Newspaper Page Text
12 THE COMMERCIAL WORLD SU3IMARY OF THE MARKETS. Sliver a fraction firmer. Wheat futures advanced. Barley weaker. Oats. Corn and Rye dull. Middlings marked up. Old Hay steady. Beans neglected. Potatoes and Onions steady. Medium Butter well cleaned up. Slight advance in Eggs. Cheese still weak. Poultry unchanged. Canners after Cherries. Peaches and Apricots easy. Oranges and Lemons very weak. String Beans lower. Hi!''s booming. Stocks of Grain published. MtATHEB BVBEAO REPOKT. United States Department of Aoßicnir tube. Wkatheb Bureau, Sax FBANCI9CO. June 6, 1895, 6 p. m.— Weather conditions and general forecast. The following maximum temperatures have been reported from • California stations to-day: Eureka, 63 degrees: Red Bluff. 90; Sacra mento. 92: San Francisco. 77; Fresno, 100: San .Mils Oblspo, 80: Los Angeles, 75; San Diego, 63; Independence 90; Yuma. 104. The pressure continues abnormally high on the Washington coast and lowest in Southern Cali fornia and Arizona. This condition is causing a north* of considerable severity in the Sacramento Valley. The temperatures are not extreme in that pec: ton. being between 90 and 95 degrees. A dry north wind has blown with considerable force for the past thirty-six hours, and must be absorbing a vast amount of the moisture contained in the sou, plants and grain, and will cause grain to ripen rapidly. The norther will continue in the Sacra mento Valley Friday and will extend into the San Joaquin Valley also. The following are seasonal rainfalls to date as comparer with those of the same date last season: Eureka 46.30, last year 53.97: Red Bluff 28.87, las* year 21.84; Sacramento 24.11. last year 16.33; San Francisco 25.70, las! year 18.30; Fresno 14.15, last year 5.47: Los Angeles 15.91, last year 6.75; San Diego. 11.61, last year 4.19: Yuma 2.97. last year 12.16 inches. San Francisco data— Maximum temperature 77 deg.. minimum 58 dec. mean 68 deg. . Forecast made at san Francisco for thirty hours ending midnight June", 1895: For Northern California— Fair: continued high temperatures In the interior. A norther of consid erable severity in the Sacramento and San Joaquiu valleys; nearly stationary temperature along the coast; brisk northerly to westerly winds. For Southern California— Fair: nearly stationary temperature, except slightly {cooler along the cen tral and northern coast: fresh westerly winds. For Nevada— nearly stationary tempera ture. For Utah — Fair; probably " slightly ' cooler in northwest portion. For Arizona— Fair; nearly stationary tempera ture. For San Francisco and vicinity— Fair: nearly stationary temperature; light, variable winds in tbe forenoon, becoming brisk westerly in the after noon. W. H. Hammux. Forecast Official. NEW YORK MARKETS. NEW YORK, N. V., June 6.— The share speculation to-day was dull and- unin teresting. At the opening the market .was quiet and generally firm, but in the early dealings a drive against Reading and New Jersey Central forced these stocks down .34 and % per cent re spectively. The grangers and general railway list were in the main firm throughout, but the move ment of prices was at times erratic. Northwest made the wildest fluctuations, declining 3/ 8 , rally- Ing 114. reacting % per cent. The trading in the industrial properties was irregular. Tobacco, Lead, General Electric, Sugar. Chicago Gas and Leather reached a fraction above las; night's figures, while the Cordage shares sagged to the lowest prices yet recorded lor both common and preferred, the former touching -.Mi and the latter 4%. Among the less active shares material changes were made, Oregon Navigation advancing 214. Most of the changes are merely fractional and in many cases are in the direction of lower figures. The market closed fairly steady. The bond trading was restricted in volume but with a profound downward tendency. The aggre gate sales were $1,130,000. Government bonds quiet and steady. State bonds inactive. Railroad bonds weak. Petroleum - steady, closed $1 49 bid. Grain and Merchandise. Flour — Receipts, 14,800 bbls: exports. 12,700 bbls; sales, 17.(500 pkgs. Market firmly held at old prices, with demand better. Spring patents silently higher. Bye flour firm and more active: sales 300 bbls. Superfine, $4 25@5 20; fancy. $4 40@4 60. Wheat — Receipts. 50.000 bushels; exports, 80.300 bushels: sales. 6.750.000 bushels: futures, 12.000 bushels spot. Spot strong. No. 2 red. store and elevator. 81 %c: afloat. 82y 3 c; f. °. b., 8214 c; No. 1 hard. 86c delivered. Options were generally strong all day on bad State reports, higher cables and foreign country buying, rumors of a hot wave and active short covering. A cable reporting 200,000,000 bushels shortage in Europe's rye crop aiso had an effect and the close was at '2c advance. Crop news was the worst in many days. No. 2 red June closed 81 %c: July 80%@82 11-lßc, closed 82V»c; Au gust Biyß&>J2%c, closed 82";4<;: September 81%@ S^mc, closed 833/ 8 c: October 82^ B @S3%c; De cember 83@85c, closed 82% c. Hops— Quiet, Wool— Steady. Petroleum— Dull; United closed $1 49 bid. Pig iron— steady: American Slo@l2 75. . : — Steady: brokers' price, $10 62%; ex change price, £10 50. Lead— Strong; brokers' price, $3 12%; exchange price, $3 27%. ! Tin— Barely steady: straits, $14 10; plates, steady. ■ . . Spelter — Firm: domestic, $3 70.' Sales on 'Change, 5 tons tin cash to-day, $14 20: 15 tons spot, $14 121/2 '• 1 carload spot lead, $3 32% ; 1 car load cash sold to-day, $3 20. ' Coffee— Options opened dull and unchanged and ruled featureless and inactive. Absolutely no speculation on foreigns, unusually dull, closed quiet and unchanged, prices 5 to 10 points decline. Sales, 5550 hairs, including: ■ March, $14 60: June, Pl 4 30; July. 514 75; September, $14.70<ai4 85; October, $14 90, and December, $14 75. Spot Coffee— Rio, dull: No. 7, 16c: mild, quiet nnd steady; Cordova, 18i,4;6;19c. Sales, 1000 bags Maracaibo and 300 bags Central American p. t. Sugar— Raw, quiet and steady. Sales, 16,000 bags molasses sugar, 89 test, 2 11-16 cto arrive to go to Philadelphia; refined, quiet and steady. CHICAGO MAKKETS. CHICAGO, 111. June Wheat started firm, but rather quiet, at 77y±@77y_c for July, a much narrower opening range than usual, of late, and the firmness soon began to gather force. The weather map was dry as to the winter -wheat area repre sented, and showed rain In the spring ■ wheat conn try, where they had more than enough. : • The bulls were assisted by the tlrmn?s3 of the foreign markets. Buying > orders were more nu merous than - for several daya. Foreigners were buying wheat at New York, and . the . New York , men were themselves among the nerviest buyers here. The bligest boost, was from reports for an indicated shortage in the Russian . rye crop of 2.000.000 bushels and in the German "rye crop of 40.000.000 bushels. . « . Tbe Russian rye crop of last year was about 765,000,000 bushels. A reawakening of the specu lative Interest which has been dormant for a week was probably responsible for a good deal of the —eater strength and activity displayed. Canadians were twiyers of flour in Duluth. .The prices of July rose steadily to 79% c, broke back to 79V«c and closed M 7 9 Vie, Corn— July, which closed at siy c yesterday, opened at from ft 1. "•'„«: to 51"/ s c. After remaining firm but quiet at around 61%@51%c for half an hour, It rose to 53c in a gradual way and was at that near the close, the last trading being at ! 52 %c • Oats— July started at 30% c. sold up to 30"/ 8 c and closed at 30i.2'aHU5 8 c: September ranged from 298/gC to 30« 4 c and rested at 30y 2 c. Provisions were weak on account of the liberal runs of hogs predicted yesterday. The receipts for to-morrow are estimated at 26,000 head, and the wheat, corn and oats market showing such re markable strength provisions responded to the extent of recovering an early slight break in lard and ribs and recovering a loss In pork made at the start, gaining 15c at the close. ... Estimates for to-morrow Wheat, 40 cars; corn 195 cars; oats, 187 cars; hogs, 26.000 head. The leading futures ranged as follows: Wheat No. 2— Highest. Lowest. June 78% c ' 76y*c Ju1y.."