Newspaper Page Text
Ihc Corning gjtaFS
SATUKDAY, MAY 6. 1876.
Comrawial.
SWASNAH MARKET
WEEKLY REPORT.
OFFICE OF THE MORNING NEWS,)
Savannah. May 5, 1876. j
General Remarks.—There has been a steady
demand throughout the week for moderate (.ur-
chases for replenishing the stocks of interior
merchants and locil retailers, and a fair aggre
gate business has been done for this season of
the year. The trade of the week has shown a
decided improvement over that of the previous
week, though for the balance of the season it
will be almost enti ely confined to orders for
sorting purposes. There are no epecial changes
in the condition of trade in or out of the city.
Everything remains quiet and unchanged.
Dry Goods —This branch of trade has been
quiet and has not shown as much increase as in
other branches. Prices remain unchanged.
Groceries, Provisions, Etc.—A fairly active
business has been done in this line, as a good
many near-by retailers have been in the mark* t,
whose joint purchases were quite satisfactory.
Bacon, butter, lard and sugar have declined since
our last report, aud bacon is now reported weak
and declining, i lour is firm and unchanged.
Naval Stores.—The receipts have been quite
large, and though the market is reported dull, a
fair business has been done. Spirits turpentiu.
has declined 2c since last week, but rosin is un
changed.
Financial —The money market has been very
easy throughout the week, with siocks quiet and
bonds in fair demand. The first coupon of the
8 per ceut. juaction branch bonds of the branch
road connecting the Atlantic and Gulf and the
8avannah and Charleston roads was paid on the
1st inst. out of the monthly deposits made to the
Savannah Bank and Trust Company, leaving a
balance of over one thousand dollars for the
sloking fund.
Cotton.—The market for spot has been quiet
during the week, the quotations remaining un
changed until Thursday, when they marked
down au #c to a #c. The news from con
trolling markets has been very discouraging, aud
has tended to depress the tone of our market.
From the present outlook there seems to be no
hope for any recuperation in prices,
unless there is a general revival of busi
ness throughout the country. The followiu;
rtsume of the week will give its correct tone and
transactions since our last report. On Fatarday
the market was very dull and irregular, buye:s
purchasing only what they wanted at quotations,
and generally offering lower; selections were not
very de-irable; closed quiet and dlchanged; sales
383 bal s. On Monday the Cotton Exchange was
closed, and as the day was generally observed as
a holiday, there was hardly any busi
ness done. On Tuesday the m rket
was active, with good sales for this sea-on of the
year, aud the prices have been steadier than fur
some time past. A good deal of the purchases
were of the lower grades. Closed steady; sale
885 bales. On Wednesday the market was
quieter, and prices which holders could get yes
terday they could not obtain to-day, except.fur
desirable lots, which buyers actually required to
complete shipments; closed quiet; sales 234
bales. On Thursday the market was lower
and very irregular, and when fact rs
were necessitated to sell, buyers bought even
below quotations. Lack of freight room has
some effect in depressing prices. Clos d quiet;
sales 742 bales. To-day the selections were too
poor to admit of much buying, but there Is a
growing disposition on the part of factors to sell
at quotations, or even a shade lower, for the
poorer qualities. Market closed dull; sales 265
bales. vVe quote:
Good Middling 12#
Middling 11#
Low Mi- filing 10#
Good Ordinary 9#
Ordinary 7#
Sea Island —The market for this class of cot
ton i * dull. The sales for the week are 30 bags,
at 18®21c.; the receipts for the same time are 6
bags. We renew our quotat ons:
Common Florid as 20 ®24e
Medium Floridas 24#®27c
Good Floridas 2S ®29c
Fine Floridas 82c®
The receipts or cotton at this port for the past
week from all sources have been 4,623 bales
upland and 6 bales sea island, against 2,573
bales upland and 13 bales sea island for the
corresponding date last year.
The particulars of the receipts have been as
follows: Per Central Railroad, 1,967 bales up
land ; per Atlantic and Gulf Railroad, 6vs
bales upland and 5 bales sea island;
per Savannah and charleston Railroad, 56 bales
upland; per Augusta steamers, 13 bales upland;
per Florida steamers 1 bale sea island; per steam
ship Berlin, from Charleston, 1,935 bales upland.
The exports for the week have been 12,719 bales
upland and 115 bales sea island, moving as fol
lows: To New York, 1.972 bales upland and 42
bales sea island; per ate unship San Jacinto, 314
bales upland and 42 sea island; Gen. Barnes, 206
bales upland; Huntsville, 968 tales upland;
Kapidau, 484 bales upland. To Boston, per
st* amship Seminole, 740 bales upland. To Balti
more, per steamship America, 556 bales upland
and 70 bales sea island. To Philadelphia, p r
steamship Juniata, 356 bales upland To Reval,
per steamship Berlin, 5,«>00 bales upland. To
Liverpool, per ship Transit, 4,093 bales upland
and 3 bales sea island.
The stock on hand at the close of the market
yesterday was 18,387 bales upland and 949 bales
nea island, against 24,726 bales upland and 152
Movements o» Cotton a* the Interior
Ports.—Giving receipts and shipments for the
week ending May 5, and stocks on hand to
night, and for the corresponding week of \£75:
/-Week ending May 5, 1876.—,
Receipts. Shipments. Stock.
Augusta 465
Columbus 102
Macon 126
Montgomery 441
Selma 330
Memphis 2,623
Nashville
672
614
660
895
421
5,950
7,516
6,534
2,596
4,306
3,009
35,454
3,213
Total .4,196
9,212 62,627
Augusta
r-Week ending May 7,
Receipts. Shipments.
359 271
1876.-,
Stock.
7,902
6,027
3,924
2,078
2,286
26,130
10,893
Columbus
Macon
Montgomery ...
Selma
292
103
198
227
216
369
546
692
Memphis
1,611
4,869
144
NabhVille
320
Total
3.110
7,075
58,940
LIVERPOOL MOVEMENT FOR THE WEEK ENDING
MAY 5th, 1876, AND FOR THE CORRESPONDING
WEEKS OF 1875 AND 1874.
1876
Sales for week
Nails.-We quote: Id, %i 90; 44 and 5d, $4 15;
6d, $3 90; 8d, $3 63; lOd to 60d, $3 40 per keg.
Oranges.—Messina —The market is fairly sup
plied. We quote $6 00®$5 50 per box.
Onions.—The market is moderately supplied.
We quote: $3 50®3 76.
Oils.—Market is quiet. We quote: W B Sperm,
$2 15; Whale, W. B., $1 00; lard, $116; petroleum,
19c; tanners, $1 20®1 25; machinery, 90c; linseed,
S0®S5c.
Potatoes.—The stock is small, and the de
mand light. We quote: common, $1 60®
2 00; Peach Blows, $2 25®2 60; Sweet, market
>rly supplied, with a good demand at $1 30®
• poorly
$1 40.
Exporters to
Speculators to
Total stock
Of which American.
T’l imports for week
Of which American.
Actual exports
Amount afloat
Of which American.
Price
1875
84,000
7,000
6,000
951,000
583,000
117,000
100,000
8,000
430,000
148,000
7#d
1874
73,000
6,000
6,000
781,000
413,000
47,000
27,000
10,000
674,000
275.000
8#®8#d
Visible Supply of Cotton as Made up by
Cable and Telegraph.—Below we give our
table of risible supply, as made up by cable and
telegraph for the Financial and Commercial
Chronicle to April 2a The continental stocks
are the figures of last Saturday, but the totals ror
Great Britain and the stock afloat for the conti
nent are this week’s returns, and consequently
brought down to Thursday evening; hence to make
the totals the complete figures for April 28,
we add the item of exports from the United States
including in it the exports of Friday only:
1876.
Stock at Liverpool 1,021,000
Stock at London 65,250
Total Great Britain stock... .1,086,250 996,500
1875.
893,000
108,560
Stock at Havre 190,250
Stock at Marseilles 5,750
Stock at Barcelona 89,000
Stock at Hamburg 17,000
Stock at Bremen „... 53,250
Stock at Amsterdam 57,500
Stock at Rotterdam 18,000
Stock at Antwerp 13,780
Stock at other contin’tal ports. 17,500
109.250
9.250
71.250
11,0(0
40.250
45,000
11,000
5.250
13.000
Total continental ports 462,000 315,250
Total European stocks 1,548,260 1,311,750
India cotton afloat for Europe. 246,000 450,000
American cotton afloat for Eu
rope 468.000
Egypt, Brazils, &c., afloat for
Europe 51,000
Stock in United States ports... 533,521
Stock in United States interior
ports 70,759 66,245
United States exports to-day... 3,000 8,000
470,000
73,000
465,864
Total visible supply 2,920,530 2,844,859
Of the above, the totals of American and other
descriptions are as follows:
American— 1S76. 1875.
Liverpool stock 620,000 514,000
Continental stock 304,000 149,000
American afloat to Europe.... 468,000 470,000
United States stock 533,521 465,S64
United States interior stocks... 70,759 66,245
United States exp’ts to-day.... 3,000 8,000
Total American bales 1,999,280
Total East India. Ac 921,250
1,673,100
1,171,750
Visible supply, bales 2,920,530 2,844,859
These figures indicate an increase m the cotton
In sight to date of 75,671 bales as compared with
the same date of 1875, and an increase of 29.865
bales as compared with the corresponding date
of 1874.
