? box: California Lemoos, $I@l 75 for com
mon and ?2f<i2 50 for good to choice; Mexican
Limes, $3 6O<§4 "r 1 bx; Bananas, $1 25@2 f) bunch;
Pineapples, nominal.
DRIED FRUITS, RAISINS, NUTS, ETC.
DRIED FRUlTS— Prunes, four sizes, 4 i4@43,4c;
larger sUes, s@si/2C ~$ lb: smaller Rises, 2V 2 @4c ='
1b; Apples, 4 • •.:'"; -V for quartered, 4V 2 (asc tor
sliced and :..i.")!.;c for evaporated; Bleached
Peaches, 4@6c: Apricots, ti(o.7c for fair to choice
and 7y 2 @Sc for tan -y Moorpark; Pears, 4®-l>/_»c
for evaporated halves, 3(a4c for quarters and 1 ! 2 io)
2c for inferior goods; Plums, 3V2©4y»c for pitted
and lJ^@2c lor unpitted: Figs, black, 3c for
pressed nnd 11-ia'J'- for impressed.
RAISINS AND DRIED GRAPES— Raisins—
4-crown, loose, 4c y lb; 3-crov.n, 1 •>!•; 2-crown,2c:
seedless Sultanas, 3c: seedless Muscatels, '2c "ft lb;
! 3 crown London layers, $1 35®1 45 %< box; clusters.
$2 2 8ra. 2 75: Dehesa clusters, 1f. 2 50; Imperial
clusters, fig 50; Dried Grapes—] *£&l%c « it..
NUTS— Chestnuts weak and dull at 3@sc: Wal
nuts, 7®9y»<: for paper-shell and softahell, and 6(a>
7c i^ It' for Hardshell: Almonds, 'Kq'Z Vic for hard
shell, and s@Cc T» It. 'for softsneu, and for
paper-shell; Peanuts, s(g.oc for Eastern and 4®
4y 2 c for California; Hickory Nuts, s@6c; Pecans,
tie. for rough und He for polished; Filberts, 8(49c;
Brazil Nuts, 7@7 /2C V, lb; Cocoauuts, -$4 50(0i5 50
• 100. <=*/*.
HONEY- Comb, 9@liy 2 c? lb: water-white ex
tracted, i@7c; light amber extracted, 5V2<9« 61 .4c;
dark amber, .Va.su,c ~$ lb.
BEESWAX— * ft.
PROVISIONS.
CURED MEATS— to move off actively
at firm prices. Bacon, 8y 2 @9c for heavy and 9y 2 c
for light medium; 10c for light, 10y 2 @llc ? Ib
for extra light and 12(a14c lb for sugar-cured;
Eastern Sugar-cured Hams, 12y 2 c; California
Hams, liy 2 c; Mess Beef, ?7<&»7 50 bbl; extra
mess do, sß@B 50; family do.$10®ll; extra prime
Pork, $10&10 50; extra clear, $17 50@18 f bbl;
mess, $16®16 50 "£ bbl; Smoked Beef, 9y»@loc
lb.
LARD— Is firm and selling steadily. Eastern,
tierces, is quotable at t»3,4@7c V ft for com
pound and M:j + c lb for pure; pails, 9y 2 c; Cali
fornia tierces, 6c for compound and 8c for pure;
half-bbls, 81/4 C; 10- lb tins, ay c 9 lb; do 5-lb,
9c $ It..
COTTOLENE— 7%c »Il» In tierces and B%c •#
Ib in 10-lb tins. ■ •
HIDES, TALLOW, WOOI/AND HOPS.
HIDES AND SKINS— Leather is going up
steadily in the East, and Hides are In good demand
and firm In consequence. The market is in de
cidedly Rood shape for sellers. Heavy salted steers,
7®7y 2 c f lb; medium, 6@6Vqc; light, 6f§6y 2 ;
Cowhides, 6(&6y 2 c; salted Kip, 4V 2 @5; salted Calf,
7@Bc: salted Veal, 6®7c; dry hides, usual selec
tion, 101 2 MI i r . dry Kip, 9c:, dry Calf, 12® 13c;
prime Goatskins, 20@35c each: Kids, sc; Deer
skins, good summer, 30c Ib; medium, 15(a;25c;
winter, 10@16c; Sheepskirts. shearlings, K%i2oc
each ; short wool, 25fq;35c each ; medium, 30(0<45e
each; long wool, 4O(ia,'t3Oc each; Culls of all kinds
.about y 2 c less. • . ■ -■. '■ ...
TALLOW— No change to report. No. 1 ren
dered, 4i/i@4y 2 c; country Tallow, 4@4Vic; re
lined. 6c; tirease, B@3y 8 Ib. •
Win )],— Quotations for the spring clip are: Choice
Northern, 10®llc; San Joaquln, year's staple, 6®
7c V II,; do. seven months', 6®Bc; Calaveras and
Foothill, B@iOc • . - ■;.,:;.
. HOPS— Choice, 6 l / 2 @7c; common to good, s@6c
%* Ib. No business coins on. . ■.
GENERAL MERCHANDISE. f
BAGS— Calcutta Grain Bags, 4i/ 4 @48/ 8 c spot, and
43/ @4y 2 c or June and July delivery; Wool Bags,
--24®26c.