....-: ...•....-.."...-........793 / 4C 77i/tc September.. ................:.80%c 78V 4 c Corn No. 2— • ■• • - ; . , June.... .........52V4C 50% c , Ju1y... ........;.•....; .......53c 51% c September...:...'....' ; ;54c 52 V B c ■ ' Mess Pork per bbl— •- -• v*. ■ Ju1y........ . .'...512 62% SI 2 42% September ......?12 92% $12 67y . Lard per 100 lbs-. ' , . . -July.. ..-.5660 $6 57% September....... .$6 82 % $6 75 Short Bibs per 100 lbs— July ...$6 27y 2 $6 22% 5eptember............. ........... $6 47y 42% Cash ' quotations were as follows : Flour— Firm- No. 2 Spring Wheat, 79y_@82%c:'No:- 3 Spring Wheat, nominal: No. 2 Red, 78%@79c; No. 2 Corn, 62V8@52i;4c: No. 2 Oats. 3Dy.>c: JS'o. 2. White. 32s,i@33c:No.3Whlte. 32%<<z;3'.>%c: No-2 Bye, 65c; No. 2 Baney, 52@53e: N0.3 _sarTey,siy_ @53c; No. 4Barley. nominal: No. seed, sl4BVi; Prime Timothy Seed, $5; Mess Pork. "$ obi., $12 55 @12 62y,; Lard, If* 100 tbs., $6 50@6 52y 2 : Short itibs, Sides (loose), $6 20MB 25: Dry Salted Shoul ders (boxed), 553/ B @sy 3 ; Short Clear Sides ( boxed), * $6%@65/b: Whisky, distillers' : finished goods, %* gal., $126%; Sugars,' Cut Loaf,' unchanged; Gran ulated, unchanged; Standard A, unchanged. On the Produce Exchange to-Gay the Butter mar ket was firm. Creameries. 3 o@l7c; Dairies. 10® @16c; Eggs, steady, 10@ll%c. ; . <> Livestock. . , "'■ , Common to extra native steers weighing 1000 to 1500 pounds were salable at $3 60@6, but sales about $5 50 were few and' the bulk of the trans actions ere at $4 50@5 26. Nice distillery fed SalUi »ye_-a__nj; J^gQ apuffljs sold at $5 SO, and yearlings weighing 620 to S3O pounds sold at $4 60 @4 70, while desirable westerns sold as low as $3 28: stockers sold at $2 25@3 35, and. feeders at $3@3 95. Texas cows and hulls sold freely at $2 @3 and steers were active at $2 85@4 25, the offer ings consist mostly of grass fed lots. ;• The best hogs sold at $4 70, or 20c lower than a year ago. Heavy hogs sold at $4 25(d>4 70; mixed, $4 25@4 55: light, $4 10@4 45, and pigs at $3@4. The bulk of the sales occurred ■at $4 65@4 65 for heavy and $4 40@4 45 for light. Very inferior sheep sold at $1 25@2: common to choice sheep at $2.25@4 25 and spring lambs at $3 f>o@6. Exporters have taken some heavy sheep, mostly ewes, at $4. To-day's sheep have suffered a big decline and are selling around $2 25 for common lots. " Receipts— Cattle 9000, calves 700, hogs 35,000, sheep 9000. STOCKS IN LONDON. NEW YORK, N. V., June 6.— The Evening Post's London cablegram says: There was a de crease of £1000,000 in the coin and bullion in the bank of England this week, although £140, --000 in gold net . was imported for the week, the casn having gone into home circulation for the Whitsuntide recess. The details as to the gold movement for the week were: £181,000 im ported from Australia, £178,000 in bars bought and £6000 from Paris, while £100,000 went out to to the Cape, £120,000 to South America and $5000 to Gibraltar. The speculative markets were dull to flat to-day, partly due to the Armenian matters and partly to undigested blocks of mining shares offered by speculators. ■ Americans were flat, but closed above the lowest. The rise in exchange favors the argument of jour nalists and private pessimists. The liquidation of a large account of a recent bull operator in Yankees assisted the dullness and partly accounted for the sharp break in Erics and Readings. The rumor cabled yesterday about a Chinese loan received practical confirmation from the best quar ters. I have reason to believe Russia lends China £10,000,000 for twenty years, charging China for the money a small interest, the loan to be issued in Paris, bringing 4 per cent interest and guaranteed by Russia. It is said . Russia received from China no special guarantees, but one cannot confirm this. It is expected that the loan will be issued very soon. CALIFORNIA FRUIT SALES. CHICAGO, June The Earl Fruit Company sold California fruit at open auction to-day, realiz ing prices as follows: Royal apricots, $1 60<ffi2 50; seedling apricots, $1 55@1 65: Alexander peaches, $1 60@2 25: Royal Anne cherries, $I@l 25; Black Tartarians, 80c<a,<i;i 15; half boxes, Tartarian, 45c; Bigarreau, 90c@$l 16: Black Eagle, 95c; Governor Wood, 60@70c; Rockport,.7o@7sc; assorted cher ries in baa condition, 35@70c. The National Fruit Association '■ sold California fruit at open auction to-day as follows: Black Tar tarian cherries. 50c@$l: Republicans, 85c; Black Oregon, 70c; Royal Anne, 85@95c; Centennial, 90c; Pontiac. 70@90c: Griffins, 65c; Prinele apri cots, 70@90c; Newcastles. 80c: seedlings, $125: Royal apricots, 5165@2 45; Alexander peaches, $1 95; some green, $1 55. . Porter Brothers sold at open auction to day four cars California fruit at following prices: Royal apricots, $1 70@2 50; seedling apricots, $1 15 (oil 60; Newcastles. 70@90c: Pringles, Ssc; Alexander peaches, $140@52 30 ; cherry plums In crates, $150@155; in boxes. 35 @65c; Royal Anne cherries. 65c@$l 25: black republicans, $1 : two California fast train cars San Jose cherries arrived in very bad order and sold: Bigarreaus, Hscrd;sl 20: Royai;Annes, 60c@-?l 15; tartarians. 50c@$l 10; mixed cherries, $1 20; black eagles, 75c: assorted, 70c: Governor Woods, 45@70c; reds, 60c; Clevelands, 40@60c. BOSTON, Mass., June B.— Porter Brothers Com pany sold at public auction to-day one car San Jose cherries, arrived in very bad order, at following prices: Tartarians, 75c@$l 40: Bigarreaus, 87% c© $1 37%; Governor Woods, 55@57y 2 c NEW YORK STOCKS. Bonds, Exchange, Money and Railroad Shares. Money on call easy at I@iy 2 last loan 1%%; closed I@iy 2 %. Prime mercantile paper, 2y 2 @3y 2 S. Sterling exchange, strong and higher, with actual business in bankers' bills at $4 89Vi@4 89% for demand and $4 88 I<4@41 < 4@4 88% for sixty clays. Posted rates, $4 88y 2 ®4 S9 and $4 89y>®4 90. | Commer cial bills, $4 b7y_@4 87y 3 . Silver certificates, 66% ©67y±c. .:.■:-;■- /a CLOSING STOCKS. Atchison 6% Northern Pacific. 6 Adams Express... l 44 j Preferred 18% Alton/Terra Haute. 67' V. P., Den. A Gulf. 6y» Preferred ... . Northwestern 9SS/g American Express.ll 6 | Preferred 144% American Tobacco.lll%N. Y. Central 1013 /8 Preferred 113 • IN. Y. <fc New Kng. 43y* Baltimore & Ohio.. 61% Ontario & Western. 18Vr Bell Telephone 201 Oregon Improvmt. 12% Canada Pacific 51% Oregon Navigation. 2SK/4 Canada Southern.. 53% Oregon Short Line. 5 Central Pacific... Pacific Mail ....... 28% Cues. & Ohio 22% Peona, D.<t Evans. 5% Chicago Alton 150 iPittsburg ISS& Chicago, 8.&.Q.... 8iy 2 Pullman Pa1ace.. .172% Chicago Ga5........ 74y 4 Reading 16% Consolidated 4 Richmond Termini C. C. C. & St. Louis. 43%! Preferred Colo. Coal & Iron.. 8% RloGraude&Westn 18% Cotton Oil Cert 27 | Preferred... 44 Del. Hudson 129 Rock 151 and...;... 68% Del.LackG Westernl6l Su. L. & S.F.lst pf. Denver G.pfd. 46 :bt. Paul 6Gy Distillers 20%' Preferred 120% East Tennessee. . . St. Paul & Omaha.. 38 Erie 10141 Preferred 114 Preferred 23% Southern R. 8..... 135/. Fort Wayne 157 ' Preferred. 38% GreatNorthernpfd. 12y B St. P. M. & 11..... .114 Chicago <SE 111 pfd.loo% Southern Pacific... 23% Hocking Valley... 253/ 4 Sugar Refinery... .llßi/i Illinois Central.... 94y 3 Teun. Coal & Iron. 283^ •St. Paul i Duluth. 29 (Texas Pacific 11% Kansas «fe Texas pf. 315/fc Tol. & Ohio Cen. pf 79% Lake Erie AWestn 2 Union Pacific 13 Preferred......... 81%|U. S. Express .. 41 Lake Shore 145i/4!\Vab. S. L. & Pac. 8% Lead Trust 355/,, Preferred ....19 Louisville & Nash. 67% Wells-Fargo 108 Louisville *NewAl 9% Western Union.... 92 Manhattan Consul. Wheeling & L. E.. 13% Memphis & Charts. 