Newspaper Page Text
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SATURDAY, JANUARY 27, 1877.
Commercial.
savannah jiakkjt.
^ESKLT REPORT.
°FP1CE OF THE MORNING NEWS,)
Savannah, Ga.. Januaiy 26, IS77. (
knep.al Remalss.-—During the week under
review we have a fair business to report in all
anc es of trade. A number of interior mer
chants have been on the market, buying Spring
stocks, and many orders have been filled, princi-
paiiy in the proviaion line. In flour, we have a
* arp a vance to report, as also in nails, while
n>Bm, hides, bacon and coffee show a flight
decline.
In cotton the market opened firm on a basis of
l-c for middling and was irregular most of the
^\ C 0im ° < l u ‘ el hi the opening prices. Some
7, WO bales were so’d durirg the week, and the
market closed quiet, with ho'ders unwilling to
accept prices offered by buyers, which are a
sha'.e below our quotations.
The following resume will show the tone of
the market for the week:
Saturday—The market has been firm, with a
good demand, under an advance of ,#c on all
grades. Sales 2,200 bales. Middling 13c.
Mo.iday The market opened quiet on the
jus if loc for middling; became dull during the
morning and buyers offered from #@.#c lower
than at the opening; liter, however, a quiet tone
prevailed. Sjles 1,209 bales. Middling I2#c.
Tuesday—The market was quiet at the
opening, became steady during the morning, re
mained so throughout the day and closed with a
fair demand. Sales. 1,827 bales. Middling 12#c.
Wednesday—The market was dull at the epen-
iDg and buyers demanded a concession on yes
terday s prices, which hold -rs refused to accept.
Daring the morning it bee ime firm under ad
vices, and remained so throughout the day. Sales
62s bales. Middling 13c.
Thursday— 1 The market was quiet and firm at the
Opening, became steady at noon, and remained
so throughout the day. Sales 714 bales. Middling
Friday At the opening the market was qn'et
and steady on a basis of 13c for middling. Dur
ing the morning buyers offered lower, but quota
tions remained unchanged. 1 his feeling contin
ued throughout the day, and the market closed
quiet. Sales 763 bales. The following are the
closing quotations:
Good Middling 153
Middling *.!“!**.**!*.*.**.*’13 ‘
I/'w Middling ...........12 3 '
Good Ordinary w k
Ordinary 11.7.11”'"*’.**.10#
Sea Islands—Continue in good demand, the
sales for the week amounting to 422 bags. Re
ceipts 325 bass. The grades most in request are
medium and good Floridas. Prices are firm and
unchanged. We quote ;
Common Floridas 23® 26
Medium Floridas 27®29c
Good Floridas 30®
Medium Fine Floridas 3; 14 33
Fine Floridas nominal. 34®
The receipts of cotton at this port for the past
week from all sources have been 10,203 bales
upland and 306 bales sea island, against 15,342
bales npland and 58 bales sea island for the cor-
resoonding date last year.
The particulars of the receipts have been as
follows: Per Central Railroad. 6,045 bales np
land; per Atlantic and Gulf Railroad, 1,646
bales upland and 268 bales sea island; carte, 37
bales upland and 8 bales sea is'and; Augusta
boats, 1,084 bales upland; Savannah and»Charlos-
ton Railroad, 1,029 bales upland; Florida boats
162 bales upland and 39 bales sea island.
The exports for the week have been 11,567 bales
upland and 738 bales sea isiana, as follows: To
New York, 2,539 bales npland; to Liverpool,
4,406 bales upland and 179 bales see l.land; to
Baltimore, 1,114 bales upland aud 435 bales eea
island; to Philadelphia, 386 bales upland; to Am
sterdam, 1,677 bales upland; to Havre, 1,454 bales
upland and 48 bales sea island; to Charleston,
76 bales sea island.
The stock on hand at the close of the market
yesterday was 78,730 hales upland and 884 bales
sea island, against 90,586 bales upland and 2,116
bales sea island for the corresponding date last
year.
Rick.—There has been a good demand for this
grain daring the pa-*t week at firm rates. Hale-
about 400 casks. The eiports foot up about
250 casks. To-day prices have been well sus
tained. and with the light offering stock holders
aie quite firm. Sales about 60 casks. We quote :
Common 4#@4.#c
Fair 4#®5#c
Good 5#®5#c
Prime 5#®6 c
LIVERPOOL MOVEMENT POB THE WEEK ENDING
JANUARY 26. 1877. AND PoR THE CO RUES PON L-
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' jttoTMt*KTS OF COTTON AT THX INTZBIOB
PORTS.—^Hiving receipt* and shipment* for the
w ecK ending Jiuinar, 20, and stocks on Hand to-
night, and for the corresponding week of 1S70:
.—Week ending January 20, 1877.-,
Receipts. Shipments. Stock.
3,817 5.592 10,118
August*.- • 81Q 10.7QI
Colnmbns ’ C9T 5T 10,t74
Macon...--- 549 1,434 6,294
Montgomery ;>1 1 0 21 4,531
s,907 2,0*0 62,812
{fSSS£:::::::: _*« ^
17,199 12,892
‘weekending January 2S,
Receipt*. Shipments.
4 977 " AB "’
Wgn»to" 1 ’ 63 g
”*.. ’l»51
2.104
....15,324
.. 2,4J9
Columbus.
dacon
dontgomery
>c ima
ilahville.y. ••••••
_ . . 26,493
Total ——
3 993
564
1,708
1.08*
2.050
10,535
2,101
22,0 >4 133,517
110,837
1876.-,
Stock.
19,744
11,658
7,857
10,3«6
9.177
67.394
7,653
XMXNT SHOWS THE BK-
POB THE WEEKS ENDING
lnd januaby 19 rn. 1676,
last year.
• Last Week Last Year
‘ 6.677
15,137
28,726
13,819
17,536
11,097
2.6«>8
13,4/7
564
9,421
492
362
44
6,677
72,032
15,833
16,248
8,637
1,812
11,107
140
7,777
4,623
1,274
2.106
111.312 149,416
rATEMENT POB WEEK
jY 26, 1877.
2,998,380
*. 2,936,243
95,963
.... 85,906
....1,737,126
1,638,862
ortsV.V. -8S7,424
... 906,776
110,837
... 133,822
.* 724,000
75:0,000
IS!S
INO WEEKS OP 1876 AND 1875
| 1877.
Saiee for week 73,000
; Exporters to5k 6,000
! Speculators took.... 1 —OuO
Total stock 7S4.000
; Of which American. 477,900
j T'l imports for week 162,000
( Of which AmeriCiU. 131,000
Actual exporis 4,900
Amount afloat 391,000
Of which American. 336,000
Price 6 15-l«d.
1S76.
64.000
6,000
6.000
703,000
356,000
104,000
59 000
7,000
393,000
312,000
fiijd.
1875.
74,00u
5,000
9,000
769,000
4'»,000
86,000
68,000
7,000
355,000
231,000
7*d.
Visible Supply op Cotton as Made up by
— our
» lMDf-z. ot I ri.i w* vv* .w*. -
Cabie and Telegraph.—Beiow we give
table of visible supply, as made up by cable
telegraph for the rinnncuii and. CoTnvtercxal
'.eiegraun ior iuc rttiunnw*
Chronicle to January 19. The continental stock.-
are the figures of last Saturday, but the totals lur
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 January 19,
we add the item of exports from the United Slates
including in it the exports of Friday only:
1877. I*"*:
Stock at London
Stock at Havre
Stock at Marseilles
Stock at Barcelona
Stock at Hamburg
Stock at Bremen
Stock at Amsterdam
Stock at Rotterdam
Stock at Antwerp
Total continental ports
. 649,000
683,000
41,250
52,000
690,259
745,000
160,750
220,000
3,000
3,750
43,000
55,0i6
. 13,000
17,1-00
44,000
32.0 0
39.8T0
39,000
. 10,000
10,75*9
4,1-00
13.1S-0
. 8,750
7,750
331,250
398,250
.1,021,500
1,143,250
54,590
134,000
. 63,000
r
618,000
. 77,000
60,000
. 896,315
r
858, ISO
26,547
129,009
. 21,000
12,000
.2.886,962
2,954,439
American
and otner
1377.
1S76.
. 393,000
::42,000
. 232,000
188,000*
. 63 ’,000
6 8,000
. S96.315
858,180
. 126 547
129,099
. 21,000
12,000
.2,300,862
2, 1 47,189
526,009
857,250
ports
Total visible supply
Of the above, the totals of j
leecripticns are as follows:
American—
Uveivool stock
Continental stocks
American afloat to Europe...
United States stock....
Cnited States interior stocks..
United States exp'ts to-day...
Total American bales
Total East India, Ac
Total visible supply 2,326,862 2,954,439
By cable, la.-t Friday, the American tfloat to
Great Britain was given at 308,Ooo bales. Satur
day, this was corrected aud given at 380,090
bales. Our visible supply was made up by using,
o: course, Friday’s figures, and hence our total
was 72,0,0 bales too small.
These figures indicate a decrease in the cotton
In sight to date of 127,577 bales as compared with
the tame date of 1875, a decrease of 12,924 bales
as compared with the corresponding date of 1374,
and a dtcreant of 13,024 bales as compared with
1973.
FINANCIAL.
[Quotations furnished by Thos. S. Wayne, Jr.,
Broker, 93 Bay street.]
Money Market.—Money easy.
Domestic Exchange.—The banks and bank
ers are buying sight drafts at 1-16 % discount;
selling checks at % premium.
Sterling Exchange.—Sixty day bills, with
bills lading attached, buying at $5 09®5 10.
Gold — Buying by brokers at 106, and sell
ing at 108#.
Securities—A good business has been done
during the pas-t week, and the demand for first-
class bonds bids fair to continue.
BONDS AND STOCKS.
State Bonds— bid. asked
Georgia 6%, coupons Feb. and Aug.,
maturity 1975 to 1886 96
Georgia ni’ig’e on W. & A. R. R.
reg^lr, 7%, coupons Jan and July,
maturity 1S86 108
Georgia m’tg’e on W. & A. R. R., end.
Bullock, 7%, coupons Jan and July.
maturity 1886 106
Georgia coupons April and Oc
tober 1879 * 107
City Bonds—
Atlanta 7% 85
Aueusta 1% 84#
Columbus 1% 70
Savannah 7%, coupons January and
July, maturity 1902 and 1903 63
Savannah 7%, coupons February and
August, maturity 1878 91
Railroad Bonds—
A. & G. end. city Savannah 7.#, cou
pons Jan aud J uly, maturity 1379.. 65
Central con. mtge 7%, coupons Jan.
and July, maturity 1S93 99#
Macon* Brunswick 1st m’tg’e end.
by State ol Ga., 7%, coupons Jan
and July, muturity 1S89 98#
Mobile aud Girard 2d mtge end. 8%,
coupons Jan and July, maturity ’o9. 85
Western Alabama 2d m’tg’e end. 9%,
coupons April * Oct, maturity 1890. 89
Railroad Stocks—
Augusta «te Savannah 7%, guaranteed 84#
Central Common 35
southwestern 1%, guaranteed 69
Apples.—Northern apples in good de
mand. We quote: $3 00@3 50 per barrel.