'COAIj— About 15,500 tons Coast and 2832 tons
Greta have arrived this week. There is consider
able Australian loading for this port. Wellington,
$8 ton; New Wellington, 98; South field Wel
lington, $7 50 f>' ton; Coos Buy, $5; WallsenA,
$7 50; Scotch; 98; Brymbo; $7 50; Cumberland,
$13 50 in bulk and $15 In sacks; Pennsylvania
Antnracite Egg,- sl2: Welsh Anthracite Kgc, $9;
Cannel, $8; Rock Springs, Castle Gate and Pleas
ant ' Valley, $7 60; Coke, $12 in bulk and fl4 in
sacks. -^ ■• ' ■' ■- -- - -
COFFEE— C. E. Bickford's circular says: "The
market Is easier with dull business under the ad
verse influences of heavy arrivals locally and the
declining tendency of prices in New York, which
market dealers follow closely, fearing each down
ward fluctuation may be. the precursor of some
radical change In values. All descriptions have
suffered, good unwashed Salvador more noticeably,
this description showing a decline of y e during
the past ten days, with light sales. Costa Rlcas
and Guatemala have Mold 111 a small way at ir
regular figures, but generally showing : the same
decline. The first hand stock on the 15th was
41,555 bags, consisting of 6951' bags Costa Rica,
37 Nicaragua, 10.045 Salvador and 24.552 Guate
mala.' The steamer City of Sydney is due about the
21st with 8150 bags." We quote: 18ya@20i.4c for
good to prime washed Costa Rica; lSi/2@l9c for
, good costa ßica mixed wlih black beau; I T iiiaiSc
<£ Ib for fair Costa Rica; 14@15y c for common to
ordinary Costa Rica; 'l9@2oc- for good to prime
washed Salvador; 17@r7Vic for good green un
washed Salvador;- 203/i@2iy±c for prime washed
Guatemala; 19y 2 @2oy4C for good to strictly good
washed Guatemala; 18®19c %4 Ib for fair washed
Guatemala; 16@17y4C for medium Guatemala;
15@16c for ordinary Guatemala. HVi!@I4VoC
tor inferior to common Guatemala; 21@215'icfor
good to prime washed Peaberry:' 19y 2 @2oc 3 Ib
for fair to good unwashed Peab.erry.
KICK— Chinese mixed, new crop, $3 30; old crop,
83 15; No. 1, $3 60@3 75; extra No. 1, $4@4 26;
Hawaiian, $4 50; Japan, $3 70@3 75 %* ctl.
SUGAR— Western Sugar Refining Company
quotes, terms net cash: Cube, Crushed. Powdered
and Fine Crushed, all 5^' 8 c; Dry Granulated, 434 c;
Confectioners' A, 45£ c; Magnolia A, 414 c; Extra
C, 4y 8 c; Golden C, 3y»c: D, 35/ 8 c; half barrelsVic
more than barrels, and boxes Va c more. . . . . ,
SAN FRANCISCO MEAT MARKET,
Quotations for all descriptions remain without
variation. Wholesale rates for dressed stock from
slaughterers are as follows: :
BEEF— quality, 5y 2 @6c; choice. 6y 2 c f>. Ib;
second quality, 4y 2 @sc; third do, 3@4c lb.
VEAL— Large, 4®sc; small, 5 1 /a' a ' ' < " ¥ "'•
MUTTON— Wethers, sc; Ewes, 4(a4i/ 2 c $ tt>.
LAMB— Spring, 6®7c ? lb. 4
PORK— Live liocs, 3(a.3i4c for soft, 4i4@4S /
13 Ib for bard and 3 3 A@4c %i Ib for. feeders; dressed
do, s®7c # Ib. ■
RECEIPTS OF PRODUCE.
FRIDAY, April 19.
FOR TWF.NTY-FotK KOTOS.
flour, qr. sks 14.942i.Middlintrs, sks 143
Wheat, ctls 81,6X3Hajr, tons 378
liarley.ctla 478W001, bis 1,15:!6
Corn. 'ctls 125)Raialns, bxs 1,383
Heans, sks 3tsßjQuieksilver, flsks. 50
Potatoes, sks 383' Hides, no 274
onions, sks 570' Wine, gals 81,600
limn, ftks 859 i
FAMILY RETAIL MARKET.
Butter and Kggs continue in large supply and
cheap. Cheese is lower.
Young Poultry is scarcer and dearer all around.
Meats are unchanged. Several kinds of Fish are
rather dearer.
Nothing new in the Fruit and Vegetable mar
ket.
Following Is The Call's regular weekly retail
price list :
'• « ; COAT,— PKR to jr.
Cannel...... — @10 00 Wellington. — @10 00
New Wei- Scotch...... — <|l 000
lington — @10 00. Coos Bay..-. 7 00® —
DAIRY PRODUCE, ETC.
Butler, fancy, "$ Cheese, Swiss.... 20®30
square 3566 — Common Eggs "ip.dzl 5® —
do, f) roll 30®— Ranch Ecgs, V 17@20
do, choice ...25® — Eastern Eggs..'. ... — (<$ —
Ordinary do 20®— Honey, comb, "^Hj. — ©15
Cheese, Cal B{g;l2 do, extracted 10(^12
Cheese, Eastern... 16@30
MKATH— PKR POUND.
Bacon 15®17;Pork, fresh. — ftsl2
Beef, choice 12® 1 5 ! Pork, salt 12016 i
do, good 8:gilO I'ork Chops 12@18
Corned Beef 8(3.-- Round Steak 8(0.10
Ham, Cal — <a)J S Sirloin Steak... l2y>tols
do. Eastern — ®16 Porterhouse, d0... 1TYn.20
Lard r." 12®15 Smoked Beef — ®15
Mutton B®lo Pork Sausages — (a 2O
Spring Lamb 12 Veal 10@12
rOUI.TKY AND GAME.
Hens, each 50® 75 Turkeys, r 1 tb.. 15@- 18
Young Roost- JDucks", each... 75®1 00
ers, each -foil OOiGeese, each 1 5(ha.2 60
Fryers, each... 75® 85' Pigeons, '■& pr.. 60® 65
Broilers, each.. 60® 76lRabblts, V pr . . 25®. 40
Old Roosters, Bare, each 20® —
each... 60@ 76; •• . •v-
FRUITS AXI> NITS.
ApplPS, 1?. 1b..: 4t'dk BiOranges, V doz 15@40
Almonds, ftb 20©25 Raisins, <H Ib .-. 5(§15
Bananas, r l . doe.,. l^@2o|Straw berries, : .
