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WEEKLY

NEWSPAPER,

REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS
OF THE UNITED STATES.
.

-

.

.

■

—

-

-

■

■

■■■■■■

'

-

-

VOL. 9.

Marquand, Hill
BANKERS

AND

37 WALL

& Co.,

BROKERS,

Stool’s, Bonds

and

George EL B. Hill,

Gold, bought and Sola

Business Paper

Nego

on

WILLIAM

ALEXANDER SMITH

&

Bankers and Brokers.

CO.,

Farmer, Hatch

HANKERS,
No. 40 Wall Street, New
York.
DEPOSITS received and Interest allowed at best
Currpnt Krtt68

STREET)

Marquand,

NO. 211.

Bankers and Brokers.

New York.

mission.

—

NEW YORK, JULY 10, 1869.

Bankers and Brokers.

John P.

-■

com¬

GOVERNMENT and STATE SECURITIES,
GOLD,
RAILROAD BO'JDS, STOCKS, etc.,
bought and
Sold on Commission.
ADVANCES made upon approved Securities.
COLLECTIONS made, and Loans Negotiated.

luted.

78

BANKERS Sc
BROADWAY AND

Stocks, Bonds

5 & 7 JNKW STREET.

and Gold

bought and sold exclusively
commission.
Accounts of Banks and Bankers
received. Collec¬
tions made in the United
States, British Provinces and
on

Europe.

Bills of Exchange drawn
E. J. Farmer & Co.,

York,

Leipzig, Saxony.

AND

BROAD ST.

principal

Blake

Brothers & Co.,

52 Wall Street. New
York.
AND

38.

STATE

STREET,

BOSTON,

EXCHANGE ON
LONDON,
And

DEALER3

BANKER
14

85 BRUHL.

DRAW IN SUI?IS TO SUIT
cities of Germany.
Switzerland,
England, France, Sweden, Norway,
Holland, belguiin, Russia, Italy, Spain,
Denmark, &c.
Issue Letter* of Credit for
Travelers,
available in ali parts of
Europe.

On the

COMMERCIAL

WALL

on

AND

DEPOSITS RECEIVE D SUBJECT to SIGHT
DRAFT
And Four Per Cent Interest allowed
on Dally
Balances.

Collections made

on

Buy and Sell Massachusetts and New York
State

especial

Wall

I?l Iscellaneons
Securities
No. 41 PINE STReET,
NEW YO K.

In connection with the
Manhattan

Memphis, Tean.
E. G. PEARL.

64

BROKERS,

IN

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and Sold
exclusively
on Commission. Interest
allowed on Deposit Accounts

Government Securities, Stocks
Bonds, and Gold,
sold strictly on Commission.

Capital and Reserved Fund...

$2,500,000,

Bills

on

AGENCY,

A. D.

SELLECK, 37 Pine St,N.Y.
Draw

,

London Joint Stock

Bank,

on

Marcuard. Andre & Co,

Baring, Brothers & Co,
Fould & Co,
London,
In sums to points suiting
buyers of Sterling

Paris,

or

Francs.

Hatch, Foote & Co.,

BANKERS
AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT
SECURITIES,
GOLD, &c.
No. 12 WALL STREET. *
George Otdyke,

Wm. A. Stephens
G. Francis Opdyke.

BANKING HOUSE OP

Geo. Opdyke &
NO.

25

NASSAU

Co.,

STREET,

(Corner of Cedar street.)

DEPOSITS received from
Individuals, Firms, BankB,
Bankers and Corporations,
subject to check at
sight, and interest allowed at the rate of Four
per
cent per annum.

CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT issued,
bearing Four
payable on demand, or after
xed dates..

8er cent Interest,

COLLECTIONS made

on all accessible
points In the
United States, Canada and
Europe.
Dividends
and Coupons also
collected, and all most promptly
accounted for,

ORDERS

promptly executed, for
of

the purchase and
gale
Gold; also, Government and other Securi¬
ties, oh commission.

INFORMATION furnished, and purichases or
ex¬
changes of Securities made for Investors.
NEGOTIATIONS of Loans, and Foreign
Exchange
effected.
.




William Street, New York
Paris and the Union Bank of
London.

CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TRAVEL
LERS IN ALL PARTS OF EUROPE.
Lancaster & Co.,
Brown, Lancaster & Co.,
Richmond.
Baltimore.

Southern Securities.
LANCASTER, BROWN
23

Nassau

Sc

CO.,

Street,

OFFER FOR SALE:
Chesapeake and Ohio 1st mtg, 7 p. c. bonds, princi¬
pal and interest, in gold, at 95 and interest.
Petersburg Railroad 1st mtg. 8 p. c. bonds
(mtg.
$6,000 per mile), at 92 K and interest.
South SI ie Railroad 1st
mtg. 8 p. c. bonds (mtg.
$6,0D<) per mile), *t 85.
Ricomond and York River 1st
mtg. 8 p. c., bonds
(mtg. $7,000 per mile), at 85.
Piedmont RK. 1st mtg. 8 p. c.
(mtg. $10,000 per mile),
at 90.
Norfolk an 1 Petersburg RR, 2d
mtg. 8 p. c. bonds
(mtg. $14,000 per mile, including 1st mtg.). at 82>£.
Columbia and Augusta RR. 1st
mtg. 7 p. c. bonds
(mtg. $12,000 per mile), at 80.
Richmond and Danville RR. 1st
mtg. 6 p. c. bonds
(mtg. $14,000 per mile), at 73.
W. P. Van

Deubsen,

Swan & Paybon
New York.

Chicago.

W.P.VanDeursen &Co.,
BANKERS and

106 LASALLE ST

BROKERS,

UNION BANK

BUILDING).

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS,
Buy and sell STOCKS, GOVERNMENT SECURI¬
TIES and GOLD, on Margins—oi lor inve tors
at
NEW YORK RATES.
GOLD DRAFTS ON NEW YORK 1 OR SALE.

BROKERS,
ST., NEW YORK.

Henry

Meigs,

Banker and WroUer, No. 27 Wall
St.,
Member ot New York Stoi k
Exchange,
(Formerly Cj shier of the Metropolitan Bank, and late
of

the firm of H.
Meigs, Jr., & Smith).
Offers his services tor the purchase and
sale of Gov¬
ernment and all other
on

Stocks, Bonds and Gold,
deposits

Investment carefully attended to.

Bowles Brothers & Co.,
19

& 19 NEW

Government Securities,
Gold, Stocks and Bonds of
description bought and sold on Commission.
Southern Securities a
specialty.

Tanner & Co.,

[Successors to Bowles, Drevet & Co.]

CitizensBankop Louisiana

BROADWAY

interest allowed

No. 12 Rue de la Paix, Paris.
76 State Street, Boston,

D. F. JETT.

every

Stocks.

bought and

1

BANKERS AND

Street, New York.
AND

Savings Bank,

Pearl &■ Co.,

ali Southern Points.

McKim, Brothers & Co.,
No. 47

Borg,

Southern and

YORK.

Stocks, Roods, Gold and
Exchange,

DEALERS

PAPER.

BROKER,

Securities
hare
attention.

Milwaukee, Wis.

deilersin

Particular attention paid to the purchase and sale
of

Southern

London, Paris, &c.

C. J. Hatch & Co..

Levy &

EXCHANGE,

STREET, NEW

BANKERS

Sterling Credits,

IN

Worthington,

MEMBER N. Y. STOCK

BANKERS,

New
51

N.

Co.,

BROKERS,

Cleveland, O.

Knauth,Nachod &Kuhne W.

&

BANKERS

AND

No. 49 Wall

BROKERS,

street, N. Y.,

DEALERS IN

AMERICAN AND

FOREIGN

AND SPECIE OF ALL

GOLD,

KINDS,

Which they have on hand for Immediate
delivery.
United Stares Government

Securities, Foreign and

Domestic exchange. Particular attention
given to
Collections at all points iu the United
States, Canada
and Europe. Remittances
made, LoanB negotiated
and made on securities and business
paper. Interest
allowed on Deposits, subject to draft at
sight. Orders
executed at the Gold and Stock
Exchange with
promptness. Contracts in Gold and stocks earned
on

the most favorable terms.

BANKING HOUSE OF

Luther

Kountze,

52 Wall Street. New York.
v.
^
Deposits received from Banks and Individuals, sub
ject to check at sight, and interest allowed thereon at
FOUR PER CEN T per anuum.
Collections made throughout the United
States, the
British Provinces and Europe.
Governments Securities bought and sold.

John J. Cisco & Son^
BANKERS,

NO. 59 WALL STREET, NEW
YORK,
(Brown Brothers & Co.’s Building,)
Receive money on deposit, subject to check at
sight,
allowing interest on daily balances at the rate of four
per cent per annum, credited monthly.
Issue Certificates of Deposit bearing four cent
in¬
terest, payable on demand or at fixed periods.
Negotiate Loans.
•.
Execute promptly orders for the purchase and sale
of Gold, Government and other Securities on
com¬

mission.

Make collections on all parts of the United
States
and Canada.
^

THE CHRONICLE.

34

Financial Notices

Dividends,

Seventeenth

G E It MANIA

No.

176

Sinki’g Fund

SEVEN PER CENT BONDS OF THE

Company

Houston & Texas Cen¬

BROAD WAV.

NEW

REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE

MARKET

Land Grant

OFFICE OF TUE

Miscellaneous

FIRST MORTGAGE

Dividend.

Fire Insurance

[July 10,1869

tral

Railway Comp’y.

Principal mid Interest

Five

Hamilton Fire Insurance

Company.
-

$150.000 10
108.186 16

....

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS HAVE THIS DAY
declared

a

Semi-annual Dividend of FIVE PER CENT

free of Government tax,

payable

on

and alter .July 1

JAMES GILMORE, Secretary.

No. 96

Co.,

BROADWAY,

NEW YORK, July 1,1869.
VF" The BOARD OF DIRECTORS of this COM¬
PANY have this day declared a semi-annual dividend

of

FIVE PER

CE>T.,

Free from Government Tax, payable on demand.
JAMES H. HODGES, Secretary.

In

undersigned otter to persons desiring a safe and
profitable investment, a limited amofint of the above
Bonds at 90 percent and accrued interest In currency.
The Bonds are secured by a Sinking Fund of 2 per
cent per annum, and the mortgage now eovers ONE
HUNDRED
AND
FIFTY-FIVE MILES OF A
THOROUGHLY BUILT AND FULLY EQUIPPED
RAILROAD IN ACTIVE OPERATION, extending
from Houston, Texas, in a northerly direction towards
the Red River; where It Is Intended to connect with
the Railroads now building from Lawrence, Kansas
City and St. Louis, with a branch road to Austin
twenty-five miles of which is now in operation. It
also covers valuable prairie and timber-lands, to the
amount of 6,400 acres lor each mile of road built. The

AN Per Cent Dividend of Three and this Company,
Interest the capital stock ol One-half (8^)
on

for the six months ending 80th of June, has been de
dared thlP day, payable to the stockholders, at the
office of the Company, on and after July first (1st)

1869, tree of Government tax.
JOHN P.

ATION.

Sneppard Knapp, Esq., ana William Walter Phelps,
Esq., are Trustees under the Mortgage
T he Railway as built and projected passes through
the most fertile and thickly populated portion of the
State of Texas, and during the past three years has
earned more than double the amount necessary to
pay the Interest and Sinking Fund upon Its Bonds.
For further Information apply to
ROBB, KlNG & CO„
56 Wall st., New York.
J. S. KENNEDY & CO„
41 Cedar st., New York.

Office

of the

Pacific

Illinois Central Railro; d Co., \
New York, July 8,1869.
j

August the transfer hooks will he closed.

THOMAS E. WALKER. Treasurer.

THE CENTRAL NATIONAL BANK Of
the City ot New York, New York, June 22
1869.—The Board of Directors of this Bank have tliJi

day declared a dividend of FIVE (5) PER CENT, fre<
of all taxes, out ot the earnings ot the
past six month!
payable on and after July 1.
The Transfer Bo >ks will be closed 23ri Instant at f
P.M.'and reopened on the morning of July 6.
W. H. SANFORD, Cashier.

(JK^^THE market national bank.—the
Board of Dlrecto-s

have this day de lared f
semi-annual Dividend of FIVE (5) PER CENT, free o
government tax, payable to stockholders on and altci
the 1st day ot July next; until which time the trans
fer books will be closed.
A.

GILBERT, Cashier.

METROPOLITAN NATIONAL BANK, No
108 Broadway, New York, June
22, 1869.Dividend— I he directors of the METROPoLITAf
NATIONAL BANK have this day declared a SEMl
AN UAL DIVIDEND OF SIX (6) PER
CENT,tree o
tax, payable on the first Monday of July next
The Transfer Books will be closed until July 9. nrox
GEO. J, SENF Y. Cashier.
National Bank

of the

Commonwealth, )

New York, July l, I8c9.

New York, June 8,1869.

iug,

i

t

muNDAV, llth July.
By order of the Board of Directors.
GEORGE ELLIS, Cashier.
Continental National Bank
New

York, June 26,1869.
this day declaret

B.°,?rd.of Jplcectors
Dividend of Four (4) have

p«r Ce;.t, tree from
Iha transfer books v
be CMWbd from this date until the >th of
July proxin

taxes, payable July 6,1869.

TIMPSON, Cashier

The Tradesmen’s National Bank,
New York, June 22, 1869.

Cent will be paid
A Dividend of Six PerJulv 1, free of tax.
1 dTJRSDA Y,
alter




ANI HONY

8.

ITICCLEIAN

on an

HALSEY, Cashier.
Sc

BANKERS,

Plttibnrgb, Fa.

CO,

811,197 66

Surplus

Discount

$49,308 70

Profit and loss

937 99—

89,370 02

Circulating notes received from
Less amount

on

hand

16,152 00

Amounting outstanding
State t>ank circulation outstanding
Individual dapoaits

578,648 00
8.000 00

Certified checks
Due to notional banks (as^ner schedule)...
Due to other banks and bankers (as per

1,^88,263 Ott

schedule)

Dividends unpaid
Uncollected checks

102,803 61
110,231 13
23,048 60

i

1,110 00

303,000 CO

Total

$4,415,671 97
I, A. GILBERT. Cashier of the Maiket Na iontl
Bank, of New-} ork, do solemnly swear that the above
statement Is true, to the best of my knowledge and

belief.

A. GILBERT, Cashier.
Correct—Attest,
K.BAYLY,
)
J. M. BRUCE, Jr..
> Directors.
GEO. B. WHITFIELD, J
State of New York,county of New York: Sworn
to and subscribed before me, th’s 22d day of June,

1669.

Thos. Hik wood, Notary Public,
In and for the County of New-York.

SAFETY!

The Safe

Deposit Com’y

OF NEW

YORK,

Broadway, Corner of Llbt rty,
OFFERS

Absolute

Safety

IN

biidging, ballasting, cros6-ties and
laying of the following portions of said railroad ;
musonry,

SMALL

First
The last fifteen miles on the first division of one
hundred and fifty miles, between Jefferson and Paris,

SAFES,

.

OR

Texas, commencing eight miles east and extending
seven miles west of the town of Clarkesville
in Red

County. Second—One hundred and fifty miles,
embracing the second division, commencing at Paris
and extending wrest to Palo Pinto County.
Specifica¬
tions, profiles, maps and plans can be examined after
the 15th of August, 1869, at the Engineer’s office at
New York or Jefferson. Proposals must conform tor
the specification, which will be furnished upon applica¬
tion at either of the above places utter August 1, 1869.
Evidence of ability to complete contracts will be re¬
quired and a per centage retained of estimates until
each section of five miles is finished. Work upon the
first division must be completed by March 1, 1870: the
second division must be, finished by October 1, 1870.
Every facility w’ill be furnished those wishing to in¬
spect the ground on the line of the road, by applica¬
tion in person at the Engineers office in Jefferson. J.
M. DANIEL, Engineer-in-chief, Memphis, El Paso
and Pacific Railroad Company.
River

}

A Dividend of Five (5) Per Cent, freeofolthis taxes
all Bank
v,en*)v
f°
Stockholders
vn

$1,000,000 00

Capital stock paid In

SEALED PROPOSALS will be received at the
above office until September 1, I8C9, when contracts
will be aw arded for the grubbing and clearing, grad

track

$1,415,671 17

LIABILITIES.

El Paso and
Railway Co.

66 EXCHANGE PLACE,

the

2d day of August next to the holders of full paid
shares registered at the close of the 17th day of July
inetant. after which date and until the 6th day of

\

450 00

91,698 61
231,850 00
800,000 00

Total

Office of the Chief Engineer Memphis, El Paso and
Pacific Railroad Company,

A DIVIDEND OF FIVE PER CENT IN CASH.
by

free of Government lax, has been declared
the Illinois Central Railroad Company, payable on

47 916 78
803,085 68
20,< 00 00

Specie...
Legal-tenaer notes
Three per cent certificates

TO RAILROAD CONTRACTORS

Memphis,

82

00
21,185 84
9,891 80

Bills of other national banks
Bills of State banks

JAMES

NICHOLS, Secretary.

15
00
00
02

limited to $20,000

mile. NO BONDS ARE ISSUED EXCEPT UPON
ROAD COMPLETED, EQUIPPED AND IN OPER-

Office of the Sun Mutual Insurance Company, )
No. 52 Wall Street,
>
New York, June 28, 1869.
)

3,671
672,000
2,700
239,614
27,220
85,(00

Items, Including stamps (as per sche¬
dule)
Exchanges for Clearing-house

per

Star Fire Insurance

$2,410,007 27

Cash

The

Bonds Issued and to be Issued are

Yoi&, June 9,1869.

New

Loans and discounts...
Overdrafts
United States bondB to secure circulation.
Other stocks, bonds and mortgages
Due from other national banks
Due from other banks and bankers

C.F D.I

the Capital Ssock, free from Government Tax, pay¬
able on demand at the otlice of the Company.
HUGO tTIUMANN, Secretary.

Capital
Surplus

day of June, 1869:

RESOURCES

Taxes paid

(.old in New York.

(5) I’er Cent.

on

Payable

In New York,In the State ot New York, at the close
ol business on the 12th

Current expenses

YORK, July 7th, 1869.

Semi-Annual Dividend of

a

BANK.

Banking-house

C2T-TBE BOARD OF DIRECTORS HAVE THIS

day declared

NATIONAL

We Offer

for

Sale

Special Deposits.

No

The Public

HAVING TWENTY YEARS TO RUN, interest pay.

Semi-annually, on the first day of April and
October, at the

able

BANK OF

AMFRTCA, In thfs City*

A Special Tax has been levied to meet the Interest
upon these Bonds, and the Sinking Fund lor retiring
the lndebtedm bs of the City amounts to about two
hundred thousand dollars per annum. The compara-

tlvely *mill debt .and the conservative policy which
hasalwa's marked the management of the finances
of the flourishing City of Louisville, make these
Bonds one of the safest a*d most desirable Invest¬
ment securities now offered In the market. Any fur¬
ther particu.ais can be had on application at our
office.

WILLIAM ALEXANDER
40

SMITH & CO.,

WALL STREET.

can

occur

at Its Vaults.

(including Ladle*),

are Invited to call and
examine Its system.

FRANCIS W, jt

The

NK8,

PRESIDENT.

Hope Fire Insurance
COMPANY,
OFFICE NO. 92 BROADWAY.

A LIMITED AMOUNT OF

City of Li ulsvllle, 7 Per Cent Bonds

Loss

Cash Capital
Net Assets, Bee.

1868

fl 50,000

223,282

advantages offered by thl* Company are tally
EQUAL TO any now offered by other reliable compa¬
nies, comprising a liberal commiMion to broker*,
placing entire lines of insurance, with it* customary
rebate, to assured and prompt settlement of losses.
The

Board of Blrcctorst
lenry M. Taber
Henry 8. Leverlch
Robert Schell,
[*he •. W. Riley,
Wm. H. Terry,
Cambreleng,
losepb Fonlke,
Joseph Grafton,
Amos Robbins,
jyrus H. Loutrel,
Jno. W. Mersereau
facob Reese,
B. Ward,
Elgenbrodt.
).

WilliamReinsen,

Lydig Suydam,

frea. Bchucliardt,

JACOB

Stephen Hyatt.

REESE, President.

July 10, 1889.]

THE CHRONICLE.

35

THE

OCEAN

NATIONAL

BANK

ROBBERY.
HU

The

the

fjllo.viig U.

B

>□ Ja were

Ojeav Natdnwl Bavk, on

stolen from

Numbe r 141,799.
tt

Sunday, June

tt

Number

11,914.
11,912.

tt

.

u

......

«

.......

((

it

1

500

it

1

.

600

600

•<

39,347

$2,500

6

Number

$1,000

.

1,000

tt

.

1,000

ct

1000

tt

43,303..

u

15,538:.

u

15,539

it

1

......

.......

.

.

15,640..

ft

1

15,641..
15,542..

u

((

1865.

1

ti

125,332

.

.

1

.

it

.

1

124,224..
124,225..
125,330

it

.

.

124,223 E,

it

1,000

.

1

10

$10,000

5-20 Coupon Bond*

Number

15,588...

i<

15,539...
15,540,..
15,541

li

it

15,542

..

.

...

1

500

it

tt

1

tt

A, “

tt

tt

“

tt

“

tt

“

,

82,586...

.

Number

1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000

22,177....
22,178....
22,179....
69,924 ...

1
1

».

....

tt

Jan’y and July*

1,000

828

1

1,000

829

1

1,000

830

1

1,000

831

1

1,000

11,915

I

11,916
2/ 96

1

1,000
1,000
1,000

'

it

942

New.

Number•100,469.,

•

1

(Old 65’s
Jan’y.

due

$1,000

1

• •

■***

100,472.,

1

600

$9,000

100,471.,

ft

..

146,960

tt"
tt

it
..

ft
t

1

ft

100,474..
Io0,475..
100,476..
100,477..

1865.

a

ft

tt

ft

5-20 Coupon Bonds.
1

Number 124,223

100,473..

if

1

124,224

1

it

124,225

1

1,000

tc

125,330
125,332

1

1,000
1,000

1,000
ft
......

1

1,000

.

1

1865.
•

«••••

1

1,000

•

1

......

1

r

.

•••#•000

1

1

1.000

.

50

2

$1,000

80,288.

l/oo

100,487..

$5,000

......

5-20’s.
July 1, 1867.
Letter F, No. 85,970.... 1
tt

•

•

.

<.

1

144,991
141,796
141,797
14’,798

1

$ 1.000

1/00
1,000

1




........

1
1

1865.

1,000

-

85,971.... 1

........

........

w

85,972,...

1

tt

‘

85,973,...

1

......

Cou

1

.

_

on Bonds.

.......

$500

8,722..
77,055..

“

“

1

.

“

138,064..

1865.

Letter A

1867.

,

No. 15!?
t

....

t*.

$50 3

$590
600

500
500

5-20*».

Number 169,874

li

it

tt

1,000

5-20*.-■IJ. S

Number 77,000..
it

1
.......

$19,000

$5,0J0

’

80,286

a

100.486..

*;0,485..

••••••••

5-20’s-TJ. S. Coupon Bonds.
1
$5u0

Number

100,484..

1,000

1,000

5

0,480..

100,481..
IT’,432..
100,483..

$1,000

it

100,478..
100,479..

if

ft

..

$1,000

••••••••

10

1

.*••••

100,470.,

1.000

1

500

1

n

ti

102,431

tt

r

.

........

1

500

$23,000

19

146,959

........

1

827

tS65’s.

tt

........

1

tt

Number’46,875

1,000

11,826

tt

81

1

5

1,000

1

...

New—Due

1865.

1

....

it

$1,000

...

•

It

if

1

1

500

4,599.

li

D, “

1

tt

t<

li

....

$1,000

........

22,176

“

.,

4,604.

•

81,821... 1

Issue, July 1st.

99,197
22,175....

“

4,603.

If

143,961... 1
183,967... 1

500

*

1,000
1,0C0

........

ft

if

F, “
A, “

a

“

1

ft

5-20’s.

Letter O, No. 144,973... 1

“

1,0(0

(f

ft

,

July, 1865.

tt

4,601.

ft

$5,000

6

-

5-20’s—New

4,60 >.

ft

$1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000

1

...

((

1865.

a

ft

1864.

1

$1,000
........

Letter A, No. 99,198.... 1

1865
-

19,83>

«

1,000

1,000

.

.

........

36,887.
4,600.

ft

1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000

1

.

36,886.

ft

1,000
1,000

1

49,519.
4,000.

it

.

1

36,935.

tt

22,783..

It

19,830
19,831

tt

36,933.
36,934.

'

11

5-20 U. S. Bonds.

1

36,932.

tt

1864.

68,712

tt

1
.......

5-20 Bonds.

Number

39,348.

«t

...

1,00 )
1,000

11,913.

.

1

1,593..
1,691..
1,595

(1

tt

........

1

••••••

•

33,182.

a

5-20’s, Coupon BondK.
1,591..
$5r0
1
600
1,592..

1-

• •••«••

11,917.

:

1962.

1865.

141,800.

it

27th, 1369

■■■■<

...

...

$1,000

1

207,052

1

207,054

1

1/00

221,612

1

1,000

........

1/00

4
$4,000
Continued on the Next Page*

Bonds Stolen from tbe Ocean Bank
Continued.

5.20’s.
No. 16,056.... 1 ....

July 1, 1867.
Letter C,
»«

<<

t<

%i

it

a

ii

it

a

ii

tt

a

16,065....
16,066,...
16,063.. ,

1600

...

16,062.... 1

u

500
600
600
600
600
600
500

1

1
1
1

F,

u

u

ii

D,

ft

ft

0,

ii

16 068....

((

A,

it

89.666....
111,634....
67.746....

1
1
1
1

78.131....

1

85.964....

1

86.965....
86,966

1

85,$74....
85.975..
27,801

1

•.

u

u

E,
c,
F,

tt
u

u

u

ft

1

...

c,

tt
a

tt

a
a

ft

u

a

ft

a

it

u

a

u

a

u

1

...

u

ii

Number 25,145..
Number 475, Land

Railroad , Eastern

600

a

........

600

it

33,682..

1

600
600

1867.
tt

600
500

tt

it

$1,000
1,000

1

ii

%t

5-20’s.

$1,000
600

II

1

1

•

••••••••

$1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000

1867.
-

“

84,048

1

84,049
84,050

1

84,051

1

105,597

1

105,598

1

44

44
44
44
44

106,699

118,886
1 18,387
26,317

44

44
44

1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,<’00
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000

1
1

1
1

ll

No.
44

a

• l

tt

tt

11
a

Number 184,128..

1
••••••

1

•••••

184,136..
184,137
184,138..
184,189..
184,140..
184,141
184,142..
184,143..

tt
tt
tt

• •••••

tt
U

1

••••••

•

«•

tt

-

•

•

•...
•

•

•

3

•••••

184,146..
184,147..

tt

1
1
1
1
1

....

...

••••••••

•

•

•

•

• •••••

1,000
1,000
1,000
1,0 ‘0
1,000
1,000

........

••••«••»

........

........

....

1
1

........

1

•

184,145..

tt

1
1

1,000
1,000
1.0 0

•••••«..

1

184,144..

tt

•••••

1

1,000

........

1

....•»..

1,000

1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000

1

i

Number 164,285

tt

o•

$2 ,000

it
a
tt

44

tt
a

tt

a
tt
x




$1,000
1,000

•••••

1

....

126,803..

•

•••••

1

........

••••••

1

600

1

1,000
1,000
1, 00
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000

74,646
224,172..

172,338..
107,600..
178,082
178,* 33.,
211,076..

211,077..
174,566..
174,667..
174,568..
225,893..

146,313..

1

•

•

...

•

.

.

1
1

••••••••

4

...

....

1
1
1

1
1
1
1

...

.....

1,000

1,000

..

1

..

165,987
61,708

tt

120,837

••••••

1

1

..

1

••••

.....

....

•

•

••••••

..

••••••

..

tie*

•

•

..

,..
.....

1

i.

••••••

1,000
1,000

1,000
1,000

1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000

$15,000

15

1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000

1,000
1,000

$16,000

81,805
80,085
101,490

1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000

it
tt
a
tt

$600
500

1

21,381
29,263
60,994

tt

1
1
1
1
1

106,684

«-

92,717
72,008.

........
........

-

600
600
500
500
500

98,152

1
1
1
1

tt

25,849

1

tt

28,957
105,475
26,730
89,438

1

600

1
1

500
600
500

a
ii
tt

tt
it
tt

tt

5,846.
46,162

tt
u

1,000
1,0 o

1.000

..

72,858...

•

1,000

Vfonds of 500 each.

Number

1,000

31,660...
81,677...

72,860...

83,733

1
1
1
1

600
600

600

....

600
600

$9 000

18

Coupons from 6 per cents of 1881
dated November 16,1861, Nos. 80,085,

Bonds,

30,086,
30,087, £0,088, 31,718, 81,722, 82,895, 101,326,
101,827,101,837. From U. S. 6-20s, July 1st,
1867, Nos. 118,285 to 118,291 both inclusive.
From 6-20’s of 3 867, Nos. 166,200 to I55r
256, both inclusive $80 each; three (3) Coupons
of each number, due July, 1868, January, 1869
July, 1869. From 10-40’s, Nos. 90,991, to
91,040, both inclusive; two (2) Coupons of
each number, $25 each, due November, 1868,
nd May, 1869.
U. S. Coupon Bonds of 1867. Nos. 165,285,
164.287, 10,833, 166,019, 200,759, 171,738,
.

$30,000 5 20’s U. S. Coupon Bonds of 1864,
as

follows

:

$1,000 each.
1
44,606...

207,063.

Bonds of

Number
41

44
44
tt

»

31,037...
49,722...
90,213

..

3,750

•

•

•

•

•

•...

.

41
tt
14

44 608...

1

1
1

1,634...
63,402...
63,403...

•

»

•

•

•

•

..

1,000

..

..

41

41
tt
44
44

tt

tt

95,690...
10,874...
17,833...
3b,573. • •
91,414...

10,875...
91,416...

M

•

V

•

9

1,000

•

98,442...

1
1

.....

X
1
X
1
1

.....

1

.

1

•

•

•

•

»•..«

•••••

.....

r.

1,000

..

•••••

..

•

*

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•••••

•

•••••

•

..

•

•

»

•

.

.

.

45,618...

44

1

1,000
1,000
1,0 JO

1,289...

tt

.....

tt

•

,

•

a

*

• • •••••

98,441...

Number
4*

tt
44

44

1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000

1,000
1,000

1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000

$22,000

22
Bonds of

$1,000
1,000
1,000

18,119...

tt

.....

•

•

1,114...

tt

•

.

«C

•

5-20’s.
1 ••••••*«
• • •

164,287..
.

tt

tt
a

$1,000
1,000
1,000

..

1
1

72,869

44

20

1
1

l.oro
1,000
1,000

••••••••

.....

1,000

••••••*

1
1
1
1
1
1

66,682

$10,000

•

tt

1,000

••••••••

1

.

tt

tt

1,000

..

1,000
•

16

tt

1,000
1

$1,000

1
1
1
1
1

77,132
77,184
56,676

tt

1,000
1,000

..

July

1

19,971
19,972

<t

1,000
1,000
1,000

..

1

51,578...

tt

•

.

1

•

184,185..

tt

tt

39.237...
61,476...
51.677...

$1,000

1

184,129..
184,130..
184,131..
184,132..
184,133..
184,134..

tt

tt

89,232...
39,233...
39,234 ..
39,285.. •
39,236...

ii

£-20’*—Coupon Bonds

tt

tt
tt

$1,900

39,231.%.

4.

••••••

for $1,<j00 each.

tt

tt

10- 40’s.

Number

a

tt

tt

10* *
100

•

10

$500
1,000
••

1

9,967...

i

tt

•

106,336...

tt

$18,000

66,676... 1
125,040... 1
»•••••

tt

tt

1,000
1,000

109,740 ..
109,741...

tt

1
$500
38,630..,
1
600
88,644..
Loan < of June 80, 1864.
Numbers 99,169 to 99, 183 both inclusive,

tt

;

36,013...

a

1867.

a

ft

$1,000

1

$8,000

1
1
1
1

166,741
7,268
7,269
7,260
7,261..’.
7,262

600

282...

tt

tt

Number

tt

•

3,753...

a

1,009

18

1867.

•

4,616...

tt

a

N,

U

100
500

•

82,363...
31,904...

tt

600
500
600
600
600

Coupon Bonds of January and

Number 166,740

100
100
1<0

.,

Coupon Bonds.

10-IL’s—U. S

1,000

1

120,573

1867.
Letter D,

u. s.
1866 :

$3,500

12

Number

1,000
1,000

•

1

44

41

«

1

26,318
122,666
122,666

44

•

1

„

44

•

1

118,385

•

1

105,616

44
44

•••••••

1

44

1867.

1

-

44

25,751....

$1,600

84,046
84,047

.

176,290...
176,291..,
81,416...
81,420...

tt

2

600

176,288..
176,289...

tt

$2,000

1
1

1,000
1,000

.

5-20’s -ll. S. Coupon Bonds.
1
*50
60
100
108,619..
100
108,520...

176,286...
176,287..

tt

1
1
1
1

.

96,0 9...
96,010;.,

tt

Number

tt

it

Number

»••♦••••

1
1

18,741
25,750.

ft

4

-

500
500
6 0

........

16

ft

•

Pacific

,

500
600

1

$1,000
1

tt

74,646

5-2G’s

1867.

1

26,748
25,749
26,414
26,395
14,390

ft

Division, $1,000.

62,553..
52,654.„

........

ft

$1,000

»•»...*

Grant Union

62.552...

2

“

•••••••

u

tt

t.

1

18 07.
Number 126,803

It.

Number

1

164,287

......

600
600

1

Number 164,286

1,000
1.000

146,316

Number

1867.

5-20’s.

44

146,815..

tt

Continued.

1,000

Number 146,814..

Bank

Bonds Stolen from the Ocean

Bonds Stolen from the Ocean Bank
Continued.

....

600

86.967....
86.968....
85,069....

1867.

44

[July 10,1869,

THE CHRONICLE

36

$500 each.

4,663
18,759...
4,339...
23,656...
18,027
...

•••••

X

«•

23,166...

t*

6,266...

t<

[23,167...

Coupon Bonds of 1867, Nos.

payable January and July, Nos.

144,978,

193,961, 81,821, 168,287,
168.288, $1,000 each, $7,000. No. 165, $500..
U. S. 6-20 Bonds of 1867, Nos. 16,056,
16,062, 27,801, 89,666,67,746, 16,063, 16,066,
16.066,16,068,116,634,78,131, 85,964, 86,965,
85,966, 85,967, 85,968, 85,969, 86,970, 85,971,
86 972, 85,973, 85,974, 85,975, $500 each,
$11,600.
183,967,

82,586,

U. S. 10-40
A

rewar

Coupon Bond, No. 2,606, $500.

1 of twent -five per cent

will be

paid for the restoration of these Bonds, in whole
or in part, and a fair compensation will be paid
for the return of the following miscellaneous
Bonds:
The Glen Cove Starch

pany,

Manufacturing Com¬
10 Bonds for $1,000 each, Nos. 1 to 10,

600

inclusive.
Noe. 401

600
600
600
6C0
600

Detective Bureau and General Inquiry
No. 61 Broadway, Rooms 16,17 and

600

..

tt

$500

U. S. 6 20

224,172, 172,338, 107,600, 178,032, 178,* 33,
211,076, 211,077, 174,666, 174,667, 174,568,
226,893, 176,316, 146,316, 146,314, 146,318
24 647, 126,488, 126,487, 217,628, 217,629
217,630, 28,480, 28,481, 28,432, 141,616, for
$1,000 each; $26,000.
U. S. 6-20 Coupon Bonds of 1865, interest

.....

1

•»

to 600, inclusive. Bonds of the
Portage Lake and Lake Superior Ship Canal
Company, for $500 each (first series). On ap¬
plication to Captain JOHN S. YOUNG;

Office^
18,

-

4

atnmm'jaj & ®manr|a
lauto’

fedte, (tanwwial

§Uilwatj fjftanitw, ami insurant f aatnal

A WEEKLY

NEWSPAPER,

REPRESENTING TIIE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OE THE
UNITED STATES.

YOL. 9.

SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1869.
than

CONTENT 8.

lack of capital. Which ever
proofs multiply on every side that our people

THB CHRONICLE.

Redemption of Bank Notes
Our Imports and Exports
The Western Granary and its
Outlet

37 I

38
39

j

I

LatestMonetary and Commercial
English News

40

Commercial and Miscellaneous

News

..

42

THE BANKERS GAZETTE AND RAILWAY MONITOR.

Money Market, Railway Stocks,

Railway News
Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List.
Railroad, Canal and Miscellane¬

Securities, Gold Market,
Foreign Exchange, New York
City Banks, Philadelphia Banks

National Banks, etc
Hale Prices N.Y. Stock

Exchange

43
46

47

ous Bond i ist
Southern Securities
Insurance and Mining

U. S.

49
to
50

.........

Journal.,

48

THE COMMERCIAL TIMES.

Commercial Epitome
Cotton

51
52

Tobacco
Breadstuff's

611 Prices Current....
65

} Groceries
I Dry Goods

j

to

NO. 211.

55
56
62-3

look
are growing in
wealth and in all the chief conditions of material prosperity.
What is wanting, however, is a corresponding elasticity in the
financial machinery of the country. Speculators and cliques
of capitalists dam up the fertilizing streams of the national
wealth and prevent them flowing equally and freelv and
gently over the whole field of the national industry. We are
suffering not because we cannot produce wealth but because
our
machinery for distributing that wealth is out of order,
inelastic, and not sufficiently responsive to the changing
pressure upon it and to the varied demands of different
any

way

we

of the year.
These facts all point to the currency
weakest part of the National system.

seasons

of* the banks as the
When the cliques
The Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued
every Satur would make trouble in the loan market
they always attack the
day morning by the publishers of Hunt’s Merchants’ Magazine,
with the latest news up to midnight
currency and their ingenious devices for locking up currency,
of Friday.
and so depleting the current of the active circulation have
been often exposed.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION—PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
Why have no such plans ever been set
For The Commercial
Financial Chroniole, delivered by carrier
in operation in Paris or in London ?
The speculators there
to city subscribers, ana mailed to all
others, (exclusive of postage,)
ForOne Year
$10 00 are as keen, as bold and as shrewd, and wield
larger masses
For Six Months
6 00
The Chhomclb will be sent to subscribers until ordered discontinued
of capital.
by fetter.
Why do they never resort to the expedient of
Postage is 20 cents per year, and is paid by the subscriber at his own post-office.
locking up currency. The reason is obvious. The currency
william b. DANA,
WILLIAM B. DANA ft OO., Publishers,
1
JOHN e. ployd, JR.
f
79 and 81 William Street, NEW YORK.
of France and of Great Britain is elastic, and enlarges or
Post Ofpice Box 4,592.
contracts with the seasons with the activity of business and
Remittances should invariably be made by drafts or Pos> with the greater or less demand for
money.
Our currency,
Office Money Orders.
on the contrary, remains
rigidly fixed in amount all the year

®i)c tHIjronuU.

and

round.

REDEMPTION OF BANK NOTES.

It consists first of

greenbacks and fractional

some

four hundred

millions of

the amount of which was
fluctuate, and secondly of national bank notes,
ing system against the attacks of persons who exaggerated its the outstanding amount of which ought to vary from two
defects, and overlooked the vast benefits which it has conferred, hundred millions as the minimum, to three hundred millions
or is
capable of conferring in the financial, industrial and as the extreme amount authorized by law. The issue of cur¬
commercial progress of the country. In
pleading the cause rency is so profitable to the banks that they try to keep afloat
of the banks, however, we should
carefully remember that the all the law allows. If the notes of a bank come back to it
system is by no means perfect, and that much remains to be they are immediately reissued, and as there is no effective
done for its improvement.
Of this, we have lately had a arrangement for redeeming the bank notes, the whole three
striking proof in the spasms which have invaded the money hundred millions are kept constantly afloat, winter and sum¬
market, and in the Exorbitant rates of interest which have mer, spring and fall, whether the amount is in excess of the
been paid in Wall street. That these troubles are caused, in
requirements of the country or not.
In no other banking system ever established in
part, by movements over which the banks can exert little
Europe or
direct control, we freely admit. But still, neither the man- in this
country, have private corporations been invested
oeuvers of speculators, the
with so much power over the volume of the
locking up of greenbacks, the
currency. To
absorption of currency in the South, the over-rapid conversion say that they should not abuse this power, is nothing to the
of floating capital into fixed capital, nor the
hoarding of purpose. The banks are 1,600 independent institutions,
money in the Government vaults, would have produced spread over the various States, and anxious each to make
so
profound and convulsive a stringency had the banks large profits for its shareholders. The issue of currency is
kept themselves strong, and bad our currency been elas¬ one of the most lucrative parts of the banking business, as it
tic- and responsive to the wants of business. It is very enables the bank to borrow
money without interest. While
evident that the monetary troubles of the past three months human nature is as it is,
every bank will put out and will
have been due to defeelg in our financial machinery rather keep out all the currency it can, And the only way to make
We have often had occasion to defend the National Bank¬ not intended




to

currency,

increase when they
needed for busiuess and shall diminish when the want has

sure
are

that the volume of bank notes shall

passed

rJuly 10, 1869.

THE chronicle

38

is to make it impossible for the banks to keep
This is easily to be done. Bank¬
notes in excess.

away,

out their

ing experience has supplied an effective safeguard. It is the
safeguard of metropolitan redemption. Let the banks be
compelled to redeem their notes at the metropolis, where in
time of plethora the notes are sure to accumulate, and we
have the best remedy for inelasticity of the currency, which
the nature of the

case seems

to

admit.

An unreasonable

opposition has been aroused among some
banks, against any more effective means of redemption
than one in use at present.
We trust, however, this will pass
away. The existing arrangements for redemption are notori¬
ously imperfect and unsatisfactory. This circumstance offers
a
powerful weapon to the enemies of the banking system,
which they are not slow to use.
In Congress a large power
is known to be arrayed against the banks.
Suiely it is the
part of wisdom for these institutions to correct every abuse,
and to strengthen and reform themselves as much as possible.
The banks must show to the country that they are not a set
of speculative institutions, intent on money-making and greedy
of gain, but that they are depositories and trustees of important
powers over the currency of the country, and that they do
not receive the rich endowments of that trust without doing
of the

their best to fulfil its duties.

One of the strongest arguments

against the banks would be deprived ot its force and one of
the most threatening dangers which await them in Congress
would be removed, if they would voluntarily combine together
this summer and organize some effective scheme for central
redemption. It is matter for regret that the recent conven¬
tion in this city did not give more attention to a reform which
is infinitely more for the true interests of the banks than
almost any other topic, which was prominently discussed.
OCR IMPORTS AND EXPORTS.

(1.)

IMPORTS AND EXPORTS OF THE UNITED STATEEr' (SPECIE
FOR TfiE NINE MONTHS ENDING MARCH 81, 1889.

July,
Aug.,
►ept.,
Oct.,
Nov.,

Pec., 1868
Jan., 1869
34,526.7751 Feb., “
32,297,545 I March, “

4

28,908,5501

.

To'al

$303,598,503

imports—nine months

July, 1868
Aug.,
Sept,
Oct.,
Nov.,
Dec.,

Exports—Gold value—.
Dom exports,
;
Re-exports,
produc - and
merchandise
and gold.
cold.
$1,640,670
$23,716,854

.

1,755,685
1,520,012
1,558,378
1,033.807
1,642,707

19.749,787
17,741,801
22,454,419
28,865,795
83,701,950

“
“
“
“

Jan., 1869
Feb.,
“
March, “

Imports.
$21,999,176
30,112,634
35,173,726
50,195.334

Imports.
$35,849 916
34,539,797

1868
“
%l
“
“

INCLUDED)

27,655,515

1,232,610

29,810.233

2,227,540

24,182,837

3,308,024

Totals-nine months
Add re-exports

$227,938,691

$15,919,463

Total

$213,858,154

,

15,919,463

exports—gold value

Jdown to the close of
April. The imports for that month, ate stated at $52,176,828, and the exports at $12,6)7,311 in mixed currency,
while the re-exports are given at $2,980,351, principally in
gold value. Reducing the exports for this month to gold
Later

value

we

reports bring the movement

should hive the

for the ten months

(2.)

following as the trade movement
ending April 30, 1869 :

IMPORTS AND EXPORTS OF UNITED STATES FOR TEN

80, 1869.
Import?, specie included.
nine months enlin^ M irch 31, 1869
mouth of April, 1869

MONTHS ENDIN#

APRIL

For
For

Total

-

$303,593,503
52.176 828

$356,775,331

imports—ten months
JEJtporls and re-exp ~rts, specie included.

$213,858,154
35,905,000

For nine months ending March 31,1889
For month of April, 1869
Total

$279,763,154

exports—ten months

(3.)
Total imports
Total exports

RECAPITULATION.

$356,775,331

for the ten months
for the ten months

279,763,154

imports, gold value
$77,012,177
Import and E?]mtsfor ten nohths ending Jlpr'd ZQ, 1868#
1 mports, specie included, gold value
$304,306,000
Exports, specie inc tided, gold value
304,995,009
Excess of
4.

