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The morning news. [volume] (Savannah, Ga.) 1887-1900, January 26, 1897, Image 7

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86063034/1897-01-26/ed-1/seq-7/

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the markets quiet.
(OTTOS QIIET ASD STEADY
\\D raCHASCBD.
. virong Demand For Spirits Tnr-
Bat the Sales Msht-Hostn
Market Firm **■<• Inehanged With
„„ a i e —The Wholesale Markets
. lea dy and Ln.hanged-A Decline
(Il .he Egg Market-Markets by
telegraph.
- .vannah, Jan. 25,-There was very little
_ to-day in the leading: departments of
,j’ greater interest seemed to be een
, j in the coming election than in the
, ,',-kets. Cotton remained quiet and
, iy with sales of only 223 bales. Spirits
, •• . ntine was very firm at 25%c, but the
• -mgs were light and the reported sales
i Lie day were only 189 bales. Rosin
B , ulletined firm and unchanged, but
, ,es were reported. The general mar
„ were steady and unchanged. There
~ another drop in the price of eggs, the
„ , , being large. The following re
of the different markets will show
, ,and the quotations at the close
t" las • •
tOTTOX.
,r iocal market spot remained quiet
, idv with sales of 233 bales. At the
a.l it the Cotton Exchange, the mar
j. u ,. bulletined quiet and steady and
hanged, with sales of 44 bales. At the
,i call it was unchanged with sales of
i ;7 . at the last call. It was quiet and
, > and unchanged with further sales
of 12 bales.
I following were the official spot quo
i.ujons. at the close of the market, at
Cotton Exchange to-day:
l middling 7 1-16
Middling 613-16
;.„w middling 6 9-16
i ordinary 6 5-16
M :k> t quiet and steady; sales, 223.
• .i l -fand Cotton—The market contin
i, : ,irly active at the following quota
tions:
ixtra choice Floridas 15'<6
(lio'.'.c Floridas 14'6
i:\ ra fine Floridas 13%®14
I'aucy Georgias 12%
Extra choice Georgias 11%@13
choice Georgias 11 <®lP,6
Extra line Georgias 10V6019%
Cine Georgias 9%
Medium fine Georgias 9
Common Georgias 8
(Savannah Receipts, Exports and Stocks:
Ihceipts this day 5,316
Receipts this day last year 1,880
K- ..pts this day year before last .. 3,160
Rr '-eipts since Sept. 1, 1896 680,297
Same time last year 572,789
Same time year before last 761,793
.Exports, coastwise, this day 2,533
S'oek on hand this day 82,264
Same day last year 77,674
Receipts and Stocks at the Ports—
Receipts this day .' 33,475
This day last week 33,372
This day last year 23,383
This day year before last 42.050
Heceipts past three days 60,934
Same days last year 40,342
Sam- days year before last 64,05 P
Total receipts since Sept. 1, 1896 5,423,545
Same time last year 3,919,985
Same time year before last 6,023,623
stock at the ports to-day 1,063.947
Stock same day last year 956,217
Daily movement at other ports—
ilalveston—Steady; middling, 7c; net re
f pts. 5.621; gross, 6,321; sales, 762; stock,
12",979.
New Orleans—Quiet; middling. 7c; net
receipts. 13.226; gross, 13,534; sales, 3,000;
stock. 425,014.
Mobile —Quiet; middling, 6%c; net re
ceipts. 3,438; sales, 1.000; stock, 31,469.
Charti -ton—Firm; middling, 6 15-16 c; net
receipts. 2.332: stock, 35,246.
Wilmington—Firm; middling, 6%c; net
receipts. 570; stock, 6,535.
Norfolk—Quiet; middling. 6 15-16 c; net re
" ipts. 1.701; sales, 426; stock, 34,352.
Baltimore—Nominal; middling. 7 5-16 c;
gross, 189; stock. 24.692.
New York—Easy; middling, 714 c; net re
•'Girts none; gross. 5,290; sales, 3,298; spin*
Iters. 198; stock. 283,934.
Boston—Quiet; middling, 7 5-16 c; net re
ceipts. 1.208; gross, 3,399.
Philadelphia—Quiet; middling, 7%e;
stork, 8.936.
baily movement at interior towns —
Augusta—Quiet; middling, 7%c; net re
" l't> 1,027; gross, 1,465; sales, 633; stock,
50,011
Memphis—Quiet; middling, 6 15-16 c; net
r'i'fipts. 2.083; gross, 2,531; sales, 1,850;
stock, 155.045.
8;. Louis—Steady; middling. 7c; net re
ceipts. 355; gross, 1,524; stock, 64,141.
''hvinnati—Quiet; middling, 7c; net re
ipts, 590; stock. 3,682.
Houston—Quiet; middling, 7c; net re
>■ Ipts. 2.131; sales. 516; stock. 43,078.
Louisville—Firm; middling, 615-16 C.
Exports of Cotton This Day—
Gaiv. .-ton—To Great Britain, 7,345; to
1 continent, 700; coastwise, 1,458.
Mobile-Coast wise, 903.
Savannah—Coastwise, 2,539.
' 'harltsion—Coastwise, 18.
Wilmington—Coastwise, 650.
Norfolk—Coastwise, 1,444.
N'u York—To Great Britain, 3,580; to
1 —5; to the continent, 5,857; for-
Varded, 129.
; To Great Britain. 1,494.
1 R i'rt'cign exports from all ports this
1,1 Great Britain, 12,419; to France,
- Hu eontlnont, 6,557.
" ‘ *sn exports from all ports thus
"“6: To Great Britain. 12,580;
■ . 825; lo the continent, 21,737.
' 1 b'M'ign exr>orts since Sept. 1. 1896:
Britain, 2,243.008; to France, 490.-
'■ "" continent, 1,285,731.
'T"* >j. Jan. 27i, 12:30 n. m.—Cotton,
■ 'l' uiatul; American middling, id; sales
;,;t ' s ' American, 9,490; speculation
' ' "in 500 hales; receipts, 1.000 hales,
1 none Futures opened quiet,
moderate; January-February,
" '-" ' -March. March-Aprfl. 3.s9d;April
■'lav-.iune, June-July. 3.80d; July-Ait*
1; Septcmber-Oetober, 3.52d. Fu-
Iy; tenders 2,100 liales, new doek
, , 1 January, 3.5803.59d. values; Jan-
I 'd'ruary, February-March, March
ed. buyers; April-May. 3.5803.09a,
'lay-.Tuiip. :i.59<1, sellers; June-July,
/ - "st. 3.5903.60 U, buyers; August
-1 iSd. buyers; Septetnber-Orto
-4 . L b't.vers; Octobcr-November. 3.47il
I aturcs closed easy.