FINANCIAL.
[Quotations furnished by Brokers’ Association.]
Money Market.—Very easy.
Domestic Exchange.—The banks and bank-
kers are buying sight drafts at par®l-16% pre
mium; selling checks at #®## premium, ac
cording to amount.
Gold—Buymg by brokers at 111; selling at
113*.
Silver—Buying by brokers at par; selling at
par.
Securities—Stocks quiet. Bonds in fair de
mand. The first coupon of the 8% Junction
Branch bonds of the Atlantic A Guif Railroad,
connecting the Savannah A Charles:on Road
with the Atlantic & Gulf, was paid ou the first of
May out of the monthly deposits made to Die
Savannah Bank and Trust Company, and leaves
an excess on hand of nearly twelve hundred dol
lars for the sinking fund.
BONDS AND STOCKS.
State Bonds— bid. ask
1880 .
1S86
Georgia m’ g’e on W.
A A. R. R.
orgia
Bullock, 7%, coupons Jan and July,
maturity 18S6
bales sea island for the corresponding date last
year.
Rice.—The market for the past week has
sbowe 1 the usual steadiness, and holders seem in
no harry to rid themselves of stock even at quo
tations. The demand from the West continues
good, and with low freights the shipments hive
been considerably increased to this section. The
sales for the week have been about 350 casks,
part of which brought 6#®6#c. The exports
have been 595 casks. We quote :
Common 4#@5 c
Fair 5#<35#c
Good 5#®6 c
Prime 6#®6#c
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ra« voiaowinu statement shows the be-
OSIPTS AT AU. POSTS TOR THE WEEKS ZNDINS
APRIL 2STU AN1) MAT STH AND FOR THIS WEEK
This Week
Last Week
Last Year
Galveston
. 4.002
4,213
1,382
New Orleans....
. 8,986
10.151
8,105
Nobile
. 2.003
2,184
1,115
Savannah
. 2>7B
3,652
2,576
Charleston
. 1,492
J.949
1,752
Wilmington
430
456
493
Norfolk
. 2,785
2,963
1,940
Baltimore
96
215
9
New York
. 1,568
2,391
3,306
Boston
917
936
896
Philadelphia
470
602
1,433
Various
478
1,496
Total
. 25,805
29,208
22,816
CONSOLIDATED COTTON STATEMENT POB WEEK
ENDINO HAT S, 1876.
Receipts at all U. 8. porta this week _ 25.80ft
Last rear * 28,81ft
Total receipts tc date 8,242,673
Laatjrear - 3,327,561
Exports for this week 66,583
Heme week list year 43,814
Total exports to date 2,846,022
UatyearVT- 2,303,967
btock at all United States ports 4*8,601
Last year 440,226
Stock at all Interior towns 65,627
Last year.... 66,940
Stock at Urapool
test rots. ••••••
‘-^Rlo^forGwBtBirlteto
1880
Georgia 7%, gold coupons, July,
maturity 1S90
City Bonds—
Atlanta 10%', due 1885, Sept, coupon-*.
Atlanta 8%, due 1902, July coupons.. 90)4
Augusta 7%, due 1898, Sept, coupon. 87
Savannah 7%, Jan and July coupons,
maturity 1886 89
Savannah 7%, Jan and Jly, 1902,1903. 85
Savannah 7%, coupons May and No
vember, 1900 84
Savannah 7%, coupons June and De
cember, maturity 1888 £9
Railroad Bonds—
A A G 1st mortgage consolidated 7%,
coupons Jan. and July, 1897 74
A. 4&G. end. city Savauuah 1% Jan.
and July, maturity 1879 f 0
Centrai con mtge 7%, Jan and Jly,*93. 97)4
Macon A Brunswick 1st m’tge end.
bv State Ga. 7%, Jan. A July, 1889.107
Mobile A Girard, 2d mtge, end 8%,
coupons Jan. A July, maturity 1889 84)4
Western Alabama 1st m’tg’e end. 8%,
April A OcL 1888 94*4
Western Alabama 2d m’tg’e end. 8%,
Api il A Oct coupons, maturity 1890. £0
Junction Braccb A A G RR $%, cou
pons November and May, maturity
1881 . 85
Railroad Stocks—
Augusta A Savannah 7%, guaranteed 90
Central Common 40
Southwestern 7% t guaranteed 74 *4
Bank Stocks—
Merchants’ 100
Savannah Bank and Trust Company.. 72)4
Citizens’ Mutual Loan Co, dividend In
June 98
Apples.—Market very firm, stock light and not
sufficient for the demand. We quote: 6 50@|7 00
per barrel.
Axes.—Collins’, $11 50®13 00.
Beef.—The market is quiet. We quote: New
and old Western per bbL $10 00®IS 00 ; Fulton
market, $22 00 per bbi; half bbls, $12 00.
Bacon—The market is dull and unchanged. We
quote: Clear rib sides, 13)4®l4c; shoulders, 10]^@
10)4c; dry salted clear ribbed Bides, 12%®13c; long
cleared, 12)4®13c; shoulders nominal; hams,
stock full, and selling at 16®17c.
Bagging and Ties.—The stock is light, with
no demand. We quote, nominally: Stand
ard domestic, best brands, 13)4®14)4c, accordin;
to quantity; Jobbing at 14®15c; Gunny dull am
nominal at ll)4c. Iron Ties 5)4®6c; piece Ues,
4®4)4c.
Butter.—The market is declining under re
ceipts of new. We quote t Western, 25 cents;
Goshen, 36 cents; Gilt Edge, 35®40c.
Cheese—The market is quiet. We quote:
English dairy, 18c; extra cream, 15®15)4c; fac
tory, 15®16)4c; State, 13c.
Cabbage—Market quiet and poorly supplied
at $S 00® 12 00 per hundred.
Coffee.—The market is quiet, with small stock*
We quote: Rio, 21®23)4c, according to quality;
Old Government Java. 34®35c.
Dry Goods.—The- market has been quiet
during the week. We quote; Prints, 5®7c; Geor
gia brown shirting, X, 6c; % do, 7Xc; 4-4 brown
sheeting, 8)4c; white osflaburgs, 10® 12c, striped
do, 10® 11c; Georgia fancy stripes, 9c, for light
dark, 9)4®10)4c; checks, 11c; Northern checks, 9
®10c; yarns, $1 05, best makes; brown drillings,
9® 10c.
Eggs—The market is firm and well supplied,
with a good demand. We quote: 16®17c per
dozen at wholesale; 20c. at retail.
Flour.—The market is firm ami well sup
plied. We quote: Superfine, $5 00®5 50; extra,
$6 00®6 50; family, $7 00®7 50; fancy. $8 00® 9 00.
Fish—The market has advanced and is firm. We
quote: Mackerel, No. 1 bbls $18 00, half bbls $9 00;
No. 7 kits, $2 00; No. 2 half barrels, $S 00; No. 2
kits, $1 75; No. 3 half barrels, $7 00; herring, No.
I, 45c per box; scaled, 55c; choice cod, 6)4®7c.
Grain—Corn—Market dull, with a light de
mand. We quote: White Western at wholesale
and retail from wharf and store, 756 80c., ac
cording to qoaiity; mixed or yellow, 75®78c. Oats
—The stock is fair. We quote: Prime Western,
by the car load, 57®60c; smaller parcels, 62)4®
65c.
Hides, Wool, Ac.—The market rules very low
and no hope of recovery for the present. We
quote: Dry flint, 1014c; dry salted, S)£c; deer
skins, 28 cts; wax, 27c; wool nominal, 23®24c;
burry wool, 10®l2c; tallow, 7c; otter skins. $1 00
®$2 50, according to quality.
Hay.—The market is quiet. We quote: East
ern, $1 35® 1 40 for very best grades, wholesale;
$1 50® 1 65 retail; poorer qualities me not saleable;
Northern, $1 15®$ 1 20 wholesale, and $1 25® 1 40
retail. Western nominal at $1 10® 1 25 wholesale;
$1 30® 1 50 retail.
iron. — Market steady at, for Swedes, 6\c.®
TXc.; refined, 3)fc.
liquors.—The stock is large with a fair demand
at unchanged prices. We quote: imitation Robert
son county, $250; Pure Robertson county, Tennes
see, $4 5o®5 00; Gibbon’s X, $2 05; XX, $215;XXX,
$2 25; old Bourbon, $1 50®5 50; Nectar, 1S40,
$3 75; old family do., $4 1*0; pure old rye, $5 25;
Gibson’s cabinet $5 00: Western, strictly rec
tified, $1 10® 1 25; old Monongahela, $1 50® 1 75;
Sherry, $2 00®7 00. Ales unchanged, and in
good demand.
Lard.—The market is firmer. We quote: In
tierces 15®}5)4c; tubs 16)4® 16c; pressed, 13®
13*c.
Lemons.—Palama and Messina—The supply
sufficient for demand at $6 oo®6 50 per box.
Lime, Calcined Plaster, and cement—Ala
bama lump lime is in steady demand and selling
at $1 46® 155 per bbl; Rockland finishing, $1 85;
common $1 35. Calcined Plaster $2 50 per barrel.
Hair 7c; Rosendale Cement $215; Portland
Cement, $6.