Coroanuts, each...10&12 '^busket 10®15
Lemons, '# doz. . . .~2s336|Walhnt8 l 1b...'..15® —
Limes, i* doz 15® — I
VK<3ETABLES. .
Asparagus, « 1b... s<aio|Onlons, 1b. ...... 2® 3
Artt<hokf-5,{»d0z..2()®40 oki-a, dry. V Ib —326
Beets, V- doz..' 12w15 lVppers,"<!ry "i? 1b..20 1 »25 I
Beans, white. ~? Ib.— fill s;l'<':>p*-r.;<rPen, f lb. —Cat — |
Colored,? 1b.... 4f* • 5it > ar.snips, d0z..,.15(?t20
Lima, V 1b....'... 63 6|Potaro«% V 1b...... 2fa. 3 I
Cabbage, each sfilO, Do, New, 1b... 4,-t. 6 1
Cauliflowers, each. 5® 8! Do. Sweet, ■?. Ib.. 3fi 4
Celery, V bunch... sf» — |Radisln-s,"^dzbchs.ls®2o
Cucumbrß,?dz,l 00@I50| Rhubarb, '^1b..... 4® 6
Cress, #dzbuncus.2o<a2sSage, 1?. Hi 25®35
Garlic, 1> tt>... — wSOi-String Beans,'l* 1b.}5(a,21> ,
Grqea Peas, 'i lb.. — « 6 rhyme,? 11.. 20@30 :
Lentils, '? Hi fc>(o- MTurhlps, r : do* 15@20 j
Lettuce, doz. ...16@20iTomatoes, '& 1b.... — ®20
Mushrooms, f U»...-'o(§isol • •
FISH I'K.K POL'.VD.
Barracuda.'. 10@12 Sea Bass — <3) —
Carp.......: B@lo Smelts — 012
Codfish .>...-.. B^lo Soles -.. to 10
Flognders — @1O Skates, each ulO
ll lit. 10 Sturgeon... '...'. — Co) —
Herring ■. 6*3 i B Tomcod — (nil 2
Klngflsb ..'. B®loTrout 15f4'JO
MeckerW ........... — '.en — Clams, r* gal — ®75
do. H0r5e. ........ 8»10)Do, hardshell, f>
Perch KgilO; mo 50® —
Pompano 6O^i,7 j'Crabs, each 10® —
Hocktish 12@16 Do, soft shell, 'f. dz.25®35
Salmon, smoked. ..20W2S Mussels, ;' qrt 10i#15
Salmon, fresh 10312 Oysters, Cal.f 100.50® —
Shrimps Bf<BlO Do, Eastern, "$ dz.26,g>35
Shad t —&8, . . -<..-:
EEAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS.
Edward C. and Mary A. Delamater to Cyrus
Walker, lot on S line of Broadway, 77:2. < Eof
Octavia, s 133:8 by W 77:2%; ?10.
Cyrus and Emily T. Walker to Mary A. Delama
ter.lot on S line of Broadway, 77:2% E of Octavia,
a 188:8 by X 141: $10.
Anna and Edward Foster to William Hardy, lot
on S line of California street, 55 W of liaguna, W
27:6 by S 107:6; $10.
William H.\pimoud to Agnes M. Bourn, lot on E
line of Webster street, 82 :6 sof Broadway, sSO by
I. 103:6: $10.
Frederick W. and Mary E. Bridge to Alexander
Baldwin, lot on N line of Union street, 187:6
W of Scott, N 137:6 by W 137:6; $1.
James and Helen M. Palache to same, lot on N
line of Union street, 121 W of Scott, N 137:6
by W 16:6: $1.
. Same to Frances A. Baldwin, lot on NW corner
Of Union and Scott streets, N 137:6 by W 121 : SI.
a. H. Boomer to Mary .1. Boomer, lot on NW
corner of Lyon and Page streets, W 32:6 by N 95;
gift.
Leopold Selii'.mnn to Mary S. Lang, lot on N line
of Fell street, 81:3 E of Clayton, £ 25 by N 100;
$10.
• Joseph B. and Caroline M. Crockett to the San
Francisco Gas Light Company, all interest in the
land lying between the charier line of the city and
county of San Francisco on the W, as in 1850. E by
Buchanan street, and extending- from N line of
Lewis street to S lino of Beach; $10. ■•
George H. Bahrs (executor of the estate of Her
mann F. Scheele),to H. H. Lowenthal, lot on NW
corner of Ridley street and Elgin Park, W 25 by N
75: ?6700. . ■ '
Robert B. Woodward. Ely I. and Helen J. Hutch
inson to the city and count v of San Francisco, lot
on S line of Ridley street, 170 W of Mission. S
173:10' 'm, W 40, N 180:5, 40, except right to re
move buildings; $1.
George Peacock to Margaret Peacock, lot on W
line of San Jose avenue, 699 S of Twenty-fourth
street, S 25 by W 120; gift.
' Patrick l.ally to Hannorah Conlon, lot on W line
of • Leavenworth street, 112:6. N of McAllister,
N 25 by W 87:6; $10.
Thomas C. and Fannie Arnold to Peter C. Des
calso, lot on SE line of Park Lane North, '212 SW
of Second street, SW, 22 by .ME 98, subject to mort
gages; $10.
P. C. and Julia Descalso to Bert E. Wertheimer,
same; $10.
Edward B. and Frances A. Church to Eleanor
Hall, lot on S line of Clement "street, 57:6 E of
Third avenue, E 25 by S 100; $10.
Eleanor Hall to Theodore H. Kellogg, same;
$10.
Mary A. McCahe to Michael Murphy, lot on E
line of Twentieth avenue, 225 S of Point Lobos
avenue, S 25 by 10 120: $10. •
Arnold, Phoebe, Isidor and Flora Glaser to Simon
Glaser (for Millie L. and Hattie Glaser). lot on W
line of Eighteenth avenue, 100 S of A street, S 25
by W 120; trust deed. ." ' '
R. F. Harris to Johannes W. Bolln, lot on W line
of Twenty. seventh avenue, 313 X of C street, N 26
by w 120: 8360.