15 ; Preferred ..... 44 1 Michigan Central.. 99% Minn. & St. Louis. 38 Mexican Central... ll% ; Denver, <fc Rio G... 1434 Missouri Pacific... 27% General Electric... 35% Mobile & Ohio 24y 4 Natlonal Linseed.. 28% Nashville Chatt.... 65 {Colo. Fuel & Iron.. 28 National Cordage.. 2y± Preferred..... 65 Preferred, 414 H. & Texas Cent... 2 N. J. Central 98% T01.A.A.& N.Mich. 2% Norfolk <& West pf. 143/ B Tol.St. Louis &K.C. 6y 2 North American... 65^1 Preferred 13% CLOSING BONDS. U S 4s, new, reg..'.1233/ BCen8 Cen Pac lstsof '95.103 Do. 4s coupon. l23*/g Den & R G 75... . 112% US 5s registered.. ll6 1 Do, 4s .: 88y« 5s coupon 116 Erie 2ds ....... 66 Do, 4s registered.il 1% lUSA 65...... 99 Do, 4s c0up0n. ..113 : Do, 7s 10iy Do, 2s registered. 97 11 & Tex Cent 55..110y« Pacific 650f '95....100 ! Do, 6s ..:... 103 Ala Class A ...... .108% M X Trim 4s 85% Do, Class 107 1 Do, second 4s 58y» Do, Class C 107 Mutual Union 65... 109 Do, Currencies... 97 IN J Cent Gen 55.. .118% La.New Consols 43. 96 Northern Pac 15t5.117% Missouri 65.. .100 . | Do, 2ds.. .100 N Carolina 65...... 124 Northwest Consols.l4o Do. 4s .102 ! Do, SFdeb 5?.. 109% SC Non-fund...... 1% GranaeWestlsts 77yl Term new set 63... ' 86 V St Paul Consols 75.128 Do, 05...... 100 i Do, C&P W. 55..114 Do, 35.... SiL«felronMtGenss 78 Tennold6s 60 St L& S F Gen 11l Va Centuries 62 [Southern R. R. ss. 9014. Do, deferred 6 Texas Pacific firsts 9iyi Atchlson 4s 72% Texas Pac seconds. 29% Do, 2d A .:..:... 235/ s i UnionPac lstof'96.los3i Canada South 2d5..105i/ 8 West Shore 45... 106 L& N unified 4s;. 1 .,8iy l . J i;Y: ". . r" .FOREIGN-, MARKETS. •• ; - ■.•";■•-•?■;-•■ WHEAT IN . LIVFBPOOL, LIVERPOOL, Esc, , June 6.— The spot market is dull at 5s 9y 2 d@ss lid.' Cargoes are steadier at 27s 4y d arrived. ■ . - - ;' ' >i_- ' ,•■ . ■ ■'* ; FUTUKKS. ~y'.. "'• _;;.V;;--.' ' The Produce Exchange cable gives the following ! Liverpool quotations for No. 2 Red Winter: June 5s 9Vid; July, 5s 9%d; August, 5s 10i4d; Sep tember, 5s 10% d; October, 5s lli/id. ■ r ,;j-V« . . SECOBITIES. './ •-.•. LONDON, Esq., June 6.— Consols. 100 3-16- sil ver, 30y 2 d: French Rentes, 102f 57y2C. Bullion Into Bank of England, £14,000. a - PORTLAND'S BUSINESS. PORTLAND, Or.. .Tune 6.— Exchanges, $252, --718: balances. $47,904. '• Wheat— Walla Walla,'sl@s2c % bushel- Valley 53@54c ■& bushel. _______ *' EXCHANGE AND BULLION, Sterling Exchange, 60 days — $4 87% Sterling Exchange, 5ight............ — 488% New York Exchange, 5ight........... — 02% New York Exchange, telegraphic... — ' 05 Fine Silver, spot, ounce '.■....."....''—' - 66 8 4 Fine Silver, 30day5......... ......... — 66&& Mexican Dollars .::.......... 63 63% GOVERNMENT MONEY IN THIS CITY. C. P. Berry, Assistant Treasurer United States at San Francisco, reports cash on hand May 31, 1895, follows: . . '• - J-I , • • . , V; United States notes... $148,28100 Treasury notes 1890........;..;...... •• • 103,685 00 National Bank notes.... 26.315 00 Silver certificates....:..-... ;.V.:7.:..;~ .. 345,125 00 Gold certificate 5...:........;......... 2197000 Gold coin.:;;.';. ".:-.-„•. ......'15,620,778 50 Standard silver d011ar5......... ..'.... 25,060, 185 00 Fractional silver coin. ;y. .456,523 60 Minor coin".;.. ..„.....„;;...... *, S 9,521 10 , Total J.....:. .....$41,792,384 20 Standard dollars shipped in May. . . $115:500 00 Fractional silver shipped in May.... ! ■ 74,740 00 STOCKS ;OF GRAIN. Regular Semi- Annual Statement of the ; Produce Exchange. • The San Francisco Produce Exchange yesterday issued its usual statement of the amount of grain, etc., i on hand .in . the State June 1. ; The stock of wheat, as will be seen by the figures for former years, Is over tbe average a u& time of t&e year. THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 1595. while the stock of barley is below the average. The statement is as follows: Dpcembel 1, 1894 June 1, 1804 December 1, 1893 Junu 1, 1898 naaa 1, Totals San Francisco wovplioiisc3 and mills, including grain and flour afloat In harbor and in transit Sonoma, Holano, Yolo, Colusa and file tin counties Sacramento, Yuha, Slitter, Jiutte. Placer aud Tehama counties Contra Costa and Alanieda counties San .loaquln, Stanislaus, Merced, Fresno, Madcra. Tulare, Kings and Kern counties San Mateo, Hanta Clara, San Benito, Santa Cruz, Monterey and San Luis Obis] io count It's Santa Barbara, Ventura, l.os Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino, River- side and San Diego counties REPORT OF AND Flour Bbls. 73,{ 80,: 90, C 83,3 COMPARATIVE STATEMENT. Flour Bbls. ING IN THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA ON JUNE 1, 1895. UEMA 6,000 6,001 13,040,330 7,646,000 14,234,119 4,485,923 Wheat Ctls. 1,965,230 1.370,305 8,907,011 1,309,102 714 ,44 10 Barley Ctls. 213,590 106,915 2fi2.5()K 57.210J 100 3,780 120 I 198,180 134,300 45,621 '620 ■"94,390 2&.800 2,900 8,800 620 ' 280 2,760 1,440 Kve Ctls. PRODUCE MAEKET. WHEAT AND OTHER GKAINS. WHEAT— account of the shipment of syndi cate Wheat to Texas : millers appears In another column. Only a fraction of it will thus be disposed of. however, as the major portion will be exported through the regular channels. Yesterday's markets for futures were higher In sympathy with Chicago which rose from 77Vic to 79VaC. Shipping Wheat was dull, as the exporters are at present busy with the syndicate Wheat. No. 1, 87y B c^ctl; choice, 88%@90c ft ctl: lower grades, 80@85o; extra choice for milling, 96c@ $1 ft ctl. ' CALL BOARD SALES. Informal Session — 10 o'clock — December— 2400 tons. $1 05Vs: 4000. $1 051/4- Seller '95, now, storage paid— loo. $1 01%. Regular Morning Session— December— l6oo tons. $1 055/ 8 : 1900, $1 «5%; 700, $1 05y 2 . May —300, $1 13. Seller '95, new— 7oo, $1 02. Aftkbnoos Session — December— looo tons, $1 06; 800, ,$1 06y 8 ; 500, $1 05%. — Continues to decline and Is very weak. Feed. 60c ft ctl for ordinary and possibly a small advance for choice bright; Brewing, nominal at 67y 2 @77y a c ft ctl. . . CALL, BOARD SALES. Informal Session — 10 o'clock— No sales. . Regular Morning Session — December— 100 tons. 63y 2 c. ' • Afternoon Session — December — 100 tons, 64c: 100, 635/ B e. Nothing going on worthy of comment. Milling are quotable at $1 05@l 12% '& ctl: fancy Feed, $1 02%@l 05 ft ell; good to choice, 97y 2 c@ $1 02%: common to fair, 90@95c; Red, 90cfij$l; Gray, 92y @95c; Surprise, $1 10@l 15 ft ctl. CORN" — report trade excessively dull, with large offerings. Large Yellow. $1 Os@l 15 ctl : Small; Round Yellow, $1 10@l 12% T White, $I@l 05 ft ctl. KVK- Steady at 90c ft ctl for No. 1. BUCKWHEAT— at 85@90c ft ctl. FLOUR AND MILLSTUFFS. ■ FLOUR— Net cash prices are as follows: Family extras, $3 40@3 50 ft bbl; Bakers' extras, ?3 30 @3 40; superfine, $2 25@2 50 ft bbl. ■;_• .-. MILLSTUFFS— Flour. 3%c18 Ib; Rye Meal, 3c; Graham Flour, 3c; Oatmeal, 414 c; Oat Groats, sc: Cracked 'Wheat, 2 c; Buckwheat Flour, 4y 2 c; Pearl Barley, 4yi@434c ft tt>; Rice Meal, 312&15 ft ton. ■ CORNMEAL, ETC.— Table Meal, 3@3SAc: Feed Corn, $240425; Cracked Corn, $24 50@25 50 ft ton; Hominy, 4y 2 / ic ft lb. HAT AND FEEDSTUFFS. BRAN— Unchanged at 813 50@14 ft ton. MIDDLINGS— Are higher at $17 60@19 60 "$ ton. . FEEDSTUFFB— and rolled Barley, $14@14 60; Oilcake Meal at the mill, $25 ft ton; Cottonseed Oilcake, $24 ft ton. ■. HAY— Old Hay steady; new more or less weak. New Wild Oat, $6@7 ; new Wheat and Oat, $6(0,7; new Alfalfa, $4 50@5 50. We quote old Hay : Wheat, $B@ll ft ton; Wheat and Oat, ?7@lo 50; Barley, $7@B ft ton; Oat, $8@10: Alfalfa, ?7@B 50; Clover, $7ta<H; Compressed, $7@10; Stock, Sti(s>7 « ton. STRAW— 4o(§»7sc't4 bale. \ BEANS AND SEEDS. BEANS— Very dull. Prices are generally weak. Bayoß quotable at 81 25@1 60; Small Whites, $2 60 ©2 85 : Pea, $2 50@2 75 ; Large Whites, $2 50@2 76 • Pink, $1 26@1 45; Reds, $1 25; Blackeye, $3 25® 3 76; Red Kidney, nominal Liimas, $4@4 25: But ters. $1 75@2 for small and $2(5)2 25 ft ctl for large. — Mustards are nominal. Flax, $2 25 @2 50: Canary, S@4c ft lb: Alfalfa, 7@7%c; Rape, i%(2>2y 4 c; Hemp, 4c ft lb. ■ ' DRIKD PEAS— Split Peas, 4@43 / 4c: Green Peas, nominal ; NUes, nominal ; Blackeye, nominal. POTATOES, ONIONS, VEGETABLES. POTATOES — Steady and not particularly changed. Burbanks, 50c@$l; Peerless, 50@65c. New Potatoes, in sks,3s@6sc; New Early Rose, in boxes, from the : River, j 50@85c; Oregon Bur banks, 40@60c > ctl. ' .' .'