Naval Stores.—Doll; rosin quiet al quota
tions. We quote: Strained, $1 so: E, $1 50; F,
$1 60; G, $1 90; H. $2 00; I, $2 50; K, $3 00®3 25;
M, $3 75; N, $4 50. Spirits turpentine dull at 27
®2Sc.
NAVAL STORES—RECEIPTS. SHIPMENTS AND STOCK
FROM APRIL 1, 1876, TO DATE.
Roetn. Spirits.
Stock op hand April 1, 1876 727 82
Receipts this week 2,331 541
Received previously 5,657 1,394
Poultry—The market is well supplied, with
a good demand. There is no demand for grown
fowls. Fowls selling at 66®70c for full grown
per pair; half grown 55®60c per pair. Spring
chickens 40®50c. Turkeys, none in market. The
above are wholesale figures; retail prices are 5 to
10 per cent, higher. Small stock meet with ready
sale.
Pork.—The market is quiet with a light stock.
We quote: Mess, $25 00; prime, $23 00.
Powder.—Market firm. We quote: Per keg
$5 25®$6 00; hall keg, $3 12®3 50; quarter keg,
$1 70®2 00.
Salt.—The market is well supplied; demand
good. We quote: By the car load, $1 00® 1 06
f. o. b.; in store, $1 10® 1 15,
Sugars.--The market is firm and unchanged.
We quote: Crushed and powdered, llX®l$c;
A, 10)4® 10\c; C extra white, 10c.; C 9®9)4c;
yellow, 8)4®9c.
Syrup.—Florida and Georgia syrups are quiet.
We quote: Florida and Georgia, 55® 60c.; golden,
50c.; extra golden, 65c.; silver drip, 75c; Cuba,
new crop, hhds, 37c; tierces, 38c: bbls, 40c; black
straps, hhds, 22c; bbls, 24®25c.
Shot.—The market remains unchanged. We
quote: Drop, per bag, $2 37Buck, $2 60.
Tobacco—The st ock of summer work is becom
ing scarce and prices firmer. New and unreliable
goods can be purchased at less than quotations,
but will not stand warm weather. Smoking—Dur
ham 55®65c; Fruits and Flowers, 60®70c* other
grades, 50 cts®$l 40. Chewing—Common sound,
50®55 cts; medium, 55®60c.; bright, 65®75c.;
fine fancy, 75c.®$l 00; extra fine bright, 90c.®
$1 20; extra fine fancy, 90c®$l 20; dark caddies
sweet, 52®55c; caddies bright, 50®60c; 10s; black
65c.
Timber—Few arrivals during the past week,
but there is a large amount of timber in first
hands. Market dull. Prices nominally as fol
lows:
Shipping timber—
700 feet average 6 00® 7 00
800 “ 7 00® 8 00
# 900 M 8 (HI® 9 00
1,000 “ 9 00®10 00
For mill timber, prices rule about $1 below
shipping timber.
Lumber.—Orders offering freely; mills are all
full; no advance in prices. We quote:
Ordinary sizes .$15 00®17 00
Difficult sizes 18 50®25 00
Flooring boards. 17 00®20 00
Sh’P stuff IS 00®23 00
EXPORTS OF TIMBER AND LUMBER FROM THE PORT
OF SAVANNAH FRoM BSPTflST TO DATE.
COASTWISE. TIMBER. LUMBER
Baltimore 224,333
Boston.
Philadelphia.
New York 632,717
Providence
Bath 11,263
Rhinebeck
Camden, N. J
Wilmington, Del
Freeport, Me..
Georgetown, J
Portland, Me.
Hodgdon’s Miils, Me 115,187
Bridgeport
Elizabethport, N J
Bangor.
■
tlLlUKAnUC HAttKEM.
[HOOK REPORT.]
London, lUjrft. Noon.—Erie, 13^- Consols 99.
Nrw York. May 0, Noon.—Ltola opened
at U*J<. Money opened at per cent. Gold now
at 119Ji. Exchange—long $4 88H; ahort U 90X.
Government bonds opened active and steady.
State bonds onened quiet and steady. Stocks
opened active and unsettled.
iWtnrtmr ItrtriUamrr.
MtalaUirt Alaaaat—Tfcl* Uav.
Bun Rises. 5 15
Bun Beta 6 45
High Water at Savannah 6:48 a m 7:09 p m
Liverpool, May 5. Noon.—Cotton market
opened quiet and unchanged; Middling Uplands,
6 3-lGd; Middling Orleans, 6)4d. Sales 3.000 bales,
including 1,090 for speculation and export.
Liverpool, May 5, Noon.—Futures dull and
unchanged.
Liverpool, May 6. Noon. — Cotton-
Sales for the week 51,000 bales; American 35.000
bales; speculation 2,000 bales; export 6,000bales;
stock in port, 1,025,000 bales; American,
600,000 bales; receipts, 67,000 bales; American,
52,090 bales; actual exports, 462,000 bales.
Liverpool, May 5, 1:30 p. m.—Cotton—Sales
on a basis ot middling uplands, low middling
clause, deliverable in August and September,
6?»®6 ll-33d; ditto, deliverable in July and
August, Q 9-32d.
New York, May 5, Noon.—Cotton market
opened dull: Uplands. 12 9-16c; Orleans, 12Xc;
sales 520 bales.
New York. May *5, Noon.—Cotton—For
futures the market opened lasier, as follows:
May, 12 17-32®12 19-32r; June, 12X®12 13-16c;
July, 12 15-16®13c; August, 13>4®13 5-32c.
(2r•eerie*, Provisions, <&c.
New York, May 5, Noon—Flour opened
dull and unchanged. Wheat opened quiet but
steady. Corn opened a shade firmer. Fork
opened firm at $21 75 for mess. Lard opened
firm; steam at $12 85. Spirits of Turpentine
opened firm at 35c. Rosin opened quiet at $1 70
®1 80 for strained. Freights opened firm.
Baltimore, May 5, Noon—Floor opened
unchanged; Howard Street and West
ern Superfine $3 25®3 45; Howard Street Extra
$4 60®5 50; Family $5 75®6 75; City Mills Su
perfine $3 75®4 00; City Mills Extra $4 50®6 50;
City Mills Family $8 75 ; Rio brands $7 50®7 75;
Family $9 00. Wheat opened dull and heavy,
with a downward tendency; Western quiet;
Pennsylvania Red at $1 43® 1 45: Maryland Red at
$1 20® 1 48; Amber $1 52®1 55; White$1 40®1 50.
Com opened dull aud lower for Southern;
Western opened active and lower; Southern
White 62c; Yellow 60®6lc.
, D. C....
1,732,396
916,969
3,372,083
4,891,834
2,303.685
1,049,124
188,641
161,952
344,771
300.000
280,920
302,270
273,733
62,000
54,785
143,678
100,000
1,813,118
41,460
63.319
Total coastwise
foreign.
Liverpool
Barcelona
Charlottetown, PE 1 55,940
St. John. N B 520,472
Bn—on Ayrat
Cartagena and Barcelona
Cardenas
Barbadoes
Santander
Santa Cruz.
Montevideo
Exuma
Palma de Majorca
Harbor Island
Ponce, Porto Rico.
Aspinwall
Pacasmayo and Mollendo..
Greenock
Gloucester 604,390
Port Antonio, Jamaica
Cape Verde Islands
Vigo, Spain
Amsterdam
Holyhead
Cieufugos
Cork for orders
Seville
CartageDa
Valencia
Antwerp 363,424
983,510 16,573,320
484,653
546,643
59,255
949,640
9,345
822,254
1.001,991
631,805
203,496
98,867
1,051,189
145,350
725,777
10,000
529,159
10,000
10,544
440,092
657,084
460,048
35,274
2,500
41,157
108,000
333,840
24,439
203,154
22.941
79,355
617,421
155,136
46,443
Total Foreign...
4,493,687 9,131,533
100
Grand Total
5,476,197 25,704,847
9S
Freight* by Steam.
lc«X
109
Liverpool via New York.-..
Antwerp via New York..
IKinburg via New York..
New York
.tflb .13-3*1®
lb.. —c, gold
. y tb.. — c, gold
bl,$l 25;S. 1. $1 50
104
106
Boston
Philadelphia
Baltimore
.«bl.*2 00; S. 1*150
.V hi, *1 *6;S. 141 00
bl. $1 25
110
Hick—New York
I^cask $1 00
Philadelphia
.’ M 1 50
1071'
Baltimore
. “ 1 50
Boston
« 2 5)
105
By Sail.
The freight market is qniet, with an over-sup
ply of room.
Cotton—
Liverpool direct V k>..) s d.
Havre (gold).^ tt>..—c.
Bremen ^ lb..nominal.
Baltic # lb..—d.
Mediterranean ports (gold) lb. .nominal.
Lum bkr.—Vessels are scarce and in good
demaud. To New York aud Sound ports, $5 50®
6 00; to Boston and eastward, $6 50®7 00; to
Baltimore and Chesapeake ports, $5®5 50; to
Philadelphia, $5 25®5 50; to St John, N. B.,
$8 00, gold. The rates for timber are from
$1 ou to $1 5it higher than lumber rates; to the
West Indies and windward, nominal; to South
America, $1S 00®20 00, gold; to Spanish ports $15,
gold; to United Kingdom, timber, 39®t0s; 1 im-
ber, £5®jC5 6s. Kates from Dear ports, Bruns
wick, Darien, Feniandina, etc., are 25 to 50c t d-
ditioual.