•■ A. K. P. Harmon to Peter J. Curtis, lot on NW
corner of ."Ninth avenue and N street, N 118.72 by
\V 120; $10. '
sol and Dora Getz to George B. Starr, lot on SE
corner of o street and Forty-third avenue, E 57 :ti
by s 100: $10.
Frank Fox and Jacob Fehr to Emannel Krull, lot
on SK line of Arlington street. 138 NE of Mateo,
NE 25 by SK 160, block 10, Fairmonnt; $100.
' Ellen Corcoran to Mary Corcoran, lot on S line of
Powell avenue, 125 E 01 Mission street, E 25 by S
100; $10. •
.lames and Theresa .MoKfnna to Charles Lut
tringer.lot on W corner of Harrington street and
Mission road, NW 100 by SW 50, Academy Tract;
$10. - .•'.:.,, ■::•■.
K. T. Anthony to Henry Wangenheim, lot on NE
corner of Beacon and Carlos streets, N 147:1, E 21,
S 249:1, W 66:8: $1.
ALAMF.DA COUNTY.
Clarisse A. Ruet of Oakland toCorlnne M. Brann
(wife of F. A.) and Mnry M. Paige (wife of W. E.),
lot on E line of Franklin street, 25:3 X of Fifth,
N 4f1:9 by B 75, being lots 2 and 3, block 56, Oak
land; gift.
John C. Cantwell (by Jesse K. Godley attorney
and Samuel B. McLeneganl to Montgomery (ioci
ley of San Francisco, undivided half interest In
lot on E line of Valdez street, 100 N of Dennison,
N 100 by E 125. being lot 6, block C, Shell Mound
Tract, East Oakland ;. $10.
William T. and F.mily J. Halliday to Anna Tal
bot of Oakland, lot on S line of Seventh street, 75
R of West, E 50 by S 100, being lots 9 and 10,
block 97; also nil interest to a strip of land about
12 feet in width next and adjoining said lot 9 and
running to width about 3 feet fronting on West
street; also lot on E line of Adeline street. 418:8
N of Adeline. N 60:4 by E 127, to correct 557 d.
35, warranty deed, Oakland ; $10.
Montgomery G«dley of Man Francisco to Samnel
B. .McLenegan, lot on X line of Vuldoz. street. 100
N of llennison, N 90 by E 126, being the S half of
lot 6, block C, Shell Mound Tract, East Oakland;
$10.
Same to John C. Cantwell of San Francisco, lot
on E line of Valdez street, 150 N of Dennison, N
50 by E 125, being the N half of lot 6, block C,
Shell Mound Tract, East Oakland; $10.
Thomas and Carrie White to Frank Bartle of
Oakland Township, lot on E line of San Pablo
avenue. 91.12 N of Parsons street. E 104.68, N
45.50, TV* 107.02, S 45.56 to b^inniug. being lot g,
block D, Gnskill Tract, Oakland Township; $650.
James R. and Margaret A. Little to Carmelita H.
Boegle (wife of F.), lot on N line of Charming way.
150 W of Audi) bon street, W 50 by N 130, being
portion lot 3, block 9, College If omestead property
of College Homestead Association, Berkeley; $100.
D. I. anH Ella T. Talcott to Jonathan R. Talcott
of Alameda, undivided quarter of block A, lots 4,
5, 17 and 18. block B, and lots 16, 17 and 18, block
C, Patterson Ranch Map of the Patterson Home
stead Association No. 2, Berkeley Township: $10.
Central Pacific Railroad Company, a corporation,
successor to the Central Paclflc Railroad Company
of California and California and Oregon Railroad
Company (consolidated) to S. Prentiss Smith of
San Francisco, 659.04 acres, being all of section 19,
township 2 south, range i east, and property in Con-
l J a J-^ ta ' Yol ° an<i Bolano counties, quitclaim
deed, Murray Township; 91.
Builders' Contracts.
J. J. Dowling with J. H. McKay, to erect a two
story building on the W line of Fulton street 137 6
E of Steiner: 93595.
Edward Coleman with J. P. Fraser, paintlnp,
polishing, graining, etc., on the N\V corner of
Franklin and California streets: SI4SS
Mary A. Townsend with W. W. Kednall, to erect
a one and a half-story frame building on S lime of
California street, 56:3 W of Baker; $1800.
THE STOCK MARKET.
Bodle continued to decline yesterday and sold
down 'to' «1. The Comstocks remained dull and
featureless.
XOTE3.
Savage is assessed 20c.
The Mayflower gravel mine has shipped $500 In
bullion.
: The assessment on the Occidental will be delin
quent In the board to-day.
: The following local corporations will pay interest
on their bonds in May : > Edison Light and Power
6s, quarterly; North Pacific Coast Railroad '6s,
semi-annual; Pacific Rolling-mill os. quarterly;
Southern Pacific Railroad of California first con
struction bonds guaranteed in gold Os, semi-annual,
and Sutter-street Railroad. ss, semi-annual.
■ The Hutchiiison Sugar Plantation Company and
Contra Costa Water Company will pay dividends of
16c and 20c per share respectively to-day.
ItOAKD SALES.
Following were the sales In the San Francisco
Stock Board yesterday: ,
BICIiI'LAR MOKXIXO SESJIOX— 9:3O.