. ONIONS— New Reds, 40@50c * ctl; Silverskins, 50@60c "ft ctl. " : . . VEGETABLES— No change beyond a further decline in Beans. Tomatoes from Winters. 75c IS drawer: Tomatoes from Los Angeles, $3 50©4 f, box; Summer Squash, 40©50 c for Vaca ville and $1 @1 25 $ box for Bay: Asparagus, 50c@$l 50 » ban. . for ordinary and $1 76@2 for choice: Rhu barb, 40@50c for ordinary and 65@85c box for choice: Green Peas, $I@l 26 f( sk for common and '2@2y c for Garden; String Beans, 2@3c fy lb for Green, 2 @4y a for Refugee and Fountain and 2y 2 @4y 2 c tR lb for(^ol<len Wax; Marysville Cucumbers! $I@l 25 '# box; Dried Okra, 15c f, It. ; Dry Pop pers, 12y @15c; Cabbage, 75c ft ctl; Feed Carrots 30@40c ; Garlic, 4@sc ft lb. -. ", ■- BUTTER, CHEESE AND EGGS. BUTTER— Medium grades of dairy rule firm, being pretty well cleaned up. Creamery. Butter continues plentiful and dull. ■ ■. • Creamkry— Fancy,- 12@12y 2 c; seconds, 11® ny 2 c ft ft. ■ . •" ■ ■■" ': ■- „,. Dairy— Fancy, 10@llc ft Ib; good to choice, 9@ 91/J2C; medium grades, B<a,By«c ft lb; store Gutter 7&. y 2 e ft lb. :• CHEESE— Fancy - mild new, , 6c: common to good, 3@so^i lb; Young America, s@7c; Eastern. 11 y 2 @12y 2 c; Western, 6@Bc ft lb. . . ' \EGGS— Dealers quoted a small advance In prices. The market is firm. Duck Eggs, 13@16c ft doz store Eggs, 12@13c; ranch Eggs, 14@16c ft doz. ' POULTRY AND GAME. POULTRY— Is quiet at unchanged prices. ' Live Turkeys, 12@13c for Gobblers; 12@13cfor Hens; Geese, ft pair, $I@l 25; Goslings, ft palr,sl@l 25- Ducks, $3 50@4 50 for old and $4@6 50 for young- Hens, $4@5 50 ft doz; Roosters, young, $8(a»10 ~A dozen: do, old, .* 4 50@5 ft dozen; Fryers, $6 50@ 7 60 ft dozen; Broilers, $s@ti for large and $2@l for small ; Pigeons, $1 75@2 for young and old. Game— Nominal. ;■;• :■■■.-. ' .>. ■ DECIDUOUS AND CITRUS FRUITS. ORCHARD FRUITS— The , canners are In the country after Cherries, and are obliged to pay up to secure them. The local market Is steady. , The re ceipts yesterday were 8600 j boxes. Supplies |of reaches and Apricots are ample. 1 ; Plums, 75c(S> $1 25 ft box; Peaches, 40@75c: Cherry Plums, 40 <a}soc ft drawer: • Green Apples, 35@50c ft box' Red -Apples, $1 25@1 60 ft box; Apricots, 40® 60c ft box for Prlngles and 1 60@90c for . Royals- Cherries, 40@60c for red ■ and white and 40@7*5c ft box for black ; 4@6c .ft lb for white lin i bu f k and 4(a.6c for black in balk; Royal Anne, 76@85c » box and 7c ft lb in bulk. ..:.«• < , . - " BERRIES — Berries were slightly ; firmer all around. Blackberries, $1 25@1 60 ft crate; Rasp berries, $6®ll ft chest and 76c@$l ft crate; Cur rants, $2@4~J) chest; Gooseberries, l@l%c for com mon, and 2@2yac for Oregon Improved. Receipts of Strawberries were 499 chests, belling at ■ $7@B for Longworths and $2 50@4 ft chest for large berries. s f CITRUS FRUITS-Oranges t and | Lemons con tinue In large supply, 'dull and weak. Navels 75c@5176 ft box; Seedlings, 40@75c: California Lemoflg, 7ficjfliU3o ias mama a*^ si co@2 toe i pood to choice; Mexican Limes, $4 50@5 <p box; Bananas, $1 25@2 a bunch: Pineapples, $4@5 0 dozen. DRIED FRUITS, RAISINS, NUTS, ETC. DRIED FRUITS— Primes, four" sizes, quotable at S34@4c-$ ft; larger sizes, s@6c $ Ib: smaller sizes, iy 2 @3c * lb; Apples. 4@4y 2 c or sliced and 6@5y 2 c for evaporated: Bleached Peaches, 4Vi>@ 6c; Apricots, s@6c for fair to choice and I@iy»c for fancy Moorpark- Pears, 4<a4y 2 c for evaporated halves. 3@4c lor quarters and lV 3 @2c for Inferior goods; Plums. 3(®3i/oc for pitted and iv c for un pitted; Figs, black 4c lor pressed and 3y 3 c for unprnssed. . ".RAISINS AND DRIED GRAPES — Raisins — Four-crown loose quoted at 3y 2 c ¥ tb; three-crown 2y 2 C$ Ib: 2-crown 2c ¥>. lb; seedless Sultanas, 3c * lt>; seedless Muscatels, 2c V Ib; 3-crown London layers, $1 35@l 45 $ box; clusters, $2 25@2 75; Dehesa clusters $2 50; Imperial clusters, $3 50: /xUTS-ehe^muf at 3@sc; Walnuts, 7@loc .ft for paper-shell and shell, and 6@7cs} tb for hardshell: Almonds, 2@2i/ 3 c &lb for hardshell, and 6®6c $ Ib for softshell, and for Paper-shell • Peanuts, s@6c for Eastern and 4@4yo C for California; Hickory Nuts, s@bc: Pe cans, 6c for rough and 8c for polished; Filberts, 8& 9c; Brazil Nuts, 7@7%c %4 tt>; cocoanutß> $4 50 HONEY-Old Comb, 6@loc; new water-white extracted,' s@siAc- light amber extracted, 4%© 4S4c: dark amber, 4c © Ib. • BEESWAX-Quoted at 26@28c # lb. PROVISIONS. CORED MEATS-Are slow at the familiar prices. Bacon quotable at 9@9y c Qib for heavy and 10c $ Ib for light medium, ioy 2 c ■$ Ib for light, ll@liy 2 c '$ for Ib extra light and 12y 2 @lsc for sugar-cured; Eastern Sugar-cured Hams, 12y 2 c; California Hams, liy 2 c; Mess Beef, $7@ 7 50 $ bbl; extra mess do, $B@B 50; family do, $10; extra prime Pork, $9 50 i* bbl; extra clear, $17 50@18 bbl; mess,sl6@ls 50 * bbl; Smoked Beef, 9y 2 @loc lb. . ; '. ? ) LARD— Eastern tierces quotable at 6y 2 c f> tb for compound and 8c for pure;. pails, 9c; California, tierces, 6c for compound and 7y 2 for pure; half bbls, 73/ic; 10- Ib tins, 8c tb: do ft-lt., 8y 2 c 3 lb. ' COTTOLENE— 8c in tierces and 9@9y 8 c «4 Ib in 10- Ib tins. /'•■'• HIDES, TALLOW, WOOL AND HOPS. HIDES AND SKlNS— Hides are Jumping. We have to note the sharpest '• advance for at least 20 years, especially in dry Hides, which have-gone up 4c %4 tb within 24 hours, owing to pronounced scarcity. When the Leather Trust was organized many of the smaller tanneries In the Eastern and Western States were closed down and this has now led to a scarcity of Leather: and as cattle have been scarce as well, a boom in Hides is the result. Heavy suited steers, 10c ?* Ib; medium. BV @9c: light, 8@8y o: Cowhides, B@By 2 c: salted Kip, 7c; salted Calf. 9c; salted Veal. 8c: ary Hides, usual se lection, 19@20c; culls and brands, 14c; dry Kip, 15c ts> Ib; Cry Calf, 20c # tb: prime Goatskins, 20@ 35c each: Kids. sc: Deerskins, good summer, 30c 3) tb; medium. 15@25c; winter, 10@15; Sheeo skins, shearlings, 10@20c each; short wool, 25@35c each; medium, 30@45c each: long wool. 40@t>0c each. Culls of all kinds about y a c less. TALLOW— Ig rattier : steadier at unchanged prices. No. 1 rendered, 4i4@4y 2 c: country Tal low,4@4V4c; refined, 6c; Grease, 3@3y c '& tb. Quotations for the spring clip are as follows: Humboldt and Mendocino, ll@l2c Q lb; Choice Northern, 10(g,llc t* lb: San Joaq"uin, year's staple, 6@7c f* Ib: do, seven months', 6@Bc; Cala veras and Foothill, 10c: Nevada, 7@9c i* lb. HOPS— Good to choice, 4@6c %i tb; inferior and old Hops, 2@3c. • - OENEBAL MERCHANDISE. BAGS-Calcntta Grain Bags, ?4 70@4 75; Wool Bags, 24@2t5c. . COAL— Wellington, $8 i* ton; New Wellington, $8: Southlield Wellington, $7 50; Seattle, $6 50; Bryant, $6: Coos Bay, $5 "£ ton: Wallsend, $7 50; Scotch, $8; Byrmbo, $7 50; Cumberland, $13 50 in bulk and $15 in sacks; Pennsylvania Anthra cite Egg, $12: Welsh Anthracite Egg, $9; Cannel, $8; Rock Springs, Castle Gate and Pleasant Val ley, $7 60: Coke, $12 in bulk and $14 in sacks. SUGAR— The Western Sugar Kenning Company quotes, terms net cash : Cube, Crushed, Powdered and Fine Crushed, all 5%c: Dry Granulated, 6%c; Confectioners' A, sc: Magnolia A, 4%c; Extra C, 4y 2 c; Golden C, 4Vic; D, 4c; half barrels, Vie more than barrels, and boxes %c more. SAN FRANCISCO MEAT MARKET. Wholesale rates for dressed stock from slaugh terers are as follows: BEEF— First quality, sy»@6c; second quality, 4y 2 @sc: third do, 3®4c ?