AXES.—Collins’, 19 25(410 25.
bsEP.—The market is weak. We quote: New
and old Western per bbl, $1U 0(‘@1S 00; Fulton
market. $22 00 per bbl; half bis $12 00.
Bacon. — The market is firm and demand
moderate. We quote: Clear rib eides, 10\®llc;
shoulders, nominal; dry salted clear riblied sides,
yi 4 (4l0c; long clear, 9# 310c; shoulders, 9c; ham.-,
stock light, and selling at 15®16c.
Bagging and Ties.— T he stock is good, with
a fair demand. W e quote: S andard domestic,
best brands,'13® 14c, according to quantity; Gun
ny dull and nominal at 10(£llc. Iron Ties—re-
ta 1 6c; per ton 5#c; 5'.0 bdls 5#c, 10?£ off; 1,000
bdls 5#c, 10% off.
Butter.—The market is quiet. W’e quote:
Western, 25 cents; Goshen, o2®34 cents; Gilt
Edge, 34£36c.
Cheese—The market is firm at 16c per pound.
Cabbage—Market quiet and well supplied
at $16 00 i»er hundred.
Coppee.—The market is quiet. We quote: Fair
to prime Rio, 21 @23c, according to quality; Old
Government Java, 30(435c.
Dry Goods.—Orders arc coming in slowly, and
business is fair. We quote: -Prints, 5<j|7#c;
Georgia brown shirting, #, 5#c; # do, 6#c;
i-4 brown sheeting, 7#c; white osnaburgs,9@l2c,
striped do, 11c; Georgia fancy stripes, lu#c;
fur light dark, 9#@lUc; checks, 11c; Northern
checks, 9#@10#c; yarns, $1 10, best makes;
brown drillings, s^luc.
Eggs.—The market is well supplied and the de-
mund good. We quote: 25c per dozen at whole
sale; 3ec at retail.
Fish—The market is dull and prices nominal.
We quote: Mackerel (bay), No. 1 bbls $14 00, half
bbls, *7 5-*; No. 1 kits, $t 50; No. 2 half bbls, $6 uO;
No. 2 kits, $1 25; No. 3 half barrels, $4 50; her
ring, No. 1, 25c per box; scaled, 35c; choice cod,
Sc.
Flour.—The market is steady. There
is a good supply at quotations: We quote: Super-
line, $7 00; extra, $8 25®S 50; family, $9 00; fancy,
$10 00.
Grain—Corn—Market dull, with a light de
mand. We quote: Maryland white, 7S@80c;
mixed, 7R475c; White Western. 75<£77c; Tennes
see white, 73 @ 75c. Oats—The stock is fair
and demand light. We quote: Prime Western,
by the car load, 53c; smaller parcels, 65c.
Hides, Wool, etc.—Hides continue to decline,
We quote : Hides—dry flint, 14#c; salted, 10#(*t
121* c; Wool, 21c; burry wool, 12#c; tallow, 8c;
wax, 2Sc; deer skins, 23c; otter skins, 50c@$3 00,
according to quality.
Hay.—The market is quiet. We quote: East
ern, $1 15 for very best grades, wholesale;
*1 40^1 50 retail; pooler -'ualitiesjl 00; Northern,
90®95c whoiecd'e, and $1 15@1 20 retail. West
ern nominal at $1 00(£l 10 wholesale« $1 25® 1 30
retail.
iron. — Market steady at, for Swedes, 6#c.®
UKc.; refined, 3#c.
i.ard.—The market Is steady. We quote: In
tierces 12#c; tubs 13#® 14c; pressed, lie.
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 50®5 00; Gibbon’s X, $2 15; XX,$225;XXX,
$2 35; old Bourbon, $1 50®5 50; Nectar, 1840,
$3 75; old family do., $4 CO; pure old rye, $5 25;
Gibson’s cabinet $5 oO: Western, strictly rec
tified, $1 10®1 25; old Monongahela, $1 50® 1 75;
Sherry, $2 oo®7 00. Ales unchanged, and in
good demand.
Lemons.—Palma and Messina—Stock very light.
We quote: $4 0«®4 50 per box.
Naval Stores.—The market tor spirits closes
firm at 42c for oil and whisky packages;
43c for regulars. The stuck and receipts are both
light. Rosins have been in fair demand; 1,200
bbls were sold during the week. We quote: Good
Strained $2 0'J, E $2 00, F $2 ]0, G $2 85, H-$2 35,
I $2 50, K $: 60, M $3 00. N $4 00.
NAVAL STORES—RECEIPTS, SHIPMENTS AND STOCK
FROM APRIL 1, 1876, TO DATE.
Ronn. Spirit«.
Stock on hand April 1,1S76 732 8
Receipts this week 1,211 194
Received previously... 63,102 14,233
Total
Riinin. Spirits.
70,045 14.435
Valencia ......
152
Cartagena
. ... 133
Liverpool
.... 661
Seville
.... 23
Barcelona
.... 1,086
Ferrol
.... 29S
Malaga
72
New “Y'ork
43,492
S.96S
Baltimore
11,578
1.648
Philadelphia ...
.... 8,139
1,374
Boston
.... i,*8l
1,938
Providence
909
-67,624 13,923
Stock on hand and on shipboard.... 2.421 £07
Nails.—We quote: 3d, $5 15; 4d and 5d, $4 15,
6d, $3 90; Sd, $3 65; lOd to 60d, $3 15 per kee.
Lime, Calcined Plaster, and Cement—Ala
bama lump lime is in steady demand and selling
at $1 40® 1 50 per bbl; Rockland finishing, $1 40®
I 50; car load lots $1 30; common $1 30. Calcined
Plaster. $2 50 per barrel. Hair 6c; Kosendale
Cement $2 15; Portland Cement, $6.
Oranoes,—Stock fair. Florida $1 50®2 50 per
hundred.
Onions. — The market is well supplied. We
quote: Northern per barrel, $4 75# 5 00.
Oils.—Market is quiet. We quote: W B Sperm,
$2 25-0*2 50; Whale, W. B., $1 00® 1 25; lara, $1 01
®1 09 ; petroleum, 33c ; tanners, $1 20 ® 1 26;
machinery, 90c; linseed. 76c.
Potatoes.—Stock very fair and the demand
good. Selling at $4 5o®4 75 i>er barrel. Sweet
potatoes—stock fair and selling at 55®60c per
busheL
Poultry—The market is well supplied and
demand fair. Fowls are selling^ 55®65c for
full grown per pair ; half grown 40,$45c per
pair. Turkeys $1 75®2 50 per pair. The above
are wholesale figures; retail prices are 10 to 15
cents per pair higher.
Po&k.—'The market is quiet with a light stock.
We quote: Mess, $20 00; prime, $18 00.
Powder.—Market firm. We quote: Per keg
$5 S0®$6 25; half keg, $3 14®3 50; quarter keg,
$1 70® 2 00.
Sugars. — The market is dull and prices de
clining. We quote: Crushed and powdered, 13®
13#c; A, 12c; C extra white, H#®ll#c; C, 11®
II #c; yellow, 10#c.
Syrup.—Florida and Georgia syrups arc selling
ut 45®50c. Sugar house, market dull under a
ight demand. We quote: sugar house syrup, 60
®65c; sugar house molasses, hiids 27c; bbls, iOc;
Cuba—none on the market.
Salt.—The offering stock is large and the
de-nand moderate. We quote, f. o. b, $115 per car
load; $1 25 at reta:l.
Tobacco—Market steady. Stock full: de-
mind fair. Smoking—Durham 55®60c; Fruits
and Flowers, 70®75c; other irrades, 50 cents
®$1 40. Chewing—Common sound, 45®5o cts;
medium, 5&|<30c; bright, 66®75c; fine fancy, 65®
9Jc; extra fine bright, Wc®$l 20; extra fine fan
cy, 20c®fl 20: dark caddies sweet, 52®56c; cad
dies bright, 55®60c-; lCs: black 66c.
Timber—The arrivals for the p*st week were
large. There were few sales. We quote:
snipping timber by the cargo f. o. b—
700 feet average $ i 00® 9 00
900 “ 9 00®10 00
900 M U 00®12 Ort
1 000 12 00®13 U0
Snipping timber in the raft—
700 feet average $ 5 00® 6 00
900 “ 6 00® 7 00
900 “ 7 5^® 9 00
1.000 ** S 00® 9 60
M 11 timber $1 below these fizur-s.
Lumber.—But few orders offering. We quote
cargo luts f. o. b:
Ordinary sizes $14 50®16 00
Difficult “ 16 J0®2» 00
Flooring boards. 17 00®19 00
Ship stuff 17 00®20 00
yrelfhd by Steam.
Liverpool via New York.... V ®.. #d
Liverpool via Baltimore.. lb.. gold
Havre via New York tf tt>..l#c, gold
Bremen via New York tf lb. .l#c, gold
Antwerp tf B>..l#c, gold
Boston tflb..^c;S. L—
New York tf Ib..#c; S. 1. %c
Philadelphia tf lb..#c; S. I. #c.
Baltimore tf lb. #c.
Rice—New York tf cask $1 50
Philadelphia “ 1 50
Baltimore “ 1 60
Boston ** 2 00
By Sail.
The freight market is quiet.
Cotton—
Liverpool direct tf lb..11-32®f,d.
Havre tf lb. .%c, gold.
Bremen..... .......tf lb.. i3-32d.-
Continent tf lb.. 13-32d.
Genoa tf lb..lc, gold.
Baltic a small vessel charter
ed at tf !!>..#d.
Lumber—The continued fog and South winds
have delayed arr.vals of coastwise tonnage and
vessels are wanted here and at near ports; for
Baltimore aud Philadelphia at full iates; for New
York there is less demand and rates are off some
what. We quote: To Baltimore, $5 50; to
Philadeiphia. $6 0u; to New York, $5 50^6 00; to
Boston and eastward, $7 00; to St John,
N. B., nominal. Timber from $1 00 to $1 50
higher than lumber rates; to the West Indies
and windward, $3 00 ; to South America,
$20 0u, gold and primage; to Spanish ports
$16, gold; to United Kingdom, timber, 3S®40-;
lumber, £5 10s. Rates from near ports, Bruns
wick, Uarien, Fernandina, etc., are 25 to 50c t d-
ditiouaL
savannah market.
OFFICE OF THE MORNING NEWS, )
Savannah, January 26, 5 P. M., 1877. j
Cottos.—At the opening the market was quiet
and steady on a basis of J13c. ifor middling.