SAVANNAH MARKET.
OFFICE OF TnB MORNING NEWS. 1
Savannah, May 5, 5 P. M., 1876.f
Cotton.—The selections to-day were too poor
to admit of much buying, hut there is a growing
disposition on the part of factors to sell at quo
tations, or even a shade lower, for the poorer
grades. There were no advices to-day from
Liverpool. New York closed dull and irregular j
quotations unchanged. Our market closed dull;
sales 265 bales. We quote:
Good Middling 12> 4 ®—
Middling 11 J*®—
Low Middling 10)4 ®—
Good Ordinary 9X®—
Ordinary 7X®—
SAVANNAH DAILY OOTTON STATEMENT.
Sea Is’d. Upland.
Block on hand Sept. 1st, 1875.... 41
Received to-day . ....
Received previously 6,801
Total 6,842 515,142
Exported to-day.
Exported previously ff,893
Total 5,898 496,755
Stock on hand and on shipboard
this evening 949
CONSOLIDATED DAILY REPORT OF RECEIPTS, EX
PORTS AND STOCKS AT ALL UNITED STATES
PORTS FROM THE FIGURES OF THE COTTON EX
CHANGE.
Receipts at all U. S. ports
Exports to Great Britain
Exports to France
Exports to Continent
Exports to Channel
Stocks at all U. S. porter
Receipts at the ports to-day...
Receipts this day last week....
Receipts this day last year....
COUNTRY PRODUCE
Grown Fowls, Hens V pair
Half grown, V pair.
nail L’lUHU, 11................... uu
Spring Chickens, pair 40® 50
Roosters aud Guinea Fowls, ft pair... 50® 65
Geese, $ pair 85® 1 00
Ducks (Muscovy), i* pair 90®1 45
Ducks (English), H pair 80® 90
Eggs (country), ^ doz 16® 17
Eggs (Western), ^ doz 15® 16
Butter (country), ^ lb 20® 30
Peanuts (Georgia), bush 1 15®1 25
Peanuts (Tennessee), y hush 1 75®2 00
Florida Sugar, lb 7® 9
Florida Syrup, gal 55® 60
Honey, V gal 85® 1 00
Sweet Potatoes (Yams), V bush 1 40®1 50
Egg Carriers (Patent), 30 doz 1 25®
Wool, free from burrs, V lb 23® 24
Wool, burry, V lb 10® ft
Poultry—The market i* well supplied, with
a light demand for grown fowls. Spring chickens
are In demand but are veFy scarce.
Eggs.—Market Is well supplied, with a good
demand.
Butter—Market fairly supplied. Good enquiry
lor first-class article.
Peanuts—Market barely supplied with a fair
demand.
Syrup—Georgia and Florida well supplied ;
demand good—tendency of the market firm.
Sugar—Georgia aud Florida scarce, with but a
ht demand.
iglit u
Woe
ool—Market quiet with small transactions.
Sweet Potatoes—The season is nearly over
and there is scarcely any demand.
REVISED DAILY BY
M. Y. HENDERSON, 180 BAY STREET.
No charges except for freight on consignments.
Hides—Dry flint 10)tfc ^ lb
Hides—Dry salted 8#c tb
Hides—Butcher dry salted 6)40 "9 lb
Deerskins 23 c V lb
Deer skins—Indian dressed 75 c 4ft tt»
Wool—Prime 23® 24 c i lb
Wool—Burry 10®15 c ^ lb
Wax 28 c ^ lb
Furred skins—Otter 50c®$3 00each
Furred skins—Raccoon, etc. 10 c each
- ~
Total 8.716
Shipments, Bonn, Spirits.
Valencia.... 452 ....
Cartagena 133 ....
Liverpool 173 ....
Seville 23
New York 4,310 8«S
Baltimore 2S4
Philadelphia 694
2,017
119
174
MARKETS BV MAIL.
Charleston, May 4.—Ricjs.—There was a fair
demand at unchanged prices. Sales 150 tierce*
of clean Carolina ou private terms. We quote j
Common 4)*®5c; Fair 5V®fUfo; Good 5V®flc;
Prime 6?4®6)$c.
Naval Stores.-- 1 There were received 299 casks
spirits turpentine and 704 bbls rosin. Rosing
were sought after, aud we note sales of 650 bbls
at $1 55®1 60 for extra No. 2; $175 for low No.
1; $1 85 for No. 1. and $4 37# for extra pale.
Spirits turpentine quiet and without report'd
sales. Low grade rosins generally dull. Crude
turpentine may be quoted at $2 26 per bbl for
virgin, and $1 40 for yellow dip.—News and
Courier.
Wilmington, N. C., May 3.—Spirits Tur-
£KNTfME.—Receipts 119 casks. Official quota
tions firm at 2b# cents. Sales of 20 casks at 29
cents per gallon for Southern packages, and 50
do. at 30 cents.
Rosin.—Receipts 546 bbls. Official quotations
[EVENING REPORT.
Flasadsl.
New York, May 5, Evening.—Money closed
easy; offered at 3 per cent. Gold firm at 112)*®
112#. Sterling Exchange closed firm at $4 88#.
Government bonds closed active and lower; flew
fives at 117 State bonds closed quiet and
nominal.
New York, May 5, Midnight. — Stocks
closed active and very unsettled; Central, 110;
Erie, 14#; Lake Shore, 52; Illinois Central, 96;
Pittsburg, 94; Northwestern, 39#; Preferred,.*##:
Rock Island, 104#.
New York, May 5, Midnight.—Sub-Trea
sury balances: gold, $44,364,778; currency, $10,-
465,558; Sub-Treasurer paid oat $767,000 on ac
count of interest, and $94,COO for bonds. Cus
toms receipts $334,000.
New Orleans, May 5.—Midnight—Exchange
—New York Sight, # premium. Sterling Ex
change-Bank $5 52. Gold closed at 113#®
113#.
Cotton.
New York. May 5, Evening.—Cotton market
closed dull and irregular; sales 818 bales; uplauds
12 9-16c; Orleans 12#c.
New York, May 5, Evening.— Cotton.—
Weekly net. receipts 1,568 bales; gross receipts
10,8 9 bales; exports to Great Britain 2,641 bales;
to tlic continent 100 bales; sales 4,663 bales; stock
191,445 bales.
New York, May 6, Midnight.—Cotton-
Net receipts 386 bales; gross receipts 796 bales.
Futures closed weak, with sales of 28,590 bales,
as follows: May, 12#®12 17-32c; June, 12#®
12 25-32c; July 12 31-32®l3c; August 13#®
13 5-32c; September, 13 1-16®13 3-32c; October,
12 15-'.6c; November, 12 27-32® 12J,c; December,
12 27-32 i 12#C.
Charleston, May 5, Evening.—Cotton—Market
unchanged; middling 12#c.
New Orleans, May 5, Evening—Cotton-
Market closed dull and irregular; middling 12c;
low middling 11c; good ordinary 9#c.
Baltimore, May 5, Evening.—Cotton market
doll and nominal; middling U#c.
Wilmington, May 5, Evening—Cotton market
nominal; middling 12c.
Augusta, May 5, Evening—Cotton—Market
dull and nominal; middling ll#®ll#c; low mid
dlings ll@ll#c; good ordinary 9#c.
Montgomery, May 5, Evening,—Cotton-
Market nominal; middling ll#c.
Nashville, May 5, Evening.—Cotton market
quiet; middling ll#e.
Galveston, May 5, Evening.—Cotton maiket
weak and irregular; middling ll#c.
Memphis, May 5. Evening—Cotton—Market
quiet and easy; middling U#(g>l2c.
Norfolk, May 5, Evening.—Cotton—Mirke‘.
dull aud heavy; middling ll#®12c.
Macon, May 5, Evening—Cotton mark.t
closed dull; middling 11#c.
Columbus, May 5, evening.—Cotton market
quite; middling ll#c.
Boston, May 5, Evening.—Cotton—Market
dull; middlings 12#c.
Philadelphia, May 5, Evenmg—Cotton—
Market quiet; middling 12#c.
Mobile, .May 5, Evening.—Cotton—Market
irregular; middling ll#c.
Provisions. Hroceries, dkc.
New Yore, May 5. Evening.—Flour closed
without decided change, with moderate business
doing lor export and home use; Superfine
Western and State at $4 10®6 00; Southern flour
steady and unchanged; Common to Fair Extra
$5 10®5 75; Good to Choice Extra $5 S0®9 00.
Wheat closed lc better, with brisk export de
mand, largely for the continent: also some litte
milling inquiry; $1 05 for no grade Winter Red
Western. Corn #®lc lower, with fair business
doing for export and home use at a decline; 62#c
for graded Mixed Western; 63®64c lor new Yel
low* southern; 66®67#cfor Nev White Southern.
Gate closed lc better for parcels in store;
more active; 37c for Mixed Western and State;
44#®53c for White Western and State. Coffee,
Rio closed quiet but steady; cargoes at 15#®
gold; job lots 15#®19#c, gold. Sugar
closed qniet and in fair demand; 7\®7#c
for fair to good refining; 7#c for prime; 7#c
for Muscavado; 8#c for Centrifugal; refined firm
at 9#c for standard A; 8#®10#c for gr uu-
lated; 10#c for powdered; 10#c for crushed.