> lb. VEAL— Large, 4@sc; small, s@7c f, Ib. MUTTON— Wethers. 4@4yoc; Ewes, 4c "® tb. LAMB— Spring, 4y 2 @si/>c $ lb. PORK— Live Hogs, 3c '£ !b for soft, 4@4i/4c for hard and 4@4i4c for feeders; dressed do, 5@6%c. RECEIPTS OF PRODUCE. THURSDAY, June 6. Flour.qr. sks 11, 100 Straw, tons 8 Wheat, .66,057 Wool, big 19 Barley, ctls 3,560 Leather, rolls 149 Beans, sks 850 Wine, gals 41,700 Potatoes, 5k5...... 2,362 Pe1t5, Ddls .„;. 30 Onions, 5k5..... ... 364 Hides, no 324 Bran, sks ......... 275 Mustard, Seed, sks 199 Middlings, sks..:.. 198Quicksllver, flasks ' 61 Hay. t0n5..".....:.. '- 471! Lime, bb15. ...:.... 120 ■■ ■ -»- THE STOCK MAEKET. Stocks continued dull yesterday and showed no change worthy of note. ', NOTES. ' The assessment on Justice will be delinquent In the board to-day. The following official reports have been placed on file: \~:s; : V; Savage— On the 950 level the north lateral drift started from the west side of the station is ad vanced 110 feet; face Is in quartz and porphyry. The south drift from the 'station is advanced 16 feet; face is in low-grade quartz. From the face of the south drift started from the east drift they have started an east crosscut and advanced the same 12 feet, passing : through 2 feet of fair grade ore. The east crosscut started from the south drift '20 feet from the east drift passed through 526 feet of quartz and reached the east clay of the vein. The west crosscut started from the ! face of the north drift fourth floor is advanced 35 feet; face shows some good ore. On the 1000 level at a point 40 feet back of the face of the east crosscut they have drifted south on a streak of ore 20 feet. On the 1050 level the south drift from the east cross cutis advanced 45 feet; face is in porphyry and quartz. ' Sko. Bklchkb— the 200 level the southwest crosscut from the south lateral drift is out 74 feet, 10 feet having been added during the week; the face shows porphyry. On the 300 level the joint '■■ Belcher south drift is now out 237 feet from the Belcher . shaft. The face is in quartz of no value. Have hoisted during the week and stored in the orehouse at the mine 15 tons of ore, the average top car • sample of which shows an assay value of $19 per ton. . .. , .. '-■ Justice— From the south drift from the bottom of the winze, 32 feet below the the drain tunnel, a total of 35 tons of ore have been extracted. This ore has been worked at the Douglass mill and yielded in bullion $2375. . Ckown Point— The raise from the west crosscut on the 700 level to connect with the fifth floor of the slope, is now up 22 feet, In porphyry. j It will take 3 or 4 days to connect and put in chute. Have extracted and : shipped the past week to the Mexican mill for reduction 600 tons of gold ore. The average battery sample was $9 46, of which $8 40 was gold. ■ v ' ■ . " Belcher— On the 1000 level the northeast cross cut from the north lateral drift is out 60 feet, with, the face In porphyry and quartz of no value. Have hoisted during the week and stored in the ore house at the mine 32 tons of ore, the average top car samples of , which ■shows an assay value of $31 16 per ton. ■ At the Bodle Consolidated mine they got through crushing on -May 28 and finished cleaning up on June 1. Crushed during the. week ending June 2 45 tons of ore, the ' average battery samples of which was $28 41; tailings- $7 78 per ton. . Total amount of ore crushed on this run, 525 tons. Shipped to the San Francisco office June ■ 2 bullion valued at $13,587 21. ' Total amount of bullion shipped for the run, $23,351 09. The usual pros pecting work is being done in the mine. *■ ■ • The amount of money paid out for labor by the mining and other companies on and around the Comstocli during May was $75,968 40. The Con- I solidated California & Virginia paid $10,275 60, Crown Point $7036 66, Chollar $5447, Ophir 83864, Belcher $3586, Savage s272B, Best* Belc her $2106 and Potosi $2274, and the other mines from $1000 to $2000 each. BOARD 5 SALES. ' Following were the sales in the San Francisco Stock Board yesterday: ' '■... , : REGCLAR MORNING SESSION— 9:BO. 150 Belcher. ..32.200 G A C...... 23,100 Ophir. . . 1.25 450 B& 8... 411100 H&N 88 100........ 1.30 50080die....;40100 ............87100 Potosi ....35 200 Chollar... 500 Justice.... Savage. ...33 250 CC&V...2.35 200 Kentuck .02200 S Nev ....47 300 2.30 60 Occidnt..:iß|3oo V Jacket. 4o AFTERNOON SESSION— 200 8e1cher....32 100 Chalnge..l9 100 Occldentl. l9 600 B& B. .40 100 Chollar. . :17|300 0phir.. .1.30 200 80d1e... 39 100 CC&V...2.30 100 SierraN...49 100 Caledonia.os|soo Justice... .03) - Following were the sales in the Pacific Stock Board yesterday:; '. v • -. ' . KEGUTJIB SESSION— IO:3O. 300 8e1cher.. .32 400 CC&V..2.35|800 Occldtl.... 18 100 B & 8... 300 .•.:.".. .2.32% 100 Ophir 1.27 V* 1000 80d1e... .42 200 G & C... 23 100 0vrmn....16 100 Chollar... 16 100 H*JN 89 200 Union C.:25 100 C Point.. :3s]2oo Justice... .03! - AFTERNOON SESSION— 2:3O. 100 Chollar.... 171100 0ccidt1.... 191100 Savage. ...S3 150 CC&V. .2.35 50 0phir....1.30 60 Jacket.. 40 •50 r......2.32y a I . - ' CLOSING QUOTATIONS. ; ' ' THURSDAY, June 6—4 p. m. Bid.Asked.\ Sid. Asked. Alpha C0n...;. 02 - : 04 Jack50n........ 20-?-: — A1ta...... "is sl6 Julia 02 — Ande5..... ;.;„ 23 24 Ju5tice......... > 03 04 Belcher ..... 31. S2 Kentuck. ...... \ — 03 Best Belchee. 40 41 Lady Wash.... * 01>v* — BentonCon 30 —Mexican .... 31 3a 80d1e..'.. ..:... 738 89 Mono .......... 05 06 8u11i0n......... 08 : * 09Mt. Diab10..... 15 — Bulwer.... ...„.,•._ .-; 05! Nevada Queen. ; — 05 Caledonia.. 05 06|Occidental 18 19 Challenge Con. 18 : 20 0ph1r. ;........ 1.25 1.30 Ch011ar... ....... 17 \ 18 Overman ...... 15 .16 Con.Cal.«fcVa.2.3o 2.35 P0t05i...;...... *34 36 ■ Con. Imperial. ' — ■'-■■ 01 vase ......... 33 34 Confidence .„ '75 84 Seg. Belcher... - 11; 12 Con.New — V 03 Scorpion -— '■ 04 • CiQwa^olu 33 86 Sierra Hevada. „ 49 Eastß.<feß... 12 14SilverHiU 01 03 EastSierraNev — 05 Silver King 20 — Exchequer 01 02 Syndicate — J^ EurekaCou 20 — UnlonCon 25 Gould & Curry. 22 23 Utah OS — Hale&Norcrs. 89 90 YeUow Jacket. 40 41 lowa — Os| STOCK AND BOND EXCHANGE. THURSDAY, June 6—2 P. K. BOXES. Sid. Asktd.\ Bid. Asked. US 4s coup..lliy 2 — I Banks. Commercial— V S4sreg...lllV a — Amerß<fcTC. — — Cal-stCbless. lO9S4 — Anglo-Cal... 59 — Cul Elec L 65107y 2 — jßank of Cal.. - 225 Cntra CW 5s — 103 Cal SD&TCo. 403/ i — Dpnt-stex-cp 92 99 First Nationl.l77y a — EdsnL<feP6s. — 110 Gransers — — F&CH RR6sloo — London P<fc A. 12 5 — Geary-stRSs. — 103 Lomlon<fcSt\ — 31 LosAngL6s. 97y 2 — Merch Ex... 12 — Do.Gnted.6s. — 103 Nevada — — Mkt-BtCblet>sl23 — Sather B Co.. — — NevCNgRSs. — 110 Banks. Savings— NPCRR6S.IOO — GerSJtLCo.. 1700 1780 Ny 11 Cal 65.. 100 104 iHumbS&L.IOOO - NRvCalss.. — — !Mutual — 45 Oak"Gas 55. .102% — SFSavUnion — 510 Do, 2di5555..103y 2 105 iSav& Loan.. llo 150 Omnibuses.. ll7Villß jSecurltv — 310 Pacßoll>i«B.lo2V2 — Union Trust. B3o XSO Do, 2d iss 65.. — — Street Railway— P&ORy6s..llo 120 California. ... 103 107y 2 P<feChßy6s. 93 — Geary-st — 90 P\vl-stRR6s. — 113 MarKet-5t.... 38 38% Reno,WLdfcLlo2 105 Oak.SLillay — 100 RiverWCo6s — 100 |Presidio — 13 SF*NPRRSsIOiy 2 102 ISutter-st — — SPRRAriz6s 96 100 | Powder— slMtliCal6s.lliy> — Atlantic D... 17 25 sPßltfalßs. 87V 2 100 Icalifornia 75 — Do, Icon std. 871/2 100 Giiini 14 16 SPBrRCal6s. 94V 8 95y« Juason — — SVWater6s.. — 12S^4|VIgorlt — 75c SVWater4s.. 973^ 981/ i! Miscellaneous— StktnG4E6s — 102y> Blk DCoalCo. — 12 SunstT&T6s — 103 ";Cal Cot Mills. — — Sutter-5tR55.107% — |C'al Dry Dock — — VisaliaWC6s — 92 EdisonLlght, 94S/ 8 95*/ 8 stocks— Water — GasConAssn. — — Contra Costa. 50Vi — HawCASCo.. — 8 Marin C 0.... — 50 HutchSPCo.. 11% 12y 8 San Jose — 100 ! Jud*onMfgC. — — Sprng Valley 6 l{ioVi MerExAssn.loo — Gas— lOceanicSSCo — 23 Capital — 46 IPacAuxFA.. 