Excess of exporie,

$689,00 0

gold value

The statistical results here

such as could
and but for the large increase in the
returns, as an index of the balance of accounts between our I imports at our own port and a proportionate decrease in the
own and foreign countries.
The trade statistics of the country / exports both of produce and specie, for some months past,
are now placed in charge of a
special bureau, and appear to ij we should have been disposed to question the accuracy of
be compiled with the greatest attainable accuracy. It is the official returns. It appears that while the imp >rts for the
We cannot

sympathize with the disposition shown in some
quarters to underrate the importance of our foreign tiade

presented

are not

desired ;

necessarily omit some items of ten months have reached $356,700,000, the exports have
importance in our account with foreign nations; such, for been only $279,700,000, showing an adverse balance, upon
instance, as the movement in bonds and other secu¬ the trading account, of $77,000,000 in gold.
This result is the more remarkable from the fact that the
rities, the arrivals of gold by immigrants, and the amounts
taken out by travelers to Europe, the interest payable upon period covers the export of nearly our whole surplus of cot*
foreign capital employed here and the ocean freights upon ton, which this year realized very high prices, and the ship¬
our importations.
Our comparative ignorance of these items, ments of which, for nine months out of the ten, amounted to
however, affords no reason for rejecting inlormation upon the 497,500,000 pounds. In nearly every other article of export
more important
movements which constitute four fifths of there has been a material decrease, the net result being that,
for the ten months, the exports are $25,232,000 in gold value
our whole transactions with other nations.
Some weeks ago, we took occasion to indicate that, while less than for the same period of last year; while, on the other
our imports
were gaining largely, there was an important hand, the imports for the same period, are $52,469,000 high¬
decrease in our exports.
This tendency tovyard an adverse er. The trade" movement for the corresponding months of
trade balance was continued up to about the close of May; 1867-8 show's an almost even balance, the exports, as will be
when our exports were enlarged by free shipments of bread- seen from table 4, being $689,000 in excess of the imports*
There are, however, other items which require to be added to
stuffs and our imports began to exhibit a moderate decline.
Returns just issued by Mr. Francis A. Walker, in charge of the debtor side of the account. Our interest account has now
the Bureau of Statistics, enable us now to form a close become a weighty one. It is very generally estimated that
approximate estimate of the course of the foreign trade for over $900,000,000 of United States bonds are now held in
the first nine months of the past fiscal year, i. c., from July 1, Europe; on which the annual interest amounts to about $55,000,000 in gold; while, upon other miscellaneous stocks and
1868, to March 31, 1869.
We present the following statements, compiled from the bonds held abroad, the interest and dividends cannot amount
official returns, including specie in both the imports and to less than $10,000,000 in gold, making a total of interest
exports, the exports being reduced to gold value in the Gov¬ payments to Europe of $65,000,000 per annum. Adding the
ernment statement so as to compare upon even terms with proportion of this item, say $52,000,000'for the ten months,
to the adverse commercial balance, we are found to stand
the imports, which are always entered in specie values :
true, the official returns

hi

have been




July 10, 1869 ]
debtor

THE CHRONICLE

to other countries about

months’ transactions.
and exports is
trade is done

indefinite

$129,000,000

THE WESTERN GRANARY AND ITS OUTLET.

the ten

on

The

freight account upon our imports
by no means unimportant, as two thirds of our
in foreign bottoms; but this is an item too

to admit of estimate.

The main contribution toward

39

It is within the
memory
centre of the wheat
east of

Lake Erie.

counties

on

the

of many men now living that the
production of the United States was
In the earlier
part of this century the

the Hudson River and along the Mohawk were

liquidation of this large producers of wheat. Then the Genesee Valley came
balance consist* of shipments of securities. As, however,
into notice, and for many years
was the granary of the East.
there is no other record of these remittances than such as
The wheat and flour of this
valley have not yet lost their
exists in the
private accounts of the shippers, it is impossible celebrity, despite the competition of Ohio, St. Louis and Cali¬
to present
any accurate statement of this movement. We fornia. For
many years the insect destroyed the crop there,
have taken some
pains to ascertain the views of prominent but its productiveness has been now
partially restored, and
foreign bankers upon the amount of this item, and as those at no time was there a
complete failure. “ Extra Genesee,”
firms

are

accustomed

to

estimates, their opinions though often merely a name, was still a brand in the market
weight, and may be regarded as very through all viscissitades. The Erie Canal opened the way
nearly correct. The average estimate of these parties does not to the West and made the farther shores of the
great lakes
exceed $100,000,000, for, the ten months under review
as accessible to market as Western New York had been.
representing about $72,500,000 in gold. This, too, is prob¬ So the wheat-growing moved westward to Ohio, Michigan,
ably an extreme estimate; and it is proper to remark that it Indiana and Illinois. Another
impulse was needed. Rail¬
exceeds the figures
suggested by firms who have S3nt out a roads were built from the Lakes to the Mississippi, from the
large proportion of the whole exports of securities.
Mississippi to the Missouri and farther West, and again the
Seme allowances should
be made for the fact that a
granary ” receded to the Westward, until to day it is found
certain amount of our
imports are consigned here on foreign beyond the Mississippi; and Iowa, Minnesota and California
account, and that the remittances against such consign¬
are, in proportion to population and in the yield to the acre>
ments, after allowing for losses and charges, are sometimes the
greatest wheat-growing States of the Union. In 1848
considerably below the value at which the goods were and in 1859 the wheat product of several States was as fol¬
compare

possess considerable

“

entered at the Custom House.
But, on
to be considered
that, in some

the other hand, it is
cases, the amount realized
upon this class of importations exceeds their invoiced
value; and, indeed, it is reasonable to suppose that the

lows

:
'

lm

Pennsylvania

bush

law.

13,012,165

14,487,351
13.121,498
9,414,575

Ohio
New York
Illinois
Indiana

15,367,691

15.119,047
8 681,105
23,837,023
16,848,267

6,214.458

consignments would not be continued from year to year Michigm
4,925,889
8,336,363
were there
Such were the figures for 1848 and 1859. But in 1866
rnot, upon the average, a profit to the con"
signors. Nor is it to be overlooked that there is a cer¬ a further change took place. For instance, Wisconsin, which
tain extent of
under-invoicing importations, in order to reduce reports 4,000,000 bushels in 1848 and 15,600,000 in 1859,
the aggregate duties
upon them ; in which cases, the remit reports in 1866 20,367,920 bushels, at a valuation of $33r
tances exceed the value entered at the Custo?n House.
Bat 914,226—a five-fold increase in crop in 18 years and a nine¬
again, on the other hand, there is an average profit upon our fold increase in value. Other States named above pre¬
consignments of products to other countries, which may be sent the following aggregates :
taken as setting off the
18%.
Value.
profits upon foreign consignments to
Pennsylvan’a
bush. 10,519,060
$28,097,492
our own
10,208,854
porfs. Upon the whole, then, it would appear that Ohio
25,726,312
New York
12,526,406
33.525,604
the onlv items
3S,551,4*1
55,104,243
really necessary to be taken into the account Illinois
Indiana
9,114,562
21,ufift,fl04
are the
imports and exports of produce and specie, the indebt¬ Michigan
11,740,639
37,588,630
edness accruing in
the way of interest upon foreign capital
Pennsylvania, in the interval from 1859 to 1866, fell off;
invested here, and the
shipments of securities. Above, we New York, recovering from the devastations of the weevil,
.have presented the
figures representing each of these itemsi gained; Ohio fell off largely, considering her increase in
and, if the estimate of the exports of securities can be accepted population; Indiana also produced less, while Illinois and
as
approximating the truth, it would follow that, at the close Michigan increased. Iowa now enters the lists with a pro
of the ten

months, there was a net balance against the coun¬ duction of 8,000,000 bushels; California shows a produc ’
try of about $60,000,000 in gold. This may seem a very tion in 1866 of 14,000,000 bushels, having a currency value
undesirable, not to say dangerous, condition of accounts. It of some $20,000,000; Minnesota, which in 1857 imported
is not, however, the first
time, within the last four or five breadstuff’s, had 10,000,000 bushels for export ten years later
years, that we have found ourselves in such a position^ For and kept 4,000,000 for home consumption. Twenty years
the first two
years

after the close of the war, our imports ran ago the wheat product of New York and Pennsylvania was
constantly very largely in excess of our exports; yet we then four or five bushels per head to the population ; now.it is but
found it practicable to settle our balances
by remittances of two or three. Of course these States and their Eastern
securities. Assuming that the
European money markets are neighbors look to these great Western granaries for sup¬
open to receive our bonds to as large an extent as during late plies; and their confidence will not be misplaced. Directly
years of over trading, there would see^a to be nothing in this west of Iowa and Missouri, and within the limits of Kansas
adverse balance to cause immediate uneasiness. Under the and
Nebraska, the wheat region virtually ends; but it will
circumstances, however, it is impossible not to feel some soli, expand into immense dimensions on the vast areas of the
citude as to the present
disposition of European capitalists to Northwest. There will be a granary never to be drawn
increase their investments in our securities.
advices from Frankfort
represent a reaction as

The

down.

latest

There is

having set in

upon the Continental Bourses from the late speculative excite¬
ment, and that the markets are well supplied with our bonds;
how far this may prove to be temporary, remains to be seen.
During the remaining two months of the fiscal year it is
likely that this adverse balance will be decreased somewhat

through increased exports of breadstuff's,
aieoow




on a

reduced scale,

as

our

imports
i

lesson of

importance to be derived from this
statement we have given.
These wheat areas of the East,
and in this term we include all the regions east of the Mis¬
sissippi, are by no means exhausted. They need but cul
ture to reach the highest promise they ever gave.
The
wheat crop of New York fell from 13 millions in 1848, to
8 millions in 1859, and rose then to 12 millions in 1866.
a

X

-

r4o
The prime

THE CHRONICLE.
cause

of this

was

the renewal ot wheat culture

after years and
years of disease.
contend with the insect and

The farmers could not
they yielded. The insect dis¬
appeared, and again the fields returned productive crops.
If land is
h;gher in price in these Eastern States, the farm¬
ers are nearer a

Cateat

AT

JU

Amsterdam...

Antwerp
Hamburg

4b

short.
25.20
3months. 12.55

Cadiz
Lisbon
Milan
Genoa

growth of the West and
the tendency of the centre of cereal
production in that
direction. In 1854 the receipts of flour at
Chicago were
234,575 bbls., in 1808 they were 2,276,335 (a tenfold in¬
crease) and Chicago which, in 1860, manufactured but 282,000 bbls. manufactured last
year 747,932.
In 1854 the
receipts of wheat were 3 millions of bushels, and in 1868
they were 15 millions. Corn grew from 7 millions in 1854
to 25 millions in 1868.

Chicago shipped last

year

000 bushels of wheat and flour reduced to wheat.

24,800,-

DATS.

13.:i*@13.12*
25.37* @25.42*

14

Paris
Vienna

RATS.

short.
12. 2 @12. 2*
3 months. *5.42* @25 47*

Paris

An examination of the breadstuff's trade of
series of years, also indicates the

?!

TIME.

44
44

Frankfort*....

a

EXCHANGE ON LONDON.

E 25.

LATEST
ON—

Berlin

Chicago for

LATEST MATES.

EXCHANGE AT LONDON—

yet unexhausted.

!!■

Ulonetarg anh Commercial Cnglial) Ncroa

KATES OF EXCHANGE AT
LONDON, AND ON LONDON

market and

they can compete, to a certain
extent, with the West. In Ohio, Michigan, Indiana and
Illinois, there has been a falling off in the average yield per
acre, showing a careless cultivation, for these wild lands are

[July 10, 1809.

44

90

days.

@25.25
@12 70
6.28 @ 6.‘-’8*
1.21*@ 1.21*
49 @49*
51*@ 62

3 months. 20.55
44

“

44

Naples

New York....
Jamaica
Havana
Rio de Janeiro

“

44

June 25.
44

44

44

—

days.

109*

days.

4s 4 d
4s 4d

44

2 p. c.
1* 11
1* 11 <i@,
Is 11

.....

44

44
44

days.

44

44

46

M-ty 30.

Pernambuco..
44

—

1 p. c. pm.
13* p. c. pm

May 30.
May 28.
May. 1.

days.

—

53.*

days.

60
90
June 25. 60

—

30

—

3 mos. 25.2U le s 3* p. c.
June 24. 3 mos
124.60
44
3 mos.
6.24*
44
3 mos.
120*.
June 19. 90 days.
50. f'5

May 25.

Madras
Calcutta

@

25.22*@
13. 9*@
25.20, @

short.
short.

June 25

Valparaiso....

Sydney

44

12 11

“

@

——

00

RATE.

short..
short.

@26.65
@
“

Bahia

Singapore
Hong Kong...
Ceylon..
Bombay

TIME.

June 24.

44

18*

June 3.

6 mos. 46. 7*d.@
44
40. 8 rf.@
44
3 p. c.

May 27.
May 17.

dis.

June 22.

44

May 20.

...

44

April 21.

30

—
—

die

18. ll*rf.
10 U'Ad.
10. 11 %d.

44

June 23.

...

* p. c. dis.

15*
18*

44

1 * p. c.

days.

pm.

The five

lake ports together sent out
53,000,000 bushels, and it is
estimated that 18,000,000 of bushels went on the railroads.
The promise of an increased
crop this present year is
very good.
Illinois has recently suffered so severely from
the rains that the corn
crop is considered to be in

| From

our own

Correspondent.J

~

London, Saturday, June 26, 1869.

Notwithstanding the cheapness of

money and the finer weather
which has prevailed towards the close of the
week, business remains

exceedingly quiet, with scarcely a department to be pointed at in
any marked activity exists.
The position of the iron trade is,
danger, indeed, good, the demand for
all other sections of the
railway descriptions for Russia and the
country report good progress United States
being still active. The raw cotton trade has also beent
and warrant the belief that the avenues of
transportation firm, and buyers have effected large purchases, owing to the somewh^
will be crowded with the
products of Agriculture. For the discouraging accounts from the Southern States. Other departments
great granary beyond the Mississippi, of which we have of trade, however, are decidedly quiet, although, at the same time,*
prices appear
spoken, the competition of transporting interests is
lively. with unusual to be tolerably firm. Merchants, in fact, are operating
St. Louis has an
caution, and, as a consequence, not in excess of their
agent in New York to engage a steamship
actual wants.
At Manchester higher prices have been demanded for
to proceed to that
city and bring a crop of grain directly to yarns and
goods, owing to the upward movement in prices at Liver¬
this port; Iowa and Minnesota are
pushing railroads into pool ; but business has, in consequence, been checked. At Leeds
the interior;
Chicago reduces her charge for handling and Bradford, Leicester and Huddersfield, wool has been rather more in

storing grain.

Freights by rail

down and the great
route assumes

of

the

new

on

competing roads

battle between the rail and
and

more

interesting proportions. Some

extensive scale.
from New York to St. Louis and
return,

*

1

If

l

•

‘

-

the water

experiments induced by this rivalry between dif¬

ferent routes

\r,

go

are

on

an

This

steamship

which

request, the demand for qualities'suited to the requirements of the
autumn and winter trade
having been more active. In metals a fair
degree of firmness has prevailed ; and at the quarterly meeting of the
iron masters, just held, it has been determined to make no
change in
the price of finished iron.

According to

a

Parliamentary return just published, it

appears

that

involves a long the imports of cotton into the United Kingdom, which were 887,voyage. It is 3,000 miles of water against 1,000 by land. 333.149 lbs. in 1864, amounted to 1,328,084,016 lbs. in 1868, being an
increase of 440,760,867 lbs. The
It is an ocean
exports, which were 123,326,112 lbs.
voyage, a gulf passage and a long and sinuous
in 1864, were
322,620,480 lbs. in 1808, or an increase of 119,294,368
river with all its
opposing currents and unknown obstruc¬ lbs. The
exports of cotton yarn increased from 147,128,498 lbs. to
tions.
ft passes by the
Mississippi cities, whose hopes 174,537,970 lbs., being to the extent of 27,409,472 lbs., and of cotton
have been of “Direct Trade” with
Europe, and it manufactures from 1,692,899.192 yards to 2,966,706,642 yards, or to
has for its St. Louis
guarantors the enterprise, and capital the extent of 1,273,807,359 yards. To meet, therefore, the largely
and pluck of a
strong and vigorous city. As one attempt augmented demand for goods on the part of foreign buyers, there is a
net increase in the available
to solve this
supply of cotton of only 214,047,027 lbs.
problem of transportation it is interesting to
As the home demand for goods has also
all observers. The world at
materially increased since 1854
large which takes many mil¬ the result has been that
Middling Orleans cotton, which was quoted at
lion bushels of wheat, corn and flour from the United
States, 6d per lb. in the first week of 1864, was worth lid per lb. at the com¬
and the army of consumers in the
non-producing States no mencement of 1869. The largest import of cotton was in the year
less than producers are all
directly interested, for to them 1880, when we received 1,390,938,752 lbs. The la-gest export was
it is a*question of
388,952,368 lbs. in 1866. In 1860 there was an export of 2,776,?18,427
cheaper food.
—The

following is a statement of the
by the various railroad corporations:
Orange & Alexardria

Richmond & Danville
Virginia Central
Bouthside

Virginia & Tennessee,.
NcrlolkA 1 etersbu g
Total

amount of interest due

Virginia

$17,500 00
42,000 00

05,500 00
252,000 00
420 000 00

45,855 13

$843,865 13

—The

Portland, Saco and P rtsmouth Railroad’s stockholders at
their meeting lately discussed the contract between this
road and the

Boston and Maine and Eastern railroads.
The latter were
thereby
bound to piy their rent in gold and silver
coin, but have for six years
availed themselves of the
Legal Tender act to pay in greenbacks. The
lessors think that under a recent decision of the United States

Supreme
Court, they have a right to recover back rent
according to the contract’s
terms, which would amount to $194,868 in
gold, or $328,600 in curren¬
cy.
The directors were accordingly instructed to take action to reco¬
ver for the past and enforce tor the future
according to those terms,

t




yards of goods, but in 1868, with a diminution of 60,000,000 lbs. in the
import of the raw material, as compared with 1860, the shipments had
increased to as much as 2,966,706,542
yards. There was, however, a
diminution of nearly 23,000,000 lbs. in the
export of yarn.
From South Wales it is stated that all the
great

iron masters are of
opinion that prices of railway iron must advance before long, as the
requirements of the United States and Russia are known to be large,
and, as at the same time,'there is little, if any, competition with
Belg urn

aud other Continental markets.

Considerable

activity is evinced in the
shipment of rails at the local ports of South Wales for the United
States and the Southwest coast of
America, and it is expected that
with fine weather large quantities will be sent
away.
As compared
with last year the increase in the
shipments will be very important.
In consequence of the unsettled weather which
prevailed up to
Monday night, the wheat trade was very excited on Monday, and
prices rose to a considerable extent. Good English wheat advanced
4s and inferior
qualities 2s and 8s per quarter, while iq foreigq produce

July 10, 1869.]

THE CHRONICLE.

41

similar

improvement took place. Since then, however, the tempera' oats in England and Wales for the week ending June 9, compared with
higher, but, at the same time, up to Thursday night there the four previous years :
was much of the
1869.
1868.
1867.
1866.
1865.
appearance of unsettled weather.
The late advance Wh at
46 2
66 1
48 5
65 8
41 3
in prices, therefore, is
supported. The accounts from the agricultural Harley
39 2
32 2
35 0
34 4
27 5
Oats
27 8
27 7
26 7
23 8
29 3
districts are contradictory. Still, it is quite
certain that the harvest
It may be observed as the week closes that fine warm weather bao
will be late, and that it will
vary considerably.
There is, therefore, the
set in, and that there
appears to be a prospect of the crops ripening in
probability that good dry wheat will command a good price in the
approaching season. The following acc unt of the crops has been good time, and also being secured in good condition. The opinion eeems
to be general that the
published in one of the principal agricultural j mrnals :
crop will vary very much, and will be of lefi
Sitting-before ft good fire, with the room door shut to keep out the cold, and with quantity and less superior quality than that of last year.
Rapid prc»
rani
streaming down the window panes, varied hy the occasional rattling of large
gres® is being made with the hay crop, wh'ch is, on the whole, abundant
hailstones—and this, too, in the third week of June—we might discount our “ pros
pect of the crops” beforehand, and say, before writing our report, that harvest will and is now
being harvested well.
he late and wheat below an
average. A blazing July may come and modify such
conclusion, hut present appearances do not favor the expectation. The wheats in
Money has again fallen in price, and the minimum rate of discount
the north and east
certainly not first-rate. From North Yorkshire we learn that is now ?
} per cent. In the open market there is no activity, and choice
there is
thin and defective
plant on the heavy soils, and in the West Hiding the
crop cannot be an average. In North Lincolnshire the wheats a-e reported to promise
bills are discounted at 3, 3^ an 1
per cent.
There is abundance of
less than an
average, and in South Lincolnshire and the (Ireat Fen Level the crop
may he an average, but will certainly he li.te. In Cambridgeshire wheat looks tole¬
unemployed money in a'l quarters, and the bankers find much diffi¬
rably well; the same is true in Norfolk and Suffolk, and in Essex the crop is good
culty i*i disposing of their surplus balances. The fact would seem to
upou heavy land, hut on the light lauds poor.
In the southern counties the wheat
is eariug three weeks later than last
be that business lias been
year, and it is reported doubtful ir a full aver
materially checke 1 by the late rise to 4| pet
age can be attained ; and the midluud counties do not promise more than an average
cent, which it is admitlel in all quarters, disturbed the commercial
wheat crop, even with the best of weather.
The prospects of barley are equally
unsatisfactory, the weather having been too cold for producing heavjy crops. In mind to a serious
degree. It i<, no doubt, agreeable to find that partly
Norfolk aud Suffolk the
barley looks well on tlie highly fanned lands, but on thin
soils
defective, backward and yellow. Oats, beans and peas tell a more favor
through the great caution exerci-ed by commercial men, the money
able tale.
Potatoes
up irregularly, and have to some extent thrown out supertubers, instead of putting up a vigorous top. As far as probabilities strike us now, market has again righted itself, and if it be not disturbed by large
we anticipate
rather late harvest—that is, three weeks <*r a month later than last fi lancial
a
operations, money will undoubtedly remain cheap. It wai
year—and a yield of wheat and barley-somewhat below an average; an average,
however, being possible if we should have a sunny, settled July.
thought so, however, in the early part of April last; but a demand
An agricultural
report from Ireland states :
suddenly arose towards the latter en 1 of that month, and the resut wa«
The cold and ungenial weather which marked the early
days of the present that ihe rates of discount advanced rapidly to 4 £ per cent.
It is now
greatly retarded vegetation, and gave such an appearance to the face of the
country that in the first week of last month many fields looked as bleak and bare beginning to be the impression that a similar change may come over our
they had done two months before. Spring labor, however, was then well for¬
With cheap money, speculation will revive, and the foreign
ward, aim more than usual attention had been paid to the pieparation of the soil for market.
general crops. A great improvement has taken place in every part of the country loans now in
abeyance, will probably be brought forward ; while, with
since the commencement of this
month, especially in grass lands. The importance
of having ample food for cattle aud
fine weather, and with the pro:pect of a good agricultural year, busi¬
sheep in a country which, in proportion to its
area, produces a larger number than any other part, of Europe, cannot he too highly
ness is
likely to improve. The uncertainty which has characterized the
estimated. Ireland’s cattle herds, taking a’l egos, cannot at present he under four
millions, and the Hooks would amount to about five millions.
These figures show
money market of late May, however, tend to caution on all sides, and,
how very important it is to the nation, as well as to individual
graziers and sheepif so, money will of course remain extremely easy.
owners, that the pasturage should he in good condition.
Rapidity of com¬
A proof of this was seen
in the decline of value which took
place in the cattle markets about the middle of munication tends
very materially to effect rapid changes, and if the
last month, when, in
consequence of the unfavorable appearauce of stock farms, a
fall of 10s to 15s
head
current for all varieties of young cattle.
.Since then a bank minimum fhould again decline to 3 per cent, something of the
considerable improvement has been experienced, and,
with the present favorable aims character which so
decidedly affected the money market in April
weather, still further recovery may he looked for. We may report a very gratify¬
ing course that has been pursued hy some of the leading graziers in course of the last
may influence it again before very long.. We must, in fact, be pre¬
spring months.
Tanks have been made for the purpose of guarding against
scarcity of water should a dry season set in, and more care is being taken to provide pared for speedier action, for the times have, as it were, quickened
field shelter for the cattle in wet
stormy weather.
The wheat lands in those sections of Ulster most celebrated for the growth of that
during the las! few years. The following are the prices of money :

a

ture has been

a

are

a

are

come

season

as

a

was

or

grain have rarely appeared so luxuriant or so well forward as they do at present.
Throughout the counties of Down, Antrim and Armagh, which produces two-thirds
of all the wheat that is
annually raised in the province, the prospects of ample
yield are exceedinglg favorable. No complaints are heard of the oat crop, wlvifh
was got in at a
good time and is now doing well. Potato lands present the finest
appearance. An old farmer lias reported to us that since 1812 there has not been
seen such a
healthy growth of young potato plants as may be seen in every direc¬
tion. Not a word is heard of “missed” sets, nor, so far as we have heard,
is there
any appearance of “curl” either in the early or later planted lands. No correct esti¬
mate ean be formed of the total breadth of soil under
potatoes this season, hut it is
pretty certain to he much in excess of that of last year. Mangold wurtzel and
Swedish turnips have also been
largely sown. The turnip crop in Ireland was an
almost general failure in 1863.
Many farmers made ample provision for this loss of
spring feeding by sowing vetches, which, coining'into play in the end of March,
proved most valuable for sheep and lambs, as well as for dairy cattle.
In Scotland the
crops are being retarded by the ungenial weather,

which is.

a

in which it is

serious matter for that

1S63.
1869.
Per cent. Per cent,.
Bink minimum....
30 and 60 days’
3 months, bills

3‘g@—

bills 1%(7£—
1%($—

3%/<£3#

The rates of interest allowed
houses

by the joint stock banks and discount

are :

Joint stock banks
Discount houses, at call..

’69.
ax

’68.
1
1

....

..

’68.
isc’t bouses, 7
do
14

2%

..

do

.

1#

’69.
2%

.

days notice

1%

HX

the Continent remains easy, the tendency being towau’B
The commercial inquiry continues limited, aud the fin; nestablishments appear to be boriowing to a very modeiate ex'ent.
cial
Annex d are the quotations at the leading cities :
Money on
lower rates.

*

r-B’k rate— r—Op. m’kt—,

Advices from Lower

Styria and Austria state th it the ha vest pros¬
pect is encouraging, and it was expected that the crop would be equal
to that of last year, which was
unprecedentedly largo. The accounts
fron Hungary are also
encouraging ; but rain is said to be wanted in
some

3%

Open-market rates:

country, owing to the high'latitude

placed.

2

1868.
1869.
Per cent. Per cent.
1 months, ba’lr bills 2 (&2%
3%@3%
6 months’ ha’lc bills 2%@2%
3xr@3%
4 and 6 trade bills.. 2XQ&
3%@4jjf

1868.

1868.1869.
At Paris
Vienna
Berlin

2%

%X

l%-%

4

4

4

23«-3
l%-3
ax

a%
3%

Frankfort. 2%
Amst’rd’m 2%

districts.

Turin
Brussels
Madrid

4

3%
‘1%

-

B’k rate—, r-Op. m’kt-*
1868. 1869.

1868. 1869.
5
5

-

2%

4
4

...

r-

1869.

..

...

2#

ax

5

Hamburg —
St. Fetb’g. 7

2%-3 ax-3
1%

—

.

3

4%

3x

6%

4%

exchanges, in consequence of the lower rates foi money on this
side, are again lower, but the Paris exchange is still at a point which
The

In

Russia the crop appears to have been retard :d by a severe
drought; but at the latest date rain had fallen, and the prospect had

All the supplies which

prohibits the export of gold.

mateiially improved.

are

coming in

From Salonica we learn that the harvest, which from Australia and elsewhere are
likely, therefore, to be retained here.
had been threatened by a continuance of
dry weather, was likely to The hu t
telegram from New York quotes the exchange on Loudon at
prove abundant, a considerable quantity of rain h ving recently fallen,
109£. In the bullion market there is no important feature. Silver and
i Our imports of wheat continue to diminish, but, in consequence of
dollars, however, are in moderate request for export to the Eas1.
the recent excitement in the tra le,
large orders hive been sent out to
The consol market has been rather fiat, owing to some considerable
the Black Sea and to New York for the
purchase of additional sup sales of
money stocks, in anticipation, it is believed, of the approach¬
plies. For the present season our imports a e 8,460,0 0 cwt les3 than
ing money bill for the purchase of the telegraph companies. Towards
they were in 1867-8. Annexed is the state cut of in ports and
the close of the week prices have beeu firm, owing to the much finer
„

exports.

weather which
WHKAT.

Imports

,

C-

mand f
>

1867-8.

186S-9.

cwt.
2?,776 560

cwt.

.

Sept. 1 to May 29
“

“

Exports

,

1868-9.
cwt.

“

12
19

Total

20,674,'*76

603,456

136,875

4,673

1

1.521

667,423

232,572
126,795
289,337

6,324

80
248

29,788,857

Week ending June 5
“
“
“

/

1367-8.
cwt.

21,323,680

615,974

137,204

755,817
689,057

FLOUR.

Sept. 1 to May 29
Week ending June 5
“
“
“

“

Total

.

“12
“
19

2,548,598

2,932,553

44,865

16,079
25,957

46,311
47,895

2,687,669

40,727
1,831

26,540
3,107

23,637

310
689

390
744

'2,998,226

43,557

80,781

The following are the average sriccs of Eng lish wheat, barley and




r

shares have beeu dull.

Consols, and of the
week

Five Twenty bonds have been in steady de¬
previous quotations. American railway

prevails.

investment at about

Annexed

are

the highest and lowest piicea of

principal American securities

on each

day of the

:

Monday. Tuesday. Wod’ay.

June 26.

|92%-92%
8U%-80%
U. S. 5-20S, 18S5. ,..|78%-78%
U. S. 5-20s, 1887
176%-....
Consols

U. 8.5-20’e, 1882

...

U. S. 5-208, 1904.. .. |7l%~72
Atlantic & G’t West.j

92%-92%
80%-80%
78%-7S%
76%-76%
7i%-72%

9 2%-93

80%-80%
78%-78%
76% ....
71X-72

Thu’ay.

Fri’ay. Sat’day.

9:%-93 92%-92% 92%-92%
80% Sd% 80%-80% 80%-SO%
78%-78!* 78%-... 78%-....
76%-76% 76%-.... 76%-70%
71%-.... 71%-72
71%-72

25%-25% 25%-.... 25 -25%
-25% 24%-25% 25 -26
19%-19% 19%-19% 19%19%-20
20 -20% 16&-20
94%-.... 94%-94%
94%-.... 94 -95
94 -95 94 -95

consol’d moit.b’ds 25

Erie Shares($100)..
Illinois shares ($100)

The following

statement shows the present position of the Bank of

July 10, 1869.

THE CHRONICLE

42

England, the. Bank rate of discount, the price of Consols, the average
price of English wheat, the price of Middling Upland cotton and of
No. 40 raule yarn, fair second quality, compared with the four previous
years:

1867.
£

1866.

1865.
£

£

1869.
£

1868.
£

Circulation, including—
Bank p st bills
21,517,58") 25,383,303 23 635,529 24,153,582 23,128,896
8 095,285
7,498,189
Public deposits
7,965,331 11,105,413
lo,487,984
Other deposits .... . 13,724,188 20,089,750 17,85%106 19.531,108 16,972,956
Government securities lo,489,025 11,348,454 12,886,314 13,294,557 14,^39,87 4
Other securities
22,036,975 80,883,810 20,098,076 18,160,273 16,465,014
Reserve
9,931,321
5,248,409 14,081,774 14,275,591 11,915,520
Coin and oulliou
16,407,060 15,042,339 22,236,664 22,962,931 19,595.96C
2 p. C.
3% P- c.
10 p. c.
Bank rate
3 p. c.
2% p. c.
93%
94%
94%
90
Consols
86%
Price of wheat
Mid. Upland cotton...
40 mule yarn, fair 2d

48s. f)d.

41s. 3d.

lid.

13%d.

19%d.

65s. 8d.

Is. 7d.
Is. 5%d.
quality
Is. 10d.
Lord Chief Justice Cockburn, on the application of

46s. 2d.

66s. Id.

12% d.

ll%d.

Is. 3%d#

Is. 3d.

The

daily closing quotations for U. S. 6*8 (1862) at
86%

Frankloit

Frankfort were—
87®%

87@%

87%

86%

....

Liverpool Cotton Market.—See special report of cotton.
&

c

Liverpool Breadstuff's Market.—This market has experienced an
unusually active week, with a geueral advance throughout the list*
amounting to Is 6d in Flour, 7 cl hi Red Western Wheat, 8d in White
California Wheat, 2d in Oats, and 9d in Peas. The market closes firm,
with a prospect of a still further advauce.
Mon.
s. d.

Flour, (Western)
p. bbl 23 0
Wheat (No.2 Mil. Red) p. ctl
8 11
10 0
(Jaliforuia white) “
Corn(W.mx’d)p. 4801bsn’w 26 9

23
9
10
*7
28

23
9
10
27
28

Barley (Canadian), per bush
....
Outs (Am. & Can.) per45lbs
3 4
Peas..(Canadian) pr504 lbs 38 0

3
38

“

“

“

old

28

6

6
1
2
0
6

'4

0
3
5

0
6

38

s.

24
9
10
27
28

3

38

0

d.
6
6
8
0
6

*3 6
38 3

3*4

3” 4

34
38 0

0

Fri.

Thu.
s. d.
24 0
9 4
10 7
27 0
28 6

Wed
s. d.
23 6
9 3
10 6
27 0
28 6

Tues.
s. d.

Sat.
d.

s.

Mr. Henry George
Liverpool Provisions Market. •This market has generally reraaiued
Gordon, one of the directors, has ordered the trial of the directors of Over¬
was very much depressed early in the week and declined
end, Gurney A Co., to be commence 1 on the 22 1 of Ju!y. Mr. Thorn, the quiet-. Lard
to 'TOs, but later a bet er feeling was manifested and the price reacted
prosecutor, however, appears to be in an unenviable position, for not hav¬
to 71s.
Bacon has declined to 62s.
Cheese still continues to decline^
ing collected a sufficient sura of money to meet the large expenses which
will necessarily be entailed in employing counsel, he is likely either to closing at 64s. Pork and Beef remain unchanged.
Fri
Thu
Mon.
Wed.
Sat.
Tues.
s. d.
8. d.
s. d.
8. d.
d.
8. d.
withdraw from the case or else bear the greater part of the expense
90 0
90 0
90 0
90 0
90 0
3eef(ex. pr. mess) p. 304 lbs 90 0
himself.
In addition to this he ha9 been bound over by the Lord
99 0
99 0
99 0
99 0
99 0
Pork(Etn. pr.mess) d 200 lbs 99 0
62 0
62 6
62 6
63 0
62 6
Mayor in the sum of £5,000 to prosecute at the Sessions. Mr. Thnrn Bacon (Cumb.cut) p. 112 lbs 63 0
71 0
71 0
70 0
70 6
71
0
Lard (American)
“
“
71 6
64 0
has recently applied to the Treasury for funds to meet the expenses of Cheese (tine)
65 0
64 0
67 0
66 0
44
44
67 0
the prosecution, but has been refused, notwithstanding that some yearfl
Liverpool Produce Market. —1 here lias been ecarrely any varia¬
ago the Treasury advanced £38.C00 to aid the prosecution of the direc¬ tions iu the reported list of the produce market during the past week*
tors of the Royal British Bank.
The application, therefore, is not with¬ Tallow is a little better, closing at 46s, while Spirits Turpentine have
out a without a precedent.
He has also asked to conduct the prose¬ lost 3d^ and Petroleum, both spirits and refined, ^d.
Th
Fri.
Mon
Tu.
Wed.
Sat.
cution himself, without incurring the expense of counsel; bnt the Lord
s. d.
B. d.
8. d.
B. d.
s. d.
s. d.
Chief Justice has intimated that it is not the practice of the court to Rosin (com Wilm ).per 112 lbs
4 9
4 9
4 9
4 9
4 9
4 9
15 0
15 0
15 0
15 0
15 0
15 0
do
Fine Palef..
allow prosecutors to conduct their own cases.
The trial of the accused Sp turpentine
27 0
27 3
27 3
27 3
27 3
27 3
1
6% 1 6%
directors is likely, therefore, either to break down from the non- I etroleum (std white).p. 8 lbs.
6% 1 6% 1 6% 1 6 *
0 7
0 7
'0 7% 0 7% 0 7% 0 7
P
spirits... .per8 lbs
45 0
45 0
44 6
45 0
41 9
44 0
appearance of the prosecutor or to be only a farce, from the fact that
Tallow (American)..p112 lbs.
Clover seed.
all the leading counsel of the bar have been engage i for the defence.
Fri.
T,b.
Tu.
Wed.
Mon.
Sat.
32 0 0
32 00 0
32 00 0
Some-clever juniors should volunteer to support Mr. Thorr, so as to Linseed oil .per ton
32 00 0 3;! 00 0 32 00 0
8.

.

'

1

44

44

,

,

m

#

m

.

.

,

,

,

m m

•

•

•

,

1

#

,

.

•

•

.

•

•

ruled firm*

deputation on closing at 61s 6d. Sperm Oil declined £l at the close to £92.
Thursday of the committee of promoters of the scheme for a submarine these excep ions the market remains unchanged.
of Trade received

The President of the Board

.

...

.

London Produce and Oil Markets.—Calcutta Linseed has

make themselves known.

,

a

Th.

With
Fri

Mon. ; Tues.
Sat.
Wed.
Lord Richard Grosvenor M. P., Lins’d
cake(obl)p.tn£l0 02 0 £10 02 0 £10 02 0 £10 02 0 £10 02 0 £10 02 0
0 61 6
0 61 6
the chairman, stated that they asked the governmt nts of England and Linsee l (Calcutta)
0 61 6
0 61 0
0 61 0
0^61 0
Sugar(No. 12L)chstd)
'
France each to guarantee 2T per cent on £2,000,000, being the sum to
0 39 9
39 9
per 112 tt>
39 9
39 9
39 9
,39 9
95 0 0
95 0 0
95 0 0
95 0 0 95 0 0 92 0 0
be applied to driving two driftways from shore to shore. The French Sperm oil
40 0 0
41
0 0
\Whiie oil
40 0 0
49 0 0
40 0 0
41 0 0
government are said to be waiting to see what the English government
will do in the matter.
Mr. Bright has promised to bring the matter
COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS.
before his colleagues.
Imports and Exports for the Week.—The imports this week are
A report from Mauchester states :
Prices are unchanged since Tuesday, but the tone of the market has about the same in dry goods, but show a considerable decrease in genera^
een quieter, and producers are rather more easy to deal with than they
merchandise, the total being $4,842,469, against $5,204,934 last week,
Were in the beginning of the week, although they adhere very firmly to
and $6,856,ISl the previous week. The exports are $4,431,637 this
their quotations. The upward movement, however, ha9 been checked.
On Monday and Tuesday there was some excitement in the cotton week, against $3,684,936 last week, and $4,427,631 the previous week.
market, which compelled spinners to put up their prices, and some The exports of cotton the past week were 990 bales, against 152
were indifferent
about giving quotations.
When it was found that bales last week. The following are the imports at New York for week
merchants here would not support the upward movement, spinners
ending (for dry goods) July 2, and fur the weekending (for general
gave over buying cotton in excess of their wants, and a quieter feelir g
came over the cotton market.
The general feeling, however, is that merchandise) July 8 :
FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOB THE WEEK.
the position of cotton is inherently very strong, and that the market is
1868.
1869.
1866.
1867.
liable to speculative movement any day.
Consequently producers are Drygoods
$1,413,181
$1,146,4'I4
$890,851
$1,162,777
chary about selling a long way in advance, being apprehensive that a General merchandise.. 1,789,317
2,t23,329
3,079,682
2,959,811
possible rise in <he raw material might put them in even a worse plight lotai for the week
$3,202,493
$3,859,662
$3,971,793
$4,842,459
than they are in at present.
Previously reported... 155,455,014 * 128.565,055
120,745,937
157,524,519
lu the early part of the week there were rumors of failures, which
Since Jan. 1
$158,657,512
$132,530,848
$124,596,599 $162,366,978
gave some uneasiness, but they appear to have been only idle reports,
and any effects which they have produced have passed away.
In our report of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry
The
reduction of the Bauk rate of interest is a favorable feature in main¬
goods for one week later.
taining the stability of prices, but it has had no perceptible influence
The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from
here. Buyers resolutely set their faces against higher prices ; and,
unless better advices arrive from abroad to stimulate things here, it is the port of New York to foreign ports, for the weekending July 6 :
EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK.
probable.they may desist from buying until producers hold more stocks
than they do at present.
1866.
1867.
1868.
18S9.

tunnel betweer England and France.

..

.

...

For the week

The

daily closing quotations in the markets of London and Liver
pool for the past week, have been reported by submarine telegraph as
shown in the

following

summary :

London Money and Stock

Market.—Consols have,

the whole«

on

Since Jan

1

$2,094,882
107,084,227

$3,075,579
97,777,669

$2,452,508
86,188,797

$4,431,637
87,597,889

$109,179,109

Previously reported....

Euffiinli Marker Iteports-Fer Gable.

$100,851,268

$88,641,395

$92,029,526

The value of

exports from this port to different countries (exclusive
of specie) for the past week, and since January 1, compared with the
corresponding time of last year, is shown in the following table :

ruled at better

prices than those current last week, closing, however
± per cent lower than the highest point of the week. United States
bonds have experienced a fair amount of activity during the week, but
at the close

were

easier.

bonds at Frankfort have

Railway stocks closed quiet. United States
been firm, an i close higher than last week.

Bat.

Consols for money.....
44
for account...

92%
92%

U. 8. 6’s (5 20’s) 1862..
Illinois Central shares.
Erie Railway shares ..
Atl. & G. W. (consols).

81%
95%




19%
....

Mon.
93%

93%
81%
95 V

19%
•

•

*

*

Tues.

93%
93%
81%
95%
19%
....

Wed.
93 X

Thu.

*

Fri.

81%

93%
93%
81%

90

95%

81%
95%

19%

19%

18%

93%

•

•

•

•

93%

93%

Since Jan. 1.
To
Great Britain...
France
Holland and

Germany

$48,090,573

Belgium

..

Other Northern

Spain

1869.

*

Europe

Other Southern Europe
East Indies
China and Japan
Australia

Britisn N A. Colonies
Cuba

Hayti

3,509,2382,643,897
10,284,936
1,983,* 04
1,503,363
3,077,190
49,163
1,726,597
1,235,290
2,106,400
2,520,770
554,214

Same time
1868.

$45,712,881
4,365,411
2,447,909
7,812,058

1,002,012
1,045,866
2,785,949
55,773

1,719,334
1,307,838
2,228,822

3,653,135

1,093,417

1’

';V-*

v.

July 10, 1809.]

THJE chronicle

Other Wert Indies
Mexico
New Granada
Venezuela
British Guiana
Brazil
Others. American ports
All other ports

The

4,098,799

4,606,06*
994,77^

817,956
1,320,636
326,785
695,618

1,869,281

335,10*>
783,472

1,687,006
2,240,066
1.515,265

following will show the

1,681,362

2;023;200

671,253

exports of specie from the port of New

York for the week ending July 3, 1869 :
June 29—St. Westphalia, London,
American silver..
$52,695
Mexican silver....
633,416 July 1—St. Union, Paiis,
Mexican gold
Mexican dollars
280
3,940
29—St. Westphalia, Paris,
Gold dust
220
M exican silver....
3—St. New York, London,
25,000
“
29-St. Westphalia, Ham¬
Mexican do lars...
9,787
3—St. City of Antwerp,
burg,
Mexican silver....
1,200
Liverpool,
30—St. China, Liverpool,
British gold
7,312
,

..

“

44

Cold bars

53,500

July 1—St. Morro Castle,

3—Schr. Azelda

and

Laura, Para,
American go;d....

Spanish gold
11,131
1—St. Arizona, Aspinwall,

Total for the week

4,477

$852 957

s

Previously reported

14,638,489

Total since Jan. 1,1869

$15,541,446

Same time in
1868

$51,350 825

1367
1366
1865
l8t>4
1863
1862
•••••«••••••••••
1861 •••>••••
••
I860
t

m

m

....

....

••••••

The

•

29’755,185
21,044,601

r

•

47,123,863

30^623,411

....

3,251,638
23,199,302

....

•

....

Same
1859.
1858.
1857.
1856
1855.
1854.

13,067,976

1853.
1852,

imports of specie at this port during the past week have

June 28—Steamer

Cleopatra,

June

Si8:ll,
Silver
Gold
June 28—Schr. Uncle

$370,756
286,656

been

Silver

30—Brig G. W. Barker,
savanilla,
Gold
Silver

782

Gold

July
1,509

29, Steamer Hammonia,
Hamburg,

$473
125

Gold

Total for the week

2,700

8,904,140

Total since Jan. 1 1869
Same time, 1868

...$9 594,078
3,951,284

National Treasury.—The

at

following forms present a summary of cer
the National Treasury and Custom House.

1.—Securities held by the U.S. Treasurer in trust for National banks
Date.

For Circulation.

For U. S.

3

April
44

44

May

342,749,800
342,747,496

15
2>

44

44

44
44

5...
12
19
26

July

373

342,891.200

3

....

372

905,156
372,802,840
372,198,150

28,786,359
28,316,350
27,538,850
26,144,350
24,907,350

342,891,200

342,892,600
342,918,600

149,150

1372, f 92,150

30,155,350
30,055,350
29,390,350

342,807,800

29

June

375,168,650
373,673,650
373,252,150

30 255 350

8

44

44

Total.

30,875,350
30,558,350
30,455,350

1

44

Deposits.

32,428,350

10
17
24

44

with the amount in circuation at date

371,677,551
371,207,55 <
370,421,050
369,036,950
367,825,950

June 6
“

'

12

“19,...
“
26

Total

July 3

260,950
124,000
120,410

*

In

13.859,048
14,343,940
14,464,358

Week ending.
“

“

41

*

May
“

44
44
44

June
44

44
44

Ju:y

137,350
176.250

177.250

14,290,877
14,467,127
14,644,377

299,858,694
299,79 ,445

299,749,605

8
10....
17
24

Received.
495,000
476,230

Distributed. Destroy’d
295,208
574,780
406,('00
536,600
503,150
600,900
671,800
607,0110
320,183
4:38,900
296,8(H)
656,500
634,496
354,200

228.000

8
15

None
None
None
None

22...