' , " k ' Jan- 25. noon.—Cotton futures
an . ( and easy; January and Keii
-7 . ,*■ ■'""•.March. t.o4c; April, 7.10 c; May,
. „ '"'■‘•23c; Jfi'y and August, 7.28 c.
i " r , Jan ' 1 P. m. -Cotton fu
.l, 6*eady sales, 98,500 bai.<s;
At.- J'Obruary, 6.99 c; March. 7.06 c;
■ \ " , , y ’ 7 - la< ' ; Junt> - 7.24 c; July.
' Ml *"' September. 6.99 c; Oe
'lJ ' mhe r, 6.84 t■; December, 6.89,;.
" ihs. 1,a., Jan. 25.—Cotton fu
.i, 8 *k" 1 *6.0O0: January, 6.71 a-;
March, 6.56 c; April, 6.92i-'
done, 7.05 c; July, 7.10 c; August’
•' o tier. 6.66 c, October. 6.53.
' l ll, Riot dan 58 t'o. say
1 '* c IW market was very
ii ' . . Beiclpts, while not heavy,
, "’”*'• Tt “’ tie.us took advan
' "" coinlltious to sell hi,,
' a few points, but at the !
' k whii* r m, , J rHtll, ‘ r onxious to
''hut they had sold. March
advanced l 0 d „,.| in ,,,
G"ed at 7.06tt7,07c, W |, h lh „
"e (an ssr change In the s.t
, ■ 'tvor liuylng on breaks."
1 ' Jan. 25—The Hup says of
Peculation to-day was de
, resting developinents The
, "’e main of u local soalp
''■ •* n ’ l the rtuctnattons ,n
j GUSTAVE FOX Pres t and Treas JOSEPHS WALKER, Secy and Manage r j
|Elegtrig Supply & Construction Co.|
Wholesale and Retail Electrical Supplies and Construction.
Contractors for Electric Lighting Plants
and tor Electric Transmission ot Power, j
Our stock of electrical goods is large and complete and our prices are entirely I
satisfactory. j
Our construction department is second to none in the southern states. Only
experienced electricians and electrical engineers are employed. |
Write us for estimates. .
OFFICE, 40 DRAYTON STREET. SAVANNAH. CA.
prices were confined within narrow limits.
Liverpool was lower, and prices here de
clined in sympathy at the opening. After
the first transactions, however, the tone
became stronger in the absence of any
decided selling pressure, and prices slow
ly advanced. Local shorts covered and
Liverpool bought here on a moderate,
scale. Before the close, however, the
prices weakened again and slowly re
ceded, the market closing steady at a
slight net decline for the day. The re
ceipts jvere free and the New Orleans es
timate for to-morrow was also liberal,
but the worst feature was the stagnation
of the speculation.”
New York, Jan. 25.—Hubbard Bros. &
Cos. say of the cotton situation: "Judging
from the present movement the crop does
not seem likely to exceed 8,500.000 bales,
and as the consumption for the past two
years has been 8,750,000 bales of American
cotton, it there be no increase in the con
sumption, the visible supply must be
drawn upon to furnish the requirements
for consumption. On Sept. 1, the visible
supply of American cotton was 1,042,000
bales, a reduction of 250,000 bales, would
leave practically 800,000 bales from
this supply, which was swelled
150,000 bales from this crop on account of
the drought. Should the visible supply at
that time reach these reduced figures, we
must look hack to 1890 to find any such
small visible supply. Nothing but the
extraordinary early movement last season
prevented a natural squeeze, and we
therefore feel justified in calling attention
to this situation. We have exported more
than the excess receipts over last sea
son, which has come in sight, and certain
long staple lines have become exhausted.
Agents of American spinners are now en
quiring in Liverpool for shipment to Amer
ica. In the meantime Europe is heavily
short of cotton in this market, and with
a small speculation, we have so far failed
to respond to the decreasing movement,
though the demand for cotton in the south
has advanced the markets there in several
instances above our quotations.”
DRY GOODS.
New York. .Tan. 25.—The week in the dry
goods market opens without change, busi
ness continues limited and prices show no
change.
NAVAL STOBF-.s.
Spirits Turpentine—There was a strong
demand at the quotations, but the re
ported sales were light. At the first call
at the Cotton Exchange the market was
bulletined firm at 25!/2C, with sales of 189
casks. At the last call it was bulletined
very firm at 2544 c, with no sales reported.
Rosin—There were no sales reported at
the Board of Trade to-day, though the
market was bulletined firm and unchang
ed, as follows:
A, B, C $1 50 I $1 90
D 1 50 K 1 90
E 1 60 M i 1 90
F 160 N 1 90
G 1 65 W G 2 00
H 1 80 W W 2 25
Naval Stores Statement-
Spirits. Rosin.
Stock on hand April X, 1896.. 5,319 134,878
Received this day 573 5,123
Received previously 317,574 1,043,805
Total 323,466 1,183,906
Exports this day 250 11,274
Exports previously 300,546 917,287
Total since April 1, 1896.. .300,796 928,561
Stock on hand this day 22,670 255,345
Stock same day last year.. 13,597 229,417
Receipts same day last year 291 2,479
Charleston. S. C., Jan. 25.—Turpentine,
market dull; nothing doing; sales, none.
Rosin, firm; sales, none; A, B, C, D, $1.45;
E, F, $1.50; G, $1.55; H, $1.60; I, $1.80; K.
$1.85; M, $1.80; N, $1.85; W G, $2.00; W W,
$2.10.
Wilmington, N. C., Jan. 25.—Rosin firm;
strained, $1.45; good strained, $1.50. Tijrpen
tine firm; machine, 26%e; irregulars, 2474 c.
Tarqifiet at $1.90. Crude turpentine steady;
hard, $1.30; soft, not quoted; virgin, SI.BO.
New York, Jan. 25.—Rosin steady; com
mon to good, $1;[email protected]%. Turpentine quiet,
27%@28c.
RICE.
Common Nominal
Fair 87433%
Good 4 642
Prime *%@4%
Rough, 60c to $1 per bushel.
FINANCIAL.
Money—The market is easy.
Foreign Exchange—Market firm. The
following are net Savannah quota
tions: Commercial demand. $4.86*4: sixty
days, $4.8374; ninety days. $4,824: francf,
Paris and Havre, sixty days. -5.21; Swiss,
sixty days, 5.2274; marks! sixty days, 94%.
Domestic Exchange—Steady. Banks are
buying at per cent, discount and sell
ing as follows: tip to $25, 10c premium; $25
to SSO, 15c premium; SSO to SIOO, 20c pre
mium; SIOO to S2OO, 25c premium; S2OO and
over at par.