100 Aita 19 700 C P0int... 66:300 Savage. ...34
100 8e1cur....68 300 G AC 481350 S B AM. .18
200 B A 8....82J750HAN....1.20<200 .17
10 85 300 Justice.... 10 100 S Nev....80
100 Bodie. .. 1.10 200 Mexican. .B3 600 79
200 Chal C... 45 1100 Occidtl...ll 200 Union ... .50
500 100 Overrun. . 10 250 V Jacket..46
200 C AY. 2.95 400 Potosl . . . .49 |<
■ . AFTERNOON SESSION— 2 •
200 Alta 18 250 CCAV...3.0fi250 0cc1dt1....10
200 Belcher.. .69700 C Point. . . 67 500 11
200 B A 8.... 87 200 E B A 8.. 12300 0phir...1.70
700 80d1e.. .1.00j1 00 Eureka... 3s 50 1.65
300 1.05:250 G A C... 200 Potosi ....50
400 Bulwer...lo 600 Justice.... lo 100 Scorpion..os
100 dialing c.4s 200 Mexican.. Bs2oo SNev 83
100 Ch011ar...52 100 Overman.ll'loo Union 53
Following were the sale* In the Paciflc Stock
Board yesterday: • -'.;•
. KF.IifT.AR KKSSION— IO:3O.
200 Alta 21,400 C Point.. .67 400 Ophlr... 1.65
700 20 200 66(200 1.62y a
800 181400 HAN.. 1.20 300 Savage..
100 B A 8... 53 100 ..1.17V 2 500 33
MO ....82H00 Mcx 831100 Sierra N.. 81
250 C C A V. 2.90100 84 100 ...: 79
400 2.95 ; 200 occidtl....llilOO Uni0n. ...51
100 Kentuck .051200 10.
AFTKKNOON SKSSIOJT — 2:30.
100 8e1cher....68 200 G & C.....50100 Ophlr. ..1.65
250 8A8.... 86 300 HAN 1.22% 100 1.67 Vo
100 87i 50 1.20 250 5Nev.... »3
700Chollar.. .501100 Justice.. ..lo 2so Union C..53
300 CC&V. 3.00350 85 100 54
100 3.021/41 50 86-100 V Jacket. 46
300GAC 511 ■ I
CLOSING QUOTATIONS.
FRIDAY, April 19-4 P. If.
Bid.Axkcd.\ Bid.Ask*d.
Alpha Con — lOiJackson — ■ 35
Alta 17 18.1ulia — 06
Andes 26 27 Justice 10 11
Belcher 68 70 Kentuck — ' 05
Best A Belcher. 85 86 Lady Wash. ... — 05
BentonCon.... 50 ' —Mexican 85 86
Bodie 1.00 1.05 Mono 21 —
Bullion 18 20JJU. Diablo 15 —
Bulwer — 11 Nevada Queen. — 06
Caledonia 08 10 Occidental..... 30 11
Challenge Con. 45 4G'O:>htr... 1.05 1.70
(.hollar 50 52 Overman 11 12
Con. C'al. A 3.00 3.osl'otosi 4!) 50
Con. Imperial.- 01 02Stivn<re 39 38
Confidence i.BO 1.50; Beg. Belcher... 17 19
Con. New York. — . OK Scorpion — 05
Crown Point... 65 67, Sierra Nevada, 82 84
EastSierraNev — 05 ! Silver Hill — 05
Exchequer — 04 silver Kin? 10 —
Eureka Con 35 40 Syndicate. — 05
(iould A Curry. 50 BllUtah — 08
! liale ANorcrs.l.2o 1.25 Yellow Jacket. 45 46
lowa. — 08
STOCK AXD BOND EXCHANGE.
FRIDAY, April 19—2 P. it.
bonds. Bid. Asked.i Hi>l. At/ced.
1" S Is coup.. lll — I Banks. Commercial —
V S4areg...lll — AmerßitTC. — —
Cal-stCble6s.lO9^ — Anglo-Cal. .. 57 —
Chl Elec L 65107 — Hank of CaL.2l7 222
CntraCW6s — 101, 'Cal SPATCo. 41 42
Dpnt-st 88 91 |FirstNationl.l77y 2 180 -
K<lsnLAP6s.lOß 110 Grinders.... — —
FACII RR6slO4 ' — |LondonPAA.l23Vi —
Geary-stßSs.lo7 — Lcndon&SF. — 32
LosAngL6s. 97% — IMerehEx... 15 —
Do,Gnted,6s.lol 103 Nevada — —
Mkt-stCble<ssl22 - — .satherßCo.. —;* — .
NevCNgRSs. — '■■' 110 '• Banks. Savings— ••■ .
NPCRR6S.IO2 — (^rS<tl.Co,.l7f,o '."—"-'
NyßCal6s.. 97y 2 - — ilunibSAL.looo —
NRyCalss.. — — Mutunl 97 —
Oak Gas ss. .101 — |SKSavUnion497y —
Do, 2d is> r.s..l<) i:' 4 — ;Sav A Loan. .110 150
Omnibus — . 117' - security — 320
PacßellMtts.lOS — jfnion Trust. — 760
Do. 2d Iss 65.. — — Street Rail way—
PAORv6s..llo 120 California.... — 108
PAChRy6s. 95 100 Geary-st — 90
Pwl-stRH 65.110 — Market-5t.... — 38 :
Reno,WlAfeLlo2 105 .Oak-,SL<sllay — 100
KlverWCo6e — 100 Presidio;.... 7y 2 —
SK*NFRKSs 99 — Sutter-st — ■' —
SPUR Ariz 84y 2 87 Powder— • V
Sl'RßCal Os.llo — . Atlantic D... 14. 20
SPHKCaISi«. — 89 California 75 >— ; . !
Do.lcongtd. — 90 Giant — . 15 .
SPBrRCal6s. — 86 'Judson — —
V Water 65..120 121 Vigorit 50c 75c
B V Water 4s.. 97% — ' Miscellaneous—
StktnG&E6s — lOOyißlkDCoalCo. — 12
SunstTAT6s — — Cal Cot Mills. — —
Slitter stltss. lo9 — (al Dry Dock — —
VLsalia\VC6s - 92 JEdisonLight. 97% 98 ! \
stocks — Water ' GasConAssn. — —
Contra Costa. 55 67%'HawCASCo..- 654. 8y s
Marin C 0.... — 50 [HutchSl'Co.. 12 1214
San Jose — 100 LTudsonMfgC — —
SprngV alley 974 98 Assn. 100 105
Gas— OceanicSSCo — 25
Capital....... — 50 IPacAuxFA.. iy '£
Central 95 — Pac Borax... 99 —
OakGLAH. 46 47y 2 !Pac I A N Co. — 30
Pac Gas Imp. — 87 |Pac Roll Mill 17 . — I.'