1% — Central 96 — |Pac Borax... 98 100 OakGL&H. 44 — PacI&NCo. — ' 30 PacGaslmp. 82y 4 83 Pac Roll Mill 17 — PaeihcLight. 468,4 — Parf Paint Co — 9 KanFrancsco — 72 Pac Trans Co — 25Vi Stockton — 30 jPacT&TCo. 45 — Insurance — jSunset'f &T. 30 — FiremansFd.l6o — United C Co.. — 25 Sun — 60 ' MijHMNi) SESSION. Board— 4o Edison Light & Power Co, 95y 4 . Street— 2s Hutchinson S P Co, 12y^; 50 S F Gas light, 7iy 3 ; 60 S V Water, 100. AFTERNOON BKSSION. Board— 2s Hutchinson S P Co, 12. THE CALL CALENDAR. Junk, 1895. Moon's Phases. June 7, Full Moon. June 15, Last Quarter. 17 June 22, New Mood. June 29, First Quarter. OCEAN STEAIMSKS. Dates of Departure From San Francisco. STEAUER. | DKSTINATION | | it h r.. T>.,..^«-:»i^."* B^ndorilie.. State of Cal Truckee .... Corona Point Loma. Arago CityPuebla.. Proereso San Juan. .. Kureka Kahr.lui Pomona. Santa Rosa.. Homer Weeott Oregon Del None... J-'arallon.... Ht Paul Walla Walla Humboldtßay 1 Coquille Kiver Portland... P0rt1and....... San Die tco Grays Harbor. I Coos Bay i Vie <fc FgtSnd { Panama ; i Panama.. .;.; iNewDOtt Knbului. .. jtlumboldtßay .San Diego i Coos Bay I Eel Kiver | Portland I Grays Harbor Vaauina Bay.. Newport : . I i Vie tfc I'iri Smi June I. »ah June 7, 3pm June B.loam June a. 4pm June 8.11 June B.loam I June B,loam June 9, 9am Jun 10, 4pm Jun 10.12 m Jun 10. Bam Jun 10, Jun 11. 2pm Jun 12,11 am I Jun 12, spm I Jun 12. 9am IJun 13,10 am Jun 14, spm Jun 14,10 am [Jun 14, Bam Jun 14. 9am Washt'n Miss'n 1 Spear ; Vailejo ! Bdw'y 2 Miss 1 ' Valle.io Bdw'y 1 ; Lornb'rd P M 8S 1 Bdw'y 3 Miss'n 1 Bdw'v 1 Bdw'y 2 ' Oceanic I Vallejo ! Spear Main Miss 1 ! Bdw'y 2 ! Bdw'y X STEAMERS TO ARRIVE. xuuuuwai i C0r0na........... San Juan..... ... Kahuiul.. A raw City of Everett. Pomona Eureka. ;:.'..;;■: Weeott Australia. 0reg0n .......... Walla Walia. . . . Santa Kosa. Homer Crescent City. . . Fnrallon I Del None ] Alice Blanchard Peru St Pau1. ......... Humooldt .. C010n.... I Arcata | Willamette Val. State of Cal . j [Sydney San Diego ............. Panama ;..'. Comox. Coos Bay Comox .......;...;. Humboidt Bay. Newport....*. I. Eel River Honolulu Portland Victoria & Puget Sound San Diego Coos Bay Crescent City.. .......... Yaquinaßay I Grays Harbor I P0rt1and.......... I China and Japan... Newport. :. :...;..'....... Humboldt iSay ! Panama.................. Coos Bay Mexico I Portland ..june o ..June 6 ..June 6 ..June 6 ..June 7 ..June 7 ..June 8 ..June 8 ..June 9 ..JunelO ..JunelO ..JunelO ..JunelO ..JunelO ..Junell ..Junell ..Junel'2 ..Junel2 ..Junel2 ..Junel2 ..JunelU ..Junel2 ..Junel3 ..Junel4 ..JunelS SUN AND TIDK TABLE. B WA' WA ii.: 11.1 6.14P 5.5: 6.o'Jp 6.31 4.4' 4.4' HYDKOURAPHIC BULLETIN. Branch Htdrooraphio Office, U. S. N., ■* Merchants' Exchange: V San Francisco. June 5. 1895. j The time ball on Telegraph HI 11 wag not dropped to-day. Apparatus temporarily deranged. A. F. FBCHTEtBR, Mpntenant IT.l T . S. N.. in charge. SHIPPING INTJvLLItiKNCIS. ■-.''■' . Arrived. . .•v v ... X' re THURSDAY, June 6. : Stmr Alcatraz, Olsen, 43 hours from Port Los Angeles: ballast, to L E White Lumber Co. Stmr Tillamook,' Hansen. 43 hours from Port Los Angeles: ballast, to Pollard 4, Dodge. Stmr San Juan, Pitts, 26 days — hours from Pan ama, etc : pass and mdse, to PM S S Co. . Stmr Corona, Hall, 63% hours from San Diego and way ports: pass and mdse, to Goodall, Perkins <fcCo. .-■'.■■-->.•. ..• •■■ . , .* Stmr Point Arena, Johnson, 16 hours from Men doclno, etc; pass and mdse, to Mendocino Lumber Co. ■.-•"._•■ Stmr Noyo, Levlnson. 33 hours fm Fort Bragg pass arid mdse, to J S Kimball. - In tow of the tusr Vigilant. :•. --. . .'■■■■.■■■ . . Stmrßonlta, Doran, 110 hours from San Dle^o and way ports: produce, to Goodall, Perkins & Co. Haw stmr Kiilmlui, Tyson, 5 days from Comox • 1 1333 tons coal, to R Dunsmuir <fe Co. S '. Stmr Rival, Johnson, 51 hours from San Diego ViaHuenemn: ballast, to W A Mitchell. | Stmr Laguna, Peterson, 23 hours from Usal* lum ber, to Usal Redwood Lumber Co. ' Cleared. THURSDAY, June 6. Stmr Humboldt, Edwards, ■ Eureka; M Kallsh & Co. Ship Wachusett, Williams, Nanaimo; John Ros enfeld's Sons. : , . Br ship Lord Shaftesbury, Cunningham, Queens town : Epplnger <fe Co. Nor bark. Fortuna, Mikkelsen, Port Townsend- J D Spreckels <fe Bros Co. ',■ . ' Stmr Bertha, Hays, Oorialaska; Alaska Com Co . ■ ".••:,',- ,' .*. .Sailed.'; . -;.= :; . THURSDAY, June 6. Stmr St Paul, Green, San Pedro. Stmr Bertha, Hays, Oonalaska. . Stmr Queen, Carroll, Port Townsend. Stmr Whitesboro, Johnson. ....-■■ • . Br stmr Wellington, Salmond, Nanaimo. Whal brig W H Meyer, Hanson, whaling voyage. ■• Schr Rebecca, Christiansen; Eureka. " . . .■ Schr Bobolink, Nelson, Mendocino. • Schr Ivy, Arff, Wallapa Bay. - ■ Schr Win Bowden. Fjerem, Seattle. .- Schr Melancthon, Remmers, Coos Bay, - j ' ... 'Charters'. The Br ship Wythop, now at Victoria, was char tered for wheat loading prior j to ' arrival, with op tion of Portland or Tacoma. ■ ; v/■ Telegraphic. , . '.. POINT LOBOS— June 6—lo p. Weathar thick; wind SW: velocity 8 miles per hour. Domestic Forts. EUREKA— June s— Schr Elvlnla, for San Francisco. - -' ■.-■..., .... SANTA BARBARA— SaiIed June 6— Br bark Duke of Argyle, for Royal Roads. . " . • SAN DlEGO— Sailed June 6— Br ship Dowan Hill for San Francisco, In tow of tup Fearless. , ' WESTPORT— Arrived June 6— Stmr Protection nenceJune4. ■ ;.: • ■::■ , .: : . PORT HADLOCK— SaiIed June Bktn John Smith, for Shanghai. . ' ' ■ MOSS LANDlNG— Arrived June 4— Schr Enter prise, from Grays Harbor. • ■. . - SAN PEDRO— June 6— Schr ' Alice stmr Pasadena, for Eureka. ; . . ..■■-. ■■•- r PORT LOS ANGELES— SaiIed June 8-Stmr Sunol. --''<•"".■• ;i- ; ; i ....■"■.■•■■.■■ ".-■■'. ••> . ■ NEWPORT— Arrived ! June Stmr Newsboy from Redondo. and sailed for Redondo. .? ' MENDOCINO-Sailed June 6— Schr Nettie Sund borg, for San Francisco. ■ ■"■*■■ ■'■ ■.-•-. ■:.' PORT ANGELES— SaiIed June Bktn Quick step, for Shanghai. ■ • ■-.-• . ' - TACOMA— Sailed June 6— Schr Maria E Smith for San Francisco. - . .. BOWENS LANDING— SaiIed June 6— Stmr Cle one, for San Francisco. •• • ;- ■ : ; ' : -■. • ' COOS BAY— Arrived June Stmr Homer, hnc June 3. ■...;■:.• .;.•=:■:.■■.-.■■ ■'■',■ .; ■ ..-.,.- Sailed June s— Schr Gotama, for San Francisco ■' schr Seven Sisters, for San Francisco. ■ - ' V; . .-.....;. ; Eastern Ports. . NEW. YORK-Arrived June Ship Kenilworth 93 days from Honolulu. ■'. • : Foreign Ports.. ,"-**■ - ' fANASIAwArrjLved May 2a-Stmr San Joae, fm Champerico. May 25— Stmr of Panama, from Champerico; stmr City of Sydney, hence April 29. bailed May 18— Br at nix Aztec, for San Francisco. May 20— Stmr Colon, for San Francisco. •-.■ ANTWERP— Arrived June 4— Br ship Galatea, hence Jan 2. ■-•, : - : BRISTOL— June Nor ship Breldablik, from Oregon. ■ • • ■ ■ •• . ■ - - - DUNKlßK— Arrived June 4— Br ship Ellisland. from Tacoma. ' LIVERPOOL— Arrived June s— Br ship Gars dale, hence Jan 25. • ' ■ . DUNUKNEss— Passed June s— Br ship Ard more, from London for Vancouver: Ger ship Ferdi nand Fisher, from London tor Oregon. NEWCASTLE, NSW— Sailed May 23— ship Toxteth, for San Francisco. NANA IMO— SaiIed June 6— Bark Wilna, for San Francisco. . ■; .' Importations. NAVARRO- Per Point Arena— soo railroad ties. Mendocino— l pKg mdse. • • _„„ Point Arena— l7s M ft lumber, 8 pkgs mdse, 120 bxs butter, 48 sks bone, 2 cs HKgs. 10 sks peas. FORT BRAGG— Noyo— 2 bdls pelts, 60 salt hides, 2 horses, 100 M shingles, i.'53 M ft lumber, 1 sk tails, 1 bx druifs, -1 cs shoes. SANTA MARIA— Per Corona— 3oo sks beans. ' Los Alamos— loo calves. PortHarford— l4 cs honey, Bcs cheese, les oil. 5 coops chickens, 2 coops poultry, 1 bx medicine, 1 pkg knives, 15 bxs fish, 1 roll carpet, 3 bbls 7 cans tallow, 75 bdls hides, pelts; etc, 54 bxs butter, 48 cs eggs, 41 dressed calves. Ptocksidin^— 97 sks rocks. --<'•. Los Berros— 94 sks wheat, 33 sks beans, 35 sks mustard. Santa Barbara— l 2cs oil, 9 bbls wine, 28 bxs oranees, 145 'emons. . Los Angeles, via Port Los Angeles— 2 bxs books. 