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NEWSPAPER,

A WEEKLY

-

EEPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND

COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES.

•

:

*

1

'A

Bankers and Brokers.

Bankers and Brokers.

Bankers and Brokers.

JohnBailky,
J. A. Buckingham.
F. F. IItll,
Late Bound & Bailey. •
Member N.Y. St. Ex.

John j. Cisco 8c Son,
BANKERS,

j{0,5!)WlLli STREET, NEW YORK,
BROWN, BROTHERS & CO.’S BUILDING.
Receive money on Deposit aiul allow interest at the
rate of 4 percent per auuuui on daily balances, sub¬
ject to check at sight.
BsneCerti '.cates of Deposit bearing four per cent
interest.-pavable on demand.
Negotiate Loans.
*
Execute promptly orders for the purchase and sale
of Go d.
Buy and

Bailey,BuckmghamSc Co
BANKERS AND
44 WALL

BROKERS,

Special Agents for the sale of

sion.

Soutter &

the First Mortgage

Government and oilier

Bought and sold at the Stock

TRAV¬

Securities

Exchange on usual

Commission.

Interest Allowed on

Deposits.

Winslow, Lanier 6c Co.,
STREET,

NEW

YORK.

Interestfallowed
subject to draft.

Securities.
Interest allowed on Deposits
or Check.
Advances made on approved

securities.

Special facilities foi negotiating Commercial Paper.
Collect’ 'msboth inltnd and foreign promptly made.
Foreign and Dome 3 tic Loans Negotiated.

71 Wall Street,

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES

AND DEALERS IN

GOLD, &c.
No. 12 WALL STREET.

Hoyt &

Gardner,

HANKERS AND BROKERS.
NO. 5 NEW STREET, NEAR WALL,

NEW YORK.

Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold
bought and sold exclusively on Commission.
Gold

a

Money received upon
upon current balances.

Specialty.

Hoyt,
vice-Pres’t. Gold Exchange,

BANKERS AND
8

Government

formerly of Georgia

KENNEDY, HUTCHINSON & CO.,
NO. 40 WALL STREET, NEW YORK.
Dealers in Gold Silver, Government Securities, &c

Collections Made.

Securities, Stocks, Bonds and

LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR
ELLERS.

Gold

n

Exchange.

WILLIAM S. FANSHAWE

BANKERS,

James G. King’s Sons,

ST., NEW YORK.
Bonds, and Gold promptly exe¬
CENT. INTEREST ALLOWED

No. 4 WALL

Order* for stocks,
cuted. FOUR PER
oi

deposits, subject to check at sight.

TRAV¬

Philadelphia Bankers.

8c

Austin
313

-

Oberge,

WALNUT STREET,

PHILADELPHIA.
Commission Stock Brokers.

CHAS. H. OBERGE

J. BELL AUSTIN.

54 William Street.

.

Cincinnati Bankers.

JAY OOOKK,
WM. G. MOORHEAD

COOKE,

i

•I

H. C. FAHNESTOCK

EDWARD

DODGE,

PITT COOKE.

Jay Cooke & Co.,
New York.

3d Street,
Philadelphia.

.

In connection

with our houses in Philadelphia and

BANKERS and dealers in u. s
No. 14 WALL STREET

#

Dealers in GOLD,

SILVER and all kinds of

GOVERNMENT BONDS.
%

points aud remitted for on day of-payment.

opened an office at No,
of Wall Street, in this city. Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co.
New York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washington

CHECKS

ON

Washington we have this day

f
LONDON AND PARIS
FOR SALE.

1 Nassau, corner

House, and Mr. Pitt

Gans,

West Fourth Street,

CINCINNATI, OHIO.

Washington.

Government securities, railroad and other bonds
railroad, mining and miscellaneous stocks, gold and
exchange bought and sold on commission. Mercantile
paper and loans in currency or gold negotiated. Inte¬
rest allowed on
deposits.

government securities.

110

Sc

COLLECTIONS MADE at all accessible

Opposite Treas. Department,

BANKERS AND BROKERS,

No, 21 Broad Street, New York.

10S

Wall and Nassau Sts.,

No. 114 South

KETCHUM, PHIPPS & BELKNAP,

Gilmore, Dunlap, & Co.,

BANKERS.

Corner

Fifteenth Street,




YORK

Warren, Kidder & Co.,

EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND PARIS.
SIGHT DRAFTS ON EDINBURGH & GLASGOW
STOCKS AND BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD.
AT THE NE W YORK STOCK EXCHAN GE.

Ketchum.
George Phipps.
Thos. Belknap, Jr.

8c

NEW

Securities,

RICHARD P. LOUNSBERY.

bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Merchants
Bankers and others allowed 4 per cent on deposits.
The most liberal advances made on Cotton, Tobacco,
&c„ consigned to ourselves or to our correspondents,
Messrs. K7 GILLIAT & CO., Liverpool.

H. D.

: of

Frank

BROKERS,

STREET,

WALL

Jambs Gardner,

Specie and Banking: Office.]

Franklin M.

New York,

Merchants,

STREET, NEW YORK.

NO. 44 BROAD

deposit and interest allowe \

T. A.

CO.,

executed

Guion,

Gold and Foreign

Banker** and Commission
Government

Sixty Days upon

Lounsbery 8c Fanshawe,
NO.

Co.,

TRAV¬

CO., London,

Williams &

-

WILSON, CALLAWAY &

BANKERS

Sight and

Orders for Stocks, Bonds, and Merchandise,
in London by cable or mail.

subject to Sight Draf

■M

Horace J. Morse.

ALEX. S. PETIT'iE &

Dealers in Bills of Exchange, Governments, Bonds
Stocks, Gold, Commercial Paper, and all Negotiable

I

deposits of Gold and Currency

Albert F. Day.

LATE

Hatch, Foote & Co.:,

on

Sterling Exchange at

WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK.

R. T. Wilson &

BANKERS,
27 PINE

Co.,

BANKERS,
No. 53

ELLERS.

Government

Commission.

LETTERS OF OiiEulT FOR
ELLERS.

Pacific Railroad Company.

LETIEflS OF CREDIT FOR

STREET, NEW YORK.

Stock**, Ronds, Gold and

STREET.

Commercial Paper, make advances on
good securities, execute orders for the purchase and
sale of Stocks, Bonds and Gold for the usual commis¬

all parts of the United States

Make Collections on
and Canada.

BROKERS,

AND

NO. 16 WALL

on

Buy and sell

Sell Government and other Securities on

commission.

Day & Morse,
BANKERS

Securities, Bought and Sold

.

Bonds of the Union

NO. 158.

SATURDAY, JULY 4, 1868.

VOL. 7.

Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, will

be resident partners.
We shall
sale,

give particular attention to the purchase

and exchange of government securities o

all issues; to

orders for purchase and sale of stocks,

aud gold, and to all business oi National Banks.
JAY COOKE & CO.
Mar«li 1, I860'

bonds

FIRST

NATIONAL

BANK

OF

Cincinnati, Ohio.
Pres. Lewis Worthington, V.Pres.
T*ikodork Stanwood, Cashier.
CAPITAL
$1,000,000
SURPLUS
$314,852 89
Collections made on all accessible points and

John W. Ellis,

promptly remitted for at best rates.
Directors*
John W. Ellis,
Jas. A. Frazer,

Lewis Worthington,

R. M. Bishop,
William Woods A S. Winslow,

L. B. Harrison

Bobt. Mitchell*
Jos. Rawflon. *

THE CHRONICLE

2

Financial.

Insurance.
OFFICE OF THE

on

nor upon Fire Risks
nected with Marine Risks.

Risks;

INSURANCE

NEW YORK.

Sight or Sixty Days; also, Circular
ters of Credit for

Notes and Loi¬

Travellers’ Use, on

Losses and Expenses
Return Premiums...;

LONDON.

UNION BANK OF

Available in all the principal towns

discon¬

Europe and the East.
T

$7,597,123 16

$>>82,972

No Policies have been issued upon Life
Risks, nor upon Fire Risks, disconnected
with Marine Risks.
Earned Premiums to Jan. 1,18fc8

TUB

and cities #f

The Company have
Cash in Banks
United States Stocks

elegraphlc orders executed for the Purchase and
London and New York.

same

paid during the
period
$1,224,364 61

Charles K. Milnob.

Lbti P. Morton.
Walter H. Burns.

H. Cbuger Oaklet.

$29,809 57
272,925 00
194,790 00

Loans on Stocks,
the Company

40,785 15
92,000 00

Real Estate,Bonds and Mortgages

:

Returns of Premiums and

Expenses

Central

$1,305,805 93

—J

The Company has the following As¬
sets, viz.:

.

.

Cash in Bank

00
00
00

Government Bonds—
County accounts received on terms most fa
vorable to our Correspondents.
Collections made in all parts of the United States and

$13,108,177 11

be

ary,

tlie outstand¬
ing certificate* ol profit* will be pal
to the holders thereof, or their legal representatives
ail
and after Tuesday the Fourth of
February next.
Fifty per cent, of the outstanding certifi¬
cates of the issue nt 186.1 will be redeem¬
ed and

paid to the holders thtvcof, or their legal
representatives, on ana alter Tuesday the
Fourth of February next, from which date
the amount

so

redeemable will

produced at the time of pay¬
ment, and cancelled to the extern paid.

WILLIAM

A.

WHEEijOCK, President

Tenth National Bank.
$ 1,000,000.

Capital

D. L.
i. H. Stottt. Cashier.

of

Thirty

on the net earned premium*
Company, for the year ending 3l*t
December, 1867, for which certificates will be
issued on and after Tuesday the Seventh of April

of the

next.

paid to the holders there¬
of, or their legal repi esentatives, on and after Tues¬
day, the llth day of February next, from which date
all interest thereon will cease. The Certificates to be
presented at the time of payment and cancelled to
that extent.

Banker

By order of the Board,
W. P. HANSFORD, Secretary.

TRUSTEES:
Stewart Brown,

J. II.

CHAPMAN,
Secretary

k.

......

Duncan, Sherman & Co.,

States, available in all the principal cities of the
world: also,
COMMERCIAL CREDITS,
For nse in Europe, east of the Cape of

Joshua J.

William E. Dodge
Robt. C. Fergusson,

Henry,
Dennis Perkins,
Joseph Gaillard, Jr.
J. Henry Burgy,
Cornelius Grinnell,
C. A. nand,
B.J. Howland,
Benj. Babcock,
Fletcher Westray,
Robt. B. Minturu, Jr.,
Gordon W, Burnham
Frederick Chauncey,

John Munroe & Co.,

COMPANY.

David Lane,

James Low

James

GeorgeS. Stephenson

Caleb Barstow
A. P. Pillot

49 WALL STREET.

Incorporated 1841.

BANKERS,

MOSES H. GRINNELL, President.
JOHN P. PAULISON Vice-President,
Isaac H. Walker, Secretary.

1VD

Temple &

Marsh,

BANKERS AND BROKERS.

Also Commercial Credits,

Dealers in Government Securities,&c. on

S. G. & G. C;
AGENTS

FOR

BARING BROTHERS &
•

56 WALL

Ward,
COMPANY,

STREET, NEW YORK,

28 STATE

STREET, BOSTON.

No. 9 Wall

Commission.

Street, cor. New.

Vermilye

Gov,

&

N K E R S .
No. 44 Wall Street. New York,
Keep constantly on hand tor immediate delivery
issues of
R A

UNITED JSTATE S'tfS
INCLUDING

Drake Kleinwort&Cohen

previous

assets a paid up cash capital of $500,000, and subscrip¬
tion notes in advance of premiums of $300,000, continues
to issue policies of insurance against Marine and Inand Navigation Risks. No Fire Risks disconnected
rom Marine taken by the Company.
Dealers are entied to participate in the profits.

STREET, NEW YORK,
Circular Letters of Credit for Traveller* to all

parts of Europe, etc., etc.

$1,614,540 78

Capital and Assets,

NO. 8 WALL

Issue

P. Fabbri

.This Company having recently added to its

Good Hop
South America, and the United State

Sturgis,

Gustave H. Kissell,
Gerhard Janssen,
William Paxson,
John H. Earle,
Francis Skiddy,

Sun Mutual Insurance

STS.,

CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS
OF CREDIT,
For the use of Travelers abroad and in the United

Henry K. Bogert,

George Mosle,

(INSURANCE BUILDINGS)

NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS,

Wm.

Jones,
Dennis,
W. H. H. Moore,
Henry Coit,
Wm. C. Pickersgill,
Lewis Curtis,
Charles H. RnsBell,
Lowell Holbrook,
R. Warren Weston,
Royal Phelps,

Kaupc,

James R. Smith,

JO®N H. LYELL, President.
TlfPO. B. BLEECKER, Jr., Vice-Free.

RICHARD BERRY, President,
ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier.

trustees:

Charles

Henry Oelricns,

Edward if. R. Lyman,
George Moke,
K. V. Thebaud,
Francis Hathaway,
Lloyd Asplnwall

.291 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
OAFTTAli........................................ gl ,000,000
SURPLUS
450,000

AMERICAN

John D.

Edward

Stephen Johnson,
Arthur Leary,
Henry Meyer,

The Tradesmen’s

West Indies.

By order ol the Board,

PERCENT.

of 1859 will be redeemed and

TOSS, Preside

Per Cent. I*

declared

Tax, is declared on the net

outstanding Certificates of Profits of the issue

and Dealers’ Accounts solicited.

CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU
dividend

States

FIFTY
of the

BANKERS,
A

1868.

Cftii&dfl8

ceases

The certificates to be

the outstanding Certificates of Profit will
and after Tuesday, the 11th day of Febru¬

and the United

NATIONAL RANK.

ou

on

on

earned premiums entitled thereto, for tl:e year ending
31st December, 1867, lor which Certificates may be
issued on and.after the 1st day of May next.

Designated Depository of the Government.

Interest

paid

TWENTY PER CENT. DIVIDEND

No. 29 BROAD STREET.

Six percent Interest on

22,803 2

City'and

82
27

31,037 69

at esti¬

$767,549 73

William H. Sanford, Cashier.

873,374 02

$630,309 72
83,399 13

SIX PER CENT.
Interest

$3,000,000

Has for sale all descriptions of

Stock, City, Rank and other Stocks. $6,804,485
Loans secured by Stocks, and other¬
wise
2,175,450
Real Estate and Bonds and Mortgages,
210,000
Interest and sundry notes and claims
due the Company* estimated at
252,414
Premium Notes and Bills Receivable..
3,232,453

and other Claims due the Company
Insurance Scrip and Sundry Motes
mated value

Bank,

318 BROADWAY.

<

Capital

United States and State of New York

Total Amount of Assets

National

Re-insurance, Accrued Interest

Salvage,

$307,390 93

the following assets:

Premium Notes and Bills Receivable,

Losses

68

$207,661 23
14,418 30

Bank, City and other Stocks
and Cash due

Sale of Stocks and Bonds in

293’^

*

Total...

(58 Old Broad Street, London.)

Life

1867 to 31st December, 1867

COMPANY,

STREET, NEW YORK.
January 23, 1868.
The Trustees submit the following Statement of fh
affairs of the Company in conformity with therpmu*.
ments of the Charter :
9uire.
Outstanding Premiums to Dec. 31,1866
*aq o«.

BURNS & CO.f

IP. MORTON,

AND

Premiums marked oil from 1st Janu¬

WILLIAM

61

Premiums received

iums. .$10,100,125 46

No Polices have been issued upon

ary,

At

2,838,10b 71
■

The New York Mutual

EXCHANGE,

STERLING

Policies not marked oil

January. 1807

Total amonnt of Marine Prc

INCORPORATED 1798.

NO.

JANUARY 25-rn, 1868,

Trustees, in Conformity to the Charter of the
Company, submit the following Statement of its
affairs on the 31st December, 1 SOT:
Premiums received on Marine Risks,
from 1st January, 1807, to 31st De¬
cember, 1807
$7,32?,015 75
1st

90 BROAD STREET,

Co.,

The

Premiums

Co.,

BANKERS,

Insurance

NEW YORK,

Financial.

L. P. Morton &

Atlantic

Mutual

[July 4, 1868.

all

TOURS

'

6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881,'
6 Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862,
1
“
“
6
1864,
6
“
“
1865,
Per Cent 10-40 Bonds,
3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st,
Per Cent Currency Certificates.
,

Bryce,
Francis Skiddy,

William H. Webb.

Daniel S. Miller.

Paul Spofford.

Charles P. Burdett,
Robert L, Taylor,
Shephard Gandy.

^

JOHN D. JONES, President,
‘




CHARLES

DENNIS, Vice-President,
MOORE, 2d Vioe-Pres.
J. D. HEWLETT, 8d YicvPree’t

nr. H. H.

LONDON AND LIVERPOOL,

The subscriber, their representative ana

Attorneys

the United

States, is prepared to make advances
va shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwoit & Cohen
jpndon and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile
gedits upon them for use in China, the East and
West Indies, South America, &c, Marginal credits
the London House issued for the same purposes.
SIMON DE

26 Exchange

VISSER,

Place, New York.

-

-

2d, & 3d series®
o

-

/Tew York State 7 per cent. Bounty Loan. ’
LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN J
MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS.

Compound Interest Notes of 1864
1865 Bought and Sold,
VERMILYE & CO,

Li

&

•

Tuck School, Hanover,; N. K CHRONICLE.
...
■ | h Vi
Commercial and rinancial Chronicle

prom -linos
: I.'.

*n

"'(July'-"tec;, 1868)

Vol. 7

Complete with

exchange, gold and

Street, Boston.
TRAVELLERS’ CREDITS issued on London and
Paris available in all parts of Europe.
LOANS OF STERLING made to Merchants upon
114 State

favorable terms.
DEPOSITS OF GOLD AND CURRENCY received,
subject to draft at sight and interest allowed.

Liverpool

ADVANCES made on consignments to
and London.

JAKQE0 JL DDFX1,

_

Co.,

Everett &

IIEARB &

Boston, Mass.

CO.,

Thompson’s Nephew,

Washington.
1M.TON.

favorable terms,' and give especial atten¬

Itli Hie several

pnrtilieikts of *lie Govcrnineaf.
Foil information with regard to Government Loans
at all times cheerfully funds led.
■i

England, Ireland & Scotland
Bankers furniBhed with Sterling Exchange and
through tickets from Europe to all part* of the United

U. MAURY.

JAS. L. MAURY.

ROB’T T. BROOKE*

Co.,

BANKERS & BROKERS,
No. 1014 MAIN

ST. RICHMOND, VA.
Bank Notes,

Sterling Exchange, Gold and Silver,
State, City and Railroad Bond’s and
bought and sold on commission.

Stocks, &c.,

Deposits received and Collections made on all
points in the United States.
N. V. Correspondent, VKRM1LYE & CO.

accessible

Annual Financial
1868

mady, and will he forwarded free of charge t
investments through us.

Circular

for

Taussig, Fisher & Co.,
BANKERS AND BROKERS,

No. 52 St,

No. 32 Broad Street,

New York.

Buy and SeU at Market Rate*,
ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES.
Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS, and
others, and allow Interest on daily balance*, aubject to
Bight Draft.
Make Collection* on fkTorable terms,
and

promptly execute order* for the

Gold, State, Federal,

Securities.

~

Exchange, Gov
Silver. Prompt

New York.

Goodyear, Bros. & Durand, Bunkers,

Purchase or sale

Brothers,

STOCK BROKERS AND
No. 16 BROAD

BANKERS,

STREET, NEW YORK.

Buy and Sell on Commission Government Securities
Gold, Railroad, Bank and Slate Stocks and Bonds
Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petroleum and
Mining Stocks.

Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to
Dividends and Interest collected and Invest¬
ments made.
Orders Promptly Executed
Draft.

New York.

NO. 69

BROADWAY, NEW YORK,

Bankers anil

Brokers.

Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold
bought and sold at market rates, on commission only.
Interest allowed on balances. Advances made on ap¬

proved securities.

Part icular attention given to
sale of the Adams,

orders for the purchase

American, United States, Wells
& (Jo., and Merchants’ Union Express Stocks.

or

New York Life Insurance Company.
-<Etna Insurance Company ol Hartford.
Underwriters Agencv, New York.
Charles Walsh, President Bank of Mobile.

John
Washington M. Smith.
E. W. McGinnis.

Henry A. Sehroeder, Pres. Southern Bank of Ala.

Fargo

faithfully executed.
JOSIAH HEDDEN,
ISAIAH C. BABCOCK,
LOCKE W. WINCHESTER, ROBT M. HEDDEN.
All orders

OF

Company

CHICAGO.
President.

Banking and Collections
promptly attended to.
W. B Haydn*
Job. Hutchison.
BANKING HOUSE OF

F. Hayden.

Hayden,Hutcheson & Co
NO. 13 8. HIGH 8TKEET,

COLIMBUS,
General

YORK,

STREET, NEW

Deposits received and interest allowed same as with
Incorporated Bank. Bonds and Loans negotiated
Compare *

for Railroad

Manager,

General

a

BROAD

vGovernment Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Exchange,
Commercial Paper and Gold, Purchased or Sold on
Commission.
an

J. Young Scammon
Robert Rkil>

Do

4

OHIO,

Banking, Collection, and Exchanfft
Business.

#^MND0£i^ v"
IS anlrers9

w

~lb

c.

So.

SzfL.r I 3 ^JJaAAciu.

\?\yy\avi\xv.

I

ov\y.

<ZJ) ea_lelA in JIL. - c~/l
er.u±itieA
a.n.ci fVJaleifjn ^rcch.a.na.ef and

memhetA

National Trust
423 PENN

Company

STREET,

PITTSBURGH,

Capital

PA.

$100,000

Particular attention glyea to CQUeeU9BS, and pro
teeds promptly remittei




af ^ftaclz ctncL ^Jfal.ci
LfaiclLCLnQeA in bath. citieA.
ZfLac.au.ntA af Jfff.ci.nlzA a.nci
JffanlzctA le.cciuLe.cL an LiLelnL
telmA,

,

LOANS OF

In pursuance of instructions from the Secretary of
holders of United States Bonds of
the loans of 1847 and ISIS are hereby notified that, said

bonds will he redeemed at

the Treasury Department

Washington, or at the office of the Assistant Trea¬
surer in New York, on and after the first day of
july, 1868 (proximo), and that interest on the afore¬
said bonds will cease -alter June 30th instant.
All bonds must be assigned to “ The Secretary of
In

Treasury for

the

Redemption,” and endorsed by the

party* to whom payment is
sentative

required to be made.

assignments are executed in a repra
fiduciary capacity, the evidence of au¬

or

thority to make the assignment must accompany the
certificates. Should that evidence be already filed

Department, the date of its transmission and
lodged should he stated.
Certificates presented should he listed in a schedule
in which the numbers, denominations, names of payees
and other data above required, should be set forth.
H. H. VAN DYCK,

with the

the bureau in which it was

Assistant Treasurer.

Treasury Department.
June

.

.

22, 1868.

who desire to avail themselves
of their right to convert the same into 5-20 BjiuIs are
hereby notified that the notes must he presented at
the Treasury Department at Washington, or at the
office of the Assistant Treasurer United States at New
Holders of 7-30 Notes

York, as follows :
The notes that matured on the
.

15th of June must be

presented on or before the 15th of July. The notes
that become due on the 15th of July.musL be presented
on or before the 1st day of August.
The bonds to be issued in exchange for the notes
will bear interest from the 1st day of July, 1868, and

the interest on the notes will be calculated according¬
ly. The bonds will be ol’ilie issue oi 1867 or 1868, a
may be preferred, and
iu which the notes are

.'