PaclficLight. 48 49 Parf Paint Co — 9
SanFrancsco 71% 72 Vi Pac Trans Co — 27
Stockton — 30 PacTATCo. — 60
Insurance— Sunset TAT. 20 —
FlremansFd.ls2y 3 — United C Co.. — 25
Sun — 70 I ;;■-
MORNING SKSSIOX.
Board— 6s Hutchinson S PC<>. 12':»; 175 do, 12:
50 Pacific Lighting Co, 48..; 30 do, 48%; SSV
Water, 98.
Street-10 Pacific Lighting Co, 49.
AKTKRNOON BK,S»ION.
Board— lo Oakland Gas, 46>i; 10 S V Water,
973/ i,.
THE CALT, CALENDAR.
Avkix, 1895.
Moon's I'hases.
3 April '.',
First Quarter.
9
10
1!
19
is
»
April 9,
Full Moon.
IB
10
«
18
C April 16,
Last Quarter.
April 24,
New Moon.
30
BYDROUKAPHIU BULLETIN.
Bbanch Hydrookafhic OFmrn:, U. S. N., "»
MERCHANTS' EXCHAVGB. }-
Ban Fkancisco. April 19, 1895. )
The time ball on Telegraph Hill was dropped
exactly at noon to-day— l. c., at noon of the r.'Oth
meridian, or at exactly 8 p. m., (ireeuwich time.
A. F. FKi.'HTKLRR,
Lieutenant U. S. N., in charge.
OCEAN BTKAMEKS.
Dates of Departure From San Francisco.
STEAKRR. |r»K»TrWATION |
SAIUS.
I FIKB.
'matilla .... I Vie & Snd
flumboldU. ! Ilumbolcltnny
Excelsior. . . ! Vaqulna Bay..
C0r0na...... San D1ec0.....
iiureka JNewDort
Coptic...... China A; Japan
Oregon | Portland
r*omona. Hiiniboltltßay
IV eeott Eel River
Del None. . . lir&ys Harbor.
lueen V'lc & i*st and
•rogroso — Panama
iVillamt Val Mexico. :..„■..
>;mi;t K««ia.. San Diego
Lnuco ...... Coos flay
fruckee.... I Portland. „:...
Vnsiralla.... | Honolulu
forth Fork. ■ Humboldtßay
roosßay... Newport . ;
'tate of Call Ponland . .
; Apr 20. 9am! Bdw'y 1
Ai>rl!o.llAMi Washt'n
Apr 20, spm Mlss'nl
Apr 21.11 am Bdw'y •-.'
i Apr 23, Sam Bdw'y 2
Apr 23, 3pm PM S S
Apr '24, 0 am Spear
Apr -24. 2pm iJdw'y 1
i Apr 24, Bam Vallejo
Apr 24. spm ; ..'.......'
Apr 25. 9am Bdw'y 1
: Apr 25, 4pm : I,onib'rd
Apr 25.10 am Bdw'y 2
! Apr 25, 11 am Bdw'y 2
1 Apr 25,10 am Vnllejo
: Apr 25, 4pm Vallejo
Apr 27, 2pm Oceanic
I Apr 27, 9am Miss'n 1
i Apr 27, Bam Bdw'y '2
I Apr 29.10 am Spear '
STKAMKRS TO AKRIVK.
Stkamkr I
Crescent City... 1
Wellington i
North Forte
Australia..:.;..; :
City of Sydney.
5c0tia...........
Queen.......;...
Pomona
Weeott
Columbia. '
Eureka '
City of Everett. >
Del S one. i
Point L0ma..... I
Arcata j
' Crescent City
j I><'imrture Bay
llumboldt Bay
Honolulu j
Panama j
Yanuina Bay i
Victoria A i'nget Sound :
Ilumboldt Bay !
Kol Htver :
j I'ortlnnd I
Xi wport I
C'omoi
lUrays Harbor
(ira.vs Hjirbor
jCoos Bay
j fort land I
Tacoma I
iCoos Bay
Isan Diego
iCoos Bay
iHumboldt Bay
Newport
Portland
Victoria * l'uget Sounci
Portlaad
|Smn Eio«o
April 20
April 20
April 20
April 20
April 20
j April 20
! April 21
April 21
April 21
I April 81
i April 21
April 21
April 22
i April 22
i April 22
; April 22
April 23
i April 23
April 23
April 24
April 25
April- 26
April 26
April 2G
April 26
April 27
Truckee
.Mackinaw
Homer |
Santa K05a... . . . |
Araso
U M.*ili*tl.l»
Huraboldt i
Coos Bay
State of Cal
Walla Wa11a. . . .
Alice JBlanchard
Corona |
SUN AND TII>K TABLE.
—
Wat:
\VA
. ■Small . Small. |Large. Ktsest Seta ms
e.3l"^ 8.401T021j 2.34p^ 5.28, 6.50j 3.
9.47P 9.3.1 a! 3.82a 1 3.09n 5.26 <>■.■» 1' 3.
• iLarge.j
Seta
jKisrs.
SHIPPISG IMKLLKiKJiCIi.
Arrived.
FRIDAY, April 19.
Stmr San Benito, SO hours from Tacoma; 4500
tons coal to Bi' Co. Oakland direct. -ni«»«
Stmr Corona, Hall, 68V2 hours from San Diego
and way ports: pass and incise, to Goodall, Perkins
' Stmr Rival, Johnson. 63 hours from Redondo;
ballast, to Union Lumber Co. '• " 'i,
Stmr Point Arena, Johnson, 16 hours from Mcn
docino, etc; pass and mdse, to Mendocino Lumber
Co
Schr Mary Etta, Wetzel, 16 hours from Pt Arena;
70 cords wood, to Bender Bros. '» ? -«• '•■
ScbrTwilight, Topfer, 19 days from Willapa Har
ber; 225 M feet lumber, to Union Lumber Co.