None

29
5
12
19
26
3

Nona
None
None
None
None

1

opeialion but

a

t In operation but

$8,103,197 56

few days

a portion of the year.
Partial Redemption or the Indiana State
Debt.—The Board of
State Debt
Sinking Fund

Auditor, Treasurer

Commissioners, consisting of the Governor,
Agent of State, have had a meeting, and uppn

and

examination ascertained that the State will be able to
redeem about
$800,000 of the principal of the Indiana five per cent State stocks at
the office of the Agentof State in
New York, on and after the 1st
day
of July next.
The amount necessary to pay the semi-annual interest
has also been transmitted to New York.
This will leave about
$1,600,000 of the
principal of the five per cent stocks still unpaid, supposing
the holders should consent to
give up the stocks to the amount pro¬
posed, of which there is some doubt, as it is still

optional with
they find the investment one entirely satisfactory to them, sothem,
as
they can draw the interest. They are almost as popular aslong
the
war loau
bonds, which the State expressed a readiness,
through her
officers, to redeem in full, in May last, but the agent has
only beeu able
|4t > get hold of about $2,00t',000 of them, leaving some $200,000 still
unpaid, because,

not yet

having matured, the State

fully

seven

millions but five years

cannot atop the six
the still outstanding five per

$1,800,000, whereas

it

was

ago.—Indianapolis Journal.

New Advertisements.—A
very

the Ocean Bank

Great Western
Grand *»runk
London and Port
Stanley
Welland
Northern
Brockville and Ottawa
St. Lawrenreand Ottawa
St. Lawrence and Industry
New Brunswick and Canada

on

The

reputation of Captain Young as a detective is unequalled ia this
country, and it is more than probable that a part or all of the stolen
securities will be recovered.
—The

Illinois Central Railroad advertises the usual semi-ai
dividend of five per cent.
—The Germania Insurance
Company gives notice of a

nua

semi-anni al

d.vidend of five per cent.
—The

Safe

Deposit Company informs the public, through their
page 2, that bonds are safe in their vaults, corner of
Broadway and Liberty slieel.
—Messrs. Theodore Polhemus & Co.,
long known to the trade as the
principal dealers in cotton duck in this city, have removed from their

advertisement

on

old well known store

Nos. 13 and 16

the

on

corner

of Beaver and Broad

Lispenard street

tllje Bankers’

streets, to

©alette.

The following Dividends have been declared
daring the past week:
PER

6
5
5
10
5
10
7
5
2 extra.
10
5

Importers & Traders
New York Equitable
Tradesmen’s
United States Fire
i(

i

■

Citizens Fire
Globe Fire
Germania Fire

117,576

390,400
2^2,421
294,000

Commercial Fire..’.
Nortli Americau Fire
Lori Hard Fire
American Exchange Fire....

Pacific Fire
Mechanics Sc Traders Fire....

183’, 990

1819.

1863.

$294,658

$280,992

736,917
3,371
9,2ol
-

81,906
19,344
14,688
989

646,924
3,642
10,792
74,671
16,556

10,263
1,027

12,324
11,273
European and North American
17,190
14,746
—The Burlington
Haiokeye gives as follows the gross earnings of
railroads of Iowa, for the
year 1868, as gathered from books in the
State Treasurer^ office;

July 3.
July 2.
July 1.
July 7.
July 6.
July 10.
July 10.
July 6.
July 6.’
July 7.
July 7.
July 7.
July 7.
July 7.
July 7.
July 7.
July 8.
July 8.
July 8.
July 10.
July 8.
July 8.
July 8.
July 8.
July 15.
July 15.

5,

Irving Fire

278,700

95,100

pay’ble

BOOKS CLQSBD.

Insurance.
JEtna (Hartford)
International
Phoenix (Hartford)....
Firemen’s

431,860

220.669

WHEN

CENT.

NAME OP COMPANY.

Relief Fire
Excelsior Fire

Canadian Railwat Returns.—The
earnings of the railways
Canada for the month of May, 18 8 and 1869, were as follows :




10,758 28.

DIVIDENDS,

8.—Fractional currency received from the
Currency Bureau by U. S.
Treasurer and distributed weekly ; also the amount
destroyed:
April

71,846 21
2,7J8 24

;

:

.—Mutilated notes burned.— Notes in
Current week. Aggregate. Current week. Aggregate. Circulation
199,820
13,662,038
123,000
13,870,327
299,842, 1> 2
97,190
13,861,858
160,200
14,153,527
299,748,034
v.

498,2-q5 03
Co

tDubuque Street R.ilroad

aggregate), in returi.
(weekly and aggregate)

r-Notes issued for ret’d.—,

ending.

...

McGregor Great Western

2.—National bank currency issued (weekly and
for bills destroyed and mutilated bills returned
Week

*

Council Bluffs <fc Pt. Jo

02
94
84
24
93

reference to the advertisement that the reward offered is
very liberal.

210

1,303.

weekly transactions

1 7,000
710,240
1,051,828
841,658
153,854

S,637

17,287

Silver

Previously reported

tain

172,427 02
55,465 67

Valley

Keokuk & St Paul
♦Dun. & Dubuque
Bridge

28

970,696 25

....'

Cedar Falls & Minnesota
Sioux City & Pacific
De« Moines

Chicago, i,ock Islani & Pacific.
Burlington & Missouri

Earnings

$3,371,682

full list of the bonds stolen from
Sunday, June 27, will be found on pages 8 and 4
of the Chronicle.
Captain John S. Young, formerly of the Detective
Police, and now of the Detective Bureau, No. 61 Broadway, has
charge
of the bnsiness of
recovering the bonds, and it will be observed on

Silver
Gold.
1—Bg. G psey, St. Croix,

July 1—Brig Curacoa, Cnracoa,

Gold

.

Gross

per cent interest upon them. Theso, with
cents, will leave the State debt at about

July 1—St. Alaska, Aspinwall,

29—Bg. La Creole, Curacoa,

June

'

$690,538

Tom,

Carthagena,

June

Railroads.

Chicago & Northwestern.......
Dubuque & Sioux City
Dubuque & Southwestern

and

follows:

as

43

Long Island, to policy holders..
int. ou outst’g scrip..
st’kholde’rs.iu cash.
“

“

Knickerbocker Fire

Stu^vesant

5
5
5
5
5
5
5
8
8
60
6
10
5
5

scrip

Kailroads.
Lake Shore Sc Mich. Soutli’n.
Illinois Central
Minehill Sc Schuylkill Haven.
Cleveland Sc Pittsburgh

4
5
4
2

Miscellaneous.

United States Trust Co
Hudson Iron Co

7

.

5
25

The Money Market.—The week

of the

stringency in money noted in

Aug. 2.
Aug. 2.
.

July 9.
July 10
July 17

,

J uly 2 J.

July 10

July 10.
July 15.
Friday, July 9, 1869, P. M.

opened with
our last.

a

continuance

^The disbursements

I
1.

THE

44

4

vL.

u

*'

(July 10, 1869.

CHRONICLE.

his ppecial purc ases of bond*. . A?, however, the last two pur*
against pur¬ chases have not been made for the sinking fur d, but subject to the
chases of bonds on Saturday last, produced no perceptible relief.
approval of Congress, Mr. Boutwell may; quite probably,-ftel
The money was evidently taken off the market and held out of use cautious about assuming the responsibility of further transactions
by parties engaged in gold and stock speculations. The absence of of such a character ; and the mo:e so as the now relieved condition
relief from this source, upon which great expectations had been of the money m trket lenmv.s the necessity for this departure from
placed, produced a feeling of disappointment, and borrowers being the uinary use of *the Treasury surplus.
. Y.
V. • • r ‘
then ever at the mercy of huders, rates were exacted ranging
The following are the closing prices of leading government
frcm } to f per ceut per day additional to 7 per cent per annum. securities, compared with preceding weeks :
Julv 9.
4. Jane 11. June 18. Juno 25. July 2.
Tois condition of things continued until the middle of the wee!
117#
in#
Wl#
121#
i‘4
1-1#
191#
a
122#
when it was learned thut the Government w >uld purchase $3,0i 0,0 »0
US#
w#
5-20’s,1862 coup....
116#
116#
116#
9#
5-20’s, 1864
44
118
118#
Five-Twenties on F riday, the 9th. This action ol the Gov¬
118#
117#
5-20’s,1865 44
116#
119#
119#
119#
319#
117#
5 20’s, 1805, July cpn
116#
ernment, being construed as indicating a purpose to meet the want'
1)9#
1,19#
119#
119#
m#
S-JO’s, 1801, coup
116#
119#
U9#
1.19#
119#
108#
of the money market, appears to have discouraged the < {forts of the
108#
5-20’s, 1808, “
108#
108#
108#
S.10-40’8.
44
speculators to force a stringency in money. About the tame time
class ol ceeurities speculation has been genit became known that the District Attorney was taking stops to
erally in favor of lower quotations. The Tennessees and North Car¬
expose the general violation of the usury laws, and in pu suanoe of
ol inas have generally been the especial stocks aimed at, and the former
this purpose several bankers and brokers were yesterday summoned
have dropped to CJ)} for old, and 57 for new, chiefly on reports that
to appear before the Grand Jury to-day to testify upon the matter.
martial law is be proclaimed throughout the S ate, and troops to be
There can be little doubt that these circumstances have caused the
called out to preserve order. This ha3 the- effect of discouraging
abandonment of the “ lecking up” of money, the results being
investors. The North Carolinas on the rumored extra issue Of
that, to-day, the m«st general rate has been 7 j>rr cenf, with
eight millions of bonds, in aid of additional State railroads, dropped
exceptions at 7 per cent gold and L-32 per day.
46} for the new bonds under a heavy pressure of sales, and, 54
Later information respecting the currency balance of the
for the old.
The Missouri sixes have also been weak, dec ining to
Treasury throws additional light upon the causes o. the late extreme
87}
The ^Virginias have been ste.dy and withoat notable feature.
stringency. Later reports from national bank depositories carry
The Lmiiiana bonds have shown great- Aimless, selling-, at 69 for
up the amountof the currency bilance on July 1st to $40,000,00.),
the old sixes and 67} for the levee sixes. Other Southern bonds
beside which there stood at that date, to the credit of disbarring
have be
negljeled.
i
officers, $7,500,000 at the New York Sub-Treasury alone; so that
The following aie the closing quotations compared with lastJuly 1st somewhere near $50,000,000 of currency must have
week
..

of about $3,500,000

in currency, by

the Government,

oi

more

Jane

U. S.
U. S.
U. 8.
U. S.
U S.
U- S.
U.

more

i

118#

..

122

128

122

^

W •

118#

117

1=

'

...

.

.

...

109

,

j

to

n

oj

Within the past
seven days the Government has paid out nearly $7,000,000 upon
special purchases of bonds, while it has received $ ,350,( 00 upon
SrlfS of gold ; leaving a net gain to the market on these transactious of $5,500,000 currency. These movements, together with
the suspension of artificial interference, can hardly fail to conduce
to
much easier future condition of the market. The currency
movement with the interior has been about even until within the
last iwo dajs, when some moderate amounts have betn received
from the West; the expectation of receipts of noney from New
Orleans, based upon the fact of Exchange on New York, being
there at a } per cent premium, has thus far not been real zed.
From the circumstances at present affecting the market, it would
seem that the stringency which stands almost unequalled in the
history of Wall street, has passed its climax.
Whether the
severity of the pressure wilt be followed by a reaclion to the oppo¬
site extreme, remains to be seen ; perhaps the rule by which such a
result ordinarily follow may be in ^thia case modified, by the com
paratively near approach of the period wheu mo ey is required for
been held out

of circulation by

a

.

tin Government.

:

_

.

.

.

Ju'y2. July 9

Sixes, x c
Sixes, new
North Caroliua Sixes, old.
North Carolina Sixes, x.c

Tennessee
Tennessee

Virginia cixes,

old

Viiginia Sixe?, new
Louisiana Sixes.
Louisian^ sixes, levte

...
....

62#
67#
67#
52

oo

66#
63
46#

57
67
61# 61
69
68#

July 2. July 9

Louisiana Eights,
Alabama Fives

Eights
Geojgii Sixes
Alabama

levee... 85
....

Ge rgia Sevens...........
Missouri Sixes

south Carolina

Sixes, n’w

96
....

93

87

83#
92
...

90
87

66# •’ 06#
Miscellaneous

Stocks.—The week opeued with
very unsettled und weak leeliig, in con equence of the failure of
Saturday’s purchase of bonds by the Treasury to afford relief to the
Kai road and

a

Brokers very generally advised- their-cost-imers
the current rates for money lor carrying their
stocks; and as this amounted to from } to } per cent per day, with
prospect of suca charges i outinuiog,' there was a very general
realizing by outs de holders of stocks, with the result of a decline in
prices ol 2} to 7} per cent. New York Central declined to 188}
Hudson River to 159}, Rvck Island 114}, Michigan Southern
I0G}, Pittsburg to 101 and Northwest common to 79. The bulk
of stocks, howev r, appear to be in the hands of strong cliques, who

money

market

that they

*

must p >y

a

various schemes, to market them at high
figures; and these parties having come into the market to arrest
Discount operations have been confined almost entirely to the ihe decline, there was, about the middle of the week, a recovery of
accommodations of the commercial banks to their customers. On confidence, and prices have since steadily advainced, New York
the street there lias been no market for the best paper at even 1)
Central having sold at 196}, Hudson River 165f, Rock Island 119,
to 12 per cent. The bauki have been unable to discount grain
Pittsburg 10£f and Michigan Southern at 110}. Pacific Mail
paper, with much consequent inconvenience to the v\ est; and also has advanced to 92}, against 88 early in the week. The mar¬
paper sent here in considerable amounts from Boston has been ket at present follows the lead of the Vanderbilt stocks. Negotia¬
returned as unsaleable.
tions between tbe Hudson River aud New York Central Compa¬
United Siates Bonds.—The bond market has been irregular, res, lor a consolidation of interests, are id progress; same of the
though more active than last week. The monetary pressure, ’efails of th scheme have not yet been- arraug d, and thirty or
extending throughout the country has brought an uuusually large forty
days must elapse before the p an can be formal.y ratified
amountof bonds from the Interior; while, from 'he same cause, according to law ; it is probable, however, that within the present
there bas not been the demand for the reinvestment of July interest month arrangements may be so. far informally agreed upon as to
usual at this season. These influences, together with the high rates suffice as the basis of an active speculation in the stocks, in which
paid for money, have naturally tended to depress the market event a more active market-goneraliy would probably be realized;
Tables, however, have been sustained by the large purchases of the
The following were the closing quotations of the regular board
Government; so that at the close prices are from 1 to 1} higher
comp ired with those of the six preceding weeks;
May 28. Jun 4. Jan.11 Jan. 18. Jan. 26. July 2. Jane 9.
upon all the issues, except Sixty-Two3, Eighty-0 ks and Tea8L
.85
. 33
. 34#
.82# ,15 .,31#
*3
Forties, than a week ago. The.Treasury purchases of last Satur¬ Cumberland Coal
nicksilver
19#
.15# 16.
J5
15
15
antonCo
64# .66#
61#
6.2# 62# . *>i
,62
day and to-day aggregate $6,000,000; and, at the close of the
Marip osapref....
6.#
49
.17#
16# .17# 15
week, there are indications of a comparative scarcity of most of the Pacific Mail
82#
.82# . .84# .. 89#
86# 9J# 16 •
,89#
York Centra x.i.190#
192# 190# J86# ,194# > - 196# *96#
issues. It must be remembered, howeveicr, that usuillyat. the
Erie
29
29
29# . 3o
* 29# , \ 30# , 28
.158# .. 165# 164# ..163#Yl§4#
169
beginning of July there is a foreign demand lor bonds for the re¬ Hudson River.... 157#
Reading......«...
93 . 97# >98# h-,98 x.d.98
99#. .99
investment of the July interest; owing to the over-supp ied con¬ Mich. Southern..
113#
114
106# .103# /196# J09# . 109#
Michigan Central
126
131# - 105 '1128
128 08
130
132 . 132
dition of the Frankfort m rke», that demand io not this y a" Clev. and Plttab.
97#
101# 1 97# ■ ’-%#
9J#
92# 00#
,83#
forthcoming ; so that the Government purchases simply substitute Northwestern.... - 105# ; 104 oV101# x.dvJKl# ’ •' • J.-96# i .. .82# \ , 89#
preferred
x.d.94#
96# 95
127
122
120# 117# fl9# U8# "116#
for what ordinarily comes from other sources. • Nothing is knov ft Rocklslanu....^
Pprt Wayne
157#
158# 157
158
157# 155# 151
as to whether the Secretary of the Treasury purposes continuing
hope herea

kr, upon

moving the grain crop:.




.

..

New

.

-

44

’

July 10, »\£i
1869.1
'

45

CHRONICLE.

THE

^

'A

239,730

831,166

178,890 3,246,317 712 071
143
400.000 5.175,680 1,115.617
143
144
145*
Illinois Central..
32*
33
931,231 6,417,623 4,064/66
32
33*
84*
84*
Ohio & Mies
76*
Commerce....../
5,848,710 8,630/85 1,387,059
76*
72*
75*
77*
77*
Milw & 8t. Paul.
86* Broadway..,....;
86
900,000 1,768,433 571,439
87
(83*
86*
89*
W7*
73
prt
Ocean
800,000 2,653/88 702,740
.:?* !."■ V ':AV
73
73*
70*
74
76*
Mercantile
481.403 1/77,719 887,001
'•77,
Tol., Wab. & w’n
Pacific
8,195 131.853 3,802,755 680,637
The Gold Market.—The 3tringen°y~.in money, involving the Republic
1/99,120 847,862 2/41,764 533,495
Chatham
101,895 129,808 1,187,005 120,866
29.799 5,997 1,691/92 316/66
payment of 1-16 to f percent for having gdd carried,
a People’s
North American
168,974 4.266 1,195,766 280/14
453,000
223,017 291,478 1,837,000 1,H0/57
large amount pf gold to be thrown upon the market during the Hanover
Irving.
500.000 1/45.000
9,000 191,108 5.V29/55 324,408
4,000.000 10,384,093 1/86/16 2,188,430 1,191,132
jirst half of the week, with, the result of a decline from 137| on Metropolitan..
Citizens
400,000 1,498.682
23,738 132,110 1/87,623 271,420
1,000.000 ; 1,824,109
56.004 S/SO 1,845,642 469,641
Friday laBt to 134 Qn Wednesday.! The decline, however, afforded Nassau.,
Market
1,000/00 7 3/21,478
141,361 576,785 1,002,122 498,605
St. Nicholas.
,1,000.000 2/75,731
41,050 750,918 2,144,000 759,100
a favorable opportunity for the purchase of Foreign E xchange ; and
Shoe and Leather
‘1,500,000 4,048,800
27.985 915,180 1,620/53 488,000
1,000.000 2,917,050 1 38,182
6.078 2.073/23 626.000
vthe rates of sterling bills having, consequently advanced to a point Corn Exchange
. 2,000,000
8/47,711- 149,948 558,569 2,023/92 509/42
Continental
.
750,000 2,665,722
81,521 285,127 1,192,798 219,346
which leayes.a profit oq the shipment of specie, there was a reaction Commonwealth
Oriental,.;
300,000 1,487,206
10,691 5,041 1,112,420 261,130
177,616
1,609,310 160,120 3^0,000 715/vS 1,355,975
- 400,000
pf l-J to, 2| from the lowest figures, the market closing to-day at Marine
7,167/26
Atlantic....
800,000 1,076,542
42.189 98,105 13,858,242 2,477,850
1,500,000 9,454,473 262,204 504,265
l'35f.‘ To morrow’s steamers will take out] about $1,000,000 in Importers and Traders’.. 2,000.000 12,922,783 1/95/78 1,027,000 1,067,635
404,628
Park
12,419 30<,452 675/83 191,343
Mechanics’Banking Ass.
500,000 1,125,634
specie; which, from present indications, appears to be the begin¬ Grocers’
300,000 812,218
20,859 54,250 910,654 150,739
400,000 1,141,126
17/57 11,052 629,268 206,103
209,004
ning of the usual sum ner exports of the precious metals. , In addi¬ North River
822/09
850,000 1,000,769
East River....
12/30 283/00 13,140,713 3,391,525
500,000 1,154,897
Manufacturers* Mer....
4,966
677 10,457,805 2/22,115
tion to the ordinary tr de remittances, several millions have to be
Fourth National
5,000,000 16,135,917
831,078 2,938,858
456,832
Central National
3,000,000 11.731/17 217,787 1,805,000 1,348,424 1,856,189
sent out in payment of July interest upon United States bonds and
....... 270,000 4,530,395
Second National
300,000 1,557,262
154,752 824,998 3/20/47 545,129
1,000,000 5,168/90
other securities; and a3 the exports of cotton are now rapidly de¬ Ninth National
First National..
500,000 8,462,109
398,241 864,3/ 3,492,319 809,056
National
<84,846 512,260 209,254
clining,.specie will naturally be sent out in settlement of mnturiug ThirdYrork N. Exchange. 1,000,000 4,135.282 - 294,398 268,769 1,258/00 431,000
New
300,000 1,075,0.0
3,403 912,<00 2,227,419 32,000
National
137,000
223,645
obligations. The break in the market appears to have enlisted a TenthYork Gold Exch’ge 1,000.000 2,635,800 1,192,446
615,388
New
500/00 1,794/17
Bull’s Head
200^)0 833,217
7,143 225,009 1,875,409 *60,259
considerable 4< Bhort” interest, and hence the charge for carrying National Currency
200,000 1/89,647
5,606 ^,9-1. 210,393
Bowery National
250,000
273,203
10,36 . 90,000 455,367 88,237
407,127
gold has fallen at the close of the week to 9 per cent to 1-32 per Stuyvssant
200,000 464,081
....... .....
Eleveith Ward......
200/00
510/30 ...... .... .. 790,113 294,035
552,495
..
..
,day. •’
Eighth National
250,000 055,59o
1,323 250,000 304.146 240,428
29 870
American National
500,000
713,654
3,354 449,260 252,381 130,S97
The fluctuations in the gold market, and the business at the Gold
Germania
398/14
550
247,653
Board during the week closing with Friday, are shown in the fol. Manufacture & Builders
Total
83,910/00 258/63,471 23,5>0/67 34,217/73 179,929,467 46,737/63
143

143
33*
75

141

Seventh Ward, National.
State of New York
American Exchange

"

v

caused

500,000
2,000,000
5,000,000
10,000,000
>1,000,000
1,000,000
1,000,000
422,700
2,000,000
450,000
412/00
1,000,000
1,000,000

1,384,591
4,445,493
10.165,685
23,817,315
5,187,293
3 020,470
8,246,063
1,814,863..
4/52 283
2,152,694
1,445,345
2 093,494
2,134,999

.

82,281
656,570
714.435
f69,*55
53,891
132,131
163,476

’

;

1




..

.

.

lowing table:,

~

•

fm
tng.

Tuesday,

-

-

ing.

135* 137
135% 134% 135%
135% 135% 135% _
136
135* 186*.

i

134* 137* 136

Current week
137
187*
Previous week.
Jan. 1 ’69. to date... i 134%

136*;i37* 136*
130* 144* 136

vanced. £ per

.

Dec $2,063,261 I

Loans

Inc . 3,263,127
.Inc. — 3,183 1

Specie..;..

569,880,000 17/35/ 49 22/40,808
382,251,000 15,121,648 20,726,454
)

of previous week are as follows:

Dec. i $1,845,228

Doposlts

9 • • •

.

Deposits. Tenders. Clearings.
837,823,692
10,737,889 34^16,916 175,325,789 48,496,359 810,056,455
34,609,360 171,496*580 48,644,732 772,365 294 A
8,794,543
7,811,779 34/36,769 172,203,494 61,001,288 752,905,766
53,677,898
8.850,360 34*060,581 177.340,080 66,495,722 763,768,349
9,267,635 33/72,058 183,949,565 ‘
55,109,573 901,174,577
16,081,489 33/96,1-0 193,'93,137 56,501,356 860,720,880
15,371,769 33/77,794 199,392,449 57,839,298 788/47,852
15,429,404 33/27.386 199,414,869 57,810,373 ,781,046,491
17,871,2:80 33/20 865 203,055,600
1

Specie.

Loans.

3 . 261,933,675
10 . 257,480,227
17 255,184.882
24 . 257,458,074
May
1. 260,4:15,160
8. 268,486,372
May

April
April
April
April

.• ,

active demand for

bills, rates have ad¬
rent on our last.quotations,, the present figures for
sterling leaving as light profit upon the shipment of
a

dsviationsfrom the returns

95/01,000 2/52,378 3,823,5 .7

Exchange.—There has been a more

bills; and with

last week.

report, same as

Legal Tenders.. .../.«Dec. 1,426,657
Circulation
- r::«
3 242,1S1 4,149,865
The following are the totals for a series of weeks past: Aggregate
8,572,846 4,580,497
Legal
Circula-

135% 123,647,000
135% 150,117,000
136*

No

The

117,223,000 $4,658,808 $6,596/66
(Holiday.)
135% 83,386,000 3,00^,936 3,690,673

-

.......

*

-BalancesGold. Currency.

Total
clearings.

136*

137

“

Wedu’day, “
Thursday, “
Friday,
“

Foreign

Clos¬

eat; est.
136* 187*

137

Saturday, July
Monday,
“

\

..

-Quotations.
Open- Low- High-

diminished: supply of cotton

tion.

269,498,897
270,275,952
274,935.461
275,919,609 ; 19,051,133
271,9>3,7351 19,4.53 580

15.
22.
29.
5.
•June
June 12.
June 19,
June 26
3.
July

May

May
May

UK),124/42.53,289,429) 766,581.026
193,986,905 50,859,258 856/06.045
265,341/00
186,214.1:0 49,622,483 ,886,224,023
260,431/32
.181,774,695 . 48,163/20 262,170,741
The following are the closing quotations of the different classes
258,368,471
179/29,467 40,737,263 846/68,30
of foreign bills, compared, with preceding weeks :
Philadelphia Bankf.—The following is the average condition
July 9.
July?.
June 25.
TJune 18/
109*© 109*
10b ©109* 109 © 109*
of *-he PhiladelDhia Banks for the week preceding Mpnday, July
109 ©109*
London CommM.
109*© 110
109*©109* 109*© 109*

prime bankers’

»■.

specie.

33,982,995
34,144,79»
19/25.444 34.19^,829.
20,257,140 34.214,785
2^4,520/67 31,217/73

.

.

•

do

da

Paris,tong......
do

-

6.17*©5.16*

.

t/torl. .r.... 5.15 ©5.48*

Antwerp
BwlXs r.
Hamburg

1

109*©108*
110*@110*

bkrs* Ing
do -thru

5.20 -©5.48*
- 5.20 ©5.18*
• •*•) 36*©
86*

110*© uo*
5.16*®5.15
6.13*@5.12*

110* ©lio*'
5.4 7&©5.15*
5.15 ©5.18*

©5.18* 5.17*®5.16*
5.30 ' ©5.18*i 5.17*@5.16*
36*© 35*
35*© 35*
40*© 40*
40*© 40*
40*© 40* 7 40*© . 40*
78*© 78*
78*© 78*
71 © 71*
-71 © -71*

5.20

11.0*© 110*
@5.14*
5.12*®5.11*
5.16* &5 15
5.16*®5.15

5.15

5, .1869

...

!

....

Capital.

Banks.

Philadelphia

'

Jl"

Total net'

Loans. Specie. L. Tend. Depos. Circulat’n
784.000
$5/06,000 $94,000 $1,171,000 $3,880,000 $1,000,060
4,196,194 55,750 1,1< 4,619' 3,079,607

717/00
1,090,000 5,082,738 23,670 1,235,972 3,670/71
626,000
2,009,000 2,328,000 9,200
631,000 1,397,000
477,156
Amsterdam
- 40*© - 40*
Commercial
810,000 2,436,000* ....
534,000 1,365,000
Mechanics’
800,000 2,519, (XX)
Frankfort
40*© 40*
736,000 2,278/0 .463,000
220,880
Bank N. Liberties
500,000 1,498,900 3 14,936
Bremen
78*© 78*
5 9,500 1,532,400
225,640
Southwark
250,000
Berlin
71 © 71*
307,000 1,007,525
179,085
Kensington
250,000 1,150,488 4,930
233,675 1/35,254
3,000
The transactions for the week at the Custom House and Sub- Penn Township...
6,610
600,000 1,396,077 1,419
390,686 1,433/15
1,410,325
449,803
Western
400/00
946:922
337,000
Treasury have been as follows :
1,528,500
216,035
Manufacturers’....
570,150 ! 872,787
673,666
249,856
-Sub-TreasuryCustom House.
588,000
250,000
Receipts. B’k of Commerce..
Payments.
3,503,000 20,000 1,0(K%000 2,779,000
Receipts.
179,757
983.299
1,000,000 1,435,446 4,572
297,382
$2,057,236 62 Girard
$2,642,895 85
270,000
June 28
200/00
767,857
< .. $270,476 60
221,74i6
2,819,854 70 Tradesmen’s
5,250
28
7,374,977
359,113
29
i - 266.468 91
300,000 1,092,934 2,100
927,688
474,816
4,187,758 35 Consolidation
2,263,269 73
212,310
—364,619 80
•30
759,783
400/00 1,276 827
210,617
2,242,289 75 City..
1,593,849 77
450,00(1
300,000 950,705 5*000
July 1.
-260,014 77
354,000 1,329,000
1,606,411 81 Commonwealth ...
4 346,843 20
221,000
9
-237,107 95
500,000 1,807,000 63,791
350,000 1,465,000
1,443,316 66 Corn Exchange....
3,897,647 50
795,4'00
Union
30 ,000 1,313,000
3
227,871 06
1/66,000 3,473,000
269,757
First,
1,000,000 3,662,000
357,500 1 007,150
$14,350,867 89
133,000
300,000 1. IKK), 600
Total..:.
$1,646,557 59 $22,119,483 33
545,000
167 000
87,809,109 31 Thiid
663,000
185,000
Four/
200,000
311,000
Balance in Sub-Treasury morning of June 28
129,000
; 455,000
219,000
150,000 728,000
542,000
198,000
$102,165,977 20 Sixth
240.500
607,000
250,000 *. 830,000
f
if'
f
: ’ f
1 .... ' .
249,000
22,119,483 33 Seventh
Deduct payments during the week.... _
Eighth
275,000 2,927,000 1,000 693,000 2,158,000 698,000
417.500
Central
750,000
340,000 1/13/00
175,000
Bank of Republic
1,000.000 1,980,000
655,000
-Balance on Saturday evening...
$80,016,493 87 Exchange
208,000
300,000 893,000
Decrease during the week
7,762,615 54
Total amount of Gold Certificates issued,
Total..
.. 16,055,150 53/37,521 303,621
14,031,449 41,321,537
in the receipts of customs are $79,000 in gold and
The deviations from last week’s returns are as follows:
o

-

,

35*© '36

40*®
.40*®
79,. ®
71*©

40*
40*
79*
i 71*

North America

...

Farmers’ & Mech..

*

.

.

....

-

‘

-

*

•

..

.

*

—

“

•

-.

“

'

•

“

>

*

»

•

. ..

i

*

•

$6,084,000. Included

...

10,618,846

$1,567,558 in

gold certificates..
—
New; York City Banks.—The following statement shows
oonditiqn of the Associated Banks of New York
endiqg at the

commencement of business on
,

.

Loans
Hawks.
New York

Capital. Discounts.

Manhattan

Merchants’
Methanlcs
Union.

America

Phoenix

City
Tradesmen’s
Fulton

Chemical
Merchants’ Exchange....

-National.

-AVXBABK
and

the

City lor. the week

July 3, 1869:

AMOUNT OF Net
Legal
Circnla •*'
Deposits. Tenders

Specie,

tlon.

,7C

$8,613,756 $3,930,451 $928/59 $5,709,95.4 $1,288,455
10,261 3/11/70
766/45
568,167
2,050,000 ■5;889,9'2 :'£,575,680 - 882,584 6,480,835 1,876,598
6,885.77$
8,000,000 -5.631,110
557,621 4/91.8*5 - 741,467
510,966 493/19 2,108.887 ' 446,16s
2,000,000
305,976
1.680
5,784/10 l,36J,96o
1/00,000 5/43/14 1/71,603
,000

’

3,000,000 ...6/88,083
l,800,o00 8/78,657,

1,000,006:5/43,027
1000,000 8/65,907
i 600,000 2,201,029
} 800 000 6,868,439

d/35,000 - 3/07/21
J/00,000._3 HO/88

800,000 2*412,200
"600,000 "2/94,719
200,OOO'l.067,667
Leather Mahuf. Nationalf -600,000 2,659/32
;
:u..
1 .i ■---.... -- 1j.—
i
• * '
;
... .
-Batchert’.-.
i
Mechanics and Traders*.
.Greenwich........ T..... .7

i
.

519,9*8
681,297
90/10
185,738
482/96
r35/16
261,299
38,900
81,790

528,615

2,855,152

i

1,610,329

i* 8,411,103
754,922 1,497,205

449,353
4S9/6I
262,400
195,720

3,138

821,904 * 267,481

695,074
175,00o
511,96s
429,434

4,480,846 1,156/fti
83?/9i
2/84,942
813,68s
1,176,735
1,665,600 . 417.60
1,464.852
456/1
844,720
155,28’,

1,472/81

507,84°

Capital..
Loans

Specie
The annexed

Banks for a

Loans.

Date.

50,499,866
50,770,193
51,478,371

April 19
April 26
May
May
May

.

61,294,222

51,510,982
51,936,530
52,168,526
53,361,764

3
10
17
?4
31

June
June

7
14

June

21

June
J »’y

r

series of weeks;

April 5
April 12
M*y
May

Legal Tenders... Decrease. $535,878
Deposits
.....Decrease. 196,179
Increaso . 122,937 Circulation
..Decrease. 8,868
statement shows the condition of the Philadelphia

........Increase. $276,349

23

.

rawi*

62/10,874
52,826,357
53,124/00
53,8414,095
63,661,172

53/37,521

Circulation.
Specie. Legal Tend. Deposits.
10,623/96
35,3:5,854
12,169/21
189.003
10,629,1*8
36,029,133
12,643,357
384/46
10,629,425
87,031.747
12.941,783
167,818
10,624,407
13,640,063 ‘ 37,487,285
164,261
10.617,815
38,971/81
14,2-20,871
201,758
10,6 7.984|
39,478,-03
14.628,803
270,525
10 6 4,612
40,602,742
14,696,865
276,167
10.618,248
4t 081,410
-

.15,087,008
15,48«, 947
15,878,388
15,178,332 *

174,115
135,257
169,316

152,451

14 97S.1V8

148,795
180,684
*

SO 1,621

14,567,827
-

14,031,449

42,847,819

1(1,618 566

42,391',330
42,005,077

10,619,890

41,517,716

10.622,70$

42.066,601

41,321,537

10,621,922
10,«17,86«

10,618,841

46

THE

CHRONICLE

[July 10,186 J

SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE,

REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, JULY
9, TOGETHER
WITH THE AMOUNT OF BONDS AND NUMBER OF SHARES SOLD AT BOTH BOARDS IN THE SAME WEEK.
STOCKS AND

Satur. Mon

SECURITIES.

American Gold Coin (Gold Room).. 136)4
National:
United States 6s, 1881
coupon. U7k
do
do
6s, 1881. .registered. in*
do
do
do
io
Jo
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do.
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

6s, 5-20s(’62)cow/wm.
6s, 5-20s doregxsCd
68,5*20s (’64) coujxm.
68, 5.20s doregist'd
6s, 5.20s (’65) coupon
6e, 5.20s do regisVd
6s, 5.20s (’65 n.) coup
6b, 5.20s do regisVd
68, 5.208(1867) coup.
6e, 5.20s do regWd
68,5.20s (1868) coup
6s, 5.20s do regis'd
6b, Oregon War 1881
6s,
do. (* y'rly)
6s, Currency
5s, 1871. ....coupon
5s, 1871.. registered.
58, 1874
coupon.
5s, 1874. .registered.

Tubs.

Fri.

I'burs

kV cii

9
©

135k 136k 135k 136

h“

117k 116k 117k 118

<<!

121

117k
117k

117

—

l’.7k

117k 117k

117 k

118k

—

116k

—

116

—

——

118

118k

118* H9k
117

—

—

—

117

116

117 >4

6

117k

',500

do

—

106

31.000

—

—

—

—

—

108k

108k

601.500

—

—

iosk

—

3l,100

—

Georgia 6b

7e (new)
do
Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860
—

6s,cou.,’79,aft.’60-62-65-70

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

69
—

—

—

67k

—

—

—

87k

—

84

88

89

67k

67k

—

—

87k

87k

-

*

—

—

—

r

'

108k 108*

"

—..

57

56

55

54

50k

49k

48*

46k

i62
58

*61*

—

105

112k H2k
115

do

do

2d

165

108k 107k

109

130

—

700
200
900

144k

162k 159k
142k

pref 60

680
270

—

165

129k 129

144

—

17,550

118

143

—

It 9%

300
700

—

119

—

—

130

2.860
412

—

109k

15,393
125

Ohioand

73

•-—

75

84%
89k

74*
86k
89k

—

85k
89k

74k
85k

3,400

5,115
919

——

193k 189k 194% 195%

15,600

scrip.
104k

100

Mississippi

105

33

100
100

do
do
pref
33,000 Panama..../
100
5,000 Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chic. 100 157k
Reading.
50 98k
59,00i Home,Watertown &
Ogdcnshurg —

57

57

57

x57k *57
61k

—

.

92k

—

do
do

—

32

52*

152

150k
*93%

31k
285
*150

155

97k

Jersey City Water Loan

—

New York 5s, 1870
.

_

_

Bank Mocks
American Exchange
Bank of America
Bank of New York....
Bank of Republic

—

—

-

:

100

114

—

22

—

100
100

15

3,200
20

—

96k

98

1,850
7,261

—

100
100

111

99

100

—

111

110

5
98

108
123
99

—

30
20

L13

—

,100

103

25

’.’.’.’.100
100
50
_100
100

Park
Shoe & Leather
State of New York

’.!..100

XeV,h
Union

104

Hlk

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

95

10
20
10

—

94

94

_

Stocks :
;
25
50

100
100

Cumberland
Delaware and Hudson.. .100

Pennsylvania
JVilbs Barre

ImjrovemetU.—Bost.Wat.

—

131

—

—

Pow.100

Cary...

Telegraph.—Western Union
& leamehip.— Atlantic Mail
Pacific Mail

Union Navigation

R tpress.—Adams

i5k

Mining.- Mariposa Gold

62k
39

37k

90k

89 k

90k

89k

60k

59k

59

58 k

40k 40k

40

70

—

is*
69k
26k

39k

37k

60*

41k

—

—

—

100 26
100

Mariposa 1st preferred.... —
Manposa preferred
100
Qltcfcailver
loo
ieceUaneow—Bankers & Bro. Aw

96

—

94

—

-

—

27k

.

26k

83k 83k

83%

13/00

83

91.000

12,000
—

m.

2d mortgage,
3d mortgage,

1879
1883
mortgage, 1880

—

93
87

—

—

1,

88k

2,000
3,000

82k

—

mortgage
Great Western, 1st mortgage, 1888.

87k

—

.

78

-

78

1,000
8,000

—

—

Land grant

Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869.
do
2d mort, (S. F.), ’85
Illinois Central bonds
Lake Shore, div. bonds
Marietta & Cin., let mort

120
91

500

2,500

—

Mariposa Trustee 10 ctfs
Michigan Central 8s, new, 1882.... 128
Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund.

-

128

--

98

—

—

—

7,000
99

11,000

93

—

—

—

6,000
—

—

—

—

98k

—

98k

5 000

4,0,0
4,000
8,000

—

92
—

—

4,585

do
do

do
do

do

ICO
——

71k
22

15

600

do

1,000
1,000

82*

7,000
6,0t0

1,000

—

—

—

76

—

7,100

—

—

—

—

—

equipment...
cods,

32

con

—

83

—

Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw,1st W.D
do

—

KOk

—

300

—

—

Pen'nsular, 1st mortgage
ouih ide, 1st mortgage
6,450
St. Louis, Alton & Terre H, lstm.
do
%do
do
1,916
2d, pref
do
,do
do
income. 75k
1,155 8t Louis A Iron Mountain, 1st m..
do
Jacksonville & Chic, 1st
110; Toledo & Wabash, 1st mort.,ext..
do
do
4/40
2d mortgage,
do
do

9ik

—-

2d mort.
3d mort.

do

91

91
—

Pittsb’g,Ft. Wayne & Chic., 1st m.

”

do
do

16
16

7,000

•

31

—

93k

100

100
500
American and M. Union. 100
Merchants’ Union
.100
United States
100

...

—

95

*94%

—

....

161
100
100
100
100

American

Wells,Fargo &Co

130
65

—

6,000
—

—

—

Brunswick City Land....—

Canton

2d

do

do
do
conv
New York Central 6s,1883
10
do
do
6s 1887
N. Y. & New Haven 6s
New Jersey Central 1st
do
do
new
10c Ohio and Mississippi ,1st
mortgage
do
do
consol, bonds

—

50
50
50

Gas.-Manhattan

108

——

—

2d mort.

do
do
2d mort.,7s...
Milwaukee and St. Paul, lstmort..
10
do
do
2d mort
do
do
8s 1st mort
do
do
7 3-10 corn
“ do 1st Iowa... —
do
Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage...
do
do
2d mortgage...

—

10C

Ashburton
Central

do

do

4th
61 h

—

1

Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1569-72

138

50

Ocean

do
do

1,000

\s

—

Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868
do
do

—

1st mort.
consolid’ted

do
do

do

100
50
50

Nassau
Ninth

*108

Western, 2d mortgage
Ilan. & St. Jos., 1st convertible..

Importers and Traders
Manufacturers & Merchants....100

Exchange

—

Great

50
100

Metropolitan

30

2,290
—

Income

do

-do

100 112
100

Corn Excharge
Fourth
Gal! a in

do

59k
iik

—

74k

Delaw’e, Lackawan. & West, 1st m.

100

Central
Commonwealth
Commerce
Continental

_

Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mort
6,non Chicago, R. I. and Pac, 7 percent..
Cleve. P.acd ABhtnbula, new
Clevelandand Pittsburg, cons
do
do
2d mortgage...
do
do
4th mortgage..
Clevelandand Toledo, Sink’g Fund
No.
£3k
Col., Chi. & Ind. Central 1st

—

—

5e, 1875
6s, 1878

do

36,OOo Chicago & Great Eastern, lstmort
Chicago
523,000 Chic & & Milwaukee, 1st mort...
Northwest.,Sinking Fund,
11,000
do
do
Interest b’nds

*60k

6s. Park Loan




103

8,525
4,737
13,275

—

37*
108%

—

163k

do

B

Municipal :
Brooklyn 6s, Water Loan

Goal.—American

76

104

*oiiet

& Chicago
Lake rhore
Lake Shore and Mich. South...

25

—

37k

144

Chicago,Burl’ton & Quincy, 8 p. c.

6s, (new)
6s, (reg.)

Miscellaneous

300
<

74

38
105
113

113

do
do
do pref.’00
Toledo, Wabash and Western. .100 73k
3,000
dov
do
do preflOO
3,000
Railroad Rond*:
36,000 American Dock
& Improvement 7s
Central Pacific gold bonds
537,000
Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund
do
do
1st mortgage..

—

—

Virginiafis, (old)

Mechanics

im
—

-

80* 80*
94* 95* 95%
15k 116% 116%

96

10< 119

—

—

—

Manhattan
Merchants
Merchants

—

stonington
Louis, Alton & Terre Haute.100

'

do
do

4,368

St.

do
68, 1874
do
7s, State B’yB’de(coup) 108*
do
do
do
(reg.) 57k
North Carolina,6s
do
?6s (old)
50
do
'
6s, (new)
Ohio 6s, 1870
South Carolina 6b
South Carolina 6s, new
Tennessee 5s
do
6s (old)
57k
do
6s, (new)

do

8H,

1CK

.

do
do
New Jersey
Norwich & Worcester

...

New York 6s, 1872
do
68,1873

190

—

—

do
do 1877
War Loan

Michigan 6s, 1878
Missouri6s,...
do
6e,(Han. & St. Jos. RR.)

do
do

—

—

158

Mo.

..

—

Louisiana 6s.
Louisiana 6s Levee Bonds
8s Levee Bonds..
do

pref

6,000
1,100 Michigan So. and N. Indiana
.100
Milwaukee and St. Paul
100 16k
do
do
pref...10i
Morris & Essex
50 89k
New Haven ana Hartford
100
NewTork Central
100 195k
New York and New Haven
100

—

'do Registered, 1860

Harlem...
do
pref

52,000

63k
—

Wek’sSaloi

98k1
-

—

6,000

—

108k 107k 108

5s

Kentucky 6s

97

97

—

106

106

92

Indiana 5s

do

1<(

Hannibal and St. Joseph

Alabama 8s

do
do
do

CL

—

*63,OUO Dubuque & Sioux City

—

5s, 10-408 ...coupon. lOSk

California, 7s
Connecticut 6s

99
160

O

—

—

116k 116k 116k 117k

—

5s, IQ-Ms.registered.

Frl

_

—

State :
do

Weii. TharfW

-

loik
160k

317,600
do
do preferred
173,000 Chicago, Burlington and QuincylOf
186,000 Chicago and Great Eastern....
8,000 Chicago and Northwestern....
83
129,500
do
do
»6k
pref
118k
Chicago, Rock Island and Pac
521,300 Cleveland, Col. Cin. and Ind..
24/6,0 Columbus C. & Ind. Cent.....
38
2,268,500
106k

116k 116 k ii7k

-

—

116*
116k

Taes

•

s

11,500

H8k 118

116k

Railroad Stocks

Mod

Saiai

$217,000

U7k ink
121k 121k 121k

££>

118%

STOCKS AND SECURITIES.

—

—

CL

122

Week’sSales

do

Lorg Dock Improvementbds

—

8,000

E.D
—

•

1—

__

■

47

CHRONICLE.

THE

July 10,1869.)