Securities— The market is quiet. Many
quotations are nominal.
Stocks and Bonds—State Bonds—Georgia
3'% per rent, bonds of 1930, 101'!. bid, 102%
asked; Georgia 3'% per cent, due 1915, 101
bid, 102 asked; Georgia 4% per cent, bonds,
1915, 113% bid, 114% asked; Georgia 4 per
cent., due 1926. 110 bid. 111 asked; South
Carolina. 4%5, 103 bid, lot asked.
City Bonds—Atlanta 7 per cent., 104 bid,
105 asked; Augusta 4%5, 1925. 103 bid, 104
asked; Augusta 7 per cent., 112 bid, 113
asked; Augusta 6 per cent., 110 bid. ill
asked; Columbus 5 per cent., 102 bid, lu3
asked; Macon 6 per cent., 114% bid, 115
asked; Savannah 5 per cent, quarterly
April coupons, 1077s bid. 108 asked; Savan
nah 5 per cent, quarterly February cou
pons, 108% bid, asked; Charleston 4s,
91 bid, 96 asked.
Railroad Bonds—Savannah, Florida and
Western railroad gereral mortgage Isinds,
6 per cant. Interest coupons, 1127-3 bid. 114
asked; Atlantic and Gulf first mortgage,
consolidated 7 percent, coupons, January
and July maturity, 1897, 100 bid, 100% ask
ed: Central Railroad and Banking Com
pany collateral gold ss, 95 bid, 97 asked;
Central of Georgia Railway first mortgage
6s, 50-year gold bonds, 110 bid, 112 asked;
tYntrul of Georgia Railway first consoli
dated mortgage ss. 91 hid, 92 asked; Cen
tral of Georgia Railway first preferred
in. one .■!. 29 bid. 30 asked; Central of
Georgia Railway second preferred In
comes, 11% bid, 12% asked; Central of
Georgia Railway third preferred incomes,
67* bid, 77*.. asked, Georgia railroad 6s, U'O,
106% bid. 107% asked, Charlotte. Columbia
and Augusta first ss, 106 bid, to? asked;
Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta second
mortgage 7s, 113 bid. 115 asked: Georgia
Southern and Florida, new ss, 94% lilcl, 95%
asked, South Georgia and Florida first
mortgage 7s. let bid. 105 ashed: South
Georgia ami Flotilla second mortgage 7s,
102 bid. 103 asked. Ocean Steamship 5 per
cent, bonds. 1926. 101 bid. b'2 asked; City
and Suburban railroad first mortgage 7
per cent bonds, 80 bid. 85 asked; Ala
bama Midland 5 per cent, endorsed, tw bid,
THE MORNING NEWS: TUESDAY, JANUARY 26. 1897.
9i asked: Brunswick and Western 4s,
bid, 7u asked; South Bound railroad ss, 70
bid, 73 asked; Southern Railway ss, 90 bid,
91 asked; Georgia and Alabama first pre
ferred ss, 9844 bid. 100 asked: Georgia and
Alabama first consols. So hid, 81 asked.
Railroad Stocks—Augusta and Savan
nah, 92R. bid, 91 asked, ex-div.; Georgia
common, 158 bid, 100 asked; Southwestern,
91 bid, 92 asked, ex-div.; Atlanta and
West. Point, railroad stock, 99 bid, 100 ask
ed; Atlanta and West Point 6 per cent,
certificates, 98 bid, 99 asked; Savannah
Construction Company, 70 bid, 74 asked.
Gas Stocks—Savannah Gas Light stock,
21 bid, 2146 asked, ex-div.: Electric Light
and Power Company, 65 bid, 6 1 asked; ex
div.
Bank Stocks. Etc.—Citizen's Bank, 108
bid, 10846 asked, ex-div.; Chatham Bank,
45 bid, 4644 asked, ex-div.; Germania
Bank. 106 bid, 107 asked, ex-div.; Mer
chants National Bank, 9246 bid, 9344 ask
ed, ex-div.; National Bank of Savannah,
126 bid, 127 asked, ex-div.; Oglethorpe Sav
ings and Trust Company, 100 bid, 101 ask
ed, ex-div.; Southern Bank of the State
of Georgia. - bid, ICB asked, ex-div.;
Savannah Bank and Trust Company, 100
bid, 101 asked, ex-div.; Chatham Real Es
tate and Improvement Company, A, 53
bid, asked; B, 51 bid, 5146 asked, ex
div.; People’s Savings and Loan Com
pany. 92 bid, 93 asked.
Factory Bonds—Augusta Factory, 6s, 100
bid, 102 asked; Sibley Factory 6s, 100 bid,
101 asked; Enterprise Factory 6s, 102 bid,
103 asked; Eagle and Phenix Manufactur
ing Company, 6 per cent, bonds, 40 bid.
50 asked.
Factory Stocks—Savannah Cotton Fac
tory. bid, 50 asked; Augusta Factory,
82 bid, *5 asked, ex-div.; Graniteville Fac
tory, 145 bid, 151 asked; Langley Factory,
io6 bid, 107 asked; Enterprise Factory
common, 99 bid, 102 asked; J. R. King
Manufacturing Company, 103 bid, KM ask
ed; Sibley Manufacturing Company, 96
bid, 98 asked; Savannah Brewing Compa
ny, 92 bid. 95 asked.
London, Jan. 25.—Bar silver. 29%d. Con
sols, 112 5-16 for money and 112% for the
account.
Paris, Jan. 25.—Three per cent rentes 102
francs, 66 centimes for the account.
New Y'ork. Jan. 25.—Money on call was
easy a't 11602 per cent; the last loan and
the closing was at 2 per cent. Prime mer
cantile paper 30346- Sterling exchange In
active with actual business in bankers
bills at $4.844604.84% for sixty days, and
for demand. Posted rates,
$4.8504.8746. Commercial bills. $4.8304.84.
Government bonds strong; state bonds
were dull; railroad bonds were firm. Sil
ver at the board was quiet.
New York, Jan. 25.—The treasury bal
ances were as follows: Coin, $122,814,112;
currency. $52,665,003.
•New Y'ork, Jan. 25, noon.—The specula
tive market was quiet and steady, at the
following quotations:
Lake Erie 152 |Balt. & Ohio ... 15
Northwestern ..KM lean. Southern .. 45'6
do pref 15144|8t. Paul 75%
Lake Erie 152 |Roek Island ....68
Nor. A W. pref. 16*4] Del. & Hudson..loß44
Western Union. 81461 Del., L. & W.... 15344
So. Ry com .... 946 Manhattan 91%
do pref 28%,Mich. Central ~S9
Am. Sugar 1174s|N. Y. Central ... 94
New York, Jan. 25.—Speculation at the
stock exchange was quiet again to-day,
the sales aggregating 129,953 shares. In
this small total sugar figures for 19,500;
Burlington and Quincy for 15,800 and St.