During the morning buyers offered lower, but
quotations remained unchanged. This feeling
continued throughout the day, and the market
closed quiet; sales 783 bales. We quote :
Good Middling
Middling
13?,'
13
Low M ddling
.12#
Good Ordinary
11#
Ordinary
10#
savannah daily cotton statement.
sea Is’d.
Upland.
Slock on hand Sept. 1st, 1876.
... 1S1
2,858
Received to-day...
10
1,177
Received previously.......
...3,676
4:2,653
Total
... 3,867
416,688
ffxportod to-day..
... 204
796
Sxported previously..........
... 2,779
337,162
Total
.. 2.9S3
337.95S
Stock on hand and on shipboard
7 ,730
this evening.................
... SS4
COUNTRY PRODUCE.
Dressed Chickens tf lb 16® 18
Dressed Turkeys tf lb 18® ‘R>
Turkeys, tf pair $1 75 ®2 50
Grown Fowls, Hens tf pair - 75® 90
Half grown, tf pair 50® —
Geese, tf pair 1 25® 1 £0
Ducks (Muscovy), tf pair 75®1 00
Ducks (English), tf pair 66® 75
Eggs (country), tf doz 25® 27
Eggs (Western), tf doz 25® —
Batter (country), tf ft 20® 25
Peanuts (Georgia), tf bush 75®1 00
Peanuts (Tennessee), tf bush 1 25®1 50
Florida Sugar, tf lb 9® 9#
Florida Syrup, tf gal 45® 50
Honey, tf gal 65® 75
Sweet Potatoes (Yams), tf bush 50® 6u
Venison, tf lb 10® 14
Wool, free from burrs, tf lb 21® —
Wool, burry, tf lb 12#®
Poultry—The supply is very small and the de
mand good for grown fowls.
Egg*. — Market well supplied and the de
mand light.
Butter—Scarce and in demand for a first-class
article.
Peanuts—Market well supplied; demand limit
ed.
Syrup—Georgia and Florida—in light demand.
Sugar—Georgia and Florida scarce, with but a
light demand.
Wool—Market quiet.
Sweet Potatoes—Are in good demand.
MARKETS* BY MAIL..
Charleston, January 25—Rice.—On Wednes
day afternoon about 400 tierces were sold in ad
dition to previously reported nales, making the
tjtal sales for that day about 810 tierces clean
Carolina. To day the market was quiet, with
sales of 20 tierces clean Carolina. Prices exhibit
firmness, and we quote :Common 4®4# ; fair 4#
®4 ; low good 5®5#; good 8#®6# ; full good
to prime 6#;26.
Naval Stores.—The arrivals were 37 casks
spirits turpentine and 889 bbls. rosin. The mar
ket was quiet aud without reported sales, at $i 10
for sfained to No. 2, $2 15 tor extra No. 9, $2 25
for low No. 1, $2 35 for No. 1, *2 45 for extra
No 1, $3 00 for low pale and $3 1.5 for pale.—
.\eios ami Courier.
TELEGRAPHIC MARKETS.
[NOON REPORT.]
’FlnaaclaJ.
London, January 26, Noon.—Consols opened at
96 3-10.
Weather fair.
London, Jauuiry 26, Noon.—Erie 9#.
London, January 26, 1:10 p. m — Consols at
96 1- 6.
London, January 26, 3:30 p. m.—Consols at 96.
London, January 26, 4:00 p. m.—Consols at
95 15-15.
Paris, January 26, Noon.—Rentes opened at
107f 22c.
Paris, January 26, 4:0) r. m.—Rentes at 107f
3tc.
New York, January 26, Noun—Gold opened at
106#.
N k w York. January 26. Noon—Stocks opened
active; market unsettled and lower. Money
opened at 4 per c.nr. Gold now at 106#. Ei-
cuaege—long, $4 >4#; shori, $4 S6. Goverrment
bonds opened active and strong. Mate bone’s
opened quiet but steady; Loui*ianas and Mis
souri sixes better; Tennessees lower; rest steady.
COllOM.
Liverpool. January 26, Noon.—Cotton market
opened easier but not quotably lower; Middling
Uplands, 6 15-16d; Middling Orleans, 7#d. Salep
8,000 bales, including 1,000 bales for speculation
and export.
Liverpool, January 26, Noon.—Cotton—Re
ceipts 13,800 bales, of which 11,000 bales are
American.
Liverpool, January 26, Noon.—Cotton-
Futures, sellers offering at l-32d decline. Sales
of middling uplands, low middling clause, now
landing, 6#d; ditto, shipped in January and Feb
ruary, per sail, 7 1- 6d; ditto, deliverable in Feb
ruary and March, 6 15-!6d; ditto, deliverable in
March and April, 7 3-32®7 l-16d; ditto.deliverable
in May and Jane, 7 7-32d; ditto, deliverable in
June and July. 7 5-lGd. Sales of middling up
lands, low mind ing clause, shipped in March and
Apri 1 , per sail, 7 5-16d.
Livkrpool. January 26, Noon. — Cotton-
Sales for the week 73,COO bales, of which 12,000
were for speculation and 6.000 for export. Stock
724,000 bales, of which 477,000 are American:
receipts 152,000; American 131,000; actual exports
4,0o0; afloat 391,000 bales; American 336,000 bales;
sales of American 45,000 bales.
Liverpool, January 26. 2:00 p. m—Cotton-
Sales of middling uplands, low middling clause,
deliverable in Marcu and April, 7 3-32d; ditto,
deliverable in April and May, 7 3-16d.
Liverpool, January 26, 3:30 r. m.—Cottoa—
Sales of American 0,ll0 bales.
Liverpool, January 26. 4:30 p. m.—Cotton—
Sales rn a basis at middling uplands, hw mid
dling clause, deliverable in April a^d May,7 6-32d;
Saks of middling uplands, low middling clause,
shipped in December, per sail, 6 15-.C *G 31 32d.
Liverpool, January 26, 5:30 p. m.—The market
for yarns and fabrics at Manchester is quiet and
unchanged.
New York, January 26, Noon—Cotton market
oocned quiet; sales 475 bales; Uplands, 13 5-1 t'c;
Orleans, 13 7-I6c.
New York, January 26 Noon—Cotton—For
futures the market opened easier, as follows:
Jannary, 13 9-32®l 3 U-32c; February, 13 11-32®
13#c; March, 13 19-32dl3#c; Ap il, 1313-16®
13 27-32c; May, 14®141-32c; June, 14 5-*2®
14 7-32c.
Groceries. Provisions. Ktc.
Liverpool, January 26, 3:30 p. m.—Bread-
•tuffa du 1. New Mixed Western Corn at 25s 9d
®26s: old at 26s 9d. Long clear middies at 42s;
short at 44-.
New York, January 25, Noon—Flour market
opened dull and unchanged. Wheat op meo quiet
and heavy. Corn opened dull and unchanged.
Fork opened quiet at $17 62# for mesr, unin
spected. Lara opened firm; steam at $11 25.
Spirits of turpentine opened quiet at 46 346#c.
Rosin opened dull at $2 40 for strained. Freights
opened dull.
Baltimore. January 26, Noon.—Flour opened
quiet and unchanged; Howard Street and West
ern SujkTtine $5 25 £5 75; Howard Street Extra
$6 00®6 50, Family $7 00 #8,00; City Mills Super
fine $5 25®5 50 ; Citv Mills Kxtra J6 00®7 50;
Rio brands at$S0O@S25; Family $9 25. Wheat
opened qu ! et an l unchanged; Pennsylvania Red,
$1 53 #1 55; Maryland Red, good to prime, at
$1 56£1 58; Amber $1 60®1 62; White $ 50®1 00.
Com opened quiet and firm Southern; Western
opened fairly active and easier; Southern White,
5Sc; yellow, 56®58c.
per bag, $3 32; Buck,
: hanged.
$2 57.
[EVENING REPORT.]
Flaaiolai.
Berlin, January 25.—Specie has increased
18# millions of marks.
New York, January 26, Evenlnz. — Money
closed dull at 4®5 per cent. Sterling Ex
change at $4 84#. Gold closed at 106#® 106#.
Government bonas closed dull but steady. State
boads closed nominal.
New York, January 26 M'dnlghti—Stocks
closed dull and lower; New York Central,
102#; Erie, 10; Lake Shore, £6#; Illinois Cen
tral, 55#; Pittsburg, 93#; Chicago and North
western, 36; Preferred. 57; Rock Island. 106.
New York, January 25, Midnignt—Sub-Trea
sury balances: gold, $68,r24,l54; currency, $42,-
166,257; Suo-Treasurer paid out on account of in-
t rest $109,000 and $184,0011'or bonds. Customs
receipts $157,000.
Cation.
Liverpool, January 26, 5:00 r. m—Cotton-
Sales of middling uplands, low middling clause,
shipped in January and February, 7 1-16d.
Futures steady.
New York, January 26. Evening.—Cotton-
Net receipts 1,206 bales; gross receipts 3.1 £3
bales. Future market closed weak, with
sales of 22,000 bales, as follows: January, 13 5-16c;
February, 13 5-16® 13 ll-32c; March, 13 17-32®
13 9-15c; April, 13#c; May, 13 29-32® 13 15-lfic;
Jane, 14 1-16®14 3-32c: July. 14 3-16®l4 7-32c;
August, 14#c; September, 13#®13 15-16c; Octo
ber, 13 19-32®13 21-32C; November, 18#®!3 7-16;
December, 13 5-16® 13# c.
New York, January 26, Evening—Cotton-
Market closed quiet but firm at 13 5>16®18 7-16c; I
saiee 24'. bales.
New York, January 26. Evening.—Cotton
—Consolidated net receipts of week, 10,670 |
baris; gross receipts 27,506 biles; exports to
Great Britain 8,938 bales: to France l'JU bales;
sales 4.S14 bales; stock 249,059 bales.
Galveston. Jannary 26. Evening.—Cotton
market closed steady; middling 12c.
Norfolk, January 26, Evening. — Cotton
market steady; middling 12#c.
Baltimore, January 26. Evening.—Cotton
closed quiet; middling I3#®13#c.
Boston, January 26, Evening. — Cotton-
Market closed quiet; middling 13#c.
Wilmington, January 26, Evening—Cotton
market closed unchanged; middling 12# c.
Philadelphia, January 26, Evening.—Cotton
market closed quiet; middling 13#c.
New Orleans, January 26, Evening—Cotton
market closed steady; middling 12#c; lew mid
dling 12 e c; good ordinary ll#e.
Mobile, January 26, Evening.—Cotton market
closed quie*. bnt steady; middling 12#c.
Memphis, Jannary 26 Evening—Cotton market
closed firm; middling $#c.
Augusta. Jannary 26. Evening—Cotton market
closed quiet; middling 12#c.
Charleston. January 23, Evening — Cotton
closed steady; middling 13c.
Montgomery, January 26, Evening,—Cotton
quiet and firm; offerings light; middling 12#®
li#c.
Macon, January 26, Evening.—Cotton closed
quiet; middling 12 #c.