Molasses—New Orleans at 45®60c for common
to choice; grocery grades qniet and unchanged;
refining stock firmer aud in fair den and at 33®
33#c tor 50 vest. Rice quiet 6®7c for Carolina.
Tallow closed quiet at 8#®S ll-16c. Spirits Tur
pentine closed at 35c. Kosin steady at $1 7o®
1 80. Pork Closed higher; New Prime Mess at
$21 6)®21 50. Lard steady; steam $12 S0®12 95.
Leather qniet but steady; Hemlock Sole, Buenos
and K10 Grande light, middle and heavy we ignis
at 22@25c; California light, middle and heavy
weights, 22®25c; common light, middle and
heavy weights 21 #®25c- Wool closed dull and
heavy; domestic fleece 35®62c; pulled 30®47c; un
washed 14®34c; Texas 15®33c. Whisky closed
quiet at $111#. Freights to Liverpool closed
firmer; cotton, per sail, 7-32d; per steam, #a.
Baltimore. May 5, Evening—Oats closed
dull and heavy; good to prime Southern 5it,56c.
Western White 45c; Western Mixed 45®46c. Rye
closed dull at 70®75c. Hay closed dull
Maryland and Pennsylvania at $20 00®23 no.
Provisions closed dull apd nqminal; Pork at
$22 25 for mess. Bulk meats nominal; shoulders
S#c; clear rib 11 #c. Bacon, shoulders 9#®9#c;
clear rib sides li#c. Hams at 15®l6c. Lard
closed weak; refined 14 #c. Butter quiet; Western
extra at 30®32c. Coffee closed quiet but firm
Rio, cargoes, 15#glS#c; jobbing at 16® 19c.
Whisky closed dull at $1 12. Sugar closed active
and firm at 9#®10#c.
louisville, May 5,. Evening—Flour steady
and in fair demand; Extra Fall $4 00®4 25;
Extra Family $4 75®5 00; No. 1, $6 25®7 25;
Fancy $6 75®7 75. Wheat closed quiet at <1 15
®1 30. Com closed firm; 48®50c for choice
white; 46®4Sc for mixed. Oats closed active
at 3S®42c. Rye doll at 72® 74c. Provisions
closed unsettled; Pork at $21 75. Bulk Meats
shoulders 8c; clear rib sides at !l#®ll#c; clear
sides ll#®ll#c. Bacon—Bhoulders 94#c;clear
nb sides 12#c; clear sides atl2#c. Sugar Cured
496,755 | Hams at 14®15c. Lard—tRrce I4#c; keg at 15c,
Whisky closed steady and firm at $1 07. Bagging
closed qniet and firm at 12@13c.
Cincinnati, May 5, Evenmg.—Flour closed
quiet aud unchanged; Family $5 00®6 00. Wheat
closed in lair demand and firm at $1 12®l 2‘
Corn closed doll at 47®48c. Oats cIotw*l steady
and firm at 38®43c. Rye closed unsettled at 72
®75c. Barley closed quiet and unchanged; No. 2
Spring at 98c®$l 02. Pork closed in fair demand
at $21 00. Lard closed in fair demand and firm
steam rendered 12 20 bid, 12 25 asked; kettle
rendered 12 87#. Bulk Meats closed m fair de
mand and firm; shoulders at 8c; clear rib sides
at lie for cash, ll#c for buyer lor June; clear
sides at ll#@ll#c. Bacon closed quiet and
unclianged; shoulders 9c; clear rib sides 12c;
clear sides at 12#c. Hams, sugar cured 13#®
14#c. Whisky closed at$l 07. Butter closed dull
and heavy; good to choice new Western reserve
at 25®27c; choice Central Ohio 23®24c. Live
Hogs closed steady; fair to good heavy at $7 10®
7 5); shipments 1,000.
Wilmington, May 5.—Naval Stores.—Snirite
of Turpentine closed firm at 30c. Rosin
closed qniet at $1 50 for Strained. Tar closed
firm at $1 45.
Chicago, May 5, Midnight.—Flour closid
quiet and unchanged; Common to Choice West
ern Shipping Extra $4 00®5 00 ; Good to Fancy
Family Brands $5 75g 7 50. Wheat strong aud
higher; No. *2 Chicago Spring at 98#®98#c on
the spot; 108#c for June; $102 for July; No. 3
Chicago Spring 88 %®88#c; rejected 79c; closed
with a downward tendency. Corn closed active
and a »hade higher; No. 2 at 45#®45#c on the
spot; 45#c bid for June; 46),c for July; new
higher; mixed 43c. Oats closed higher; No.
2, 43c on the spot; 30#c for June. Rye closed
steady and unchanged at 6l#c. Barley closed
active, firm and higher at 64#c on the spot and
for May; 60c for Jane. Pork closed generally
unchanged, but some sales rather lower ; mess at
$20 09®21 00oh the spot; $21 05®21 07# for June;
$21 17# for July; $21 55®21 60 for August Lard
closed unsettled and a shade higher;<1240®12 52#
forJune;$l2 67#®l2 70 for July; $12 85 for Au
gust. Bulk Meats closed dull; cash higher and
options lower; shoulders 7#c; clear rib sides 11c;
clear lides 12# c; all boxed spot loose lots #c
lower. W’hisky closed quiet at $1 07.
Chicago, May 5.—Afternoon call.—Wheat
firmer at 99#c for Jun<-; $1 01 for Jaly. Corn
easier at45efor May or June. Oats firmer at #c
higher. Pork lower. Lard 5®7#c lower.
Ur. Louis, May 5, Evenmg.—Floor closed
J niet and weak, with bat little doing; Superfine
all Extra at $3 00®3 50; Extra Fall $4 00®4 25;
Doable Extra Fall $4 75. Wheat dull and lower to
sell; No. 2 Red Fall, $1 37#; No. 3 ditto, $1 38.
Corn closed fi m and higher; No. 2 Mixed at 45#
®45#c bid for strictly Fresh. Oats firm; No. 2
at 33#®34c. Barley dull and uncharged; choice
Minnesota $1 12; No. 2 Spring at $110; Canadi
at $1 15. Rye closed duu at 6$#c bid. Pro
visions—Pork dull at $21 35®21 40. Balk Meats
nominal and firmer; no movement; shoulders 7#c;
clear rib sides 11c; clear sides ll#c. Bacon in
active; shoulders 8#®8#c; dear rib sides 12#®
12#c; clear sides 12#®12#. Sweet pickled ham9
12# c for fourteen and a half pounds average.
Lard, none offering. Live Hogs closed doll; ba
con $6 75®9 00; butchers at $7 47®7 70; light
shipping $5 75. Cattle closed active but not
higher: good to choice native steers at $4 75®
5 12#. Whisky closed steady at $1 06.
New Orleans, May 5, Midnight.—Flour quiet
aud steady; Choice and Family $6 25®7 75. corn
Meal dosed dull at $2 35. Com dosed in goqd
demand and at full prices; Mixed 58c: White
Western 53®6tc: Yellow 67#c. Oats dosed quiet
and in fair demand; prime St. Louis 41c; white
Galena 4j»c. Bran closed dull at 76c. Hay
dosed; choice at $22 00. Pork closed qul t and
steady; prime mess at $21 25®22 00. Dry Salted
Meats closed weaker; shoulders at 8#'®8#c;
clear rib sides 12c; clear sides 12#c. Bacon
dosed quiet and steady: shonlders 9#'c; clear rib
■ides at 12#q dear sides 12#c. Hams—choice
sugar cored closed steady at 13#c for large; 13#c
for medium; 14#c for small size. Lara closed
dull; sale> tierce, refined. 13#®13#c; keg 14c.
Coffee closed dull; Rio, cargoes, l$#®19c.
Whisky dosed quiet and steady; Louisiana, recti-
POBT OF DARIEN—ARRIVALS, CLEARANCES, ETC,
FOR WEEK ENDING MAY 4.
Darien, May 4—Arrived 2d, Swed bark Juno,
Lockner, London—Guy, Stewart A Co; b ig Ab-
bie Watson, Hooper. Newburyport—Hilton A
Foster. May 3d, Ger bark August, Kaster, South
ampton—A Dobell A Co.
Cleared May 2—Br bark Magnolia, Purvis, Dub
lin—A Dobell A Co.
In port, loading for the United Kingdom—Ship
Alexander McKenzie (Br), Copp—A Dobell A Co;
barks Canada (Ger), Lammert—D M Munro;
Orion (Ger), Futterer—Young A Langdon; A*se-
curedeur (Br). Sheehan—Goy, Stewart A Co;
Anandale (Bci), Stephen—A Dobell A Co; Rich
ard (Ger). Crepin—Guy, Stewart A Co; Julii
Heyn (Ger), Schroder—Aug Schmid*; Condor
(Nor), Olsen—Young A Langdon; Fannie (Nor),
Torgersen—D M Munro; Noret V’eritas (Nor),
Isaksen—Young A Langdon; Maria (Ger), Kraeft
—A Dobell A Co; Mary Ann (Br), Newcomb—
Young A Langdon; Hedorg Siebe (Nor) Knaach
—Young *fc Liuigdon; Vldsjaaseu (Nor), Frods.n
—Young & Langdon; Amphitrite (Rus). Rein—
Youag A Langdon; Oskar (Rus), Schyberg?on—
A Dobell A Co; Alexandrine (Ger). Rickeles—A
Dobell A Co; John Masterman (Br), Gibson—A
Dobell A Co; Margarethe (Ger), Wilson—A Do
bell A Co; Lina Schwoon (Ger), Horn — A
Schmidt; Sarah Mendel (Br), Cassen ine—A Do
bell A Co; Juuo (Swed), Lockner—Guy, Stewart
A Co; August (Ger). Raster—A Dobell A Co;
brigs Express (Ger), Tretwurst—Guy, Stewart A
Co; Boa Fe (Port), Campos—Guy. Stewart A
Co; Abby Watsou, Hooper—Hiltons A Foster.