Paul for 12,900. The opening was quiet,
following which an advance of 4401% per
cent, took place. The firmness at this
time was partly the result of a reduction
in the posted rates of sterling exchange
of 46 cent to $4.8504.8746 and partly to the
fact that the bears did not continue their
raid of Saturday. The loss in the St.
Paul’s earnings, which proved to be much
smaller than expected, watj also used with
gfood effect. London again sold in the
local market, parting with gbout 5,000
shares of various stoqks. In the Industrial
group General Electric was notably firm
on the announcement that the deal for the
equipping of the Fourth, Sixth and Eighth
Avenue surface lines had been perfected.
Tobacco, however, was down % to 7344 on
the legal complications of the company.
The features of the afternoon trading was
the heaviness of the Anthracite Coalers.
Lackawanna fell 246 to 152, Delaware and
Hudson 2% to 106%; Jersey Central 244 to
98, and Reading % to 25%. The selling was
based on the belief that the annual re
ports of the larger companies, now about
due, will compare very unfavorably with
the previous years. On statements that
the New York and Escabana, one of the
Delaware and Hudson's leased lines, had
Issued $1,000,000 4% per cent, gold debent
ure bonds last year, led to free selling of
Delaware and Hudson shares and played
right into the hands of the bears. The
general list yielded Ufel'A for the highest
of the day in sympathy with the coalers,
but the final dealings were a fractional
rally. The market closed weak. Net
changes show losses ot 440% In the gen
eral list and 10244 per cent, in the coalers.
Bonds were firmer. Transactions footed
$1,016,000.
■New York Stock List, Stocks and Bands
at the Closing-
Aril. Cotton Oil. 1274! N„ C. * St. L... 67%
do pref 56 |N. J Central .. 98
(4ugar Ref lW%j N.'Y. Central .. 91
do pref 118% N. Y. A N. E.... 45
fc\m. Tobacco .. 73%|Norf. A \V. pref. 16%
do pref 103 ; North. Pacific . J3'4
A.. T. & S. F... 14 j do prof 33%
Balt. & Ohio ... 15741 Northwestern ...103%
Can. Pacific ... 54 | do pref 151
s}hes. & Ohio .. 17 j Pacific Mail .... 24%
flhl. A Alton... 165 j Reading 26%
Chi., B. * Ci. .. 7.7% Rock Island .... 67%
Chicago Gas ... 77%; St. Paul 76%
Del., L. & W... 150 | do pref 131
Eric . ll%| Silver Cert 65
do pref 34 iTenn. C. A Iron. 2874
Ed. Gen. Elec... 34%j do pref 79
Illinois Central. 94 ‘ | Texas Pacific .. 9%
Lake E. A W... 16% Union Pacific .. 7%
do pref ....... 68 iW,, St. L, A. P.. 6%
Lake Shore ....152 | do pref 16
Louis. A Nash. 50% Western Union . 83%
Louis. A N. A.. % Wheel. A L. E.. 2%
'Manhattan 9u*% do pref 11*%
Mem. A Char .. 15 | So. Hy 5s tin
Mich, central .ss So. Ry com .... 9%
Mo. Pacific ....22%; So. Ry pref 28%
Mobile A Ohio . 21 !
Government Bonds.
Alabama A 1"4 | Ten. new set, 3s. 77%
do B 10* | Va. 6s pref 5
do C 95 tVa. Trust Reo.. 5%
La. stamped 4s. 95 j Va. Fund. Debt. 62%
N. Carolina 4s.l’D |H. Carolina 4%5.1n2%
N. Carolina 65..122 (
State Bonds.
V. S. Is. reg ...111%; U. S. 45n0w,r0g.121%
V. H. 4s, coil 112 jU. S. 4s.new,eOU. 122%
F. 14. 2s. leg .. . 96 |
JIIMBI.LANBOI 8 MARKET*.
Macon—The market Is steady. Smoked
clear sides. 5%c; dry salted clehr rib sides,
sc; long clear, none* bellies, sc; sugar
snirod hams. ll%c.
Lard—Market < ady; pure. In tierces.
50. 511-pound tins, 5%e, compound, in
tli *ea l% In 50 pound Una, 4%e.
Florida Central & Peninsular Railroad Cos.
Mile. Shortest Line to Tampa, 34 Miles Shortest Line to Jacksonville*
TIMi; TABLE I\ EFFECT, JAY. 20. IS(>7.
", 31 . ' Tral'H Train time Shown'aTlGT j Train Tr tic
\ est e j .To | J 7 J; Points South of Columbia w v * T*
MontPyl Da ‘‘ y ' Dai ' y 11 S ’ C ” 19 * Hh Merldi ’’ I! dSiy i Dally
— ’ .' t It (Sunday
12 10n'n|12 15am| 4 30pm l.v New York “ ' ' . .
2 36pm; 3 50amj 6 55pm l.v Philadelphia.’'".’.’.'.'.'."'/ a, iJivt'm m
5 00pmi 6 22smi 9 20pm l.v Baltimore: r s ihm 11 "7m Im m
6 20pm,11 15am 10 43pm l.v Washlncton \ *• ■*"' 1 1 -M’ 1 " H OS.itu
1110 pm 4 06pm 340 am | Lymhbut’g t -7"" 7 - 1 ” 1 ' ' 7'- ,am
1 13 ani 620pm1 5 50am Lv DanviUc. 8 .::::::::;- l‘ r rw ',l Onm mm
2 33am 737pm| 7 05am Lv Greensboro \l „7 , , ’Y p 7 7°’' m
355 am 8 50pm 8 17am l.v Sahsbmw 1 1 pm 7 2 p,n ' ’ ? am
615 am 10Spin' 9 35am Lx Ch *io“S V
- ./ ////"'
-• I 3 06pra|......„. I.X Yshevllle \, ' 2 Topm.
7 27attt 12 47am|lf 56am Lv Columbia" ... . ...