Columbus, Jannary 26, Evening—CottOD closed
steady; middling 12c.
Nashville, Jannary 26,Evening—Cotton closed
quiet; middling 12#c.
Groceries, Proviaion*, dte.
London, January 26, 4:30 p. m.—Turpentine
Closed at 32s 6d,
New York, January 25, Evening.—Flour closed
dull and slight y in buyers’ lavjr, with only
limited inquiry, rnaiuly for immediate wants and
local trade; Superfine Western and State at $5 75
®6 00; mmket closing cu 1; Southern flour
dud a d heavy ; Common to Fair Extra at
$6 10 3,7 55; Good to Choice Extra at $7 30 a 9 35.
Wheat dull and heavy at l®2c lower; demand
light, mainly for present wants of city millers,
shippers and speculators; $1 35 for Extra Amber
Indiana, Jersey Sta f e and Canada; Western ai S4
®^4#c. Corn slightly in buyers' favor, with
only limited business for export and home use.
Oats closed rather more steady aud wit bout
change. Coffee—Rio tlosed quiet ana unchanged;
Rio quoted at I7#®2lc, gold, cargoes; )ob lots
a* 17# ®22 # c, gold. Sunar closed quiet and
steady at 9#a9#c for fair to good refining;
refined closed steady and in good de
mand at 11#®11# for standard A; 11#®U# for
grinulated; 12c for powdered: ll#c for
crushed. Molasses—Foreign grades closet! dull
and uuchauged; 45®56c for common to choice
New Orleans. Rice closed steady at 4#®6#c lor
Louisiana; S#@G- 0 c for Carotin t. Taiiow closed
quiet at 8#c iur prime. Spirits Turpentine
closed easier at 46c. Rosin closed quiet at $2 40 for
strained. Fork closed dull; prime mess at *17 50
for new, tninspected. Lard clo>«ed dull aud
lower; prime steam $11 15®U 2^. Whisky closed
irregular «d un.-ertltd at $103gl 09. Leather,
Uemiock Sole, Buenos aud Rio Grance light,
middle and heavy weights at *5®29;;
California light, middle and heavy weights.
2J®22c ; common light, middle and neavy
weights 21#® 22c. Wool closed firm and in rair
demand; domestic fleece 28®4a?; unwashed
in®26c; Texas 23®28c. Freights to Liverpool
closed dull; cotton, per sail, 9-321; cotton, com-
pre-sed, per steam. 9-16d.
Baltimore, January 26, Everri g—oats steady;
prime Southern at 40®43c; Western White at
35®36c; Western Mixed at 31(®53c. Rye closed
steady aud nominal at 7U®75c. Hay c.osed
steady and unchanged; Maryland and Pennsyl
vania at $15 00® 16 on. Provisions closed quiet
and dull; Pork $13 00 for mess. Bulk menu-—
shoulders at 7c; clear rib at 9# c. Bacon steady;
shoulders at 7#c; clear rib sides 10 #c. Hamn
closed at 14®15#c. Lard, refined dosed at 11#\
Coffee closed dull ami nominal; cargoes at
18®21#c; job lots 17#®21#c. Whisky nominal
at $111. Bugar closed quiet at ll#c. Butter closed
quiet but steady; Western, good to prime at 16
®lSc; ditto fine at 19®20c.
Louisville, Jannary 26, Evening. — Flour
closed steady and unchanged: Extra at f5 00,®
5 5o; Extra Family. $5 tu*6 uO, No. 1, 16 00®
6 6^; Fancy at 16 £0®7 2^. Wheat closed steady,
with good demand; $1 35® 1 40 for Red; $145 ior
Amber, $1 45®1 50 for White. Com steady at
46c. Rye closed firmer and quiet at S5c. Oats
closed firmer at E9c for Mixed; 42c for White.
Provisions—Pork firm at $17 25. Bulk Meats
in fair demand; shoulders at 6 65; clear rib sidep
atSS5; clear sides at 9 12#. Bacon closed
dull; Bhoulders at 7#c; clear rib sides at 9#c.
Sugar Cured Hams at 13#c. Lard quiet; tierce
at U#®ll 7 «c; keg at 12#c. Whisky closed quiet
at $1 05. .Bagging steady at ll#c.
Cincinnati, January 26. Jfiveiung.—Fioi r
closed steady and unchanged; Family at $7 55.
Wheat qn et but steady; Red $1 42® 1 48. Corn
quiet at 4i®44c. Oats closed quiet at 31® 39c. Rye
closed dull: No. 1 at 82®83c. Barley closed
dull at 7j®9Jc tor fa L Provisions—Mess Poj-k
closed dull and nominal at $17 00. Lard closed
dull and nominal; steam rendered at 10#c; kettle
rendered at ll#®12c- Bulk Meats closed dull;
shoulders at G#c; clear rib sides at 8#c. clear
sides at S#c. Boxed meats quiet and un
changed; shoulders at 6#c; short rib sides at
S#c; short clear sides 8#c. Cumberland cats at
8#c. Long cut hams at lo#®10#c. Bacon quiet
and steady; shoulders at 7#c ; clear rib sides
at 9#c; clear sides at 10c. Green meats nominal;
shoulders closed at 6#. Ham- quiet st 9#®10#c.
Whisky closed steady at $1 05. Butter dull;
buyers offering lower prices; packing grades 15c.
Live Hogs in fair demand; common at |5 25®5 80;
fair at $6 25® 6 30. packing grades at $6 30®6 60;
receipts 2,500; shipments 2,400.
St. Louis, January 26, Evening. — Flonr
quiet: Superfine Fall at $5 00®5 25; Extra ditto
at $5 50®5 75; Doable Extra ditto at $6 0O®7 25;
Treble Extra ditto at $6 21®6 55. Wheat closed
dull and weak, excopt tor medium grades; No. 2
Red Fad at $1 51; No. 3 Red Fall $1 40#. Com
closed unsettled aud lower; No 2 mixed at 39#c.
Oats dull acd heavy at 31c bid for No. 2. Rye
closed dull at 70c. Barley quiet and unchanged:
choice to fancy Wisconsin aud Minnesota at 85.®
$1 16. Provisions—Pork dull and nominal
Bulk Meats, buyers and sellers apart; shoulders
6#e asked; clear rib s : des at S 60 asketl; clear
sides at b#'®8;,c. Bac n closed quiet and
dull: shoulders 7#®7#c; clear no sides at
9#®9#c; clear sides at 9#®9#c. Boxed Meats
unchanged; shoulders at 6#c; clear rib sides at
8#.*; long and shori clear middles at S#c. Hams,
long cut at 10c. Sweet pickled hams at 13#c for
fourteen and a half pounds average. I*ara closed
firm at 10#c. Live Hogs firm: pocking $5 70®
6 00; choice heavy at $6 00^6 60. Cattle closed
quiet and slow; prime fat steers at $5 25®6 60;
good to choice through Texas at $3 25®4 25;
common to fair at $2 50®3 00. Butter, Western
reserve at S0®31c; Central Ohio at 18®20c.
Whisky closed quiet at $1 06.
Chicago, January 26, Midnight.—Flour closed
quiet and firm; low to fancy Western extra at
$5 25®6 5o; Minnesota at $6 00,®7 50; winter
extra $6 00@S 00. Wheat unsettled and generally
lower: No. 1 Chicago spring $1 33 lor cash
No 2 ditto, $1 26# cash; $L 26# for February
$1 28#@1 28# for March; $1 35# for May; No 3
ditto, $1 15. Corn closed unsettled; No. 2. 42#c
for cash. Oats dull and nominal; No 2, 35#c lor
cash; 31#c for February’; 35®37c for March.
Rye closed easier at 71c. Barley closed irregular
at 66®63c. Pork in fair demand and lower; mere
at $16 SO for cash; $,662#®16 55 for February;
$16 77#®16 60 for March. Lard closed in fair
demand but lower; $10 75 for cash; $10 95 for
March. Bulk meats easier; shoulders at Gc;
short rib sides 8#c; short clear sides at 8#c.
Whisky closed firm and unchanged at $L 04#®
1 05 asked.
Wilmington, January 26.—Naval 8tcr3s.—
Spirits Turpentine closea steady at 43#c. Rosin
da l at *2 20 for Strained. Crude Turpentine
dull at $2 10 for Hard; $3 10 for Yellow Dip;
$3 10 for Virgin. Tar steady at $1 80.
Shipping MntclUprurc. Strain tfngiurs aud parbiarry.
£rpl £ales.
Administrator’s Sale.
G 1 EORGIA, Effingham County.—Under and
f by virtue of an order from the Honorable
the Court of Ordinary of Effingham couuty,
granted to William P. Carmichael, administrator
on the estate of Anderson P. Longs tree t, late of
said county, deceased, 1 will sell at public outcry,
before the Court House door of said .county, in
Springfield, on TUESDAY, THE SIXTH DAY
OF FEBRUARY, 1877, between the legal hours
of sale, the follow ing real estate property belong
ing to saidesta'e:
All that tract or parcel of land lying in the
county ot f ffingham, containing 237 acres, more
or less, bounded by lands ®f Mrs. Lee, D. Smith,
B. J. Morrell aDd Scriven county line.
ALSO,
All that tract or parcel of land lying in the
counties of Effingham and Scriven, containing
776 acres, more or less, bounded by lands ot
Wm, Eoicks and others, as will be shown by
plats on day of sale; these lands known as a por.
tion of the Lee and Lovett lands.
also.
All that tract or parcel of land, containing
1,250acres, more or less, known as the Conner
lands, bounded by lands of J. H. Porter and oth
ers, as will be shown by plats on day of sale. On
this tract are superior beds of marl. This tract
will be soil in trac’s of about 400 acres each.
Particulars given on day of sale,
ALSO,
About threa hundred acres Savannah river
swamp aDd adjoining the two last named tracts.
Terms of sale—O^e-half cteh, balance twelve
months, secured by mortgage on the property;
purchasers to pay for titles.
W. P. CAHMICHAEL,
Jan6-S&W,td&feb6 Administrator.
lotteries.
A
MPL.KNDII) OPPOKTCMTY ’id
WIN A FORTUNE !—\ECOND GRAND
DRAWING, 1S77. At New Orleans, Monday,
February 6.
LOUISIANA STATE LOTTERY COMPANY.
This Institution was regularly incorporated by
the Legislature of the State for Educational pur
poses in 186S, with a Capital of *1,000,000, to
which it has rince added a reserve fund of $350,-
100. Its Grand Single 9umber Drawings will
take place monthly. It n*ver *cal s or post
pones. Look at the following scheme:
CAPITAL. PRIZE, 825,000.
Dollars Each,
s.
$26,000
10,00(
5,00(
5,00(
5,000
5,000
6.250
100 10,000
50 5,000
6,250
5,H)0
5 20,000
APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
9 Apt roxlmation Prizes ot... .$200.... 1,S01
9 Approximation Prizes of.... 125.... 1,125
9 App.oximadon Priaes of.... 75..
40,000
Ticket-i at
list of
1 Capital Prize
1 F nzc
1 Prize
2 Prizes
$2,500..