$

they will he issued in
presented.
H.MCCULLOCH,

the order

Secretary of the Treasury.
THE MARKET
New York,
the Market

NATIONAL BANK,

June 23,1868.—The Board ol Directors of
National Bank have this day declared a

semi-annual Dividend of FIVE
taxes,

BANKERS AND BROKERS.
NO.

Marine

McGinnis, Jk

McGinniss,Bros.& Smith,

Western Bankers.

The

IJ. S.

■>

Bulkly & Co., Brokers, Now York.
Byrd & Hall, New York.
Marlin, Bates & Co., Merchants, New York.
Geo. D. H. Gillespie, late Wolll’& Gillespie.
Henry A. Hurlburt, late Swift & Hurlburt.
Home Insurance Company of New Vork.
E. H.

OF

and Railroad

.

Drake

Francis St.% Mobile, Ala.

Babcock. Bros. & Co., Bankers,

REDEMPTION

24th 1363.

Where such

Jas. M. Muldon 6c Sons, Hedden, W inchester&Co
Dealers in Foreign and Domestic
eminent Securities, Bonds, Gold and
attention given to Collections.
References:

States’Treasury,

the Treasury, the

RANKERS AND BROKERS,
NO. 39 WALL STREET.

Co.,

R. H. Maury &

16.

New York, June

<£

Thomas;Denny &

of
BOB’T

United

Drafts 011

President.

Government depository and Financial
Ago t of ilic United stales.
We buy and sell all classes of
G ve linient Seeurltfe*

connected

OFFICES 15 AND

EUROPEAN
PASSAGE AND EXCHANGE OFFICE,
73 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

parties desiring to make

HKVr NATURAL BANK OF WASIff-

liiiMioe**

PLACE.

NO. 44 EXCHANGE

Is now

of the most
tion to

Flat, by

Kendrick, Christie & Co.

Bankers and Brokers.

Bankers.

II. 1>. COOKE (of lai Cooke & Co.),
WM. S. HUNTINGTON, Cashier.

at 83 1-2

purchased on this Bank, of National Bank North
merica, New York City ; National Bank of Com¬

be

Our

Southern

$100.000 for Sale in Lots of $10,000

tory
Sight and Time Exchange, for Gold or Currency, can

OF CHINA AND JAPAN.

j

WESTERN DIVISION.

1847 AND 1848.

AGENTS FOR

AUGUSTINE

FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS,

America.

■tatea.

Street, Boston,

RAILWAY COMPANY’S

principal places In Idaho Terri¬
promptly,attended to. “ Telegraph Transfers,”

S.

STREET, BOSTON.

Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw

Collections on the

Sayles,

JAMX8 BKOK, * HENRY 8AYLXS

28 State

Organized March 11, 1867, (with circulation), under
Act of Congress approyed June 3,1864.
Capital, $100,000.
Authorized Capital, $500,000*1
B. M. DU RELL, Pres.
C. W. MOORE, Cashier.
New York Correspondent,—National Bank of North

merce.

STOCK BROKERS,
JJo. tt STATS

Financial

-'ity, I. T.

BONDS,

Dupee, Beck &

Bankers.

7 ‘ c-j. 1L BANK OF IDAHO

!!H) A

dealers in foreign
V

i

3

Per Ceut, free of all

payable on and afier the 1st day of
R. BAYLES.

July next.

President.

THE CENTRA E NATIONAL BANK
City of New York, New York, June 19, 1S6S.—
The Board of Directors of this Bank have this day de¬
clared a semi-annual Dividend of FIVE (5) Per Cent,
free of tax, payable on and after July 1st proximo.
The Transfer nooks will close at 3 P,M. ou the 20th
inst, and reopen on the morning of July 3d.
W. H. SANFORD, Cashier.
of the

TE vTH NATIONAL
York, June 21,1868.—The Board

day

BANK, NEW
of Directors have this

declared a Dividend of FOUR

Per Cent, free

of taxes payable on and after 1st July next.
The Transfer books will be closed until that date.
J. II. STOUT, Cashier.
’

OFFICE OF THE

CENTRAL
IEEINOIS
RAILROAD
Company, New York, 11th June, 1868.—At a meeting
of the Board of Directors of this Company, held this
day, it was
Resolved, That a dividend of FIVE Per Cent In
cash, free of Government tax, he paid on the first day
of August next to the holders of the full paid shares
registered on the thirteenth day of July next, and
that the trail fer hooks be closed on Hie said thirteenth
day of July, and opened on the fifth day ol August
following.
Resoived, That in pursuance of the plan approved
at the shareholders’ meeting, May 27, 1868, the shares
of the Company he increased by the issue of eight
shares for.every one hundred now outstanding, and
the same be distributed to the holders of shares regis¬
tered on the Company’s books on the 1st day of August
next, in the proportion of one share for every twelve
and one-halt shares then held by them.
Resolved, That where, in the distribution of such
shares, a stockholder would be entitled to a fraction
of a share, the Company will retain such fraction, and
will pay therefor.
THOMAS E. WALKER, Treasurer.

r f *

THE CHROMt 1

i

■

af shit

•

OFFICE OF THE

L. P. MoRTOt

Atlantic

1868,

the 31st, December,

STERLING

1807:

2,838,100 71
■

3 Co

61

WILLIAM

ments ot the Charter *

LONDON.
and oltie* #f

The Company have
Cash in Banks
United States Stocks

Bank, City and other

and

$7,597,123 16

during the

T elegraphlc orders executed for the Purchase
Bale of Stock* and Bond* In London and New York.

E. Milnon.

Lnu P. Mobtow.

Chablxs

Wxltnb H. Burn*.

$1,224,364 01

H. Cbugbb Oajllet.

$307,390

Central

14,418 30

Stocks

194,790 00
40,785 15
92,000 00

the

Premium Notes and Bills Receivable

Salvage, "Re-insurance, Accrued Interest
and other Claims due the Company
Insurance Scrip and Sundry Notes at esti¬
mated value

rj

The Company has the following As¬
sets, viz.:

Stock, City, Rank and other Stocks. $0,804,485 00
Loans secured by Stocks, and other¬
wise....,
2,175,450 00

Mortgages,

* 210,000 00

Jnteroet and sundry notes and claims
due the

Has for sale all descriptions of Government Bonds-*
City and County accounts received on terms most fa
vorable to our Correspondents.

Collections made in all parts of the United States and
C&n&d&s
WILLIAM A. WHEEuOCK, President
’

"

William H. Sanford, Cashier.

Company, estimated ar

252,414 82

Premium Notes and Bills Receivable..

3,232.453 27

Cash in Bank

873,374 02

Total Amount of Assets

$13,108,177 11

Tenth National Bank.
$ 1,000,000.

Capital

Designated Depository of the Government.

ing certificates oi profits will be pat
thereof, or their legal representatives
and af>er Tuesday the Fourth of
on

D. L.

291

ed and

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

SURPLUS

on

the amount

so

redeemable will

fl.000,000
450,000
RICHARD BERRY, President
ANTHONY HALSEY, Caihler.

ceases

the time of pay¬
ment, and cancelled to the extern paid.

Tax, is declared on the net
entitled thereto, for tl:e year ending
31st December, 1867, lor which Certificates may be
issued on and after the 1st day of May next.
FIFTY PER CEvT.
earned premiums

outstanding Certificates of Profits of the issue
paid to the holders there¬
of, or their legal repiesentatives, on and after .Tues¬
day, the llth day of February next, from which date
of 1859 will be redeemed and

The Certificates to be
presented at the time of payment and cancelled to
all interest thereon will cease.

By order of the Board,

•

W. P.

KOSS, Preside

The Tradesmen’s

outstanding certifi¬

The certificates to be produced at

TWENTY PER CENT. DIVIDEND

HANSFORD, Secretary.

T R U STEE S :

Edward Kaupc,

Stewart Brown,

CAPITAL

Interest

outstanding Certificates of Profit will

and the United States

t. IT. Stout. Cashier.

cates of the issue of 1865 will be redeem¬

paid to the holders thereof, or their legal
representatives, on ana after Tuesday the
Fourth of February next, from which date

the

and Dealers’ Accounts solicited.

NATIONAL BANK.

Fifty per cent, of the

on

paid on and after Tuesday, the. llth day of Febru¬
ary, 1868.
”
be

that extent.

Banker

to the holders

February next.

767,549 73

of the

No. 20 BROAD STREET.

Six. per cenf Interest on flic outstand¬

Duncan, Sherman & Co.,

lienry

Stephen Johnson,

Oelrichs,

Arthur

James R.

Edward H. R.

Gustave H. Kissell,
Gerhard Janssen,
William Paxson,
John H. Earle,
Francis Skiddy,

Smith,
George Mosle,

Leary,
Henry Meyer,

Lyman,
George Moke,
K. V. Thebaud,
Francis Hathaway,
Lloyd Aspinwall
A

•

A

1 1

E. P. Fabbri.

JCXJJN H. LYELL, President.

TJfPO. B. BLEECKEE, Jr„

dividend

of

Thirty

Per Cent. Is

declared

on the net earned premiums
Company, for the year ending 31st
December, 1867* tor which certificates will be
issued on and after Tuesday the Seventh of April

of the

next.

By order of the Board,
J. II.

CHAPMAN,
Secretary

COMPANY.
(INSURANCE BUILDINGS)

CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU STS.,

49 WALL STREET.

ISSUE

CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS
OF CREDIT,
For the use of Travelers abroad and in the United

States, available in all the principal cities of the
world: also, *
COMMERCIAL CREDITS,
For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hop
West Indies, South America, and the United State
_

Jones,
Dennis,
W. H. H. Moore,
i Henry Coit,
Wm. C. Pickersgill,
Lewis Curtis,
Charles H. RnsBell,
Lowell Holbrook,
R. Warren Weston,
Royal Phelps,
Charles

AMERICAN BANKERS,
NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS,

Wm.

Sturgis,
Henry K. Bogert,

Joshua J.
Dennis

Henry,
Perkins,

William E. Dodge

Joseph Gaillard, Jr.
J. Henry Burgy,
Cornelius Grinnell,
C. A. Hand,
B.J. nowland,
Benj. Babcock,
Fletcher Westray,
Robt. B. Mintura, Jr.,
Gordon W, Burnham

Caleb Barstow
A. P. Pillot

Robt. C. Fergusson,

Frederick

David Lane,

James Low

James Bryce,

Francis Skiddy,
Daniel S. Miller.

AID

STREET, NEW YORK,
Ibbuo Circular Letter* of Credit for Traveller* In aR
part* of Europe, etc., etc. Also Commercial Credit*,
NO. 8 WALL

S. G. & G. C.
AGENTS

.

Spofford.

Charles P. Burdett,
Robert L. Taylor,
Shephard Gandy.

\




JOHN D.* JONES, President,
CHARLES

W, H. El.

DENNIS, Vice-President,
MOORE, 2d Vice-Pres.

J. D, HEWLETT, 34 Yice-Pree’t

COMPANY,

? 5G WALL STREET, NEW YORK,
28 STATE

STREET, BOSTON.

Incorporated 1841.
Capital and A**et*,

Drake Kleinwort&Cohen

JOHN P. PAULISON Vice-President,
Isaac H. Walker, Secretary.

Temple & Marsh,
BANKERS AND BROKERS.
Dealers in Government Securities,&c. on

No. 9 Wall Street, cor.

Vermilye-

LIVERPOOL.

The

subscriber, their representative ana Attorneys
the United States, is prepared to make advances
vu shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwoit & Cohen
jDndon and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile
gedits upon them for use in China, the East and
West Indies, South America, &c, Marginal credits
the London House issued for the same purposes.
SIMON DE

VISSER,

SO Exchange Place, New York,

Commission.

New.

Go.,

&

N K E R S .
No. 44 Wall Street. New York,
Keep constantly on hand tor immediate delivery
issues of
BA

UN ITED5STATE S"l|S

all

TOCRS

INCLUDING

6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881,
6 Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862,
“

“

LONDON AND

$1,614,540 78

having recently added to its previous
assets a paid up cash capital ol $500,000, and subscrip¬
tion notes in advance of premiums of $300,000, continues
to issue policies of insurance against Marine and Inand Navigation Risks. No Fire Risks disconnected
rom Marine taken by the Company.
Dealers are entied to participate in the profits.
MOSES H. GRINNELL, President.
This Company

.

William H. Webb.

Chauncey,

Ward,

FOR

BARING BROTHERS &

George S. Stephenson
Paul

,

John Munroe & Co.,

trustees:

John D.

Vice-Fres.

Sun Mutual Insurance

BANKERS,
A

81,037 69

SIX PER CENT.
Interest

% 3,000,000

$630,309 72
88,399 u

22,803 2

Bank,

S18 BROADWAY.

-

Capital

United States and State of New York

Real Estate and Bonds and

National

93

the following assets:
.'... $29,809 57
272,925 00

Returns of Premiums and

$1,305,S^5 93

*

$207,661 23

on Stocks, and Cash due
Company
Real Estate,Bonds and Mortgages

Loans

1807 to 31st December, 1S07

1,18fc8

■Losses and Expenses
Return Premiums...:

Europe and the East.

Premiums marked off from 1st Janu¬

87

f 382,972 68

with Marine Risks.
Earned Premiums to Jan.

Available la all the principal town*

•oq

No Policies have been issued upon Life
Risks, nor upon Fire Risks, disconnected

London.)

UNION BANK OF

’

Total

nected with Marine Risks.

Expenses

f:

COMPANY," ^

Outstanding Premiums to Dec. 31,1866

iums. .$10,100,125 40

Life
Fire Risks discon¬

period

I,

*

Premiums received

TUN

AND

No Polices have been issued upon

same

,

STREET, NEW YORK.
January 23,1868.
The Trustees submit the following Statement of th
affairs of the Company in conformity with the
require,

BURNS & CO.t
r-*

(58 Old Broad Street,

Policies not marked oil

Total amount of Marine Pro

Losses paid

v

■

;v»

INSURANCE

EXCHANGE,

Iu P. HORTON,

January. 1807

ary,

.i.

f

and Loi¬

January, 1807, to 31st De¬
cember, 1807
$7,32?,015 75

nor upon

n

J

-1

1

Al fight or Sixty Day*; also, Circular Note*
ter* of Credit for Traveller*’ U*e, on

from 1st

Risks;

r

NO.

Premiums received on Marine Risks,

1st

\

V*

NEW YORK.

H> BROAD STREET,

Co.,

Insurance

Conformity to the Charter of the
Company, submit the following Statement ol its

on

“jv^.

,

The Trustees, in

Premiums

^>

i»/

*

--I

NEW YORK, JANUARY 25-rn,

on

V r-4 i.

BANKERS,

p

affairs

O

-

1£\ r r:
*

Mutual

‘**1

Financial

Insurance.

*

>

“

18frt,
1805,

Per Cent 10-40 Bonds,
3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st,
Per Cent Currency Certificates.

2d, & 3d series*

/few York State 7 per cent. Bounty Loan.

’

LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN!
MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS.

Compound interest Notes of 1864
1865 Bought and Sold,
VERMILYE & CO,

£3

&

V

FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF

Richardson & Co.,
MERCHANTS,

BANKERS &

exchange, gold and

dealers in foreign
"

BONDS,

Boston.
TRAVELLERS’ CREDITS issued on London and
Paris available in all parts of Europe.
LOANS OF STERLING made to Merchants upon
114 State Street,

favorable terms.
DEPOSITS OF GOLD AND CURRENCY received,
subject to draft at sight and interest allowed.
ADVANCES made on consignments to Liverpool
and London.
,

STOCK BROKERS,

iua$ jl Durn,

_

hxnry batlbs

jambs iior,

Everett & Co.,
28 State Street,

Boston,

AGENTS FOR

HEARD Sc

AUGUSTINE

OF CHINA AND

CO.,

Congress approved June 3,1864.
Capital, $100,000.
Authorized Capital, $500,0001
B. M. DU RELL, Pres.
C. W. MOORE, Cashier.
Act of

New York

Bankers and Brokers.

EUROPEAN
PASSAGE AND EXCHANGE OFFICE.
73 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
Drafts oil England, Ireland & Scotland
Bankers furnished with Sterling Exchange and
through tickets from Europe to all parts of the United
States.
& '

Thomas:Denny & Co.,

favorable terms, and give especial atten¬

connected vt itli tlie several
lipnriitieiii* of (lie Government.

Uusiocsf)

Full information with regard to
at all times cheerfully furuisied.

JAS. L. MAURY.

Government Loans

BANKERS AND BROKERS,

BOB’T T. BROOKE*

BANKERS & BROKERS,

ST. RICHMOND, VA.

Sterling Exchange, Gold
State, City and Railroad

and Silver, Bank Notes,

Bonds and Stocks, &.o.,

bought and sold on commission.
52P Deposits received ami Collections made on all
accessible points in the United States.
N.
Correspondent, VEKMILYE & CO.

New York.

No. 32 Broad Street,
Buy and SeU at

STATES SECURITIES.
MERCHANTS, BANKERS, and
and allow interest on daily balances, subject to

Solicit accounts from

ethers,

Bight Draft.
Make Collection* on
and

(krorable term*,
the Purchase or sale

promptly execute orders for

Gold, State, Federal,

Securities.

No. 52 St.

*'•

Exchange, Gov
Silver. Prompt

Securities

Buy and Sell on Commission Government
Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and

Bonds
Coal, Petroleum and
Mining Stocks.
Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to
Draft. Dividends and Interest collected and Invest¬
ments made.
Order* Promptly Executed

Steamship, Telegraph, Express,

Babcock. Bros. & Co., Bankers, New

York.

Goodyear, Bros. & Durand, Bankers, New"
E. H. Bulkly & Co., Brokers, Now York.

York.

Byrd & Hall, New York.

proved securities.

Part icular attention given to orders for the purchase
sale of the Adams, American, United States, Wells
Fargo & Co., and Merchants’ Union Express Stocks.
All orders faithfully executed.

Washington M. SmTthT

Ala.

Western Bankers.

OF

Company

CHICAGO.

4

Commission.

allowed same as with
Bonds and Loans negotiated

Deposits received and interest

Incorporated Bank.

President.

Compare 1

Manager.

Banking; and Collections
promptly attended to.
Jos. Hutohxboh.
W. B Hiydui
BANKING HOUSE OF

F. Hayden.

Hayden, Hutcheson & Co
NO. 13 8. HIGH 8TKKET,

a

COLUMBUS, OHIO,
General Banking, Collection, and Exchange
Business.

^umoLPits
sP
ft ankers.

7b

<§/c. 3a.

P/L,

"\?\vvYttAcv.

| 3 JV*llAAcul
J
oy\y.

(Zj6cal t>LA in. f/L.
ccu±itlcA
curd fT'aLciQn ^JccltanQCy and

and r(faLd
fpjc.ch-anQ.cA in bath citicA.
dLcrauntA
af J^an/cA and
/^.anlcciA tcceluLcd an. LLbclaL

rnemhcLA af ^flac/z

National Trust

Company

423 PENN STREET,

PITTSBURGH,
Particular attention

given %9 CQlleCttokS, &ftd pro

teeds promptly remitted,




PA.

$100,000

Capital..

Jk

BROAD STREET, NEW YORK.
vGovernment Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Exchange,
Commercial Paper and Gold, Purchased or Sold on
an

General

Do

John McGinnis,

BANKERS AND BROKERS,

for Railroad

J. Young Scammon
Robkrt Reid

ISAIAH C. BABCOCK,
ROBT M. HEDDEN.

McGinniss,Bros.& Smith,
NO.

Marine

Broker*.

E. W. McGinnis.

Henry A. Schroeder, Pres. Southern Bank of

The

NEW YORK,

Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold
bought and sold at market rates, on commission only."
Interest allowed on balances. Advances made ou ap¬

JOSIAH HEDDEN,
LOCKE W. WINCHESTER.

Henry A. Hurlburt. late Swill & llurlburt.
Home, Insurance Company of New Verk.

tclmA.

OF

York, June 24th 1868.

U. S.

LOANS OF

1847 AND 1848.
In pursuance

of instructions from the

Secretary of

Treasury, the holders of United States Bonds of
the loans of 1847 and ISIS are hereby notified that, said
bonds will be redeemed at tlie Treasury Department
in

Washington, or at the office of the

Assistant Trea¬

in New York, on and after the

surer

first day of

1868 (proximo), and that interest on the
said bond? will cease alter June 30th instant.

julv,

afore¬

be assigned to “ The Secretary of
for Redemption,” and endorsed by the

All bonds must
the Treasury

party to whom payment is required to be made.
Where such assignments are executed in a repra
seutative or fiduciary capacity, the evidence of au¬

assignment must accompany

the

Should that evidence be already filed
with the Department, tlie date of its transmission and
the bureau in which it Wes’ lodged should be stated.
Certificates presented shtmld be listed in a schedule
in which tlie numbers, denominations, names oi payees
and other data above required, should be set forth.
II. H. VAN DYCK,
Assistant Treasurer.

Holders of 7-30 Notes

22, 1868.

who desire to avail themselves

right to convert
hereby notified that the.
of their

the same into 5-20 Bonds are
notes must be presented at

Department at Washington, or at the
Treasurer United States at New
York, as follows :
The notes that matured on the 15th of June must be
presented on or before the 15th of July. The notes
that become due on the 15th of July.must be presented
on or before the 1st day of August.
The bonds to be issued in exchange for the notes
will bear interest from the 1st day of July, 1868, and

the Treasury

office of the Assistant

the interest on the notes will be calculated according¬
ly. The bonds will be oi ilie issue oi 1867 or 1868, a
may

be preferred, and

iu which tlie notes are

they will be issued iu the order
presented.
H.MCCULLOCH,
Secretary of tlie Treasury.

or

Martin, Bates & Co., Merchants, New York.
Geo. D. II. Gillespie, late Wollf & Gillespie.
New York Life Insurance Company.
A£tna Insurance Company of Hartford.
Underwriters Agencv, New York.
Charles Walsh, President Bank of Mobile.

Banker* and

REDEMPTION

Treasury,

June

STOCK BROKERS AND BANKERS,
No. 16 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK,

NO. 69 BROADWAY,

New

Treasury Department.

Drake Brothers,

Francis St.' Mobile, Ala.

United States

and Railroad

-

PLACF.

OFFICES 15 AND 16.

certificates.

Jas. M. Muldon 6c Sons, Hedden, Winchester&Co
Dealers in Foreign and Domestic
eminent Securities, Bonds, Gold and
attention given to Collections.
References:

Kendrick, Christie & Co.

thority to make the

Market Rates,

ALL UNITED

R. H. Maury & Co.,
Np. 1014 MAIN

Circular for

Taussig, Fisher & Co.,

of
BOB’T H. MAURY.

WALL STREET.

Annual Financial

President.

Government depository and Financial
Age t oi kite United Mates.
We buy and sell all classes of
C» >ve ninent Securities

Flat, by

the

BANKERS AND BROKERS,

Is now mady, and will be forwarded free of charge t
parties desiring to make investments through us.

lN'.TON.

at 83 1-2

Thompson’s Nephew,

1868

WASH*

$100,000 for Sale in Lots of $10,000

NO. 44 EXCHANGE

Bankers.

BIRVT NATIONAL BANK OF

WESTERN DIVISION.

FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS,

America.
Collections on the principal places in Idaho Terri¬
tory promptly attended to.
“ Telegraph Transfers,”
Sight and Time Exchange, for Gold or Currency, can
be purchased on this Bank, of National Bank North
merica, New York City ; National Bank of Com¬
merce, Boston, Mass.