II ’lim 1 Utam Jnm . - OIUIUUH Ar I1S|)1H 3 .warn 6 44pm
■' • •y- Lx l 2 26pm|H20pm 3Mum
1132amj 5 oOam| 4 33pnt Lv Savannah ~ , . ~,,
!i2 28pm 7i6pm A,. L . VS l l“Cm i,m
,MPM | dl£l U- Brunswick ! Lvjj 9 45amj 7 45pm 12 bipin
JJOpnt: liooa.n; 9 12pm x. Jacksonville Lx 82teS OKpmUOtam
3 tOpmjin nOftml 7 30.m> Lv Jacksonville "j, vTn.,„c ,• •„
4 40pm111 warn! 350 am Ar ....... St. Augustine./."././.’ Lv ? JtVm| r , ssVm! 9 50am
* ii i in .7i
- : 5 "Sum t; txn77
i 8 Mam 4 46pm Ar West Paint Beach !//" 7 55am 10’’0> ,
t 6 I. *35 | j, .;ts
11 3 ° r>m | l ,?S l ■ f Tallahassee. Lv!, 2 S 9 Lm [".Y.V.::
I 3 05um| |Ar Mobile j, v 4 30pm: ///////
| 7 ||Ar New Orleans Lv; 12 05pm ; \
|U 56amI 1 00am| Ar Gainesville..'.”.... Lv 3~soam!~i 00pm1.........
Train |! || Train | "
No. 40|| || No. 391
Trains marked • run dail>. Marked t dally'excepT'Sunday. Marked § daily except
Monday. *
Numbers 31 and 32 solid Pullman Vestibule Train between New Y'ork and St. Au
gustine.
Trains 39 and 40, daily except Sunday, stop for local business.
Pullman buffet sleepers Jacksonville and New York on trains 35 and 36 and Jack
sonville and Cincinnati via Asheville xvlthout change.
Pullman buffet vestibuled sleepers between Tampa and New York on trains 37
and 38, connecting at Charlotte with southwestern vestibuled limited train.
Pullman buffet sleeper Jacksonville to New Orleans, connecting with train 35
from Savannah.
For full information apply to A. O. MACDONELL, G. F A., Jacksonville Fla.
N. S. PENNINGTON. Traffic Manager. Jacksonville, Fla.
I. M. FLEMING. Division Passenger Agent. Savannah. Ga.
Trains leave from Central depot, corner West Broad and Liberty streets.
Central of Georgia Hallway Cos.
Schedules lr Effect Jan. 10,189 7.
GOING WEST-READ DOWN|| ~ [[GOING EAST-RKAD~Trpr~
No. 9 No. 7 I No. 3 j No. I|| Cent ral l| No. 2 /No.XTNoTs | No. 1(T
except except! daily | daily |l or I) I I except except
Sun. Sun. 1 | ||_9oth Meridian time._J| dally | daily | Sun. Sun.
200pm | 6 00pm, 9 00ptn| 845am||Lv.... Savannah ... Ar;| 6 40pmP6 00amp7 48am - 4 _ 50pm
3G6pm| 7 00pm|10 03pmj 9 52amj|Ar Guyton Lv|| 5 35pm| 4 51am' 6 48am 3 45pra
| 7 35pm|10 36pm|10 26am ;Ar Oliver Lv;| 5 03pm; 4 20am; 6 13am
|U 19pm|U 07amjJAr.... Rocky Fo/d ..Lv|| 4 20pm, 342 am;
| 6 35am| 1 60pm||Ar Augusta ....Lv;| 1 45pm; 8 40pm|
| 3 55am| 3 45pm;;Ar Macon Lvljll 55am|U 38pm
112 20pm[ 11Ar Athens Lvj| I 2 30pm|
| 5 43am| 5 30pra;IAr— Barnesville ..Lv ilO 20am| 9 sopm|
I 6 16amj 6 04pnt ;Ar Grlfiln Lv|| 9 50am 9 20pm|
[ 7 4oam| 7 30pm,|Ar.... Atlanta Lv|| 8 20am 7 50pm| |
8 50am 8 4upm|‘Ar ...Ft. Valley ....Lv|| 6 39atn| 6 30pm
\ 17 35pm, 11 At Troy Lv 7Ssam *
| |7 50pm| IfAr.. Montgomery ..Lv 7 45am
j |ll 15am| ||Ar —Coiu mbus ~Lv 4 00pm
| |l2 35nml |Ar— Opelika J>v 2 45pm
| | 6 00pm| ||Ar. Birmingham ..Lv 945am|
Trains marked • run daily except Sunday! ~
Time shown is 90th meridian, one hour slower than Savannah city time.
Solid trains between Savannah, Macon and Atlanta.
Sleeping cars on night trains between Savannah and Augusta. Savannah and
Macon. Savannah and Atlanta. Parlor cars between Macon and Atlanta.
Passengers arriving Macon at 3:55 a m can remain In sleeper until 7 a m.
For further information and for schedules to all points beyond our line apply
to W. G. BREWER, City Ticket Agent. 1 9 Bull street, or J. C. SHAW, Traveling
Passenger Agent. J. C. HAILE, General Passenger Agent, Savannah, Ga.
W. F. SHELLMAN. Traffic Manager. T HEO. D. KLINE, Gen. Superintendent-
Butter—Market lower, fair demand; Go
shen. 15@17c; gilt edge, 20',6023c; creamery,
23%®34c.
Cheese—Market firm; fancy full cream
cheese, 11012%c; 20-pound average, 11 1 ,6®
13c; fancy Elgins, 24',6026c.
Fish—Mackerel, half-barrel, No. 1, $8.50;
No. 2, $7.50; No. 3. $6.00; kits. No. 1. $1.25;
No. 2, $1.00; No. 3,95 c. Codfish, 1-pound
bricks, 6%c; 2-pound bricks, 6c. Smoked
herring, per box, 20c; Dutch herring, in
kegs, $1.60. New mullet, half-barrels, $3.50.
Salt—Demand Is fair, and the market
steady; carload lots, f. o. b., Lix’erpool,
200-pound sacks, 48c; Virginia, 125-pound
burlap sacks, 32c; ditto, 125-pound cotton
sacks, 35c; smaller lots higher.
Syrup—Market quiet; Georgia and Flor
ida eyrup buying at 22c; selling at 23@25c;
sugar house at 18@32c; Cuba straight
goods, 23@30c; sugar house molasses, 150
20c.
' Tobacco Market quiet and steady;
smoking, domestics, 22060 c; shewing, com
mon, sound, 24027 c; fair, 23035 c; good, 36
048 c; bright, 60065 c; fine fancy, 65080 c.
Sugar—Equality l’riees—Savannah Quo
tations—Cut loaf. 6.18.'; crushed. 5.18 c;
powdered, 4.80 c; XXXX powdered, 4.93 c;
standard granulated, 4.55 c; cubes, 4.80 c;
mould A, 4.80 c; diamond A. 4.55 c; confec
tioners’ A, 4.43 c; white extra C, 4.05 c; ex
tra C, 3.93 c; golden C, 3.87 c; yellows, 3.74 c.
Tone firm.