5 Prizes
lJFO..
10 Pr.zes
too..
25 Prizes
250..
H 0 Prizes
100.
100 Prizes
50..
250 Prizes
25..
10..
4,<900 Priz.*s
6..
3fliilaiMre Almanac—'Thi* Day.
San Rises 6 28
Sun Sets 5 £8
High Water at Savannah.... 6:36am 7.-07 p m.
675
6,022 Prizes, amounting to $111,100
Write for Circulars, or send orders to
CH*S. T. HOWARD, New Orleans, La.
Third Grand ■onthly Drawing. Monday,
March 5th. Capital Prize, $30,000. Tickets, $10
each. • ’an 8- lm
a. l. hartridge,
Security Broker and Real Estate Agent
Battersby’s Building, Bay Street.
C AREFUL attention will be given lo the sale
or purchase of SECURITIES and REAL
ESTATE. LOANS negotiated on reasonable
terms. novA-Sm
Saturday, January
Arrived Yesterday.
Cleared Yesterday.
Steamship Saragossa, Hooper, Baltimore—J B
West & Co.
Departed Yeaterdav.
Steamer Reliance, White, Darien — John H
Murray.
Hailed Yeoterda*.
Bark Nystad (Nor). Cork for orders.
Bark Mexico (Nor), United Kingdom.
Maatramlk.
[By Telegraph to the Morning New-. ■
Tybee, January 26—Passed in—Bark Sif,
from Roads, and a two-masted schooner.
Passed ont—Norwegian barks Nystad,for Cork,
and Mexico, for United Kingdom. Steamer Dic
tator passed out last night.
At anchor, waitin —fchip Hannah Morris, barks
Wm Gordon. America, Hope, Eldorado. Indiana,
Concordia. New Brunswick and President Von
BlumenthaL
A schooner in eight.
Wind light, E; cloudy.
New York, January 26—Arrived—Hippaschue.
Arrived out—Morning Star, J C Robertson,
Cameo, B.ndnelf, Lady Ann, John L Uasbrouck,
Forfeit, Sontag. Conception, China, Europa.
Homeward—Cavalier, Thebet.
Charleston, January 26—Cleared—Ships Re
bus, Doboy; Pride of Wales, Doboy; bark Svea,
Doboy; Ltndola, Dublin; Tourist, Cork for or
ders; brigs Angela, Barcelona; Acancia, Batce-
lona.
Sailed—Corvet e Askold, Port Royal; bark
Sera, Havre; brig Marcella, Matanza-.
.'Iaritltne Jlisrellany.
London, January 26—The Alonzo, from Bull
river, ai rived at P*ymouth in a damaged condi
tion.
The Wo doomooloo, from New Orleans, is at
Havre, with the lo*< f her bulwarks.
Queenstown, January £6—The teamship Som-
er.-et, from Bristol tor New York, has put in here
with her main steam pipe broken.
Receipts.
Per Savannah & Charleston Railroad. January
26 -64 bbls guano, 142 ska guano, 125 boxes pot
ash, 5) bbls sugar, 5 halt bbls sugar,50 bbls flour,
10 kegs sodi, 20 bdls brooms, 5 bbls beaus, 19
bxs cheese, lObxs matches. 3 > hxs herrings, 18
bcl* axes, 17 bags coffee, 10 bdls forks, 15 boxes
ami bbls hardware, 9 cases bottles, 2 pkgs tash,
3 bxs paint, 1 bbl gasoline, 25 pkgs mdse, 1 mule,
15 cars wood.
Per Central Railroad, January 26—748 bale*
cotton, 200 sks corn, 100 bb'S flour, 2 bales do
mestics, 106 long cured middies, 20 sug*r cured
middles, 1 case c olacketa, 2 bdls leather, 1 box, 1
box mdse, 2 rol s leather, 1 box, 1 chartered car,
1 case, 7 cars lumber, 551 shoulders, 20 coils rope,
9 bales yam, i box shoes, 1 box pickles, 1 bale
deer skins, 1 box mdse, 57 pkgs tobacco.
Per Atlantic and Gulf Railroad. January 26—
311 bales cotton, 82 bbls rosin, 55 cars lumber, 66
bbls spirits, 1 bbl syrup, 4 bbls oranges. 2 bbls
potatoes, lObxsw ne, 2 basket* wine, 18 sacks
rough rice. 5 sks j otatoos, 1 bale wool, 9 bales
hides, 8 empty kegs, and mdse,
BxHrts.
Per steamship Saragossa, for Baltimore—790
bales up'and cotton, 2<>4 hales sea island cottor,
17 i half csks rice. 850 bbls rosin, 359 bags sugar,
117 bhds sugar, 80j dry hides, 140 bound hides,
160 coils rope, 270 pkgs mdse.
Condign eea.
Per Savannah and Charleston Railroad, Janu
ary 26—Fordg Agt, A & G R R, Order, Millett &
W, Alexander <fc U, C L Gilbert & Co, Luddea &
B. C It R, Walter & II, J J McManus, J Johnson,
A S Bacon & Co, Palmer 4D,KM Oppenbeimer.
Per Central Kailruad, January 26—Thos Gads
den, C W Anderson & Co, 8 G Haynes & Bro,
A Freidenberg k Co, Dick Brown, Mohr Bros,
Bot-hrn, B & Co. Surveyor of Customs, Frank &
E, D C Bacon & Co, Fordg Agt C R R, Duncan &
J, N A Harnee’s Son & Co, L J Guilmartin dfc Co,
Walter <fc H, H M Comer & Co, Reed <fc B, J W
Lathrop & Co, Ilolst. F A Co. Order, Fordg Ag%
Groover, S A Co. L M Warfield, B B Minor, Chas
Green A Co, Wood, S A Co, Wilcox, G A Co
Per Atlantic and «ulf Railroad, January 26 —
Fordg Agt, M Ferst A Co, S Guckenheimer, M
Henderson, Tison A G. J F Brown, C Saussy, J J
Dale A Co, Gomm A L, WAR Mclntire, T
Campbell, Lipprpan Bros, J Lawton, C Phillips,
Goodman A M, Boehm,B A Co.Gemunden A Son,
A Ottinger, Singer Mfg Co, Ludden A B, Hudson
A S, II Ambrose, J W Lathrop A Co, K M Oo-
penkeimer, N;A Herdee’s Son A Co, Copes A It,
L J Guilmartin A Co, Woods A Co, W W Chis
holm, M Mac ean, Groover, S A Co, Walter A U,
W B Woodbridg# Austin A E, Duncan A J, G M
Sorrell, J W Auderson’s Sons, J L Villalonga.
PETER REILLY,
General Collector & Beal Estate Agent,
SO. *« DRAYTON STREET.
S PECIAL attention paid to the renting of
house* and the collection of rent*. Collec
tion* of all kind* solicited. Prompt attention
and return* guaranteed janl-lm
IjIHT OF VESSELS IN THE PORT OF
MAVANNAII.
Savannah, January 26, 1S77.
STEAMSHIPS.
Steamship Juniata, Catharine, Philadelphia, ldg
—Hunter A Gawmell.
8an Salvador, Nickeraon, New York, ldg—
Wilder A Co.
Saragossa, Hooper, Providence, cld—J B West
A Co.
Four steamships.
ships.
Casilda, Pike, Havre, wtg—Master.
Saratoga, Kendall, Liverpool, ldg—Richardson
A Barnard.
Paul Teschner, Maaa, Liverpool, ldg—Knoop,
Hauemann A Co.
Labrador, Hughes, Liverpool, ldg—A Dobell
A Co.
Ardmore, McConnell, Liverpool, ldg—Chas
Green A Co.
James A Wright (Br), Morrison, Liverpool, ldg
—Holst, Fullarton A Co.
Glen Monarch (Br), Chi'cott, Liverpool, ldg—A
Dobel! A Co.
Bonanza (Br), Webster, Liverpool, ldg—Wilder
A Co.
Harriet H McGiWe-y, Blake, Liverpool, ldg—
Richardson A Barnard.
Andrew Jackson, Bartlett, Liverpool, ldg—
Wilder A Co.
British America (Br), Lockhart, Liverpool,
ldg—E A Soullard.
llannah Morris (Br), Dunbar, wig—Wilder A
Co.
Twelve ships.
barks.
Elize Metz'er, United Kingdom, ldg—Holst,
Fullarton A Co.
Condor, Mockler, Liverpool, ldg—A Dobell
A Co.
France A Chili (Fr), Marin, Genoa, ldg—
Wilder A Co.
J L D; in mock (Br), — tons, Miller, wtg—T
B Marshall A Bro.
Oasis (Am), Randall, Liverpool, ldg—J H Gray-
bilL
(Ger) Auguste, VonHarten, Liverpool, ldg—
Knoop, Haiemann A Co.
Job Kitchen, Reynolds, River Platte, cld—J H
Gray bill.
Sneklokke, Jorgensen, Havre, ldg—Hoist, Ful
larton A Co.
Atlantic (Nor), Knudsen, United Kingdom,
cld—Sy berg-Petersen.
Katbinka (Ger), Rossine, Liverpool, ldg—
Knoop, Hanemann A Co.
Rimfaxe, Ugland, Bremen, ldg—Holst, Fullar
ton A Co.
Mecur (Ger), Dehaan, ldg—Knoop, Hanemann
& Co.
Vasco de Gama, Martensen, Liverpool, ldg—
Holst, Fullarton A Co.
Florida (Nor),Olsen, Havre, cld—Syberg-Ptter-
seu.
Minna (Ger), Fischer, Co:k for orders, ldg—F
Heimann.
Messell (Nor). Eyde, Maimo, ldg—Holst, Ful
larton A Co.
Walborg (Nor), Hansen, Continent, ldg—Holst,
Fullarton A Co.
Prndentia (Nor), Gjeruldseu, United Kingdom,
ldg—Syberg-Petersen A Co.
Panay^a (Span), Santander, !dg—Chas Green
Pana ma (Spa
A Co. lJ.V’ „
Johr C*ev.
Johr C'.ey, Ryan, Liverpool, ldg—Wilder
A Co.
Ploen (Nor), Thomsen, Continent, ldg—Holst,
Fnllarton A Co.
Sif (Nor), Torkildsen, Cork for orders, Id*—
Syberg-Petersen A Co.
Hermony (Br), Dinsmore, Havre, ldg— K A
Soullard.
America (Nor), Nelson, wtg—Holst, Fullarton
A t o.
Eva (Nor), Skougard, ldg—Holst, Fullarton
A Co.
Aurora (Nor),^ Andresen, wtg—Syberg-Peter
sen A Co.
Concordia (Br), Ji annesen, wtg—Syberg-Peter
son A Co.
New Brunswick (Nor), Stoesen, wtg—Holst,
Fullarton A Co.