Cleared.
FRIDAY, AprU 19.
stmr Humboldt, Edwards, Eureka; M Kalish
&Co.
Btmi tlmatll.a, Hunter, Victoria and Port Town
send ; Good all, Perkins & Co.
Br ship Molt Hill, Jenkins, Queenstown; Balfour,
Quthrle A Co.
Ship Stirling, Wheldon, Port Townsend; John
RosPineld's Sons.
Bfctn Jane A Falklnbur,?, Falkman, codSshing;
Lynde A Hough Co.
Schr Urania, Carlson, codflshlng; C JJorgenson.
Sailed.
FRIDAY, April 19.
Gipsy, Leland, Santa Cruz.
Stmr Rival, Johnson, Fort Bragg.
stmr National City, Anderson!"
Stmr Coos Bay. Jepson, San Pedro.
stmr State of California, Ackley, Astoria and
Portland.
Br ship Agnes Oswald, Nicol, Algo Bay via Port
Townseud.
Schr Louis. Hatch, Bristol Bay.
Sent Mary Bidwell, Wilson, M«-ndoo!no.
Schr Marion, Genereaux, Grays Harbor.
Schr Rebecca, Christiansen, Eureka.
Schr Lila andMattle, Li nd bridge, Bristol Bay.
Schr Bessie X, Thompson.
Telegraphic.
POINT LOBOS — April 19-10 p it— Weather
hazy; wind NWj velocity 'JO miles an hour.
Charters. I
The bark A returns loads lumber at Burrard Inlet
or Santa Rosalia; schr Prosper salmon at Xeknek,
Alaska, for this port.
Movements of Vessels.
Yesterday the schr Lewis Berry and the ship Ag
nes Oswald went to sea.
The bark Gen Kairchild was towed to the Mall
dock and the ship Sierra Cadena was taken to Long
Bridge.
The stmr Hattle Gage was towed to Oakland and
the stmr Polar Bear to Oakland Creek.
The brig Lurline and bark Leah! were taken to
Folsom-street wharf.
The bark John P.ni/.ley and stmr Oregon were
taken to Howard No 2.
To-day the ship Stock bridge will be towed from
the sfrearn to sea and the bark Merom from How
ard street to sea. .< ■ ■■.'■■■■, -.
The bark J I) Peters will be towed from the Union
Iron Works to Mission, the bark Sea King from
Mission to the Spear-street drydock and the bark
Carrollton from the stream to Mission street.
Spoken.
Mar 29—1 S 29 W. Br ship Copley, from Oregon
for Bristol.
Domestic Ports.
TACOMA— Sailed Apr 19— Schr Annie Larsen,
for San Francisco.
POKT GAMBLE— Sailed Apr 19— Bark Palmyra,
for San Francisco.
FORT BRAGG— Apr 19— Stmrs Cosmopo
lis and Navarro, for San Francisco. - '-'■
' Arrived— Stmr Xovo, hence Apr 18.
TATOOSH— Passed in Apr 19— Schr FS Red
field, from San Pedro for Tacoma: bark Darra,
from Shanghai; Chil bark Antoinette, from Valpa
raiso for Pugi 1 Bound : ship Cyrus Wakefleld. from
Nanalmo for San Francisco bktn Wrestler, fm
Burrard Inlet for Shanghai.
PORT ANGELES— SaiIed Apr 19— Ship Cyrus
Wakefleld, from Nanaimo for san Francisco.
I COOS BAY— Arrived Apr 19— Stmr Arcata. hnce
Apr 16.
BOWENS LANDING — sailed Apr 18— Stmr
Qreenwood, for Port Los Angeles.
PORT LOS ANiiKLKs— Sailed Apr 19— Stmr Al
cazar.
Arrived Apr 19— Haw stmr San Mateo, from Co-
CLALLAM BAT— Apr 18— Bark Wilna,
from Nanaimo for San Francisco.
PORT BLAKELEY— Apr 13-Chll bark
Anna Catherine, for Valparaiso.
UMPQUA— Arrived Apr 17— Schr Lily, hence
Apr 10.
ALBlON— Arrived Apr 13— Stmr Newsboy, hnce
Apr 17.
ASTORIA— SaiIed Apr Br bark Dunreggan,
for Queenstown ; stmr Columbia, for San Fran
cisco; slnir Bandorilie, for San Francisco.
Arrived Apr 19— Bktn John Smith, irom Hako
date.
SAN DIEGO-Arrived Apr 19— Schr Mabel Gray,
from Eureka; 0 8 stmr Thetis, from cruise.
SAN PEDRO— Arrived Apr 19— Schr Serena
Thayer. from Eureka.
Sailed— Stmr Alcalde.
GRAYS HARBOR— Sailed Apr 19— Schrs Sadie
and Ottilie for San Francisco; schr San Buenaven
tura, for San Pedro. . -.. • - .,-
-■ GREENWOOD— SaiIed Apr 19 — Stmr Whites
•oro, tor Port Antelew. <.-:•.• -iU-a >
Foreign Ports.
YOKOHAMA— SaiIed Apr 19— Br stmr Gaelic,
for San Francisco via Honolulu.
FALSIOUTH- Sailed Apr 18— Br ship Ancalos.
for Fleetwood; Br ship Lamorna, for Hull.
QUEENSTOWN— SaiIed Apr 18— BrshiD Port
Crawford, for Fleetwood ; Br ships Flintshire and
Wayfarer, for Tvne. :
NEWCASTLE", NSW— Arrived Apr 14— ship
Largimore, from Rio de Janeiro, to load for San
Francisco. 17— bark J.adas, from Garrall, to
load for San Diego.