10 stoves, 1 pksr goods. i motor, 1 bx fittings, 320 sks plaster, 1 bx tobacco,' 1 t>bl sheep dip, 3 pun cheons. Port Los Angeles— l horse, 14 crts vegetables, 9 crts squash, 1 wagon and parts, 2 bxs tents, 2 sks harness. Newport— l7o bxs oranges, 200 bxs lemons, 1 cs honey. . Redondo— 76 bxs lemons, 16 pkgs mdse, Ibx oranges. Los Angeles, via Redondo— 3 bxs oranges, 1 lot furniture, 1 bdl nets, 7 cs advertising matter. San Diego— 3s bxs oranges, 14. sks 4 bxs dried peaches. 1 crt bicycle, 1 bdl bicycles, 1 sk dried fruit, 2 crts gas stoves, 3 cs dry goods. 106 bdls dried fish, 29 hf-bbls pickled fish, 1 bar iron, 1 pkg castings, 2 bbls tallow, 338 bxs lemons, 1 bx ham, 3 pkgs mdse. 2 bis curtains. GOLETA— Per Bonita— 4s tons asphaltum. Lompoc— l6B sks mustard, 381 sks beans, 2 bdls green pelts, 38 cs honey, 73 bdls hides, 8 cs cheese, 92 bxs butter. 3 bbls tallow, 5 bxs dried fruit. : SOUTH AMERICA— San Juan— 3 pkgs gold dust ($3747). For Hongkong— 3 pkgs treasure ($1650). Mexico and Central America— 37Bß bgs coffee, 7 pkgs mdse, 6 bis deerskins, 43 hides, 350 b?s oil cake, 59 pkgs dried fish, 15 bgs pepper, 33 bis jute, 917 bxs limes. 44 bxs pineapples, 7 bxs melons, 6 bxs mangoes, 1368 btrs gold and silver ore, 34 pkgs treasure ($129,853 89). Consignees. Per Point Arena— Wilson & Baechtel; Pac Bone & Fert Co; Ross Hewlett; P BHaight: Ballard & Hall; Rohlffs<fc Gerdon; OB Smith* Co; Enter prise Brewery; Mendocino Lumber Co; C Mathews &Co; Standard Oil Co; Cluffßros; Arpad Harasz thy & Co. Per Blssinger &Co W B Sumner <fe Co; D McDonald: Porter, Slessinger & Co: J S Kimball: Standard Oil Co; W P Fuller&Co; Harris <fc Jones; C A Hooper & Co; Union Lumber Co; R M Brown; J Hammond; Friend & Terry. Per Corona— Wilson & Baechtel; Wetmore Bros : M T Freltas & Co; J F Meyers <fe Co; T B Jay ; L B Barnes; M W McCheney & Co; W B Sumner & Co; Hills Bros: Dalton Bros; Hall, Luhrs <fc Co; M S Simas; Capt Bennett; McDougall Bros; Wood & Curtis: Kahn Bros; Klein & Co; W J Smith; HO Greenhood ; San Francisco Breweries: Gray & Bar bieri; L Scatena & Co; A Galli Fruit Co;. W Wood; Neustadter Bros. Eveleth <fc Nash : Adams <fc Son; A Levy <t Co: Gould & Jaudln ; A C Richardson : , D Biagi & Co: W Wittland; W C Graves; Mark, Levy &Co; J CDolan: C C Pennell; W E Williams; S BBodgers; F JMoll; C 8 Hamlton: E Gallup: E N Johnson; W W Montague & Co; General Elec tric Co; Dairymen's Union ; E L Snell; National i Tobacco Co; Dallemand <fc Co; Cal -Dairy Produce Co; Allen <fe Lewis; A C Fry &Co: J Caire: Jos Metzler; J Ivancovich <£ Co; N P Perrine; Kruse & Euler; Norton, Teller & Co; Smith's Cash Store: J P Thomas; American Union Fish Co; H Moffatt; San Francisco Fish Co; D E Perry; FCamillonl: M Kirshman; Standard Oil Co; Chicago Brewery; Na tional Brewery: Enterprise Brewery; Jansen, Hose &Co;LD Stone <fe Co; C E Whitney.*; Co; H Wed leck; S Brunswick; Sherry, A villa <fe Co; Bennett & Murray; Brigham; Hoppe &Co Kowalsky & Co; De Bernard! <fc Co: Edwards & Co. • ■ Per Bonita— Wieland Brewing Co; R A Kershaw; H Dutard: Field & Stone; Lowry & Stellar W II Abbott; W B Sumner & Co; Bissinger & Co; A Pal lies; Smith's Cash Store: De Bernard i & Co; Getz Bros & Co; Standard Oil Co: Dodge, Sweeney & Co; CE Whitney &Co: FBHaight; Braunschweiger & Co: Meyerfield, Mitchell & Co; C Carpy & Co. Per San Juan— A Center; A Levy & Co; Beiton Lepori; Cabrera, Roma C Co; C D Bunker Co; ChuidaA Flack: Dieckmann & Co: E L G Steele Co; FRuther &Co; Goldtree Bros; G Staack^; Garcia & Maggini ; Haas Bros : J Meyerink <t Co ; I Gutte; J Gundlach & Co; J Ivancovich & Co; John T Wright; J I) Spreckels Bros & Co; L F Lastreto; L G Sresovlch & Co; L Benussi; L Gibson; Sperry Flour Co: Schwartz Bros; Otis McAllister & Co: S 11 Jones <fc Co; StocKton Milling Co; Anglo-Califor nia bank; Selby Smelting and Lead Co; W Loaiza Co; Thannhauser& Co; Nevada Bank; Urruela Urioste&Co; \V F Keyes; W F Mitchell; WOI -sen. For Lot* Shipping Ttitelllgence See Thirteenth Page, OCEAN STEAMSHIPS. / OCEANIC STEAMSHIP COIPAIY. Coolgardie gold fields jtZ3?ZAQ' : **¥bL (Fremantle), Austra- ■^P^.^MrtkfPihr«& L l ?^ "° first ' cl »ss, JSSrcr »'vWf\ti(lU» $110 steerage. Lowest /Bw J^^SSf^Zj*^- ratCS to Capetown, /ftfgM^* f» ''^hk. South Africa. fjjfjf/ ~UC^f\ \Wk Honolulu only, Satur- \^Vi ju T"^y /Mm Australian steamer, Honolulu and Auck- land, Thursday, June Ticket office. 138 Montgomery street. Freight office, 327 Market street. J. D. SPRECKELS <fc BROS., General Agents. PACIFIC COAST STEAMSHIP COMPACT DISPATCH STEAMERS PROM SAN A« XJ Francisco for ports in Alaska, 9 a. m., JcExt&Q£. June 4, 9, 19, 24. July 5. 9, 19, 24, August 3, 8, IS. For British Columbia and Puget Sound ports, June 4, 9, 14, 19, 24, 29, and every fifth day there- after. For Eureka, Humboldt Bay, steamer Pomona, every Tuesday at 2 p. m. For " Newport, Los Angeles and all way ports, June 2, 6, 10, 14, IS, 22, 26, 30, and every fourth day thereafter, Ba. v. ■ ■ For San Diego, stopping only at Port Harford, Santa Barbara, Port Los Angeles, Redondo (Los Angeles) and Newport, June 4, 8. 12, 16, 20, 22, 24. 28, and every fourth day thereafter, at 11 a. m. Steamer Pomona Saturday to Monday excur- sion to Santa Cruz and Monterey, leaves Broadway wharf 1. Saturdays 4 P. M. For ports in Mexico, 10 a. m., 25th of each month, steamer Willamette Valley. ■» Ticket Oflice— Palace Hotel, 4, New Montgomery street. : GOODALL, PERKINS & CO., General Agents, 10 Market St.. San Francisco. On J?/ HJ TO PORTLAND ■ BY. QL Ilia AND ASTORA. STEAMSHIPS DEPART FROM ; SPEAR- street wharf at 10 a. m. every five days, con- necting at PORTLAND with direct rail lines to all points in OREGON, WASHINGTON, IDAHO, MONTANA, and all Eastern points, including Chi- cago, New York and Boston. . State of California sails June 8 , 18, 28, July 8. Oregon sails June 13, 23, July 3, 13. Fare In cabin, Including berth and meals, $15 00- Steerage. $7 60; Round trip, $25 00. : ' \ For through rates and all other Information annlv to the undersigned. . "*''"■' Goodam., Pkrktnb & Co. Fbid. F. Connor. Gen'l Supts., •■ ,^:- Gen'l Agent. 10 Market, st. 19 Montgomery st. COMPAGSIEGMERAIETRASSATLASTIPE French Line to Havre. /COMPANY'S PIER (NEW), 42 NORTH xt . \J River, foot of Morton st. ' Travelers by ■&££*+ this line avoid both transit by English ra"ilw"v^Td the discomfort of crossing the channel in Ismail boat. New York to Alexandria, Egypt, via p£r?s. first class $160; second class $lig , • ; LA Capt. Leboneuf ... LA TOURAINE; Capt: :SanteiiV. J^ ne *8'' i \" 0 " *• LA GASCOGNE, CaptVßaud4ion ne 1&> LA CHAMPXGNEVcapii-Laurent 116 . 2 . 2 '. 4 ; 00 f" * ■"■■■■■■■■■■ •••••.-."...... June 7:66 a. m. »jT For further particulars apply to „; „ „ A. FORGET, Agent, ■ T v vTTfiA7? °: 3 Bowling Green, New York. a^laifFr^co* C °- X% *™*\ 5 Mont « om^ WHITE m\ USE. United Stales and lioyal Mail Steamers -. - i '. BKTWEEX NewYprk, Queenstown & Liverpool, SAILING EVERY WEEK. X f\ ABIN, 860 AND UPWARD. ACCORD- jHpC*. ■ \J ing to steamer and- accommodations WtSHB* selected: second cabin, $35: Majestic and Teutonic, ?40 and $45. Steerage Tickets from England, Ire- land, , Scotland, • Sweden, • Norway - and Denmark through to San Francisco at lowest rates. Tickets, sailing dates : and cabin plans may be . procured from W. H. AVERY, Pacific Mail Dock, or at the general- Office of the Company, 613 Market St., under Grand Hotel. G. W. FLETCHER, ■ ■ , , General Agent for Pacific Coast." : ROYAL HAIL STEAM_PACKET COMPML STEAMERS LEAVE ASPINWALL Jtum- O fortnightly for the West Indies and <G&&2j<f Southampton, calling . en . route . at > Cerbourgh. France, and Plymouth to land passengers. '■. ■ • Through bills of lading, in connection with the Pacific Mail S. S. Co., issued for freight »nd tret* ■re to direct ports in England and Germany. ' I Through tickets from San Francisco to Plymouth, Cherbourg, Southampton. First class, 196 ; thtwl i Claw, W7 60. lor further particulars apply f \ . i-ABROXT & CO., Agents, _ ■ ' - « : 308C»iiXB5Bi»lfc ' OCEAN STEAMSHIP^ c t asm tat STEAMERS . Leave Pier No. 3, Washington St.. ' At 5 I*. M. ?