Hope (Nor), Stoesen, wtg—Master.
Martha A McNeil, wtg—Wilder A Co.
John Geddie, Jacxson, dis—Ilolst, Fullarton A
Co.
||lndi*na, Irvin, wtg—Holst, Fullarton A Co.
Amity (Br), Uphain, River Platte, ldg—Wilder
A Co.
Eldorado (Nor), Larsen, wtg—Holst, Fullarton
A Co.
Braedablik (Nor). Jorgensen, Cork for orders,
ldg—Holst, Fullarton A Co.
W E Heard (Br), Robbins, River Platte, ldg—
J H Graybill.
Wm Gordon (Br). Balfour, waiting—Wilder A
Co.
President Von Blumenthal, wtg—Master.
Thirty eight bark*.
BRIGS.
Hippo’yte, Ridley, Kingston, Jamaica, for
Liverpool, ldg—T B Marshall A Bro.
Fidelia (Br), Atwood, St John's, lilg—John F
Wheaton.
Mary (Br), D.dge, West Indie3, ldg—J H Gray-
bill.
Alice (Br), Campbell, St John, N B, ldg- J F
Wheaton.
J H Kennedy, Hickman, New York, wtg—Hun
ter A Gammell.
Five brigs.
SCHOONERS.
Nellie Langton, —, ldg—Sloat, Bussell A
Co.
Sullivan, Sawin, 676 tons, Rich, Liverpool,
ldg—J II Graybill.
Lottie Beard, Perry, Mobile, for New Bedford,
repairing.
Florida, Gilmore, Kennebunk, ldg—Jos A Rob-
eits A Co.
Anna E Ketchum, Wilmington, Del, ldg—Jos
A Roberts A Co.
Charmer, Noyes, Providence, ldg—Hunter A
Gammell.
E G Morrison, Lavender, Bath, Me, ldg—
J H Graybill,
Jos H Bragdon, Fletcher, New York, ldg—Jos
A Roberts A Co.
White Sea, Stover, Philadelphia, ldg—E A
Soullard.
Charlotte Jamison, Jamison, New York, ldg—
Joe A Roberts A Co.
M A Coombs, Coombs, Philadelphia, ldg—Jos
A Roberts A Co.
G W Andrews, Grover, dii—Jo* A Roberts A
Co
Edwin Janet, Roberts, Harbor Island, ldg—J E
Waller.
Ella May, Smith, dis—Central Railroad Agent.
A P Emirfon, Kneeland, New Y'ork, dis—Jos
A Roberts A Co.
Bessie Morris, Birch, Woods’ Hole, dis—Jos A
Roberts A Co.
Gettysburg. Corson, New York, dis—Jos A
Roberts A Co.
Cook Borden, Lont, Windward, ldg—Jo?? A
Roberts A Co.
Lizzie F Dow, Dow. dis—Central R R Agent.
Wm R Drmry, Henderson, Boston, dis—Jo? A
Roberts A Co.
Henry Withington, Chase, Woods’ Hole, dis—
Jos A Roberts A Co.
Twenty-one echooners.
Professional and Business Me*
o
K anybody el**, i
•laa, color, or *
ax t
with Card* of any
printed to on* or sor
I JOS 07710*.
STEAM ENGINES
SAW MILLS,
Planers, Etc., for Sale
S TEAM SAW Mir.L, located at No. 11, Atlan
tic and Gulf Railroad. Capacity, 80,000 to
30 000 feet per dav. Tram Road, Trucks, and
all fixtures. Price, $3,000; cost, $10,000. Plenty
of timber can be secured to ran 10 years. De
mand for lumber good.
One STEAM ENGINE, 15x24, nea*ly new (60-
horse power. Price, $1,000.
One PLANER. P anes both sideo, tongues and
grooves at same time, price $700, and one new 30-
horse ENGINE, price $700. Addres*
McDonough a ballantyne.
Savannah, Ga.
janS-’m
KNOWLES’
PATENT STEAM PUMP
FOR SALE BY
1
SJSSSK&S®?
BLACKSMITH work/^C^
iipes, Ciflar sfiolders, &r.
READ AND PROFIT
BY TRE KNOWLEDGE YOU DERIVE.
F RESH IMPORTED CIGARS, of all sizes and
different brands.
A large and well selected stock of DOMESTIC
CIGARS.
VANITY FAIR, LONE JACK, DURHAM and
all other popular brands of
SMOKING TOBACCO!
As well as a fnll line of PLUG and FINE CUT
CHEWING TOBACCOS!
SNUFFS, PIPES, CIGARETTES, ETC., ETC.
AT
MOLINA’S CIGAR EMPORIUM,
f«r. Bull nndHtate Streets.
^“Satisfaction guaranteed in every particular
to any who are kind enough to favor me with
their patronage. mhl-tf
Copartnership ajotirrs.
NOTICE.
T HE firm of OCTAVUS COHEN A COMPA
NY' was dissolved on the 7th instant by th>
death of Octavos Cohen, 8r. The business will
continue to be conducted by the underaigued
under the same style of OCTAVUS COHEN A
COMPANY.
Savannah, December 14th, 1876.
OCTAVUS COHEN,
CLAVIUS PHILLIPS.
T HE undersigned have formed a copartnership
for the transacting of a general SHIPPING
land COMMISSION BUSINESS, under the firm
Iname of OCTAVUS COHEN A CO., ia which
Octavos Cohen and Clavius Phillips are the
genera! partners, ana Henrietta Y. Cohen the
special partner. Henrietta Y. Cohen has con
tributed one hundred thousand dollars to the
common stock. The business will commence on
January 1st, 1S77, and will continue for the pe
riod of five years.
■ Savannah, December 14th, 1376.
OCTAVUS COHEN.
CLAVIUS PHILLIPS,
dec!5-6w HENRIETTA Y. C*>HF»
$ctrl$ sud Sestaurants.
MARKET SQUARE,
SAVANNAH, - - - - GEORGIA.
O N and after January 1st, 1S77, the rates of
this house will be reduced to suit the times.
Meals and lodgings (each) ....$ 50
Boaid, with room, per day 2 00
Transient rates per week (aci or ding to loca
tion of rooms) $8 00 to $10 00
Permanent board, with room, per week .... 7 00
Permanent board, without room, per wetk.. 5 00
Tah:e aud accommodations unsurpassed.
Steamship and railroad facilities always in
readiness for conveying p seengers to and from
tbe house. A. E. CARR,
janS-tf Proprietor.
©roffcmt and ©lassware.
Direct Importation.
NOW LANDING FROM SCHOONER M. E.
MORRISON, JUST FROM LIVERPOOL,
Twenty Crates Crockery,
First Installment of Imports for 1877, which will
be offered, with a full line of GLASSWARE, etc.,
at low figures,
AT CROCKERY HOUSE OF
JAMES S. SILVA,
jin6-tf 1M CONGRESS STREET.
£atnysi.
IMPROVED
Student Lamps!
—BOTH—
GERMAN
—AND—
AMERI CAN
—AT—
BOLSHAW’S,
janl3-tf 152 ST. JULIAN STREET.
Sailors.
F. J. KEMLDY,
Merchant Tailor,
Corner Bull and York Streets.
G REAT REDUCTION IN PRICE 4 of new and
fashionable WINTER GOODS commencing
the new year. This stock comprises all of the
latest designs of French and English SUITINGS,
London TROUSERING, English and French
DIAGONALS, FUR BEAVER, CHINCHILLA,
PIQUES and all COLORED CLOTHS and DOB-
SKIN, all of which I am prepared to make up iff
my usual style by first-class workmen.
Call and examine before ordering your suits
elsewhere. jan3-tf
grofcrrs, &r.
JAMES HUNTER,
BROKER,
—AND DEALER IN—
Southern Securities
110 BRYAN STREET,
SAVAN N AH, GEORGIA.
28 PINE STltEET,
novl8-tf NEW YORK.
HAY!
400 Bales of Eastern Hay,
Now Ending and for sale by
feettf WILDER * (XX
Railroads.
Atlantic and Gull it. ii.
Oboral Sutkeintmdent’s office, I
Atlantic and Gulf Railroad. >
Savannah. January 26, Iff.7 i
O N AND AFTKK THIS DATE Paseeneer
Trains on thi* Ro** •ni *uq as follow*:
NIGHT EXPRESS.
Leave Savannah daily at 4:45 P. M.
Arrive at Jesup r ‘
Arrive at BaicDrldge “ •
Arrive at Albany
Arrive at Live Oak
Arrive at J season villa
Arrive at Tallahassee
Leave Tallahassee
Leave Jacksonville
Leave Live Oak
Leave Albany
Leave Bainbridge
Leave Jesup
Arrive at Savannah
7:55 P.M.
S:30 A. M.
10:00 A.M.
4:10 A.M.
11:00 A.M.
12:35 P. M.
2.-00 P. M.
3:10 P. M.
9:50 P. M.
5:00 P.M
4:3-; P. M.
6:80 A.M.
9:40 A.M.
Pullman Sleeping Cars mn through to Jackson
ville from Savannah and from Montgomery via
Albany.
No change of cars between Savannah and Jack
sonville or Albany.
Passengers from Savannah to Tallahassee take
this train.
Passengers for Brunswick and Darien take
this train.
Passengers for Macon take this train.
Passengers leav rg Maeon at 7:10 p. m. daily
connect at Jesup with this train foi Savannah.
Passengers leaving Macon at 7:4' a. in. (daily
except Snnday) connect at Jesup with this train
for Florida.
Passengers from FI rida by this train connect
at Jesup with train arriving in Macon at 5:15 p.
m (daily except Sunday).
Connect at Albany with Passenger trains
both ways on Southwestern Railroad to and (ram
Enfaula, Montgomery. New Orleans, etc.
Mail steamer leaves Bainbrulge for Apalachi
cola every Saturday; for Columbus Thursday
and Saturday mornings.
Close connection at Jacksonville daily (Sundays
excepted) for St. Augustine, Palatka and Enter
prise.
DAY PASSENGER.
Leave Savannah, Sundays excepted.at. S.30 a. M.
Arrive at Jesup
Arrive at Tebeauville
Arrive at Live Oak
Arrive at Jacksonville
Leave Jackso uviile
Leave Live Oak
Leave Tebeauville
Leave J^sup
Arrive at Savannah
J 11:16 A.M.
1 1:15 P.M.
‘ 5:80 P. M.
1 10:20 P. *.
‘ 7:45 A. M
1 12:55 P. M.
• 4:26 P. M.
1 6:40 P.M.
9.45 P M
Sleeping car from Louisville via Jesup to and
from Jacksonville on this train.
Passengers leaving Macon at 7: 5 a. m. make
close connection at Jesup with this train for Sa
vannah.
Trains on B. and A. R. R. leave junction, goln*
west, Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 11:14
a. m.
For Brunswick Tuesday, Thursday and Satur
day at 4:30 p m.