NO. 39

Washington.

of the most
tion to

RAILWAY COMPANY’S

Correspondent,—National Bank of North

JAPAN.

II. 1). COOKE (of la' Cooke & Co.),
1VM. S. HUNTINGTON, Cashier.

Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw

.

Our

Southern

IDAHO

City, circulation), under
I. T.
1867, (with

Organized March 11,

S.

BOSTON.

Vow SI STATE STREET,

Boise

Sayles,

Dupee, Beck &

Financial

Western Bankers.

Boston Bankers.

Page,

3

THE CHRONICLE.

Mj 4 L333.]

THE MARKET

NATIONAL BANK,

June 23,1868.—The Board of Directors oi
National Bank have this day declared a
semi-annual Dividend of FIVE Per Cent, free of all
taxes, payable on and after the 1st day of July next.
New York,
the Market

R. BAYLES.

THE

President.

CENTRAL NATIONAL BANK

19, 1868.—

of the City of New York, New York, June
Tlie Board of Directors of this Bank have thiB day de¬
clared a semi-annual Dividend of FIVE (5) Per Cent,
free of tax, payable on and
The Transfer nooks will close at S'P,M. on the

iast, and reopen on

after July 1st proximo.
20th
the morning of July 3d.
W. H. SANFORD, Cashier.

TE 'TH NATIONAL BANK,
NEW
York, June 24, 1868.—The Board of Directors have this
day declared a Dividend of FOUR (4) Per Cent, free
of taxes payable on and after 1st July next.
The Transfer books will be closed until that date.
J. H. STOUT, Cashier.

OFFICE OF THE

ILLINOIS
CENTRAL
RAILROAD
Company, New York, 11th June, 1868.—At a meeting
of tlie Board of Directors of this Company, held thfs
d iy, It was
Resolved, That a dividend of FIVE Per Cent in
cash, free of Government tax, be paid on the first day
of August next to the holders of the full paid shares
registered on tlie thirteenth day of July next, and
that the tran fer hooks be closed on the said thirteenth
day of July, and opened on the fifth day oi August
following.
Resoived, That in pursuance of the plan approved
at the shareholders’meeting, May 27, 1868. the shares
of the Company be increased by the issue of eight

shares for every one hundred now outstanding, and
the same be distributed to the holders of shares regis¬

tered on the Company’s books on the 1st day of August
next, in the proportion of one share for ever}' twelve
and one-halt shares then held by them.

Resolved, That where, in the distribution of such
shares, a stockholder would be entitled to a fraction
of a share, the Company will retain such fraction, and
ill pay Uiereior.

fi, WAJUKEE, Treasurer.

4

Lewis Run Coal and Iron

Paul City 7 Per Cent

j St.

Bonds.

Company.
40,000 First Mortjrage Bonds Payable
1 88o.

The

Fir ancial.

Financial.

Financial.

property'of tills Company consists of 3,608 1-10

timber, coal and iron land, in McKean county,
Penn., on line of Buffalo, B. and P. R.K., worth, with
present improvements, at least $135,000 which valua¬
acres

[July 4,1868.

THE CHRONICLE.

i

tion will be largely enhanced by the development of
the property, and for which purpose, and no other, the
money raised on these bonds is required to be used.
Two veins of coal—one cannel and the other bitumin¬
ous—and excellent mines ot iron ore are on this land
and only need working to double its value. Sixty
thousand dollars worth of bonds is the total authorized
to be issued, and constitute the only debt owing by
the company, interest 7 per cent, payable January
nd July in New York.

Stout, Thayer & Co.,
AND

BROKERS,

St. Louis
SIX

iFirst

DHBI QUE
road

road

MILWAUKEE KAIL-

AND

PONTIAC

OF

May Is

COMMERCE,

New York,

The subscribers, the authorized agents for the
these

sale of

Bonds, offer a limited amount at

July 1, 1868. will be paid at our office, No. 12
Pine street, in the City of New York, on and after the
1st proximo, less Government tax,
•
Also, due July 1,1868.

A Desirable Investment.

Due

ST. LOI
cago

IS, JACKSONVILLE <fc CHI-

Railroad Coupons of 10 per cent

Equipment

Bonds, free of Government tax,
ATLANTIC AND GULF RAILROAD
of

Georgia, Coupons of Consolidated 7 per cent Bonds

free of Government tax,

LOGANSPORT

UNION AND
PER CENT

SEVEN

We offer for sale a limited amount of the above
named bonds at the low rate of 85 and accrued inter st.
These bonds are secured by a First Mortgage
on the road between Union, Ohio, and Logansport.
Indiana, being a link in the Columbus, Chicago and
Indiana Central Railroad Company, the new route to

Chicago, and are convertible at the option of the
holder, into the First Mortgage Bonds of that Com¬
pany. For further particulars apply to

9

No. 18 Wall

Street, New \~ork.,

DUBUQUE AND SIOUX CITY RAILroad Dividend, 3 1-2 per cent, less
Preferred Stock.

in. K.
New York,

Government tax on

FOR

SAVINGS

NIES

And

«A»Lroad Company, Tontine Buildings, No. 88 Wsll s»reet,
Ne>v York, June .'4,1368.—45th Dividend.—The Board
of Directors have this day declared a Dividend of SIX
(6) Per Cent out of the e'arnings of the road for the
three months ending 30th instant,
payable to the
stockholders, or their legal representatives, on and
after the 6th of July next.
OFFICE OF

T ** K

«'AN4NA

Transfer books will be closed on the afternoon of
the 2*ith instant and reopened on the morning of the
9th prox.
HENRY SMITH, Treasurer.

METROPOLI TAN NATIONAL RANK
(No. 108 Broadway) New York, June 23, 1868.—Divi¬
dend.—I he Directors of the Metropolitan National
Bank have this day declared a semi-annual Dividend
of SIX (6) Per Cent, iree of tax, payable on the 1st
Monday of July next.
The transfer books will be closed until July 9th prox.
GEO. I. SENEY, Cashier.

MECHANICS’

NATIONAL

BANK,

New York, June 29, 1868.—Dividend.—The Board ot
Directors have declared a Dividend of FIVE (5) Per
Cent, free of tax. payable on and after 1st of July next.
The transfer book will be closed until that date.
WM. H, COX, Cashier.

MERCH l NTS EXCHANGE NATIONal Bank of the City of New York, June 20,1868Dividend A semi annual Dividend of FIVE (5) Per
Cent, has been declared out of the profits of the last
six months, free of all taxes, payable on and after 1st

Investors

THE CHATHAM NATION A L RANK
New York, June

17, 1868.—A semi-annual Dividend of

EIGHT (8) Per Cent, has

The towns of West Farms. Morrisania. Westchester
County, New Y’ork, will issue bonds in aid ot the con¬

struction of the “ Southern Boulevard.”
Said bonds
will bear int°rest at the rate of 7 per cent per annum,

NO.

175

on

the

BROADWAY.
New York, July 1,1868.

Capital Stock, free from Government Tax, pay¬
demand, at the office of the Company.
HUGO SCHUMANN, Secretary.




H

F.

merce.

JAMES LOW, Esq,, New York.
J. II. BRITTON, President National Bank of the

Missouri, St. Louis.

J. R. LiONBERGER,
St. Louis.
'
JOHN J.

President Third National Bank

ROE, Esq., President State Savings Instil

tution, St. Louia.

Jameson, Smith&; Cotting
16 Wall

Street, New York.

this Bank have declared a Dividend of SEVEN (7)
Per C«nt, lree of all taxes, payable on the first day of
July next, until which date the transfer books v ill
remain closed.

J, L. WTORTH, Cashier.

a semi-annual Dividend of FIVE
(5) Per Cent, free of tax, out of the profits of the past
six months, payable on and after the 1st day of July

next.

Savings Banks and Trust Companies within the State
are authorized to purchase said bonds tor the purpose

Thos. A.

By Special Act of the Legislature,

of investment. No
ment can be found.
AND INTEREST

safer or more desirable invest¬
A limited amount for sale at par

by

Lawrence Brothers &

Co,

RANKERS,
16 WALL £

TREET, NEW YORK,

r

OFFICE

TRADESMEN’S
NATIONAL
Bank, New Y’ork, June 19th, 1868.—A Dividend of SIX
(6) Per Cent, free of all taxes, will be paid on and
after July 1st.
ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier.
THE

PHEN1X NATIONAL

BANK,

NEW

York, June 26th, 1868.—The Directors of this Bank
have this day declared a Dividend of FOUR (4) Per
Cent, free from tax, payable on and after July 1st,

1868.
The transfer books
until the 6th of July.

will be closed from this date
‘
JOHN PARKER, Cashier.

AGEMffY JETNA

INSURANCE C«»M-

pany, 62 Wall street. New York July 3, 1868.—Dividend
—A Dividend of SIX Per Cent has bee 1 declared by
the jEtna Insurance Company of Hartford.
New \ ork shareholders will be paid at this office.
JAS. A. ALEXANDER, Secretary.

DIVIDEND.
'

'

Star Fire Insurance
NO. 96

'

Co.,

RAILROAD
Company of t alifornia, 54 William street, New York
June 15th.—The Coupons of the First Mortgage Bonds
CENTRAL

PACIFIC

o‘ of the Central Pacific Railroad Co., uue July 1,
1868, will be paid in full, free ot Government tax, on
presentation on and alter that date at the Banking
House of FISK <fc HATCH, 5 Nassau street, Sche¬
dules of 25 or more Coupons (for winch blanks will be
furnished on application) will be received for exami¬
nation on and alter the 2lth inst.

TON, Vice-President.

Gibson,Beadleston & Co.,
BANKERS,
50 EXCHANGE PLACE, NEW YORK.
Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds
and

Gold

bought audsold, ONLY ou Commission, at the Stock,
Mining Stock and Gold Boards, of which we are mem
bers.
Interest allowed on

Deposits.
Dividends.Coupons and Interest collected.

Liberal advances on Government and other Securitie
Information cheerfully given to Proiessional men
Executors etc., desiring to invest.
r>
-i.
.
5 Messrs. Lockwood & Co.,
Refer bv

permissionto

\

»,

i>ABNBY,Morgank

BROADWAY. '

$200,000 OO

Capital
Surplus

82,301 55

The Board of Directors have this

M. K.

J esup & Company,

BANKERS AND MERCHANTS,

FIVE PER

13 PINE STREET.

day declared a
egoti&ta

Semi-Aunual Devidend of

free of Government

John T. Hill, Cash.

Vyse, Jr., Pres.

1MI!\TH NATIONAL
RANK,
NEW
York, June 12, 1868.—The Board of Directors of this
Bank have declared a Dividend of FIVE (5) Per Cent
free of all taxes, payable on tne first day of July next.
The transfer books will close on the2uth instant and
reopen on the 1st proximo.
JOHN T. HILL, Cashier.

V,

The Board of Directors have this day declared
semi-annual Dividend of
FIVE PER CENT,

able Oh

CO., New York.
VAIL, Esq., Cashier National Bank of Com¬

Messrs. E. D. MORGAN &

payable semi annually (March and September) in the

city of New York.

OFFICE OF THE

COMP AN

Nation1

The transfer books will be closed from the 25th inst.
till the 1st proximo.
CHAS. HUDSON, Cashier.

FIFTEENTH DIVIDEND.

Germania Fire Insurance

President

Bank have declared

been this day declared, pay¬

able on and alter 1st July next.
The transfer books will be closed from the 20tli inst.
to July 2. By oraer ol the Board.
O. H. &CHREINER, Cashier.

R. LENOX KENNEDY. Esq.,
Bank of Commerce, New York.

EIGHTH NATIONAL RANK* NEW
York, June 16th, 1868.—The Board of Directors of this

Generally.

July nexi.

Transfer books will be closed from 22d instant until
first proximo
E. J. OAKLEY, Cashier.

We recommend the above loan as an undoubted se¬
are authorized to offer a limited amount
of the Bonds at 83 1-2 and accrued interest. For the
character of the security we refer, by permission, to

BANKS, TRUST COMPA¬

Jesup & Company.

June 25, 1868.

now

NATIONAL PARK RANK OF NEW
York, June 19th, 1868.—The Board of Directors of

DREXEL, WINTHROP & CO.

Also, due July 6, 1868.

The road

curity, and

State of

MORTGAGE BONDS

FIRST

City, already completed westward 350 miles, and
with the Iowa Central and the Cedar Rapids Railroads
in Iowa, lorming by the Iowa Central a direct connec¬
tion with St. Paul, and by tne latter with Dubuque.
It runs through the choicest agricultural and coal
lands in the State of Missouri, and by its connections
will have the finest and most populous portions of
ner.

STREET, NEW YORK.

14 AND 16 WALL

the Union Pacific at Kan

1 his Road connects with

Iowa and Minnesota trii.utaries to it.

RANKERS,

RAIL-

only lien upon the Road is this First Mortgage
Millions, and which is LESS THAN $16,000 PER

completed is constructed in the most substantial man¬

Jameson,Smith&Cotting

Coupons of First Mortgage Bonds.

DUltl QBE SOUTHWESTERN RAIL*
road Coupons of First Mortgage Preferred Bonds.

The

Fxpended in
date, Si 1,3 40,000.

sas

8 5 and Accrued Interest.

Coupons of First Funding Bonds.

DETROIT
road

BANK
In

AND SIOUX CITY RAIL*
&

length of road which will be completed
YEAR, 382 1-2 MILES.

MILE.

Bonds have 20 years to run, interest payable
and November let, at the

Coupons of First Mortgage Bonds.

DETROIT

to

of Six

NATIONAL

Mortgage 8 per cent Bonds,

.

Construction to

RONDS.

CENT

PER

JO LI FT AND CHICAGO RAILROAD

Coupons of

completed and in operation from ST
Missouri River, and
ATLANTA, in Northeast Missouri, 242 MILES.

The Road is

LOUIS to BRUNSWICK, on the

Amount In Actual Casli

City

MANSFIELD, FREESE & BROWNELL,

Coupons of First Mortgage Bonds.

JULY,

AT TEE NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE IN NEW YORK.

in NOVEMBER OF THIS

ment.

CHICAGO AND ALTON HAiLllOAD

INTEREST PAYABLE JANUARY AND

The entire

38 BROAD STREET.

I But $40,000 are offered for sale at present, and at
very reasonable rates. A lirst class reliable invest¬
Bankers, No. 50 Broad street.

FIRST MORTGAGE

30 YEARS SEVEN PER CE.XT BONDS

The subscribers offer a limited quantity of the above
Bonds at EIGHTY FIVE per cent. They have eigh¬
teen yearsito run. Interest payable 1st July and Jan¬
uary, at the Third National Bank, New York-

BANKERS

North Missouri Railroad

if.,anil

CENT.,

Tax, payable on and after July

1st.

Contract for Iron or

New York, June 30,1868.

BRADLEY, Secretary,

_

_

Rnilronn COIn
_

Steel Bail*,

Locomotive*,

Cars, etc.,
and undertake

M. M.

T.aqna fnr

r

all bu»in«ii connectedwltk

Railway*?

l'

•

I;

»THE

A

ttmmrrrtaj &

§taihmtg Panitor, and femmcc gmmwl

•ante’ fecth, €5ommcwial
.

REPRESENTING THE

A-WEEKLY NEWSPAPER.
INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE

THE CHRONICLE.

the

Review of the Month
Latest Monetary and Commercial

Redeeming

Aeents of

Notional Banks
Taxation of Government Bonds.

English News

The Banks and the Tax Bill
The China Trade—No. Ill

Commercial and

Miscellaneous

THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL

IV*

TIMES.

Cotton
Tobacco
Breadstuffs
Groceries.,

U. S. Securities, Gold Market,
IVCl)
Foreign Exchange, New York
City Banks. Philadelphia Banka
^,.7

10

News

Money Market, Railway Stocks,
1ILU1

National Banks, etc
sale Prices N.Y. Stock Exchange

Commercial

Dry Goods

15
10

Epitome.

Railway News
Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List..
J*
ecu., OLWUK LUHI. .
Railroad, Canal and Miscellane-

Prices Cnrrent and Tone
Market

25}
26

„

ous

GOVERNMENT BONDS.
So much has been said about the exemption of the gov¬
ernment bonds from taxation, and mistakes are so prev¬
alent on the subject, that some positive and more intel¬
ligible views are greatly to be desired. The heated dis¬
cussions which are now going forward, both in and out of
Congress, will have this good result, that the people will get
to understand both what taxes are now paid by the bond¬
holders, and whether more fiscal

II

THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE

of the

JOURNAL.

Bond List

he

Insurance and Mining Journal
1 Advertisements
1-4, 23-4,

27

28
31-2

Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬
day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine,
with the latest news up to midnight of Friday.
TEEMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.

For

The Commercial

ani>

to city subscribers, ana
ForOne Year
For Six Months

Financial Chronicle,

delivered by carrier
mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage,)

$10 00
6 00

Postage is 20 cents per year, and is paid by the subscriber at his own post-office
WILL’AM
JOHN O.

B. DANA,
FLOYD, Jtt

)

DANA & CO., Publishers,
79 and 81 William Street, cor. of Liberty.
Post Office Box 4,592.

WILLIAM B

f

burdens should be put upon

them.
29-30

®l)C Cl)ronicU.
I

NO. 158.

THE TAXATION OF

CONTENTS.

in

UNITED STATES,

SATURDAY, JULY 4, 1868

VOL. 7.

Changes

mantra

Thursday offered a
the question. This
measure suspends the existing income tax of 5 per cent, as
far as it applies to the interest of the bonds, and puts in its
place a tax of 10 per cent. The bill introduced by the Com¬
mittee of Ways and Means, in obedience to Mr. Cobb’s res¬
olution, atteu pts the same thing, but does not repeal the
income tax.' What it is chiefly important to dwell upor. is
this—that the national securities are not untaxed at present.
They are taxed by Congress just the same as other incomeproducing property is taxed; and the question now before
the people is, whether the government bonds shall be dis¬
criminated against, and whether the income from bonds shall
pay more tax than the income arising from other sources.
In reporting the bond-taxation bill as ordered, the Com¬
present tax, Mr. Butler on
attempted openly to meet

As to the

bill which

properly declare that
Remittances should invariably be made by drafts or Post
they act in obedience to the positive directions of the
House, and contrary to their own best judgment. They re¬
Office Money Orders.
to themselves their rights, as members of the House,
Bound volumes of the Chronicle for the six months ending Ju’y to oppose in every possible way the adoption of a measure,
which they regard as hostile to the public interest, and
1, 1868, and also previous volumes, can be had at the office.
injurious to the national character, a hill to authorize an
internal tax on the interest of the bonds and other securiCHANGES IN THE REDEEMING AGENTS OF NATIONAL BANKS.
of the United States.” This measure, if it becomes a law,
The following are the changes in the Redeeming Agents
is destined to have such important results that we copy it
mittee of

Ways and Means very

“

serve

of National Banks for

the week ending

July 2.

These

weekly changes are furnished by, and published in accord¬
ance with an arrangement made with the Comptroller of
the

Currency.
NAME

LOCATION.

REDEEMING AGENT.

OF BANK.

New Hampshire
Portsmouth...

The National Me The National Exchange Bsnk of Bos¬
chanics’ and Trad¬
ton, approved in place of The Na
tional Hide and Leather Bank of
ers’ Bank

Massachusetts.

The Beverly
al Bank

Beverly

....

Naticn-

Boston.
The Importers’ and Traders’ National
Bank of New Vork, approved in
'

Slace York. Ninth National Bank of
of i he
ew

Massachusetts.
Boston
Penn ylvania.
Erie




...

full,

as

follows

’/■

:

and after the passage of this act, there
paid a tax of ten per centum on the
amount of interest hereafter due and payable on alt the bonds and
To secure the collection of said
other securities of the United States.
tax, the amount of interest hereafter paid on any bonds or other securi¬
ties of the United States, bearing interest at six per centum, shall be
at the rate of only five and five-tenths per centum, and bearing interest
at the rate of five per centum shalL he at the rate of only 4 6-10 per
centum ; and if bearing interest at the rate of three per centum shall
be at the rate of only 2 7-10 per centum, per annum.
No higher rate
of interest than is here prescribed shall be paid on any bond or other
security of the United States now outstanding or authorised to be
iesved.
All condition of any such bonds or other security, and all
laws and parts of laws to the (ontrary, are hereby repealed.

Be it enacted, etc. That from
shall be levied, collected, and

simple reading of this bill sought to be enough to
cannot be passed. It is certainly unfit to become
law, and if, as is reported, it stands some chance of getting
through the Hous* •, it will no doubt receive its quietus in
its pre sent shape,' it involves repudiation and
The

Fourth National Bank of New York.
The Second Nation¬ Tim ucean National Back of New show that it
al Bank of Erie.
York, approved in place of the Third
a
National Bank of New York.
The First National Th * Ocean National Bank of New
Bank of Hudson..
York, approved in p ace of The
Tenth National Bank of New York.
In
The Central National Bunk of New Senate.
The First National
Bank of Milwau¬
York, approved, in place of The
breach of
Fourth Nationa Bank of New York, i
kee
.

Wisconsin.
Budeon.......

Wisconsin.
Milwaukee

The At as National The St. Nicholas National Bank of
New York, approved in place < f The
Bank of Boston

in

v

faith it} l their most

the

repulsive fornu.

i&

1
ii

6

THE CHRONICLE.
THE BAKES AND THE TAX BILL

[July 4,1808.

We desire

by no means to counsel or perpetuate any
practice it.seems to be one of the most difficult prob¬
existing methods of certifying cheques, we
lems of fiscal science to determine the true object of taxation. pronounce no opinion adverse to the rival methods intro¬
And yet in theory nothing is more plain.
A simple citizen duced by the new Stock Exchange Clearing House. By all
would say that the object of taxes is to supply the govern¬ means let the latter have a fair trial. But if the former have
ment
Treasury. But this unsophisticated view seems by no to be given up, and if the aid of legislation is to be invoked
means to
satisfy some of the gentlemen who have lately been to accomplish the sacrifice, let the act .be openly done by a
law introduced for that purpose, and let no clandestine
busy at Washington elaborating the internal revenue bill.
A significant illustration of this is offered by the bank tax
attempts be - made by obscure provisions in a complicated,
section which was struck out a few days ago by the Senate, voluminous tax bill.
but which may not impossibly be restored when the bill is
In

«

defects of the

returned to the House for

-

as

concurrence.

The section reads

kTUE CHINA TRADE.

follows:
“

,

There shall be a tax of one-twelfth of one per centum per month
uprn the average amount of the deposits of money, other than public
money of the United States, subject to payment by check or draft, or

represented by certificates of deposit, or otherwise, whether payable
on demand or at some future
day, with any person, bank, association,
company or corporation engaged in the business of banking ; and a^
tax of one-quarter of one
per centum each month on the average
amount of all deposits of
public money in their possession to the
credit of the Treasurer or
any disbursing officer of the United States ;
and a tax of one
twenty-fourth of one per centum each month upon
the capital of any bank,
association, company or corporation engaged
in the business of
banking and on the capital employed by any person
in the business of
banking, beyond the average amount invested in
United States bonds ; and a tax of one-sixth of one per centum each
month upon the average amount of circulation issued
by any banking
association, corporation, company or peieon, inclu ing as circulation all
certified checks, and all notes and other obligations calculated or in¬
tended to circulate or to be ured as
money, but not including that iq
the vaults of the bank or redeemed and cn
deposit for said bank.”
The consternation which these
of the law
duced in

banking circles

was

provisions
pro¬
justified by the fact that for the

[dumber
In

tliat the time

showed

occupied by
mails, passengers and express height in the journey between
London or New York and Japan or China by way of San
Francisco will compare with the existing routes, after the com¬
pletion of the Pacific railway, and as soon as its*full efficiency
is reached, as follows:
our

we

Pacific
Bail way.
davs.
24
29
5:0
'

From New York to—
Yokohama

Shanghai
II < ng Kong
From London to—
Yokohama

at prepent, by
»
Steamers
Steamers
via Pai araa, via Suez.
i ays.
days.
44
65
60
60

Time,

,

54

55

56
62
06

.