Joint Companies” of New Jersey.—With the view to .procure
funds for the improvement of the canal and railroads of
com¬
u

®f)c ftailtnajj jltonttar.

theuoited

panies, the stockholders of the New Jersey Railroad and Transporta¬
tion Company, the Delaware and Raritan Canal Company, the Ca mden
Railroad Earnings (weekly).—In the following table we com¬ and
Amboy Railroad and Transportation Company, and the Philadel
pare the reported weekly gross earnings of the leading railroads ohia and Trenton Railroad Company, are entitled to subscribe at par
for J5 per cent of the amount of stock which shall stand in their names
for several weeks in 1868 and 1869 :
on the books of the
said companies, collectively, on the lfth day of
liles of .—Gross earn’gs—,
Week.
Dec. .July uext, at the commencement of the day ; the stock thus subscribed
Inc.
1868.
1869.
road.
Railroads.
for to be stock of the said three first-named companies, and to be con¬
17,826
301,241
r 283,414
Chicago and N. West’n. 1st, June
38,513
305,426
266,913
tributed by them in proportion to the present amount of capital stock
2d, 44
1,152 \ 252,278 286,522
34,213
3d, “
of each company ; and each stockholder entitled to a fractional part of
402
{ 364,937 365,139
4th, “
a share shall be allowed to subscribe there! r a full share ; but no frac¬
41,979
134,400
tional subscription received. The subscriptions will close August 10th.
89,421
Chicago, R. Iel, &Pac..lst, June
f 89,203 126,800 37,597
2d,
41
Every stockholder holding less than seven shares will be entitle 1 to
35,026
1 99,374 134,400
3d,
44
subscribe for one shaie.
The installments on account of the new stock
l 88,299 112,200 23,901
4th, 44
shall be paid in cash, in two installments • f 60 per cent each, as fol¬
1,745
90,888
r 92,633
lows : First—Fifty dollars a share at the time of subscription—between
Michigan Central
3d, Apr.
9,266
75,567
84,833
1st, May
285
the 2‘2d day i f July and the 16th day of August, 1869* Second—
1,783
] 82,20 1 83,987 9,152
3d,
75,812
l 66,660
Fifty dollars a share between the 2‘2d day of January and the 10th
3d, June
day of February, 1870. Stockholders failing to subscribe v ithin the
21,970
140,818
r 118,848
Michigan Southern*.. .4th, May 1
13,618
time mentioned, or neglecting to pay tie installments when due, will
99,765
lat, June I 624
81.449
j 86,147 92,017 10,568
forfeit their right to the new stock.
44
2d,
[
9,771
•

•

•

•

“

44

“

“

•

“

44

....

•

....

•

•

•

“

“

44

44

•

44

44

....

44

44

•

•

•

•

•

•

....

—

....

►

•*

44

4

44

,

“

44

,

,

,

...

J

44

3d,

1

.

Milwaukee & St. Paul..2d, Apr. ')
44
‘4
3d,
44
( 825
44
44
4th, 44
f
44
44
4th, May J

90,S03

81,0x2

....

Oil Creek

Alleghany River Railroad

and

Company.—This Com¬

Commissioners of its Sinking Fund will pur¬
several stockholders at par, five per cent of the capital of the stock as it may stand
3,610
27,' 38
r 30,648
4th, May ”1
Western Union
the books of the Company on the 1st of Julj, 1869.
Those who
5,185
21,629
16,444
1 st, June ! 180
elect to sell that amount of their stock at par for cash, must notify the
19 330
1,254
20,584
2d,
‘4
f
366 Commissioners of the fact, and
17,842
18,208
preseut their certificates before the 20th
3d,
44
J
of July.
The transfer books of the Company are to be removed to
—The annual statement of the Michigan Central Railroad tor the
Pittsburg after the 1st proximo.
year ending May 31,1869, shows the following results :
—A bill has passed the Senate of Florida in aid of the railroads in
EARNINGS.
that State.
It is proposed to issue bonds t<» the amount of $14,000 a
From
$1,795,806 11
mile, to aid in ex'ending the Pensacola and Georgia road to Mobile, all
From freight.
2,755, 00 48
From miscellaneous
155,286 30 $4,716,292 89 the bonds to be issued at the same time. The second proposition is
for the State to endorse to the extent eff $14,000 a mile the bonds of
The ordinary expenses of operating, including local
any company undertaking to l.uild a road from Gainsville to Tampa.
taxation and taxes on dividend, have been
$2,698,278 72
Paid into sinking fund
84,500 00 2,059,778 72 The indorsed bonds to be issued as sections of five miles are completed.
jjffisTFor other railroad items see “ Commercial and Miscellaneous
Leaving for interest and dividends
•. 1,663,514 00
44

44

44

[

•

•

pany

75,679

234,400

158,721

“

|

gives notice that the

....

....

« »

chase for investment, on

....

and after August 2d, from the

on

....

4 4

44

\

*

....

....

-

—*

paid

Interest and exchange

News”

$1,017,343 54
The proper net earnings above those of the last year have been
$115,935, and the excess of gross earnings, $246,000. The amount of
the pinking fund from the current earnings is now $1,851,599 85.
There is

outstanding

fir ating debt.

no

The funded debt now stands at
Lee amount paid into sinking

$5 153,488 S'*

deb1; at
capiial stock amounts to

1,351,599 35
$3,801,889 54
11,197,343 00

Bonded debt and stock to..,

$14,999,237 54

fund

Leaving the not bonded
The

The bon led debt
of bonds into stock

decreased during the year by conversion
by the amount ot $1,815,600, and the stock of the
has been

Company has been correspondingly increased,
enlarged by a stuck dividend during the year
ing to $904,400.
,




•

(1,152 rn.) (1,152 m.)
$724,890
696,147
807,478
574,664
850.192
757,134
774,280
1,094,597
1 206,796
895,712
898,357 1,167,544
880,324 1,091,466

1,063,236
1,451,284
1,541,056

x,210,387
918,088

1,265,831

1,518,483

(1,152m.)
$871,218

..Jan...

827,254 .Feb...
1,140,258. ..Mar..
1,092,378. .April.,
1,269,931. ..may..,
1,258,284. .June...
..July,.
..Aug...
...Sep...
...Oct...

1,574,905

1,135,334
1,001,892

.Nov...
.Dec...

.

.

..Year..

224,621
272,454

297,464
276,431

268,369

301.952

297,625
276,681
297,512
f 444,024
'sS 506,403

316,708

$304,097
283,669
375,210
362,783
333,952

284,977
313,021
398,993
464,776
506,295

(377,063

April.
.May..

428,702

487,867

..Sep..

412,933

330,373

390,671

639,435

...Oct...
Nov..
Dec.

$542,416
525,498
627,960
590,557
586,484
507,451

537,381
606,217

669,037
784,801
690,.>08
678.726

942,126

1868.

..Year..

423,341
370,757

1869.

..

t

.

,

,

685.554

,

,

# f

746,999

8^041,181

.

~

«•

*

v-

• »

446,596
350,837

Nov,...

Dec •• •»

*,Y«ar~

338,335
373,735
452,4 <9
399,299
365,1! 6
308,50 J
437,600
621,326
6 43,886
436,398
437,502

$149,658
*

149,342
174,152

168,162

1868.

(210 m.)
$127,594
133,392
149,165
155,388
130,545

1868.

(708 m.)
$647,119

508,000.

$587,442
536,165
414,413

524,871

417,071
440,271

518,MI0

477,007
6 J 6,494

572,551
626,248

525,242

.June..

450,886 ..©cl

454,081 ..Nov

613,330

7,160,991

1868.

1867.

1869.

(521 in )

Jan...

$385,901.
357,409. ..Feb...
453,481. ..Mar
..

..

.April.*

445,791. ..May...
408,139. .June..

..July..
..Aug ..
...Sep...
...Oct....

(820 m.)

(735 m.)
$319,765
240,756
261,145
310,268

$369,7*8
321.202

...

1867.

(251 rn.)

(708 m.)

$681,676.

522,68'

751 739*7

1,624,045

..Nov.*
..Dec.-.

5,683,609

78,976

..Feb.

1

1867.

(210 rn.)
$132.6-»2 ..Jan...
127,817. .Feb...
175,950. .Mar...
171,868. A pril.
157,397. .May...
.

276,630

317,052

p'6,594

96,535
114,716
121,217

..Aug..

...Sep..

142,823

...Oct...
.Nov..
.Dec..

.July..

809,591
364,728
382,996
406,706
351,759
HU7.948

283, > 8;
484,208
450,203
429,89 \
823,279

171,499

143,986
204,596
196,436
210,473
174,500
157,o79

8,507 930

1,923,863

.Aug...

.Sept...
.Oct....,
.Nov:..,
.Dec....
Fear

<.

119,169

121,408

1,258,713 1,294,095

..Year

Paul.—.

i

Ohio A Mississippi —»
181«.
1869.
(340 m
(340 rn.) (340 m.)
1867.

1869.

(825 m.)

$242,793

$451,130. .Jan..
330,233. ..Feb.
.

^

219,064

279,647

284,729
282,939
240,135

234,633
322,521

365,372

$211,973 $180,366
231,351
216,080
265,905
2.1,459
252,149
214.469
214,619 218,6399
217,082

194,455
287,557

307,122

....Oct..

379 367

283,329

.Nov..
..Dec,,,

336,066

274,636

272,053

233,861

,.

Year

.

3,450,819

-

2,961,039 6,508,689

Western Union,
1867.

1869.
1521 rn.)

1868a

(180 m.)
(180 m.)
$46,415
$39,679

1869.
180 m.)

..Feb...

27.666

40,708

$41,990
42,200

352,764

..Mar...

61,557

April..

36,392
40,710
57,852

39,191

32

49,233

41 592

70,168

68,473

2,529

...Jan...

.May...

60,558

June..

July..

..

•

Aug...
Sept...
Oct,...

.Nov,.

Dec..

899,438

fc.78a,S*) 4,013,30

111,036

121,519
12 >,065

123,383

.

109.528

95,924
108,413
126,556

132,387

.

3i

140,408

103,55

.June.
..J uly.

31:

260,529

1869

98,4S2

257,799
286,825
293 344

•

(251 m.)

108,461
95,416

(521 rn.)
$237,674 $278,712 $284,192
265 137
200,793 265.136

(521 rn.)

•

$98,51
91,667

84,652

6,517,645
1S68.

.

••

81.599

72,768
90,526

-Toledo. W b. A Western
\jL!rr1
loito
1QtIf

1869.

.

•

1868.

(251 rn.)

61'8,730. ..Mar.,
595, .355. .April.
655 046 .May,

1,101,713 $1,017,463
q766,617*3 656,917
g 438,32520 468,879

Year.

•

Y409,568
(361,700

$94,136 $92,433

..Jan.

558 782.

420,774. ..Mar..

423 397

£ 503.745

-Mariettaand Cincinnati

1869.

460,287. .April.
630,844. ..May..
678,800 ..June.
...July.
...Aug..
....Sep.,

365,404
350,564

.

..

3,892,861 >4,508,642

436,412
565.718
458,190

486,1%

330,169

833.507

401,892
369,358

•

.

558,100

426,752
359,103

....

..Year..

7,817,620

Milwaukee A St.

s

408,999

..Dec

••

6^1,040

804,810

204.096

415.982

'

477,795 ..Sept...

685,400

329,078

230,340

407,888 ..Aug...

889,966
931,529

823,901
727,809

.

•

549,714
794,325

709,326
738,530

..Ycar..'

478.514.

(708 m.)

.June..

171,736
156,065
172,933
220,788
919,160

.

.

..

5,094,421

Alton & T. Haute.

(210 rn.)

...

,

497,250
368,581

.

4,613.743 4,981,149
St. L.
1867.

(468 m.) (468 rn.)
Jan...
505,505 $625,721
.Feb...
585,997
604,316
745,503 ...Mar...
689,317
729,777 ..April..
770,198
656,284 ...May..
615,600
..Jane..
601,239
July...
656,828
,.Ang.„.
656,424
Sept.*,
781.569
Oct • •.»
82\639
,

477,528

..Aug
..Sep...
..Oct...
..Nov..
..Dec...

1868.

Aug1.

Mar.

410,815

1867.

641,491

.July..

(524 m.)
$362,021

392,942
456,974

4,570,014
-?ittsb.. Ft. W., A Chicago.-

528,618
526,959

475,257
483,857

Jan. .
319,441. ..Feb..
645,789. ..Mar..
362,900. .April.
419,000. ..May .

$351,767.

4,797,461

4,358,611

312,879

4,371,071

462,674

1869.

g 424,5S9
433,434

.July..

.Feb..

352,169
341,266

..

395,286

Illinois Central.

591,209

SJ 599,548

821,013

fan.

.

355,447

380,796
400,116

451,477
474,441

1867.

^558,386
S

June.

(329 in.)
$343,-90 $384,119
32 1,636.
304,115
326,880 386,527
411,814
415,758
401,646.
369,625
325,501

318,219
421,008

459,370

(431 rn.)
(280 m.)
(280 m.)
Jan....
$243,787 $276,116 $339,762
304,827
275,139
157,8132
..Feb
267,094
893,648
235,961
.Marcli
279.121
331,148
282,165
..April..
303 342
345.556
335,510
..May...
(384,564
J une..
342,357
354,244 J.404 012
J uly...

$394,771

377,852
438,046
443,029

388,480
394,533

668,380

(524 in.)
$305,857
311,088
379,761
391,163
358,601
304,232

(329 m.)

$361,137

1869.

1868.

1867.

(507 m.)

408,864

341,885

1867.

1868

(507 m.)

(507 m.)

$504,y92

Chicago and Alton.

*

1868.

1867.

1866.

-Mich.So. & N.Indiana.-

511 820

(468 rn.)

378,416

3,442,274

Michigan Central.—
1809.

1867.
(329 m.)

(454 m.)
$308,587

(410 m.)
$292,047

.

1,712,248 13,429,534

1868.

PRINCIPAL RAILROADS.

-Atlantic A Great Western.—*

5,476,276

and has also beeD further
of ten per cent, amount¬

1867.

1869.

1868.

previous page.

EARNINGS OF

Chic., Bock Is. and Pacific

-Chicago A Northwestern1867

on a

net

Leaving, above all expenses,

'

646,170 63

• • •

.

.

Year..

'

68,2b2
73,525
126,4%
110 667

79/481
54,718

77,339
59,762
84 607

97,338
91,599
57,

15,470

$VM,971

-*

[July 10.

THE CHRONICLE.

48

AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.
Dividend.
great Dividend. giving ns Immediate COMPANIES any error discovered In our
favor by
notice of
Stock

RAILROAD, CANAL,
Subscriber* will confer a
companies

Marked thus *are leased road*
I n dividend col. x =- extra* «

cash, s

=

stock.

Stock
out¬

Periods.

standing.

Railroad.
par
Jan. & July
Atlantic A St. Lawrence*.. 100 2,494.000 Jan. A July
1,232,100
100 733,700 Jan A July
Atlanta & West Point
Augusta & Savanuah*
100 18,151,962 April A Oct
Baltimore and Ohio
100
April A Oct
Washington Branch*.. ..100 1,650,000
Parkersburg

60

Branch

Quarterly.
10C 600,000 Jan. A July
Berkshire*..
250,000
Blossburg and Corning*.... 50
July
Boston and Albany
100 14,934,100 Jan. A Nov.
800,000 May &
Boston,Con. & Montr’al.pref 100
18,939,800
Boston, Hartford and Erie. .100
Boston and Lowell
500 2,169,000 Jan. A July
Jan.
Boston and Maine,
100 4,550,000 Jan. A July
A July
3,360,000
Providence
100
Baffalo, New York, & Krie*100

Boston ana

Camden
Camden and Atlantic
preferred
do
do

Cape Cod

Catawissa*
,

10C

Chicago and Alton,

5,432,000

-

Quincy,

do'

do

5

July *6fl
July ’69

1%
2%

July’69
May ’69

Jan.

July ‘69
July 69
July ’69

4
5

prefl00 17,856,287

do

June’69

Apr. ’69
Chicago, Rock Isl.& PacificlOOj 14,000.000 April A Oct Ap’l ’69
Cine., Ham. A Dayton
100 3,521,664 April A Oct
371,100

Cincin..RicrnndAChicago*100

and Clevel. 50
do pref. 50
Cincinnati and Zanesville... 50
Cleveland, Col., Cin. A Ind.100
Cleveland & Mahoning*.... 50
Cin.. Sandusky,

21%
131
141
133

3
2
5
5
15

195

Rome,Watert. A
do

95%

116>,
5
bds

.

,

.

3% 74%
«%
108%
2
37
2%
3
5

75

8%
3
5
4

Milwaukee
100 452,850
do
pref. 50 2,095,000
2 142,250
Dubuque and Sioux City*..100
ao

do

pref.100 1,983.170

do preferred
■Fitchburg

Georgia
Hannibal and St.

100
100
100

112

3%
3%

May ’69
July 69

2%
3%

Feb.’66
Jan. ’68

7

Joseph... 100
do pref.100
Hartford &N.Haven
100
100
Housatonic preferred
Hudson River
100
Huntingdon & Broad Top *. 50
do
do pref. 50
Illinois Central,
100
Indianapolis, Cin.& Lafay’te 50
do

8.536.900 January.
3,540,000 Jan. A July July 69
4,156,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’69

1,822,000
5,078,000
3,300,000 Quarterly. June’69
July ’69
2,000,000
13,932,700 April A Oct Ap’l ’69
494,380

jan. A July

Jan.‘68
Feb. A Aug. Aug. ’69
6,185,897 Mar. A Sep Sep.’67
2,000,000 Jan. A July Jan.’66

190,750

25,277,270

Jeffersonv.tMad.<fc[ndianap.lOO
Joliet and Chicago*
100
•Joliet and N. Indiana .... 100
Lackawanna A Blooms burg 50
Juake Shore & Mich. SouthlOO
do guar.100
.'
do

July

2

Feb. A Aug

do

do

108%

• •

4

114#

72*

5s.
5
8
4

July ’69
Feb.’69

.rtp’l ’69

108*’ 109**
32%

32%

’

98%

3%

2%
98

3

*4"

2*0 ’ 288*’

6

113% 113%

61%

62%

93%

98%

105#

ice"

4
58
5
4

2%

150* 154*

3
3
5

Ap’l’ ’69

3%

’69

33
80

32

3%

Feb. ’69

2.30 >,000

62

73

13%
81

99%
60

98
130

102
131

Canal.
129%; 130

Chesapeake and Del
Delaware Division*
Delaware and Hndson

118

220
164% 165

'3%

144

5
4
5

50 1,983,563

June A Dec June’69

50 1,633,350 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’69
...
.100 15,000,000 Feb. A Aug Feb. '69
100 4,999,400 Feb. A Aug Feb.’69
Delaware A Raritan,
May ’67
May A
Lehigh Coal A Navigation . 50 8,739,800 Jan. A Nov Jan. ’69
July
728,100
Monongahela Navigat. Co. 50
Morris (consolidated)
100 1,025,000 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’69
Feb. A Aug
do
preferred
100 1,175,000
! Pennsylvania
4,300,000
5:>
Feb. 67
Feb. A
Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.) 50 1,908,207 Feb. A Aug Ftb. ’67
Aug
2,888,977
do
prefer.. 50
Susquehanna A Tide-Water 50 2,002,746
Union, preferred
50 2,907,850
Jau. ’65
West Branch A Susquehan. 50 1,100,000 Jan. A July

118% 119

3
4
4

57

84

4
5
4

•

Sit )

Feb.’69

Ju y

’

107
100

4

^

Jan. A July July ’69
Jau. A July July 69
Jan. A July Ju'y ’69

100 3,383,300
Georgia. 100 2,141,970
East Tennessee & Virginia 100 1,902,000
600,000!May A Nov
Elmira and Williamsport*.. 50
500,000'Jan. A July
do
do
pref. 50
100 57,765,300'Feb. A Aug
Erie,
—

Eastern, (Mass)
East Tennessee &

3%

si

85

3*

130

Delaware,Lacka.,AWcstern 50

Detroit and
do

100

Il.TOOl

Jan. A

A

8% 81%

pref.100 2,040,000 Annually. May ’69
St.Louis,Jackeonv.A Chic*lC0 1,469,429
9)1,841
Sandusky,Mansf. ANewark.100
f 76,050 Jan. A July July ’69
8*
Schuylkill Valley* ......... 50
Feb.’69
869,450 Feb. & Aug Jan. ’69
Shamokin Val.AI'ottsvillo* 50
2
Jan. A July
Shore Line Railway
.100 635,200
South Carolina
50 5,819,275
75 ' Sonth Side(P.AL.)
100 1.305.600 Feb. A Aug Feb.’69
210,900
South West. Georgia
100
109 ' Syracuse, Bingh’ton A N.Y100 1,314,130
37% Terre Haute A Indianapolis 50 1,988,150 Jan. & July July '69
;
Toledo, Peoria, A Warsaw. 1,00 2,700,000
do
do 1st pret.100 1.700.600
do
do 2d pref.100 1,000,000
Toledo, Wab A West
100 9,500,000 May
May '69
131
A
do
do
preferred.100, 1,000,000 Jan. A Nov Jan.'69
July
(Jtica and Black River
100 1,497,700
4
Vermont and Canada*
100 2,250,000 June A Dec Juic’69
2
A July Jan 69
Vermont A Massachusetts.. 100 2,860,000 Jan.
112% Virginia Central,
100 3,353.679
cASOs
Virginia and Tennessee
100 2,94',791
555,500
do
pref.100
do
102% Western (N. Carolina)
100 2,227,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’64
2,707,693
Western Union (Wis. A Ill.)..
560,000
do
do
pref....
Wilmington A Manchester. 100 1,147,018
1,463,775
Wilmington A Weldon
Worcester and Nashua
1( 0 1,550,000 Jan. A July July '69

95

r

preferred

80% St. Lonis, Alton, A Terre

80),

5

2,500,000

.100

A Oct

Bid.

rate

July! July ’69

50

Ogdeneb’glOO

Rutland

do

'

FRIDAY.

300.500

Raritan and Delaware Bay* .10C 2.530.700
Rensselaer A Saratoga con.100 2,850,000 April
Richmond and Danville ... 100 4,000,000
100 847.100
Richmond A Petersb.,

80
161
ItO

77
15 i

2,989.090

393,073 May A Nov Nov. ’6ti
1,676,345
10,460,900 Feb. A Aug Feb.
2,056,750 May A NovjMay
Cleveland and Pittsburg .. 50 5,958,775 Quarterly. Jul * ’69
Columbus, Chic.AInd.Cent*100 11,100 000 Quarterly. Oct. ’67
Columbus and Xenia*.
50 1,786,800 Dec A June June’69
May
Concord
50 1,500,000' Jan. A Nov;Nov. 68
A July July 69
350,000
Concord and Portsmouth.. .100
Ja". ’69
Conn. APassump. pref
100 1,822,100 Jan. A July July ’69
Connecticut River
100 1,700,000 Jan. A July. A pi ’69
Cumberland Valley
50 1,316,900 Apr. A Oct.
Dayton and Michigan * .. .100 2,400,000 j
Delaware*
25 891,206'Jan. A July July ’69
14,100,690!Jan. A July July '69

Jan. A

Table**.

paid.

June’69
do
preferredlOO 3,844,400 June A Dec Ju
y ’69
Oil Creek A Allegheny Itivcrf.O 4,259,450 Quarterly.
135
5
Jan. A July July '69
Old Colony and Newport. 100 4,913,420
3%
Orange and Alexandria ... 100 2,0(53,655 Feb. A
4
Aug Feb.’69
Oswego and Syracuse....
50 482,400
Panama
■
100 7,000,000 Quarterly. July ’69
Nov
130) 230* Pennsylvania
...
50 27.040,762 May A July May ’69
A
6,004,200
Philadelphia and Erie*
50 2,400,001' Jan. A July Jan. ’69
Jan.
do preferred ..
do
Phila. and Reading,
50 26.280,350 Jan. A July July *69
Apr. A Oct A pi ’69
30
26
Phila.,Germant.ANorrist’n* 50 1.587.700 Jan. A July July ’69
72
Phila.,Wilming.A Baltimore 50 9,084.300
3
Pittsburg andConnellsville. 50 1,793.926
Quarterly. July ’69
Pittsb.,Ft.W. A Chicago. .100 11,500,000 Jan. A
5
July Jan. ’69
581.100
Portland A Kennebec (new)100
2% 98)4
1,500,000 June A Dec June’69
Portland,Saco, APortsm’th. 100
3
July ’69
Providence and Worcester. .100 1,900,000 Jan. A July

A July July ’69

June A Dec June *69

2,000,000

3,150,000
.100 2.363.700 Jap. A July
Annually.
Ogdensb. A L. Champlain.. UK) 3,023,500
do
preferred.100 1,000,000, Apr. A Oct
Ohio and Mississippi
100 19,522,900
North Pennsylvania
Norwich and Worcester*^

99%

5
3

4.666.800 June A Dec
Jan. A July
2,500.000 June A Dec
f 00,000
do
2,085,925 Jan. A July
5.141.800 Mar A Sep. Mar.’69
2,425,400 Mar A Sep. Mar.’69
12,500,000 Mar. A Sep. Mar. ’69

Chicago, Iowa & Nebraska* 100
Chicago and Milwaukee* ..100 2,227,000
Chicago A Nor’west
100*14,555,675

c

4

Ap’l ’69

Periods.

standing.

Las t
Dale.

187.500 Jan. A July Jan. ’68
June A Dec June’69
Northern of N. Hampshire. 100 3,068,400
Northern Central,
50 4,798,900! Quarterly. jMay ’69
898,950
North Eastern (S. Car.) ...
155,000 May A Nov
do
8p.c., prei
North Carolina
100 4,000,000
North Missouri
.100 7,500,000

3%

Junc’69
Jan. ‘69
Dec ’68
Juno ’69
July ’69

15,000,000

preferredlOO
100
Chicago and Great Eastern. 100 4,390,000
1,000,000

do
Chic. Bur. &

July '69
Ap’l ’69

8SO.000

preferred
& Missouri *100
Central Georgia A B’a’g Co.100
Central of New Jersey
10G
Central Ohio
50
do
preferred.... - .50
Cheshire, preferred
100
do

July ’69

Jan. ’69

out¬

New York, Pro v. A Bos ton. 100
Norfolk A Petersburg, prellOO
do ■*
guar.100
do

2
4

5,000,001' Feb. A Aug Feb. ’69
50 377,100
50 731,200 Jau. A July July 69
801,905
60 1,159.500
50
50 2,200,003 May & Nov Nov.’6v

Cedar Rapids

Bid. Ask

rate

leased roads
=■ extra ^ c=-

arc

col. x
cash, s — stock.

In

paid.

1,235,000

Missouri Itiv.lOO
do
prof. ...100
and Amboy,
100

Burlington &
do

Last
Date,

950 000 June A Dec June’69
’69
6,000,000 Feb. A Aug Feb.

100

Buffalo and Erie

~Marked thus *
dividend

FRIDAY

r.69.

8
4
5
5
3
3

60%

10s

20%

1%
300,000 Quarterly; Ap’l ’69
4
300,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’69
1.335.600
Miscellaneous.
109% 109%
4
26 592,100 Feb. A Aug Aug ’69
50
6
£6
Feb. A Aug Feb. ’69
63*,500
Coal— American
25 1,500,000 Mar. A Sep. Mar.’69
2%
Ap’l ‘69
Quarterly.
Ashburton
; 50 2,500,000
Lehigh Valley
50 16,058,150 Jan. A July Jan.’69 3
60c
514,646
500,000 Jun. A Dec. Dec. ’68
Butler
25
Lexington and Frankfort...100
3%
June A Dec •lune *69
85*
Hi
Little Miam
*
50 3,572,400 Jan. A July Jnly *69
Cameron
4%
2,646,100
Consolidation
100 5,000,000
Little Schuylkill*
. 50
2
64
Aug. ’66
3,000,000
Central
100 2,000,000 Jan. A July July ’69
Long Island
. 50
4%
31%
Jan. ’69
211,121 Jan. A July
Louis vill*, Cin, A Lex preflOO
Cumberland
100 5,000,000
3
216
Jan.’69
3,200,000 Quarterly. Feb. M)
Louisville and Frankfort . 50 1,109,594 Jan. A July Feb.’69
Pennsylvania
.. 50
50
3
Jan. A July Jan. ’69
7,869,686 Feb. A Aug
Louisville and Nashville.. ..100
Spring Mountain
50 1,250,000
2,800,000
Louisville, New Alb. A ChiclOO
60
2
10 1,000,000
Spruce Hill
55
Macon and Western
100 2,000,000 June A Dec June ’69
Wilkesbarre
100 3,400,000 Apr. A Oct
Aug.’66
22
24
Maine Central
100 1.611.500
Wyoming Valley
100 1,250.000 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’69
3s.
190* 200
Marietta & Cincin., 1st pref. 50 8,130,719 Mar. A Sep Sep.’66
9
9%( Gas.—Brooklyn
25 2,000,000 Feb. A Aug Jan.’69
3s.
160
A Sep Sep.’66
do
do 2d pref 50 4,460,368 Mar.
1,200,000 Jan. A July F.
Citizens (Brooklyn).... 20
b.’69
Feb. A Aug.
2,029,778
Common
do
Harlem
50 1,000,000
5
386,000 Jan. A July Jon.'69
Manchester and Lawrenee.,100 1,000,000 May A Nov May ’69
1
Jersey City A Hoboken 20
3
245*’
June’69
5,312,725
Manhattan
50 4,000,000 Jan. A July Jan.*69
Memphis & Chariest
.100 11,197,348 Jan. A July July '69 5 128% 129
Michigan Central,
100
74% 75
Metropolitan
100 2,800,000
14j,'
Jan. 69
Nov. ’6S
A
100 7,151,069 Jan. A July Jan. ’69 7&10s 85% 85%
Milwaukee and St. Paul
New Yorit
50 1,000,000 May A Nov Jan. ’69
8,188,272 January.
750.000 Jan.
July
do
preferred
:.100
107
50
William burg
4
62*’ 65 ”
Mine Hill A SGh’lkill Uav.* 50 3.775.600 Jan. A July July *69
731,2*0
Improvement.Qan ton
16% 4,000,000
15% 16%
2,948.785
July ’66
-...100
MLssissipp Central*
Boston Water Power. .100
37% 38
^
825,407
40,859,400 Jan. A July Ju y ’69
Mississipp. A Tennessee 100
'Telegraph.-- Western Union 100
68% 58%
Mobile and Ohio
100 4,269,820
10,000,000 Quarterly. npr.’68
4
Express.—Adams
100
A Dec Dec. ’67
89
Moi.lgomery and W. Point.100 1,644,104 June &
89%
Am. Merchants’ Union .IOC 18,00 .,000
3%
2% 70% 72
July July ’69
4.823.500 Jan.
i United States
Morris and Essex*
.. 50
100 6.00 .i 00 Quarterly. May ’69
5
24% 24%
720,000 May A Nov May ’69
Naslina and Lowell
100
Well«, Fargo A Co.. .100 10,000 000
2%
2,056,544
Quarterly. Dec.’67
Nashville & Chattanooga ..100
5
Steamship.—Mai.. .100 4,000,000
S0%
3
A Aug
Naugatuck
....100 1.818.900 Feb. A July Feb.’69
Pacific Mail
100120,000,000 Quarterly. June’ 69 6 90%
4
July *69
500,000 Jan.
New Bedford and Taunton .100
Tivst.—Farmers’L.ATrusi 25 1,000,000 Jan. A July July ’69
3
4
Jan. A July
July ’69
New Haven A NorthvwptonlOO 1,500,000
133
100 1,000,000 Jan. A July Feb.’69 10
National Trust
5
A
Feb. A Aug
New Jersey,
100 6,250,000 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’69
New York Life A TrustlOO 1,000,000
4
4
Sep. Sep. ’68
995,000 Mar
Newlxmdrr Ncitt-«rr
.. inn
Union Trust
....100 1.000,000 Jan. A July July ’69
5
Jan. A July July 69
N. Orleans, Ope. & Gt WestlOO 4,G98,425
195% 195%
United States Trust.... 100 1,500,000
4
*8*’
AAup Aug. ’69
Now Yorki-'entrai
um 20.795 non Feb do
Mining.—Mariposa Gold
4
100 2,836,600
15
16%
Aug. ’69
do
do
int. certifslOO 22.829.600
142% 145
4
Mariposa Gold Prefer d.100 8,648,400 Jan. A
45
41
’69
New York and Harlem
50 5,500, GO0 Jan. A July July ’69
July
9,824,000
do
Trustees certifl
4
M* •
Jan. A July July
Fob '66 gvld 16
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

.

.

.

t

....

....

....

...

....

....

....

....

.

.

.

.

.

.

•

....

•

•

•

•

•

.

...

...

....

*

*

*

*

..

....

••

•

....

....

,

....

....

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

...

...

•

•

•

.

•

....

New York A

Harlem pref.. 50

N, Y. and New Haven



100

jan.A July July ’69

6

f

t

• •

•

...

«.

•

....

*■

• •

135*

1

...

Quicksilver

....

100 10,000,000

• f •

l

• •

• -

•

•

Sab.crib-rs it

given in detail in the 2d col

ing.

it is expressed by the figures
in brackets after the Co’s name.

*

It all road t
Atlantic dk Gt. Western ($45,701,806):
1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa-) 1
1st Mortgage, sinking f d, (N.Y>)

Mortgage, sinking Pd, (Ohio) }- $7,144,400
Mortgage eink’g f’d (Buff, ex)
Mortgage Franklin Br
J
Mortgage, (Pa )...
.*)
do
(N.Y.)
>• 3,908,100
2d
do
)
(Ohio)
18,917 500
Consolidated Bonds
7,000,000
2d Mortgage Consolidated
8,701,806

Income Bonds

Albany & Susquehan a: 1st A.ort.
2d

.

Mortgage

1,COG,000
802,000
1,000, coo

Alort(Portlaud) 1,500,000

375,900
484,000
885,236
863,250

Sterling Bonds....

do
of 1864
B iltimore and Ohio: Mort (S.F.) 1855
do
do

529.500

1850
1&53

1,710,500
740,000
Billefontaine : Belief.* Ind.,lstmort
Ind. Pitts. & Cleveland, 1st mort.
379,000
do
341,000
do
2d mort..
Belvidere I)eia.: 1st Mort. (guar.C A A) 1,000,000
499.500
2d Mort.
do
3d Mort.
745,000
do
2,051,520
Boston dkAlbany: Sterling Bonds..
593,000
Albany Bonds

798,000
204,000

Dollar Bonds

Boston, Cone. dk Montreal'. Mori Bds
Convertible Mort. Bonds

j 150,000
2(0,000

1

496,000

Sinking Fund Bonds
Bost.y Hart. A Erie ($14,904,350):
do
do
do
new....
^

do

do
do
guaran.
Boston and Lowell: Bonds o. Ju y ’6
do
of Oct. 1864

ioi,oro
200,000

400,000

Buffalo tft Erie: Common Bonds...
do
do
do

do
do
d)

do
do
do
do

do

do

100,000,
200,000

...

...

300,000

...

2,700,000

...

2,000,000
380,000

Buffalo, N. Y. and Erie: 1st mort..
2d

Mortgage
Burlington dk Missouri:
Bonds conv. into pref. stock
do
do

do
do

do
do
Income Bonds

600,000
600,000

....

....

Land mortgage bonds
Camden and Amboy ($10,264,463): .
Dollar Loans
do
do
Dollar Loan
Consolidated ($5,000,000) Loan...

1,200,000
1,000,* 00
5,000,090
323,220
675,000
1,700,000
867,000
4,665,940

1,632,290
do
do
1,632,290
new loan
490,000
Camden and Atlantic: 1st Mortgage
498,000
2d Mortgage
286.500
Catawissa : ($371 000) 1st Mortgage.
766,000
Central Georgia: 1st Mortgage
900,000
Central of New Jersey : 1st Mortgage
600,000
2d Mortgage
1,500,000
Mortgage bonds ol 1S90

Sterling at $4 84 to the £

2,500,000
Central Ohio : 1st Mort
Central Pacific of Cal.: 1st mortgage 18,500,000
1,500,000
Convertible Bonds
Chic and Alton: 1st Mort. (S F), prel
1st
do
do
income
2d
Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,488,750):
Trust Mortgage (S. F.)
Chicago and Gt. Eastern 1st Mort..

Chic, and MUw. : 1st Mort. (consol.

Chicago dk Northwest. ($16,251,000):
Preferred Sinking Fund

.

Interest Bonds
Consol. S. F. Bonds,
Extension Bonds

conv.

1,100,000
3,078,000
5,600,000
1,098,000

1.249.500
3.595.500
755,000

Mortgage
till 1870

3,422,000
,

Equipment Bonds
Equipment Bonds
Chicago, Rock Island dk Pacific:
1st Mortgage (C. A It. I.)
1st
do
(C., R. I., A Pac)....
Cine., Ham. dk Dayton : 2d Mort...
3d Mortgage

Cine. & Indiana: 1st Mort
do
2d Mort
do

484.000,

3d

do

....

V».,Pain, dk Ashtabula: IstM. B’de
2d Mort. Bonds
3d
do

Payable.

<

Railroad:
Zonn. and Passumpsic R. : 1st mort
Cumberland Valley:(352,400) 1st Mort

1877
1879
1876
1884
Jane & Dec 1882
Ap’l & Oct. 1882
1881
do
Jan. & July 1883
1895

2d
do
'avion and Michigan :
2d Mortgage

do
do
do

•

•

•

•

•

1st
2d

1SF8
1885
P85
Ap’l * Oct. 870
1871
do
May & Nov. 1878
Ap’l & Oct. 1884
Jan. & July 1875
1880
do
Ap’l & Oct. 1885
Jan. & July ’70-’7
1870
do
Ap’l & Oct. 1870
J’ne & Dec. 1877
M’ch A Sep 1885
Feb. & Aug 1887

..

1st

July
Ap’l & Oct.

j

*873

80

64)4
•

•

•

•

9J

....

•

1,000,000
eveland dk Pittsburg: 2d Mori gage; 1,130,000
1,598,000
3d Mortgage convertible
1,096,006
4th
do
375,000
Consol.Sinking Fund Mortgage..
Cleveland and Toledo:

•

•

•

•

.

looi

r

1883
1895
1898

Feb. A Aug 1885
1885
do
May & Nov. 1883
F.M A.AN. 1915
Feb. A Aug 1885

May A Nov
J’ne & Dec.
Feb. A Ana
M’ch A Sep
Jan. & July
do

April A Oct
M’ch A Sep
May & Nov.
Jan. * July 1892
May & Nov. 1900

Mortgage

.

.

(ind. in C. dk N. JK.):
sinking fund
do

Consolidated mortgage

Illinois tfe Southern Iowa

....

....

....

....

n

Marietta
•

•

800,000
700,000

307,000
612,000
485,000
800,000
900,000
409 000

200,000

1,234,000
1.953.500
1,4'9,000
807.500

600,000
175,000

150,000

Jan. A July
Jan. A July
Jan. A July
March A Sep

April A Oct
May A Nov. 1890
Jan. A July 1871
Jan. A

Columbus db Xenia: 1st Mortgage...

(joneecticut River :1stMort
Connecting (Philad. Iphia)




250,000

1,000,000

•

.

....

f •

var.

May A Nov.

var.

Feb. A Ang.|90-’91
June ADec.r70-’71

307.700

• •

•

•

• « •

»

1st
2d

Mortgage, sinking fund
do

t

IM« IMI

July 1597

Jan. A Jnl\

,

..

121

May A Nov.
Feb. A

6,728.000

2,698,000

Ang

May A Nov

isoi*
189(5

Apr. A Oct. 1874
Feb. A Aug.

1870

May A Nov 1880
Jan. A

July 1885

TJarchASep V*9-,72

April A Oclfc 1889
May A Nov. 1885
do

1877

86

90)4 91

1596

1,509,000
267,000
646,000
3.50- ,01 0
2,500,000

($2,532,000)

$1,100,000 Loan Bonds

•

July

79

June A Dec 1898
May A Nov 1883
April A Oct 1877
Jan. A July 1875
Feb. A Ang 890
May A Nov 1893

....

M’ch A Sep
~"‘ch A Sep 1878
Ch & Sep 19iQ

119)4

May A Nov. 1873

J in. A

....

248,(66

,

1,095,600

.

$400,000 Loan Bonds
1st Mortgage (City Bangor) Bonds.
2d
do
(P.AK.RR.) Bonds..

Sinking Fund Mortgage

10114
loi.k

2,116,000 7

Jan. A July 1885
2,015,000
621,000
Ap’l A Oct. 1886
1,090,000
800,000
Mortgage Bonds of 1866
Memrhis dk Chari.: 1st Mort. bonds 1,293,000
Columbus dk Indianapolis Central:
Jan A July
1st Mortgage ........ ............ 8,200,000
2d Mortgage bonds
1*000,000
May A Nov.
1,000,000
2d
do
Michigan Central, ($3,801,889)
Convertible
9-05.492.1
Columbus Chic, dk Ind. Central:
83 M
83
Ap’l A Oct. 1908
2,300,000
1st Mortgage Consolidated S. F .
207,(XX
Sicking Fund do
2d Mortgage
•
Mich. S. db N. Indiana:
1890
'

107
115

1,500,6: o

& Cincinnati: 1st Mol.

2d Mortgage,
Maine Central:

75
90

April A Oct 1896

600,000
1,898,000

500,000
200,000

Mortgage

..

73

3.055,00(1

’700,000

87X
76)4

1906
1873
1881
1882
1874
1875
1885
1880

1st mortgage (gold)
Ijehigh Valley: 1st Mortgage..
1st mortgage, new bonds
Little Miami : 1st Mortgage...
Little Schuylkill: 1st Mort sink.fund
Long Island : 1st Mortgage
Extension Bonds (Hunter’s Point),
do
do (Glen Cove Br.)..
Louisville, Cincinnati dk Lexington:
1st Mortgage (guaranteed)
Louisville and Nashville ($4,683,500):
1st Mortgage (Main stem)
lit Mortgage (Memphis Branch)
1st Mortgage (Leb. Br. Extreme)..

....

927,000
2,1 55 000
2,046,000
2,000,000
183,000
416,000
367.500
887,045

Jnn. A Jnly 1870
1868
1888
May A Nov 1893
1868
July,
1868
do
1868
do
April A Ocl 1881
Jan. A July 1883
Jnn. A July 1883
Jan. A July 1878
1876
do
Feb. A Aug 1870
J’ne A Dec 1885
May A Nov 1875
April A Oct 1870
Feb. A Ang 1875
April A Oct 1895

April A Oct
Feb. A Aug

April A Oct
April A Oct
May A Nov

Extension
Income Bonds
Lake Shore Div. Bonds
Lake Superioi' and Miss:

....

1882
1875
1884
878
70-75

1,961,000

..

....

do
do

77

1909

do

....

Aug

Aug

....

....

Feb. A

May A Nov.
Jan. A July

Feb. A

•

94

1877
1879
1883
do
April A Oct 1880
June A Dec 1888
M’ch A Sep 1875
Jan. A July 1882
April A Oct 1890
Jan. A July 1898

May A Nov.
M’ch A Sep

1,7C0,000

Mortgage

Extensi-

200,000
189,000
889.500
202,000
927,000
1,000,000
1,455,000
2,500,000
326,000

1885
do
M’ch A Sep 1888
Jan. A July 1880
April A Oct 2862

1888

mortgage, guar

do

1,919,000
1,029,000

Jan. A July 1872
Feb. A Aug 1874

April A fc’ct

Indianap. A Madison RR., let M.,
93)4 92)4
4..
92)4 Joliet dk Chicago : 1st Mort., sink, f
96% Joliet and N. Indiana: 1st Mortgage
Lackawanna dk Bloomsburg 1st Mort
88
2d

926.500
4,844,4(0
899,100
290,200
1,281,000

1894
18fc8

\

2,'O'1,000
600,000

Jeffersonville RR., 2d Mort

••

506,900
1,000,000
670,000

'**

.

’

Jeffersonville,Madison&Indianapolis.
1st

do

May A Nov.

1st Mort

Indianapolis and Vincennes:

95

Jan. A July 1883

1875
1890
1876
18S2

1st Mort (2d on I AC)
1st Mortgage I. AC....
let

1875
1886

us.

do
do
do
Feb. A Ang

Ind, Cine, dk Laf.

109
84
89

86

:

vari<

437,(00
2.560.500
2.424.500
300,000

Redemption bonds
Sterling Redemption bonds

May & Nov 1880

1885
1892
77-’8 T
1895
1900
1890
1893
69-8 4
1873
1876
1874
1880
1892'
1873
1875

.

Illinois Central:
Construction bonds, 1875
do
do
do 6 per cent

....

May A Nov 1875
May A Nov 1875
1878
various.
Feh. A Ang 1886
Feb. A Aug 1816

4,441,600

Huntingdon dkBroeul Top: let Mort.
2d Mortgage

.

$2,500,000

8,000,000
4,000,000
6,000,000

*

do
new
Grand Junction : Mortgage
Great West., 111.: 1st Mort., W, Div.
1st Mortgage Whole Line
2nd do
do
Greenville dk Columbia: 1st Mort..
Bonds guaranteed by State
Bonds unsecured
Hannibal <fe St. Jos.: Laud G’t Mort
Convertible Bonds
Harrisburg dk Lanc'r : New D. B’ds
Hartfoi'd dk New Haven : let Mort..
Hartf., Irov. dk Fishkill :.. .
Hudson River: 1st Mortgage
2d
do
sinking fund..
3d
do

*

1870
1875
90)4
do
88\
Feb. & Aug. 1883
May & Nov. 1889
J’ne A Dec. 1893
1880
Mar. & Sep.
Jan. & July 1873
Ap’l * Oct. 1879
Feb. & Aug 1882
Mar. A Sep. 1875
Feb. & Aug 1870
May & Nov. 1875 100 100
97
Feb. & Aug 1890
M’ch & Sep 1890
Jan. A July 95-’9 p
884
do
18S5
do
90
’75-’8 0 90
do
101
May A Nov. 1877
Jan. A July 1893
91* 93*
Ap’l A Oct. 1883

100)4
93)4

* *

*

1881
1871
1877

462.000

394,000
750,000
160,000

Elgin and State RR. Bonds.....
Georgia RR Bonds

*

.

-

Mississippi River Bridge Bonds

*

April A Oct 1875

MV-hA Sep
Jar A July
Ap’l A Oct

899,100

Consolidated Mortgage Bonds

Gal. & Chic. U.
1st Mortgage,
2d
do

J’ne A Dec. 1876
Ap’l A Oct. 1905
1910
do
Jan. A Jnly 1881
M’ch& cept 1884
’81-*94
do
Jan. A Jnly 1875
1875
do

300,000

Sterling convertible (£800,000)...
PitUburg: 1st Mortgage
2d

Payabb

660,000

cent. Bonds

v-1

FRIDAY

924,(.(0

Erie &

Jan. A July 1870
1896
do

1,000,000

81
05

664 000
2,310,000

1,006,640
1,611,639
250,000
250,000

do
do

Erie Railway ($22,370,982):
1st Mortgage (extended)
2d
do
convertible..
3d
do
4th
do
convertible
5th
do
do

„

J,000.000

Pennsylvania: Sink. Fund B’ds
Mort..