Coffee—Mocha and Java. 27%c; Peaberry,
20%c; standard No. 1,17 c; No. 2,16 c;
No. 3.15 c; No. 4,14 o; No. 5,13 c; No. 6,12 c;
No. 7. lie.
Flour—Very strong; patents. $5.50;
straights. $5.25; fancy, $5.10: family, $4.80.
Corn—Market Is steady; white corn, Job
lots, 44c; carload lots, 41c; mixed corn,
Job lots, 43c; carload, 40<-; cracked corn,
job lots, 85c sack.
Oats—Carload lots, 32c; Job lots, 35c.
Data—Texas rust proof. Job lots, Gsc.
Bran—Job lots, 85c; carload lots, 75c.
Hay— Market steady; western, Job lots,
85c; carload lots, 75c.
Meal Pearl, per barrel. $2.20; per sack,
95c. city meal, per sack. 85c; pearl grits,
per barrel, $2.30; per sack, $1.00; city grits,
per sack, 95c,
Lemons—Market quiet; n< w crop Mes
sina, per box, $2.75513.U0.
I’ineapples—Cases, $4.00M.50; half cases,.
$2.25412.50.
Oranges—Florida. $3.75®4.00 per box; Im
ported oranges, $2.75<b3.00.
Apples- $1.75412.00 barrels
Dried Fruit Apples, evaporated, 874®10c;
common. 7418 c.
Raisins—L. L., $1.75; % box, $1,10; loose,
50-pound boxes, pound
Oils—Market steady; demand fair: sig
nal 45®50c; West Virginia, black, 97512 c;
lard, 587165 c; neatsfoot, 60©85c; machinery,
20'u30c; linseed, raw, 36c; bulled, 37c; kero
acne, Georgia teat, lbc; water white, 11c;
lire proof, 12c; guardian, lie; deodorized,
stove gasoline, 13c.
Lime, Calcined Blaster ami (Vinotii
Alabama and Georgia lime In fair de
mand and selling at 86c per barrel, bulk
and curloiui lots special; calcined plaster,
$1.60 per barrel; hair, 47f6c; Rosedalc ce
ment, $1.3070.10; carload lots, special;
Pot Hand cement, retail, $2.40; carload lots,
$2.10.
Cabbage—Barrels, 7c; barrel crates, $2 00
©2 25.
Nuts— Almonds, Tarragona. 16c; fvicgs,
14c; walnuts. French, Jtc; Naples. 12%c;
pecans, 10c; Brazils. 61 ; filbprts, 10c; as
sorted tints. 50-pound and 25-lound lajxes,
9%©10c; cocouuuts, $3.75 per 100.
Peanuts—Ample stock; fair demand;
market steady; fancy hand-picked, Vir
ginia, per pound, 4%c; hand-picked, per
pound, 4c; small hand-picked, per pound,
4c. n
Onions—Crates, 11.26; barrels, $3.50.
Potatoes—lrish, SI.BO barrel; sacks, $1.75.
Seeds Potatoes—Virginia second crop,
$3.25; Houlton Early Hose, $2.75 barrel.
Shot—Firm; drop to B, $1.20; B to larger,
$1.45; bulk, $1.45,
Iron—Market very steady; Swede, 4 Vjtt
sc; retlned, $1.70 base.
Nalls—Cut, $1.90 base; wire, $2.15 base.
Advance national list of extras, adopted
Dec. 1, 1896.
Gun Powder—Per keg, $4.00; half keg.
$2.25; quarter keg, $1.20. Champion duck
ing, quarter keg, $2.25. Austin, Dupont
and Hazard, smokeless, half kegs, $8.13;
quarter kegs, $4.30; 3-pound canister, $2.10;
1-pound canister, 75c. Less 20 to 10 per
cent. off.
Lumber—Demand, both foreign and do
mestic, is firm. Ordinary sizes, sll.oo®
12.00; difficult sizes, $13.00*318.00; flooring,
boards, $15.00*322.00; ship stuff. $16,504/20 <10;
sawn ties, SIO.OO.
Poultry—Steady; fair demand; spring
chickens, 26c per pair; half-grown to
three-quarters grown, 30c to 35c pair;
full-grown fowls, 50c per pair.
Eggs—Market fully supplied; candled,
per dozen. 12c; country, 2c less.
Hides, Wool, Etc.—Hides—The market
firm; dry flint, 10'yfcllr; dry salt, 9c; green
salted, 5%0. Wool—Nominal; prime Geor
gia, free of sand burrs and black wool,
13c; blacks, lie, burry, Bc. Wax, 25c. T/N
low, 2c. Deer skins, 15c.
Bagging and Tics—The market is quiet;
.lute bagging, 214-pound, 6%e; 2-pound, o ,
154-pound, 6 %<•; quotations arc for Job
lots, small lots higher; sea Island bagging,
7-VqSc; Standard Arrow ties, steel, 45
pounds, large lots, 75c; small lots, 90c.
Dry OoodSt—The market is steady; de
mand brisk; prints, 44/se; Georgia brown
shirlings, 4, %, IVic; 4-4 brown sheet
ings, s’c; white osnaburgs, 74/7 V;
cheeks, 4®sc; brown drillings, s<f(6 V.
04 KAN FREIGHTS.
Cotton—Market lirm; rates quoted are
per 100 pounds; Boston, per bale, $1.25;
New York, per bale. $1.00; Philadelphia,
per bale. $1.00; Baltimore, per bale, $1.00;
to Liverpool, via New York. 40c; Bremen,
via New York. 45c; Antwerp, via New
York. 50c; Havre, via New York, 53e; Am
sterdam. via New York, 53c; Genoa, via
New Y6rk, 65c; Reval, via New York. 63c;
Hamburg. Via New York. 50c. Direct:
Bremen, 38c; Barcelona, 48c; Genoa, 48c;
Liverpool, 35c.
Lumber—By Sail—Freights are steady
at ruling rates.. Foreign business Is more
or b’*s nominal. The rates from this and
nearby Georgia port* are quoted at s4.on
<<14.50 for a range including Baltimore arid
Portland, Me, ltnilroad ties, tmse 44 feet.
10e. Timber Web SI.OO higher than
lumber rates. To the West Indies and
windward, nominal; to Itosarlo, sl2.oi>'.,
13.00;to Buenos Ayres and Montevideo,slo.oo
dUl.ut; to Ulo Janeiro, $11.00; to Spanish
and Mediterranean ports, $11,304/11.60; to
t'jilted Kingdom for orders, nominal for
lumber, 4-ponnds 5a standard
lly Steam- To New York, $7."0; to Philo
•lelplna. $700; to Boston, $8.00; to Balti
more, $5 on. •
Naval Stores—By Sall-The market 1*
firm. Large-sized, fork for orders, are
as follows: Rosin. 2s 6d; for barrels pf 310
pounds and 5 per cent, primage: spirits,
3s 94; Genoa, rnslli. 2s 3d®2* 64; Adriatic,
2s 64® 2s 9d; South America, rosin. 65c per
Plant System.