>:-.il- . Except Sunday, •car Accommodations Reserved by Telephone *^ STJSA3IKKS: a T. C. Walker, ■ . J. D. Peters, Mary Garratt, City of Stockton. Telephone Main 805 ■ Cal. Kay. and Imp. Co RAILROAD TRAVEL; FRA»O & NORTHPi. CMC RAILWAY CO. Tlburon Ferry-Foot of Market St. San Francisco to San Rafael. WEEK DAYS-7:40, 9:20, 11:00 a.m.; 19-JUL It 11-^r'« :3 2 T- M h Tn il«lays-Extra trip andll-30'p " M 78 ~ Extra tripB at 1:5 « BU: o!oO. Y 6i2o B^' 9:30> 11:0 ° A - M - : 1 : 30 ' 3:S * San Rafael to San Francisco. WEF.K DAYS-6:25, 7:55, 9HO 11-10 a w< at i 4 5 3 4 m. and 8:35 p. m tUrClayS - Eltra trlP " TO ?sm\fe?i 10 ' 9:40> 11:1<i A - M - ; I:4 °- 3:40i O .\J\), f> _.> I*. M. Between San Francisco and Schuetien Park aami schedule as Above. San Francisco. '"ffig B^gSSteT I),fvs I days destination. >rN - I W«« uays. [ i)a^B. l.ays. | days. 7:40 am 1 8:00 ami Novjuo, 10:40 mi 850 am 3:30 pm 9:30 ami l'etaluma, 605 pmlki-'O am 6:10 pm|s:oo pm, Santa Rosa. 7:30 ix 6.15 pit Fulton, ——— 7:40 am Windsor, 10:30 AM Healdsburg, Geyserville, 8:30 8:00 am Cloverdale. 7:30 fM 6:15 rm Pieta, Ti ~" 7:40 am Hopland & 10-^Oam 3:30 pm 8:00 am Ukiah. 7:30 pm; 0:15 rM 7:40 am ~ 10:30 am 8:00 am Guerneville. 7:30 pm 3:30 pm ' 6:15 pm 7:40 am 8:00 am Sonoma 10:40 am 8:50 a* 6:10 fm 5:00 PM and 6:05 pm 6:13 pm ; Glen Ellen. I 7:40 am 8:00 am a ph£ mno > 110:40 am 10:30 a* 3:3opm|s:oopm faebastopoi. [ 6:05 pm | 6:15 FM Stages connect at San Rafael for Bollnaa. Stages connect at Santa Rosa for Mark Waal Springs. stages connect at Geyserville for Sl«»f?gs Spring* Stages connect at Cloverdale for the Geysers. Stages connect at Pieta for Highland Springs, KelseyvlUe, Soda Bay, Lakeport. Stages connect at Hopland for Lakeport and Bartlett Springs. Stages connect at Ukiah for Vichy Springs, BIn« Lakes, Laurel Dell, Upper Lake, Boonevllle, Green- wood, Mendocino City. Fort Bracg, UsaL Westport, Cahto, WlUetts, Calpella, Porno, Potter Valley, John I D»y's, Lively's, Gravelly Valley, Harris, Block.* burg, BridgeviUe, HydesvUle and Eureka. Saturday to Monday round-trip tickets at reduced rates. On Sunday? round-trip tickets to all points b» yond San Rafael at half rates. Ticket Offices, corner New Montgomery a*4 Market streets, under the Palace Hotel. H. C. WHITING, P.. X. RYAN, Oen. Manager. ' Gen. Pass. Agent. •4M7TMKKN PACIFIC (•RFAIII. • (PACIFIC BVBTKM.) Train* le»ve and are due to arrive »l ;;'-;;•- "SAN FRANCISCO. leave — From May 19,. 1695. — akkto, "•"«:3OA~BanTeandrorHayward:i Way St'ns 8:15* 7:«Oa Atlantic Express (via Martinez and Lathrop) Ogden & Kast 7:l!»ii •7:8Oa Port Costa and Benicia JO:43* •7:OOa Peters and Milton '7:15* ?:3Oa San Leandro, Haynards & Way St'ns 1 0154 7:30 a Kapa, Calistoira and *Santa liosa ; VacaviUe,' Esparto, Sacramento, and Redding via Davis; Martinez and Sanltamon Ci-ISI «:80a Kiles, Han Jose, Stockton, loco, • Sacramento,. Marysville, Red Bluff and *Oroville 4 1 1 .1» S::«0a Port Costa, Uenicia and Way Stations 6:4.1 1 9:OOa San Leandro, Hayward3 i: Way Ht'ns 11:43 a _ t»:OOANew Orleans -Express, Raymond, ' 9 (for Vast-mite). Santa Barbara, Los Angeles, J)eiiiiiijj, El Paso, New Oileaus and Kast 5:45* 10:OOa San Leandro, Hay war' ls and Nile 3-. 1:45 1 12:00 m San Leandro, Haywards 4 Way St'na 2: «5» 1 :OOp Niles, .San Jose and Livermore *: *•"»* •I:OOp Sacramento River Steamers »!»:OOp fl :3Op Port Costa and Way Stations t*s**l 3:OOp San L3andro, HajTyards& Way St'ns s:i3| ■4:00p San Leacdro, Haywards & Way Sfns 6:45 i 4:OOi' Martinez, San Ramon, Benicia, Vallejo, Napa, Calistoga, El Ver- aao mid Santa llosa 9:134 4:00r Vacaville, Woodland, Knights Landing, Marysville, Groville and Sacramento 11:454 4:30r Niles, San Jose; Uvermoro *a&-~ ■■ — - Stockton....:. .;...- J.... 7:15 l S:OOp Ban Leandro, Haywards & Way St'ca 8:45 i S:OUpLos Angeles Kxpress, Fresno, Ray- mond (for Yoscmite), Uakersiield, Santa Barbara and Los Angeles.. 19:134 5:00p Santa Fa lloute, Atlautio Express for Mojave and Kast 10:15 a 5:30 p European Mail (via Martinez and Stockton) Ogdeij and Kast 10:43 a 6:00 Hayn-ards, Kilt-s auil ban Jose ' 7:45^ ]6:O»i> Vallejo t»:43s 4:OOp Oregon Express (via Martinez and Stockton) Sacramento, Mary.iville, Bedding, Portland, Pugut Soutul and Kast 10:43 a 7:0 Op San Leandro, Haywards & Way St'ns 10:30 v »:OOp SanLeandro,Hßywards& WaySt'n3 tt12:004 ft! 1 :1 ftp Leandro, Hay wards & Way *7:15 a Z SANTA CltllX DIVISION QarrorKinugej. J7:45a Sunday Excursion for Newark. Ban . Jose, Los Gatos, Felton and Santa Cruz '.*> : 83 1 «:IsANewark,Centervillc,San.Jose,FeHon, Boulder Creek, Santa Cruz and Way Stations 9:5*1 •8:15p Newark, Centerville, San Jose, New Almaden, Felton, Boulder Creek, Santa Cruz and Principal Way Stations ...•II:SO4 4:45p Newark. .San .lose. Los Catos 0:30^ COAST DIVISION (Third & Towiisfml StM.) , •6:45 a Kan Jose, New Almadeu and Way _ Stations •1:43| 17:30 a Sunday Excursion for San Jose, Santa ..:-■'• ,•. Cruz, Pacific Grove and Principal Way btatiorj 28:33] 8:15 a Han Jose, Tres I'inos, Hoot* C'ruj;, I'acilic lirove, i'aao Itobles, Kan Luis Obispo and Principal Way Stations 7:031 Jo:47 a Palo Alto and Way Stations Jl:-35| I»:4Oa Kan Jose and Way Stations r>:O(>| 11:45 a Palo Alto and Wn StatlODi 3:30| • *J*:3op Ban Jose, Gflroy, Ires Pinos, Santa Cruz, Salinas.Monterry ami Pacific ■ . Grove M 0:404 •«::top San Jose and Princiiial Way Stations »:474 *4:30i- Son Jose anil Way .Stations ... •8:00^ 5::;0i- San Jose aud Way Stations •S:l'»4 «::£Of San Jose ami Way Stations : 0:3.14; tll:-l5p San Jose ami AVay .StaUnns t7:-lO| CREEK ROUTE FERRY. ; From SIS FR4KCISCO— Toot of Market Street (Slip 8)— r •7:00 8:00 9:00 ■ *10:00 } 11:00 a.m. . *12:30 U:00 *2:00 3:00 •1:00 5.01 ■ *6:00 p.m. From OAKLAND— Foot or . Bro»dTty.— *C:00 •7:o* 8:00 *9:00 10:00 -••11:00 a.m., tU4N . »12:30 - 3:00 *3:00 4:00 '5:03 p.m. A for Morning. '. I* for Afternoon. • Sundays excepted. t Saturdays only. § Thursdays only. 1 Sundays only. ft Monday, Thursday and Saturday nights only. _ ' ■ * , X-^^SAUSALITO FERRY. From April 21, 1895. _ Leave S. F. WEEK DAYS. Arrive S. F. ' 7.00 a.m. Mill V»I., Rom Vil.,Stn Rf!. '....• 8.00 a.m. " " " San Qtn. 6.45 a.m. 9.15 a.m. " " " 7.40 a.m. 10.15 a.m. . " , " " SaaQta. 8.45 a.m. 11.45 a.m. " - " 9.40 a.m. 1.45 p.m. •' " " S«n Qtn. 10.4. r 3.20 p.m. " " " H^a.m. " " " S*nQta. 1.16 p.m. 4.15 P.M. " " " 305 p.m. 6.15 p.m. " " . " " Sao Qtß 4.40 p.m. " 5.50 P.M. " " " 6.35 p.m. 6.35 P.M. " " " 6.25 p.m. ......... , " " " San Qtn. 7.45pm 11.30r.M. R«?sVal., San Rfl., San Qtn 8.00 a .M. Cawdero and Waj Stations ' 7*45 P ' M * •1.46 p.m. " • " . " • ."xB - 45a'm* •Saturdays only. x Mondays only " " SUNDAYS. 8.00 a.m. Mill Val., Ross Val., San Rfl., Sin Qto ........ Ross Valley, San Rafael, San Qtn . . ' Kioi* i' 9.00 a.m. MiU Val., Ross Va!., San El, S«n Qta. ! . . . f * '. i0.66a.m: " ■'•«.: « ' SinQta : « :i^* ........ Ross Valley, San Rafael. San Qtn "in mi*- -11.00a.m. Sansalito only ..... ' ' ' " -IT™**"' .... Sanaalito and Mill VaileT* ""*'"" iVio»« 11.30 a.m. Kill Valley, Ross Vall^sln'Rfi: " " • IUaAJI ' lzso'p'x. V » li> *°* Vil .v San " Rfl - Qt a ;i2:i6p-.M. :::::::: "nj^i-jitaS^::::^ ;?kS£ « :: :; figfe:.Sß2 4.00 p.m. «• .. „ ,*, >•• 6.30 P.M. 5.30 p.m. " ■ ••■••• •• 7.20PJ!. 6.45 p.m. '« -«>. x „•••■•••• . ATLANTIC m PACIFIC RAILROAD. __ 4TXT SANTA FE ROUTE. TFrtSit.^^ 15 AND ARKIVE AT BAS if^ancUcojMarket-st. Ferry): » A tLY.} V _ MAKCH 11, 1891. {$**%* .6:00 r. .Fast Express via Mojave 10-15 4 •-0? A ■ .Atlantic Express via Los Angeles ". 6-45 i Ticket Omce-650 Market st., Chronicle koliA ; ««. a. y. v^ C. H. speers,