5 per

April & Oct

JaD. * July
June ADec.
Jan. A July
do
Feb. * Aug
June * Dec

.

Elmira dk Williamsport : 1st

1,397,000
7,375,000

654.500
500,000

East

....

!T7.

500,000
500,000
2,000,000
.560,000
997,000

do
do

....

133,000
1,925,000

1,250,000

Mortgage, convertible

Sinking Fund, conv. bonds.......
Eastern, Mass ($2,192,400):
Mortg age, convertible

!!!!

Jan. & July 1870
1875
do
1818
1379
April A Ocl 1893

July
Ap’l & Oct.
Jan. * July

do

:
1st Mort. Bonds 1st Div
Construction Bonds 2d Div

...

1879
J’ne & Dec. 1870
May & Nov 1873
Jan. A July 1882
Mar. & Sep, 18f6
April & Oct 1898
J’ne & Dec. 1877
May & Nov 1872

Jan. A

1,111,000
000

Mortgage, sinking fand

Dubuque and Sioux City

...

1889
Mar. A Sep. 1884
JaD A July 1899

Jan. A

100,000

:

2d Mortgage
let A 2d Funded Coupon Bonds..
Bonds of June 30, 1866
Detroit and Pontiac R.R
a>.,
do
do
Detroit, Monroe A. Toledo: 1st Mort

1870

July
Feb. & Aug

500,000

Laekn.and West. 1st Mort
Des Maine* Valley : i 3rat mort.Ponds
Income Bonds
Detroit and Milwaukee if 6.055,047)

....

.

1875
1865

Jan. &

642,000
169.500

Delaware: 1st Mortgage(912,250)

•

Jan. &

April & Oct
July
April & Oct
Feb. A Aug

•. •

1st Mortgage 2,837,000

Bonds guaranteed.
BelaLacka. dk Western

July
Ap’l & Oct.
May * Nov.

573,800
161,000
109, 00

Toledo Depot Bonds

•-

Ap.l & Oct

Jan. A

ing.

it is expressed bv the figures
in brackets after the Co’s name.

umn

CD

•H

Apr. * Oct. 1874
May * Nov.

Cincinnati Richmond dk Chicago.
G n. Sandusky <fe Cleveland: 1st Mort
976,092
: 2d Mortgage
1,300,000
Cincinnati & Zanesville .1st Mort
400,000
C eveland, Col. and Cine.: 1st Mort.
850,000
if'eveland dk Mahoning: 1st Mort
.

•

500,000
673,200
402,000
2,400,000
1

State Aid
Cheshire: Bonds

1st

N.B.—Where the total Funded Debt Amount
is not given in detail in the 2d col¬ outstand¬

Ap’l A Oct

1st
1st
1st
2d
2d

do
do

DESCRIPTION.

FRIDAY

INTEREST.

umn

Albany City bon is

will appear ftu tilts place next week.

.

N.H.—Where the total Funded Debt Amount
ontetand
is not

A tlanticdkSl. Law. lBt
2d Mortgage

I,63

“““railroad, canal and miscellaneous bond list.
11 confer a great favor br giving u» Immediate notice of any error discovered In drir Table*.
Bon(l Lint page it

DESCRIPTION

49

CHRONICLE.

THE

July 10, 18691

128
128

60

THE CHRONICLE.

[July 10,1869.
INSURANCE STOCK LIST.

SOUTHERN SECURITIES.

Marked thus (♦) are

Bid Asi

State Securities.
Alabama 8s

“

Pensacola & Georgia 1st in 7s
44
44
2dm 7s.

J*

fie, old
fie, new

“

80
40

83
45

“

7s, old
7s, new

“

“

8e, Lev

North

Caro!iua,

ti

b’ds

South Carolina fis, o d
“

fie,

“

new

ex-c

“

irginia ex-coupon bouds...
“

N. Or. Jack’n &

“

44

“

new

registered stock, old

“

“

ritr

“

“

“

“

bv State S. Carolina.
Spartensburg and Union 7s,

44

7s..

44

44

st’ek

North Eastern 1st mtg. fis...
2d
fis...
4
44
end. by Siate
Columbia and Augusiu 1st m
44

50

30

80

Gebhard

66*

75

& Geonria fis

—

by Smte Teon.
44

stock

..

Memphis and Ohio 10s
44
44

Memphis & L. 14Rock lsts, 8s

ALABAMA.

end

VIRGINIA

Montgomery and Euialla 1st
8s, gold bouds. endorsed by

67

Import’&Traders 25

44

—

2ds fis
Sds 8s
4ths8s

“
44

...

Orange & Alex. &> Man.
Va. & Tenn lets fis

8s, i nt
2 intg, 8s

41

8s income.
8tock

2ds 6s
3ds fis

14
44

Mebi e & Montg. RP, 1st m..
Mobile & Great North, lstsin
“Selma and Meridian 1st in. 8s
Alabama & Tenn. 1st m. 7s.
bel , Rome &;[)alt. 1st m. 7s.

lsts

.a..

44

2nds, fis

44

3ds, fis.

44

53

4tb, 8s

44

GEORGIA.

...

stock

44

Central RR. 1st intg. 7s

“
stock
South western R it., let mtg
“
slock

Augusta bonds
44

44

2d

“

3d m. us
4th m. 8s

44

end bonds
stock
“
& Brunsw'k end b. 7s
Macon & Bruuswick stock
“

....

92*

S2*

85

95

guart’d fis.

44

44

“

Fre'ksb’g & Poto. fis
44
,

44

“

conv.7s

44

“

‘

75
70
81

76

Manhattan..'

Lorillard*

44

2d

100

50

500,000
200,000
200,000
150,000
200,000
200,000

Metropolitan * t. .ICO
Montauk (B’klyn) 50
Nassau (B’klyn).. 50

83
74
74

72
66
72

200.000
1,000,000

25

300,000
150,000
150,000

Market*
100
Meehan’ & Trade’ 25
Mechanics (B’kly) 50

72

Mercantile
Merchants’

(iS

73*
65
73

80
74
72
83

82*

69
70
79

70
75
84
85

60
25

67,
30

25
80
78
82

30
85
82
S6

100

7&
New Amsterdam. 35
N. Y. Equitable.3 35
N.Y.Fire and Marl0<
Niagara
50
North American* 60
North River
25

National

77
75
85

100

Peter Cooper

People’s

20
/... 26

| Phoenix + Br’klyn 50

1,581,47’
300,’ 961

50

Reliei.

Republic*

100

)
)

66i;i8

Rutgers’

25

)

315,97!^

100

Resolute*

77*

St. Nicholast
Security t
Standard

70

Star

....

Sterling*
Stuyvesant

...

150,000 210,799
50 1,000,000 1,7 6,011
50 200,000
360,828
700 200,000 303,588
lr.O 200,0C0 255,368
25

25
UnitedStat.es
26
Washington
50
WilliamsburgCity 50
fonkers & N. Y.100

PETROLEUM STOCK LIST.

200,000

25

Tradesmen’s

261,76t2

*

150,000
250,000
400,000
250,000

500,000

303,270
368,661
4t4,023
764,629
525,074
822,981

10
10

10
11

Feb. ’69..5
Mar. ’69..6

5
to
14
20
20

Feb.’69 .51

14
10

10
14
10

Apr. '69.10
Jnly ’69..5

10

14

Jvn.
Jan.
Jan.
Jnn.

•

.

•

.r

15
12

.

20
20

14*
12
10

10
10
10
14

Jnne’t 9. .5 \
Feb. ’6°. .8
Jhii. ’69.10
Jan. ’69.10
14* • an. ’69. .3
10 July ’69..7
10 July ’69. .5
10 July ’69. .5
8
Mlg. ’68..4
9 Jnn. ’69..5
10 Jan. ’69..5
15 Jan ’69..8

Feb.’69..5

io

,

5

.

10

10

,.

,

10
12

7
10

..

..

•.

..

io
15
14
8
10

8*
11
10

do
do
do
do
Feb. and Aug
Jan. and July.
Feb. and Aug.
Jan. and July,
do
Feb. and Aug.
Feb. avd Aug.
Jan. and July,
do
Feb. and Aug.
Jan. and July,
do

8
10
7
7
10

10
18
12
10
11
0

10
10
10

’69..5

’69..5
’69..5
’69.10

"69. .5

Jan.
Jan.
Jan
Jan.

io

10

’69..5
’69..5

Apr. ’65. .5
July ’68..5
July '69. .5

.

10

’66. .3

Fe >.
Jan.
Jan;
Feb.

5
10
10

10

’69.10

May ’65. .6

,

10
10
10
20

10
12

,

Jan. ’69..5

’66 .5
’69. .5

’65. ’5

July’69..6

10
10
5
10
10
12
10
10

’69..S

Jan
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.

10
10
10
10 10
10 10
10 10 13
10 10 10
16 14 16
10 10 10
15 to 10
H 7 10
10 10 12
10 10 12
8 10 10
20 20 25

436,7 lr April and Oct. 8
397,37? Jan. and July 12
uo
10
281,2tr
251,36 Feb. and Aug to
215,934 Jan.and July 8

25

Pacific
Park

Richmond & York R let 8s..

79
41

77
46

..

Longlsland(B’kly) 50

fis

..

300,000
150,000

25

69f

382,382
182,719
532,490
22n,117

150,000

100

Lamar
Lenox

do
do
do
do
do
341,384
do
1,550,395
do
1,202,104
do
580,526
do
405,085
do
l86j>P0
do
262,895
do
429,161
do
427^267
do
218,610
do
328,84f
do
254^084
do
420,892
379,54f Jan. and July.
365,475: Feb. and Aug.
1,371,93t Jan. and July.
do
773,84?

280,000

Lafayette (B’klyn) 50

44

“

endorsed...
“
**
stocks..
Atlantic and Gulf 7s bonds
“
“
stocks...

Knickerbocker... 40

68

44
7* s
Richrn. &- Petersb. 1st m 7 3
44
2d m. 6sl...
3d m. 8s 95

30

..

..

m.

Norfolk & Petersburg 1 m 8f

75

72
91
25

90

.

.

lsts 8s

Southside, 1st mtg. 8s

Macon and Southwestern s’k

30

fu >d. int. 8e

Rich. & Panv. lsi cons’d 6s.
44
Piedmont bra’b

Georgia RR. 1st rntg

25

King’s Co’ty(Bkln 20

82*

4th, 8s

100

Jefferson

60
70

Virginia Central 2sts, fis.

loo

Irving

89
78
49
35
80

47*

60

International

f2*

60

.

Orange & Alex., lsts fis,.

25

65

•

endorsed

44

Montg’ry & West P. 1st, 8s..

100

78

36
25

fis

15
50
50

74

“

44

8s

—

Hope

Virginia fis, end

44

50

June’64..5
Jan. ’69..6
17* 14* Jan. ’U9..7
10 10 Jan. ’69..5
10 Jan. ’69. .5

,

.

50
50
25

Howard
Humboldt.

Memp. & Charleston lsts, 7s 88
2nds, 7s 76

State of Alabama
Mobile and Ohio, sterliug

paid.

10

,

,

100

Germania
Globe
Greenwich
Grocers’
Guardian
Hamilton
Hanover
Hoflman
Home

TENNESSEE.

East Tenn

“

’68 Last

10

,

,

Firemen’s
17
Firemen’s Fund.. 10
Firemen s Trust. 10
Fnlton
25
Gallatin
50

....

62
77
82
45

“

Railroad Securities.

“

Excelsior

Exchange

58
74
80
•10
82
72

61

...

“

Muscogee bonds

■

m

55

Wilmington, N. C., fis

“

...

Exchange.. 50
Eagle
40
Empire City
100

Corn

50

South Carolina Railroad 6s..

,

Commercial..... 50
Commonwealth ..100
Continental *
.11)0

guaranteed by State S. C..

63

Richmond fis
Savannah 7s, bonds

“

(N.Y.).IOO
(Alb’y)lOO

•

guar’d by state S. C

Petersburg 6s

Macon &

Commerce
Commerce

Chaileston and Savannah 6s,

44

44

100

71
87

65

Norlolk fis

.

Columbia*

u-m

m

22*

guar,

New Orleans fis bonds

11

100

91

75

rsashville fis

“

•

70

CAROLINA.

Charlotte & S Carolina 7s
Greenville and C -luinbia 6s,

“

“

•

(it)
83

SOUTH

“

“

■

12*

*•

Memphis past due coupous.
scrip,
Mobile, Ala., 5s, bonds
....
8s,
“

“

•

Chari. & Rutherf.
North Carolina 8s
stock

,

44

.

41

,

“

72*

20

Clinton

235,269 Jan. and July.
437,152 Jan. and July. 5
712,548 Tan. and July. 14
289,093 Jan. and July. 7*
250,000
310,566 Jan. and July.
250,000 430.652 Feb. and Aug. 10
300,000 495,319 March and Sep 10
200,000 210,241 May and Nov.
200,000
279,754 Feb. and Aug.
300,000 615,106 June and Dec. 10
200,000
333, •’66 Feb. and Aug. 12
153,000
326,135 Jan. and July. 20
300,000
633,354 Jan. and July. 20
210,000 427,977 ..Quarterly... 12*
250,000
357,918 Jan. and July. 10
do
300,000 436,321
do
10
200,000
250,723
400,000
641,464 Feb. and Aug. 10
200,000
302,767 Jan. and July. 10
415,978 Jan. and July. 10
250,000
500,000 2,066,854 Jan. and July. 14
400,000 426,073 March and Sep
300,000 532,877 April and Oct. 10
200,000 256,145 Jan. and July. 14
do
10
200,000
347,685
150,000 186,473 Feb. and Aug.
39 4,449 Jan. and July. 10
204,000
do
3*
150,000 204,832
do
150,000
206,289
do
10
200,000 303,247
150,000
147,066 May and Nov.
200,000 259,659 Feb. and Aug. 10
500,000 955,475 Jan. and July. 10
200,000 ; 282,419 Jail, and July. 10
3!* 3,732 Feb. and Aug. 1C
200,000
200,000
224,746 April and Oct.
200,000
235,860 Jan. and July. 7
do
8
150,000
242,293
do
10
400,000
650,682
do
5
200,000
207,140
do
to
2,000,000 3,966,282
do
150,000 225,779
do
12
600,000 723,988
do
200,000
266,099
do
200,000 265,377
530,000 1,117,492 Feb. and Aug. 7
200,000 330,424 Jan. and July. 10
200,010
329,240 March and Sep 10
150,000 238,875 Jan. and July. to
,

25
25
17

Citizens’

80
76
7
65

78

Opel.lsts, 8s
2ds, 8s

“

..

City

6

“
-

25
25

Bowery (N. Y.)
Broadway
Brooklyn

40

44

“

Baltic
Beekman

50

“
“
m 7s.

44

“

25
Atlantic (Br’klyn) 50

75
50

61

2d
3d
2d

50

A^stor

72
58

stock..

44

44

Atlama, Ga, 8s, bonds
Augusta, Ga., 7s, bonds
Charle-ton, ts. C fis, stock..
Columbia, S. C fis
Columbus, “ fis, bouds
Iredricksburg fis
Lynchbu-g fis
Maco i 6*. bonds
Memphis fis bonds, old
*•
fis, “
new
Memphis fie, end. by Memp.
and Charleston Railroad...
Memp! is fis, end. by Memp

V

,

44

Alexandria fis

lUs

,

89
Wilmington & Weldon 7s g’
Manchester 1 pfd 7s 75

Securlt'es.

“

,

NORTn CAROLINA.

I860
1867

& Little Rock & .>tate

,

•

“
44

“

“

5s.

•

70
:6
46

N. Orleans & Jackson lets,8s
“
14
cert, 8s

mpons
bouds

new

“

2d
3d

“

“

.

11

Mississippi 1st m. 7s.
“

8outh.

regist^’d s’ck

Tennessee

2d
44
stock
& Ten>i. 1st m. 7s
44
2d
“

0

.

70
56

....

new

“

•

44

“

•

Arctic
.

n

44

e...^

ex-coop

“

12*

pref st’k

Mississippi Cent, lsi, mtg. 7i

6s, Levee

“

’66 ’6

Periods.

Netas’te

Adriatic
25 $200,000
<Etna
50
300,000
American
50
200,000
American Exch’e.100
200,000

LOUISIANA.

M‘8SISSIPPI AND

bonds

new

“

At antic & West Point stock

Louisiana fie, ex-conpons...
“

dividends.

Ask

bonds, end. by Savannah..

5s

Georgia

write Marine Risks.

bid

Savannah, Albany.& Gulf 7s

.

“

Jan. 1, I860.

participaring, & (+)

Quotations by X. M. Welth & A rents. 9 New Street.

v

’69. .5
’69. .5
’69..5

ar.’69..5

July ’69..5
Jan. ’69. .5

July ’66. .5
Jan.
Jan.
Jau.
«L n.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.

’69. .6
’69..5
’69..3
'69.. 5
’69..5
.69..3
’69. .7*

July ’69. .5
Jn'y ’69. 5
Jan. ’69.10

July ’65. .5
Jnly .'69. .5
20 July ’69.10
12 Ou'y ’69. .6
10 Julp ’69. .5*

io

Jail. ’09..8

14
12

Feb. ’69. .7
Jan. ’('9. .5
Jan. ’fit). .5

10

10
10
10
16
10
1C

11

10

Jan.’69. .5

i.3

July '66..5
Feb. '69.. 7

u
10

Ap’l ’69..5
Jan. "69..5

Jnly '69. .5
Feb. ’69..6
10 to July ’69..6
10 10 Jan. ’69..5
10 10 Jan. ’69. .5
\

11
10

Feb. ’66..3*
Jan. “69. .5

July ’69. .5
F. b.
Jan.
J8n.
Jan.

'69. .5

’69..5
’69. .5
’69..7

Feb. ’69..5
Jan.

’69..5

July 69..5

copper mining stock list.
Bennehotf

Companies.

Bid. Askd

Companies.

par

10

40 Northern Light
Pit Hole Creek
65 Rathbone Oil Tract

1*60

10
10
100

Brevoort
Buchanan Farm

67
55

Central
Clinton Oil
Home
National
6
N. Y. & Alleghany, par 5

Bid. Askd

25

.

United Pe’tl’mF’ms....

-

United States

3 0<i

1 0)

.—

Bay State

2
.10

16
90

-

*

Charter Oak

-

1 00

!

—

—

Central
Concord
Copper Falls
Dana...:

GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST.

Davidson

Eagle River
Companies.

Bid. Askd

Companies.

Bid. Askd
1

Black Hawk
denton
Bullion Consolidated...

—

5
—

.

Combination Silver
Consolidated Gregory. .700
—

Gunnell Gold
Ham'.L011G.& S.b ds.
Harmon G. & S

Kipp & Buell
LaCrosse




1 55
•

•

.

•

6 (0
1 65

10
—

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

....

•

•

....

13

....

....

....

.

.

•

....

1 00

...

Smith & Parmelee

20

Syraonds Forks
•

2 15
....

100
—

..

•

•

•

,

.

1 10
....

—

Twin River Silver

jVandefbr

•

.

.

....

.

•

2 20
•

•

•

Hancock

—

5

•

.

.

.

.

•

•

•

«

Huron
Isle Royale*
Keweenaw

Knowlton..

Manhattan
Mendotat.
55 00 Mesnard
Minnesota
National
30 00 Native

8*i2

24)£

3%

—

*25

10>£ |

00(

Rockland
St. Clair
Schoolcraft
South Pewabic
80 00
35 00 South Side

87*COj

19

Star

33

Superior

i’50
•

Capital $200,000, In 20,000 shares.

^Capital of Lftko gnperlor *

•

•

•

....

19 00
30
....

....

....

—

76

6#
—

17
2
11X

11

Tremont

'*25 '*50
25

8

Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares,

•

esolute

3 50

5

•

20 00

10

uincyt
16

•

•

5M ’*25 i ro
3)4 5 (X* ’■0 88
10 CO 15 00
34

Petherick
Pewabic
Phoenix
Pontiac

16

25

....

"

7

Ogima

5%
—

2

6
5%
5
8
20
5)4
2

Pittsburg & Boston... 5)4

3\

--...23&
2#

Superior."

5 00, Madison

4

Humboldt....

—

.

Franklin....
Gardiner Hill
Hilton
Hecia

....

—

....

•

i4

....

—

....

•

.

Manhattan Silver
100
Montana
5
10
New York
New York & Eldorado

Owyhee
People’s G. & S. of Cal 5
6u Quartz Hill
25
50 Rocky Mountain

55
.

•

....

..

Corydon
Grass Valley

•

•

•

Evergreen Bluff
Flint rteel River

15

Bid. Askd

Companies.

,

Lake

25J£
1M

Caledonia
Calumet
Canada

....

.

! 1 00

....

Allouez ..."

io

10

Rynd Farm
Sherman <fc Barnsdale...

Albany & Boston

2 00
45

—

Bid. Askd

Companies.

t Capital $5Jo,000,in

100,0(1) eh?i ea

generally $50 .000 in 30,C00r

July 10, 1869.]

THE CHRONICLE.

51
\

■Jj i

Commercial ©imes.

Exportsof Leading Articles from New York.
The

following table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows
exports of leading articles of commerce from the port of New
Tort since
January 1, 1869. The export of each article to the
everal port* for the
past week can be obtained by deducting the

■

the

COMMERCIAL EPITOME.

-

amount in the last number of the Chronicle from that here

Fkfday Nioht. July 9.

The general markets the
past

CO©
•OiO

week have been quiet, as is
usual during
the few days which immediately follow the
National Holiday. The
stringency of the money market, and
the fluctuations in
gold, have also produced an unfavorable

of

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nt © P© OO tp

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following is

a statement

© 35

<5 ccco

TP © © ot TP -P

<

>

r* © t- tp oo tp ©

i

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© ct,

£— -

io

co" t-4 t—'

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1£3

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21 o* t- p- -p<

^GO ■—CO ©
r© o» tp

merchandise

at dates

COT*

: -i—i
•

CO* .j*"cfco

<f»io

© OO

CO

CO

of—*

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Tp

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Tp_©_00_fit oo_

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t—

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t* © LO Ot

-r_w
~

Bief, tierces

and barrels

28,a39
44,4H1
12,380
27,192
149,83)
85,020
66,691
127,952

Pork, barrels

Tobacco, foreign, bales
Tobacco, domestic, hogsheads

Coffee, Rio, bags
Coffee, other, bags
Coffee, Java, mats
•Sugar, hogsheads
Sugar, boxes

|

*'

143.137

June 1,

39,547
50,772
14,996
22,044

122,687
41,878
45,223
96.645

...

-to* tp ofco t-Tm
tp co co at co ©

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t-> :
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•

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•

•

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11,SOS

22,593

"C

0

173,000

i s,m

39, "00

37,400

60,000
65,154

©io

•

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•

cr.

•

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•

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425

317

1,495

•

6.770

8.100

20,640
8,246
24,800
n.aro
45,155

23,800
16.400
55,301
13.139
28.000

•

g.

O
(ft

700

700

1,700

(f»

?£
s

.

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Freights have been rather dull, though improving towards
close, both in business done and rates. But the spec¬
ulation in Wheat checks, and
any marked increase of tonnage
would probably result in a decline in rates.
the

(4 ©

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freely, but at 4T '.t ©
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some decline, closes
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one-third of the opening prices in June, is
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prices now
export demand and prices firm. Hay also rules steady.
Tallow is in demand for
export, and firm. Whiskey is doing
rather better, but is not active.

but

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dull, although foreign have been
by the decline in gold. Leather and skins

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27,586
29.600

5,043

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30,925
15,800
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14,900
22,200
1,577
16,000

WIOTCH

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flop.
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being fair for both spirits turpentine and rosin, the latter
being taken considerably for export, notwithstanding the
high rates current for ocean freights. Oils have been without
(4
essential change and little
2
doing. Petroleum has rather ft
favored holders. The effort to
depress prices has been so
long continued that there is some natural reaction.

which closes

*

•

.

I-

1,547
3,927
15,596
1,760

827

movement

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without

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have remained

East India

•

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somewhat favored
have been quiet.

•

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19,140

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1,650

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175

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20,000
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48,399
20,232

114.400
.

Hemp, bales

Tin, slabs
Spelter, tons
Lead, tons...-

Hides

•

.

168

Cotton, bales
Rosin, barrels
Crude turpentine, barrels
Spirits turpentine, barrels
Tar, barrels
Rice, E.I., bags
Rice, Carolina, casks
Gunny Cloth, bales
Gunny Bags, bales
Linseed, bags
Saltpetre, bags
Jute, bales

©

<7* rr

135,230
10 >,802

114,567

.......

Molasses, hogsheads
Molasses, barrels
Hides, No

-

ctH

02

76,469
7,511
31,8 >5
115,562
26.408
49,735
81,032

991

i

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13,817

S ugar, bags
Meltflo, hhds

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24,478

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July 1.

•

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1868.

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given :

1869-

July 1.

.

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of the stocks of leading articles
,

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foreign and domestic

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effect.

The

given.

.

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88

sgsll'*

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.

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CfLE.

52

1

it

— .

;

Articles.
'I r

Imports of Leading
’■

i

'

•

*•*:

-

_

of 5,383

in 1868:

week.

1869.

5,574
31,489

8.977

231,945

202,
76
116

17,853

7,864
4,915
2,974
41,419
12,519
651,5;)

3>

1,515

Earthenware...
Glass

Glassware

plate.....

Buttons'
Coal, tons

2,948
168

Cocoa, bags
Coffee’, bags
Cotton

bales

Drugs, &c.—
Bark, Peruvian
Blea powders
Brims'tone, tons

10,782

Cochineal
Cream Tartar..
Gambler
Gums, crude

5,457

19,261

12,403

476

373

1,757
4,048

1,917
2,671
5,088

5i
78

Indigo
Madder
Oils, essence....
OIL Olive

7

931
2

Opium
Soda, bi-carb...

Soda, sal

Soda, ash
Flax
Furs

-

750
522
402

7,390
-

119

36,221
385

53,113
20,395
21,748

3/152

45
is;
46.5

9'1
8.043

1,174

Cassia

17,9-5

1,853

Spices, &c—

3,302

55c

7,782
8,837

Mahogany

Receipts of Domestic Produce for
Jan. I.

the Week

we

871
10

17,510
11,383

3,802

1-581

5 J83

3,529

47,154

101,175

Receipts and

Exports of Cotton (bales) since
Stocks at Rates Mentioned.

92,116

Breadstuffs—
Flour .bbls.
Wheat .bus.
Corn
Oats

-

Rye
Malt

Barley

Spirits

tine

turpen¬

Rosin
1,299,695
570,823
Tar
6,723.516 8.916,697
Pitch
875,317 4,495,124 9,010,924
191,738 2,271,055 2,781,307 Oil cake, pkgs—
188,223 Oil, lard
199,617
3:33,619 oil, petroleum...
234,779
2,387
406,818 Peanuts, bags..
76,020
7/309
59,142 Provisions—
Rutter, pkgs....
‘387
2,317
4,951
Cheese
23.498
70,657
1,261
Cut,meat179,840
27,400
275
50'1'3
Eggs
81,665
Pork
214,o;o
1/275
181,101
Beef, pkgs
Lard, pkgs
8,272
11,377
Lard, kegs
5.6d7 3.71,049 363/273
591
7,206
10,295 Rice, pkgs
979 Starch
806
14,663
51
13,634 Stearine
5/528
3,318 Spelter, slabs
2,688

61,441
629,487

.

Grass seed
Flax seed
Beans
Peas
C. meal.blds
.

..

“

bags
Buckwh’t &
B.WJl’r pkg
Cotton, bales.

Copper..bbls.

1.

74,092

53,008
255,151

156,450

65,363

46,789

791,737 585.636 340,583 168*361
16,133
225,405 352,771 135,771
195,608 238,952 52,979
20,129
354.257 487,947, 130,814

Texas
New York

103,249 108,798 234.210

143,183

15.797

Florida
North Carolina

Same
time ’68

•

1,915
6,065
107

•

.

•

•

2,334
211

32/256

ports*

2318,122

55,717

4T,7o9
47,831

1,231

97,876

3,817

100

5,965

55,915

1637,4491737.133

102,188

(

m

% •

•

•

• •

”383

•

direct to manufacturers
bales, and for last year 175,000
- '! •
; ■
‘ ! ' ■ ' '♦ • '•

past week has been entirely
Very few buyers have shown themselves,

are

143,993

4,80
12,411
133,143

‘207

11,000

229

without inters
and yet stockreduced to so low a point that holders have manifested
little disposition to make concessions. Continued -favorable
accounts with regard to the growing crop* tba fair stocks: now
held by our mills and the failure of tlr&^gfGGds piarket to
respond to the late advance in the raw mafteriid, have for the

est.

86,008
60,383

25

301

17,510

The market the

218,809
2G6.992
61,504

347

6,178
3,499
2,321

970,619 219,810 227,525 1417,984 827,110

-

10*789

bales.

5.777

28.28C
6,996
315.853
24,433

341,173
219,478
63,928
109,499
63,052

421

.

22,629
59,681 313,849

2339,463 1218,544 196,660 222,245

....

14.733

7/725
35,527
6,232 149,689
23,345

to

689

4,708

.3,056
12,250

Fort*.

613,532 206:477
161/441 43,163
56,035 139,881
163,193 191.747
80,128
52,893

229

30,594

....

109,583
9,537

Total.

Ship¬
ments
Stock.
to Nor.

•Under this head we have added the overland shipments
April 21, as follows: for the present year 241,090

221.452
18.8W0

14.946

36,122

19/158

35,527 37,3^7
156,304 153,128
297,055 235,514 12,556

Total this year

28,926

32.583
288,779
55,118
2,006
60,540
4/261
402,112

108,734 57,499

Sept. 1, and

SEPT. 1 TO—

Other
Great
Britain France Forign

Mobile
Charleston
Savannah

New Orleans

and since

Since
Jan. 1.

1867.

1868.

Virginia

This
week.

3,252

5,111

EXPORTED SINCE

’receipts

Total last year
182

Ashes...pkgs.

usual table showing the movement
Sept. 1, a »,coraing to the latest

SINCE SEPT.

Other
Same
time ’68.

20,170

We do not include our telegrams to night, as
cannot insure the accuracy or obtain the detail necesvtrj

by telegraph.

week anJ since Jan. 1

Since
Jan. 1.

721

mail returns.

The receipts of domestic produce for the
and for the same time in 1868, have been as follows:
This
week.

1,911

208

478

TOUTS.

5,062
4,033

Logwood

225,501
122.359

16i,S60

129,607

WoodsCork
Fustic

1,161
596

328,400
119,311

2,684
66,015

Pepper
953 Saltpetre

4,129

479

1,449

•

213

86,889
20,558
128,834
3,431

175,428
22,846

•

67.481

is

.

4,391

23,337

Ivory..
Jeweiery, &c—
•Jewelry
Watches
Linseed
Molasses

Rice

69,521

59
1(

Hides, dressed.
India rubber

Raisins
Hides undressed

•

ago. The following
our
of cotton at all the ports since

254,917 146,369
619,072 509,041
495,287 299,184
640,894 702,400
93,822 5,797.593 3/300,190
197,135 567,307

Nuts

* *"'4,941
1,949

1,980
•

6,888
6,232
5,314

foregoing statement it will be seen that, compared
with the corresponding week of last season, there is an increase
in the exports this week of 1,854 bales, while the stocks to¬
night are 54,021 bales less than they were at this time a year

28,555
11/48
10,716

Oranges

663

3,135
7,349

1

Bristles

Fruits, &c—
Lemons

1,295

31

31,396

75*

'447

1868.

From the

564

103.640

313

1,980

Total

Articles report’d

20,081

3,39i
3,134
5,356
58,081

383

Hemp, bales
Hide’s,' &c—

46,608
52,990
14,985

4,955

Wines
Wool, bales

26,586

12

Hair

1,550

Champag’e.bks

1,579

180& rv'V 1869.
^51.11,384

Other ports

357,732
626,901
20,018

63,656

•

rr---Stock

Total Sam&weejc

this week.
1,108

1,579

Texas
New York

by value—
278 Cigars
$10,197 $432,798 $291,829
419
98,230
76.771
27,125 Corks
581 Fancy goods....
49,986 1,003,500 562.972
518
393,125 203,995
57,864 Fish

134

Gunny cloth




1,16!

....

109
79

*

1,103

Mobile
Charleston
Savannah...

276,481

519,760
636,644
21,822
1,400

13,254
4/207

5,099 Tobacco
2,455 Waste
877 Wines, &c—

2,92.-

275,425

13,695

& bbls
Sugars, boxes &

6,406
bags
15/278 Tea ...;.

16,610
9,8 <!6

Gum, Arabic...

-

255

526
583
76
20

.

July 9.
New Orleans

Hardware
8,675
24,033 436,864 301.201
22.778
Iron, RR bars.
9,762 296,240 226,653
Lead, pigs
183,498
231,925 7,405,102 3,176,096
36,922
Spelter, lbs
88.514 101/224
3,358
Steel
3,156
19,925 728,926 398,033
8.764
Tin, boxes
28,316
Tin’slabs,lbs.. 257,776 2,337,646 3,138.731
23.084
58,151
3,960
8,016 Rags
601,181 Sugar, hhds, tes

Exported to

,

G’t Britain. Contin’t.

r

1,871
3,144

2,164
2,503

67
45

’

156
855

China

Glass

Weekending

Metals, &c—
Cutlery

China, Glass and
Earthenware-

Sam*
timo
1868.

Since
For
Jan. 1,
the
1869.
week.

Same
lime
1868.

Since
Jan. 1,

the week, and also for the
corresponding week of last season, as telegraphed to us by
our own correspondents at the various ports lo-night:
give the exports and stocks for

we

specified.]

*

the

For

.

exports for the week ending this ei&iitig^ireach a total
bales, of which 3,802 were to Gieat Britain, and
1,581 bales to the Continent, while the stocks at all the ports
as made up this evening, are now 47,154 bales.
Below

followiag table, compiled from Custom House returns, show
he foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this port
or the last week, since /an. 1,1869, and for the corresponding period
The

[The quantity Is given In packages when not otherwise

1

The

C

•

.

■

•

9.309

the purchases of

time at least checked

7,427
71,782
8,424

spinners and made

speculators less confident. For these reasons the market has
been very quiet, and yet prices have been maintained until
Hemp ..bales.
678
2,052
297/264 bu^gar, hlids and
4,181
212,475
Hides ..'..No.
to day, when, under the continued influence of the money
264
4,561
1,426
3,3;3 Tallow, pkgs
41/596
1,511
Hops...bales.
61,378
40,667
3,816
556,785 Tobacco, pkgs...
47,341 1,433,030
Leather .sides
stringency and an entire absence of buyers, quotations fell off
48,231
30/22
3,377
3,477 Tobacco, niids...
1,33:
Lead —pigs.
12.135
93.417
2,707
Whiskey, bbls....
Molasses litids
slightly, middling uplands being quoted at the close at 34J@
39,278
37,453
6,729
80
& bbls.
10,950 Wool, bales
18,691
11,423
54,591
Dressed hogs No.
Naval Stores34|c., anl the market dull and heavy. ^ For forward delivery
23.640
.*...
Rice, rnuu:h busn
Cr. turpenthere has been considerable doing, the ^leaVi'eaching 2,720
271
tlne..bbl
4,729
9,641
bales (all low middling, or on the basisiojf loyyr‘ middling), of
COTTON.
which 1,600 bales were for December ; at 26c; 100 January
Friday, P. M., July 9, 1869.
also 26c; 200 November and December, and 100 December
By special telegrams received by us to-night from each of 10th and January 10th, at same price; also 100 November at
the Southern ports we are in possession of the returns show
26fc; 100 July, 33£c, and .100 same mouth at 33jc;100 for
ing the receipts, experts, &c., of cotton for the week end¬ December, 200 October and December, 120 November, all on
private terms. The total sales for immediate delivery this
ing this evening, July 9. From the figures thus obtained week foot up 7,891 bales (including 192 bales to arrive),
it appears that; the total receipts for the seven days have of which
6,454 bales were taken by spinners, 490 bales on
reached 4,G43 bales, (against 5,200 bales last week, 9,440 speculation, 946 bales for export,, and the: following are the
bales the previous week, and 11,536 hales three weeks since,) closing quotations:
Upland*
New
Florida.
*
Orlears
Texas.
Mobile.
making the aggregate receipts since September 1,1868, up to
Ordinary
V
28 ©....
28*®...,; ; '38%@....
28*®....
this date, 2,320,545 bales (of which 241,000 bales are over¬ Good Ordinary
30%@.
80%@
81 @ ... .31 %@....
Low Middling
33%@33%
33%@33%
83%@34
- 84 @34%
land shipments direct to the mills), against 2,340,187 bales (of Middling.
34*@34% / 34%@84% , 34%@S5
' 35 j @34^
Below we give the sales and price of' middling cotton
which 175,000 hales are overland shipments), for the same
this market each day of the past week:
period in 1867, being an excess last season over this season o
New
To al
Upland *
Texas
Orleana
Mobile.
19,642 hales. The details of the receipts for this week (as
sales. -Florida.
35 @...
34 %@....
35*@..
34%@....
1,645
Saturday
per: telegraph) and the corresponding week of 1868 are as Monday
35
“

plates.

Dr’d fruit.pkg
Grease

.pkgs.

17

362

2.198

..

...

,

,

.

....

•

follows:

r-Rcceipta.—,
Received this week at—
New Orleans
bales.
Mobile

;
:

.-Charleston
Savannah
•

;

Texas

I860.
1.070
411
558
532
'

...

fwneaeoe,' &c

1868.
277
22

160

170
930
199

995

TU

*—Receipt®.■—>
Received this week at-- 1869.
73
Florida
bales
69
North Carolina

Virginia
Total receipts
Increase this year

775

4,643
.,.. MMM

1868

Friday.

’

w

^

•

•

34*@....
3i%@ . .
84%@ ...

1,344
312

•j

'

34%@34*

-•»

-

.

•

2,515
2,065

.

@...

34%@....

34%@....

35
35

34*@ 44%

34%@35

34%@

m
.

.

...

@ .<
@...

85*0.^
‘35%@..

*35%@
35

@3.

•

6
131

The Growing

Crop;—We have nothing new to add to-night wi

regard to the growing crop. All the information we have repeiv^
lett<
>,087 during the week has continued favorable, and many of theVi
2,556

?>'

V.

July 10t 1869.J

extremely hopeful. Planters are in
spirits in view of the present good prospect if a fair crop and

which have reached .us are

Obleans—To Liverpool; per ship Victoria,
Mobile—To Liverpool, per ship Lancaster, 8,804

New

^igh

high

Tptal exports of cotton frorp
The particulars

prices.

week the Cot¬
probable
precisely
estimate of the 26th of June Their

The Cotton Supply of our Mills —During the past
ton Manufacturers1 Association have issued an estimate of the
waDts of our mills during the remainder of the year, reaching
the

same

figures

result given in our

are as

follows

:

.hales..

Sept. 1, 1868

Stocks in the ports,

Receipts at the ports to last

mail dat«8 (June 18)

Total supply at ports to June 18
Deduct foreign exporta to June 18.
Stocks in ports

as

wee^ihe^lotal reaching 990 bales, against 162 bales last
week. Below we give our table shoiyiug the exports of cotton from
New York, and their direction for each of the last fou • weeks ; also
the total exports and direction since September 1, 1868 ; and in the
last column the total for the same period of the previous year:
ExportsofCotton (bales) from New York since Sept. 1,1888
EXPORTED TO

June
15.

Other British Ports

Total to Gt» Britain.

482

Total French
Bremen and Hanover

Hamburg
Other ports.......

99
ll*l

17
513
17

,v....

Total to N. Europe

; f

200

10

...

....

....

....

....

....

prev.
year.

280,269
7,359

19,953
....

25,913

•

•

•

.

•

....

..

1,406

1,567

Grand Total

•

1

•

••

19,958

26,116

33,137
2 >,130
1,375

32 372

54,642

50,589

2,4!)8
2,541

2,172
8,266

5,039

5,4:38

11,385
6,832

990

152

313,849 369,771

Phila¬
delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and siuce September 1, 1868 :
The

following are the receipts of cotton at

RECEIPTS FROM-

This 1

Since

week. |Sept. 1.
New Orleans.
Texas

Savannah
Mobile
*
Florida
South Carolina.
North Carolina..
.

2,210
217
862
689
73
638

27,635

142

101,616
1,031

Nbrth’rn Ports.

Tennessee, Ac.
Foreign.........

40,543
142,932
10,261
7,457
103,295

65
61
69

Virginia

• •

♦ •

-

BALTIMORE.

70,387
12,469

BOSTON.

PHILADELPHIA

This Since
week. Septl.

week. Septl.

week. Sept 1.

6,799

1,587

12,157

*550 16*052

*549 15,263

478

2181

5,000

Slice

64

298

*558

9^878

*438 isM

1,313

**80

Total last year

"*609,248

2,3201218,410

2,355
28,213
119

‘ioi 21*761

*389 17,932
28

913

j5,589|223,469

Since

50

*953 25,3:4

1,551 68 475
363 35,420

This

333

152)

636,867

Shipping News.—The

This

6,761

Total this year

.

New York, Boston,

2,190 66,603

NEW YORK.

1,209 56,076
683

exports of cotton from

52,094

1,456 79,234
431

77,623

the United States the

fatest mail returns, have reached 6,607 bales. So
for as the Southern porta are concerned, these are the same exports
reported by telegraph, and published in the Chronicle last Fri¬
day, except Galveston, and the figures for that port are the exports for
'two weeks back.
With regard to Ne v York, we include the manifests
only up to Tuesday night, to make the figures correspond with the offi¬
cial week.
Below we give a list of the vessels in- which these ship¬
ments from all pcr.s^both North and South, have been made:
Exported this weekAom—
"*•'''■• 1 : i;'
Total bales.
New Yoiix-^Tiojyiv^TOol, per steamers Nevada, 55 and 15 Pea Island
CityJintfniBto, 834...,Helvetia, 113/...per ships Cresent
C ty,
Warren; 95
tl8
To Havre^ieraJlwmaPhyife; 102.;.........202
To Hamburg, per steamer Hammonia, 10
10
past week, as pel




■

Island.

of the week, 411 bales., Exports—to Great
Stock on hand 4,241 bales. Sales of

Mobile, Ala., Ju’y 9.—Receipts

Biitain, 1,579 b iles; coastwise, 769 bales.
the week, 250 bales, bales to-day, 80 bales.

M»rket dull and nominal; Low

Middlings. 81c. Receipts, 80 bales. E> ports, 1,579 bales.
New Orleans, La., Ju'y 9.—lt» ceipts today, 188 bales. Feceipts
week, gross 1,361 bales, net 1,010 bal b. Expoits
for the week—to the Continent, 1,103 bales ; v era Cruz, 227bales, coastwise,
3,380 bal^s. Stock on h -nd, ll,r84.balea. Sales
to-day, 103 bales. Middlii gs 32%c.

for the
to-day, 376 bales. Exports
of the week, 1,190 bales. Sales
Galveston, Tex, Juy 9.—Nothing dokg
Receipts of the week, 160
bales. Exports—to New York, 253 bales. Stock on hand, 268 bales. Market
quiet, holders Arm ; good ordinary 22%c . Sales 150 bides.
\ Liverpool, July 9— 4:30 P. M.—‘Cotion has ruled quiet to-day, with sales
amounting to 10,000 bales. The sales of the week have b en 63,000 bales, of
which 10 000 were takun for export and 7,000 on speculation.
The stock in
port is e timated at 366,000 bales, of which 207,000 aie American.
The stock
at sea, bound to this port, is estimated at 631,000 bales, of which 49,000 are
from the United States.
For the convenience of our readers we give ’he following, showing the sales
and stocks at

and afloat for

Tota. sales
Sales for export

Liverpool each of the last four weeks :
July 2.
July 9.
June 25.
63,000
102.000
85,000
.\. 10,000
19,000
16,0- 0
7,0 0
11,000
12,000
366,000
332,000
. 388,000
207,000
1^8,0 )0
212,OOd
599,000
631,000
674,00 )

June 18.

86,000

18,000
13,000
Total stock
428,000
Stock of American
229,000
Total aflout
605,000
American afloat
49,000
80,009
79,000
86,000
Trade Report—The market for yarns and fabrics.at Manchester is reported
quiet but Aim. The fo lowing table will show the daily closing prices of the
Sales on

speculation

week:

Sat.

44

Mon.

12#

12%
12%

12%

Up. ta arrive.

European and

kets,

our
states:

Indian Cotton

Fr.

Thu.

Wed.
12%
12%

Tues.

12%
12%

Price Midd. Uplds.
*•
44
Orleaus...

12%
12%

12%
12%

Markets.—Id reference to these mar¬

correspondent in London,

writing under the date of June 26,

Liverpool, June 26.—A large bueiuess has been
this week, and on Monday and Tuesday the market,

transacted in cotton
owing to somewhat

discouraging reports from the Southern States, was very active. Since
then, however, business has been quieter, but prices have ruled firm.
American cotton ha9 risen £ to £d ; Brazilian £ to ±d, and East Indian
also £ to £d per lb.
Iu the value of Egyptian cotton no advance can

The sales of the week amount to 85,060 bales, of which
speculation ; 15,690 bales are declared for expoit,
leaving 67,000 bales to the trade.
In cotton to arrive the business has been large; the latest quotations
are:
American, basis of Middling, from Mob le, steamer due 12£d ;
New Orleans, at sea, 12-fl; Texas, at sea. 12|d; good ordinary, ship
named II
; Maceio, basis of fair, ship named i2|i; Dhollerah, fair
new merchants, June sailing, 9fd; fair merchants, old crop, May saili g, 9 9-l6d ; Oomrawuttee, fair new merchants, sailing March and 1st
April, lOd ; April-May shipment, 9|d ; Bengal,good fair new merchants,
April sailiog, 8|d per lb. The following are the prices of American
cotton compared with last year’s :
—Same date 1883—,
r-Fair
/—G’d
be

rr—

1

week
Foreign
prime bankers*
109£@l09fc for

Freights.—Gold has fluctuated the past

above:

203

.

Total Spain, etc
■—f—"

io

a

....

....

Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar &c
Ail others

Q

'

547

.