85
40
41

...

Shanghai
Ilong Kong

53
48
43

This difference in time will

inevitably turn the current of
travel, trade and exchange into the American channel. At
the same time—and especially if, as seems likely, the constitu¬
tional vices of the Chinese Custom House, on w hich Ilong
Kong flourishes, he removed—the British colony at that point
will probably lose its rank as the chief port of tlie Far East.,

first time in the history of commerce and of commercial
nations, certified cheques are to be subjected to so heavy a
tax as must of
necessity fprohibit their use altogether. It
would be a not uninteresting task to discover who the
per¬
sons are that have
placed the mercantile community under
obligations by introducing this extraordinary feature into

and

the bill.

.

last article

hi.

northern

The effect of such
to arrest it.

Every

a

law would be not to tax business but

one acquainted with the
tions of New York knows
very well that

be but

crown

to

one

or

other of the

ports of China or Japan; this change, however, will
relative, if it occur at all, for the new communications

hardly do otherwise than largely increase the tiaflie of
these certified
Ilong Kong is now the centre.
cheques are an important part of the financial machinery;
Those who have watched the development of trade and
that they have been used for a quarter of a century with travel
consequent upon the opening of regular railway com¬
immense advantage to the community, and that
they could munication, even under circumstances apparently the most
not be
prohibited without danger and mischief.
adverse, will hardly be surprised at any increase in volume or
Nothing better or more safe has ever been devised than change in character which the Eastern trade may take on, as
certified cheques as at present
employed. The daily aver¬ a consequence of the opening of the new highway across this
age of debts paid through the Bank Cleaiing House of this continent.
That articles will be interchanged heretofore
city is over eighty millions of dollars, sixty millions of unknown to this commerce, and bv persons previously un¬
which are in certified cheques.4 These
large sums are settled familiar with its operations, is but the simplest form of the
and paid every day by
the use of two to four millions of cash. new growth. Things now regarded as curiosities or rare
So perfect is this
machinery, so economical and so safe are luxuries, much as sugar or tobacco in the times of Drake or
the present methods of
adjustment, that with ordinary care Raleigh, will come to be staples common as those articles to¬
no
delay need occur, nor any losses in the daily settlement day. This is the history of all commerce.
of accounts.
This is proved by the fact that in the two or
Again, New York will soon cease to pass through her
three cases where losses have
happened, those accidents were Custom-House the teas and spices consumed west of the
caused by a want of care, which would have
produced the Alleghanies.
These must naturally come by rail from San
same losses under
any other system.
Francisco, and with them products now unknown beyond the
A year ago Wall street was excited
by the rumor that the smell of salt water, or known only to be stared at.
Comptroller of the Currency had addressed a circular to the
West of the Rocky Mountains an immense area,
quite un¬
National banks forbidding the long-established
practice of cultivated, but of fertility so fabulous that the mere statement
certifying cheques on the method and to the extent in which | of it excites a smile, certainly of surprise,
perhaps of in¬
it had been carried on.
This rumor was found to be
exag¬ credulity, and mines of precious metals and all useful min¬
gerated ; but still there has been a revival from time to time erals, whose mere surfaces have as yet been but
irritated,
of the belief that somebody at
Washington was determined invite all the starving population of the world to come and
to make war on the certified
cheque system as at present there find labor and its rewards. To China, with her dense
established here, and, consequently, we need not wonder at
population, estimated at four hundred million souls, and an
the promptness with which influential
deputations have gone inability to feed these numbers, so evident that, in spite of all
from our chief cities to remonstrate before the
Congressional the industry and frugality of her people, rebellions which are
Committees against this new and outrageous misuse of the in fact
only gigantic bread riots are chronic, and infanticide
taxing power.
I is common;—to China we
naturally turn for the source




banking

transfer the commercial

opera,

can

which

THE CHRONICLE.

July 4,1808.]

this population is hereafter to be supplied. The de*
©and and supply are separated only by the Pacific Ocean.

whence

vastly in value and importance; that it wilt be maiuly
the race between New York
London for the first place will be hotly contested ; so much

grow

controlled at New York; that
and

has already begun. The seems clear.
its care of its subjects, is
notably the most paternal in the world, now recognises its
REVIEW OF THE MOM.
interest in promoting the general welfare by encouraging and
In our The chief characteristic of June has been an unusual inactivity
facilitating the emigration of its surplus numbers.
This condition of things is partially due to the unusual
of trade.
own country, ignorance, always the most expensive of luxuries
whether for individuals or nations, still opposes, with a lateness of the summer season, besides being in the nature of a reac¬
bitterness which can only come from prejudice so born, the tion from the extraordinary stringency of money during March and
immigration of the Chinese on several pretexts, alleging April. The position of the banks necessitated at iliat period the
withdrawal of mercantile and industrial advances, which naturally,
that they are immoral people, an idle race, irreligious,
for
period, produced a curtailment of operations and a depression
and the like: all of which they are not. Noted for the
of confidence, the effects of which we are now experiencing. At
practical morality which governs their lives, for their steady the same time, business is perhaps more than at any former time
industry, for their rare frugality, these Chinese immigrants feeling the results of taxation iu a general economizing of expen¬
form the best laboring class that has come to the shores ditures.
As usual at periods of commercial stagnation, there has been an
of America during this century. Their influence upon us, and
ours upon them, for good or evil, must largely depend uoon
extraordinary ease in the loan market. Although, at the commence¬
the spirit in which they are received;
but however that may ment of the month, there was an increase of several millions of cur¬
be, their coming, and in millions, is foredoomed by the unal¬ rency in the Treasury, yet there has been a steady flow of the legal
tender circulation into the banks, while the a ercantile deposits have
terable conditions of the case, and can only be turned aside by
Although 1 he rate of interest on demand
very materially increased.
staying the march of our material prosperity.
has ranged at 3@4 per cent, and was for a day or two even 1
Thus a mighty empire bids fair to arise on the Pacific slope,
per cent below that rate, yet the banks have found it necessary, for
peopled by a new race or a new admixture of races. The the employment of their large balances, to buy, to an unusual extent,
commercial results must be obvious,
government securities. The following statement will show the
San Francisco will naturally become the great entrepot and present condition of the banks compared with their position at the
depot for the greater and more valuable trade between the beginning of June and at the current date in 1807 :
June 27,1868,
June 20. ’07.
May 30, 1808.
United States and China and Japan, which we have assumed
$270,504,0> 0
$208,117,n(H)
Loans and discounts
$212,5 7,000
will be carried on by steamers across the Pacific, and by rail Specie
7,753,000
7,700,000
17.SC,1,000
Circulation...
34.04b 000
34,145,000. * 33,542,000
or steamer between the Atlantic and PacificrStates.
Valuable Deposts.
214,302.0'0
204,740,000
Is0,2l3,0<’0
73,b53,UOO
05,033, 00
70,174,000
Legal Tenders
goods of all kinds and all small shipments, such as are sent by
This extraordinary ease iu money, though favorable to special
express in this country, passing between Europe and the Far
East, will be gradually diverted to this route as its advantages activity in stock speculition, has not been productive of that result.
On the contrary, there has been an unusual dullness in stock opera¬
become known.
tions.
This fact is the more remarkable, considering that the
The exchange of precious metals, which now flow from their
earniDgs of the railroads have exhibited a large increase, and that
sources to London, as into a great reservoir, and thence to the
wealthy cliques have for some time ♦been carrying very heavy
various points of distribution in India, Egypt, China and else¬ amounts of stocks in anticipation of an active “ campaign” during

This movement of population
Chinese Government, which, in

a

cans

.

where—will this be

changed ?

When ?

no

natural

reason

the mines of Mexico or^Peru

iu money. As will be seen from a subjoined
the total sales of railroad stocks at both stock boaids in
statement,
June were only 973,b00 shares, against 1 554,000 shares during
the same month of last year. Strong efforts have been made by
the combinations to encourage speculative transactions, aud special
inducements have been offered in the way of liberal stuck dividends;
the Summer ease

why silver should be taken from
by way of Panama to England
for the purpose of being exported to China or India, now that
abridge has been thrown across the short gap that formerly
seperated producer from consumer.' Shipped to Sau Francisco,
it is in a few days within the control, by telegraph, of its
actual or ultimate owner, the London banker.
All exchange
is finally a question of cost of transportation.
Why should
he pay a high freight to get it to a cheap market, when for a
low freight he can in less time place it in a dear market?
The conclusion is irresistible that all exchanges of the precious
metals between Europe and America and China, Japan and
There is

speculative habitues ot Wall street have refused to respond,
of merchants who are apt at this season to employ
idle balances in a “ turn” at stocks, have scarcely been s en in the
'I his singular avoidance of speculation is, to some extent,
street.
due to its being understood that stocks were generally in the hands
of cliques, desirous of unloading upon the “ street
but a more in¬
fluential cause appears to have been a feeling of distrust ot railroad
stocks, engendered by the recent exposures in the courts of corrupt
management, and by the daily accumulating evidence that the roads

but the

while the class

San Francisco, which will thus become are
managed, to a large^ extent, with a view to the speculative con¬
exchanges at least, if not indeed of
venience of directors.
Moreover, the couvietion appears to be
those “of the world,” as her more ardent citizens are wont to
gaining ground, that the intrinsic value of railroad stocks has not
predict. “The centre of exchange of the world ” is and must improved, during late years, at all in proportion to the advance in
ever be where the commerce of the world settles its balances;
their market price.
The following statement shows the sales of the
in other words, where those balances can most conveniently several classes of stocks at the open board, aud the New York
be settled.
Other elements than the most important one of Stock Exchange in June, 1808 and 1807.
facilities fur frequent, rapid and reliable communication enter
1867.
, 1868.
Classes.
Increase. ‘Dec.
Bank shares
3.584
1,659
1,925
iuto this problem ; chief of these is the possession of the Railroad 44
... 1,554,112
973,064
581,018
Coal
“
9,522
2,242 <
7,280
accumulated capital by which that commerce'As carried ou. Mining
44
5,654
36.208 , 30,5a4
Improv’nt 44
31,535
16,775
14,760
To day London holds this golden master key, as pyzantium, Telegraph “
53,172
24,773
28,399
Steamship41
..:
y 0,056
8',726
6,070
•••
....
Carthage, Venice, Lisbon once held it. Exchanges are settled Expr’ss&c44
57,941
51,321
6,620

India will converge at
the “ centre ” of these

,

in London for the same reason

that a merchant does

business

Whether this condition will be
changed by the bodily transfer of the capital itself, or by the
drying up of the sources of its growth iu one place and their
breaking forth afresh in another, it would be useless now to
speculate. That the trade of America with the Far East will

in his

own

counting house.




Total—June
“

-since January

1

l^/TO

1,183,114

11,339,859 10,317,619

639,616
1,022,240

following table will show the openiug, highest, lowest
closing prices of all the railway and miscellaneous
at the New York Stock Exchange during the months of May
The

and

securities quoted
and

June, 1868 :

119.'
2
32
8

^

THE CHRONICLE.

Open. High. Low. Clos’g Open. High. Low.

Alton & Terre Hant
do
do
pref.
Boston, Hartford & Erie
Buffalo N. Y. & Erie....

45
73

....

Chicago & Alton
do

do

15

73%

‘

15%

•

12S

pref... 129

& Ot Em stern
& Northwest’n
do nref.
& Rock Island.

48

4S

67

67%

35%

6^%
35%

85

85

15

....

127%
128

149

70

63

15%

79%'
97%

93%

io8% io2
89

85
1-S
136
154

85

6S

75

15%

129
3S0
151
35

127%
128%
150%

80%
98%

Painesv. & Ashta. 102%
& Pittsburg
82%
& Toledo
106%
Del., Lack & Western.. 118%

scrip...
Dnbuque & Sioux city

•

48

08%

75%
94%

do
do
do

do

.

48

70%

64

Cleve., Col.,Cin. & Ind.

do

.

128
12 9%
150

Clos.

48

43
66
15

49%

Chicago, Burl. & Quincy 149
do
do
do
do

8
9
10.
11
12
13.'....
15...

-May.-

Railroad Stocks—

*

‘

tXi

ios

83%

88

1(19

103%

125%

!9.‘l

123

117

m

110%

...

...

...

...

uovr

...

89

Erie
do pref
do

*

*83*

Ind. & Cincinnati
Mar. & Cincin., 1st pref.

Michigan Central

143

313%
113%
113%
113%

117%

pref.

Morris & Essex.
New Jersey
’ Central...
do
New York Central....
do
& N. Haven.
Norwich & Worcester..
Ohio & Mississippi
do

'

„

do

76
65

Panama

2%

1%

117%'

113%

113%

110%

129%
150

120
134
159

126
151

31%

29%

30%

80

78

80

92
31 %

80%
79%

330%

315

104
90

330%

116

116
95

116

86%

96%
89%

90

86%

«...

51%
69

....

....

52
69

49
69

339

116%
100%
95%

95%

89%

Monday....

9U
118

51%

69

69

American Coal
43
A hburton do
3
Central
do
Cumberland Coal
33
Del. & Hud. Canal Coal. 1?8

43
....

91%
35
20
21 %
51

''50

50

35%

356%

90%
31%

161
95

163%

34

24%

26%

20%

20%

52

49

51 %

26%
51%

5

8%

8%

Friday

Saturday.

23 "
51 %

pref

10

27%

Gas

114%

110

113%
114%

110

107

107%

110%

113

110

112%
114%'
1%
113%

113%
112%
114%
1%

109%
109%

114

110

111%
1%
111%

107%
106% 109%
105% 109%
107% 110%

110%
>8

•

1%

107% no

144

West. Union Telegraph. 37%
Bankers & Brokers Ass. 113
Union Trust
120

11%
32%
144

9%
27%
144

38%
113
120

5

9%

8%
29%

30%
309%
120 ~

29
114

38%

112%

.is
19
.20

96%'

72%
72%
72%

97%
97%
97%

Thursday.,.,

95

12% 97% 45%
95% 73% 98% 45%
95% 13% 100% 40%
95% 13% 100% 46%
95% 12% 101 ^ 46%
95%' 12% 100% 46
95% 7244 100% 46
95
72% 100%' 46
9 ’%
73% 160% 40
46
94% 173% 100
99% 45%
91% 73
95
73% 99% 45%
95
73% 100% 4o%
(Holi day7)1

73% 1101
45%
73% .101% 45%.
7 •% 1.01% 4 %
73% 1101% 45%

Monday
Tuesday.....
Wednesday.

40%
45%
45%

Friday

.

4^'

...

73% 1101% I 46%
73% 1101%J 46%
73% 1101% I 45%

~aliiHl iy

Monday
Tuesday...
Lowest

91%

Highest....,
Range.......

90%

Low ) p

91%

1%

^...

96%

j llig >- -E- 5 • • ■
Rug)

I

4%

.

94%

Last

97)4
74% 101%
1
4%

40%

go
70% ;4-;
73% 101%
*g3/
0/8
16%
i-'/S 101%

41%
o0%
8%

72%

closing prices of Five-Twenties at Frankfort m
ending with Thursday, were as follows :

1

‘

5

.10

96%
96%

Cons Am. securities.
for U.S. Ill.C, Erie
moil. 5-20s sli’s, nh;g.

Date.

(tfoli day.)

£■

SECURITIES AT LONDON.

The

A
’

QuicksTver
Citizen’s

114
114

110

107% 110%
307% 11(1
101% no
107%

45%
7/
/8

45%

'20%

8%

”5’

6

9

..

Thursday..

30

20

■

50

103%
103%

9>
30

.

.11
.12
Friday
.13
Sat ‘day
Monday ... .15
Tus’day— .16
Wednesday. .17,

35%

21%

8%

Mariposa

165
97
35
26

....

3
4
5
(»
8

.

...

....

O

....

.

Wcdn’y
Thursday

43

33

35%

Cary Improvement
do

43
2

3%

.

.

Tuesd y

51 y,
69

1
0

.

Sat'day
Monday

US

51%

.

Tues
Wedne
Thurs
Friday

79%

329%

101

B un8wick City

no

106%

114

Cons Am. securities.
for U. S. Ill.C. Eric
mon. 5-20s sli’s.
shs.

Date.

130%

78

...

106% 109%

110%

113%^

COURSE OF.CONSOLS AND AMERICAN

Miscellaneous—

Pacific Mail
Atlantic do
Union Navigation
Boston Water t ower
Canton

ill

106% no
106% 100%

109%

67:

31%

Rome & Watertown....

111%
ill uy
111%

.

'*

.

prices of Consols for money and certain American
(viz. U. S. 6’s 5-2(Vs 18G2, Illinois Central and Erie
snares) at .London, on each day of the month o( L ne are shown in
the following statement :
"
''

65
133

133
116

Toledo, Wab. & Western
do
do
dopiet.

•

109%
109%

114%

113%

•

lOti

114%
114%

113%
113%

l(.9j

The elosing*

315

Pittsb., Ft. W. & Chica.
Reading
Rensselaer & Saratoga..

111%
11 %

•

106% 109%
106% 110

114

114

110%
•

105% 109?
105% 109%

113%

114%
114%

111

1%

.

iii%
111%
111%

110%
109%
111%

.

113%

113%
113%
113%

110%

10<)n

109?

106
106

114
114
114 '

113%

111
311

106

112%
112%
112%
113%

112%
112%

110%

110%
110%
110%
111%
111%

112%
111%
113%

v

.

113%
113

112%

110%

111

111%
111%
118%
2%

116%
110%
118

.

.

113
113

110

109%
110%

110%

113%

78;

.

pref

113%
113%

117%

.

.

110

113%
113%
113%
113%
113%

in%

•

Last.....

..

do

112%

110%
110%
110%

110%
H“%

112%

112%

110%

110%

112%

%2%

...

110%

securities

116
do
S.&N.Tnd.
90%
Mil. &■ P. du Ch’n, lstpr 100
dr
do
2d
pr. 91 %
Milwaukee &St. Paul., 64%
do

•

117%
117%
317%

.......

Highest

87%

10

do

•

117%

Range

142

145%

•

117%

First
Lowest

27

2d pref..

136

,Q0.3/

•

111%
111%

113
113

.

29
30

80*

.78

87
114

111%

‘27

76

148%

84%
136%

112%
112%
112%
112%
111%

117%

v<;

70’

74

77

80

.

do pref.

_

68%

72%

74

Harlem
Hannibal & St. Joseph

3

■71%

111%
Hl%

117

...

.

25

103%

125

105%
118%

117

317

20.

103%
90%
100%

90%
99%
300%
80%

116%
110%
116%

IS

37%
7!%
77%

05%

116%

...

...

..

-

[July 4,1868..

■

J

*38%

38%
U4,%

33%

'

111

106

I

34%

line

.1 line

4,

77%

■

n

most

106

11.

June IS.
r*'7 q '

f} 73/
i i
,a

each week

J une 25.

Momh.

77%

77%©7 Oi

respects the specie movement has run

closely parallel with

opened with $3,244,000 moregold
Express—
the receipts from Cal fornia were
American
60
61
53
53
53
40% $1,364,511
Adams
61
63
larger than then, while the imports of specie and the coin
56%
56%
56%
;,2?8
United States
60%
56
61%
56
55%
48
interest payments of the month were together $686,000 higher,
Merchant’s Union
28
31%
31%
28
28%
25%
Wells, Fargo & Co
27
22
20%
25%
25%
26% making a total increase in supply of $5,294,000; but as-the exports
But while speculation has avoided railroad
shares, it has been of specie show an increase of $1,615,000, and the customs payments
more active than at
any previous period m Government securities a gain of $166,000, it results that the sp.cie in the banks at the
The near prospect of the
completion of the funding process and of close of the month is about the same as a year ago.
the consolidat:on of the debt into a
The following formula furnishes the details of the general move¬
permanent form, have produced
a favorable effect
upon the Government credit; while tlie
maturing ment of coin and bullion at this port for the month of June, 1867
ot unusually
heavy interest disbursements at the Treasury in July, and 1868, comparatively :
and the falling due of the loan of 1848 on
July 1, have induced the
GENERAL MOVEMENT OF COIN AND BULLION AT NEW YORK.
expectation of a large demand for bonds in
July. The consequence
has been a very active
1867.
1S6S.
Increase. Decrease
speculation by both dealers and outside In
banks, near first
$14,617,060 $17,8i-l,088 $3,214,028 $
operators, advancing'prices to unprecedented figures.
2,568,773
3,933,284 1,364,511
While, there¬ Receipts from California
fore, there has been

120

that of June, 1867* The month
in the banks than list year, and

decrease upon June, 1867, of 35
per cent on
the board sales of railroad
stocks, the transactions iu Governments
have amounted to
increase of 115 per

a

$32,457,000 against $15,137,060 in 1867,
cent, as shown in the following statement—

BONDS SOLD

Classes.
U. 8. bonds
U. S. notes
St’e &city b’ds

AT

THE

Y,

STOCK EXCHANGE

1867.

$14,042,750
1,095,350
2,025,950
757,000

Company b’ds
Total—J une.
“

N.

—

—since Jan. 1

$18,521,050
88,300,730

an

186S.

Inc.

Dec.

Excess of reported

supply

Specie in banks at end

130,650

.

1-43,446
542,667

640,923
1,779,749

_

$18,920,392 $24,215,044
$6,348,529 $10,963,582
8,040,114
8,206,096

$5,294,652 $.
$4,615,053 $
$4,781,035

$4,531,749
7,768,996

165,982
n

&.

$5,045,3(i6
7,753,300

$292,454

$2,707,934 $.

$529,313

15,696

6,984,550

1,050,200

165,015,120

Customs duties

497,477
1,237,082

$14,38S,643 $19,169,678,

supply..

Total withdrawn

$17,192,120

$43,121,570

Total reported

bullion

Exports of coin and bullion

BOARD.

$31,231,870
1,226,000
9,610,500

Imports of com and
Coin interest paid

293,200

Derived from

$24,000,520
70,744,390

unreported sources $3,237,247

while the

It is not easy to find any special reason for the fact that
result of the movement so closely resembles that of last year,

The

daily closing prices of the principal Government securities
yet the
at the New York Stock
Exchange Board in the month of June, as price has ranged about 3 points higher. It is generaliy conceded
represented by the latest saie officially reported, are shown in
the; that the Government credit stands higher now than a year ago,
following statement:
,which the advance in bonds is an evidence ; yet the gold premium’
PRICES OF GOVERNMENT

Day of

r-6’s, 1881.—^

month.

Coup. Keg.

1

?

116%

6........

o*

*




116%
116%

116%
«••••

Ul%

1862.

SECURITIES AT NEW YORK.

6’s, (5-20 yrs.) Coupon

1864.

1865.

new.

1867.