I min* operated by noth Mfridiun Time-Oiu* hour slower tliun City Time,
Going j TIMK CARST j] Going North—Bead Up.
I *9 j 23* | 37§ | 35* '||m Effect Jan. 19, 1897. 11 32* | 38t | 78* | 6* |
j | } W 00a|12 03a||Lv". 7'ArTf B~3op|UOl>p[ToOp|
j '-MWpi 4 ;K)pi 9 30.i l,v ...New York Arjj 2 03pj 4 23pj 6 53ai
| ■ "•' ,l 7 oOpj]2 09p |Lv ..Philadelphia Ar|lll2saj 1 54p| 345a'
I * ! "<Bp| 346 p l.v ... Washington.... Ar; 7 40a|10 10a, 11 lOp
I Ililjaj 2 00a | 7 90p l.v Riehrflond Ar 4 20a i 6 3"aj Blip
I 9110a: 7 oGp| 100|> l.v .Old Point Comfort. Ar t j 8 40a' 8 40a; 7 10|>
| i f&a 1201a' 4 35pj|Lv Norfolk Ar|| 7 43a| 7 15a| 526p|
I !!Lv Augusta Ar|| | i ;1155ai
i r- r ; |... , ....||Lv ....Port. Royal Ar|! 5 35pj j ■ 9 60aj
1 B 10|>; 1117p| I 839a l.v ....Yemossoe Ar||2 27p; |224a|B2sa|
1 7 30p; 12 fills I 2 OOp 806 Ar , Savannah l.v 11265p| 4 .Mp 12 15 a 5 50a| ...
| 21* | 83* | 378 | 35*~|~j~ || ~32*“j- 381' | 78* | 24* | 22*
I 32 ®P iosa i 2lp 8 24a l.v Savannah Ar||l2 33p| 4 41p|12 20j loallo iOp
I >”> 07pi 2 37a! 3 37p| 9 50a;|Ar Jesttp l.v]!lll2aj 3 22p,10 4Sp; 7 22a S 2Sp
I 4 20aj | I 7 45p |Ar Atlanta Lvjj | | 11 lOpj 7 20a
] ?“•*“! 1 1 12 33a Ar ...Chattanooga.... l.vlj j | j 6 15p 12 10a
\ T ;To'l7a['2 25pT 9*4oi>[ loaj"7s)p
8 50p| 7 30ai 65jp| i nip !.\r ...Jacksonville.... .Lvjj 820a112 33pi 700p1..7....|' 445p
I s4o l 7 tf'Pl 4 40p||Ar.. St. Augustine ....Lv|| 7 00a|1130a| 5 35p|
| 445p| ] flAr ...Palm Beach,.. I,v]| 1 17 30a!
i 7 20p| j )Ar Miami Lv|j i I 500a!
H4Sa| sOop| 8 48a, ||Ar ..Tampa B. Hotel..Lvjj 739p| 7 39pl 914a'
I 7 00aI 'l2 alp iAr ....Suwanee...... Bv|| B 43a|7...... 6 80p|
i 7 17a| | 1 OlpjlAr ....Live Oak Lv| 6 30a| |6l6p|
I 1 55p| j 5 42p|! Ar Leesburg Lv||l2 35a| |ll 50a|
I 3lip| j 9 13pj! Ar ..Tampa B. Hotel. Lvj 7 39pj 7 00a
I I 7 05pj | 9 45p||Ar Port Tampa.. Lv| 7 10p| j 8 Soa|
8 10aj 9 20p||Ar ...Montgomery... Lvl | |745p|850a.
1 50p| 3 06a ]Ar Mobile Lv| I 112 50p 12 2fta*
7OOp 645a|jAr Nashville Lvl 9 Qoalll 20t
....... 71Sa| 1 8 17pj|Ar Chicago Lv| | 9 00pJ10 40a
Trains marked • run daily, marked f dally except Sunday,marked S"daily except
Monday. . .
No. 3071 leaves Savannah 7am for Waycross and Intermediate stations.
No. 25t leaves Savannah 12:25 noon for Jesup and Intermediate stations.
No. 306 t arrives Savannah 5:35 p tn front Waycross and Intermediate station*.
Nos. 5,6, 21, 22, 24, 25, 306 and 307 make all local stops. ,
THROUGH SLEEPING CAR SERVICE.
Nos. 35 and 32 carry Pullman buffet sleeping cars between New York and Port
Tampa, via West Coast. New York and Jacksonville, and Jacksonville and Cin
cinnati via Waycross, Thomasvllle and Montgomery. These trains run solid be
tween Washington and Jacksonville. No. 35 connects at Waycross with Pullman
Buffet Sleeping Car for St. Louis, via Tifton, Macon. Atlanta and Nashville. Trains
37 and 38 are the New York and Florida Special Vestibule, composed entirely of
drawing room, sleeping, dining and observation cars, heated by steam and lighted
by electricity, and run solid between New York and St. Augustine. Nos. 23 and
78 carry Pullman Buffet Sleeping Cars between New York and Jacksonville, and
Dupont and Port Tampa, via West Coast, and Parlor Cars between Jackson
ville .and Tampa Bay Hotel. No. 21 connects as follow* with Pullman Buf
fet Sleeping Cars: At Waycross to St. Louis, via Thomasvllle and Montgomery to
Nashville, via Tifton, Macon and Atlanta; to Jacksonville, and at Jacksonville to
Port Tampa, via Sanford.
PLANT STEAMSHIP LINE.
Leave Port Tampa for Key West and Havana 10 p m Mondays and Thursdays;
for Mobile 10 p m Saturdays. Steamers leave Port Tampa for St. Petersburg 710 a
m, 10:10 a m. 6:35 pm, dally except Sunday. For Manatee River points. 7:10 a m
dally, except Sunday. Steamers leave I’unta Gorda for Fort Myers and interme
dlate points 7am Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.
Tickets sold to all points and sleeping car berths secured at passenger station
(corner East Broad and Liberty streets) and ticket office De Soto Hotel. Telephone
No. 73. E. A. AIIMAND, City Ticket Agent.
J. W. CARR, District Passenger Agent.
R. W. WRENN. Passenger Traffic Manager.
H. C. McFADDEN, Assistant General Passenger Agent.
GEORGIA AND ALABAMA RAILWAY.
SAVANNAH SHORT LINE.
Passenger Schedules. Effective Dec. 27, 1896.