0

!3ame
time

234,210 287,621

502

SO

....

3,055

—

....

....

....

231,155

502

20

492

Havre..
•
Other French ports

778

132

1,206

638

*

778
....

—

....

date

0.

132

1,206

....

to

July

June
29.

June
22.

533

Liverpool

Total

10

;

134J and 137£, and the close to-night, was 136.
exchange, closed steady at 109£@U0 for London
60 days, 110|@110| for London prime bankers' 3 days,
London nrime commercial.
Freights id by steamer, 5-32d by sail.
By Telegraph.—The following despatches from the Southern ports
and from Liverpool contain some matters of interest net given
Boston, Maes., July. 9.-^Exports this week—to Great Britain and Continent,
none.
Stock on hand,* 3,500 bales.
Baltimore, Md., July 9.~Exports this week—to Great Britain and Conti¬
•
nent, none. Stock on nand, 1,107 bale*.
Norfolk, Va., Jnly 9.—Net receipts of the week, 763 bales. Exports
—coastwise, 794 bales. Stock on hand, 79 bales. A" arket dull—Low Middlings
31%@32c.’ Sales ot the week, 60 bales.
Charleston, 8. C\, July 9.—Net receipts of the week, 558 bales; coast¬
wise, none—total, 558 bales. Exports—tu t reat Britain and other foreign
ports, none ; coastwise, 871 bales. Stock on hand, 1,949 bales. Market quiet;
Middlings 33c, Sea Island, 50c(gi$l 00. Sa’es oi the wc ek, 285 bales.
Savannah, Ga, Jnly 9.—Market fiim with no offering stock; no sales ;
Middlings 32c. Receipts of the week. 632 bales. ) xports—to Great Britain,
1,865 hale^ Uplands and 110 bales Sea Island; coastwise, 714 ba es Uplands
and 200 bales Sea Island. St,ek on hand 395 t ales Uplands and 84 bales Sea

last

WEEK ENDING

202

....
....

between

York show an increase

exportalOf^c^Jfctoo this week from ^ew

....

6,395

990
1,818
3,804
6,607

10

202

778
1,813
3,804

Gold, Exchange and

38,000

....hales. 6,607
usual form, are
Hamburg. Total.

Liverpool. H.vre.

Total

would take them into October,
■The

follows:

New Orleaus
Mobile..'

2,100,000

.........

the United States this week
arranged m our

NiwYdrk

2,062,000

1,813
8,804

1,813

of these shipments

'

1,402,000
93,000— 1,497 000
Taken from the ports by Northern spinners
603,000
A dd receipts overland to mills to April 24’
241,000
.
Add receipts overland tomiils, April 24 to June 18 (estimated)
6,000
Total taken from th’a cr p by Notlhern spinners since Sept. 1,1868..
850,000
According to this statement the Northern mills have taken 860,0 0
bales since September 1st, and, as the consumption for the whole year
is estimated at 900,0( 0 bales, only 60,000 bales more (if it could be
evenly distributed^ are needed to provide foi the balance of ^the year.
The, figuresljr^ j^iiye on the 26th of June showed that the mills had
already ta^ en 849,000 bales, and would, therefore, need 61,000 bales
more.
Of course, howevir, some mills have more stock than others, so
that we think about 20,000 baits should be al'.owi d to cover this
unequal distribution, making the total requirenn nts t f the mills 71,000
bales between June 18 end September 1st if they continue t > run
during all the summer months. Or if there is a general stop during
August, as some of the leading manufacturers now ptopose, this supply

over

53

CHRONICLE.

THE

quoted.

12,370 bales are on

,

*

Description.
Sea Island

Stained

Upland

Mobile

New Orleans
Texas* *•••••.....

g’d fair

r-Ord. & Mid—,
24
22
11
9
Ord G Oid. L.Mid.
10% 11% 11%
1 % 12% 11%
10% 11% 12%

10%

11%

The following are the
date and since 1866;

26 -28
12 -14
Mid.

12%
12%
12%

.13%

12%

1869.

27d. I8d. 26d.

24d.

London, and also the stocks of
tained to be afloat to those porta :
“

Liverpool....

London...
American cotton afloat.
Indian
“
....

Total

-..

11%
11%

Good.

Fair.
28
14

13%
12%

..

11%

.v
..

.

13

11#

86
17

18

this

1866. 1867. 1868. 1869
Mid. Pemamb 18%d. ll%d. 10%d.ll%

Upland.... 13% 11
11% 12%
11% 11%
Mobile.... 13% 11
11% 11% 12%
Orleans.... 14
Annexed is a statement showing the

Stock in

Mid.
26
13

prices of middling qualities of cotton at

1866. 1867. 1868.

Mid. Sea Island

fine.
32 -50
16 -18

12

Egyptian. 12%
Broach...
Dhollerah

6%
6%

7%
7%

9%

8
7%

10

8%
8%

stocks of cotton in Liverpool and
American and Indian produce ascer¬
1868.
Bales

1869.

567,519

388,480
75,842
79,000
659,065

1,260,771

1,196,887

607,330
38,922
47,000

54

THE CHRONICLE.

Since the commencement of the
year the transactions
and for export have been to the
following jextent:

Taken

on

1869,

1868,

1867,

bales;

114,470
22,060

bales.

206,330
43,250
37,010
8,380
80,060

Egyptian. &c.. 12,210

West Indian...
5r0
East Indian ..173,5<;0

Total.... 322,790

r-Actual export from
Liverpool, Hull and Aetna!
other outports
exp’tfrom
to this date—,
U. K. iL
1869.
1868.
1868

spec, to this date—,

hales.

American
Brazilian

speculation

on

bales.

54,340
4,410
6,060

hales.
80, *72
27,730

56,853
22,878
3,944

860

177,970
89,810

5,670
6,257

5,178
101,682

39,620

hales.

10,160
21,68!)
615,670

160,279

370,030

105,290
193,035
280,108
915,120
The following statement shows the sales and
imports of cotton for
the week and year, and also the stocks on hand on
Thursday

evening

last:

SALKS, KTC., OP ALL DESCRIPTIONS.
Sales this week.
,
Total
Same
Ex- Speculathis
period
Trade. port. tion. Total.
1868.
year.
American..bales. 22,890 2,100 6,950 31,040
975,920
674,890
Brazilian
10,700 2,420 2,440 15,560
253,300
327,100
760
Egyptian
6,540
570
6,850
117,690
153,400
West Indian...♦ 1,010
50 * 190
1,870
33,920
47,250
East Indian.
16,700 9,760 3,220

29,740

..

Total

691,210

57,000 15,690 12,370 85,060
-ImportsTo this
date
week. 1869.

To 1 his
date
1868.

This

American
Brazilian

8,972

Egyptian

4,231
2,572

West Indian..

East Indian...

1868.

679,824 1,026,174
276,020
33!),890
131,919
123,021

6,895

6,113

629,502

36 082

2,-3,745

1869.

181-8,

19,790 27,350
7,93) 9,750
4,020 4,240
1,400

1,460

14,660 10,570
47,800 53,370

-Stocks
—,
Same
date
Dec, 31,

day.
2!2,150
71,070
60,110

1,262,260

200,509
79,541
235,432 1,154,731

39 888

Average
weekly saies.

1,719,010 2,093,640
This

1869.

369,400
13r-,8i0
56,120
12,750

4,620

40,170

3

<,240

1869

82.360
15.360
3l,82J
3,410
219,390

Total

27,783 1,411,369 1,765,845 3,326,543
388,430 607,:-30 352,340
Of the present stock of cotton in
Liverpool 5
per cent is American*
against 60 per cent last year. Of Indian cotton the proportion is 10
per cent, against
per cent.

London, June 26.— Prices have risen ^ since the ch'se of last week,
a good business h«s been transacted.
The following are the
par
ticulars of imports, deliveries an stocks :
and

1867.

Imports, Jan. 1 to June 24
Deliveries
Stocks June 24

Havre, June 25.—The stock
bales, of which 30,200 bales

1868.

86,003
81,537
68,231

Bales.

Belgium

3,485
8,827

Holland
Denmark

67,993
133,108
39,922

1869.

141,975
211,362
75,842

of cotton

yesterday evening was 43,411
American, and 7,200 bales East
21,975 bales of American, and 112,697
were

Indian. It was estimated that
bales of East Indian
produce were

afloat to the port.
Alexandria, June il.—The cotton trade has been more active, an 1
prices h *ve risen ^d per Ih. Fair cotton is quoted at 12£ to l*2|d
Good fair, 13 to I3£d
per lb, per on board and freight.
The following
have been the shipments :

197

Italy

5,589
8,335
13,934

France

Spain, Gibralt.

Mediterranean

&c

...

♦ -

Austria

m

^

90
916
23

Africa, &c
China. India, &c
Australis, <fec

,

Mexico

•

•

•

•

•

•

729

•

•

»

287

78,893

From

Hhds.

36,111
25,176

Boston

•

•

Philadelphia

New Orleans
San

•

2

Portland
Total since Nov 1.

72,368

.

2,286

m

•

•

•

,

...

.

....

...

1,776

16,316
23,100

1,209,5*4
169,499

1,G77

45,654

1,843

17

331,6*6
2,900
6,773

1
•

1,505

2

19,754

1,150

1,016

2,272

5
2
•

•

•

58

4,818 3,478,363
251

....

309
10

2,0*6
3,850

....

....

19,754

17,019
1 <5,870
76,788

3,912

47

•

181,739

9,611 3,723,339

....

....

21,235

43
393

from which the

2,720

....

15

•

Stems Bxs. &
Lbs.
hhds. pkgs. Manfd.

479
60

....

•

2,778

967
50
40

626

•

....

Tcs. &
cer’s.

16,168

The tobacco market has been
In
leaf,

69

....

1,150

2,178

9,611 3,723,389

active the past week.
the demand has been active for export at
Holders of Government contracts are the

Kentucky

full prices.

very

120,834

85
46
48

125

73

....

194

34

2,845
2,022

17,889

882

.

.

6,816

•

14

611

766

Virginia

•

f

12

•

89

Bales.

13,628

Francisco

»

•

m

21,235

855
10

...

12.235
e

m

Cases.
'

104
....

The following table indicates the
ports
above exports have been
shipped :
New York
Baltimore

36,264

•

1

355

418
261
78
213
401

Honolulu, &c

All others

*

^

1,075

* * *

« •

•

....

328
803
803
440

1
56
344
855
•

•

•

*

B. N. Am. Prov
South America
WeBt Indies
East Indies

• •

•

1,008

^

-

100
100
151

600
277
122
809

488

Total since Nov 1....

58!),670

Total.

[July 10,1869.

more

principle Ibuyers. The sales since Friday last amount to
hhds., of which 1,000 hhds. yesterday—prices
varying from 8 to 13c for common to good.
The market for seed leaf has been more active
but mainly for
for domestic
about 2,300

consumption, and prices rule firm. There

are some

out-of-town buyers in market, and the sales of the week
are:
42 cases old Connecticut cut fillers
9^c; 42 cases old Con¬
necticut and Ohio
fillers, 9^-c ; 50 cases State, private terms ;
103 cases Connecticut
wrappers, 1867 crop, private terms;
100 cases new
Pennsylvania, private terms; 25 cases Con¬
necticut wrappers, 1867
crop, 38c; 25 cases Connecticut
wrappers, in small lots, 45@78c.
The sales of the previous

week

(accidentally omitted

from

Connecticut, seconds, 19c; 42

last)

our

were 40 cases old

do, 22c; 150 cases
fillers, in three lots of 50 cases each, at 10c, 10£c,
10£c;
80 cases old
From—
G. Britain, Continent,
Connecticut, private terms; 97 cases New Con¬
Total.
Nov. 1, 1868, to June 10, 1869
bales.
131,987
43,059
181,046 necticut, part at 33c.
Same period 1867-8
’
161,145
41,447
201,031
1866-7
149,237
80,990
Spanish tobacco has been in more demand; sales 400 bales
181,227
1965-6
127,077
26,840
153,917 Yara,
1864-5
private terms, and 250 do Havana, 92i@110c.
201,982
37,617
239,599
Colombo, June 16.—Large contracts ; 8$d for Tinnivelly,
Manufactured tobacco is without
delivery in
especial activity, though
two months.
in rather more
demand, both for consumption and export.
The receipts of tobacco at New Y-ork this
TOBACCO.
week, and since
Nov. 1 have been
“

“

44

44

44

State

cases new

44

c-

There is

slight increase in the exports of crude Tobacco this
week, the total from all the ports reaching 6,531 hhds, 559 cases
491 bales, 47 hhds stems and 56
tierces, against 6,345 hhds.
247 cases and 75 bales for the
previous seven days. Of these
exports for this week, 2,731 hhds., 527 cases, 147 bales, 47
hhds. stems and 46 tierces were from New
York, 2,248 hhds.
and 149 bales from Baltimore, 2
hhds., 12 cases and 95
bales from Boston, 1,550 hhds. and 100 bales
from New
a

Orleans and 20 cases from San Francisco.
The direction of
the shipments of hhds. was as follows: To
Bremen,

RECEIPTS AT NEW YORK SINCE
NOVEMBER

/—This week—*
hhds.
pkgs.
5,843

From

Virginia
Baltimore
New Orleans
Ohio, &c
Other
Total

10

all the ports were as follows:

nhds.

Exp’d this week from
cp-

Hhds. Cases. Bales. Stems.
517
2,7 1
147
47
2,218
149

New York
Baltimore
Boston

2

12

Philadelphia

-

..

Pkgs.

46

222

10

1.550

lbs.

119,175

give

6,531

6,345
7,766

10

194

•

2,560

....

3,804

/—T’lsin.
In.Nov.l—

461

■

44,992

24,846

350

556

62,306

67,893

...

Hhds.

Liverpool

Loudon

Glasgow

Cases.

Bales.

612
601

hhds.
5,848
1,220

pkgs
42,779
2,681

204

461

47,243

25,218

360

556

54,865

71,695

YORK.*

Sterna,

143

Bremen

Gibraltar..
Havre

Cadiz
Danish
British
British
Frencn
Cuba
Africa

West Indies
N. A. Colonies
West Indies
West Indies....

...

Tcs.
36
10

245
25
534
5
596

Hamburg

388
79

1

Lbs.

Pkgs.

Mani’d.
68,500
18,495

5

47

222

5.701

‘*35

3,765

43

*4
21

Hayii

559
2*7
919

491
75
538

47

66

332
428
88

♦

hi
627

147

6,279

57
25
65

‘

119,175
25.643

129,887

*

from tlie United States
since Novem¬
ber

1,1868.

To
Great Britain..-,....

Hhds.
It,362

»*,oio

Cer’s

Cases. Bales. &tcs.
811

668

18,700

9,913

664

Stems,

Pkgs. Manl’d

hhds.

429

& bxs.
‘

2,035

2,731

The exports in this table to
ifests, verified and corrected by aD

our

Exports of Tobacco




•

•

EXPORTS OF TOBACCO FROM NEW

Total

usual taole showing the total
export
of Tobacco from all the ports
of the United States, and their
direction, since November 1, 1868:

Germany

•

372

Ntw Granada..

100

5,549
l,v20

pkgs
89,936
2,092

The following are the
exports of tobacco from New Yoik
lor the past week :

100
23

Total
Total last week
Total previous week
we

Tcs.

hhds.

692

15,753

*

New Orleans
Portland
Ban Francisco

Below

95

Man’d.

•

2,251

...

1. 1868.

r-Previously—,

589

1,332

hhds.; to Havre, 1,051; to Liverpool, 612; -to
London,
901; to Cowes and a market, 1,150 ; to
Gibraltar, 534 ;
to Cadiz, 596 ; to
Glasgow, 143 ; and the balance to different
ports. During the same period the exports of manufactured
tobacco reached 119,175 lbs., of which
68,500 lbs were to
Liverpool The full particulars of tire week’s shipments from

follows:

as

Friday, P. M., July 9, 1869.

lbs.

1,905 1,223,397
484
103,501

47

European porta

inspection of

46
are

made

the cargo.

222

119,175

np from

man¬

The direction of the
foreign exports for the week, from the
other ports, has been as follows:
From

Baltimore—To Br. men, 1,187 Tihds and 149
bales....To Havre, 1,046
hhds....To Rio Janeiro, 15 hhds.
From Boston-To New
Zealand, 20 boxes, 25 quarter boxes, 10 tcs and 3 caeea
To Cayeone and
Surinam, 1 hhd ...Toliaytl, 100 hf bales ...To
Port au Prince, 20 bales and 50 hf
do
To St. Johns, 36 boxes....To
Halifax and Charlottetown, 13 boxes
and 9 cases
To British Prov¬
inces, 1 hhd, 4 boxes and 6 hf do.
From New Orleans—To
Brazos, 100 bales
To Cowes and a market,
1,150
hhds... .To London, 400 hhds.
From han Francisco—To
Victoria, 19 cases
To Honoln'n, 1 do.

From

Portland—Tq British Provinces, 10 boxes,

.

55

THE CHRONICLE.

July 10,1869.J

P. M,

Friday, July 9, 1869,

week ha8 been active,

the past

The market for Breadstuffs

26,973
20,805
56,697

prices tending upward.

6

540,054

141,704

1,506,612

12,278
1,773
9,669
62,230

2,465
1,596
6,673

714

546 503

January 1 to July 3 :
1866.

1869.

Wheat, bush

..

.<

Corn, bush
Oats, bush

..

1868.

1867.

2,667,601

..

1,626,122

1,305,079

1,653 440

15,627,681

7,833 405
16,590,340

4,479,626
19.326 375

9,684,773
18,255,645
6,511,851
.360,705

15,197,548
5,484,154

4,^81,18'.
3*),7c 6
19i,773

3,254,366

5g3,00u

.

37,241,301

29,902,439

23,079,321

3<.s 255

Barley, bush
dye, bush
..

529,887
489,127

956.766

35,763,740

GROCERIES,

closed to day at $6 65@

Good lines of Extra State

cuted.

127,337

1,152,806
1.166,867

810.905

Comparative receipts at the same port9, from

The receipts of Flour at this
market continue on a moderate scale as compared with the
exports and the wants of the local trade, and with some
speculation, prices of the low grades show an advance for the
week of an average of 25c per bbl, with an upward tendency,
stimulated by the advance in Liverpool. The contracts for
Flour to be delivered this month are yet mostly to be exe¬
and

215,309
262,951

656,915

73 191 11,158,965

BREADSTUFFS.

Friday Evening,

79.

supply, but with firmer foreign
markets and higher gold, the demand has been active and
prices of Spring are five or seven cents higher, with Winter
Wheats showing some improvements. The demand, how¬
ever, has been mainly speculative, and the export business em¬
braces large quantities of Winter Wheat, which is relatively
cheaper than Spring. The receipts at the Western markets
have fallen off to about 100,000 bushels per day. The ac¬
counts from the growing crop are generally favorable,
Win¬
ter Wheat, now nearly ready for the harvest in the middle
latitudes, is especially promising. Some New Wheat from
the Southern States has been received at market.
The quali¬
ty is excellent. No. 2 Spring closed at $1 53@L 54, and
Wheat has been in liberal

Our

JtfyO, 1869.

little change in the

review of the week shows but

general markets for groceries, and except in the items o
sugar and molasses, no improvement. To the usual quiet o
the season Las been added this week the relaxation o
business which usually accompanies the celebration of the
Fourth, while a descending scale in the price of gold ha
further contributed to the quiet which has prevailed. Raw
Sugars, though showing a loss of
during the week, which
they have not yet recovered, close with a marked increase o
inquiry and activity, and a firmer market. Refined are also
more active and better.
Molasses has been generally inactive
and but little sought for, such inquiry as there was being
directed to the refining grades, but there is a better demand
on at the close and firmer prices. Coffee has been very quiet,

dull.
Corn has had a large advance, mainly speculative,
the backward state of the growing crop throughout
and Northwest.
It appears certain that warmer

based
the West
weather is
partial failure ot

prices sustained mainly through the firmness of holders.
Teas, with some improvement in firmness in the irregular
immediately required to secure us against a
prices prevailing, are still inactive.
this crop..
Oats have come forward sparingly, and have also attracted
Imports of the week have included more than an average
the attention of speculators, resulting in a considerable ad¬ quantity of Coffee and considerable receipts of Molasses, but
vance.
Other grains are entirely nominal.
only a few packages of Tea by steamers, and comparatively
The following are closing quotations :
small quantities of Sugar. In the receipts of Coffee are
Corn Meal...
$4 20® 4 SO
Flour—
Spring,
1 45® 1
Superfine
$ bbl. |5 40® 5 85 Wheat,Winter per bnsn. 1 50® 1 60 included some five cargoes of Rio, one of Ceylon, one of
Red
55
6 40® 6 85
Extra State
Amber do
1 60® 1 65
Shipping R. hoop Ohio. 6 50® 0 75
White
1 63® 2 00 Maracaibo, and sundry other lots.
Extra western, com¬
Corn, Western Mix’d, old ....® ..
to good
The imports at New York for the week, and at the several
6 25® 6 60
Western Mixed, new...
70® 95
Double Extra Western
93® 92
Yellow new
and St. Louis
6 75®ll 00
White
94® 9 * ports since January 1, are ffiven below under the respective
Southern supers
6 50® 7 00
and

mon

new

Southern,
family

extra

1 58® 1 32
82© ..
® ..

Rye

and

7 25® 11 50

Oats, West

4 00® 6 25

Malt
Peas Canada.

6 85® 9 25 Barley

California

Rye Flour, fine and super

-

fine

The movement in

....® ••
1 20® 1 50

breadstuff's at this market has been as
RECEIPTS

1869.
,
Since
For the

.

>

week.

....

bush

1,068,380
213,430

385

702,585

12,505
169,650

2,220.905

.

731,060

2,933,060

FOR THE WEEK AND 8IN0E JAN. 1
Rye, Barley. Oats. Com
bush,
bush
bush
bbls.
bush.
bush.
2 .,434
841,938
17,0001,326.856
10 6,153,661
-

FROM NEW YORK

Flour, C. meal. Wheat,
To
Gt. Brit, week
Since Jan.1
N. A. Col. week..
Since Jan. 1
Went Ind. week*.
Since Jan. 1

bbls.

24,500
227,265

....

76,273
5,513
170,737

630

43)

20,907
2,570
26,476

from—
81,419

Boston

..

3,550

Total exp’t, week 38,472
Si nee Jan. 1,1869. 596,395
Same time, 1868.. 445,071
Since Jan. 1

.

,

4f 0

225

858,552 29,428

3,000

136.899

Baltimore

AFLOAT ON

48,312

5.700

19.7 3

....

Total
Previou» week

7,665 1,551,600
6,928 1,495,623
“

“

Receipts at

1,823
1,363

1867
1866

Lake Ports for the
Flour*

At

1

Chicago

Milwaukee
Toledo
Detroit

Cleveland
xotals




315,373

300

Corresponding week, 1868
‘k

217,788

1,700

bbls.

8,464

7,131

70,940

r

Rye.

weekending July 3, viz.:

irregular, they nevertheless show an improvemeut as con¬
few weeks ago. The sales are very
light and principally in greens, to which the attention of buyers has
been mostly directed. Sales include 8,058 hf chests of Greens, 2,470
do Japans, and 1,000 do Oolongs.
The only imports of Tea have been 77 > packages by European
steamers.

SHIPMENTS PROM

Japan

10,570,633

7,102,769

41,778,903

33,302,647

Rye
bush.

896,763
340,630
97,616
12,144
27,150

311,676

93,114
7,619

bush.
595
320
•

•

5,199
999
530

•••

....

...

....

.915

1868.

14,436,872
6,509,351

31.879,185
13,039,349
5,619,648

33,228,814

30,528,248

reach 16,687 pkgs, again

light demand for both Rio and West Indian, the market has
been inactive throughout the week. Prices have been maintained
through the firmness of holders, but they are above the ideas of most

Barley.

•

1869.

9,837,236

13,511

bush.

•

importations since Jan. 1 now

CHINA A JA¬
SINCE JAN 1,

IMPORTS PROM
PAN INTO U.S.

15,800
5,791

Oats.

•

CHINA A JAPAN

1,’68, TO APRIL 28,’69.
1868-9.
1867-8.
13.278,30-1
13,155,376
18,052,894
12.921,570

PROM JUNE

The indirect

bush.

127,756

and although they are

6,057 last year.

Corn.

415,224

....

214.465

313,651
10,925

trasted with the rates current a

Total

Wheat.
bush.

874,603'-

402,689
376,639
262,819
17,497

firmness in prices,

Green

474,456 256.116
35,628
....
510,884 256,115
684,559 800,1*81

8,700

421,891

8,770
6,953
7,451

somewhat

Black

13,162
5.161

238,826

1,148

.

There has been rather more

65,861
496,473

289,012 2,350,062 569,058 103,598

97,052
2,035
1,450

6.057

TEA.

9,146

6,452
3.v02

834,532 104 657
1,368,662 262,916

3 011

..

583,539
229,875
350,281
412,595

%

TIDE WATER.
Wheat.
Corn.
Oats.

5,965 1,333,812

..

Molasses, New Orleans

706 ,365

11,091

30,517,132

The following table shows the shipments of Tea from China and
Japan to the United .States from June 1, 1868, to April 28,1869 the date
41,745 1,528,082 of latest advices by mail; and importations into the United States (not
39,303 4,023,156
including San Francisco), from Jan. 1 to date, in 1868 and 1869.

CANAL DESTINED FOR

From Buffalo, 14 days
From Oswego, 9 days

7—bags.
.boxes.
boxes.
hhds.
^. hhds.
bags.
bags.
..hhds.
hhds.
bbls.
bbls.

Sugar
Sugar
Sugar
Molasses

.bags
bags

1868.

1869.

a3,228,814
16,539

770
19 082

.

ports

From Jan 1 to date-\

27.574

*

10

pkge.

-

81,891

61,753

2^,021

Flour.

“

75

<990

23,008
400

....

83.779 5,747,547 77,464
168,990 2,885,534 152,993

53,627 21,903

Philadelphia,

19,919

....

....

Tea
Tea

4,309,700
8,7 7,650

405,115

201,450

193,505

189,493

1,415
159,545

145,135
6,550 270

...

...

....

EXPORTS

FOREIGN

3,3:6,040

Jan. 1.

24,800

1,300,250

488,021
11,240

meal, bbls
Wheat, bush
Corn, bush
Rye, bush
Barley, *fcc., hush

Since

For the
week.

Jan. 1.

62,685
1,240

Flour, bbls

Corn

1868.

,

r

Total at all
At N. York.
this Week.

(indirect import)..
Coffee, Rio
Coffee,other... .

follows:

NEW YORK.

AT

The totals are as follows :

heads.

6,729

With

(/OF’FISIi!*

a

buyers, and the latter are consequently holding
5,918 bags of Rio and and 125 do of Laguayra.

off. Sales include

Coffee,
4,163
3,000 bags, and by Green Olive,” 4,OOo bags. Of

Imports of the week have been considerable, including of Rio
by the “ Garron,” 8,979 bags; “Julie,” 8,950 bags; “Freya,”

bags; H Lebanon/,

FRUITS.

of Maracaibo, per “ Ilva,’
Hayti, per “ Oliver

other sorts the receipts have been 2,886 bags
6,687 bags of Ceylon, per Hyacinth : 1,229 bags of
Cutis ” and 389 bags of sundries.
The stock of Rio July 8, and imports since Jan.

del.

In Bags.
York.
Stock..
15!), 993
Same date 1868. 116,401

Imports

7,790

.

8,200

413,781
372,036

157,817

5,836

a

9,711

unchange4.
dull, though

notice an exceptional sale of very fine Southern during
Unpeeled half Peaches are not wanted, and quarter
do are dull at 7 a 8c.
The receipts cf Me literranean green fruit have
been more restricted, and, as usual, very much of it has been in such
poor c ndhion as to realize very little. In and from the store are sell¬
ing nt $8 per box for Palermo Mountain Orange1, and the same for
Lemons.
We notice that some Menton Lemons sold at auction from

706,365
583,589

ani the imports at the
Balt.

Intags.
Java

•

....

....

4

•

•

....

....

•

•

.

•

•

•

•

•

....

Domingo.

•

....

39,811

170.033

Includes mat ?, &c.%

•

.

♦ •

E:

«'

o

05

pier, to-day, brought from $7 12.Vf*7 25 per box. In West Indian
exception of Pineap lep, there is not much doing. Bananas
are selling at #1
50.72 00 per bunch; C >coanuts at #35 per M for
Barracoa to #65@70 for Carthagena.
Havana Pineapples bring from
#10(010 60 per C. Cat Islind Sugar L af do ft 2(0)11.

the

•

•

with the

1,246

238.826

141

550
815

20,850
15,1)3

31,082
37,777

181,492

27,790

Total

a

E

o o

....

....

j

tn
u,

..

....

•

..

Maracaibo.

*

C3

....

....

....

Singapore.
Ceylon....
St.

4-3

N.Orle’s

Stock. Import, import. import. import. import.
♦12.067
♦35,5.4
+1,995
‘.
12,616
♦4,8:14
913
8,471
10,361
43,461
9,622
10,002
19,397
7,163
7,342
60,388
550
1,246
1,254
1,114
11,534
12,560

229,875

t Also 66,691 mats.

reduced to bags.

we

,he week at 14c.

several oorts since Jan. I were as follows:
/—New York—, Boston Philadel.

little le38 firmness in this description. New is
Domestic dried fruits have been neglected. Apples are

and, in consequence, a

Total.

2,eoo
2,800

In,666

56,071
137,135
Of other sorts the stock at New York July 8
in 1868

Turkish Prunes rather less active, but

218,093
224,601

8,600
2/200

17,600
11,300
74,068

34,590
67,0 0

...

foreign dried there has been but little business. Raisins are steadj\
without any decline. There is
considerable amount of old citron, in broken lots, upon the market*
In

1, are as follows :

New Savan. &
GalOrleans. Mobile, veston.

Baltimore.

Phila-

New

“

[July 10, 1869

THE CHRONICLE.

66

We

annex

SUGAR.

ruling quotations in first hands :
rJVa.

Sugars continue liberal and the a cumulation of
stocks giadually increases. Durr g all the earlier part of the week
the market was very dull, purchasers declining to buy e xcept in a very
mall way as compelled to ; and in this way a reduction of i@£c per
At this concession, however, buyers seemed more
lb was obtained.
willing to operate, and for the last three days a fair business has been
done, closing to-day with a more active inquiry from refiners and free
sales, including some 2,700 boxes. 'Jhe maiket h s apparently acquired
more strength and the future wears a mere encou aging look.
Refined
Sugars were also dull, and in the first of the week declined
but
The

receipts of

Duty: 25 cents por

raw

do

follows:

as

do

Cuba, P. Rico,

bxs.

Imports this week
Stock

hand’
lime 1868

on

“

“

..

.

...

...

1867

...

♦hhds.

1,148

6,023

♦hhds.

2,151

Ex line to flnest.l 25 @1 55

“

“

44

“

44

“

“

44

Portland..
Boston....
Philadel..
Baltimore.
N.Orleans

44

©1 45

© tS
©l 10

©1 40

Duty: When imported direct in Am rican or equalized vessels from the
place of its growth or production; also, the growth of comtries this side the
Cape of Good Hope when imported indirectly in unericiu or equalized ves¬
sels, 5 cents per lb.; all other, 10 per cent ad valonun in addition.

do
do

were

good

...gold
W
gold ',0*® 11

fair

gold

ordinary
Java, mats an 1 bags

9p®

9J

geld 84® 8|
.... gold 21* $ 25

4,053

Native

gold 17 © 19*
gold 15 © 19

Ceylon

Maracaibo
Laguayra

gold 16}@ 184

gold 15 ® 1***
gold 15 © 16

St. Domingo
Jamaica

Sugar.

12 Du'ch standard, 3; on
Dutch standard, not refined,
refined, 5; and on Melado 2% cents per lb

Duty: On raw or brown sugar, not above No.
white or clayed, above No. 12 and not above No. 15

27,902

3yt; above 15 and not over

1868.

15,050
45,530
30,9 4 43,923
23,513 10,970
63 224 51,064
7,807

20 512

Brazil, Manila
bags. bags.

-*IIhcD 1868.
1809.

k

18,9.

-

do pr me
do fair to good grocery..
do pr. to choice
do
do centrlfugalhluls & bss
do Melado
do molasses

1809.

215,317 1248,320 120,005 145,395
7,987
7,526
4!),170 12,600 40,143
46,156
57,098 41,481
38,936 10,955
10,484

52.338
43,673
7,679

20, 4; on

Cuba, Inf. to com roflning.. 104® :n
do fair to good
do ... 1U@ in

have been as follows :

lit®

111®

do
do
do 19 to 20 15 © 15*
144® 15
do
dc
white
® ..
do No. 12, in bd, n c (gold)
Porto Kieo, refining grades, Ill® 114
do
grocery grades . 12}® 13
11 (ft 12
Brazil, bags
..

in

124® 12 i
U'i© 134
6 © 9
10
114

flav’a, Box, D.S. Nos. 7 to 9. 11 © 114
do
do
do 10 to 12 nm in
do
do
do 13 to 15 121® 134
do
do
do 16 to 18 13)® 144

402,689 412,595 191,101 185,538

421,891 350,2S1

Total

80
87

29,232

Boxes
18G9.

“

70

132,597

Imp’s since Jan 1, at New York 275,911 177,139
‘f
“
“
44

30

87,833
74,871

.«

67 © 72

75 ©1 00

do
Ex flue to finest.. I 10
Souc & Cong., Com. tofair 78
do
Sup’rtoflne. 90
do
Kx f.toflnestl 20

10

129^723

149,390
49,120
38,970

Imports at the several ports since Jan. 1,

“

Ex f. to floesll 05 ©1 15

Oolong, Common to fair..
do
Superior to fine...

Coffee.

Brazil, Manila,
bgs.
bgs.

Other,
♦hhds.
596

do
do

90 ®1 10

G inp. & Imp., Com.to fair 90 @1
do
Sup. to fine 1 15 ®l
do do Ex. f. totlnost.1 35 ®1
H. Sic. ScTw’kay,C,to fair. 73©
do
do Sup. to fine 83 ®

fair.. 80 @ 85
Sup’rtoflne. 90 © 95

Uncol. Japan, Com.to

45

78 ® 85

Y’g Hyson, Coin, to fair...
do
Super, to line..

do

Cuba,

Same

July 8.

...

Ex line to 11 nest...! 30 dll

do

do Ex f. tofln’at nominal.

do

83 ® l 00
Superior to tine ...1 (5 ®1 v0

liio, Prime,uuty paid

hand

z-Dnty paid—<

/—Duty mid—

of St.

on

.

Hyson, Common to fair

subsequently rallied and close active and firm with the loss recovered.
Sales of raw Sugars include 8,854 lihds of Cubas, H8 do St. Croix, 140
do Deraerara, 10 do Porto Rico, 3,719 boxes of Havana and 600 bags
Domingo.
Imports for thj week at New York, a d stock

lb.

loj® 114
l.c4®....
154®....
14J® l4f
134® 14

Manila, bugs
Crushed
Granulated
Soft White
Soft Yellow

niolamicN,

♦Including tierces and barre’s reduced to

hhds.

Duty : 8 cents $

MOLASSES.

The
.

few transactions which have taken

place since

our

gallon.
$ gall.67 ® 85
50® 75

NewOrleans
Porto Rico

last have

\

do Clayed
Barbadoes...

45 ® 5 0
..

..

.

.

59

© 60

48 ® 52

CubaMnsjovado

the refining grades, in which holders have
Spices.
induce refiners to purchase ; the sales
Duty: mace, 40 cents; nutmegs, 50; cassia and clove?, 20; peppei and
have been light however, and our scale of prices, which we do not pimento, 15 ; and ginger root, 5 cents ?8 lb.
84
change, is hardly more than nominal. The grocery grades, though Cassia, inmats-gold # lb
(gold)
8®
® 45 I Pepper,
11}®
Pimento,
®
scarce, have met with no demand except for the finest.
Distilling Ginger,race and Af(gold) 1 15 © 12 II Cloves Jamaica.(gold) 19 © 194
Mace
(goU)
(gold) 27
qualities continue neglected altogether. We are ab!e to note at the Nutmogs,No.l....(gold) 93 ® 95 j
Fruit.
close some increase in the activity of the marlret and a consequent
Duty: Raisins, Currants, Figs, Plums and Prunes,5; -Shelled Almonds,
strengthening of its tone ; the demand does not, however, extend
6; other
Shelled do, 14, Filberts and
beyond the refining grades. Sales include J ,832 hhds of Cuba, 254 do Almonds, 3 cents $nuts,2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, 1;Ginger, 50; Green Fruits,
Walnuts,
lb; Sardines, 60; Preserved
of Barbadoes, 122 do Demerara, and 60 do Porto Rico.
$ cent ad val.
have been altogether in

made sufficient concession to

..

....

The

receipts of the week at New York, and the stock on hand July

8, were as

follows

:

Cuba.
♦Hhds.

“

“

same

Demerara.

*llhds.

Oth^r.
*Hhds.

187

do
do

1,081

12,019
time 1868. ..19,686

5,357

3,639

5,370

1,761

,.

44

“

14

44

York

Portland
Boston

...111,516

121,613
47,739

.

.

...

...

33,902
71,292
11,077

-

Provence......

Sicily,SoftShell
Shelled..........

12 ht.box

Sardines

..

..

..

28

©

274
114
12

26
21
14
38

Sardines

...V qr.bov

Figs,Smyrna
Brazil Nuts

$ lb

17 ® ..
14 © 16

10 © 104

© 124
94® 10
lb © 19

Filberts, Sicily
Walnuts, Bordeaux
Macaroni, Italian
Dried Fruit—

Apple?, State

Blackberries...

# lb

Peaches, par<d new
Peaches, un pared

14J® 15

20 © 21

23 © 24
7® 8

..

I860!
13,579
-

-

•

•

43,283

762

69,193

2,722

20,016
16,707

©
11 ®
©
©
©
©
35 ©
..

Almonds, Languedoc
do
do
do

5 75®6 00
2 80®2 85
12 © 124
10 ® 10)
..

Dates

.

N. O.

Tatal imports since Jan. 1 at New
“
“

lb.
$ fi>

Prunes, Turkish
330

Imports at the Siveral ports since January 1 have been as follows
-♦Hhds—
1869.
1868.

12 box

Layer

Valencia
Currants
Citron, Leghorn

N. O.
Bbls.

1,885

4,318

Imports this week
itock on ban!

P. Rico.
♦Hhds.

Raisins,Seedless.. $1 mat.

THE DRY GOODS

434

TRADE.

Friday, P. M., July 9. 1869.

....

quiet which follows the occurrence of a close
holiday has been observable in the market during the past
•Including tierces and birrels reduced to hhds.
week.
Comparatively little business has been done, and
SPICES.
There has been a quiet trade at unchanged prices. We do not leArn prices remain .quite firm at neailv the same quotations raadq
in our last report.
of any movement beyond the usual unimportant sales to jobbers.




318,551

17,497

The usual

July 10, 1869.]

TUE CHRONICLE

Under the

existing circumstances there is no class of per¬
goods who feel inclined to much activ¬
ity. Commission men are not anxious to dispose of the goods
which they have on hand, as the same could
hardly be
replaced now and sold at current prices. Jobbers are very
cautious about putting more goods into their huuses than they
see a chance of
distributing while cotton remains at high
figures; and retailers, although one step further removed
sons

interested in dry

from the direct influence of the fluctuations

rial,
or

on

the

raw

mate¬

still very reluctant to buy goods at an advance of 10

are

20 per

cent on the

ruling prices of the first four months

of the year.
The tone of the market continues to be strong and healthy ;
and should the position of aftaiis remain unchanged during
the balance of the month, it seems probable that a good Fall
trade will be opened at remunerative prices.
Manufacturers
in

51

opinion expressed by a party well informed in the trade, that Prints
will net go into consumption at higher prices than 12$ cents for Glou¬
cester, L ncaster and similar goods. Others feel very confident that
higher prices will be made for these goods within a few weeks. Allens
12$, American 13, Amoskeag 12$, Arnolds 10, Oocheco 14, Conestoga
12$, DunnelFs 12$, Freeman 10, Gloucester 12$. Hamilton 18, Home 8,
Lancaster 12$, London mourning 12, Mallory 12, Manchester 12, Merrimac D 2$-18$,do pink and purple —, do W 15, Oriental 12$, Pacific
12$-13, Richmond’s 12$ IS, Simpson Mourning 12, Sprague’s purple
au'l pink 1S$-14, do blue 18$, do shirtings 13$, Wamsutta 9$.
Print Cloths are reporte i as follows by the Provi ence Journal:
The market for Pri t cloths is steady and firm.
The relative prices of
Prints and gray cloths makes no incentive to printeis to buy heavily
The following are the sales for the past week : 8,0 0 pieces 66x60, 7|c;
10,000 do 56x60, 7$c, heavy ; 6,000 do 60x64, 8$c ; 30,000 do 64x64,
8$c, extras; 25,000 do 64x64, 9, extras. Total 78,000 pieces. Most
salts of cloths are now made on a credit of thirty days.
Ginghams remain firm, without change in prices.
Allamance plaid
18, Caledonia 14, Earlston 22$-26, Glasgow 16,Hampdeu 16, Lancaster
17, Manchester 18$.
Muslin Delaines.—Prices for these goods have rot yet been made,
and the sales which take place are at prices to be fixed hereafter
Hamilton 15-20, Lowell 15-20, Pacific Aimures 2J, do Alpacas 8-4 26,
do 6 i 26, Pektus 22$, Oriental Lustres 18.
Tickings are in fair request at firm prices. Albany 11, American 14$,

curtailing production, and the stock of
market is not in such excess as it was two
This fact contributes to the firmness and Amoskeag A C A 86, do A 80, do B 25, do C 2 3. do D 21, Blackstone
Rivet 16$, Conestoga 26, do extra 81, Cordis AAA 8'$, do BB 17$,
generally healthy feeling in the trade.
The exports of dry goods for the past week, and since Jan¬ Hamilton 26, do D 21, Lewiston 86 35, do 32 30, do 30 25, Mecs. aud
W’km’s 29, Pearl River 83, Pemberton A A2^, do E 18, t^wift River
uary 1, 1808, aud the total for the same time in 1867 and
17, Thorndike 18„ Whittenden A 22$, Willow Brook 28$, York 80 27,
1809 are shown in the following table:
do 32 33$.
are

some

cases

goods

on the
months ago.

FROM NEW YORK.

Domestics.

Exports to

pkgs.

Brazil

Val.

23

$3,469

2

3t8

Cisplatine Republic

*

*

*

..

••••

G’hiua
Cuba
Danish vv est Indies
British West Indies
New Granada
Africa

....

1

....

119

.

....

....

...

Halifax, &c

•• •

.

•

•

•

•

British Provinces...

$3,857
V 81,639
1,398,876

...

few

our

,

,

....

....

....

#

••••

.

.

.

.

.

®a©©

....

••••

**i«

....

_

...»

....

.

.

.

.

....

....

...

_

_

_

•••*

289

,

....

Total this week.
.25
Since Jan. 1, 1869.. 14,608
dame time 1868
14,100
“
1860
60,698

pkgs.

.37,417

1

-

....

....

annex a

307
76

...

Smyrna
St. Johns, N. F...

1,600
1,685

27
7

,

Valpraiso, &c

340
841
904

7
2
4

.

....

pkgs.

,

Dry Goods

....

(ino

1

••••

Havre

Hamburg..

FROM BOSTON

Domestics.

*

6

Glasgow

manufacture,
jobbers:

,

....

Liverpoo.

We

,

Dry Goods.
packages. Val.
$....

■

10

1,361

$41,062

6,036

2,599

916,011

....

...

at the present

ices.

p

Amoskeag

10, Portland 7$, Pequot 10$, Victory H 9$ do A 1", Washington 10.