Receipts.
Per steamer Carrie, from Satilta River, Ac.—
104 sacks rough rice, 35 bales cotton, 1 engine
bed plate, 25 boxes mdse, 40 empty beer kegs, 1
bedstead, 6 bags, 1 bdl plants, 1 washstaud, 2
baskets, 1 baby carriage, 2 mattresses, 2 chairs,
Ac, Ac.
Per Central Railroad, May 5—754 bales cotton,
6 bales yam, 2 bales domestics, S bales twine, 4
rolls leather, 1 bale hides, 65 boxes tobacco, ?30
bbls flour, 14 bdls paper, 36 bdls box stuff, 7 cars
iron, 9 hhds, 21 boxes and 6S2 pieces bacon, 55
tes hams, 10 bbls 1 cil, 100 boxes starch, 50 kega
beer, 13 bbls whisky, 1 car household goods. 30
cases eggs, 3 cans butter, 12S bdls g sash, 4 boxes
and 4 pkgs furniture, 1 com will, 12 bbls beef, 2
bbls wax, 1.36S sacks com.
Per Atlantic and Gulf Railroad, May 5—120
bales cotton, 47 care lumber, 2 cars cattle, 442
bbls rosin, 160 bbls spirits. 57 crates vegetables,
16 bbls, 2 casks and 3 sacks potatoes, 6 crates s
potatoes, 13 sacks guano, 7 bales wool, 2 bales
hides, 7 e kegs, 2 cases eggs and mdse.
Per Savannah A Charleston Railroad, May 5—
56 bales cotton, 25 bbls sugar, 3 tubs butter, 13
cases drugs, 1 case paint, 1 case chalk, 1 bbl salts,
1 bbl camphor, 4 cases dry goods, 4 cases mdse,
5 bags coffee, 5 bags guano, 1 tierce hams, 2 tes
glass, 4 parlor organs, 2 boxes tin, 1 bbl hard
ware. 1 xeg beer, * bdls iron, 9 pkgs mdse, 2 cars
wood.
Exports.
Per schr H A Panll, for St Johns, N B—121,001
feet of timber, 143,437 feet of lumber; cargo by
J F Wheaton.
Pnsseocers.
Per steamship 11 Livingston, from New York—
F E Hagley, Chas Hoffman, W K Bradford. Capt
J S Simmons, J Haym.
Per steamer Came, from Satilla River, Ac.--
Wm Wilcox and wife, G T Stein, H Patterson,
Mrs Robt Gignilliat, Rev Dnnlop, M C Rodriguez
and wite. Mrs Schreiner and children, James T
Logan, Mr Adams, and 18 on deck.
my2-tf
Saturday. May 6.
Arrived Yeotorder.
Steamship H Livingston, Mallory. New York
—O Cohen A Co.
Bark Grossherzoginn Anna (Ger), Gal las,
Master.
Steamer Carrie, Smith. Darien—Brainard A
Robertson.
Cleared YeoCordm>.
Schr H A Panll, Strange, St Johns, N B—Joe
A Roberts A Co.
Sailed Yeoterdav.
Steamship Berlin (Ger), Reval.
Kcaeraaea.
Masters of vessels arriving at this port who wish
to be reported, will please send memoranda
to J H Ksttll,
Agt New York Associated Press, No 3 Whitaker
street.
fBy Telegraph to the Morning News.*
Tyree, May 5—Passed in—Steamship H Liv
ingston. from New York.
Passed out—Ger steamship Bt rlin, for Reval.
Arrived to-dav for orders—Ger bark Grossher-
zoffirm Anna
Nothing in sight.
Wind stiff, S K.
New York, May 5—Arrived—California.
Charleston, May 5—Arrived—Barbs Iris, Sa
vannah; Middeipad, Wilmington; brig Camilla,
Matanzas.
[By Mail.]
Barcelona, April 26—Arrived—Bark Antc-
nietta (Span) Salichs, Savannah.
Palebxo, May 1.—Sailed—Scdir M B Millen,
New York.
Port Pray a. March 6.—Arrived—Brig El vie
Allen, D’Azevede, Savannah.
New Bedford, April 29.—Arrived—Schooner
Louis V Chaples, Jacksonville. T _
Wilkingtok, N C, April 29-Cle»red-Bark FANS-Splendi(l Quality, Worth $1 2
Framat (Swed) Satilla river. * • ’
RICH’D MORGAN,
(SUCCESSOR TO DkWITT. MORGAN A CO.)
Will Offer Dress Goods, Ac., at Reduced Prices.
L KNOS at 10c* HANDSOME at 25c; PRINTED MU8LINS at 12# and 15c.
BLACK GRENADINES at 35c and 50c; NEW STYLE PLAID GRENADINES. •
ALL^WOOL DEBkTgE? Md^PONGEKS: BLACK TAMISK and CANTON CLOTHS.
BLACK BOMBAZINES and ALPACAS; Ladles’ French and English CORSETS.
6-4 NAVY BLCK FLANNEL and FRENCH COATINGS.
SUMMER CASSIMERES and LINENS; 100 pieces HAMBURG TRIMMINGS, new patterns.
90 pieces CORDED IIQUES of eood quality; 100 pieces CALICO, new patterns, at 8c.
1 case CAMBRIC LONG CLOTH at 10c.
SILK SUN SHADES and UMBRELLAS. _ _
R. MORGAN.
139 CONGRESS STREET.
Great Bargains Just Opened
. —BY—
COHEH, HATX St CO.
15S BROUGHTON STREET.
T HESE ARE real BARGAIN’S—SOO pieces FRENCH JACONETS (figured) at IS#, worth 28c.
NEW LOT OF LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS at 10 cents, worth 25c.
A new lot of EMBROIDERY from 2c per yard ud; 100 pieces CA3SIMERES 25 cents, worth 60c.
WAMSUTTA SHIRTING 12WC pet yard; LONSDALE CAMBRIC 12X per yard; yard wide COL
ORED CAMBRIC 10c, worth 20c ; STRIPED PIQUE 12)<c per yard; 3,000 CORSETS from 30e up.
PLAIN and STRIPED GRENADINES very low; doable width BLACK CASHMERES Uc,
worth $1 50.
YARD-WIDE SEA ISLAND BROWN 8 cents, worth ’.2J,c.
The cheapeet and most complete assortment of PARASOLS in the city, etc. my2-tf
FAXS—To Open and Shut, worth 10c., at only 4c.
FANS—To Open and Shut, worth 15c., at only Co.
FANS—Of Black Cloth, worth 25c., at only 10c.
FANS—Of Black Cloth, with Painted Flowers, worth 85c., at only 15c.
FANS—Various Styles, worth 5th*., at only 15c.
FANS—Various Styles, worth «0c., at only 25c.
FANS—Fine Ouality Silk, worth $1 00, at only 50c.
85- at only 00c.
The best assortment at the LOWEST PRICES to be found anywhere. Bargains in all kinds of
DRY GOODS, at
DAVID WE I SB El NT’S
FOR NEWYjORff
everv TOesd*,,
H. livings
f.g.malloly
W ILL sail for the at
May 9th, 1878, at
mss
For freight or t
OCTAVt
may3-tf
TO*,
as
-ISDav
FOR BALTIMORE
pkoviihv
£ a »' n Ear. to Balllmor, * *
T® Baltimore anil Hetm
T’l HE Merchants' ^ml M< -.
WM. LAWRBncK, W ■
CRANE. WILLIAM KKV
GEORGE APPOLD.BLA.
will ply regularly betv.e -
and Providence, R. I.,
and Boston, conveying
reasonable rates.
♦30 00
&
'\'LUa5
• Baltimore
*. NorfoS
• 88en £erg y
O NE of the above nam*
pointed to sail as fo ou
SA1URDAY, April 29th
TUESDAY, May 9th, at 5 o'c
a,hi P* is ip.
clock M.
my2-tf
CHEAP DRV GOODS HOUSE, 1G0 BROUGHTON ST.
Large Stock of New Goods at Dixon’s.
W HITE GOODS.
V ICTORIA LAWNS, PLAID NAINSOOKS, SWISS MUSLINS. MARSEILLES. PIQUES,
ECRU LACE PLAIDS, .JACONETS, CAMBRICS, TUCKED NAINSOOKS, GENT’S VEST
INGS, LACE STRIPES, etc.
f
FRIDAY, iaylfitK’at'lVcl^Va 11 -
MONDAY, May 29tb, at 12 o'cl ( „ Vm *
Through Bills of Lading signed for i*
tiie principal manufacturing towns in v 01 *^ 10
laujh to laveroo 01 by the Allen Sj H-
and to Bremen, Moscow and St
the North German Lloyd's Line (n,m iM. ttr?
For freight or passage, apply to ® A * tu “ore.