112% 110% 110% 113
113%
112% 110% 110% 113% 113%
112% 110% 110% 113% 113%
112% 110% 110% 113% 113%
112% 110% 110% 113% 113%
H2% 110% 110%
113%

1868.

yrs.u’pn.2d sr
106%

105%
......106
1(JG
106

100%

The largeness^of the exports
gold may have had some influence in causing this variation from
the premium of a year ago ; but from the above statement it will
be noticed that this enlarged export movementjis set off by about an
equal gain in supply. The following exhibits the fluctuations ot
the New York gold market in the month of June, 1868 :
in

;

«5!s,10-40 7-30.
109f

109
30!

%
)%

30* 1%

1.0 9%
It -0%

of

no sense

reflects this

improvement.

THE CHRONICLE.

July 4, 1868.]
OP GOLD AT NEW YORK.

COURSE

ti:

Closing.

’5
£

Date.

to

o

S

i-l

Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday..

Thursday ....
Friday
Saturday ....
Monday

4
5
6
S
0

Tuesday
Wednesday..
139% 139%
Thursday.. .
140
139%
Friday
140
139%
Saturday
140% 1*>
Monday
140% 140%
Tuesday
141
140%
Wednesday.,
IS j 140% 140
Thursday
19 140% 140%
Friday ......
201140% 140%
Saturday
—

.

o

ft

O

140
110

June

140

1103
140

11

|

tu

o

O

140% 140%
140% 140%

140% 140%
140% 140%
140
140% 140%
140
140% 140%
140
140% 140%
140% 140% 140%

140%
140%
H0%
140%

14

.

ISOS.... 139% 139%
1807.... 130%. 130%

141% 110%
138% 138%

1800../. 140% 137%

44

110%

tc

140% 140%
140% 140
140% 144%
140% 140%

Monday
22
Tuesday ....23
Wedne^ay. .24
140
Thursday... .25
139% Friday
20
139% Saturday
27
139% Monday
29
139 % Tuesday
30
139%

140

Lowest.

'a
Date.

139%
149%
140%

139% 139% 139%
139% 139% 140%
140
139% 1140%
140
140
1140%
140
139% 1140
139%J 139% 139%
139% 139% 1139%
139% 13»% 139%
189% 139% 139%

*

101%! 103%

138
194

1805....
1804....
1803
1802....

44

135% 147% 141

50
193
147.%
140%
44
140% 140% 14S% 147%
140%
1401 140%
103% 103% 109% 109
110% 140% I
130%
140% |S’ce Jan 1, 1808 133% 133%
...

44

Foreign exchange has been kept firm at specie shipping rates, as
usual at this period of the year, when the supply

of commercial bills

inadequate to cover the remittances of importers.
following exhibits the quotations at New York for bankers’
days bills on the principal European markets daily in the month

proves
1'hc
60

of June, 18(18:
*

COURSE OP FOREIGN EXCHANGE

London.

Paris.
centimes

cents lor

cents for

54 pence.

fordollar.

110%@H0%
11()%@110%
110%@110%

513%@512%
513%@512%
513%@512%

4..
5..
0..

110%@110%

513% @412%

110%@110%
110%@110%
8.. U0%@110%
11. 110%@110%

513%@512%
513%@512%
513%@512%
513%@512%

10..
11..
12..
13..
15.

110%@110%

513Ja@512%

110%@110%
110 @110‘3'
HO @110%
110 @li0%

513%@512%
513%@512%
513%@512%
513;%@512%

16

110
110
110
110

@110.%

110
110
110
HO
110

@110%

Days.
1..
3..

.

@110%
@110%
@110%
110. @110%

17..
18..
19..
20..
22..
23..
24..
25

.

26..
27..
29..
30..

110
110

@110%
@110%
(0,11"%
@110%
@110%
@110%

110%@110%

(00 DAYS) AT NEW YORK.
II ambling.
cents for
M. banco.

Amsterdam. Bremen,
cents for

florin.

rixdaler.

41%@41%
41%@41%

79%@S0
79%@8()
79%@80

41% @.41%
41 %@41%

41 \ @41 ■! «
41 ^@41%

79%@S0

41%@4l%
41%@41%

30% @30% 9*%@ 72
30% @30% y?l%@72
30% @30%^ 71% @72
30% @30% 71%@72
30% @30% 71% @72
30%@30% 71%@72
30% @30% 11% @72

30% @30%

79%@79%

41%@41%

71%@72

71%@72
71%@72
71%@72
71%@72
71% @72
303a@30% 71% @72
30 3« @30 V 71;% @72
3(5%@36%k 71%@72
303 a @30 % \71 % @7 2

79%@80
79% @79%

41% @41% 79%@79%
41 ^@41% 79%@79%
513%@512% 41 ^@41% 79%@79%
513% @512% 41%@41% 79%@79%
513%@512% 41%@41% 79%@79%
513%@512% 41% @41% 79% @79%
513%@512% 41%@41% 79%@79%
513% @512% 41 %@41% 79%@79%
513% @512% 41%@41% 79%@79%
513%@512% 41%@41% 79%@79%
513%@512% 41%@41% 79%@79%
513%@512% 41%@41% 79%@79%
513% @512% 41%@41% 79%@79%
513%@512% 4l%@41% 79%@7o%

513%@512%

thaler.

7J %@72
71 %@72
71% @72
71%@72
71% @72
71% @72
71% @72
71%@72

3ti%@:u;%
30%@30%
3G%@3»5%
30 3 a @30%
303a @30%
30% @30%
3'% @30%
303a@3(i H
30%@30%
30%@30%
30% @30%
30% @30%
303a@30%
30 3 a @30%

79% @80
79%@80
79%@80
79%@80
79%@30

41%@41%
41%@41%
41%@41%

Berlin,
cents for

71% @72

9

prospect is considered good, and if we should have tine dry weathe
during the ingathering of the crop, the result will be very satisfactory.
The weather, however, continues
remarkably dry, and there seems to
be no prospect of rain.
Even with the prevailing hot weather we have
no thunderstorms, and in
many parts of the country the ground n much
parched. The hay harvest is now almost complete in the southern
counties of

England, but the yield has been light.

The

crop

has, how¬

been secured in excellent condition, and consequently superior
quality and condition will, to some extent, compensate for deficiency in
ever,

quantity. It is a satisfactory circumstance that last year’s crop was a
large one, both as regards quantity and quality, and that much old hay
remains unconsumed at the present time.
During the current week
fine English wheat has realised a further
improvement in value of Is.
per quarter, but the trade has been greatly wanting in activity.
Although, as stated above, fears are expressed in some quarters that
the existing drought will prove
inj irious to the wheat crop, those fears
are as yet premature.
No doubt, on some thin, p or land, the dry
weather has had a prejudicial effect, but on well-farmed land the crop
promises not «nly well, but also promises to be abundant. Sc far as I
can ascertain, we have the
prospeet of a full average crop, so that with
an increased average of land under cultivation, the total
yield of wheat
in the country must be considerable.
In a season like the present,'
however, when so much additional land has been planted, poor soils are
resorted to, and it is respecting the crop on those poor soils that we
have less promising reports.
Spring corns, that is to say, barley, oats, beans and peas, and also the
root crops, are suffering from the protracted dry weather.
Barley is
likely to be dear this season, and if we do not have rain almost imrne •
diately, the croo will be an almost complete failure.. The scarcity of
grass in the pastures has had the effect of compelling the farmers ti»
forward their lean stock to market, and consequently the trade for
butchers’meat has been depressed.
The public must, however, suffer
from such a movement at a later period of the year.
The following statement shows the extent of our imports and exports
of wheat and flour, into and from the United Kingdom, from the com¬
mencement of the season to the close of last week.
The only feature
that I will call attention to is that our exports of wheat in nine months
and two weeks have been less than one week’s average importation into
the United Kingdom, and that our imports this season have exceeded
those of last season by 8,400,000 cwt.:
WHEAT.

Jane,
IMS 110

@110%
109%@110%

1M7

Catest

513%@512%
518%@511%

36%@36%

79%@80
78%@79%

41 %@41 %
40%@41%

36

71%@72
72 @72%

@3(5%

Hlonetarg aitir (Eommercial (Jcnglisl) Nem.

—Imports
186(5-07.
From—
Jan. 1 to

EXCHANGE AT LONDON—
JUNE 19.

TIME.

RATE.

TIME.

DATE.

Jan. 1 to May 30
Week ending June (J..
44
*4

Amsterdam

...

Antwerp
Hamburg
Paris
Paris

Vienna l

short.
11.18 @11.18%
3 months. 25.35 @25 42%
it
13. 9%@13.10
U
25.30 @25.35
short.
25.15 @25.25
3 months. 11.75 @11.85

June 19.

44

44

44

44

44

3 mos.

—

—

fcW

Berlin

6.2G%@ 0.27
St. Petersburg
31%@ 32%
ll
Cadiz
49
@49%
Lisbon
90 days.
51%@ 51%
Milan
3 months. 27.00 @27.70
Genoa
27.00 @27.70

—■

—

June 19.

3 mos.

—

Total

RATE.

30

11.89

@
25.22%@
13. 8%@
25.17%@
25.20 @

—

—
—

—

—

—

32%
—

■

June 15.

days.

51%@51%

—

—

—

—

—

—

tw

44

Naples
New York....
Jamaica
Havana
Rio de Janeiro
Bahia

@27.70
—

—

Valparaiso....

J

—

—

—

19.

00 days.
90 days.
00 days.
44

4%
44
.

44

June 2.

—

00

une

May 24.
May 29.
May 3

—

—

—

—

May 24

—

—

.

June 19.

—

—

Pernambuco..

Singapore
Hong Kong...
Ceylon
Bombay

27.00

—

4s. 4c?.

days.
4 4

•

4s. 4c?.

44
—

May 18.
May 15.
May 19.

44

is.

io%d.

44

Calcutta

44

Is. 10% d.
is. 10%

(5 mos.
fcfc

44
44

June 12.

Madras

June 11.

Sydney

30

days.

2 p. C.

dis.

—

110%
p. c.

17>4@ —
17%@ 45%@46
17%@ —
4s. 4%cL@ —
4s. 5c/. @ —
1%@I% per ct.
is. 11 %(/.
—

44

30

days.

Is. 111-lGc?.
% p c. prem.

fFroin our own'Correspondent.]

London, Saturday, June 20, 1868.

It is

clearly, apparent that we have not yet passed the period of
peculiar to the last few months. In all departments of
business the greatest quietness continues to prevail.
During the present
week, however, cotton has commanded more attention, and has realised
higher prices ; but in other departments business seems to have retrogaded rather than moved forward. In addition to other well-known
circumstances the uncertainties which have been felt respecting the
wheat crop, owing to the protracted dry weather, have had considera¬
ble influence.
In some quarters something of an outcry respecting the
harvest prospect has arisen during the week; still, on the whole, the

extreme caution




15,782

44,8(55

7.013

23,551
1,831

40,311

720

310

2,599,782

24,115

25,(592

1,521

price of wheat we mu3t take into consideration the
supply of old wheat is very small, so that no very im
portant permanent reduction in value can be expected unless our im¬
fact that the

portations the coming year are abundant. An impression, however*
prevails that in the event of the harvest being secured in good condi¬
tion, and the yield of produce as extensive as is expected at die present
moment, a reduction of about ten shillings per quarter will take place
when the new crop commences to arrive freely at market.
Immediately
after harvest farmers, no doubt, will send their produce freely forward,
in order to endeavor to

1% p. c.

1.12%@1.12%

44
—

May 8.

2,508,606

4,673

As to the future

short.

44

44

609,650

120,284
07,897

..

13..

1

405,979

..

FLOUR,

LATEST
ON—

29,818,974

2,S79,44G

...

755,817
689,057

374,756
17,707
13,45(5

2,073,027

13

ON LONDON

EXCHANGE ON LONDON.

603,456

cwt.

28,371,100

21,410,740

44

Total
ItATES OF EX.CHANC4E AT LONDON, AND
AT LATEST DATES.

1807-08.

20,320,886
037,803
452,051

May 30
Week ending June 0..,
44

,

1866-67.
cwt.

cwt.

cwt.

Exports

,

,

18(57-68.

secure

the remunerative

price

now

current. Con¬

a period of depression may not unreasonably be expected ;
but, unless our imports of foreign wheat and flour should be on a very
abundant scale, it is probable that after prices have fallen to a certain

sequently

our home supplies will decliue, millers
and the tendency of prices will be upward.

point

The demand lor money
seems

to be

no

continues in

a

will purchase

more

freely

most inactive state, and there
In nearly

prospect of any immediate improvement.

departments of business the greatest quietness prevails, and mer¬
are confined to what their requirements demand.
Hence, the trade of the country is very sound, but it is said that profits
are small, and that no encouragement is given to an extention of busi¬
ness.
It may, however, be affirmed that losses are trifling, and that the
result therefore is not wholly unsatisfactory.
During the last two days
the inquiry for money has slightly increased, owmg, it is thought, to the
requirexents incidental to the close of the quarter and of the half year.
The nearer we approach the close of the half-year this demand will
probably increase, but it cannot have any influence upon the genera^
state of the money market.
Indeed, so loDg as trade remains as quiet
as it is at present, bo long as there is so complete an absence of specuall

cantile transactions

[July 4,1868.

CHRONICLE.

THE

10

95
A
67s 6d.

94 A

85%

90

Price of Con sols

adverse to foreign loans and
ll%d.
Is. 3d.
public companies, so long roust the money market be in a condition of
inactivity, our supplies of money being very large, and with the certain
English Market Reports—Per Cable.
prospect of a further considerable increase. Large supplies of the
The daily casing quotations in the markets of London and Liver¬
precious metals are still on passage to this country from New York5
Australia and Mexico, snd the greater proportion of the gold will be pool lor the past week, have been reported by submarine telegraph as
retained here.
The supply afloat from Australia alone is as much as shown in the following summary ;
London Money and Stock Market.—Consols have been quiet during
£1,300,000. For gold tor export there is no demand, except for coarse
qualities, and the export inquiry for American eagles has lately subsided. the week, opening at 94|@94f for money, and 94f@94f for account,
But yet the remark must not be omitted that when money is so diffi¬
closing at 94f for money, and 95 for account. U. S. bonds opened the
cult of employment, and is so depressed in value, it very frequently week at 73^, but during the middle and close of the week a stronger
seeks employment in unexpected quarters.
The Tates of discount in tone was apparent, and the market closed steady at 73f@78f. Illinois
Central shares have been stronger, selling steadily at 101-*.
Erie shares
the open market, compared with those of last year, are subjoined:
1867.
1863.
have been, quiet, closing at 4 5f.
18(57.
18H8.
U. S. bonds at Frankfort are still held
Per cent. Per cent.
6 months’ ba’k bills 2%@'2%
firmly at 77*(£;77f lor the old issue.
30 and 60 days’ bills 2%(7b2% 1%@,—
Wed.
lation, and

so

long

ae

41s. Id.
Mid. Upland cotton..
19%d.
40 mule yarn, fair 2d quality.
Is. lOd.

the public continue

Average price

65s. 9d.
ll%d.
Is. 5%d.

47s. 4d.
12%d.
Is. 7d.

of wheat

„

v

Ppr ppnf

Pnr

bTis

3 months,
4

4 and 6

1%(<£l%
1%(&1%

2%@—

months, ba’k bills 2%(&2%

trade bills.. 2%(S><3%-

(g*2%

2

94%-%

in
remainder
is

Baring have announced the issue of a loan of $1,950,000
six per cent bon is for the Argentine Republic.
It is the
unissued of £2,5u0;000 authorised in May, 1865,
The price of issue
Messrs.

72* per cent.
introduced.

the Continent is still very quiet, and shows no recovery
from the late depression.
The supply of bullion exhibits an increase
this week of about £280,000.
At the leadiup Continental cities the
Money

on

prices of money are as follows :
-B’k rate-> r-Op.
1807
1867. 15(58.
5
Turin..... 5

r—B’k rate—•
Op. m’kt —,
1867.
1868.
1867. 18(58.
2
1%
AtParis :.... 2% 2%
4
4
4
Vienna
4
2K
2%-3
Berlin
4
4
l%-2
1 %-2
Frankfort. 2A 2A
2-2)4
2
Amet’rcl’in 2% 2)4

The bullion market

nr.kt—%

2%-%

2%-3

Brussels
Madrid

...

any demand
for the East,

..

...

2%

3
5

5

.

1%

6%

6-0%

7 %-8%

p.

do

Spanish Doubloons
South American Doubloons
United States Gold Coin...

.per oz.

..

...

...

9
11
0

73
70

last price
do

do
do

d.

77
77
7(5

standard.

.per oz.

..

d.

s.

—

(ft)—

5
5
5

standard quiet.
do
peroz.last price.

5 grs. gold

9.
2% (&70

4

d.

—

demand for silver for the East.
The Consol market has been

quiet, but has, on the whole, ruled firm.
At one period of the week prices were adversely affected by the appre
hension that the protracted dry weather would seriously diminish the
yield of wheat, but towards the close a firmer tone was apparent, and
prices impi oved. To-day is a holiday, owing to the review of the
volunteers by the Queen at Windsor.
The highest and lowest prices
of Consols on each day of the week are subjoined:

Consols for money

|o4%-95

94*4-95

Friday.

Tliur.

94%-95

94%-94 % 94%-95

feat.

Holiday

for Americansecuri
ties.
but, on the whole,
prices have ruled firm. United Slates Five-Twenty bonds close this
evening at 73 to 73^; Atlantic and Great Western Railway consoli¬
dated mortgage bonds 38 J to 34 ; Erie Railway shares 45f- to 46f, and
Illinois Central 100 to 101.
The highest and lowest prices on each day
quietness has also prevailed in the market
The dealings have been to a limited extent,

follows:
Friday. Sat’rday.

73 -73%|73%173%-73% 73 -73% 72%-73
U. S. 5-20’s
1 •
Atlantic & G’t West¬
34 -34% 33%-34% 33%-31% Holiday.
ern consol’d bonds 33%-3S% 33%-34
-46
45
;45%-46%
45%-40% 45 -4(5
Erie Shares ($100).. 45%99%-100 J 99^-100* 99%-100j
Illinois shares ($1(X)) 99%-100 100
..

-..

.

the present position of the Bank of
England, compared with the state of its resources at this date since
1865.
It also ex ibits the minimum rate of discount, the prices of
Consols, wheal, middling upland cotton, and No. 40 mule yarn at this
The

following statement shows

1865.
£
...

Public deposits
Private deposits
Governm- nt securities




..

..

..

..

.

..

.

1866.
£

21,(53,552
9,581,293
13,66' .5' 6
10,480,025
20,750,345

25,6'.»1.S74
7,288.314
21,171,-457
11,148,454
31,209,3 62

10.240,455
16,294,910

4,744,330

3 P» <?•

14,851,120
«.
JU

1867.
£

23,123,979
1( ',500,391
16,957,972
12,886,314

18,516,348
14,183,100
21,882,770
?% P.

1868.
£

23.524,735
7,956,2.,7
19,700,991
13,294,557
18.413,(5:45
12,795,345
22,571,045
8 P. C.

8,00)
11%
11%

11%-%
H%-%

A-K
11%-%
11

“

77%-% ' - 77%-%

Wed.

Thu.

8,()°0
11%-%
11%-%

8,000

«•••

*

....

11%
11%

down¬
6d.;

Liverpool Breadstuff's Market.—Flour and Wheat still show a
teudency, being quoted at the close as follows: Flour, 30s.
Red Wheat, I2s, and White Wheat, 12s. lOd.
Corn is held firm at
the close at 34 9d.
Canadian Barley is again placed on the list, and is

ward

bushel. Feas aud Oats are without change.
Thu.
W ed.
Tues.

quoted at 4s. lOd. per

8.

Flour, (Western)

12
13

>•

Corn

oil

34

Liverpool Provisions

'»

*

34

30

r fo

3

6

0

4
3

io

6

4
3

io

3

0

3

6

43

6

43

6

43

6

43

6

43

'

d.
6

12 0
12 10
34 9

6

•

•

8.

8.

30

0

•

3
43

2
6
6

12

13
34

d.
30 6
12 0
12 10

d.
6
12 0
3
13
34 6
e.

,

0
6

Market.—Beef has declined to 109s., and closes
6d. Bacon stea 4y at 48s. 6d. Lard dull

Pork heavy at 78s.

dull.
at

6
3
6
0

“

Barley (Canadian), per bush
u:its (Am. <fc Can.) per45 lbs

Mon.
8. d.
31 0

Sat.
s. d.
0
31
12
2
13 6
34
3

d.

31

bbl

p.

(No.2 Mil. Red) p. cil
( alifornia white) tk
(West, mx’d) p. 480lbs
“

70
48
62
63

Pork(Etn. pr.mcss) o 200 lbs
Bacon (Cumb.cui) p. 112 lbs
Cheese

“
“

“

(American)

“

(tine)

0
6

48
62
54

6
0

Tues,*

Mon.
8. d.
110 0
76 6

Sat.
s. d.
110 0
75 6

Fri.
s. d.
no 0

Lard

held at 66s.

Cheese is very firmly

60s. 6d.

63
54

0

d.

8.

48

9
0

.

61
56

8.

d-

109 .0
78 6
48 6

0

1C9
78

6

78
48
61
55

Tlin.

Wed.

0
6

109

(5
0

48

6
0
0

dr

s.

6
6
0
0

60

6

56

0

lemarkably
in Tal¬

Liverpool Produce Market.—This market has remained
quiet all the week ; the only change in quotations is a decline
low to 4 3s. 6d.
At the close Turpentine and Petroleum were
although quotably unaltered.
Sat.
d.
5
9

Fri.
s.

(com Wilrn ).per

Rosin

middling.;..

.

“

pale
Sp turpentine
“
1 etroleum (std white).p. 8
fine

“

d.

5

9

112 lbs

“
“

..

s.

28**6

1

1
4
lr 0
45 0

4

1

0

44

9

lbs.

spirits....per8 lbs
112 lbs*
“

•

...

•

•

•

•

28**6

Oil Markets.— Calcutta

.

1
1

6
•

44

Linseel (Calcutta)
Linseed cake (obl’g).p
“
oil.....
p.

£0 62 6 0 62 6
11 0 0 11 0 0
32 0 0

£0 63 0
11 0 0

5

d.
9

'28*'6

28**6

.

1

*

•

4

1
43

4
0
6

1
1
43

4
0
6

to
0

....

.

Linseed has been firm at
63s. on the spot.

last week.

Tu.
Wd.
£0 62 6 £0 63 0
11
0 0 11 0 0
32 0 0 32 0 0

Th.
£0 63 0

11 0 0
32 5 0

252 gals

Dch std)

Sugar (No. 12
per

“

Mon.

Th
s.

“

Sperm oil
Whale oil

ton

Sat.

firmer*

—

»•••

•

and is quoted at 63s. 6d. to arrive, and
remaining articles are quotably unaltered from
Fri.

e.

....

4
0

the close,
The

d.
5 9

s.

28**6
1
1
45

Wed.
d.
5 9

Tu.

Mon
s. d.
5
9
....

.

28*’6

Tallow (American)..p
Clover seed (Am. red)

Latest:

25 9

25 9

112 lbs,...

London, July 3,5 p.

date since 1865:

Frankfort were—

Tues.

10,000

10,000

....

London Produce and

Weekending June20 Monday. Tuesday. Wed’day Thu’day.

....

....

Mon.

Sat.

Fri.
Bale1 sold
T»,000
Pri - Mn id. Uplds. 11%-%
“
Orleans
ll%-%

Much

of the week are as

1»1%
45%

Liverpool Cotton Market. — Cotton opened the week active and firm,
immediately became irregular and depressed, and continued so all
the week, although a more steady feeling was apparent at the close.
The closing quotations were as follows ;
Middling Upland, llfL, and
Middling Orleans, Ilf I. The sales for the week, as reported by cable,
have amounted to 54,000 bales.