1,400

4 -7,591

Fremont 19.
Corset Jeans have sold fairly and remain firm, as they have been for
most of the season.
Amoskeag 16$, Androscoggin i3, Bates 12$,
Everetts 15$, Indian Orch. Imp 13$, Laconia 15$,Naumkeag 15$, New¬
market 14, Washington satteeu 17$.
Cambrics are sold ahead by agents

8

3
18

175
9.120

m>t much in demand, and seem to be slow of sale at pre¬
prices. Albany 10$, American 14-15, Amoskeag 23-24, Boston
I 6, Everett 13$, Hamilton 22, Haymakei 16, Sheridan A 14$, do G 16$,
Uncasville A 16, do B 15, Wbitteiiton AA 22$, do A 20, do BB 17, do
C 16, York 22$.
Denims remain firm, and meet with a fair demand at unchanged
rates.
Albany 12$, Amoskeag 81, Blue Hill 18$, Beavei Or. blue
26$, do CC 19, Columbian heavy 31, Haymaker Bro 18, Manchester 20,
Otis AXA 28$, do BB 26, do CC 21, Pearl River 3o, Thorndike 19,
6 tripes are

sent

6,033

59

24,887

particulars of leading articles of domestic
prices quoted being those of the leading

Brown Sheetings and Shirtings.—There is no accumulation of
the e goods either in first or second bauds, and prices remain very ti in,
though no general change has occurred since last week. There is no

Cotton Bags continue to be very firm, although prices are not further
advanced.
American $45, Androscoggin $45, Arkwright A $15, Great
Falls A $46, Lewiston $47, Ludlow AA $47, Outariue $47 60, Stark
A $47 60, do C 3 bush $66, Union A $30.
Cotton Yarns and Batts are unchanged.
Best Georgia Cotton Yarns
Nos. 6 to 12 38$, Best South Carolina small skeins 40.
Spool Cotton has advanced on most of the low priced brands. Quo¬
tations are now as follows: BrooL’s per doz. 200 yards 90, J. & P.
Coat’s 90, Clark, John, Jr. <fc Co. 90, Clark’s Geo. A. 90, Wiltimantic
3 cord 62, do 6 cord 80, Stafford Brothers 45, Green <fe Daniels 47$,
Parker Bios 3 cord 42$, Glasgow 45, Hadley 76, Holyoke 47$, Orr <fc

special movement at present io these goods, and in several instances McNaught 85, Pitchers 42.
disposed of by jobbers at rates below those of
Woolens.—Flanuels are quiet, with the exception of a few lots
agents. Agawam F 86 inches 13, Amoskeag A 36 16$, do B 86 16, bought on speculation. Prices on most makes are 5 to 10 per cent
Atlantic A 86 17, do II 36 16$, do P 86 13$, do L 36 14$, do V
lower than they were at this time last year.
Blankets are dull.
88 18$, Appleton A 36 16$, Augusta 36 16$, do 30 13, Bedford R
Fore gn Cassimeres are sold up close; but for domestic manufacture the
80 10$, Boott H 27 11$, do 0 34 12$, do S 40 14, do VV 46 18, Common¬
demand is less than the accumulation of stock, aud business is dull.
wealth O 27 8, Grafton A 27 9$, Graniteville AA 36 15$, do EE 36 16,
Foreign Dress Goods.—There is very little doing in this departGreat Falls M 36 18$,doS 33 12$, Indian Head 36 17, do 80 13$, Indian
meut, as it is too early f r the general opening of new slock; and job¬
Orchard A 40 16$, do C 36 14, do BB 86 13, do W 84 12, do NN 86 16, bers and retailers are no
longer buying light labrics on account of the
Laconia O 39 14$,do B 37 14,do E 36 18$, Lawrence A 86 13$, do E 86 lateness of the season.
14$, do F 86 14, do G 34 12$, do H 27 11$, do LL 36 13$, Lyman O 86 14,
do E 36 17, Massachusetts BB 36 14, do J 30 12$, Medford 36 15$, Nashua
IMPORTATI01VS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK.
small lots have been

fine 33 14, do 36 16, do E 39 18, Newmarket A 13$, Pacific extra 86 16$,
do H 36 16$, do L 36 14$, Pepperell 6-4 —, do 7-4 30, do 8-4 37$, do
9-4 46, do 10-4 62$, do L1-4 67$. Pepperell E fine 39 16$, do R 86

14$, do O 33 13$, do N 30 12$, do G 30 13, Pocasset F 80 10$, do K 86
13$, do Canoe 40 16$, Saranac fine O 38 14, do R 36 15, do E 39 17$,
Sigourney 36 16$, Stark A 36 16$, Swift River 36 12$, Tiger 27 9,
Tremout M 83 11.
Bleached Sheetings

and

Shirtings.—Favorite makes

are

sold

pretty close up to production, and as soon as the advancing season brings
the usual tiade demand, higher prices will probably be made, unless thei e
should be a material decline in cotton to counterbalance the upward ten¬
dency. Amoskeag 46 20, do 64 26$; do A 36 17$, Androscoggin L 36 18,
Appleton 36 18, Attawaugan XX 86 14, Atlantic Cambric 86 26, Ballou
& Son 36 16$, do 81 12$, Bartletts 86 16, do 38 16, do 81 14, Bates XX 86
19, do B 83 14$, Blachstone 36 16$, do D 36 14, Boott B 36 16$, do C 88
14,doE *6 13$, do H 28 11$, doO 30 13,do R 28 10$,do L 86 16,do W
45 19, Dwight 40 21, Ellerton E 42 19, do 27 —, Forrest Mills —, Forestdale 36 17$, Fruit of the Loom 36‘19, Globe 27 8$, Gold Medal 36 15$,
Greene M’fg Co 86 12$, do 31 11,Great Falls K 86 16, do J 33 13$,doS
81 13, do A 83 16, Hill’* Semp. Idem 36 18, do 33 16$, Hope 86 16$,
James 36 16$, do 33 14, do 81 13, Lawrence B 36 15$, Lonsdale 36 1 9.
Masonville36 19,Newmarket 0 86 14$, New York Mills 36 26, Pepper¬
ell 6-4 83$, do 8-4 46, do 9-4 62$, do 10-4 57$, Rosebuds 86 17$, Red
Bank 36 1*$, do 32 11, Slater J. A W. 86 16,Tuscarora36 2d, Utica 5-4
82$, do 6-4 87$, do 9-4 65, do 10-4 70, Waltham X 83 18$, do 42 18,
d<» 6-4 32$, do 8-4 46, do 9-4 60, do 10-4 67$, Wamsutta 46 32$, do 40$
29, do 86 22$, Washington 88 10$.
Brown Drills are rather scarce in the market, aod continue to be
very firm in both jobbers and agents hands.
Amoskeag 17$, Boott 17$,
Graniteville D 16$, Laconia 17$ Pepperel 17$, Stark A 17$, do H 16$.
Prints.—There is pothing pew in this line,
We have beard the




.

The

importations of diy goods at this port for the week ending July

8, 1869, aud the corresponding weeks of 1867 aud 1868, have been as
follows:
entered for consumption for THE WEEK ENDING JULY

1867.——,
Value.
Pkgs.
Manufactures o! wool... 661
1306,0(8
do
cotton.. 462
112,781
do
silk....
375
206,298
do
flax
460
90,653
Miscellaneous dry goods. 195
108,802

1868.

.

$854,542

1,953

Total
WITHDRAWN

FROM

Pkgs.
433
531
251
546
177

1,938

WAREHOUSE AND THROWN

.

Value.
$173,369
144,460
240,075
122,812
66,361
$747,U67

8, 1869.
1869.

.

Pkgs.
273
394
314
359
165

1,505

INTO THE MARKET

$120,992
114,795
233,884
61,664

67,356

$588,691
DURING

THE SAME PERIOD.

453
307
47

384

5(>;713
1 t,7Sb

201
23

908

$222,513

881

forconsu’pt’n 1,953

851,542

1,938

....

Total

Add ent’d

$S6,S05
46,139
24,070

Manniactures of wool...
do
cotton..
do
silk
do
flax
Miscellaneous dry goods.

186
140
21
257

Total th’wnxpon mak’t 2,8013 $1,077,055

$91,131

7,662

220
145
24
260
48

$316,058
747,067

697

$226,102

1,505

5i8,691

2,769 $1,063,125

2,202

$814,793

$182,283
31,429
50,625
44,059

49.890
26,369

53,287
5,485

ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD.

Manufactures of wool... 1,231
do
do
do

Miscellaneous

cotton..

silk
flax

....

dry goods

164
135
3 8

50

Total
3,918
Add ent dforconsu’pt’n.1.953

Total entered at the nort 8,871

$583,209
37 282

124,605
85,666
18,752

721
244
105
225
8

$844,514

3,803

854,542

3,928

$1,699,056

$295,882
71,047
92,749
63,941
9,784

$533,403
747,067

3,241 $1,280,470

722
149
75
482

107

1,535
1,505

>

Value.

$297,967
47,632

74,727
78,634
22,995

$521,355

558,691

3,040 $l,U0,04fl

68

THE CHRONICLE
Dry Goods.

American
THE BEST

CAUTION!

John S. &

QUALITY OF

Grain

Eben Wright &
92

4

14

Manufactured in this Country offered for Sale by
C. A. IDFFJnOIlDT Sc CO.,
134 & 13H DUANE STREET.

JENKINS, VAILL &
PEABODY,
46 LEONARD

Miscellaneous.

Dry Goods.

silks.

Black Gros

[July 10,1809.

Co.,

AGENTS FOR THE
Otis Company,
Belknap Mills,
Columbian Mfg Company, Grafton Mills,
Warren Cotton Mills,
Sumner Falls Mills,
Boston Buck Company,
Gllmanton Hosiery Mills,
Cordis Mille,
Pepper Hosiery Mills,
Thorndike Company,
Otis Hosiery Mills, And Arlington Mills,
Fancy Dress Good4,8-4 ana 6-4 Roubaix Cloth, Imper¬
ial Chines, Alpacas, Reps Coburgs, &c.,&c.

Belknap

a. Grafton

Shaker Flannels.

STREET,
Otis

AND TO CONSUMERS OF

91 Franklin Street, New York,
t Devonshire Street. Boston

Shirtings, Flannels, Rob Roys, Cassimcres.Repellants,
Cottonades, Domestics, Boys’ Checks, Sulloways,

RT ROODS COMMISSION MERCHANTS.

TO THE TRADE

Hosiery.

Co., Pepper

and Gllmanton Mills’ Sulloways,
Shaker Socks, Ac., &c.

J

P.

&

.

BEST

C

O A T

s’

THREAD.

SIX-CORD

A COUNTERFEIT, OR ROUGH FAC-SIMILE OF

their trade-mark upon the wrappers of thread, Is
In circulation, and may be readily detected by com¬
parison with the genuine. The black and gold labels
upon the spools are larger than the genuine. The
white labels bearing the name of “ Andrew Coats.
General Agent for the United States.” are roughly cut
out by hand.
The spurious article, having been smuggled into the
U. S., is also liable to seizure by the customs.

Bine Denims.
Columbian Heavy, Otis AXA. BB, CC. D, O. E, G,
A A,

J. A I*, Coat*.

Of Beyers! MUD.

Union, Arlington, Oxford, Mt. Vernon, Beaver Creek
BK, CC, Thorndike, C. Haymaker, Palmer, Bos¬
ton, Northfleld, Pawnee, Farmers’ and Mechanics’
brown Denims.
Columbian XXX, Otis BB, Warren A.B.D.X.

All deall ns In Thread with theae
Forced Labels will be prosecuted by

AMERICAN SILKS.

Ticks.
Cordis ACE. AAA, BB, Duck AA.B., Thorndike A.C.
Swift River, Palmer, New England.

Sole Agents

Soli Agents lor the aslt of

COTTONS AND

WOOLBNS,

MANUFACTURED BY

C-H i£ n e

Cordis

Brothers.

y

JOHN Sr HUGH AUCHINCLOS9,
In New York for J. A P. COATS.

Christy

Stripes.
Awning, Thorndike, B.C.. Otis CC, Mount Ver¬
non, Columbus, Eagle,
Warren FF Fine Sheeting*.

PURCHASING

BLKA. AND BROWN.

Brown and Bleached Goods.

Itlaclilne Twist.
lia^s and

Organzines,

INE ORGANZINES FOR SILK MIXTURE
MERES.

Cor. of Exchange Place.

.CASSI-

Removal.
Insurance.

Pongee Handkerchief*,
Silk Warp Poplins,

THEODORE POLUEUtS A

Goods,

CO.,

DUCK, Sun Mutual Insurance

COTTON

Belt Ribbons.
SILKS FOR SPECIAL

: <■

PURPOSES TO ORDER.

COMPANY,

Have removed from 59 Broad Street, to

AGENTS:

WALL J WET.

52

EDWARD II. ARNOLD Sc
102 Franklin

SON,

NOS. 13 A 15 LISPENARD STREET.

;

Street, New York.

HGNEV Sc N1LL1KEN,
4 Otis

Street, Boston.

Th eodorePolhemus&Co.

COTTON CANVAS. FELTING DUCK, CAR COVER.
ING, BAGGING, RAVENS DUCK, SAIL TWINES
&C. “ONTARIO’
SEAMLhSS BAGS,
“
AWNING STRIPES.”

Insures against Marine and Inland Navigation Risks
at Low Kates and on Favorable Terms.
No Fire Risks taken disconnected from Marine.

COT TONSAILDUCK

10 and 12 German Street, Baltimore.

Also, Agents
United Stales Bunting Company.
.A full supply all Widths and Colors always lu stock.
13 A 15 Llspcnard Street.
E. A. BmNcKEnnoFF,
J. Spencer Tunnkr.

Geo.

Theodore Polhemus.
H. D. Polhrmus, Special.

J. Byrd & Co.,
Manufacturers oi

Cash

Amount ot Losses paid
tion of the Company

Dealers have the option of participating In the Pro
fits, or receiving an abatement from Premiums, in
lieu of Scrip Dividends.

TRUSTEES
Moses H. Grlnnell,
John P. Paullson,
Isaac H. Walker,
Joon E. Devlin,
William H. Macy,
Fred C. Foster,
Richardson T. Wilson,
John H. Macy,

Nos. 12 & 14

WARREN STREET NEW YORK.

C. B. &

SHOE THREADS.

LINEN THREADS,
CARPET THREADS.
SEWING MACHINE THREADS.
GILL NETT TWINES. FISH LINES,

J. F. Mitchell,

Ellas Ponvert,

Simon De Visser,
Wm. R. Preston,
Isaac A. Crane,
A. Yznaga Del Valle,
John S. Wright,
m. Von Sachs,
Philip Dater,
-

A 89 Leonard

S7

Brothers,

AGENTS

Gas Machines.

COTTONS

Co.,

AND

WOOLEN'.

EMPIRE STATE

Steamship Companies.

Gas

MANUFACTURERS OF

DRIIiLED-El7£D

PACIFIC Mail STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S

NEEDLES,

THROUGH LINK

Fishing Tackle.
NO. 7 WARREN STREET, NEAR BROADWAY.

To California &

China,

Touching at Mexican Porta

NEW YORK.

For

■

CARRYING THE UNITED STATES MAILS.

On

MANUFACTURERS OF

8ALERATCS,




SUPER CL1UII. SODA,
7»f. 11

Old

AC.,

the

1st'

11th and

21st of Each

Month.
Leave PIER 42 NORTH RIVER, foot of Canal street
at 12 o’clock noon, as above (except when those dates
fall on Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday),
for ASPINWALL, connecting via Panama Railway
with one of the Company’s Steamships from Panama
for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPl LCO.

Slip, New York,

Bay State
FOR LIGHTING

TABLES

Greatly Reduced Prices.
Will. HEERDT, manufacturer'
150 WOOSTER STREET,
AND
-

rCViTON

PACIFIC and CENTRAL AMERICAN
Those of the 1st touch at MANZANILLO

pouhds baggage allowed each adult.
Baggage-masters accompany baggage through, and

Of Every Stylo and Quality' at

NEW

PORTS.

One hundred

(EXCLUSIVELY),

B8TWEKX PBIN08

for SOUTH

BTP*

7

attend to ladies and children without male protec¬
tors. Baggage received on the dock the day before
sailing, from steamboats, railroads, and passengers
who prefer to send them down early. An experienced
surgeon on hoard. Medicine and attendance free.
For passage tickets or turther information apply
the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, foot
Canal street North River, New York,

F. B. BABY, Agent.

Gas Works

CHURCHES, HALLS, ETC.

NASH Sc GATE*
State Rights

Agents,
29 Cortland St.

for sale.

THE SPRINGFIELD

M«

Gas

Departure of 1st connect at Panama with steamers

XTENSION

Machine

Lighting Private Dwellings*

AND

John Dwight & Co.,

-

For the Sale oi

99 Chambers Street, Corner

Flsli Hooks and

William Oothout,
Ernest Caylus,
Frederick Chauneey,
Geo. L. Kingsland,
James F. Pennlman,
Frederic Sturges,
’
Anson G. P. Stokes.
P. PAULISON, President,

Stieet, New Y<rk.

MANUFACTURERS

Church Street, New York
WORKS. PATERSON, NEW JERSEY

*■

JOHN
ISAAC H. WALKER, Vice-President.
JOHN P. NICHOLS, Secretary.

COMMISSION MERCHANTS.

TWINES, FLAX, ETC.

Thos. H. Bate &

PARASOLS,

Win. Toel,
Thomas J. Slaughter,
Joseph Galllard. Jr.
Alex. M. Lawrence,
Isaac Bell,
Elliot C. Cowdln,
Percy R. Pyne,
Louis De Beblan,
1 oseph V. Onativla
Edward S. J affray,

Henry Foster Hitch,

UMBRELLAS AND

Barbour

•

Capital and Assets, Jan. 1,1869, * - $1,031,167 17
since Organiza¬
- 27,124,594 73
Amount of Profits declared and paid In
4,507,402 87
Cash do. do. do. do.
-

Manufacturers and Dealers In

CHASE, STEiVART A CO.,

|

•. •

Incorporated May 22. 1841.

And all kinds of

LEONARD BAKER Sc CO.,
210 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia

,

YORK,

No. 58, BROADWAY, NEW

Poulards and Florentines,

Silk Dress

BROKER

WOOL

Thorndike H. B. & C. Brown and Bleached Sheetings,
Hingham, Farmers' AA and Swift River Brown Sheet¬
ings. 10-ln. Rocky Mountain Duck, Bear, Raven’s Duck

Sewinjt Silk,

Davis,

,v;

FOR LIGTH1NG

h i n e,
.

COUNTRY RESIDENCES AND

MANUFACTORIES.

These celebrated MACHINES are sold by
GILBERT A BARKER, General Agents, No. 9)

Crosby-st., N. Y. (Broadway entrance through Corel
& Co/-*, N*>. 554.)
ILLUSTRATED CIRCULARS, giving full descrip¬
tion-of the MACHINE, and also testimo lals
from,
and reference to, some hundred persons who have
need them for a number ofYears, can be had
upon
application, or will be manea upon request.

69

TtiE CHRONICLE.

July 10, 1869.]

Insurance.

Western Bankers.

Boston Bankers.

Page, Richardson & Co., Gilmore, Dunlap & Co., Mercantile Mutual
BANKERS,
(MARINE)
108

Street, Boston.
Exchange, and Commercial and Travelers’
70 State

Bills of

110

A

Bt> nk.

)

[-LONDON.

and

Robert Benson Sc Co.,)
Ittnnroa A Co.

J'

GOLD, SILVER and all kinds ol

Dealers in

GOVERNMENT BONDS.

Marcuard, Andre Sc Co

Circular Notes available for Travelers in all

COLLECTIONS MADE at all accessible

parts of

Europe and the East.

Co.,

CHECKS

LONDON

ON

Sc

P.

CO.,

PARIS

AND

COMMERCIAL BANK

OF CHINA AND JAPAN.

Dupee, Beck & Sayles,

313

&

Kidd, Pie ce & Co., Bankers.

Isaac Harter &
(ESTABLISHED

CIIAS. H. OBERGE

UnionBanking Company
Sts.,

of
H. F.
M. D.

w

*

^

All other Banking Business in Philadelphia lnr
trusted to us will receive our prompt attention.

Washington.
FIRST NATIONA L BANK OF WASH¬
INGTON.
President.

C overnment

Depository and Financial
Agent of the United Stales.
Government Securities

of the most favorable terms, and give especial atten¬

Chicago.

Alfred Cowles—Secretary and Treasurer and Director
of Chicago Tribune Co.
P. R. Westfall, of Merchants, Farmers and Mechanics
Savings Bank.
Henry W. King, of Henry W. King & Co.
N. O. Williams, of Fitch, Williams & Co.
H. Z. Culver, of Culver, Page & Co.
Henry H. Taylor, Farm Machinery Warehouse.
E. F. Pulslie:-, ol E. F. Pulsiler & Co.
Wm. II. Kretsinger, lumber merchant.
S. W. Ransom, manufacturer of boots and shoes.
Bacon Wheeler (retired).

Benoist &

L. A.

BROKERS,

on

BROWN, LANCASTER A CO.,
No. 30 SOUTH STREET, BALTIMORE, MARYLAND.

cities

London and Paris for Sale.
Jos. Hutcheson.

Do

13

S.

HIGH

R. H. Maury &
_

'

1 BANKERS

Co.,

No. 1014 MAIN ST.

RICHMOND, VA.

Sterling Exchange. Gold and Sliver, Banl Note*,
State, City and Railroad Bonds and Stocks &c.,
ocuight and sold on commission.
HT deposits received and Collections made on all
accessible points In the United States.
IF. 1. Correspondent, YERMILYE A CO.

J. L. Levy & Salomon,

STOCK BROKERS AND EXCHANGE
DEALERS,

2* CARONDELET ST.
General

N. ORLEANS.

rirtners.-J. L.Levy

;• E.Salomon,formerly
of 15. J. Hart & Co.

fanners In Commendum.—E. J. Hart; Day dSai oMon, of New York.

fioUectloiks made




o * * 11 points.

1

289,553 98

GOLD when Desired.

Agent.

COLUMBUS, OHIO,
Geueral Banking, Collection, and Exchange

Second National

Insurance
OFFICE

Capital
----«200,000
Deposited with U. S. Treasurer o secure Circulation
Deposits 500,000.

G. C. HYDE, Cashier.

STATE

$3,410,300

reorganized as a National Bank,
is now prepared to do a general banking business.
Government Securities, Coin. Gold Dust and Bullion
bought and sold at current rates. Special attention
given to collections throughout the West,
Jajixb H. Bbitton, Pres. Chas. K. Dick on
s
Edwasd P. Curtis Caahlar'l

COOPER INSTITUTE, THIRD
AVENUE.

$500,000 00
245,011 93
Capital and Surplus, July 1st,
1868, (745,911 03.

Insures Property against Loss or
lie usual rates.
Policies issued and Losses paid

Company, or at its various
cities in the Urltcd States.

Damage by Fire at
at the office of the

Agencies In the principal

JAMES W. OTIS, President.
R. W. BLEECKER, Vice Pres

F H. Carter, Secretary,
f. Gbiswold. General Agent.

Bankers and Brokers.
REMOVAL.

ESTABLISHED 1837.

This Bank, having

Co.,

BROADWAY,

Capital
Surplus
Cash

in St. Louis.
Capital paid ill

Fire

INCORPORATED 1823.

CIIAS. HYDE, Prcs’t.

NATIONAL BANK OF THE
OF MISSOURI.

114

BRANCH OFFICE 9

Bank,

TITUSVILLE, PENN.,
and

INSURANCE.

American

North

Cask

& BROKERS,

$5,150,931 71

:

IAS. A. ALEXANDER,

STREET

But'
justness.

T. BROOK*.

STREET.

1,1860

Policies Issued Payable In

W. B. Hayden.

No. 23 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.

BOB’T

Assets Jan.

FIRE

Hayden,BANKERS,
Hutcheson &Co
NO.

,

WALL

62

Liabilities

EX¬

Street, Richmond, Va.

MAURY'.

NEW YORK AGENCY

NO.

LOUIS, MISSOURI.

Buy and Sell Exchange on all the principal
Canadas. Also

P. Hayden.

AND

$3,000,000

CASH CAPITAL

BANKERS,

Drafts

Co.,

INCORPORATED 1819.

Co.,

of the United States and

JA8. L.

Company,

OF HARTFORD.

FIRE AND INLAND INSURANCE.

ST.

ROB'T H. MAURY

Insurance

Albert Keen—Director of Michigan Southern and
Northern Indiana RR. Co. and of Henry and Albert

Department of tlio Government.

LANCASTER, BROWN A CO

If

iETNA

F. Eames—Director of National City Bank of
Ottawa, Ill.
Wm. H. Ferry—Director of First National Bank oi
Utica, N. Y., and Chicago & Northwestern RR. Co.

H.

Full information with regard to Government Loans
at all times cheerfully furnished.

No. 1113 Haln

In Gold,

RUDOLPH GARRIGUE, President.
JOHN EDW KAHL, Vice-President.
HUGO SCHUMANN, Secretary.

Eames, President.
Wm. H. Ferry, Vlce-Pres.
Buouanan, Cashier. Geo.L. Otis, Assist. Cash.
DIRECTORS.

Business connected with the several

STOCK

45,000 00

Issued Payable
Desired.

$5 00,COO

tion to

AND
CHANGE

925,150 92

BANK

We buy and Sell all classes of

BANKERS

$500,000 00
,

Keep.

Bankers.

Lancaster &

BRANCH OFFICES:

No. 35? Bowery, New York.
No. 377 Fulton Street, Brooklyn

Policies

Capital

MUSSELMAN, President.'

H. D. COOKE (of Jay Cooke & Co.,)
WM. S. HUNTINGTON, Cashier.

Germania Fire Insurance

Cash Capital
Assets, July 1, 1868
Liabilities

NATIONAL

Vice-Pres.

C. J. Despard, Secretary.

COMPANV.

THE

COLLECTED AND REMITTED FOR ON DAY OF
DAYMENT, BY THE

N. E. Cor. 4tli A Chestnut
PHILADELPHIA.

MONTGOMERY, Jr., VIce-Pres.

Office, No. 17 5 xroadwa

j
COMMERCIAL

L. Edgerton,

Henry R. Kunhardt;
John S. Williams,
Charles DImon,
Paul N. Spoflord,

ALANSON W. HEGEMAN.2U

1854.)

Special Attention given to the collec¬
tion of Banks, Bankers and

NOTES, DRAFTS, AC., AC.

Southern

Sons,

Merchants.

Philadelphia

N. C.

Harter.

CANTON, OHIO."

Commission Stock Brokers.

Aaron L. Held,
Henry Eyre,
Joseph Slagg,
Edward Merritt,
Daniel T. Willets,

Jos. Willets.
ELLWOOD WALTER, President.
ARCH. G.

Oberge,

Francis Hathaway,

Bryce Gray,
N. L. McCready,
William Nelson, Jr.,
Harold Dollner,

Henry Clews & Co., Bankers.

G. D. Harter.
M. D.
BANKING HOUSE OF

PHILADELPHIA.

E. I. MOODY, Cashier.

accessible points.

Importers & Traders National Bank.

WALNUT STREET,

J. BELL AUSTIN.

Gold,

New York Correspondents.

Isaac Harter.

Geo. W. Hennings,
A. Foster Higgings,

James Freeland,
Samuel Willcts,
Robert L. Taylor,
William T. Frost,
M illiam Watt,
Cornelius Grinnell,
James D. Fish.
Ell wood Walter,
D. Colden Murray,

*5

Collections promptly made on all
National Park Bank,
Nat. Broadway Bank.

Philadelphia Bankers.

Austin

*

•

Dealers In Foreign and Domestic Exchange,
and SHvcr Coin and Government Securities.

HENRY SAYLES.

JAMES BEOK.

.

TRUSTEES

•

Ohio

Wooster,

BROKERS,

NO. 22 STATE STREET, BOSTON.
JAMES A. DUPE.

Scrip Dividends of a Mutual Company. The
oeing fixed according to the
business, gives to dealers a more just
apportionment of profltB than by the mutual system ;
and being made in cash, on payment of the Pre¬
miums, is more than equivalent to the cash talus
of the average Scrip Dividends ol Mutual Companies.
Policies issued, making loss payable in Gold in this
City, or in Sterling at the Office of the Company’s
Bankers in Liverpool, if desired.

OF

•

STOCK

This Company takes Marine and Inland Navigation
Risks on Merchandise, Freight and Hulls of Vessels.
On the payment of Premiums a Rebate or Discount
on the current rates is made in cash, as an equivalent

S. R. Bonewitz, Cashier.

Emrich, President.
THE

Advances made on consignments of approved mer
chandizc.

1,500,000

character of the

AGENTS FOR

HEARD

$1,000,000

Assets

amount of such Rebate

FOR SALK

Street, floaton,

AUGUSTINE

I

Capital

YORK.

for the

points and remitted for on day of payment.

Everett &
28 State

NO. 35 WALL STREET, NEW

ypARIS.

AND

COMPANY,

INSURANCE

CINCINNATI, OHIO.

Credits Issued on

Tlie CItv

Fourth Street.

West

I.

M. Weith
DEALERS

&

SOUTHERN AND MISCELLANEOUS

SECURITIES

Removed lo No. 9 New Stre t,
will continue the business under the style of
J. M. WEITH Sc A RENTS*

Have
and

Co.,

IN

60

THE CHRONICLE.
Financial.

[July 10,1869.

Financial.

Banterm and Brokers.

Williams&Guion,
71 Wall

Colon Sc

RANKING HOUSE
OF

Street,

New York.
Alex. S. Fetriu Sc Co.,

Co.,

Liverpool.

Jay Cooke & Co.,

London.

Advances made on consignments to our Correspon¬
dents, and orders for the purchase of Merchandise,
Stocks and Bonds, executed by Cable or Mail.
travelers’ and Commercial Credits issued, available
in all pans oi Europe «fce.

Dealers in U.S. Bonds and Members of Stock and Gold
Exchanges In both Cities.
Receive Accounts of Banks and Bankers on liberal
terms.

Co.,

■JANKERS,

HAMBRO Sc SON, London,
METZLER S.SOHN Sc « O.Frankfort

JAME* W. TUCKER Sc

And Letters of Credit available throughout

Dealers in Bills of

Check.
Advances made

on

r

,

GOVERNMENT

Special facilities lot negotiating Commercial Paper.l
Collect’ *>ns both inlind and foreign
promptly made.;
Foreign and Domestic Loans Negotiated.

Europe.

RAILROAD COMPANY, and execute orders lor pur

Circular Notes

WE NE

AN®

CIRCULAR

“

LETTERS OF CREDIT

OT1ATE RAILROAD AND MUNICIPAL

LOANS, receive Deposits, subject to Check, allowing
interest, aud transact a general Banking Business.
JAY- COOKE & CO.! |

TRAVELERS,
AVAILABLE^IN ALL PARTS OF EUROPE
THE
ALSO,

BANKERS,
ISSUE

*

Morton, Bliss &

FOR TRAV¬

Co.

*

Removed

to

Co.,

&

N K E R S

CAPITAL PAID IN B

Nos.

16 and

*

18

ELLERS.

DEALERS IN ALL ISSUES OF

RECEIVES DEPOSITS AND ALLOWS

FOLK

Nassa

PER

STOCKS AND BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD.
AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.

GOVERNMENT

SECURITIES

James G. King’s Sons,
64

William Street.

RAILWAY

STOCK**, BONDS AND
GOLD,

Government and other Securities

Bought and sold at the Stock Exchange

COUPONS,

BUY AND SELL ON COMMISSION

LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TRAV¬
ELER It S#
'

GOLD

on

MAKING

LIBERAL ADVANCES.

INTEREST,

CHECK

TO

AT

SPECIAL DEPOSIT for Six Months
be made at five per cent.
The Capital
ed entirely In

AND IN

GOLD AND

SUBJECT

CENT

DAILY BALANCES

ON
*

James Merrell, Sec

Mangam, Pres.

Street, New York,

EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND PARIS.
SIGHT DRAFTS ON EDINBURGH & GLASGOW

MILLION HOLLARS.

.CHARTERED BY THE STATE.
Darius R.

'

,

YORK,

NO. 336 BKOADW VY

LONE

Vermilye

TrustCompany

OF THE CITY OF NEW

ISSUED BY

-

B A

LETTERS OF CREDIT

National

COMMERCIAL CREDITS;

CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU STB.,

CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERB
OF CREDIT,
For the use of Travelers abroad and in the United
States, available in all the principal cities oi the
world; also,
COMMERCIAL CKEDIT8,
For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hop
West indies South America, and the United State

*

Stocks, Ronds and Gold.

FOR

Duncan, Sherman & Co.,

BONES,

chase and sale of

Deposits subject to Sight Drai

YORK.

NEW

Issues ot

approved securities.

on

STREET,

Buy, Sell and Exchange at most liberal rates, al

and Bonds of LAKE SUPERIOR AND MISSISSIPPI

Exchange, Governments, Bonds
Stocks, Gold, Commercial Paper, and all Negotiable
Securities.
Interest allowed

We

CO., Paris.

AND OTHER PRINCIPAL CITIES
;

No. 53 WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK.

usliint£ton.

WALL

2 0

4

C. J
tt

York, Philadelphia and
M

No.

ISSUE BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON

Soutter 6c

New

SIGHT.

or more, may

of ONE MILLION DOLLARS Is Invest¬

Government Securities, and is divided
500 Shareholders, comprising many gen¬
tlemen of large wealth and financial experience, who
are ai60 personally liable to depositors lor all obliga¬
tions of the Company to double the amount of their
capital stock. As THE NATIONAL TRUST COM
PAN Y receives deposits In large or small amounts,
and permits them to be drawn as a whole, or in part
by CHECK AT SIGHT and WITHOUT NOTICE, al¬
lowing interest on all daily halance4, parties can
among over

keep accounts In this Institution with special advan¬
tages of security, convenience and profit.

usua

Commission.

Interest Allowed

Draw Dills

on

Interest

Deposits.

on

City Rank of Loudon.

Henry II. Ward.

Ward &

Winslow, Lanier 6c Co.,
BANKERS,
PINE

STREET.

NEW

M. K.

Jesup 6c Company,
12 PINE

MERCHANTS,

STREET,

egotiate
Ronds and Loans lor Railroad
Contract lor
Iron or Steel

Cars, etc.

«=-

usual rates.
Draw Bil s on the

Deposits in Gold and Currency received and inte¬
allowed on balances exceeding $1,000.

S. G. & G. C.
AGENTS

HARING

Bills at

Addison Cam mack

Osborn

6c

Cammack,

BANKERS,

T nhrri,.„

\ LONDON.

Stocks and Bonds oought aud sold at the New
York
Stock Exchange.

Gibson, Beadleston & Co,
BANKERS,
No. 50 EXCHANGE PLACE.

STOCKS, BONDS. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
FOREIGN EXCHANGE and GOLD bought aud sold
on the moat favorable terms.
T allowed on deposits either in
ENTER!
Currency
or Gold, s bieet. to check at sight, the same as witu
the C
lie City Banks.
ADVA
ANCBS made on all marketable securities.

CERTIFICATES ol Deposit issued bearing interest
CKRT

COLLECTIONS made at all points of ihe UNION
aud BRITISH PROVINCES.
'
LOANS negotiated on FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC
PRODUCE, iu store and afloat. We invite particular
Attention to this branch of our busFiCfeg, fu which we




Central

State, City, Town,

Particular
inents

• 3,000,006 -

descriptions of Government Bonds-*
City and County accounts received on terms moBt la
vorable to our Correspondents.
Collections made In all parts of the United States an 1
Canadas.
WILLIAM A. WIIEEjJjCK, President
William H. Sanford, Cashier.

The Tradesmens
NATIONAL

BANK.

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

COMMISSION.

pal,t to Invest*'
iu Southern State Ronds.

Tapscott, Bros, & Co.
BROADWAY, NEW YORK

CAPITAL
SURPLUS

Taussig, Fisher & Co.,
BANKERS AND BROKERS

Sight Drafts aud Exchange payable in all
parts of Great Britain and Ireland.
W. TAPSCOTT & CO., Liverpool. Ad
vances made on consignments.
Orders for Govern
meut Stocks, Bonds and Merchandize executed.

$1,000,0
470,00
RICHARD BERRY, President.
ANTHONY HALSEY Cashier

Issue

Credits

Bank,

Has for sale all

291

Attention

86 SOUTH STREET & 23

National
318 BROADWAY

Securities,
BOUGHT AND SOLD ON

THE CITY BANK.
)
Messrs. ROBERT BENoON & CO.

Sixes;

and Specie

Central and

County aed Corporation Bonds ; Insurance, Manufac
taring and Bank Stocks, BOUGHT AND bOLD.

Stocks, Slate Ronds. Gold and Federal

Exchange on PARIS, Sterling
Sight or Sixty Days, on

lu.e unusual facilities

COMPANY.

34 BROAD STREET.

DRAW Short-sight

Union Pacific Railroad

Cupltal

If BOTHERS Sc

No, 56 Wall Street.

TRAVELERS,

NEW YORK.

Government Securities, Stoekst Gold
Southern Securities and Bank Notes;

FOR

C. J. Osiiorn.

LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR

Ward,

63 WALL STREET, NEW YORK.
sW state STREET, BOSTON.

connected with Kail wave

James Robb, King 6c Co.,

Foreign Ex*

BROKERS

AND

NO. 11 WALL STREET,

rest

Cos.,

Ralls, Locomotives,

Gold and Government Se

UNION HA INK OF LONDON.

nd undertake

all

BANKERS

Established 1820.

change negotiated.

BANKERS AND

W.

Co.,

STREET, NEW YORK.

Orders In Stocks. Bonds,
curities promptly filled at

Utley & Geo.
Dougherty,

Chas.H. Ward.

BANKERS,
54 W ALL

YORK.

Wm. R.

Deposits.

on

Wm. G. Ward.

No. 32 Broad

on

Street, New York./

Buy and Sell at Market RateB
ALL UNITED STATES

SECURITIES,

Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS an
others, ar.1 allow interest on daily balances, subject

Warren Kidder & Co.,
BANKERS,

NO. 4 WALL STREET, NR.W
Orders f<»r Stocks Bonds and Gold

YORK.

promptly executed. FOUR PER CENT INTEREST ALLUWEP
oa depot.* fcubj&Ci to check at Bight,

to

Sight Draft.

b

Make collection®
and
of

oil

favoradle

terms,

promptly execute orders for the purchase

Gold,

state,

8e curl tie®.

or sal e

Federal*, and Railroad

July 10, 1869.]
Miscellaneous.

Queen Fire Insurance Co
AND LONDON.
£2,000,000 Stg.
1,893,226
f 1,432,840

OF LIVERPOOL

subject to check at sight, and allow

Mercantile Insurance Co
OF

EDINBURGH.

C^ALL^YNE*} Associate ManagersE. WHITE, Assistant Manager.

INSURANCE COMPANY
HARTFORD, CONN.

OF

Bonds,

Geo. L. Chase, Pres’t

FIRE

INSURANCE
OF HARTFORD, CONN.

in current money.

,

WHITE

ALLYN A CO.,

issued in aid of the Pacific Railroad,
which are widely esteemed by moneyed

andpaid

Agents,

as the longest Six-per¬
cent, Government Bond in the market.
Communications and inquiries by
Mail or Telegraph will receive atten¬
tion.

corporations,

NO. 50 WILLIAM STREET.

Thomas

J. Pope & Bro.
METALS.

PEARL STREET, NEAR BEEKMAN STREET'

FISK & HATCH.

NEW YORK

C.

H.

Hardy

&

commission, for cash.

per-cent. Thirty Year Currency Bonds,

H. Kellogg, Pres

Losses promptly adjusted by the Agents here,

on

We offer also the United States Six-

CO.,

Capital and surplus $1,400,000.
Sec’y.

Stocks and

change miscellaneous

Capital and Surplus *2,000,GOO.

D. W. C. Skilton,

J. L. Brownell & Bro.,

Son,

BANKERS A

Street, New York.

Execute orders at the New York Stock, Government

ed

on

nd Gold
eral

Exchanges, In person, and transact a Gen
Banking. Exchange, and Brokerage Business.

Munroe

&

Lockwood

John Munroe & Co.,
NO. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK.

Rider &
73

on

Frank
RANKERS

BROADWAY, NEW YORK
BELl

STREET,

$9,345,972 12

premiums

policies have been issued upon
risks; nor upon fire risks dis¬

life

connected with marine risks.
Premiums marked off from 1st January,

.

1868, to 31st December, 1868... $6,807,9Ttt m

Losses
same

paid during the
period
$3 081,080 49

Reports of premiums and
$1,383,230 61

expenses

The Company

has the following

as-j

sets, viz : v
United States and State of New York V__

stock, city bunk and other stocks... $7,5871,438 01
Loans secured by stocks and other-.
wise

.4

•

2,214,100 6a

mortgagesV

Real estate and bonds and

Interest, and sundry notes and claims
due the Company, estimated at.....’
Premium notes and bills receivable.,

Cash in bank .‘.r.

Total amount of assets

/

210,000 0U

290,530 03

.y 2,953,267 51
405,548 88
$13,660,881 3i

•Six per cent interest on the outstand*
ftng certificates of profits will be paid
to the holders thereof or their legal representative
on and after Tuesday the Second of;;
February next.

The

outstanding certificates of tbe Issne

«>C

hold¬
and

IS65 will be redeemed and paid to the

or iheir legal representatives, on
Tuesday the Second of Februaif
next, from which date all interest thereon wf 1
cease.
The certificates to be produced at the ti* a
of payment and canceled.
ers

thereof,

A

Dividend

declared
of the

on

of

Forty

Per Cent 1»

the net earned premiums

Company, for the year ending 3 tat
1868, for which certificates will bt

December

Issued

on

and after Tuesday, the Sixth of

April

next.

WALL

CHAPMAN,
Secretary.

STREET

TRUSTERS :

Geo. Akknts

Late J. M. Weith &

Co.,
DEALERS IN SOUTHERN AND MIS¬
CELLANEOUS
NO.

9

NEW

—

Lounsbery & BROKERS,
Fanshawe,

Sight and Time Bills on LONDON, LIVERPOOL,
EDINBURGH
ami
DUBLIN, PARIS, BREMEN,
HAMBURG,
BERLIN,
FRANKFOHT-ON-TfiEMAIN, VIENNA, etc.
STOCKS, BONDS and GOLD BOUGHT AND SOLD

RANKERS

Joseph Gaillard, Jr,

Charles Dennis,
W. H. H. Moore,

James

Hclary Coit,

B. J.

Wm. C.

C. A. Hand,

Low,
Howland,

Benj. Babcock,
Minturo,

Pickersgll1,

AND

Robert B.

Lowell Holbrook,

STREET.

Loans Negotiated.

YORK.

J. I). Jones,

Lewis Cuitis,
Charles H. Bussell,

SECURITIES,

-i-

NEW

J. H.

S

J. M. Weith & Arents,

Bills of Exchange,
Europe to all arts

BANKERS.
NASSAU

U.

Englan

Stoker, Taylor & Co.,
21

2,563,00? 31

January, 1S68

By order of the Board,

Gans,

J. M. Wkith,

SONS.
on

&

AND DEALERS IN

No. II

SAML. THOMPSON’S NEPHEW, and ABM.
Ireland and Scotland.
Bankers furnished with Sterling
and through passage tickets from
of the United fUates

Policies not marked off

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.

Successors to

Drafts

1st

on

Paris

Cortis,

Sterling Exchange business.

Go.,

Interest" allowed upon deposits of Gold and Cu*
renev. eulgect to Check at .Sight.
Gold loaned
Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms.

Issue Ciicular Letters of Credit for Travellers in all

Exchange

&

No. 94 BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET.
DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT AND
OTHER SECURITIES.

SCRIBE, PARIS,

parts of Europe, etc., etc.

$6,7S2,969 81

1868.

Premiums

alter

RANKERS,

RANKERS,

AMERICAN
NO. 7 RUE

iavon.ble terms.
References:

J. H. Fonda, Pres. National Mech. Banking Ass. N Y
C. B. Blair, Pies. Merchants’ Nat. Bank Chicago.

Co.,

tta

the 31at

December, 1868 :
Premiums received on Marine Bisks,
Irom 1st January, 1868, to 31st Dec.,
on

BROKERS,

STREET, NEW YORK,
Stocks, Bouds. Government Securities and Gold
Bought and Sold exclusively on commission.
Accounts of Banks, Bankers and individuals receiv¬
28 BROAD

No. 4 Wall

affairs

No

Railroad Company; also Gold and Sil¬
ver coin and Gold coupons.
We buy and sell at the Stock Ex¬

Hartford

-

The Trustees, in conformity to the Charter of
C mpany, submit the following statement of

Total amount of marine

We buy and sell, at current rates,
all classes of Government Securities,
the Bonds of the Central Pacific

BRANCH OFFICE,

Wi<.LIAM STREET, NEW YORK.

PHOENIX

Mutual Insurance’ Co.,

Union.

$14,044,635 31 IN GOLD.

s!

Atlantic*

Deposit available in all parts of the

PAID UP CAPITAL AND ACCUMULATED FUNDS,

Geo. M. Coit, Sec’y.

OFFICE OF THE

NEW YORK, JANUARY 26, 1869.

interest on balances. We make collec¬
tions on all points in the United States
and Canada, and issue Certificates of

AND

FIRE

Securities,

Corporations, and others,

Bankers,

North British

CHAS.

y
FISK & HATCH,

We receive the accounts of Banks,

THE

STA-fcs

HATCH.

Opposite U. S. Suit Treasury.

Willtam H. Ross, Secretary.

UNITED

fl.

yo. 5 Nassau Street, New York.

GEORGE ADLARD, Manager

50

A.

Bankers & Dealers in Gov’t

Special Fund of $200 OOO
Deposited In the Insurance Department at Albany.
1'nited States Branch, No. 117 Broadway, N. Y

AND

FISK,

Office of

Authorized Capital
Subscribed Capital
Paid up Capital and Surplus

Insurance

and Brokers

Bankers
HARVEY

LONDON

61

THE CHRONICLE.

Frederick

Gordon W. Burnham
'

R. Warren Weston,

R L.

Chaunoey
Taylor,

Royal Phelps, •’

Geo S.

Caleb Barstow,

William H.

A. P.. Pi Hot,

Paul

Stephenson,
Webb,

WALL

STREET,

parts of Europe.

BICHARD P. LOUNSBERY.

White, j DeFreitas
Rathborne,
Banker*

and

National Bat’'.




Exchange,

WILLIAM 8. PANSUAWR

LATE

Daniel 8. Miller.

Robert O.

Sturgis,
Henry K. Bogert.

Samuel G. Ward,

William E. Banker,

Dennis Perkins.

Samuel L.

William E. Dc

Co.,

Meohe.nl a

Merchants,

NO. 44 BROAD STREET. NEW YORK.
Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold

bought and sold pn the most liberal terms. Merchants
Bankers and-others allowed 4 per ceni on deposits.

1

dge,

The most liberal advances made on Cotton, Tobacco,
Ac,, consigned to ourselves or to our correspondent# f
M ssrs. K. GILLIAT A CO., Uyerpot

Fergussoi^

Mitchell,

James G. Da Forest.

WILSON, CALLAWAY A CO.,
Bankers and Commission

Government Securities, Gold, Stocks and Bonds,
bought and sold exclusively on Commission at the
New York btock Exchange.
«

Cashier

YORK

David Lane.

R. T. Wilson &

&

Brokers, IT Broad St.

Interest allowed on Deposits.!
Refer to WM. H. COX, Esq,,

NEW

Government Securities,
Gold and Foreign

COMMISSION.

COLLECTIONS made In all

8

James Bryce,
Wm.

on

NO.

Spofford,
Sheppard Gandy,
Francis Skiddy,
Charles P. Burdett,

JOHN D.

JONES, President.

CHARLES DEK N1S, VUe-President,
W. H. H. MOORE,

J. D. HEWLETT,

2d Vlce-Pies’t.

3d Vice Preft,

62

THE CHRONICLE.

PRICES CURRENT

Dr (tjgs and Byes—Duty,Alcohol,
2 50 per gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ 1b;

tlotOf

a

tnt. ad

*der

discriminating duty of 10
val. is levied

T******

On

imports
reciprocal

no

all

goods, wares, and merwandisey of the growth or produce of
suntries East
of the Cape of Oood
*?°pet when imported from places this

Jde of the Cape of Oood levied
Hope,
f 10 per cent, ad val.
dition

is

to the

r tides

flace

a

Bleaching Powder,80 cents $ 100ft

token imported

in ad¬

directly from the

Anchors-Duty:
Of

2* cents # ft.
2001b and up ward# ft
8

Pearl, 1st

sort

nominal.