COLON— Arrived Apr 17— Stmr Finance, from
New York.
HONGKONG— SaiIed Apr 18-Stmr City Of Pe
king, for Han Francisco- : ■
SYDNEY— SaiIed Apr 18— Br stmr Miowera, for
Vancouver.
LONDON— Entered oat Apr 8— Ger ship Alida,
for San Francisco.
Movements of Atlantic Steamers.
NEW YORK— Arrived Apr 19— Stmr Normanla,
from. Hamburg; stmr Colorado, from Hull,
ST JOHNS, N B— Arrived Apr 19— Stmr As
syrian, from Glasgow for Philadelphia.
HAVRE— Arrived Apr dtmr La Touralne,
from New York.
Importations.
MENDOCINO— Per Point Arena— l pkg mdse,
322 M ft lumber.
Cleone— wood.
Navurro— s bxs butter.
Point Arena— 9s bxs butter, 2 cs eggs, 1 bicycle,
15 bdls hides. 16 dressed calves. 15 sks potatoes.
SAN DIEGO— Per Corona— 2o2 pkgsmdse, 229
bxs oranges, 2 cs cocoa, 10 cs honey, 12 pis pickled
fish. 15 kits do, 117 bxs lemons, 1 bx iimes, 49 pcs
curbing.
Port Los Angeles— lo bxs lemons, 2 hf bbls
coffee.
Redondo— lol bxs lemons, 36 pkgs mdse, 5 bbli
wine, 'Jo sk3 raisins, 424 bxs oranges, 67 ska wool,
5 sks chillies.
I Newport— llo bbls wine. 83 bxs oranges, 2
horses,
Los Angeles via Port Los Angeles— s cs matches,
11 cs nidse, 12 chsts tea, 1 bbl wine, 13 cs cultiva
tors.
• Winthrop— 3 bxs oranges.
Santa Barbara— 4opkgsmdse. 80 sks wool, 2 bxs
starch, 5 bbls veronica, 120 bxs lemons, 49 sks
crawfish. • .:f: -
Port Harford— cs eggs, 1 bx soap, 6 cs honey,
160 bxs butter. 1 keg 6 tubs do, 16 pkgs mdse.s ska
d fruit, 3 coops chickens, 39 bdls green hides, 30 ■ 3
ks wool. 57 dressed calves, 8 bxs risn, 68 sks beans,
3 bdls pelts.
Santa Maria— 2oo sks beans.
Consignees.
Per Point Arena— ll Levy & Co: H S Crocker A
Co; Mendocino Lumber Co; Dairymen's Union ; T
H B Varney; Wilson A Baechtel;; FB Height;
Standard Oil Co; Martin, Feusier * Co;Brady * Co;
Robin's A Gerdon; OB Smith Co; H Waldeck A
Co; Ross & Hewlett: Sawyer A Ilaight: Edwards
06. •
Per Corona— L Scatena A Co: DE Allison A Co;
MeDonongh A Runyon; J W Wittland ACo; J W
Goodwin A Co: Lievre, Fricke A Co; Dalton Bros;
Mark Lew & Co; Hulme A Hart ; Jones * Co: W
C Graves A Co; Marshall, Teggarl A Co: Paul Reg
ler A Co; Dairymen's Union : Garcia A Maggini: A
EHendricks; Kveleth A Nash ! HNTildenACo;
M Ehrman A Co; Ross* Hewlett; Allen * Lewis;
San Francisco Chemical Works; W P Fuller A Co;
Baker A Hamilton; Thos Penman Son * Co; Troy
Laundry Co; Levi, Spiegel A Co: M Freitas A Co;
C E Whitney A Co: •' Ivancovlcb A Co: A C Fry A
Co.; Tacoma Commercial Co; Felling, Cressy A Co;
American Union Fish Co ; H neaton, Breon & Co ;
Kowalsky A Co: Gets Bros A (o:\\P Fuller A Co;
W X SuninerA Co; a Paladinl; II Heckman A Co;
Dodge, Sweeney A Co: Phillips Bros; HO Green
hood- Standard Oil Co: S Brnnswich: Chiuda A
Flack- Wltzel'A BaKer; Nathan, Dohrmann A Co;
s Levy- A Co-Sherwood A Sherwood; San Francisco
Brewery: W* A Rouse A Co : Wood. Curtis A Cc ; A
HFiiswo'ld; Vannege A Co: San Francisco Fruit
Auction Co: Flinn A Tracy; Win Lough; Immel &
Co- P F Collier ; J N Young: Chns Tetzen; I' L Al
exander- E V Sullivan: Harris Packing Co: A Fay;
Norton Teller A Co; -Hills Bros; Wilson Bros; U
Waltz:' Gen Elect Co: Henry Clifton; B Dreyfus
A Co- Bancroft, Whitney A Co; Pierce A Co: Gray
A Barbieri;J Gundlach : W Shaffer; Columbia Bi
cycle Co; Smith's Cash Store; Eisen Vineyard Co;
Irvine Bros Le Count Bros.
Fnr Zate Shipping Intelligence See Fifteenth Page
EPIL OFFICE FURNITURE
gHistȣ^ OFFICE FURNITURE
AND FIXTURES.
C. F. WEBER & CO.,
*<lala^" ga 300 to 306 Post St.. cor. Stockton
P Bitters
W?l^S^rV The Great Mexican Remedy.
\w i&P'tS&Qr Giv?« hwJt-h oj»<l strength to
tPS^ll^l^ the fSezua.l Organs- •;
Depot, 323 Market St., S. F.
NEW WESTERN HOTEL.
KEARNY AND WASHINGTON ' STS —RE-
modeled and renovated. KING, WARD & CO.
European plan. Rooms 50c to $1 50 per day, »2
to $8 per week, $8 to $30 per month; tree baths;
not and cold.water every room; fire grate* in every
room; elevator runs all night. <-