JAS. B. WEST A CO., Agents,
A. L. HUGGINS. Ag en ^ y ,treA
R.H. ROCKWELLfe **•
Providence. R, ^
apr20-tf
100 New Patterns in Hamburg Embroideries
Choice assortment of CROCHET EDGINGS, EVERLASTING, DAISY and other TRIMMINGS.
SPLENDID VALUE IN LADIES’ LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS.
BOYS’ DIMITY’ COLLARS, LADIES'COLLARS aud CUFFS, LACE and SILK TIES.
Goran* " ’ *“’
NO\
JOHN
apr29-tf
YS’ DIMITY’ COLLARS, LADIES'COLLARS aud CUFFS, LACE and I
nplete stock of NOTIONS, DRESS-MAKERS’ TRIMMINGS, etc.
iVELTIES IN BUTTONS OF ALL KINDS.
Y. DIXON, Corner of Bull and Broughton.
Victoria Lawn and 80ft Finish Cambric
AT 17 CENTS, WORTH 25 CENTS.
WHITE AND FANCY SHIRTS,
AT VERY LOW PRICES.
M DHR B RO
mayl-tf
105 CONGRESS STREET.
(farpets, (Dilrlotbs,
ConilKDeei.
Per steamship II Livingston, from New York—
O Butler & Ca, A A G It K, C R U, Boehm, B A
Co, Branch A C, K Bradley, Brainard A R, Col
lector of Customs, G B Clarke, M J Doyle, A
Doyle, Mad Desboullions, J Y Dixon, Einstein, E
A Co, Wm Estill, J J A Bro, Frank A E, J Fer
nandez, M F A Co, B A K, C L Gilbert A Co, J J
Grant, Gray, O’B A Co, Gomm A L, S W Gleason
& Co, Hunter A G, H HaTigan, Lathrou A Co,
Lilienthal A K, Jno Lyons. Ludden A B, II Mvere
WM
EMIL A. SCHWARZ,
1S7 BROUGHTON STREET.
100 Rolls White Red Japan and Fancy Mattings, very low.
A Large Assortment of Window Shades, just received.
Large Stock of English Oil Cloth, choice patterns.
Mosquito iNets and Nettings, in all styles, on hand, ready
made and made to order.
Alf classes of Upholstery Goods, and Furniture Up
holstered
Carpets reduced to Cost for the Summer.
apr!7-Tu. Th, Sa& w, tf; Tel tf
MATTINGS, MATTINGS.
OPPOSITION TO MONOPOLY
GREAT SOUTHERN
freight LINE
VIA SAVANNAH.
ulack s Tar
INDEPENDENT
Line ot Steamships
nr Guaranty on through ra’.ug, and ur.
lading to all points aa low as any regnlarti*
K. LOWDEN A,-,.
“Pt-to 85 Weet street, New Yort,
INMAN Line
ROYAL MAIL STEAMERS
FOR QUEENSTOWN and LIVERPOOL
Sailing from New York on SATURDAY of CHk
week, from Pier 45, North River
CITY OF ANTWERP, CITY OF LONDON
CITY OF BERLIN, CITY OF LIMKItil lf
CITY OF BRISTOL, CITY OF MoNTKRaL
CITY OF BROOKLY’N,CITY OF NSV’ YMK
CITY OF BRUSSELS, CITY OF Paris ^
CITY OF CHESTER, CITY OF RICHMOND.
Passengers will find these steamers tastefully
fitted up, while the State-rooms are light, airy snj
roomy. The saloons, large and well ventilated,
are the breadth of the vessel, and situated vrten
there is least noise and motion. .Smoking rooma
Ladies’ Boudoirs, Pianofurtes and librara.
Bath-rooms, Barber’s Shop, Ac.
Inatant communication with the steward, by
electric belli.
The steamers of this Company adopt tie
Southerly Route, thus lessening the danger (roa
lee and fogs.
Rates ot Passage-$S0 and *100, gold, accord
ing to accommodation, all having equalulon
privileges.
Round Trip Tickets—$143 and *175, gold.
Steerage—To and from all paints at redt
rates.
For dates of sailing
apply to
JOHN G.
aprl-3m
points at reduced
and plans cf staterooms,
DALE, Agent,
15 Broadway, New York.
& Bros, R Morgan,
McFall, Mrs McAlpin,
1,026
730
513,386
Mohr Bros, John Oliver, 1* Postell, Rogers A R.
O D Rogers, J B Reedy, Solomons k Co, A Stras-
ser, II Suiter, E A Schwarz, Steamer Gen Sedg
wick, Southern Ex Co. Thompson A W, P To-
berdy, Watkins, N A Co, J F Watkins A Co, D
Weiabein, W A C, Diamond W, H Y'onge and
Order.
Per steamer Carrie, from Satilla River, *fcc.—
J W Lathrop A Co, G C Gemenden A Son, J T
Watson, M Dawson, L M Warfield, John Ryan,
Basler, Cha- Seiler, Gomm A L, Mrs F Con
way. J Tillman, L J Guilmartin A Co, A * G R
R, C R R, J L Martiu, M Feret A Co, Geo WU-
“on, Wheeler A W M’fg Co, R Meldrim, M J
Doyle, II F Grant, Haslam A McD, J W Tynan,
J C Rowland, Mrs E J Johnson, M C Rodriguez^
Lindsay.
Per central Railroad, May 5—Loodman A M
Einstein, E A Co, Fret well A N, Boehm, B A Co!
Brainard A R, J II Ruwe, A Freidenberg & Co,
Jos J Gross, A A G R R Agt J Koox, Bernhard
A K, M Feret A Co, L Putzel, C W Johnson. J
Lindsay, H A Crane A Co, D P Bickford, Biitch
A M, Holcombe, II A Co, T J Dunbar A Co, L
Butterfield A Co, Gomm A L, S Herman, S W
Gleason A Co, A Minis A Son, H Sauders, Fordg
Agt. Duncan, J A Co, Groover, $ A Co, Walter A
H, Wood A S, J W Lathrop A Co, Muir A D, II
M Comer A Co.
Per Atlantic and Gulf Railroad. May C—
Fordg Agt, W B Woodbridge, L J Guilmartin A
Co, J R Sheldon, T;son A G, Order, J W Ander
son’s Son, Blitch A M, Walter A II, J W Lathrop
A Co, Groover, S A Co, J L Yillalonga, D Y Dan
cy A Co, C L Joue a . H Myers A Bros, Solomon
Bros, M J Doyle, W M Davidson A Co, S Guck-
enheimer, Pea#ock A H, Weed A C, 0 H Olm-
stead, W’ A R Mclntire, Purse & Thomas, J F
Brown A Co, R Habersham’s Son A Co, P M
Rcynal, J Lippman A Bro, Gideon Douse, Sloat,
B A Co.
Per Savannah A Charleston Railroad, May 5-
Fordg Agt, A&GRR, Order. Wilcox, G A ~
E J Thomas. C Green, W M McFall.
t Co,
18,387
25,806
. 40,369
. 1 ,418
10,586
. 3,210
. 498,601
. 5,302
.. 6,079
. 2,989
6 r @
55®
LIST OF VESSELS IN TIIE fORT OF
KAVANN41$.
Savannah, May ^ 1876.
steamships.
San Salvador, 971 tons, Nickerson, New York,
ldg—Wilder A Co.
Herman Lyringston, 943 tons, Mallory, New
York, dis—O Cohen A Co.
Two steamships
SHIPS.
Alfred (Br), 1,278 tons, Gray, wtg—A Dobell A
Co.
Transit, 1,200 tons, Percy, Liverpool, cld—
Wilder A Co.
Pleiades (Am), 1,220 tons, Chase, Liverpool,
ldg—Gray bill A Waddell.
Three ships.
BARKS.
Tres Auroras (-paD), — tons, Cistella, Baice-
lona, ldg—C. Green, Son A Co.
Velocity (Nor), 584 tons, Olsen, wtg—Holst,
Fullarton A Co.
Marchioness of (^ueensbury (Br), 6S1 tons, Hen
derson. The Clyde, ldg—A Dobell & Co.
Grossherzoginn Anna (Ger), 226 tons, Gallos, *
wtg—Master.
Four barks.
BRIGS.
Ida L Ray, 157 tons, Haskell, New York, ldg—
Sloat, Buseeil A Co.
Cheviot (Bri* 215 tons, Leary, St John, N B, ldg
■J F Wheaton.
Zerlina (Br), 237 tont, Williams, Canary Ielaods,
ldg—D C Bacon A Co.
Three brigs.
SCHOONERS.
Loretta Fish, 316 tons, Gilchrist, Bath, ldg—
J A Roberts A Co.
Effie J Simmons, 214 tons, Harrington, Bath,
dis—J A Roberts A Co.
Carrie Heyer, 243 tons, Poland, Providence,
ldg—J A Roberts A Co.
Cathie C Berry, 320 tons, §eavy, Brunswick,
cld—J A Roberts A Co. 1
Starlight, 276 tons, Jones, New York, idg—Jos
A Roberts A Co.
L C Hickman, 230 tons, Vent, Philadelphia, dis
J A Roberts A Co.
J E Simmons, 231 tons, Young, New York, ldg
J A Roberts A Co.
Stephen G Hart, 256 tons Peirson, Providence,
dg—J A Roberts A Co.
Katie D Turner. 249 tons, Chamberlain, Phila
delphia, ldg—J A Roberts A Co.