Peas.,(Canadian) pr504 1bs

The
ofthe

73%-%

....

....

daily closing quotations for U. S. 6’s (1862) at
77X 77%-%
77%-%
77%

—

—

95

°

but

“

5% <&—
lU% (&—

3 6A

.

94%

94%-%
94%-%
73%
101%
45%

Franktoit

d.
—

101%
46%

.

Fri.

3

s.

without important -variation.
exchanges indicate that there is no probability of a revival

-londay.i Tuesday Wed’y.

..

—-

0%
0% <&-

The rates of foreign exchange are

Weekending June20

45%

Thn,

Tues.

94%-%
94%-%
73%-%
101%
45%

101%

Wheat
s.

Bar Silver Fine
do
containing
Fine Cake Silver
Mexican Dollars

73%-%

73 U. S. 6’8 (5 20’s) 1862..
Illinois Central shares. 101%
45%
Erie Railway shares ..
Atl. &G. W. (consuls).

—

SILVER.

..per oz.

94%

count...

Mid.Uplds.to arriv

feature. Ti.ere is scarcely

for gold for export ; and silver, in the absence of an iuquiry
is still dull. The prices of bullion are subjoined:

Bar Gold
do
Refinablc

a<

..

1A-K

Hamburg —
St. Petb’g. 7

presents no especial

15(58.

GOLD.

Indian

for

The

will be shortly

improbable that loans for Brazil and Tc?u

It is not

Mon.

94%
94%-%
73%-%

Sat.

Fri.

Friday

25 9

25 9

95f for the account.
American securities close at the following quotations :

and 96*@

United States

Erie Railway shares 45f ; Illinois

101f.
Frankfort, July 8.-— United
ferthe issue of 1862,

25 9

Evening, July 3.

m.—Consols close at 95f for money,

Five-Twenties 73*@73f ;

9

25

States Five-Twenty bonds

Centrals

close at Hi

..35811854.
Weekly Circular, issued to-day, under the authority o
the Liverpool Cotton Brokers’ Association, has the following statistics;
The sales of the week have been 56,000 bales, of which 7,000 were
taken for export, and 4,000 on speculation.
The total stock of cotton
in port and on shipboard is estimated at 600,000 bales, of which 853,000
are from the United States.
The market for yarns and fabrics at Man¬
chester is quiet.
The total stock of cotton afloat, bound to this port i9
estimated at 609,000 bales, of which 36,000 are from the United States
Liverpool, July 3, 5 p. m.—Cotton—The market to-day closed firm
though quotably unaltered. The following are the closing figures :
Middling Uplands 11-jd.; Middling Orleans llfd. The sales of the day
have footed up 8,000 bales.
Breadstuff's.—The market closed quiet.
Provisions.—The market closed steady.
London, July 3, 6 p. m.— Sugar ‘25s. 9d. per cwt. for No. 12 Dutch
Standard on the spot, and 26s. to arrive.
Cotton.—The

1862.
1861'.

27,976,351
3,249,438
22,027,521

1860

The

Imports

and

Exports

Week.;—The imports this week

the

for

increase both in dry

FOREION IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOR

THE WEEK.

$1,138,165
3.233,332

$1,123,989

3,278,447

$1,278,778
1,734,827

$5,118,639
Previously reported...4, 70,615,490

$3,013 605

152,441,4t>9

$1,371,547
124,193,508

.*5,263,829
115,482,108

$155,455,014

$128,565,055

$120,745,93^

General merchandise...
Total for the week.......

Since Jan. 1

In

our

$75,734,129

1863.

goods for one week later.
The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie )fron?
the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending June 30 :

Total since

For the week.

$2,023,471
76,912,968

$78,936,139

Previously reported
Since Jan 1

1867.

1868

-

$9,113,799

10-1,884,214

$3,541,893
94,235,796

$107,084,227

$97,777,689

83,074,998

The value of

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

-1868.Tliis week. SinceJan. 1.

To
Great Britain..,.
France

Week.

-1867.-Since Jan. 1.

$1,174,310

$4 4,793,703

$1,626,183

65,8 5
143,563

4, 22,7 70
2,447 909

56,755
18,824

481,617

7,367,750

625,404

264,511

.

1,020,767
2,702, VI9

Other Northern Europe

942,772

156,457
East Indies
China and Japan
Australia
British N A. Colonies..
Cuba

Hayti

74,825
•

909,133

418,379

2,955,026

.1,413,623
1,307,8)3

538,394

185,074

1,211,345
1,193,993
1,192,330
3,034,378
634,933
3,712,79i

14,519

763,473
1,5s5,v67
668,497
1,467,57c

2,023,200

25,501
97,2 3
177,006

20/J29

2,172,660

63,284

3,573,634

60,356

4.645

1.084,788

202,044

4,450,011

75,873
31,762

Mexico...,

...

2,557,281

11,453,456

110,651
11,815

104,472
88,401

987,117
1, Si 2,7^2
321,622

..

New Granada..
Venezuela
British Guiana
Brazil
Others. American ports
All other ports

$54,262,677
6,324,355

671,253

•

#

,

•

•

,

#

.

.

.

.

.

344,04d

762,421

1,596,704

98,077

1,757,61*
797,066

following will show the exports of specie from the port of New

York for the week ending June 27, 1868 :
June 23—St.

Mississippi, Rio Janeiro—
Spanish doubloons.. $10,200
•American gold
4,396
British gold
2,141
23—St. Allemauuia, Hamburg—
Gold bars
287,21S

“

Silver bars
282,645
American Gold
240.u00
24—St. Australasian, LiverpoolGold bars
205,664
Silver bars
119,290
Am erican gold
50,100
24—Bark L i Plata,Buenos Ayres—

American silver
10,109
American gold
750
June 27—St. Herman.), Bremen—
American gold
330,000
“

...

“

“

“

“

27—St. Erin, Liverpool-

Total foi the week

Total since Jan. 1,1868

$48,123,294

Same time in

1863




47,000

$2,530,134
45,593,160

Previously reported

1867
1866
1865
1864

24,037

27—St. Vi lie de i’aries, Havre—
American gold
400,000
Gold bars
209,514
Silver bars
141,5U0
27—St. City of Pnris, Liverpool —
American gold
110,oOO
Gold bars..:
50,000
Gold bars..

Spanish d mbloons..
6,280
25—St. Morro Cas le, Havana-

“

Foreign silver

$24,595,662
45,493,138
17,988,916
29,268,846

Same time In
1859
1858
1857
1856

mwMv im

Silver
26—Burk Pallas,
void

13,753

Belize, Hon.—

8,403

$354,115

3,«49,181
$3,903,296

January 1,1868

following forms present a summary of cer
weekly transactions at the National Treasury aud Custom Houses
1.—Securities held by the U S. Treasurer in trust for National bank

National Treasury.—The

For Circulation.

Date.
Juue
“

For U. S.

Total.

Deposits.

379,749,350
380,067,350
379,904.350

38,292,950
38,467,950
33,447,950
38,447,956

341,456,400

6..
13..
20..
27..

341,599,400
341,456,400
341,621,900

380,099,856

issued (weekly and aggregate), and the
(iucludiug worn-out notes) returned, with the amount in circu¬

amount

lation at date:
Week
endiu^
June 6
“

.

“

8—Fractional currency

$34,916,641
12,504,795
22,152,148
15,256,619

17,036,4^

Circulation.
299.930,175

8,400,346
8,491,646

299,907,625
299,985,085

9,373,146

299,973,905

received from the Currency Bureau by U. S
destroyed :

distributed weekly ; also the amount

Received. Distributed. Destroy’d

'■

445.100

6..
13

272,830

424,625
257,928

659,118

“

20

457,0<H)
513,000

“

27

562,000

Treasure

in

returned.
8,277,646

Current, week.

Treasurer and

Notes

Notes

Notesissned.—
,
Airgreirate.
197,775
380,270,821
100,050
308,307,971
174,910
308,482,881
99,170
308,582,051

<

13
20
27

“

from

430,20(1
503,30<)

503,18V
4i-9,10

California.—The steamship Henry Chauncey, from

Aspinwall, arrived at this port June 29, with treasure for the fol¬
lowing consignees :
Fugene Kelly & Co......
104,790 00 I J. & W. Seligman & Co.
111,403 00
Moritz Mayer..
55,185 43 | Wells, Farero & Co
37,712 (’0
332,597 15,i Iredk. Probsi & Co

A. Belmont & Co

Total

165,476 00

$807,070 58

~

steamship Santiago de Cuba, from Aspinwall, 20th inst., has
Waller, $118,108 69.
Lees

also arrived with treasure to

arrivals ot treasure Irom san

The

ment of the year, are

Francisco since the

commence¬

shown in the following statemet*
Since

I

Since

-

Date.
Steamship. At date. Jan. 1'
Steamship. At date. Jan. 1.
9.Rising Star $989,464 $989,464 Apl. 28.H.Chauncey 466,909 12,6711987
22.Arizona.... 951 705 1,941,170 May 6.t)c'n Queen. 727,849 13,39t\S36
Feb. 1.11. Chaunceyl1298,r>84 3,239,753 May 22. Arizona... 1,177,496 14,577,332
Feb. 9.Rising Star.1,255,333 4,495,087 May 28.11. Chauncey 618,040 15,195,372
Feb. 21) Arizona
.1,568,161 6.063,2^8 Jun« 6.OceanQeen 996,820 16,192,192
Mar. 2.II.chauncey.1,551,270 7,571,680 I June 11. Rising Star 657,510 1 6,849,702
Mar.ll.Rising Star. 476,147 8,047,827 | June 13.Guid’gStar 290.723 17,140,425
Mar.22.Arizona
1,168,779 9,216,6^6 | June 22.Arizona .1,063,051 18,203.476
Apl. 1. H.Chauncey 864,698 10,081,304 [ Juue 27vSan.deOuba 118,109 18,321,585
A pi. lO.Oc’11 Queen. 1,175,754 11,257,058 June29.H.Chauncey 807,071 19,128, *56
Apl. 22.Arizona
948,020 12,205,018

Date.
Jan.
“

.

.

The London Economist

55,773

Other West Indies

The

.

3,39J

.—

—

$86,188/797

$2,200,013

...

tain

The

EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK.

1866.

been ai,

Tampico-

Total for week

4,139,840

report of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry

1865.

“

Rio Janeiro1,600

Previously reported

“

1367.

$1,840,192

Silver
June 24—S< hr. Etta,

$44,277
232,687

Weekending.

*

1866.

Drygoods

at this port during the week have

Aspinwall—

Gold
23—St. Merriraac,
Gold

“

June
1365.

12,098,040

1852

2.—National bank currency

goods, and in general merchandise, the
total being $6,263,829, against $4,165,888 last week, and $5,013,085 the
previous week. The exports are $3,113,799 this week, against $2,670,477 last week, and $2,359,561 the previous week.
The exports of cot¬
ton the past week were 698 bales, against 1,358 bales last week.
The
following are the imports at New York for week ending (for dry goods)
June 26, and for the week ending (for general merchandise) June 27 :
an

bpecie

June 22—St. Arizona,
Silver

“

COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS.

imports of

15,508,621
9.472,471

follows:

“

show

11

THE CHRONICLE.

July 4,1868.]

An

has the foFowing;

imperial decree, dated Paris, June 17, orders that the old silver

coins of 1 and 2 franc*,

and of 20 alixl 50 centimes, shall

cease to

be

a

legal tender after October 1, 1868.
The British Consul

at

Calais^gives the following statement of the

number of passengers who passed through the principal French ports
*n 1867 : Calais 199,837, an iucrease of 74,305 over 1866 ; Boulogne
an increase of 38,983 ; Dieppe 88,294, an increase of 49,587 ;
16,177, a decrease of 346 ; Ostend 19,707, an increase of 3,810;
total 476,946, an increase of 166,339.
No return had been obtained
from Dunkirk, where the number probably exceeded 2,00(ik
The total value of foreign merchandise transhipped at f orts in the
United Kingdom during the past year amounted to £6,655,627 sterling.
Of the principal articles transhipped were—10,765,8 23 lbs. of coffee ;
1,243,982 lbs. of chicory ; 5,8 5,856 lbs. of paper of all kinds (except

162,931,

Havre

paper hangings);
factured tobacco ;

1 319 751 lbs. of tea; 1,404,267 lbs. of

unmanu¬

857,004 gallons of wine ; 767,823 gallons of bratxjy;
623,956 gallons of Geneva spirits, and 93,034 lbs. of opium. Goods

imported for transhipment from Russia were valued at £130,794 ; from
Denmark, at £1,398 ; from Prussia, at £9 144 ; from the HanseTo*ns,
at £936,005 ; from Holland, at £9 >0,000 ; from Belgium, at £787,264;
from France, at £2,847,784 ; from Spain and the Canaries, at £106,522;
from Sardinia, at £1,378; from Tuscany, at £3,218; from the Two
Sicilies, at £17,083 ; from Venetia, at £2,286 ; from the Austrian ter¬
ritories, at £11,124 ; bom the Turkish dominions, at £119,220; from
Egypt, at £5,260 ; from British India, at £80.860 ; from the Philippine
Islands, at £7,561 ; from China, at £89,228 ; from Japan, at £13,065 ;
from Cuba, at £59,513 ; from St. Thomas, at £1,578 ; from the United
States, at £70,556 ; from Brazil, at £177,727, and from the other

countries, at £148,831,

reporting the bill, with a strong protest, there was a partial
rally in quotations. The market, however, closes weak, and is a
disappointment of the hopes of those who expected a very strong
market at the time of the payment of the July interest.
In some
quarters there is an expectation that, after the conclusion of
the Democratic Convention, there will be a rally in the market ;
that, however, must depend upon the platform and the nom¬
mittec

embers’ (Mantle.

Oriic

t

DIVIDENDS.
The

[July 4, 1868.

THE CHRONICLE.

12

following Dividends have been declared during the
TER

NAME OP COMPANY.

CENT.

II auk si.
Bulls lle-td
Filth National

4
5
5

Merchants’ National
Phenix National
Ocean National
Second National...

4

5
4

WHEN

tay’ble

llalfroads.
Del Lack & West
•
litts 11 W & C hie
do 3d mb..
do
do
New Bedford «fc Taunt *n

1
1
10
1
1

July 20
2* Jlllv 37
3* July 17
4
July 1
4* July 1
-0
July 1
i* Julv 1
6

.

..

C-t\uga & fcuequehanna....

Terre Haut & Indiana
Berkshire
Pittsfield <fe N. Adams
Pmv A: Worce-ter
.........
Taunton Branch
Paterson & Hudson River
Paterson" it Rama} 0

3
4
4

At
At
At
At
At
At
At

1

,Tn y

Third National..

WHERE TAXABLE

July 1
Juiy
July
July
July
July

past week:
BOOKS CLOSED.

Bank
Bank

Bank
Bank
Bank
Hank
Eank

Company’sOflice
Conuany’sOflice

Company’sOfiice
Oompany’sOllice
Company’soiticc
Compny’sOtlDe
Company’sOllicc
Julv 1 Company’sOflice
July 1 Company’sOflice
July 1 Company’sOflice
July 3 Companv'sOflice

inees.

Junc 29
J une 26
June 26
J uly 3

The

following

are

the closing prices of leading

pared with preceding weeks :

—

May 21). June 5. June 12.
•TT. S.
U. S.
U. S.
U. S.
IT. S.
IT. S.
U. S.
U. S.
U. S.
U. S

June 26
June

securities, com¬

(t

June 30
—

—

—

—

—

—

6’s, 1831 coup
5-20’s, 1882 coupons.

5-20’s, 1884
“
5-20’s, 1865
“
5 20’s, 1885, July cpn
5-20’s, 1887, c
5-20's, 1888, £.

10-40’a,

115%
111%
109#

109%
111%
112
•

44

7-30’s2d Scries
7-30’s 3rd series.....

•

116*
111*

118%
112*
110*
110*
113*
113*

109%
no

112*
112%

117*x.c.ll3*
113*
110%
110*
111*
HI*
113* x.cl08%
114 • x.clOS*
109*
109*
107*
109

117*
113*.
110%
110%
113 %
114

X.C109*
106*
105*
due.
109*
109*
109*

•

105*
109*
T‘9*

June 19 June 26. July 3*

106

109%
10a %

.

.....

no

t

f

109

Stocks.—The monotony of the
stock market has been relieved by a spurt of activity iu a few stocks.
2* Juiy 3 CompanV’sOflice
Insurance.
Erie has been more active in consequence of new developments in
5
July 1 Company’sOflice
Mechanics Fire (Brooklyn).
1(1
July 1 Company’sOflice
Nas-au Fire (Brocklyn).
the contest,
The Supreme Court confirmed, in full session, the
5
July 1 Company’sOflice
star Fire
July 1 Company’sOflide
Empire City Fire
order appointing a receiver of the funds derived from the sale of
5
July 1 Com pany'sOflice
Hanover Fire..*
J u!y 1 Companv’sOfliee.
5
international
$10,000,000 of convertible bonds of the Erie Company, Mr. Peter
5
July H Com pany'sOflice
Commerce Fi e
B. Sweeny being the receiver. It appears that about $800,000 of
5
July 1 Company’sOrtice
Park Fiie
5
July 1 Com pany’sOflice
Jersey Uitv Hie
that amount has disappeared, having passed into the hands of cer¬
5
July 1 Corny any’sO flice
mia Fire
Gi
4
July 1 Company’sOfrice
Commercial Fjre
tain directors for disbursements in connection with the Albany
6
July 9 Com pany’sOflice
Nath mil Fire
5
July 1 Company’suffice
State (New Jirst y)
legislation on Erie affairs As matters now stand it appears quite
July 6 Company’sOflice
Firemens
5
July 6 Company’sOflice
pronuble that the parties responsible for this mal-appropriation of
Yonkers it New Yort Fire.
lflisccllaitcoug.
funds may be held to account in the courts. A few days ago a suit
4—
Eureka Lake it Yuba Can.. £2 no July 18 Company’sOflice
was undertaken to secure the removal of Mr. Eldridge from the
Friday, July 3, 1808, I\ M.
Presidency of the Erie Company as a means of preventing him from
Tiie Money Market.—The week opened with some important
compromisin c with Mr. Vanderbilt. That suit was to-day with¬
charges in the condition of the bauks. The loans showed an drawn, and the Erie war may now be considered as ended. The stock
increase of $2,380,428, while in the currency deposits there was an
has been firmer under these changes, and to-day sold largely up
increase of $4,189,530 ; which so far was favorable to a continu¬
to 70*.
ance of ease in the loan market.
In the legal tenders there was a
Reading has been excited and very irregular. The stock has
gain of $1,285,721, and in the specie a loss of $1,371,530, so that been largely oversold, and yesterday the clique manipulating it
there was oil the whole a reduction in the legal tender reserve. The
called in their loaned shares, ciusing a general scramble for “cash1’
market, however, has in the main retained its late ease, call loans
stock, which sold at G per cent above “regular,” sales being made
continuing at 3@4 per cent. Yesterday and to-day, owing to pre¬ at 107*, while, for delivery to-duy, it wa3 offered at 101*. After
parations for the quarterly statement to be made up on Monday the hours for delivery the stock was sold in a regular way
there has been some calling in of loans, and rates have advanced to
at 95, but to-day has been firmer under the renewal of the short
4@5 per cent, and in some cases transactions have been done at 0 interest, closing at 9G*. Cleveland and Pittsburg, Michigan South •
per cent. Probably, after the completion of the statement, there ern, Northwestern, and Ohio and Mississippi have been fairly act¬
There is, however, among the ive; otherwise the market has been quiet.
may be a return to the old rates.
banks a disposition to hold themselves prepared for an "unusually
Considerable excitement has occurred in Tennesee bonds, owing
early demand for moving the crops, which is especially apparent in to the
non-payment of the interest. Some of the Tennessee rail¬
an. indisposition to discount paper at late low rates.
The wool crop roads have failed to make their usual payments into the Treasury,
is causing a demand for money from the West, and as exchange at
apparently fur the purpose of preventing the Government from pay¬
Cincinnati now rules at 50 cents discount, currency is beginning to
ing the interest, and parties co-operating with the roads have
be remitted to that eit}7.
Some of the stock brokers are trying to served
upon the Fourth National Bankjan injunction, restraining
make arrangements lor advances upon stocks for GO to 90 days, with
them from paying the interest on the bonds.
The result of these
a view to bridging over
the stringency that usually occurs in the
irregularities has been that the bonds declined from 74* to 67, but
midst of the crop season ; but the banks do not favor such opera¬
have since recovered-to 72*, that being the closing quotation. The
tions. In the Spring very serious inconvenience arose from the
general maiket closes steady at subjoined prices.
banks having in this way tied up a large amount of money, and
The following were the closing quotations at the regular board
being compelled to sacrifice their mercantile customers for the con¬
compared with those of the six preceding weeks :
venience of speculators.' This error was generally acknowledged at'
May 22. May 29. June5. June 12. June 19. June 20. July 3.
35
34
36
the time, and it is not likely to be repeated this season.
34*
Cumberland Coal
22
24*
25%
26*
29%
26*
30*
There is rather more commercial paper on the market, and the Quicksilver
49*
50
51
50
51*
Canton Co
8*
9*
7*
9
banks decline paper, having 3@4 months to run, at less than 7 per Mariposa pref.... 129
1 &1%
134*
133*
134*
132%
133*
New York Central
4

.

—

Railroad

—

and

Miscellaneous

—

—

—

..

—

rt

—

i

—

—

—

-—

—

—

rm

—_

—

—

r*
*

—

—

#

.

•

•

,

•

•

•

•

,

*

•

••«

....

cent.
The

following are the quotations for
Percent.

Call loans
Loans on bonds & mort..
Prime endorsed bills,
months.

4 © a
.
(2> 7
0

Erie
Hudson River....

loans of various classes :

_

Good endorsed bills, 3 &
4 months
do
single names
Lower grades

Reading

Percent.
@7

7 © 7)$'
8 © 10

*

Securities.—Governments have lost their late
extreme buoyancy.
The approach of the Democratic Convention,
with an apparent probability that Mr. Pendleton might receive the
nomination, caused some uneasiness among a certain class of holder.';
of which dealers, who had sold down their supply, availed them¬
selves for breaking down the market. These operations were
seconded by the House of Representatives instructing the Com¬
mittee of Ways and Means to report a bill taxing the interest on
United States bonds 10 per cent. Upon the introduction of this
measure prices?fell off 1@1J per cent; but later, upon the Corn-,
United States




68*
138
93

Mich. Southern..

87*

Michigan Central
Clev. and Pittsb.
Clev. and Toledo.
Northwestern....
44

preferred

Rock Island
Fort Wayne
Illinois Central
Ohio & Miss

*

..

85*
107*

*

68*
77*
95*
109*

147*
30*

72*
143*
94*

69*
141*

88

119*
88*

89*
119*
86*

109*

108%

6S%

68*
81*

-

79*
97*
115*
148*
31*

94

102
111
150
....

70%

09%

69*

70

140

140

96*

100*

89*

90*

104%
92*

141*

12°

.

•

•

•

•

•

91%
.

....

....

89*
87*
107*
107%
69* x.d.65
81* x.d.77*
105*
103*
111%
111*
154*
29*
29*

•

xd96*
.

.

.