72 Milee Shortest Operated Line Between Savannah and Montgomery. 26 Miles
Shortest Operated Line Between Savannah and Columbus.
F. c. 5b P. I A~CT Idne. |] j| A. CrTane7~j~FrcT&HK"
12 15am! 4 30pm| 900 pm, 9lWami;Lv ...New York Arjf 203pni| 653amj 6 23ainJ2 43pm
350 am 6 56pm]1205 n’t|l2 09n’n||Lv ..Pniladelphla. ArHll 25am| 146am| 2 56am jo 15am
6 22am 9 20pm | 2 50am| 2 25pm ||Lv ...Baltimore... Ar ; 9 05amjl2 53 n't|ll 35pm! 8 00am
11 16am 10 43pm! 4 30am! ;i 46pmMLv .Washington.... Ar|| 7 40am|ll 10pm 9 40pm! 6 42ain
| 9 oGam| 7 30pm||Lv ....Richmond... Art! 4 20am 4 6 40pm 6 40pm!
10 15pm 9 25am |Lv ....Charlotte.... Ar, j 8 50am; 8 20pm
137am12 50pm| ||Lv ....Columbia... Ar | 355amj 418 pm
4 50am| 4 25pm|12 50 n't| Bc6am;!Ar ...Savannah... Lv|[l2 55n'n|12 45 n't|lt 20pm112 26pm
| No. ~19~N0,17 | || NoTaoTNmlS]
1 7'fcpmi72sum|;Lv —Savannah.... Ar|{ 8 10am 940pm]
| 7 32prf>j’t 32am |Ar C.&B. Junction. Arj 8 04am 9 33pm;
A 9 36pm i 949aml|Ar Colllins Lv j 6 02am 7 34pm j
1 45am; 2 15pm]!Lv Cordele || | „
'....|*S OOpm||Ar Albany Lvll'. I 9 45am
j 1 20amj 4 40pm||Ar ...St. Louis Lv|| 9 25pm* 8 Warn]
| | 1 00pm| 3 06am||Ar Mobile Lv||l2 50n’njl2 39 n’t]
| | 6 lOpnii 7 46ani|!Ar .New Orleans.. Lv|| 8 25am: 7 50pm| |
Trains 17 and is carry I’uliman parlor buffet cars ami make all - iocaletops.
Trains 19 and 20, fast nigh*, lines, curry Pullman palace sleeping cars.
Connecting at Savannah by all tralps. with steamship lines for Baltimore, Phil
adelphia, New York and Boston; with Plant system, and Florida Central and Pen
insular; Atlantic Coast Line for points north; with Savannah and Atlantic tall
way for Tybee.
At Collins hy trains Nos. 17 and 18, with Collins and Reldsville railroad and
Stillmore Air Line.
At Helena by trains Nos. 17 and 19, with Southern railway for all points thereon.
At cordele by trains Nos. 17, 18, 19 and 20, with Georgia Southern and Florida
for Macon and beyond; also with Albany and Northern railway for Albany.
At Richland, by trains No*. 17, 18 und 19 with Columbus division for Colum
bus; 17 ami 18 with Albany division for Dawson and Albany.
Tickets sold to all points and sleeping car berths and parlor car seats secured at
ticket office, corner Bull ami Bryan streets, or at West Broad street passenger
station. CECIL GABBETT, First Vice President and General Manager.
A. POPE, General Passenger Agent. J. L. BECK. Commercial Agent.
CHAB. N. RIGHT. Assistant General Passenger Agent. •
A. M. MARTIN. City Ticket Agent, eorner Mull and Rryan wtreets.
barrel of 280 pounds. Coastwise—Steam—
To Boslon, 11c per 100 pounds on rosin. 900
on spirits; to New York, rosin, B%c per I'JO
pounds.
GRAIN, PROVISION*. ETC.
New Y*rk. Jan. 25. -Flour dull and
steady; winter wheat, low grades, s2.3o'*/
3.50; do, fair to fancy, $3,504/1.75; do pat
ents, $1.1154*6.16; Minnesota clear, $3,504/*
400; southern flour dttl. ami steady, com
mon to fair extra. $3.30; good to choice do,
$3.74*1/1.50. Wheat, spot, dull and easier;
f. o. b , 96V: ungraded rod, 77c; options
were dull and weak at 'vb’S/c decline; No.
2 red, January. 88%o; March. 89V: May,
Hs*ic; July, H2V- Corn, spots, dull anil
steady; No. 2. 28V elevator; 29V afloat:
steamer mixed,'27'*4/27V'; No. 3. 2*!'4 eleva
tor; option* were /lull ami weak at V de
cline; Janary. 2*V! May, 29V: July. 80%* :
September. 32%*'- Hats, spots, quiet and
steady; option* dull ami easier; January,
Be; February, 22c; May, 22%e; July, 22V;
spot, No. 2. 22c: No. 3 white, :Mc;
mixed western, 224/21*'. Ilay quiet ami
weak: shipping, 55c: good to choice, 70 U*
sn. Hides firm and hi moderate demand;
wet st.led Havana, selected, 357/.VI pounds,
"V; Texas dry, 214/2' pounds, 124113 c. Wool
llrnt and quiet; domestic fleece, 167/23**;
pailed, 184/31**; T* xas. 7'al2e. Beef quiet
tthd firm; family, $9.354/10.50; extra mess.
$7.0/14/8.00. Beef liants llrnt at sl7 50. Tier*-'
cd beef steady; extra ln*lia m*s city,
137/11*'. Cut meat* llrnt and In moderate
demand; pickled I'Ollies, 1%1-; /should*'/-, 4%
#4%e; hams, Bc. Lard steady; western
steam, 4.25 c nominal: city, 3.70 c: January,
4.25 c; n-llned dull; continent. 5 55c; South
America, 4.80 c; compound, 414*34V. Pock
dull; new mess, $8.254/9. q>. Butter, choke,
steady and In moderate demand; stato
dairy, 104/15V creamery, 13®19e; Elgin*.
200. Cotton seed oil quiet and steady;
erttdc, 30c; yellow prim**, 2J4/23V- Rleo
firm and fairly active; fair to extra, 3%4$
6c; Japan, 4%4/4%c. Mopissis steady ami
in moderate demand; New Orleans, open
kettle, good to choice. 22532 c. /Peanuts
quiet; fancy hand-picked, 3%®*4c. Coffee
Continued on Sixth Pago.
SII.SIIY & CO. INC;,
Bankers and Brokers,
1,104% It Main st., Klcbmond. Tw.
ONE MIUION HIDES WRNIEO
bill FLINT HIDES „
GKKKN SALTED .
uiKsw.i*
Nothing but tha freight deducted fro/a
the above.
K. KIRKLAND.
7

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