Howard McComber, 108 tons, Higgins, Provi
dence, ldg—J A Roberts A Co.
B W Robinson, 341 foas. Wap lea, Philadelphia,
ldg—J A Roberts A Co.
Jas A Potter, 348 tons, Ozier, Seville, ldg—J A
Roberts A Co.
T Harris Kirk, 263 tons. Caviller, Elizabeth
port, ldg—J A Roberts A Co.
Charmer, 395 tons, Noyes, Providence, cld—J
Roberts A Co.
W J Parks, 240 tons, Bogart, New York, Mg—
A Roberts A Co.
Hen:
J A
Benjamin Courtenay, 403 tons, Baker, River
Platte, ldg—J A Roberts A Co.
Enchantress, 371 tons, Phillips, New York, ldg
—Hunter A Garamell.
Eighteen schodnere,
A LARGE LOT JUST RECEIVED, CHEAP.
MOSQUITO NETS AND FNAMES, VARIETY OF STYLES.
A LARGE STOCK OF OIL CLOTHS.
WALL PAPER, WINDOW SHADES.
FURNITURE SLIP GOODS, CRETONNES.
AWNINGS, WHITE AND STRIPE.
myo-tf LATHROP £ CO.
5fUilUnmr.
At Krouskoff’s Millinery House.
Attractive Bargains for This Week.
O ASH RIBBONS, warranted all Silk, 75c, 5<>c and 40c, worth double.
O BASKET SASH RIBBON $1 25, worth $2.
GUOS GRAIN RIBBON, all Silk, 20 and 25c, usual pnceSS and 4
Those fine FRENCH FLOW'EKS, at reduced prices.
Bargains In BLACK ENGLISH CRAPE.
STRAW, CHIP and HAIR HATS, trimmed aud nutrimmed.
LACE TIES, BOWS, Ac., a*: New York prices.
SHADE HATS in large varieties, from 25c to 50c and np.
EXPERIENCED PARIS MILLINERS TO TRIM AS PER ORDER.
S. KROUSKOFP,
Wholesale aLd Retail Dealer, Wfiitaker stroet. Corner Congress lane
l 40c.
Only Direct Line to France.
T HE General Transatlantic
Company’s Mail Steamers
between New York and Havre,
| calRng at Plymouth (G. B.) for^
1 the landing of passsn^ers. Tb*.* splendid veswh
on this favorite route for the Continent (being
more southerly than any other) will sail from
I uier No. 43, North river, as follows:
FRANCE, Trudette TUESDAY’, Miyl
PEREIRE, Danre SATUKDAY, May t
| CANADA, FranokhT.... SATURDAY, kaj 13.
Price of passage in gold (including wineH
First cahin, $110 lo $120, according to accommo
dation; second, $72; third cabin, fto. Ketnro
! tickets at reduced rates. Steerage $26, with «-
| perior accommodation, including wine, bedding
! and ntensils without extra charge.
Steamer* marked thus * do no* carry iteeragt
passengers.
LOUIS DE BEBUN, Agent, 55 Broadway, or
WILDER & CO,
apr26-3m A gouts for Savannah.
REGULAR LINE.
‘‘SUMMER SCHEDULE,’*
For Darien,Bruns wick,‘jati.'il
River, and St. Mark’s, Ga.
Touching at St. Catherine’s, Sgpek’, Doboyandlfc
SioiQ; w Islands.
apr26-tf
5#cdinnal.
POLHILL’S DRUG ESTABLISHMENT,
27 1-2 Bull and 93 Abcrcorn Streets,
XT A s on hand a large stock of FANCY GOODSTOII.ET ARTICLES, Ac., including I
L H <LfvfM hlLL ’ S T ° 0TH P ° Wi>ER * FACE &
Drugs, Chemicals, Patent Medicines, &c.,
TQ WHICH HE INVITES THE ATTENTION OF COUNTRY MERCHANTS.
PO CHILL’S
WDERand
‘He Invites particular attention to his PRESCRIPTION DEPARTMENT, which is attended
NIOHT AND DAYBY COMPETENT ASSISTANTS. lebliMf
goots and ^bors.
SOOTS AIMS §HO£§.
GIBSON & LAW,
N°MH^ttd^d^’f^A^d 0 ‘ ““ ‘“ ortmOTtt * <*»“•• Youths’.
bargains Start ^theTS^ *° ““ CIamU,C 0ar ,t0£ ‘ P«chssin« eMcwhere Special
novl7-6ia
STEAMER
CARRIE,
Oapt&in Job Smith,
(In place of steamer Reliance*)
W ILL leave DeRenne’s wharf, foot of Abtf*
corn street, for the above named pistes*
EVERY TUESDAY at 5 o’clock p. ra., connect
ing at Darien with steamer Clyde for Altaman*.
Ocmuigee and Oconee Rivers:
Freight for the Islands, Satilla, AltipiM*
Ocmuigee and Ocunee Rivers payaule a tiavao-
nah.
Rates as low as by other lines.
BRAINARD A ROBERTSON, Ages»-
my2-tf Office oi whan._
EXCURSIONS*
THE FINS IRON STEAMER
SPAMUR’S POPULAR SHOE HOUSE,
149 Congress Street,
1 8 OFFERING GREAT BARGAINS IN LADIES'
CHILDREN’S HOOTS A No SHOES ot all styles.
MISSES’, GENTLEMEN’S AND
Men’s Calf Hand-Sewed GAITERS as low as *4 60. Ladies’ Misses’
tar- PHILADELPHIA MADE SHOES A SPECIALTY. * “
j very
ja
anG-tf
nry A Panll, 497 tons. Strange, St Jo(in, cltj
i Roberta k Co.
ITood, f iiaibtr, to.
find, at (1 11: Western, rectified, *1 13. oagar
closed dull; fair to folly fair, TKwStfc; common
PL AXING MILL,
Lumber and Wood Yard
COR. LIBERTY AND EAST BROAD STREETS
ALBERT 9. BACON & CO.
K EEP constantly an band a tall atock of
PLANED and ROUGH LUMBER, PICK
ETS, PLASTERING LATHS, MOULDINGS,
SCROLL SAWING and TURNING TO ORDER.
Pan stock of BLACK WALNUT, WHITE
PINK and POPLARalwaya on hand.
UGHTWOOD, FINK aad KINDLING
fbipiitnfl.
MURRAY LiNET
FOR NEW YORK
EVERY THURSDAY.
Shipping.
THE FIRST-CLASS STEAMSHIP
MAGNOLIA,
Captain DAGGETT,
W/ ILL sail for the anove port on THURS
VV DAY, May 11th. 1876, at - o’clock —. M.
For freight or pusa^e, a^>ply
my* 1
J to
i GAMMHLL,
109 Bay Street.
FOR BOSTON.
Boston and Savannah Steamship Line.
prilabklpuia ash soithekp. mail
STEAMSHIP LISE.
FOR PHILADELPHIA.
ship JUNIATA will cover the line and will sail
for, Philadelphia on FRIDAY, May 12th, at
11 a. m., and every ten days thereafter nntil
farther nstioe.
Insurance on Cotton by steamers of thi, n».
one-half per cent.
The passenger accommodations of the JUNI-
AT® ore o&surparaea.
Through bills lading signed to Antwerp, Rotter-
data, Amsterdam. Bremen, Hamburg, London,
HolL Leith, and all prominent Interior points on
ths Continent of Europe, by steamers of the “Red
■ter Line,” and the “American “ ”
faay” and their connections froa
CABIN passage;
SAILING DAYS.
l£*&
toLiJ^fTeC 5 ^^ POlB “ ; ^
These steamships connect at T whaU with .n
railnunls leading ont ofBostor.
For freight or passage apply to
RICHARDSON A BARNARD,
F. NICKERSON ^ ^
EMPIRE line.
S1DEWHEEL SHIPS.
FOR NEW YORK
EVERY SATURDAY,
KATIE,
Captain \\\ T. GIB80.N,
J"8 now ready for excursions. For inform*!!®
X apply to the Capt lin on
ap5-tf Mart WfrmL
Winter Schedule.
Savannah,Charleston and
rida Steam Packet Lb^*
THE SPLENDID SIDB-WHFjIL sTiA*® 9
CITY POINT,|DICTATOR’
Capt. J. W.FiTzosRij.n
Will sail EVERY WED
NESDAY fit 12 m.
CapL Leo Voett.
Will sail E!'v iiKV j
DAY»tl2“- 1
(tboh pa auiNa’s wnaar, M*i****J
For Fernaudiua, Jackson|
PaJatka,
A ND all Way Landings on SL I
connecting at Palatka W; -L
Ulster St. John’s and Oclawaha Knera
RETURNING
CITY POINT
Will arrive at Savannah
every SATUKDAY
morning, and sail for
CHARLESTON, S. C.,
at 7 o’clock a. m.
THE FIK8T-CLA88 STEAMSHIP
^ SALVADOR,
t NICKKBSOH, 7
2.
DICTATE
Will arrive.,
every
“ l T IT. w* 1
Through tickete to the Nori# *
route, sold on board m-**
n ts received dally. Hales t»
ea.
For freight os passage apply w
brainard a ROBERTSON.
Office on Wharf.
AND
STXAMSK
bo s A.
Capt. T. N. P B '*^’ r ^ , a t -
leave EVERY WKD.VKSDAt. ^ ^
***** I