90*

87*

103*

103*

69%
79*
105*
112*

75*
79*
105*

xdl09%
157*

156

30*

-

29%

following statement shows the volume of transactions in
shares, at both the Stock Boards for the past and several previous
The

weeks:
RailWeek ending—

Apr.
“

2
9

“

16
23

“

“

Min-

Bank. road. Coal. ing.
483 291,125 385 3,500
* 457
207,747 Sot 6,410
448 400,744
584 5,350
518 359,932 556 12,400
010 252,205
082 5,870

Im-

Tele- Steam-

pro’t. graph, ship. Other.

Total.

2,350 19.518 34,588 9,199 381,104
2,800 19,219 81,193 4,380 302,987
1,700 18,431 26,351 46,802 500,210
4,325 14,440 34,761 21,820 448,752
4,800 3,033 19,900 13,228 300,371

7
14.

May

364
625

:

44

5S7 14,150 5,265
232,554
197,104 1,525 ; 16,800 2,550

0,084
0,036

714
550
356
176
618
500

21..
Si
28
June 5
“
11
it
18
tt
25
July 2

16,318
16,855
61,658
36,674

16,853
20,306

205,175
273,801

28,180
23,818
11,844
10,564
11,380
17,533

235,551

170,021 1,127 9,015 2,750 11,177
330,666 2,076 8,850 5,450 6,660
275,562 1,312 4,850 3,500 5,568 21,410
300 7,015 4,000 7,005 12 046
203,621
200 0,100 2.200 5,010
244.907
15 302
248,834 420 8,650 6,175 6,20.0 33,068
380 283,S17 1,646 9,230 5,200 6,411 *22,230

The followin gis

Foreign Exchange has been

firm, bankers being disposed to
keep Up rates pending the remittances against coupons and the loan

423,744

of 1848.

324,046

246,557

The

280,116
322,438

of

362,624

33,081

#
110 #110 V
UOV# UOV

Paris, long..
do shoi 't
Antwerp

5.13V #5.12V
5.11V#5.10
5.16.V^5 13V
5.16 V ©5.13 V

•

.

•

—

•

..

Weekending
Friday.
2
April
0
April
April 16
April 23

2,050,000

May
May
May
June
June
June
Juno

July

307 300

8,668,870
8,875,000

325,650

5,223,750

14
2
2S
5
11
18
25
2

81,500

Company

City Bonds.

Bonds.

Total
amount-

88,500

4,508,500

6,018,000
3,178,350

Amsterdam
Frankfort..

1,004,500
1,008,500
382,500

138,500

76S.000

125,500

023,000
821,100
440.500

820,500

823,500

2,716,000
347,050

1,674,000

132,500
141,500
328,500
248,000
200,2(10
311,000
102,000
220,cOO

155,100

2,527,500

1,455,500
2,318,000
3,300,500
5,083,000

Berlin

5,758,500
11,023,520
12.531,000

the Democratic nominations.

Mechanics
Union
America
Phcenix

clearings,

..

....

The movement of coin and

ending

on

Saturday, Jane 27,

Reported

new

supply thrown

Withdrawals in

excess

on

North American
Hanover
Irving

1,000.000
1,000.000

Metropolitan

4,000.000

....... .,....

“

“
“

“

27

..

Total
Balance in

Balance on Saturday evening
Decrease during the week....

$14,428,203 30

37
08
28

00
47

— „

$03,002,717 57

u.

1,733,502 44

Included

$1,494,058

following table shows the aggregate transactions at
Treasury since May 2 :
Sub-Treasury

Payments. Receipts. Balances.
27,813,127 22,172,626 101,208,223
34,780,865 34,806,835 101,315,865
May 16....
30,085,338 30,140,016 101,378,870
May 23....
31,225.3S2 32 532,267 102,685,755
May-’rO....
51.170,721
42,162,053 04,677,986
June 6
1,900,1 IS
30,690,497
29,001.023 04.1S8,512
June 13-1,682,4S3
12,505,20') < 14.377,045
06,060,267
June 20...
25,047,576
1,835,670
25,523,528 95,636,220
June 27...
12,604,700 03,002,717
1,508,058
14,428,293

Ending
May 2....
May 0....




..

House.
2,131,831
2,284,601
2,402,484
2,162,417
2,240,080

*>32.108

1.201,667
(587,758
1,031,300

2,048,312
862,861

■116,858
481,884

2,027,550
035,421

263,000

1.035,100
1,649,002
840,772
2,585,730
666,535
1,503,522

2,012.615

5.772.080

2.110,028

8,182,606
4,7:>s,'»()■>
2.471,655
2.6i;2,s:‘,7
1,746,4 13
4,001,320
1,006,013

7,S5»0.714

105,720
3,121
267,326

!

,

■

(5,321

378,071
584,300
4(53,480
128.085
056.019

4155,204

1,013.013
761,555
7 56,630
508; 175

1,711.086
107,702
3.>0,215

1,2(>s,340

786,000
110,530
412,000
2,01 1.50"
461,8; 2

683,585
1,406.201
1.103,000

2

6,130,178

l.H", 160
,S9S.9iS

523,00

1

>1

2,003,1) 10
1,035,100

23,111
17,530

<1,234,803

752.102
012,301

1,110,114
3,188,000

23.132

0.832

3,000.811

4.132.5 it
2,100,515

76,358

501,511
210,127

2,732,190
2,112,810

:;oo,t)oo

1,4-11,51)'.)

8.725
87.001

0,130

1,258,693
1.413,081
1,083,411
7,730,087

400,000
300,000
1,500,000

1,773,105
1,345,577

41,855

300,000

1,1(77,007

00.228
21,011
408,143
30,587
225,552 1,025,000
5,225
308,005
72,000
0,701
11,320
17,770

005,013
1,314,377
17,34(5,500

68,83 1 2,049,404

13,473,325
1.347.5 tO

54,307 1,733,512
*0,000

5,850,843
4,100,557
4,018,180

25,007
38,080

805.074

420,584

5,457

1,000.000

013,732
2,011,500

197,851
208,815

51,500

200,000

1,845,532

113,23 3

1,011,000
181.000
088.000

501,011
2 76,9X0
501,370
350,8)8
2,131,610
5,710,*ss
503,115
231,335
258,106
201,506

4,484,041

10,143

0,2 tO, 107

2,000.000 15,102,001
5(H),01K)
300,000
400,000

350,000
500.000

5,000,000
3,000,000
300.000

1,000,000
500,000

1,000,000
300,000

..

JOO.OOO

250,000

1,011.205
814,211

010,304
257,302
728,142

714
0,001

18,711,030
1,507,108
725,038
1,201,011
051,800
001,851
15,103,8-10
13,018,001
1,080,220
5,711,038

283,500
104

-

82,5207200 276,504,036

201,834

5,777,921
4,684,827
350,207
1,020,823
1,204,714
1,335,202
208,845

013,700

3,085,450
605,751
1,021,200

200,100
0,137
3,055

"7.113

740,107
1.080,083

00,0- lO

307,047

3,327

225,1100

5-10,675

101,002
197,614

11,500

250,000

114,921
41 l,0SS
1,110,702

38,015
343,203

451,040

514,708
1,087,114

Eighth National

Loans.

Inc $2,386,428

Specie

..Dec. 1,371,530
Lee.
70,300

Circulation

The following are

609,700
215,870

7,753,30034,018,721 211,302,207 70,S53,oC3

the Sub-

April 11. 252,036,725
April 18. 254,817,036
April 25. 252,314,617
2. 257,628,672
May
May
0. 265,755,883
May 16. 267,724,783
May 23. 267,381, *-79
May 30. 268,117,400
June 6. 273,702,367

Balances.
Dec.
5,(540.(505
Dec.
10(5,070
illC.
(53,(578
Inc.
1,306,(588
Inc.
8,007,703
Dec.
480,474
Inc.
1,S71,755
Dec.
424,047

1,733,502

Circula¬
tion.

34,227,108

343,150

31,104,272

16

Inc.

Deposits.. ...../
Legal Tenders ./

17.097,299

Inc.

Legal

Deposits. Tenders.
180,056,846 51,700,706
170,851,880 51.082,600

34,218.581 1-81,832.523 50,833,660
34,227,624 180,307,480 53,866,757
16,166 873 34,114,843 101,206,135 57,863,500
21,286,010 34,205,400 100,276,568 57,541,837
20.030,142 34,193,240 201,313,305 57,643.005
20,476,047 31,183,038 102.5'-7,550 62,233,002
17,861,088 31,145 ( 06 20 4,746,064 65,633,064
14,328,531 34,188,150 200,080,655 68,822,028
60 202,810
June 13. 275,142,024 11,103.631 34,166,846 210,670,765
0,124,830 34,110,120 211,484,887 72,507,582
June 20. 274,117,608
7,753,300 34,048,721 214,30.2,207 ,73,853,303
June 27. 276,504,036

Boston Banks.—Below

we

returned to

$2 817,820
1,885,721

webks past:

16,776,642
14,043.547

National Banks, as

Changes in

Dee.

4. 254,287, SOI

follows:

of previous wepc are as

the totals for a series of
Specie.

Loans.

April

$108,331,010 06
14,428,293 30

The

,

1,521.117

2.828,

Stnyvesant
Eleventh Ward

05,636,224 01

in Gold Certificates.

Custom

.

750.000

Bull’s Head
National Currency.
Bowery National

$12,604,790 05

receipts of customs were $104,000 in gold, and

Weeks

1.701,0(10

11.608,6071,630,261
2,130,010

The deviations from the returns

1,020,401
1,104,016
6,102,628
2,076,055
1,303,210

Total amount of Gold Certificates issued, $1,G04,000.
in the

....

92,319
333,000
47,13.)
200,37 L
186,810
8,000
52,312 2,167,775
10,517
131,033
31,060
4,070

1,000.000
1,500,000
1,000,000
2.000,000

Marine.

Receipts.
$088,569 76

during the week

34,288

1,000.001)

Atlantic
Importers and Traders’..
Park
Mechanics’ Banking Ass.
Grocers’
North River
East River
Manufacturers & Mer—
fourth National
Central National
Second National
Ninth National

Sub-Treasury-

Sub-Treasury morning of June 22

Deduct payments

V

1,42;;, 8(H)
782,176

:

Payments.
$1,285,156 65
658,417 28
657,715 68
6,082,653 23
653,712 53
5,000,638 02

'

•1,000.000

Continental
Commonwealth
Oriental

.7 $1,021*.120

$1,508,058 54

..

100.000

Nassau
Market
St. Nicholas
Shoe and Leather..
Corn Exchange

;

Receipts.
$253,905 14
283,298 51
310,410 84
314,884 31
261,450 02
'135,099 82

..

23
24
25
26

“

500,000

Citizens

$0,124,830
7,753,300

Custom House.

June 22

1,24(5,550

1,315,5.70
2,655,523
2,534,172

s...........

People’s

-.

sources

•

100,636
48,332
177,750
:>;o,(mh)
171,531
088,760
201,371
530,882 5,905,705
900,OOO
50,381
53,11,2
108,288
481,167
27,370
37,872
133,805
858,751)
411,037
4(5,322
120,7 70

5,031.(560

412,500

Chatham

4,165,801

711,355

10,000
17,001

1,801,781
4,013,385
061,402

First National
Third National
New York N. Exchange.
Tenth National
New York Gold Exch’ge

_;

follows

43.153

422,700
2,000,000
450,000

1,000,000

Republic

The transactions for the week at the Custom House aod Subas

2,727,115
2,564,700
2,252,476

Pacific.

2,302,059

of reported-supply

Treasury have been

200,037
10,172

3,268,728

$1,371,530

Supply received from unreported

141.005

6,224,506
3,771,642

1,000.000

4,130,034

supply

Decrease of specie in banks
excess

25,222

1,001,007

Mercantile

$1,738,275

Reported new supply in excess of withdrawals
Specie in banks on Saturday, June 20
Specie in banks on Saturday, June 27

Actual

3,218,106
.

1.000,000

$1,181,100
351,115
203,000

1,000,800.new

600,000
300,000
1,235,000
1 500,000
800,000
600,000

10,107,661
21,103.710
5,632,255
3,510,080

for 'the week
as shown in the following formula :

Legal

2.507,001
7,370,003
3,536,165
3.004,531
1,0(54,608
1,855,230
5,375.375

156.011

3,502,201

3,203,(585
3,220,237

market

reported

1,000,000
1,000,000

.'

t:;,ssi
085,254
108,DOS

0.187,828
4,067,157
4,938,058

l,S0O,v/()0

(•>00,000
500,000
Seventh Ward, National.
2,000,000
State of New York
American Exchange
5,000,000
10,000,000

3.200,433

’

80

71V# 72

Net

570,361
176,877
1, iS.*)
511,672

108,105
i

1,146,000

$2,530,134

of

,500,000
3,000,000

200.000

7,130,007 10,032,223

..

70V#

Circula-

5,191,827
3,0s 7,8 72

1

Mechanics and Traders’.

,

Imports of coin and bullTwr-from foreign ports
Coin interest paid from U. S. Treasury in New York

3(5*8# 3(5 V'
41V# 41V
41
# 41V

41)8'# 41
70V# 70V
71V# 72V

41V# 41V
70V# 70V
71V# 72

2,000,000

Greenwich
Leather Manuf. National

140 V 274.283,000

MOV 218,258,000
140V

5.16V#5.15
5.16 V#ft- 1ft

.

..

*

National
Butchers’

The

,447 $2,433,710
1,807.11
2,042,440
2,078,770 1,381, Sot)

Treasure receipts from California.;..

Withdrawn for export
Withdrawn for customs

'.

’
Merchants' Exchange...,

Balances
Cold. -Cuirency.

2,172,042
2,318,000
2,210,014

110V# 170V
5-13 V #5.12V
5.10 V #5 10

t ion.
Deposits. Tenders.
Specie.
^B.OOO.OOO $0,36(5,s()l $1,099,832 $761,217 $7,970,283 $1,08-8,180
4.401,113
180,!K)0
11,152
i,soo,4i7
5,724,955
2,0.50.000
802,410
1,558,450
373,028
6,078,050
3.000,000
8,306,8.55

Tradesmen’s
Fulton
Chemical

bullion at this port

was

5.11 V#5-10

V#3.1(»

Loans and
Discounts.

Canital.

City

,

..

..

5.11

Ocean

Saturday, June 27.,.! I ll Fa' 140
140V UOV 70.601,000
140 V
“
Monday,
20... 140*8 140
MOV 50,825.000
Tuesday,
“
30... 1 10 V 140 V 140 V' 140V 27.008,000
140 V 140*8 140V 140 V 31,850.000
Wcdn’day, July 1
140 ^ 140 V 140 V
Thursday,
“
2
MOV 33,803,000
3... 140V' 14 -V 140V Ml)?.' 47,530,000
Friday,
k*
140V 140
140V
110V 1.40
MOV
133>; 133V 111

11«V
5.13V@ft.12V

-AVKKAGK AMOUNT OF-

—«

Current week
Previous week
Jan. 1 '6S, to date...

.....

Broadway..
Total

110
110 V#

#110V
ll()V'# liov
5.13 V #5.12 V

41V# 41V
70*8# 70V
71V# 72

....

Banks.
New York
Manhattan.
Merchants’

:

Quotations.
Open- Low- Hiirn- Cl osing.
ing. est. est.

•

11,520,750

shipment of specie this week are less than was expected.
The fluctuations in the gold market, and the business at the Gold
Board during the week closing with Friduy, are shown in the fol¬
lowing table

•

•

110

...

ending at the commencement of business on June 27, 18G8:

steady through the week
at 140£@140^. The coin disbursements at the Sub-Treasury on
July interest and the bonds oi l848, amounting to about 811,000,000,
have had little effect on the market beyond easing
cash ” gold to
s eh an extent that
loans'are now made at 4 @8 per cent “ for
carrying.” There is very little disposition to speculate, pending the
with

•

#
# 110 V

....

....

,New York City Banks.—The following statement shows the
condition of the Associated Banks of New York City for the week

14,708,150
13,207,950

The Gold Market.—Gold has been

uncertainties connected

•

Bremen

6,700,000
7,428,700
4,408,200
3,128,150
7,504,450

110,700
115,500

617.800

...

Swiss

#

5.16V@5.13V 5.16 V@5.13 V
5.M>V@5.13V 5.16 V#ft-13V
36V# 36V
36V# 36V'
30*8# 36 V
41V# 41V
41V# 41V
41V# 41V

Hamburg...

187,000

851,50)
640,000
1,385,300
2,142,200
676,500

3,606,500

7

May

State &

'550,600

3,071,900
2,017,350
3,811,600
4,352,800
3,885,100
1,037,350
5,808,050
0,080,650
10,08 4,500

30

April

Go vernmen ts
*
Bonds.
Notes.

/

....

—

July 3.
100M# 111)
110 V# no v

June 25.

June 10.

London Comm’]..
do bkrs Ing
do
do shrt.

City securities, and railroad and other bonds
Regular Board lor the past and several previous weeks:

at

following are the closing quotations for the several classes
foreign bills,compared with those of thp three last weeks
June 12.

summary (of the amount of Government bond

a

and notes, State and

sold

13

THE CHRONICLE.

July 4,1868.]

Aggregate
Clearings.

507,783,138
403,371,451
623,713,023

602,784,154
588,717,802
507,028.507
480,180,008

•488,735,142
602,118,248
040,003,029
53! *,328,107
553.083,817

516,7-0,075

Boston
the Clearing House, Monday, June
give

a

sfatemeut of the

22, 1868.
Capital.

Banks.
Atlas
Blackstone
Boston

Boylston
Columbian...

Specie. L. T. Note.-. Deposits. Circu’n.
$447,770
$15,018 $132,306 $471,007
700,377
671,887
201
306,552
701,888
3,542
333,667 1,585,856
2,7(50,090
503,612
741,110
1,700
248,278
1,735,541
443.882
720,001
214,068
1,437,941
700,715
81(i,724
4,292
302,30)
2,284,692
Acm fici’k-1,290,741
Loans.

$750,000 $1,508,078
2,1 (>0,401
1,0(0,000

Atlantic

.

Continental....

1,000,000
750,0; 0
500,000
1.000,000
500,000

.

•

1,073

2.658,416

800,000

800,000

3,000,000

.

1,661

204,018

520,055

277.961

891,022

543,167
526,587
150,571
751,067
133,857

912,680
428,139

179,2.0

1,199,201
766,243

590,493

.

675

21,155

600,000

3,5*3,370
1,081,083

2,000.000

3,326 158

8.091
75,031

13,079

1,500,000

Suffolk
Traders’
Tremont

750.000

1,927,985

1.000.000

4,143 056

Second (Granite) 1,000,000
Third
300,000
B'k of Commerce 2,000, (MX)
B'k of N. Amcr. 1,000.0(H)
B'k of Redemp'n+1,000,000
B’k of the Repub. 1,000,000
1.0(H) OiM)
City

Washington

....

First

Exchange

972,0*1

1,301

509 939

580,736
2,147,751
530,170

15,297

735,067

1,831,002

229,167

745.655

8,438

169,830

673,973
853,694
854,012

10.7:5
2,479
9,584
12,639

42,300,000

208,912

The deviations from last
Capital

1,720

97,850,230
98,906,895
98/02,343

“

“

11
18
25

97,458,997
98,116,632
99,513,948
99,3^9,612

1

22
29

“
“

99,477,074

630.936
77,555
14,397

totals for a series of weeks past :
.

Tenders.

731,540 13,004,924
873,487 12,522,035
805,486 11,905 603
577,063 12,298,545

815,469 12,656,190
97,332,283 1,133,668 11.962,368
96,9:48,524 1,186,831 12,199,422
97,041,720 1.018,809 12,848,141

8
15

“

Corn

Exchange*

.

1(H)

.

l.(HH),0(H)!Feb.and Aug.,

100!

Cuirency
Dry Dock

1(H),000

766,553 14,188,806
631,149 14,368,900
561,990 14,373,575
476,433 14,564,614

436,699 15,195,550

Circulation.

Deposits. National.

36,008,157 25,175,194
36,422,929 24,213,014
3/417,890 24,231,058
36,259,946 2/231,978
37,635,406 25,203,234
37.358,776 25,225,173
37,844,742 25,234,465
38,898,141 25,210,660
40,311,569 25,204,939
41,470,376 25,194,114
41,738,706 25,190,565
42,583,871 25,197,317
42,506,31b 25,182,920

.

State.

168,023

*

......

350,000 Jau.
250,000 Jan.

Eighth

100

Eleventh Ward

100

200.001’

Fifth

100!
100;

150,000)Jan. and July..

Jan. and July

.

137

105^ 106

3

Manhattan*

167,019
166,962
164,331
160.385
145,248
160,241
160,151
159,560
159,313
159.15;
158,902
158,818

Marine
Market

..

’

Mechanics’

••••

Mechanics’(Brook.).
Mech. Bank. Asso.
Meehan. & Traders

,

Mercantile
Merchants’
Merchants’ Exch.,..

Metropolitan

-

-

Banks.—The following is the average

condition

•

•

.

.

.

•

.

.

•

fc

•

•

5

•

•

£
4
£

•

•

•

-

-

4 104 & 105

5
8
10
5 125
5
5
4
6
•

...

.

.

.

m

m

..

•

.

.

.

•

8
8

•

m

*

9

t

.

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

8

6
5 140

8...

5

•

4

....

...

....

....

•

....

and Nov,.,
and Nov...
and Nov...

4,000.000

£---

....

•

6

and July.
and July..
and July..

600,000 May
600,(HK) May
1.000,000 May
3,000,000 Jan.
1,235,000 Jan.

v

...

8

.

252,000 Jan.
500,000 Jan.
400.000 Jan.
1,000,000 Jan.
2,000,000 Jan.
500.000 Jan.

Manufac. & Merch.*.

130

3,H

600,000-

600,000 Feb. and Aug.
400,000 Feb.and Aug..
2.050,(HH) Feb. and Aug.. 'Feb.

125

102
3

.Quarterly ...
3
1(H)
500,000!Jail, and July..
First (Brooklyn).
j July’68
100; 5,000,000 Jan, and July..
Fourth
3()i
600,000 May and Nov.. May’68.
Fulton
8
,.| oOO.uoojJune and Dec.
Gold Exchange
8
200,000!May and Nov.
Greenwich*
8
300,000 Jan. and July..
Grocers’
8
1,000,000'Jan. and July..
Hanover.
8
1,500,000;Jan. and July..
3
Importers & Trad...
500.000!Jan. and July.
Irving
„••••*"
LeatherManufact rs.
Long Isl. (Brook.) ..

120

and July.. July
and July..
and July..,

and luly..
and July...
Jau. and July...

5

8

.

•

..

•

.

•

.

J

•

.

6

....

5 120
5
5

.

..

....

....

....

....

•

..

.

5 117

.

,

5 111

...

....

.

136

6 134
4 105

May ’68.

....