Beestvax-Duty,2 ) $
American

yellow.$ ft

centad val.
4'» @
48

Bones—Duty

: on invoice 10 $ ct.
Rio Grande shin # ton39 00 @ ....

Bread—Duty, 30 $ centad val.
Pilot

# ft

Navy

.*

@

6
4J

@

Crackers

6* @

11

re&dstuf fs— See special report.

Bricks.
Common hard..per M. 8 50 @10 07
Crotons....
19 00 @21 00
Philadelphia Fronts...42 U0 @13 00

Bristles—Duty, 15
1 ^ lb.
Atnei n,gray

Batter

cents; hogs hair

&\vh. #ft

ad

40 @ 2 50

Cheese. -Duty: 4

oonts.

Butter-

Creamery palls

State drains, prime
State firkins, ordinary
.

State, ht-flrk., prime..
Sttte, hf-ftr.., ordin’y
Welsn tubs, prime

...

f Welsh tubs, or Jin iry.

Western, gooJ

....

Western, lair

Penn,, dairy, prime
Penn., dairy, good...
.

Canada
Oheete—
_
-

Factory prime.-. .# lb

prime..

BFann Dairies fair.
_

@
@
@
@
34 @
29 @
_

29 @

20 @
30 @
25
..

f. Factory fair
1 Fa-m Dairies

Farm Dairies

...

c nnmon

Skimmed

@
@

28
31
30

13* ^
14f@
15 @
14 @
13 @
8

@

13*
13*
15*
14*
14
10

sporma-

wax

d; it earl no and ada¬
mantine^ cents $1 1b.
Refined sperm,city
43
@
Sperm,patent,. .# ft
58 @
Stearic
25 @
27
Adamantine
2u @
22
.

Cement—RosGndale#bl2 09@
Chains—Duty, 2* cent*# lb.
One inch & upward# lb
7*@

71

Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 # ton
of 28 bushels 80 1b to the
bushel;
other than bituminous,40 cents $ 28
bushels of80 ft

# bushel.

NewcastleG«ks.2,240ft. 9 50 @
Liverpool Gas Cannel. .12 0) @
Llverp’l House Cannell5 00 @
Liverpool Orrel.
@
Anthracite. #

ton

....

....
....
....

of

3,000 lb

8 00 @ 9 00

Caraoas(in bond)(gold)
#
Maracaibo do

"

..(gold)
Guayaquil do ...(gold)
St.

Domingo..;.(gold)

15
27
11

..

Oopper—Duty, pig, bar, and Ingot,
2*; old

2 cents <» ft; manu¬
factured,30 $ cent ad val.; sheathing
opper and yellow metal, Insheets42
fcohes long and 14 inches wide,
relghlng 14 @ 34 or. r* square foot,
3 cents # 1b.
Sheathing,new..9 ft
32
@
copper

..

Bolts

Braziers1

Sheathing, &c., old..
Bheathlng.yellow met 1
Bolts, yellow meta',..
Pi* Chile
American Ingot

35
33
22
27
27

@
@
@
@
@
@
22 @
..

35
23
*-•

,

#

22*

,8; unv„rred
Manila, 2* other untarred,3* cents
# *>•
25
Manila,
24 @
# ft
Tarred Russia
Bolt Rope, Russia

@
@

.»«••.•••••••

21

50

C

TO

#0
ion—See special report.




90

# cent ad val.; Crude Camphor,
30; Refined Camphor, 40cents # ft.;
Carb. Ammonia, 20 # cent ad val.;
Cardamoms andCantharides, 50 cents
$ ft: Caster Oil, $1 $ gallon; Chlo¬
rate Potash, 10 ; Caustic Soda, 1*;
Citric Acid, 10; Copperas,*; Cream
Tartar, 10 ; Cubobs, 10 ceuts $ ft;
Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20

Prussiate Potash

34 @
'<0 @

Sarsaparilla,H.g'd inb’d .. @
Sarsaparilla, Mex.
“
11 @

I

il cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent

Senna, Alexandria....
Senna, Eastlndia

25 @
20 @

Shell Lac
Soda Ash (80#c.)(gnd)

33 @

Sago, Pea. led

SalAm’n<ac, Ref
Sal Soda.Newca8tle “

Seneca Root

free.

2 05 @ 2 10
19 @
2)

Annato, goodtoprimo.
Antimony, Reg. of, g’d
Argols, Crude
Argols, Refined, gold.

9.3

.

75®
ai(a
76®
12* @
13 @
23 @
2f@

Alum

Assafcetlda
Balsam Copivi
Balsam Tolu
Balsam Peru
Bark Petayo

®

20*
00

@ 4 50

27 @

31

castle,gold

3 80 @ 3 87*
Bl Chromate Potash...
19 @
Bleaching Powder
®
3*
Borax, Refined
85 @
35*
..

Brimatons.

Crude

..

$1

(gold).47 50 @
Brimstone, Am. Roll
# lb
3*@

bond)

4

4|@

5

23 @

25
87i

(in

(gold)

Camphor, Refined

87 @

Cantharldos
Carbonate
In bulk

....

Sul¬

phur
Camphor, Ci ude,

1 05 @

Ammonia,
17 @

Cardamoms, Malabar.. 3 25 @

4 50

@

40

Castor Oil

ChamomileFlow’s^ft

Chlorate Potash
Caustic Soda

..

(gold)
“

Carraway Seed
....

Cochineal,Mexic’n(g’d)
Copperas, American
Cream Tartar, pr.(gold
Cubebs, East India....

@
31 @
4J@
17|@
12 @
80 @
..
@
@
30 @
28 @
G|@

..

..

*

Epsom Salts
Extract Logwood

14 @

5

Tart’c

Flowers,Benzoin.#

93
80
2

4
35

80 @
60
Gambler
gold
4
3*ih
Gamboge
1 12 @ 1 15
Ginseng, West
80 @
90 @
Ginseng, Southern.
95
Gum Arabic,Picked..
85
50 @
.

Gum,Myrrh, Turkey.
Gam Senegal
GumTragacanth,Sorts
Gum Tragacanth, w.

flakey,gold

Hyd. Potash, Fr. and

82 &
80 &
83 @

@

44 @

84
85
£9

15
47*

55 @

55 &
@
65 @

Verdigris, dryAex dry
Vitriol, Blue

70

1 12*@ 1 37*

_

do, French HXF.lT.d0

29 @

52
14

Duck—Duty, 30 # cent ad val.

Ravens,Light..#pee 15 00 @

....

Ravens, Heavy

17 00 @
Scotch, G’ck, No.l #y.
@
Cotton,No. 1....# y.

;

72
62

.

Dye Woods—Duty free.

Camwood,gold,#toni00 i'0 @
Fustic,Cuba tv
..30 00 @
Fustic, Tampico, gold
@
Fustic, Jamaica, “
@
Fustic, Savanilla “ 20 00 @
.

....

....

Logwood, Laguna
Logwood, Cam.

“ 35 00 @ 30 00
“ 31 09 @
l.ogwood, Hond
“ 30 00 @
Logwood,Tabasco “ 33 00 @ 31 00

Logwood,St.Dom. “
@
Logwood,Jamaica “ 27 00 @

3 i 00
28 00
79 IK) @ 72 50
20 00 @
....

Limawood
Bar wood

“
“

Sapanwood,Manila“

x39 inches. 6 cents # square
above that, and not exceeding

foot
24x60
foot all

inches, 20 cents #

square
above that, 40 cents # sou are

loo
unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and
Common Window,notexceeding lOx
15 inches square, 1*; over that, and
not over 16x24, 2 ;overthat, and no
over 24x30 2*; all over that, 8 cent
# ft.
American Window—1st,2d, 8d, and 4th
qualities.
Subject to a discount of 45@50 # cent
6x 8 to 7x9.. # 50 ft 7 75 @ 6 00
8x10tolOxlS
8 25 @ 6 50
on

11x14 to 12x18
14x16 to 10x24

9 75 @ 7
10 50 @ 7
12 25 @ 8

18x22to 18x30

20x30to 24x30...
24x31
25x36
30x46
32x50

15
16
17
20
22
25

to 24x36
to 80x44
to 32x48
to 82x56

00
50
50
00
00
00

Above
French Window—1st, 2d, 3d,

qualities.

(81 ngleThick)

@ 9
@10
@12
@18
@14
@10

and
Nevf

00

50
00
00
00
50
50
50
00
4t
l l

of Mar. 11
Discount 45@50# cen
fix 8 to8x10. #50 feet 8 60 @ 6 25
8x11 to 10x15
9 00 @ 6 75
11x14 to 12x18.........10 00 @ 7 60
13x18 to 16x24
11 00 @ 8 00
18x22 to 18x80
13 50 @ 9 00
20x30 to 24x80
16 50 @10 00
24x31 to 24x36.
18 00 @12 00
25x36 to 26x40
20 00 @16 0C
28x40 to 30x48.(3 qlts).22 00 @18 0C
24x54 to 32x56.(3 qlts).24 00 @20 0T
82x58 to 34x60.(3 qlts).27 00 @23 (X

English sells at 35 # ct. off above

32 00
21 00
21 00

Fustic,Maracaibo, “ 18 00 @
.

50 00 @

rates.

Groceries—See special report.

Gunny Bags—Duty, valued at 1
cents or less, # square yard, 3; ove
10, 4 cents # ft
Calcutta, light &h’y %
16 @
17

Gunny Cloth—Duty, valued at 10
cents

or

less

#

square

10,4 cents # ft.

Calcutta, standard, y’d

yard, 3;
23f@

over

23*

....

Feathers—Duty: 30 # centad val.
Prime Western...# ft
95
90 @
Tennessee..

88 @

90

Fish—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings,
$1 ; Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50
# bbl.; on other Fish,Pickled, Smok¬
ed, or Dried,in smaller pkgs.than bar¬
rels, 50 cents # 100 ft.

Dry Cod......# cwt. 7 25 @ 7 50
Pickled Scale... # bbl. 5 00 @
Pickled Cod....# bbl. 7 60 @ 8 00
Mackerel,No.l, ehore27 0u @27 50

Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20
less
# lb, 6 cents # ft, ait
# cent ad val.: over 21 cent* %
ft, 10 cents # ft and 20 # centad va.
Blasting(B) # 251b keg
@4 00
Shipping and Mining..
@4 50
Kentucky Rifle
6 50 @
Meal
6 (H) @
Deer
6 50 @
Sporting, in 1 ft canis¬
ters # ft
86 @ 1 06
cents or

20

S'*

31®
13 ® ,14—

..

..

..

.

....

Mackerel,No.l,Halifax
Mackerel,No. l,By....28 60
Mackerel,No. 3 new
Mackerel,No.2,Halifax....
Mac’el,No.3,Mass. Fgel2 50
Mackerel, Shore, No. 2
Mac,No. 8, Mass,med.l0 50
Salmon,Pickled, No.1.21 00
Salmon,Pickled,#tce.32 00
Herring,Scaled# box. 40
36
Herring, No. 1
Herring,plckled#bbl. 5 00

@
@29 00
....

@
@

North River

# ft

...

@13 00
@
@11 00
@25 60
@35 00
@
45
@
37*

@ 8 03

22 @

24

Fruits—See special report.

-Dut,y,10# cen^
Beaver,Dark..# skin 1 (M) @ 4 00
do

Pale

1 00 @ 4
3 00 @15
2 00 @ 8
50 @
25 @
10 @
4 00 @i0
5 00 @50
8 00 @ 6
7> @ 1
30 @
1 00 @ 2
2 51 @ 4
1 00 @ 3
2 00 @ 8

Bear, Black
do

brown...

do Honse

Fisher,
Fox, Silver
do Cross
do Red
do Grey

Lynx
Marten, Dark
do pale
Mink, dark
do pale

Otter

00
00
05
65
50
15
00
00

G9
75
60
00
00
00
00

1 00 @ 3 0)
@ 9 00
30
10 @
3 @
8
25 @
6»
50 @ 1 00

'.

3 00

Musquash, Fall
Opossum
Raccoon

Gorit.Curacoa# ft cur.

Bnenoi A...cur.
Vera Cruz gold
.

Tampico. ..gold
Matamoras.gold
Payta
cur.
cor.
Cape
Deor,SanJuan#ftgold

.

45

50
55
..

60
40
?8

do

Bolivar

38

do

Honduras..gold
Sisal
gold
Para....«..gold
Vera Cruz .gold
Chargrcs.. .gold
pjrrv^ello.-..

40
41
44
42
43
£4

do
o

do
do

do

RioGrande, mix’d# lbgold26j@
Buenos Ayres,mixed “
@
Hog.Western, unwash.curlO @
.

@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@

..

10*

Hay—North River, In bales# 100 ft
for shipping
60 @

Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila
$25; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; San)
and Sisal, $15 # ton; and Tampico

1 cent # ft.
Amer.Dressed.# ton 275 00@335 0(
do
Undressed.. 175 00@200 00
Russia, Clean
240 00@ 245 00
Italian
(p^old) 4C0 <0@
Manila..# ft..(gold)
12f@
13
Biaal
10 @
10*
8*
Tampico
8 @
Jute
(gold)
4 @
4*
—

Hides—Duty, ell kinds, Dry or Salt¬
ed and Skins 10 # cent ad val.

Dry Hides—

Euenos Ayres#ftg’d
Montevideo
do
RioGrande.... do
Orinoco
do
California
do
San Juan
do
Matamoras
do
VeraCruz...... do
....

-

Tamploo

50
62
,

62*
57*
65
52
65
40

44
40
45
45
40
86

do
do

Bogota

PortoCabello ..do
Maracaibo
do
Truxilio
do
.......

Bahia
Rio Hache

do
do

Curacoa,
do
Pt. au Platt.... do
Texas

currency...*

Western

Skins—-Duty: 10 # centad val,
do
do
.do
do
do
do

Ifai r—Duty trek.

....

Flax—Duty: $15 # ton.

Skunk, Black
38

Eng
(gold) 8 55 & 8 70
Iodine, Resublimed... 6 50 @
Ipecacuanha, Brazil... 3 09 @ ....
Talap, in bond gold..
00 @ 75
Lac Dye
30 @ 45
Licorice Paste,Calabria
27*@ 32
Licorice, Paste,Slolly.
24 @ 25
Lloorioe Paste Spanish
Solid
Licorice Paste, Greek.
•(adder,Dutch (void)

53
11

..

Tapioca

Badger
Cat, Wild

o*.

Gam Arabic, Sorts...
Gum Benzoin
Gum Kowrie
Gain Gedda
gold
Gam Damar
Gum Myrrh,East India

@
10*@
50 @
@

Acid..(g’ld)#ft

Furs and Skins

15 @

Fennell Seed

@

2|

.

....

ton

I lor

2*@
.

Window

or

Polished Platenotover 10x15inches
2* cen ts # square foot; larger and
not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents #
square foot; larger and not over 24

..

@

45 @

Berries, Persian, gold.
Bl Carb. Soda, New¬

@

Glass—Duty, Cylinder

..

05 @
1 ^5
8 50

31
12
45
5J

Sugar L’d,W’e...
@
25
Sulp Quinine, Am# oz 2 32*@ 2 35
Sulphate Morphine “ 9 75 @ ....

fcld, 4 ad val.;$Opium, $2 50;Oxalio
cent cents ft i Phosphorus, 20

Alcohol,95 percent.
Aloes, Cape
# ft
Aloes, Socotrlne

77
1 50 @ 3 00
@
10*
20 @
9}@
9*
1 57*@ 1 02*

Salarat08

ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers
Gamboge, 10 $ cent.;
Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic,20 #cent
ad val.; Gum Benzoin Gum Kowrle, and Gum Damar, 10 cents per ft,
Gum Myrrh, Gum
Senegal, Gum
Geeda and Gum Trugacanth, 20
$
cent ad val.;
Hyd. Potash and Resub¬
limed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and
Jalap,
50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil
Anls, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange,
50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil
Berga¬
mot, $1 $ lb; Oil Peppermint, 50

others quoted below

.

Rhubarb,China

enzola and

# cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬
low, 5; Reddo, 10; Rhubarb,50centa
# lb: Quicksilver, 15 # cent ad
val.; Sal ACratus, 1* cents # 1b ; Sal
Soda, * cent # ft ; Sarsaparilla and
Senna, 20 $ cent ad val.; Shell Lac,
10; Soda Aish, *; Sugar Lead,20cents
# ft; Sulph. Quinine, 45 # cent ad
val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 $ oz.;
Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents
$ ft; Sal Ammoniac,2o; Blue Vit¬
riol, 25 # cent ad val.; Etherial Pre¬
parations and Extracts, $ I # 1b ; all

.'.

Quicksilver

I

....

Its—Duty,50 # centad val.
Regular,qrts # gro 65 @
70
Superfine
1 40 @ 1 70
Regular, Pints
35
50
neral

30

Cutch

Coffee.—See special report.

Opium, Turkey .(gold) 9 87*@10 09
85 @

Cochineal, Hon. (gold)

14 @
20 @
10*@
@

5 75 @ 0 00
2 00 @ 2 25
28 @

Coriander Seed..

C ©coa—Duty,!cents # lb.

6 37*th 0 75
8 87*@ 4 00

Phosphorus

Brimstone,

...

® 2 37*

Oxalic Acid

Arsenic, Powderod “

Candles—Duty,tallow,2J;
oeti and

39
30
35
35
30
32
31
31

37 &
35
37
32
28

..

ffh 3 00

.

15

places of their growth or produc*** »* Rau> Cotton
and Raw Silk excepted.
The ton in all rases to be
2,240 ft.

cent ad val.
Pot, 1st sort... # UK) ft 7 37; $ 7 02*

13

Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone, $10
# ton; FlorSulphur,$20 # ton,and

duty

Ashes—Duty. 20 #

Oil Anis
Oil Cassia..
Oil Bergamot
Oil Lemon
Oil Peppermint,pure.
Oil Vitriol

;

..

10*®
35 @

Nutgalls Blue Aleppo

Refined UoraT, 10 ceuts # ft ; Crude

duties imposed on any such

or

@ 2 00
95 @
@

Mnstard Seed, Cal
Mustard Seed, Trieste.

Balsam Peru, 50 cents $ 1b ; Calisavs
Bark, 80 # centad val.: Bl Carb.Sod 1,
l*; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents $ ft;

United States.

e

fe®

per

all

on

flags that have

Manna,large flake
Manna, small flake....

Alum, 30 cents $ 100 ft; Argols, 6
rents # 1b; Arsenic and
AsBafoedati,
20; Antimony, Crude and Regnlus.
10; Arrowroot, 80 # cent ad val.
Balsam OopAlvi, 20; Balsam Tolu,
30;

In addition to the duties noted

[July 10,1889

do

Dry Salted Hides—
Chili
gold
Payta
do

..

@

22

21 @
21 @

21*
21*

20*@

21

20 @

20*
16*@
17
10 @ *11
18 @
19

18 @
18*@

16
14
18
16

@
@
@
@
14 @
13 @
10 @

Sl*@
20 @
15 @
.. @

19
19*
17

14*
19
17
15

14
17
23
22
16

do
Maranham
Pernambuco.... do
Bahia
do
do
Matamoras
Maracaibo
do
Savanilla
...do
Wet Salted Hides—
Bue Ayres.# 1b g’d.

11*@

12

Calif# .‘ala
ao
Para....
...do
New Orleans...cur

11*@
11 @
9@
11 @

12
11*
10
-2

City a^hter trim.A
cured

12*1

12|

BloGraude.... do

13 @13 @

12 @
15 @
12 @
12 @

14
14
13
1C*
13
13

July 10, 1869.]
0 ppe r Loathe r B took—
E. A. & Rio Qrl Kir

Cherry boards and plank..70 00@80 00
Oak and ash

y tt gold

Minas

@

..

234
20
41
35
27

19 @

......*v«««».»

Sierra Leone/, ^caah^ 43 @
>i<
Gambia & Bissau /»
32 @
Zanzibar
>
26 @
East India Stocked)
..

-

.

Calcutta,city gFhtti *s
<•"
$ p. gold..
Calcutta, dead green
do
buffalo,$ lb
Manilla & Batavia,
buffalo
$ ft

M6 @
19 @
13 @

164
134
14

10

11

@

Vermillion, Trieste

..

...60 00@70 0C
M 2 f,0@ .
Hemlock... 3x4, per pi •»ce ....@
22
do
do
50
....@
4x6,
do
do
25
bds,
22@
do
26
23@
Spruce
bds,
do
do plk 1 % in.
31@
do
do
50
...do 2 in.
35@
do
do strips, 2x4
20
is@
do
00@22 00

,

do of 1867
Bavarian.

@

8 00
8
6
6 00

@
@
@

East India

Carthagena, &o

.v.

55

Oude
Madras
Manila
Guatemala
Garaocas

2 30

(gold)

@ 1 15

Iron—Duty,Bars,1 to 1J cents y lb.
Railroad, 70 cents y 100 lb; Boiler i
and Plate, 14centsy ft; Sheet,Band,
Hoop, and Scroll, 14 to If cents $ ft;
Pig, $9 y ton; Polished Sheet, 3
eents y
00
00
50
60

#—Store Pricks—,
Bar Swedes,ordinary
alaes
140 00@150 00

Bar,English and Amer¬
ican, Refined
to

90 00@ 95 00

do Common 85 00@ 90 00
Scroll
118 0 @175 00
Ovals and Half Round 115 50@140 50
Band
115 00@
....
Horse Shoe
115 00@
do

Rods,5-8@3-16inch.. 95 00@155 00
Hoop
123 00@1S0 00
Nail Rod
> ft
7i@
81
Sheet, Russia
1I4@
124
Sheet, Single, Double
and Treble

5|@

....

7

Bails, Eng. (g’d)y ton 56 00@57 00
do

Amerioan

75 00@78 00

India, Prime yft

3 00@ 8 374

Ind^Billlard Ball 8 124@ 3 37*
African, Prime..
2 50@ 2 87
Afrioan,Sorlvel.,W.C. 1 25@ 2 25
..

..

Lead—Duty, Pig, $ a y 100 ft

;

Old

VEla6an<lsheet’

y/10a,#»V:'- @
Spanish........ ,(|mdL6. 80 @ 6 37i
German
..(grid) 8 80 @ 6 50
Galena

.

English

....

(gold) 6 80 @ 6 87*

Bar

.net

Pipe and Sheet.. ..net

..

..

@io 50
12
@

Leather—Duty; sole 35, upper 80
y cent ad val.
Oak,si’hter,heavy y 1b
do

no

do
do
do
do

middle

do

light.,
docrop,heavy

do

good damaged
poor

$1 ft.
Cut,4d.@60d.y 100 ft 4 75 @

ft

..

26 @

Copper

80

40 @
27 @
18 @

Yellow metal
Zino

Lime—Duty; 10 y cent ad val.
Rook land, oo m. $ bbl.
@ 1 95
do
heavy.....
..@175
..

Lumber, dec.—Duty: Lumber,20
y oentad val.: Staves, 10 y oentad
val.; Rosewood and Cedar, fbk*.
Bird’s-eye maple,logs, $ ft.
6@
7
Black walnut
y M. ft.75 00@85 00
Slack walnut, logsy sup It
8@
9
Black walnut, trotches....
16@
90
do
figur’d AebjUs’d 22@ i 25

timber,/ Geo

.39 00@33 00
y M. ft
Waite oak, logs y cub, ft.45 00@50 00
do
plank, y M. ft.50 00@55 00
Ppor 4 w wood b’ds A
45 00@45 50
nh

17

@

do
do
do

..

Saptha,refined. 68-73
grav., ....’
Residuum

Wine*—Duty: Value not

over 50 ct»
y gallon, 20 cents y gallon, and 25 y
cent, ad val.; over 50 and not ove<
100, 50 cents y gallon and 25 y cent
ad val.; over $1 y gallon, $1 y gal
Ion and 25 y cent ad val.
Madeira
y gall. 3 50 @ 7 00
Sherry
125@900
Port
2 00 @ 8 50
Burgundy port..(gold) 85 @ 1 25
Lisbon
(gold) 2 25 @ 3 50
Sicily Madeira..(gold) 1 00 @ 1 25
Red, Span. & Sicily(g)
90 @ 1 00
Marseilles Mad’ra(g’d) 70 @ 85

Provisions—Duty: beef and pork,
,

1 ct; lanis,bacon,andlar<l,2 els $ft
new mess,^ bb!32 00 @32 12
Pork, old m ss
@31 50

Pork,

Pork, prime mess. ,...28 00 @i9 00
do prime,
26 00 @27 DO
Beef, plain mess
10 00 @14 00
do extra mess
M 00 @16 00
do hams
20 00 @31 53
Hams,
$1 lb
364@
20
Shoulders
13J@
164
Lard
17 i@
20

....

Marseilles

Rangoon Dressed, gold

7i@
2|@

In bond

do strained
do
No. 2
do
No. 1
do
Pale
do
extra

—

pale.

...

Oakum—Duty fir., V ft

8 75 @
2 50 @ 2 60
3 00 @ 3 124
2 75 @ 2 80

424@
2 25 @
2
2
2
4

....

25 @ 230
40 @ 2 60
60 @ 3 50

00. @ tt 00
8 0.* @ 9 to

4S @
50 @

Liverpool,gr’nd$ sack 2 00 @

50
....

do fine,Ashton,8(g,d) 3 65 @ 3 75
do fine, Worthingt’a 2 75 @ 2 85

Copper

8@

11

Oil

Cake—Duty: 20 $ contad val.
City thin obl’g,ln bbls.
V ton.41 00 @42 50
do
In bags.54 5u @55 00
West, thin obl’g, do 61 06 @

Wools—The value whereof at the las

4 cent $ 1b; canary, III $ bushel of
cent

$ft
13 @
Timothy, reaped $ bus 5 00 @
Canary
bus
@

14

to the United States is 32 cents
less y ft, 10 cents y ft an d 11
cent ad val.; over 32 cents y ft,

....

Flax
2 50 @ 2 60
Liua’d Aiu.rough^bus . .. @
do Oalc’a,Bost’n,gM 2 07 @

do

.

do

cents

Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and
rape seed, 23 cents; olive and salad
oil, in bottles or flasks, $1: burning
fluid,50 oents y gallon; palm,seal,
and cocoa nut, 10 $ cent ad
val.;
sperm and whale or other fish (for¬
eign fisheries,) 20 $ cent ad val.

New Yk,g’d 2 (7 @ 2 03

Olive, Mar’s, qs (currency*
per case
5 00 @ 6 00
do in casks.y gall.. 1 40 @

Palm
yft
llj<@
i,i
Linseed,clty...y gall. 1 00 @ ! 04

Whale, crude

@
do bleached winter 1 12 @
Sperm,orude
@
do wint. bleach
@
Lard oil, prime
1 47 @
Red oil,city dist.Elain
do saponified
Bank
Btraits

@

@

85 @
90 @

1
1
l
2
1

06
15
85
05
50

90

95

dry
Zino,whlt>, Amerioan,
dry,l \ 1
do white,American,
No. l,lnoi
do White.Frenc: Iry
do white, French,*, i
oil

..

...

dry.

ground, In oil..
Spanish brown, dry y
ioo •>
!
dc gr’dlnoll.tt
Paris wh.. No. 1.

..

@

12
13

Silk—Duty; free.

All thrown silk,
$ cent.
Tsatlees, No.l@2.#ftl0 CO @11 00

Taysaams, superior,
7 CO @ 9 25
do medium,No. 2
7 00 @ 9 25
Canton,re-reel.Nol@2 7 25 @ 7 CO

do

10 50 @ll 25
@ 9 U0

7 50 @

Valpraiso,

....

6 CO
12

CapeG.Hope,unwash’d

East

Spice*.-See special report.

lll@
8 @

8i

9@
12 @

12
12*

14 @

17

Spirit* - Duty: Brandy, for firstprool
$3 $ gallon ; Gin, rum and whiskey,
lor first proof, $2 50 $ gallon.
Brandy, Otard, Dupuy
& Co..(gold) # gal. 5 60 @13 00
Brandy, Pinet, Castillon & Co(gold) 5 50 @17 00
do HeDPessy(gold) 5 60 @18 00
do Marett & Co(g’d) 5 50 @10 00
do Legev Freres do 5 50 @10 eft
do oth for. b’ds(g’d) 4 75 @18 f 0
Rum, Jam., 4thp.(g’d) 4 50 @ 4 75
do
St. Croix,
3d
proof... (gold) 8 50 @ 8 75
Gin, diff. brands.(gold) 3 00 @ 5 50

11,3 cts
$ ft; over 11 cents, 34 cents $ fe
and 10 y oent ad val. (Store prices.;
English, cast, y ft
.
!8 @
22
English, spring
9 @
114
English blister
11»@
19
!24@
15
English machinery....
English German
14 @ 16
.

2@

8@

Si

10

& » m
ft 8 00 @ 9 00
8 50 @ 3 75
.

Chrome, yellow, dry-• .15 @
35
Whiting, Amer $ 1001b 1 87*@ 2 00
Vermilion,China, V ft 95 @ 1 00

American blister

Amerio.n cast
Tool
American spring do
American machry do

10* @
@
..

10 @

IB

10 @

13
is

,

American Germin.do

16
19

@

2J

Zinc—Duty : pig or block, $1 50 y
100 fts.; sheets 24 cents y ft
Sheet...
y ft
12 @ 124
ireightsTo .Liverpool (steam):*, d.
Cottoi
y ft
@
Flour
y bbl. 2 6 @

Heavy

V)ds...yton

x

0

..@40 0
9@
9@
..@50
3 6 @ ;...

Corn,b’k&bag»y bus.
Wheat, bulk and bags
Beef
Pork

d

27 6 @35

Oil

....

....

y toe.
y bbl.

To London

^

7 cents and not above

India, washed....

Mexican, unwashed...
Texas, Coarse,

Brandy, gin&p.spi’ts in bl 10@ 1 15
Rnm, pore,
1 10@ 1 15
Whiskey,
98@ l 30

over

31
40
45
20
85
39

il

38 @
30 @
17 @
31 @
28 @
20

Texas, Fine
Texas, Medium

Domestic Liquors—Cash.

Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued
at 7 oents $ ft or under, 24 cents;

83

27

do

South Am.Merino do
do
Mestjzado
Creole do
do
do
Cordova,
washed

Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and
plates, $1 50 $ 100 fts.
Plates, for.100 ft gold 6 37*@
do
domestlo $ lb
11 @

27 @
18 @

No 1, pulled
Califor , line,unwash’d
do
medium do
do
common, do

Canton. Extra Fine... 8 75 @ 9 00

63

60
@
60
@
58
@
45
46
@
@
40
@
26
22 @
25
24 @
27
21 @^ 24
32 @
85

Superfine, pulled

.

Good
Medium

47 @
@

46
47
63
40
42
37
23

doCombiDg domestic
Extra, pulled.

No. 1©4

do

y ft and 10 y cent, ad val.

do full blood Merino
do % & \ Merino..
do Native & \ Mer.

35

Japan, superior

y
12

Imported scoured, three times the
duty as if imported unwashed.
55 @
Am., Sax’y fleece.y ft
60

^

Ochre ,yellow,Fronch,
do

..

Buck....

....

40 @

pure,

Sliot—Duty: 2J cents <j£ ft.
Drop
$ ft
@

or

Class 8 —Carpet Wools and other
sioxilar Wools—The value whereof at
the last place whence exported to the
United States is 12 cents 01 less y
1b, 3 cents y ft ; over 12 cents y 1b,
6 cents y lb.
Wool of all classes

...

-

.53 @..

place whence exported to the United
States is 32 cents or less y ft, 10
cents y ft and 11 y cent, ad val.
over 32 cents y ft, 12 cents y ft and
10 y cent, ad val ; when imported
washed, double these rates. Class
2.— Combing Wools--The value where¬
of at the last place whence exported

Seeds—Duty; linseed, 16 cts; hemp,
ad val.
Clover

do

Wool—Duty: Imported in the “ or
dinary condition as now and hereto
fore practiced.” Class 1—Clothing

.Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2J cents;
refined and partially refined, 3 cents;
nitrate soda, 1 cent $ ft.
Refined, pure
$ ft
I54@
Crude
104@
ill
Nitrate soda
gold
4|@
4J

ft; and grass seeds*, 30

25
25
00
CO

val.
Iron No. 0 to 18List 25-27i&5y ct oil
Iron Nos.l9to 26.L!si .87*&5 y ct. of
IronNos.27 to 36 Lift.424&5 y ct. ofl
Iron Telegraph, No. 7 t« il
Galv
y ft.lC4@lll
Brass (less 20@25 per cent.). .43 @.

Salt-^Duty: sack, 24 cents ^ 100 ft

60

00 @ 1
10 @ 1
00 @60
60 @ 9

$2 to $3 5t y 100 ft, and 15 y cent ac

18 cent ad val.

Turpent’e, s ft.y280ft
Tar, N. County y bbl.
Tar, Wilmington
Pitch City
Spirits turpentine yg
Rosin, com’n. $ 280 ft

80 @ 1 60

Wire—Duty: No. 0 to ly,uncovered

8}

Cadiz

Stores—Duty: spirits ol
turpentine 30cents $ gallon; crude
Turpentine, rosin,pitch, and tar, 20

Port.(gold)

Malaga, dry
(gold) 1
Malaga, sweet...(gold) 1
Claret....gold.y cask36
Claret,....gold.y doz 2

100 ft 8 00 @ 8 75

Carolina

334@
34
29|@
30
30 @
26 @ 8 50
I. C. Coke
6 75 @ 7 50
Terne Charcoal 7 75 @ 8 00
Terne Coke.... 5 75 @ 6 00

Tobacco.—See special report.

10 @
10J
4 50 @ 5 00 ’

$ibbl

y ft (gold)
(gold)
English
(gold)
Plates,char. I.C.y box 8

32j

8^@

bulk, 18 cents $ 100 ft.
Turks Islands $1 bush.

*

do

.

@

« ft ;oohre, ground in oil,| 50 $100

rough




horse shoe 2 cents

6 25

@

21*

$ lb.

Nails—Duty: cut 14; wrought 21

Spanishbrown 25 y cettad val:
Ghlnaolay,$5 y ton; Venetian red
and vermilion 25 y cent ad val.;
whlteohalk,$10 y ton.
101 @
11
Litharge, City.... yft
Lead, red,City
...
10i@
li
do white, American,
@
14
pure,in oil.... ...
do white,American,

do middle,
do
light.
Ori no.,heavy,
do
middle
do
light.

Yehow pine

Alolasae*.—Sec special report.

Clinoh
Horse shoe,f’d(6d)$

21 @

Rice—Duty: cleaned2J oents $ 1b.
paddy 1} oents, and uncleaned 2 cents

Paints—D»ty: on white lead, red
lead, and litharge, dry or ground in
oil, 3 cents y ft; Parle white and
whiting, 1 cent y ft; dryoohres,56
cev.ti y 100 ft: oxldesofzine, If eents

do
light.
Callfor., heavy

do

75
8

4 @

Bahia

Lubricating

do
light..
Oak, rough slaughter.
Hemi’k, B. A., <fcc.,h’y
do
do middle,

ao

25 @
6 @

12 @
12 @

Paraffine, 28 & 80 gr.

middle

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

8 @

20
13
13
10

14 @

Mansanilla....,
Mexican
Florida. $1 c. ft.

do

Oils

lrory—Duty, 10 9 oentad val.
East
East

10
15

Naval

Pig Chat coal

60 OX®
Pig, American,No. 1.. 40 00@4l
Pig, American, No. 2 .38 00 @40
Bar, Reft’d KngA Amer81 00 @87
Gartsherrie
42 00 @44

14
!4

Honduras

Rosewood,R. Jan. $ ft

..

1 10
1 02*
1 45

..

Mexican

Cedar, Nuevitas
do
do
do

40

lo @
8 @
11 @

(American wood)..

@

(*old)tfft 1 60 @
(gold)
@
(gold) 80 @
(gold) 70 @
(gold) 1 20 @

Nuevitas....
Mans&nilla

@

10 @

logs

( ndigro—Duty FRICK.

Bengal

30

do
do
do
do

India Rubber—Duty,10 % cent,
ad val.
Para, Fine
y 1b 1 00 @ 1 05

Para, Medium.
Para, Coarse

10

crotches..
do
Port*au-Platt,

Horn*—Duty, 10 y cent.ad val.
...,@
@

50

7 @

Banca

Straits

do in bulk
refined in bond,ptiine
L. S. to W. (110@
115 test)
do Standard white

lishogsnv St. Domin¬

..

cent ad val. Plate and sheets and
terne plates, 25 per cent, ad val.

refined,40 :;ents $ gallon.

Rose

25 O

Tin—Duty: pig,bars,and block,15y

—

Crude,40@47grav.f}gal

H4

llj@

Tea*.—Seo special report.

Petroleum—Duty :crude,20 cents

'

crotches 18 ft.,
St. Domingo,
ordinary logs
do
Port-au-Platt,

American,pri me, coun¬
try and city y 1b...

clay, y ton
3) 00 @ ....
$ lb
@
11
Chalk, block....y ton23 00 @24 00
Barytas, American yft . .. @
2$
Barytes Foreign
@

...

go,
do

Sugar.—See special report.
Tallow—Duty :1 cent y ft.

China
Chalk

...

Muho^any*
Cedar,
wocul —Dutyfree,

95 @
22 @

Carmine,cltyinadey ftlSou @16 00
Plumbago
@
6

...

.

90 @

...

Cal

do
do

Maple and birch.
.23 00@27 00
White pine b x boards
White pine merchantable
bx boards
Clear pine
Laths

Sumac—Duty: 10 y oent ad val.
Sicily high grd’s y ton 130 00@155 C (

95
1 00
Amer.com..
27
Venet.ied (N.O.)y cwt 2 624@ 2 75

45 00@60 (X)

,

Roney—Duty,20 sent y gallon.
Cuba (duty paid)(gf-d
y gall.
34 @
S3
Ifops—^uiy: 5cout«y a*.
8@
14
Crop of 1868
yft

Ox, Rio Grande. ..$1 C
Ox, American

63

THE CHRONICLE.

(sail)
Heavy goods...y cob 22 6 @25 0

Oil
Flour
...y bbl.
Petroleum.
Beef
y tee
Pork
..y tbl
Wheat
y buoh.
Corn
To Havre:

@30

2 6 @

5 0 @

...

,...

$

0

....
...

@4 0
@30
@
84
@
8

C;

*

yfi>
Gi
Beef and pork, .y bbl.
@
Meaanrem. g’ds.y ton i0 00 @
Lard, tallow, eat m t
eto*~
y t>
iO

..

Colton

Ash-potAd’1. y ton
P *‘oleum..

A

8 00 @ 9 00

6 00 &

....

,

64

THE CHRONICLE.
Dry Goods.

Iron and Railroad

N.B.FALCONER& CO
IMPORTERS OF

STAPLE

AND

Goods,

VELVETS. VELVETEENS,
Umbrella Alpacas and

YORK,

99 John street.

FANCY

British Dress

STREET,

BOSTON,

PHILA.,
208 So. 4th stree

RAILS,
CAST STEEL

Cast Steel

Frogs, and all other Steel

TYRES,
Material for

Railway Use.

Between Walker and Lispenard.

BENXON

34 Old Broad
who

give special attention

Ac

as

For Boston Daily.

well

as

Old

CO.,

METROPOLITAN STEAMSHIP < O.’S

Corner

Neptune Steamers,

Iron

SAILINGTUESDAY S,THURSDAYS& SATURDAYS

Street,

Bessemer

AND

18

Asland, Wm. P. C'jde and P. Sand ford
1,000 Toil* l aeli,
SAILING ON INTERMEDIATE DAYS.

From

Mi

PIER 1 1

N.

R., at 5

P. NT.

Connecting at Boston with Fitchburg, Boston and
Lowell, Boston and Maine and Eastern Kuilro id. and
m Npw York with the Erie
Railway. Freiglits taken
and through rates given to and frO u all points on the
above Roads and their connections. No charge lor
Whariarge In Boston.
WM. P. CLYDE,
Genl. Supt. and Agent, Piei 11 N.R.
H. M. WHITNEY, Agent, Central Battery Wharfs,

RAILWAY
RITIES NEGOTIATE.

Works of all kinds for

LifrjjMli,

Wiil'ani-Street, New York.

Railroad Iron,
Street Rails and
Light
Rails for Mines.

Correspondents iu America:

delphia

SCOTCH PIG IRON.

Lawrence & Sons,

MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE

FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC USE.
1S2 FRONT

2*:il!

STREET, NEW YORK

MEDITERRANEAN

the

1

IN

T

YARD, ON DOCK, AND TO ARRIVE.
purchasers. Apply to
HENDERSON BROTHERS,

No. 7 Rowling

AGENTS FOR THE CELEBRATED

S. W.

Green, New York.

Hopkins 8c Co.,

58 Old Broad

SPIKES.

street, London.
AND

69

Morris, Tasker 8c Co.,
Pa*cal Iron

approved Brand* of No.
Scotch Pig Iron,

In lots to suit

Boston.

He nry

SECU¬

Messrs. Jay Cooke & Co., New Yrork, Messrs. Jay
Cooke & Co., Washington, Messrs E. VV. Clarkb
& Co., Philadelphia, Mr. J. Edgar Thomson,
Phila¬

All

OLD RAILS AND SCRAP PURCHAS¬
ED AND SOLD.

BURDON

Rails, 8cc.

U. S.30NS AND AMERICAN

Buildings.

Ditmis k

of every

Steel.

Bartholomew House, opposite Bank
of England.
LONDON, E. C.

Broadway, New York.

P3lm and Ornamental Iron

street, New York

Gilead A. Smith,

COMPRISING

NEPTUNE, NEREU« anil GLAUCUS,
2,000 Ton* l'acli,

description of bar and Sheet

j

Railroad Iron,
Works,
Old Rails,

No*. 77 & 83 Liberty

OUTSIDE LINE OF

offer for sale at 91 and 93 John

to orders for

Ralls, Scrap Iron and Metals.

Novelty

Importers of Norway & Swedes Iron, Including f I
UB, ^EB, SF, and other brands, which they

Street,

Railroad Iron,

Miscellaneous.

WM. JESSOP Sc SONS,

and 133 and 185 Federal
street, Boston.
They have also In stock their usual supply

HOUSE IN LONDON:

NAYLOR,

Iron and Railroad Materials«

Norway and Swedes Iron

CO.,

80 State street.

-

CAST STEEL

Ginghams, Ac.,

NO. 217 CHURCH

Materials.

NAYLOR 8c
NEW

[July 10,1869

&

71

Broadway, New York,

Negotiate in Europe and America every description ol

TOWN, CO UNTY, CITY, STATE,
AND

Works, Philadelphia.

'

Manufacturers of Wrought Iron Tubes, Lap Welded
Boiler Flues, Gas Works Castings and Street

Railroad Bonds,

Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools,
Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools, &c.

For Rallroadi Companies and Contractors in connec
tion win. the purchase and sale of both Foreign and
American

GOODS.

OFFICE AND WAREHOUSES:

T.

.

.

15 GOLD

SCHNITZER,

Railroad Iron

STREET, NEW YORK.

A N ill

33 CENTRAL

WHARF, HOSTON.

Oiler for sale

BALDWIN

Liquorice Stick* and Pa*te.
Wool* of every
Gum*

M. Baird

description*.

“

LOCOMOTIVE

“

&

EQUIPMENTS.

WORKS.

Co.,

To Railroad

PHILADELPHIA.

Opium and Persian Merries.

Canary and Hemp Seed,
Tig*, Raisin*, Boxwood,
otto It owes, Ac

We beg to call the attention of Managers of Rail*

All work accurately fitted to gauges and thorough
ly interchangeable. Plan, Material, Workmanship,
Finish, and Efficiency fully guaranteed.
MATTJIKW BAIRD.

GKO. BURNHAM.

CHA8

Companies.

ways

and Contractors tbreughout

the united States

and Canada to our superior facilities for
executing
orders at manufacturers prices, for all descrlptionsoi
both AMERICAN and FOREIGN

T. PARRY

Railroad Iron.
E. J. Shipman

Abm. Mills

Mills 8c

EVANS

Shipman,

8c

158 PEARL

We are always In a position to furnish all sizes, pat¬
terns and weight of rail for both steam aud hor^e
roads, and In any quantities desired either for IMME¬
DIATE OR REMOTE delivery, at anv port In the
United States 01 Canada and always at the very lowest
current market prices.
We are also prepared to sup¬

CO.,

STREET,

WOOL BROKERS,

NO. 50

ply

Iron and Metals.

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

Bessemer Steel

We are-prepared to make cash advances upon Wool,
on the spot or in transit.

IRON.

IRON.

IRON
a

••

Wm. D.

Insurance.

McGowan,

IRON BROKER.
7 3

The Liverpool & Lon¬
don Lf Globe Ins. Co.

AffetsGoldS 17,690,390
AJfets in the
U. States

9

45




2,000,000

William St.

WATER

ST., PITTSBURGH, PA.

Iron Cotton Ties.
The undersigned, Sole Agents In New
salr and distribution of the

Manufactured by J. J. McCOMB,
Liverpool, respect¬
fully solicit orders for delivery In New York or other
ports In the United States, or at Liverpool,

80 BEAVER STR SE

Sc CO.,

(at the option of the buyer) lor Foreign; when desir¬
ed, we will contract to supply roads with their
monthly or yearly requirements of STEEL OR IRON
BAILS, taking their
OLD RAILS IN TRADE FOR NSW
furnished, receiving the difference In cash, and allow¬
ing the hlghtst market price for their Old Rail*, and,
if necessary, receiving the latter after the delivery of
the New Ralls.
Orders for Foreign Ralls, both Steel andiron, will
be taken for transmission by Mail or through the cable
to our

HOUSE,

68 OLD BROAD

STREET,
price In Steeling or on com¬
mission at the current market price abroad when the
order Is received In London; shipments to be made,
at stated periods to ports In America and at tbs low¬
est possible rates of freights. Address
for execntlon at

a fixed

S.^W. Hopkins 8c Co.,
* 91

.

Rails,

of American and Foreign manufacture, rolled to any
desired pattern and weight for llnlal yard and of
approved lengths. Contracts for both IRON AND
STEEL RAILS will be made payable in United Statee
currency for America, and In either currency or gold

.LONDON
York, lor the

IRON TIE
AND SELF-FASTENING
WROUGHT IKON bill Kt.E TIES.

SWENSON, PERKINS

♦

Broadway, New York.