ACCOMMODATION TRAIN—WESTERN DI
VISION.
Leave Dupont (Sundays excepted), at 5:00 A.M.
Va’ * ‘ ** “
Arrive at Valdosta
Arrive at Quitman
Arrive at Thomasvllle
Arrive at Camilla
Arrive at Albany
Leave Albany
Leave Camilla
Leave Thomasville
Leave Quitman
Leave Valdo sta __
Arrive at Dupont
7:00 A.M.
S2S3A.M.
1 li:00 A. M.
5:04 P. M.
7:10 P.M.
6:00 A.M.
S:05 A.M.
• 12:45 P. M.
1 2:48 P.M.
1 4:10 P.M.
6:15 P.M.
Way Freight train, with passenger accommo
dations, leaves Savannah daily at 7:00 a. m.
(Sundays excepted), arriving at Savannah 4:!6
p. m. (Sundays excepted).
Gao. S. Haines, General Ticket Agent.
H. S. HA I NEB,
jan25-tt General Superintendent.
Savannah and Charleston R. R,
Office Savannah & Charleston R. R. Co.,1
Savannah, Ga., January 5, 1877. f
O N AND AFTER MONDAY. JANUARY Sth.
inst., the Passenger Trains on this Road
will run v fohows, FROM ATLANTIC AND
GULF RAILROAD PASSENGER DEPOT:
DAY TRAINS (SUNDAY'S EXCEPTED )
Leave Savannah at IO ooa. M.
Leave Charleston at 9:30 a. M.
Leare Augusta at 9.30 A. M.
Leave Port Royal at 10:45 A. M.
Arrive at Savannah at 4:30 P.M.
Arrive at Charleston at 5 20 P. M,
Arrive at Augusta at 5:10 P. M,
Arrive at Port Royal at 3.-85 P. M.
Connections made at Charleston with the North
eastern and South Carolina Railroads; at Augusta
with the Charlotte. Columbia and Augusta,
and Georgia Railroads.
Time—Savannah to New York, 47 hours 30
minutes.
NIGHT TRAINS DAILY'.
Leave Savannah at 10:00 P. M.
Leave Charleston at 11:00 P. M.
Leave Augusta at 8:00 P. M.
Leave Port Royal at 11:30 P. M.
Arrive.Savancah at 7:00 A. M.
Arrive Charleston at C:00 A. M.
Arrive Augusta at S:30 A. M.
Arrive Port Royal at 5:15 A. M
Connection made at Charleston with Northeast
ern Railroad, and at Augusta with Georgia Rail
road.
Time—Savannah to New York, 4S hours 15
minutis.
Pu lm&n sleeping cars run through to and from
Charleston and Augusta on night trains.
Tickets for sale at K. R. Bren's and L. J. Ga
zans Special ihciet Agencies,No. 22# Bull street
and Pulaski House, also at Depot Ticket Office.
C. C. OLNEY, Rec. C. 8. GADSDEN,
jan6-tf Engineer and Superintendent.
Central & Southwestern
Railroads.
SavavNAH, Ga., December 1,1876
O N and after SUNDAY, December 3. passen
ger trains on the Central and Southwesiern
Railroads and Branches will run as follows:
TRAIN NO. 1—GOING NORTH AND WEST.
Leaves Savannah 9:2(>A.M
Leaves Augusta 9:30A.M
Arrives at Augusta. 4:45 P. M
Arrives at Macon 6:35 f*. k
Leaves Macon for Atlanta 10:45 A, \
Arrives at Atlanta 4:15 P. M
Leaves Macon for Albany and Eufaula,
acccm. tram 9:00 P. M
Arrives at Albany 5:20 A. M
Arrives at Eufaula 9:40 A. M
Leaves Macon for Columbus 8:00 P. M
Arrives at Columbus 3:27 A. M
Making close connection at Atlanta with West
ern and Atlantic aDd Atlanta and Richmond Air-
Line for all points North and West.
Eufaula train leaves Macon daily, except Sat
urday, as above, making connection for Albany
Monday, Tnesday, Wednesday, Thursday and
Friday nights.
Columbus accommodation leaves Macon for
Skipping.
£kipptofl.
For Providence, R. I.
.MERCHANTS AND MINERS’ TRANS
PORTATION COMPANY.
CABIN PASSAGE $20 00
THHOUGH To'
Mellonville,
Strictly Inland All tl
Steamer DAVID CLARK,
Captain FITZGERALD,
STEAMSHIP
GEORGE APPOLD
W T . LOVELAND. Commander,
1 8 appointed to sail for Providence, calling
at Baltimore, on THURSDAY', February 1st,
at 9 o’clock a. m.
Through bills Jading given to Fall River, New
Bedford, Lowell, Pawtucket, LawTence. Bo-ton,
and all the manufacturing towns in New Eng
land.
For freight an* passage, having superior ac
commodations, oply to
JAS B. WEST & CO, Agents,
jan27-tf 174 Bay stre. t.
F011 NEW YORK
Cabin PiuRiue
920 OO.
THE FIRST-CLASS STEAMSHIP
H. LIVINGSTON,
F. G. MALLORY. Master,
W ILL sail for New Y'crk on WEDNESDAY,
February 7th. 1877, at — o’clock —. M
For freieht<.r uaseage. apply to
OCTAVUS COHEN A CO., Agents,
jin24
No. 98 Bay street.
FOR NASSAU, N.P.
REDUCED RATES.
Sew York, Savannah an<l Nassau Mall
Steamship Line.
Under contract with the Bahamas Government,
and carrying the British and U. S. Mails.
T HE following is schedule of departures for
January, 1877:
The first-class steamship LEO, Captain Dan
iels, will —
Leave Savannah TUESDAY', January 30th, at 9
o’clock a. m.
Leave Savannah FRIDAY Fe’ ruary 9th, at 4
o’clock p. in.
Leave Savannah TUESDAY, February 20th, at
11 o’clock a. m.
RATES OF PASSAGE.
Savannah to Nassau Currency..$27 00
EXCURSION RATES.
Savannah to Nassau and return..Currency. .$52 00
Savannah to Nassau and return
to New Y'ork Currency.. 71 00
For freight or passage or farther information,
apply to HUNTER & GAMMELL,
Savannah.
T. DARLING A CO., Nassau.
MURRAY', FERRIS A CO.,
janl-lm New York.
EMPIRE LINE.
S1DEWJ1EEL SHIPS.
FOR NEW YORK
EVERY SATURDAY’.
THE FIRST-CLASS STEAMSHIP
SAN SALVADOR,
Captain K. S. NICKERSON,
W ILL sail for the above port on SATUR
DAY, January 27,1877, at 3:30 o’clock P. M.
For freight or passage, apply to
jan22-tf WILDER A CO., Agents.
FOR BOSTON.
Boston and Savannah Steamship Lino,
A
at 9 A. M„ touching at St. Cathar:;,--
Doboy, Darien, St. Simon’s, i; r - ;i .
Mary’s, Fernandina. Jacksonville,
Tocoi. Paiatka. Sanford, and Em. -.,1 s ■
landings on St. John's river, arriv r', V,i’3
vide on SATURDAY BVSNING.
varnah SUNDAY MORNING, ami : • H
TUB DAY'.EVEN ING.
This boat has superior state-room j
commodaiions ana j
a very desirable om
bhe connects at L^iien with
aud Halcyon for the Oconee end OcaaU,' ™
at Brunswick, with railroads for Mar jq ,,
bany; at St. Mary’s, with steamer* > :i , $
river; at Fernandina.with railroad •
at Jacksonville, with railroad to t;.- j/.
Florida; at Tocoi, with railroad to 8t.
and at Palstka, with steamers up the (fr!
liver. For rates of freight or pas-
Purser TAYLOR, on board, or
F. M. M1REL1. .
jan23-lm - s av«,^j
REUUL1K Ud
Winter SeheduU
Semi-Weekly Line for Darien, dJ
And Intermediate Landings, arti
Weekly Line to Brunswick, FrmiJ
St. Mary’s anl Sal ilia Uiiitl
Steamer KeliuiuJ
Captain THOS. WHITE, ^
O N and after MONDAY, Decern:. r
leave wharf foot of Drayton -■- ■. V J
MONDAY, at 6 o'clock p. m , for 1 >a.r ' ** *
wick, 8t. Mary’s, Fernandina and >
and will make an extra trip to Dar ,
mediate landings EVERY FRIDAY, at*4
p. m.
Freight received daiiy.
JOHN H. MURRAY, .W,
dec9-tf Office on ti,ew
FOR FLORIDA]
Savanuah,Charleston and?
rida Steam Packet Line]
,sGS
On and alter SUNDAY, 7th instant, the s-
side-wheel steamers ^
CITY POINT, DICTATE
Captain Scott, Capt. Lao. \ r „ J
Will sail every WED- Will sail every
NESDAY’, at 12 *., DAY, at h , 1
(TOOK DK WEKNK’S WHABY. -AVa.NMa.i, "
For Fernaudina, JacksouviJ
Palatka,
A ND all Way Landings on St. John’s L
connecting at Palatka with stenttal
Upper St. John’s and Ociawaha rivers. "
RETURNING:
(TTY POINT
Will arrive at Savannah
EVERY SATURDAY
morning, and sail for
CHARLESTON, S. C. f
at 7 o’clock a. x.
Through rates giv
Enterprise, Lako Jes*
lUtTVToJ
Will arrive at StnJ
EVERY TIiriSL
morning, and
CHARLESTON, il
at 7 o’clock a. m.
en to Mellonville
essup and intermediate”a
on upper St. John's river.
Freights received daiiy. Rates as icw i
Other lines.
For freight or passage apply to
BKAINARD A ROBERTSON,
Office on Wharf.
CABIN PASSAGE...
Columbus daily, except Sunday.
COMING SOUTH AND EAST.
Atlanta. 1 •’•15 P M
Arrives at Macon
.... 6:10 P. M
Leaves Macon
... 7:00 A. A.
Leaves Augusta
.. 9:3) A. k
Arrives at Miiledgeviile
Arrives at Eatonton
... 9:44A. A
...11:30 A. k
Arrives at Augusta
.... 4:45 P. k
Arrives at Savannah
.... 5:25 P *
Leaves Eufaula, accom. train 5:-'.S P. M
Leaves Albany «:40 P. M
Arrives at Macon 6:20A.M
Leaves Columbus 9:31 P. M
Arrives at Macon 4:50 A. M
Eufaula Accommodation leaves Eafaula daily,
except Sunday, and Albany Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday, Thursday and Friday nights.
TRAIN NO. 8, GOING NORTH AND WEST.
Leaven Savannah 5.00 P. M
Arrives at Milledgevtile 9:44 A. a
Arrives at Eatonton 11:30 A. It
Arrives at Macon 1-30 A. M
Leaves Macon for Atlanta 2:05 A. M
Arrives at Atlanta 6:50 A. M
Leaves Macon for Albany and Eufaula. S 00 A. M
Arrives at Albany 2:05 F. V
Arrives at Eufaula 3 4) P. M
Leaves Macon for Columbus 8:30 A. M
Arrives at Columbus 1:20 P. H
Trains on this schedule for Macon, At'au'a,
Columbus, Eufaula and Albany daily, making
close connection at Atlanta with Western and
Atlantic and Atlanta aud Richmond Air Line.
At Enfaula with Montgomery and Enfaula Rail
road; at Columbus with Western Railroad of
Alabama, and Mobile and Girard Railroad.
Train for Albany runs out on Blakely Exten
sion daily, except fcunday.
COMING SOUTH AND EAST.
Leaves Atlanta 10:45 P. M
Arrives at Macon from Atlanta 3:16 A. M
Leaves Albany 2 20 P. M
Leaves Eufaula 12:30 P. M
Arrives at Macon fr’m Eufaula A Albany T 50P. >
Arrives at Macon from Columbus 7:05 P. 5?
Leaves Macon 3:45 A K
Arrives at Savannah 11:45 A. H
Passengers lor Mffiedgeviile and Eatonton will
take train No. t from Savannah and train No. 1
from Macon. The Miiledgeviile and Eatonton
train runs daily, except Mondays.
WILLIAM ROGERS,
General Supt. Central Railroad, Savannah.
W. G. RAOUL,
Supt. Southwestern Railroad, Macon.
decl-tf
Shipping.
FOR BALTIMORE
AND
PROVIDENCE.
Cabin Passage to Baltimore....$13 OO
T HE Merchants’ and Minors’ Transportation
Company’s steamships JOHNS HOPKINS,
WM. LAWRENCE, McCLELLAN, WILLIAM
CRANE, WILLIAM KENNEDY, SARAGOSSA,
GEORGE APPOLD.BLACKSTONE,AMERICA,
will ply regularly between Savannah, Baltimore
and Providence, R. I., and Baltimore, Norfolk
and Boston, conveying freight and passengers at
reasonable rates.
$20
THE STEAMSHIP
WORCESTER,
Captain D. HEDGE,
T7ILL sail for the above port on SATURDAY
rv January 27th, at 5.00 P. M.
Through Dills of lading given to Providence,
Fall River, LoweP, Lawrence, and other New
England manufacturing points; also to Liverpool
by the Cunard, Warren and Ley land Lints.
The ships of this line connect at T wharf with
all railroads leading from Boston.
RICHARDSON A BARNARD,
S Stoddard’s Lower Range.
F.NICKERSON A CO., Boston. jnnl6-tf
MCRRA-Y’S LINE.
FOR NEW YORK
EVERY THURSDAY.
From Foot of Abercorn Street
A
THIS SIDE-WHEEL 8TEAMEK
MAG NO LI A,
DAGGETT, Master,
W ILL sail for the above port on THURSDAY,
February —, 1977, at — o’clock —. M.
For freight or passage, apply to
HUNTER A GAMMELL.
janl9-tf 100 Bay street.
Only Direct Line to France.
T HE General Transatlantic
Company’s Mail Steamers
between New York and Havre,
calling at Plymouth (G. B.) for.
the landing of passengers. The splendid vessels
on this favorite route for the Continent (cabins
provided with electric bells) will sail from pier
No. 42, North river, foot of Morton street, as fol
lows:
FRANCE, Tbudelle, SATURDAY’, January
27, 3 p. sl
LABRADOR, Sanqlieb. SATURDAY, Febru
ary 10, 3 p. x.
CANADA, Fraxgeul, SATURDAY, February
24. 2 p. m.
Price of passage In gold (including wine)—
First cabin, $llu to $120, according lo accommo
dation; second, $72; third cabin, $4U. Return
tickets at reduced rates. Steerage $26, with su
perior accommodation, including wine, bedding
and utensils without extra charge.
Steamers marked thus * do not carry steerage
passengers.
IXJUJS DE BEBIAN, Agent, 55 Broadway, or
WILDER A CO*
aogll-12m Agent* for Savannah.
Uerchauts’ Inland Kofl
—BETWEEN—
Savannah an<i Jacksomiil
—AND—
All Points on the Upper St.John’s ami HonJ
Xo Sea Sickucsq
THE PALACE STEAM Eli
JAS. B. SCHUYLI
L. W, BURNS, Commander,
B EING elegantly fitted up with string
and every comfort of a firat-cias* :im
with sleeping accommodation fur o er
leave Padelford’s wharf. Savannah, ■
NESDAY anl SATURDAY, at luc...
N. B—On Wednesday’s trips from i
the Schuyler will go direct to Pala’ka, is®
only at Jacksonville anil principal landinafl
the St. John’s. The only boat makin? oJ
connection at Tocoi with the stages J
Passengers by this arrangement will k»v*$
quickest transit to Florida ever y< 1
Saturday’s trips, as usual, landing at ifrbo^l
rien, St. Simon’s, Brunswick, St.'MaryV,and!
naudiaa, connecting at Darien with steamafl
cyon for Oconee and ucmuJgee rivers on tlmM
tariff. Excursion tickets u» Jacksonville!
Palatka, $12; like redu tion to all points. Tidl
issued and through rates given for ai J
North and South.
Ca B h will he paid for all purchases on uai
of this steamer.
J. S. LAWRENCE, General ]
Office on wbaB
J. W. HANCOX, Proprietor.
R. R. Melrose, Traveling and Passenger
opposite Screven House, Savannah. janl>:l
For Augusta & Way Landina|
STEAMER KATIE,
Captain A. C. CABA5B.M
TTTILLJ^avc Padelford’s wharf every TT5M
»▼ DAY EVENING at 6 o’clock, tor tfcfl
points. For freight or passage apply to ■
J. S. LAWRENCE. AgtsiI
Office on wharf. dtcd^l
£ox or C’harttt,
FOR LIVERPOOL.
'J'HE American ship
ANDBEW JACKSON,
Captain J. C. Bartlett.!
For freight room apply to „
3an3-tf WILDER iOOJ
FOR LIVERPOOL.
r J'HE first-class British ship
BONANZA,
Captain Henry Webster.
For freight room apply to
dec30-tf
WILDER i
FOR HAVRE.
fJ'HE first class Norwegian bark
SNEKLOKKE,
Capt H. JoRQEN*E.V,t_
having the larger portion of her cart; >
will have dispatch as above. For further 1'
ply to
HOLST, FULLARTON ^ 1
Dgagements apply to
dec29 tf HOLS 1
The Savannah and Mellonville
STEAMBOAT LIAE.
Winter Schedule.
INLAND ALL THE WAY
“PROM—
Savannah to Mellonville, Enterprise, San
ford, and Intermediate Landings on
St. John’s River.
FOR LIVERPOOL.
r jpHE first class Norwegian bark
VASCO DE GAMA,
Capt. P. Moutensen,!—
having the larger portion of her car."
will have quick dispatch as above. F r
freight engagements apply to
J “ - S .p yry
dec29-tf
HOLST, FULLARTON *
THE STEAMSHIP
AMERICA,
Captain G. W. BILLUPS,
I S appointed to sail on TUESDAY, January
—, 1877, at — o’clock —. M.
Through Bills of Lading signed for Cotton to
the principal manufacturing towns in New Eng-
d, to Liveroool by the Allen and Beaver lines,
and to Bremen, Moscow and St. Petersburg by
the Nortn German Lloyd’s Line from Baltimore.
For freight, apply to
JAS. B. WEST A CO., Agents,
174 Bay street
A. L. HUGGINS, Agent,
Baltimore, Md.
E. H. ROCKWELL, Agent,
janll-tf Providence. R. I.
FOR PHILADELPHIA.
THE STEAMSHIP
JUNIATA,
J. W. CATHARINE, Commander,
XITILL sail for the above port on SATUK-
rV DAY, January 81,1877, at 4 o’clock P. M.
For freight or passage, having splendid ac-
pott-td ordinary C. .
O N and after Monday, December lltli, 1376.
the steamer RELLA.NCE, Captain Thomas
White, will leave wharf foot of Drayton
street, every MONDAY AFTERNOON at 6
o’clock, for Darien, Brunswick, St. Mary’s
Fernandina, Florida, and Satilla river, connec
ting at Darien with steamers for Aita-
maha, Ocmulgee and Oconee rivers, and
at Fernandina with steamer CARRIE, Captain
Joe Smith, for all points on the SL John’s river
as far as MellonviMe.
Close connection made at Palatka by steamer
CARRIE with steamers for the Ociawaha river
and Lake Crescent or Dunn’s Lake, and at Mel
lonville for points on the upper St. John s
The rente being entirely inland, passenger*
will find it very attractive. ^ "
Capt. J. H. SMITH, M*na2er
dtc6-tf JOHN H. Murray! Agent
REOl'LAK LINK.
For Augusta & Way Landings.
J
STEAMER
RO S A,
Captain P. H. WARD,
a ''™ Y WEDNESDAY, HUn
. of freight a* low a* by any other
me, and revived at all tlmce. Por freight or
paaaace, apply on wharf.
W. P. BARRY. Agent.
FOR BRFMF>.
JtHB firat claaa Norwegian bark
RIMFAXE,
Capt. P. Ueqland, <
having a portion of her cargo engaged,
dispatch as above. For freight cD„M- T ta t5 *|
apply to ■
dec29-if HOLST, FULLARTON
FOB GKJiOA.
nnHE French bark
FRANCE AND CHILI,
Captain MAbxx.«
For freight room apply to , ,, I
nov26-tf WILDER
fish, Oysters,
M. M. SULLIVAN. | GEO. A. Hl'I* 0 * I
HUDSON & SULLlYil
—DEALERS IN—
Produce, Foreign and Douif Stic f rB q
Shad, Fresh Fish and Oysters,
Turtle, Terrapin, (tame.
Etc., Etc., Etc.
ISO BRYAN STREET, SAVANNAH. <ej
all parts __ -
will receive our usual prompt attention. „ J
tsr Shipping Oysters, open and :n • 6 b t ■' I
arge quantities, a specialty. oci^l
—
JUST RECEIVED-
REGULAR LINE
FOR CHARLESTON AND BEAUFORT.
* C., AND INTERMEDIATE
LANDINGS.
T HE STEAMER
PILOT BOY,
Capt. P. Toglio,
will leave as above every'
SUNDAY MORNING,
wharf foot of Drayton street. Freight received
daily. x JOHN H. MURRAY, Agent,
jans-lm V Offloe'ou wlurf.
at 7:80 o’clock, front
A fresh supply of thba nectar,
BlaciTen, with a Green Tea flavor AjJ*
chroroo Is given with each pound sold.
90 cents a pound. For sa'e by
L. C. STBOM»-
!Pn88-tf Cor. Bull and Perry street
COFFEE.
5 269 BAGS OOFI ' KB ’ airect 1
de^Janeiro per American brig He. £C !
now landing and for sale by r.A
aov88-tf WKKDg CC&