1,000,000 May and Nov .. Jan.’-68.
5
300,000 Jan. and July...
5
1.500,00(1 April and Oct... Apr. 68
National (Gallatin)
5 1,35
New York
3,000.000 Jan. and July...
145
..8
200.000 Jan. and July...
New York County..-)
6
3(H), 000 Tan. and July...
NewYorkExckange
5 :07^ 108
Ninth
1,0(H),000 Jan. and July. July '68.
4
Jan. and Ju y... Jan. ’68.
North America....
1,000,000
a
North River*
4(H),(KH) Tan. and July.. July ’68.
5
Tan. and July... July '68.
Ocean
1,000,(MM)
5
3(M),(MH) Feb. and Aug...
Oriental*
extra. .5
422,700 Feb. and Aug..
Pacific.
151
Park.
2,(MM),(MK) Jan. and July... July ’6S.
5
Jan. and July... July ’68
412,500
Peoples’*
4
Phoenix
«•
1,800,(MM Tan. and July July ’68.
21 '
6 119>;
100 2,(HM),000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’68.
Republic
5
Feb. ’68
St. Nicholas’
1(H)| 1,(MM),000 Feb. and Aug...
4 .15
1(M)
Seventh Ward
500,(KK) -fan. and July.. July ’68.
4
1(H)
300,000 Jan. and J uly.. July ’68.
Second
100 1,500,000 .ran. and July.. July ’68.
Shoe & Leather
1(M)
Sixth
200,(MM) May and Nov...
ih' l 20'”
.4
State of New York.. 1(M) 2,000,000 May and Nov... May' '’68
Nassau*...
Nassau (Brooklyn)

....

.

....

....

«...

•

.

.

•

•

•

••

.

....

Philadelphia

122

250

K)

7
8
8.
8
S
8

200,000!Jail, and July.,
and July..
and July..

30.:
50

East River

Manufacturers’......

97,624,197

4

June

t

97,020,925

6

Specie.

,

Dec.

Circulation

following are comparative

13
20
27

“

120^

••••?••••••

Tnc,
Dec.

Legal tender notes
Deposits

39,734

Lof.ns.

May
“

491,885
99,799
130,000

circulation.

Legal

“

516,024

436,699 15,195,550 42,506,316

$S7,439

Dec.

Specie

41

345,089
795,545
793,457
395,383

weeks returns are as follows

Inc.

*

Loans

“

800.000
456,956

244,528

....

* This total docs not include $158,818 State
+ Report not received.
Same as last week.

April

799,00(1

291,016

46,455

596,999

1,223,627

76,504

174,652

738,410
3,133,489
1,052,525

13,818

99,477,074

259,676
274,880
530,019
236,200

.

...

Total June 22.

The

795 739

1,321,467

1,948.366

2(H),0(H)

Security

692,683

8.589

233/00

.

..

795,500

16.605

145

Tan. and

..

1,611,184

1,756,799
1,856,014
3,123.107

3,000,00(1

.

1.476,973

2,452,371

1,500,000
.-...

981,931

July. ..!J uly ’68
500,000iJan. and July. Jan. '68
American......
5,000,0G0jMay and Nov. JMay '68
American Exchange.
300,000 Jan. and July. ..(July '68
Atlantic.
500,000,Jan. and July. iJuly '68
Atlantic (Brooklyn).
25O,000jJan. and July Jan. ’68.....
Bowery
'68
l,00(),000jjan. and July. JJan. ’68.
Broadway
300,000 Eel*, and Aug |Feb.
Brooklyn
July '68.....
200,000 Quarterly...
Bull's Head*...
July ’68.....
800.000 Jau. and July
Butchers & Drovers
July '68
3,000,(MX) Jan. and July
Central
Jan. ’68
••••;•
200,000 Jau. and July
Central (Brooklyn).
July '68
450,000 -Jau. and July
Chatham
May ’68
300,000 .Quarterly...
Chemical
400,000 Jan. and July. July *6S.....
Citizens’
May
1,000,000 May and Nov. Jan. ’68......
City
•••
’68
300,(XH> Jan. and July.
City (Brooklyn)
8
10,000,0001Jan. and July. J-ily 8
Commerce
1(H)
750,000 Jan. and July. Jan.
Commonwealth....
8
Ju’y
1(H): 2,(HMt,(K)l)'Jan. and July.
Continental
S
Feb.
100
100.

..

619,128
93,172

3,4'3,418
2,401,918
2,785,852
472,555
429,006

....

361,400
596,391
359,667
996,033
748,7'0

599,536

200.000

Webster
Everett

'

Bid. Ask

Last Paid.

Periods.

S Amount.

«,cs

.

796,940

4,568,507

1.000.000
1.000 000

Union

796 308

4,907.023
1,701,924

1,0(M),(KK)

Revere

177,350

349,098

i-

Friday.

Dividend.

o o !

National.)

America*

9,i03

8*0,274

1 (HH).OOO

Hide & Leather.

1,825,650

3,249,962

3,443,106

1,000,000

Eagle

382,145
245,368

647,897
251,103

670.416

1,400

2,168,660
2,185,245
1,830 487
1,748,072
2,; 09.173
3,509,635

750.000
Shawmut
S(*oe <fc Leather. 1.000,000
2,000.000
State....r

not

132

533.203

'

(Marked thus * are

353.060
•

39/70

78,833

200,000 f*

566,537
464,096

Companies.

440 35

930.898

STOCK LIST.

CAIMTAL.

357,465
240,373

580,133
680,504
1,192,705

6,562,7»5

■!

356,11

•

477,601

86,555
1,142,554
150,400
387,414
14 \ O'H)

814,262

400,003

OOO.tMH)

281,380

2,134

1,556,012
1,552,825
1,467,392
1,613,078

750,000
750,000

1,000,<MM)
!,000,000

1,742,814

3,568
9,814

1. KM),893

1.0(H),(K)0

Globe
Hamilton
Howa d
Mark t
Massachusetts..
Maverick
Merchants’
Mount Vernon..
New England...
North
Old Boston

415,000
123,203
151,050
97,135

2,115,457

3,703
1,948
1,511

BANK

796,745
597,068

826,795
1,121,677

35.850

400,000

Freeman’s

202,760
449,193
96,864

2,404,764

1/00,000
1,000,000

Eliot
Faneuil Hall....

[July 4,1868.

CHRONICLE.

THE

14

....

'

.

....

of the

Philadelphia Banks for the week

preceding Monday, June

....

....

....

‘29, 1868 :

....

Total net

....

•

Capital.

Banks.

Philadelphia*
North America....

Farmers’ & Meek..
Commercial
Mechanics’
Bauk N. Liberties.
Southwark

Kensington
Penn

Township...

Western

Manufacturers’

..

B'k of Commerce..
Girard..,
Tradesmen’s

Consolidation
Commonwealth

...

Corn Exchange....
Union
First
\
Third

Fourth
Six. h
Seventh

Eighth

$72.0iH) $1,413,000 $3,750,000 $1,000,060
1,111,335 2,848,727 . 786,000
4,922,033 12,123 1,517,312 4,175,452
714,080
2,215,000 5,000
623,000
608,000 1,295,000
2,205,000 8,950
967,(MM) 1,451.000
479,493
810,000 2,038,000
461,000
2,158,1.4)0
....

$1,500,000 $5,088,000
1,090,000
2,09/000
810,000
800,000
500,000
250,0;>0

Specie. L. Tend. Drpos.* Circulate

4,288,086 50,050

1,420,700 10,632
250,000 1,157,093 15,012

500,000

400,000

570.150

1,365,216

1,423,183

1,048,00)

964,98
1,000,000 3,21/0 <0
200,000 1,29.,252
300,000 1,095.018
250,000

1,419

r....

*...
Republic

237,000

1,09c,038

500,000 1,87-/00
30’,00) 1,561.000
1,000,000
300,000
225,000
150,000
250.000

275,000
750,000

3,836,000

979,900

713,800
409,U00
765,000

800.060

2,531,000

635,100 1,535,100

352,000 1,133,104
281,366 1,028,751

605,668 1,655,505

345, (KM) 1,125,967
284.279
779,115
....
14.0(H) 1,146,000 2,653,tK)0
3,264
213,529
841,411
855,506
333,355
....

400/00 1.316,401

City

Central
Bank of

Loan*.

....

113
....
....

....
....

....
....

561,021 1,024,628
359,302 1,036,663
521,000 1,651,000

674,000 2,267,000
1,253,000 3,7:15,000
316,720
839,700
762,700
221,890
140,600
338,U00
204,000
594,000

182,000 621,000
652,000 1,974,000
355,000 1,041,000
878,000
310,000

219,594

229,170
176,935

6,725
452,012
219.885
5*8,000
181,856
270,000

*

•

•

•

„

•

....

—

......

.

•

•

-

•

....

•

Stuyvesant*
Tenth.
Third

.

Tradesmen's
Union

•-.•••

Williamsburg City*

1(M)
100
100
41
50
50

200 0(H)

1,000,(MM) •Tan. and July... July
1,(MM),000 Ian. and July... July
1,000.000 Jan. and July... July
1.600. OH May and Nov... May

600,:)0<'}.rah. aud July.

:.4 97*

’68
’68

’68
’68

5
6

—

•>« ►

...51 18
co -S

.

Jan. ’68

9~

....

....

....

358,967
212,850
450,(KK)
227,000
799,000

BANKING AND FINANCIAL.

133,290
135,000
219,060

The first mortgage 7 per cent Fifty-year Gold
of
Rock Island and St. Lnuis Railroad Company are now selling at 95 per
cent of their par value in currency.
Interest is
the first of February and first of August, either in New York or

261,630

240,320
693,000

TO

INVESTORS.

Bonds

the Rockford

payable semi-annually
Lon¬

417,500 don, at the option of the holder.
175,000
Each bond is for $1,000 or £200 sterling, and both principal and
interest are payable in Gold Coin.
Total, June 29
16,017,150 63,072,878 198,563 16,414,877 43,930,629 10,(730,307
The Bonds are amply secured on over ‘20,000 acres of exceedingly
This column includes amounts due to banks.
valuable coal lands, and upon 200 miles of railroad traversing the finest
portion of Illinois. The company proposes to do the ordinary business
The deviations from last weeks returns are as follows
of a ia lroad, and also to mine aud seli coil or. the plan cf the Del¬

Exchange

1,000,000 1,784,060
300,000
955,000

....

..

*

Lackawanna and Western Company.
convertibility of the Bonds into stock gives the holders the pros¬
913
Decrease.
pect of realizingdhe large profits which have been made in the Illinois
Specie
Increase .
15,852
Central and the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Companies, as
The annexed statement shows the condition of the Philadelphia there can be no doubt that the future of the Rockford, Rock Island and
St. Louis Corny any will be equal in profit to either of these Companies.
Banks for a series of weeks.
Twenty-five miles of the division between the Chicago and North¬
Date.
*
Loans.
Specie. Legal Tend. Deposits.
Circula.
western and the Rock Island roads are now graded and ready for the
Apr. 4.
13.208.625
52,2(9.234
215,835
31,278,119 10,642,670
Apr. 11
52,256,949
250,-40
14,194/ 85
32.255.671 10,640,923 superstructure ; and the whole division of fifty miles cros ing the coal
52 989,780
Aor. 20
222,229
14,493,287
33,950,952 10,640,479 fields, and giving an outlet to the coal, will be in full operation by
Apr. 27
52,812,623
204,699
14.951,106
34,767,290 10,640,312 January 1, 1869.
63,3.33,740
May 4..
314,1366
14,990,832
35,109.937 10,631,044
It should be observed that there is a present and urgent demand f r
May 11
53,771.794
397,778
15,166,017
36,017,596 10,629,055
53,494.583
3S3,525
15,381,545
36,030.063 10,632,665 all the coal the Company can produce, aud at prices which will pay a
May 18.
May 25
'« 53,463,225
2S0,302
15,823,099
36,000.297 * 10,661,276
June 1
63,562,449
239,371
16,184,865
36,574,457 10,626,937 large profit.
The Bonds are for sale at the office of the Company, No. 12 Wall
June 8
53,491,364
226,581
16,078,308
42,910,499 10,630,945
Capital

Decrease.

Loans

.

...

$308,942

.Increase.

421.732

aware,

Increase.

693,067

The

.

June 15
June 22

63.122,521
*V* .381,820

175,308
182,711

June 29

S3 *tf,878

198,563




Legal-Tenders..
Deposits
Circulation

15,837,117
15,993,145
16,414,877

43,016,968
43,243,562

43,936,629

10,630,979 street
10,631,220

10,630,307

a

H. H. BOODY,

Treasurer.

15

THE CHRONICLE.

July 4,1868.]

EXCHANGE,
REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, JULY 3,
KB
WITH THE AMOUNT OF BONDS AND NUMBER OF ,iIARES SOLD AT BOTH BOARDS IN THE SAME WEEK.
SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK

STOCKS AND

Gold Coin (Gold

American

National:

-

Satur.j Aion.

SECURITIES.

jTues.

140* 140* 140*

hoorri)..

Sin*}
1

v>e-i

|

Eri. rWeek’sSules

hurts,

i

|ll3* *|
1)2*:

z
J-

do

6s,
5s,
5s,
6s,

,

1874
coupon.
1874. .registered.
5s, 10-40s ...coupon.
5s, 10-40s .registered.

107*

-llOl

—

State:

5s.....
Connecticut War Loan
Georgia 6s
Alabama

8!)

6s,cou., ’79,aft.’60-62-65-70
do
do 1877
do
do 1S79

do
do
do
do

Indiana be,
5s

19.000

86*

8,' 0 ■
5,‘.00
,,

do

j Morr

s &

i

New York 7s, 1870
-do
6s,1873
do
.5s, 1868-76
do
7s, State B’y B’ds (coup)
do
do
do
(reg.)
do
6s (old)
do
6s, (new)
Ohio 6s, 1870-75
do 6s, 1881-86
Tennessee 6s '68
do
6s (old)
do
6s, (new)

'xTG

,

New York 7s

6s 1876...
Rank Stock*

—

70

69*|
x58

1 />7

—

.’.’!*. .!

x59*
58

—

—

—

1

121

—

—

94*

No

x!45 '

—

44

—

1U5

*05

105

101*

104*

121

—

Leather Manufacturers...

—

.

—

1—

—

—

—

—

Nassau
Ninth
North River
Ocean

Phenix

—

>

111 >8*

l(
,1(
1(

no

Tenth

—

Tradesmen

Coal.—American

118

—

97

!—

it

—

—

)
)
)

134*

—

1

38

—

—

i

33

r

34*

140

~

)

—

—

8*
50

-

Cary

’Idegraph.—Western Union.

)
)
3
J

—

—

8
—

—

—-

31*

34*

’

[) 102*
3
5
3
3 51*
Ame«ican
:
3 42*
Merchants’ Union,.... .100 24*
3
3 46
3 26*

34*

Quicksilver

3

.....

84
Mtccdlaneous—Baukcrs & Bro. Ass->




8*
23*

11*
34*

99*1100*

26*
53*
44* i
24*
45*

52%
46*
25*
48
—

53*
47*
25%
49*

25*

10*

—

—
.

17*
—

—

10*
—

101% 109%

,20

22*

SCO

93

2,00c
10,000

I

do
do
3d mort, conv.
do
do
4th mortgage..
do
‘
do
Cons, mort bile
Cleveland and Toledo, Sink'g Fund
do do
new 7s.......

j 95

2,000

—96
95
93

9,000
500

80

do
do
do
2dm..
Detroit M. and Toledo bonds
Detroit & Milwaukee, 1st mort...
Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868
do 2d mortgage, 187!)
do 3d mortgage, 1883
do 4th mortgage,
‘ ‘ [ ]' ^
do 5th mortgage, 1888
Galena and Chicago, 2d
mortgage..
Great Faste/n, 1st mortgage ’88?.
Great Western, 1st mortgage
do
do
2d mortgage..
Hannibal and St. Joseph, conv. bds

1880..!

2,000

j 103*
'

3,000

98

■! 97*

96

11!.,

1,C00
77

78

21,0C0

76*

Cons’lidated & Sink Fund
do
3d mortgage, 1868
Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869.
do
2d mort, (S. F.), ’85
do
3d

mortgage, 1875...

do

convertible, 1867...

Illinois Central Bonds

45

Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72

.

Western, 1st mort

do
do
8s, new. 1882.!!.
Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund. 101*

do
do
2d mort..7s...
Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mort,.
do
2d mort..
1,400 Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage...
do
do
2d mortgage.
246
New Y’ork Ceutral 6s, 1883
do
do
68,1887.....!*’"
do
do
7s, 1876..
9001 New York A- N. II. bonds. 6s.....’!
3,900' Ohio and Mississippi, 1st mortgage
he
do
consol, bonds
1,00!
Pacific R R 7s guar’d bvS. of Mis
41)0
Peninsular RR., is morg •Hr0
6,411

21,830
400

53*
4S*
24*
49*
24*

53*
48
25
47

9,020
1,006

11,415I

do
do

101*

101 *
92*

i 90
94

90
94

50,4)1 0

90
1)5

18,000

1.10!

m.

190

Western Union Tel., 7s Bonds....

—

do

x!03

97*
95

82*

Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw, 1st E.D

22

1,200
7,850

2001

4,000

91*

do
do
2d mort.
do
do
3d mort.
Rensdaer and Saratoga, 1st mort..
St. Louis, Alton & Terre II, 1st m.
do
do
do
2d, iirt f
do
do
do
2d, inc.
St. Paul 1st Iowa Division
Toledo & Wabash, 1st mort.. ext..
do
do
2d mortgage,
do
do
equipment..

4,615!
7, 75:

do

do :

9,000

1,000

1 99*
—

3,OOC

! w

•

24%

8*
22*

—

3,000

99*

.

PittsVg, Ft. Wayne & Chic.,' 1st

A

8*

14,000

91*

.

25*

[)

3

10
49

101*

ft

Mariposa preferred....

—

—

19
8*

6,<>(!C
1,000
18

95

.

-Citizens
)

p. c.

do

Lackawanna

97

—

—

)

vas.

*98

106

do
Interest,
do 10 p. equipment
do
1st mort

2-0
95

_

:

)

Pennsylvania

—.—

—

115

—V 118

8t. Nicholas

Miscellaneous Stocks

14'

V.

!\—

125
100

do

137*

—

-

45

7,860
62,562

Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72.....

—

:

2* 0

.8,200

2,809

48.*
69*

93

Income

.

:

—

(-*00*j 96*;

18*

.

—

Fourth

1 -—i

5! Delaw’e, Lackawan. &West, 1st m..
20

:

—

—

—

103* 106

107

1

Commonwealth
Commerce

1.

—

16,346

102

Chicago. R. I. and Pac, 7 l ercent..! 98*
Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mort..

—

1

48

consolid’ted
Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mort l

—

:

67

2d mort

do

do
do
do

5,583

I ——!

1

,'101

7

100
5 939

134* 134%!

134

'

21,260

2C0
160

—

:

78*

109
240
500
300

Ronds:

do

.do

—

.100 121

| 92

Chicago & Northwest., Siuk. Fund

5,0iK)

,

American hxchange
Bank of America

1 92

•

222(|oo
12

£5*' 65
78*

5* 134*134

!•'

Chicago Su Great Eastern, 1st mort
j Chicago & Milwaukee, 1-t. mort...
4,0-HOoy-

71

K63

—

—

*!

I

10o

Chicago,Burl’ton & Quincy, 8

; 58

,

56

55

57*

71

:

78

jl05 | It 4* j
65

Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund,
do
do
1st mortgage...

1

Virginia 6s, (old)
do
6s, (new)
do
do Registered
Municipal:
Brooklyn 6s, Water Loan
do
6s, Imp’t Loan
Kings Country. 6s
Jersey City 6s, Water Loan

72*

do

do

49- nne

65*

79

91*}

! 91*1

Buffalo, N. Y. & Erie, 2d mort
Central of Nrw Jersey, 1st mort...

376,500}
wow:

} 9.2

——1

66*

Louis, Alton &> Terre Ilau'e.lOo
do
do
do preflOy,
Toledo, Wabash and Western. .10yi ‘t'"8
do
do
do preflOo ,~Z7
Rensselaer & Saratoga
lOy1 -'4

471,000;

76

j

92

St.

Railroad

71* x!2 1 72*

x73 * -a71

7 4*
x59
58

!| Rome &, Watertown

x>5*

:

1U5*;105* xl0l
5o|lU5*

Reading.

75*|

;
ZZ;

71

70

7_L-

—

J x76

.Jo

xWi x“6*

North Carolina, 6s

91*

30*| 29* 29* i 29* j 29* j
100,,no
Chic. 100i
ifr.r |*5:04]|iy9*Ty9 |iC9*|

Pittsburg, Fort Wayne &

-i

_

1

1U j ~~F

j

‘

‘

4.100

Panama

291,000
15,000

1
1

100

9IM)

157*

loo 30*;

Ohio and Mississippi
! do
do
pref

91*;
ZZi

i

|

t

100
100

43,650

1,450

I
1 50

•*->

22,S90
8,4.5

2(X)
900

157* 158

100

j

91%

‘^.i

133
135

87

.200

! Norwich and Worcester..

91*1

x91*

91

94*

Essex

1

,

23, ,13

’

140*

pref... 10)

;! New York Central
| New ’I 01 k and New Haven

—

i

:

do

j| New Jersey..,
—

!

—!

!; 75

100

Milwaukee <fc P. du Ch.lst pretlOO
do
do
2d pref 100
67
Milwaukee and St. Paul
100j ’’19

—

—;

i

|

1

Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st pretlOO,
do
do
2d pref 100

65,509

War Loan

Kentucky 6s, 1868-72
Louisiana 6s
...
Michigan 6s, 1883
.
.
do
7s, War Loan, 187S
Missouri os,
do
6s, (Han. & St. Jos. RR.)
do
6s, (Pacific RR.)

do

Illinois Central

1

1

~~

War Loan

'

do

j

i

t

j

100

..

!

1

27.270

1.9,970

j
|
'j ~
j
"j
'j
j
b8*‘l0*i69* 7l'*|

35,000;| Ind. and Cincinnati.

\

s96

99

Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860
do Registered, 1860

1,155,000

^

;

1(4/e ‘93* ,403*

100; ”*
pref.. 50

1

79* 1

79*

!04* llu*4Co 40o*
j ,^9*
1
A10;$*;‘01 j

100j '*6*. *5^
10

li udson River

75*

j»

_

71* ( 69?

100 j

Michigan Central
....100
Michigan So. and N. Indiana .100

!

r.i,

)6*

” '

-

Erie...
do preferred.. .3
Haunibaland St. Joseph,
do
do

—

—

7s (new)

do

1

sciip'50i

do

Harlem

<

.

do

.

09* 108* 1
109
L09*i

—

—

7-30sT. Notes. '2dse.\
do
do
3d series 110

do

Dubuque & Sioux City

107*'j 107

j 107* 107

730

100
5

71*1,73*

pref.iooj ‘9*

do

50.1’ ^
1,278,500, Cleveland and Toledo
Delaware, Luckawana and West —j

'8,000

200
2SS

ilS

;-137* I13S

Cleveland,Paincsv.& Ashtabula 100} — —
Cleveland and Pittsburg
50: 39* •

344,500:

eek’s Sal*

do

do

520,50*1
20,0i K)

102*

Pacific R. R ., is.
1871 ..registered.

do

50,0' 0

109

10 •*

r.ri. |

hurt

—1124

121*

578,400: Chicago, Rock Island and Pac lOOi^o* 1'-4;*,
Cleveland. CoL Cin. and Ind. ...10(0
; 90

i " **!
' 109* 109 ! 108*
*0X4,
1114* 1.14

6s, 5.20s do regist'd
6s, 5.20s (1867) coup.
68, 5.20s
do regwd
6s, 5 20* (1868) coup.
6s, 5.20s do regis'd
6s, Oregon Wa. 1881
6s,
do. (* v'rlh)

1

No.

100
100
100

....

preferred
lOOj -—j
oo.oiK); Chicago, Burlington and Q,uincyl00 154 !
256,500 Chicago and Northwestern
100j J1 ;
782.850

j 1 i0* 1»0* |

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

Boston, Hartford and Erie
Central of New Jersey
Chicago and Alton

$73,000
52,500

113*{113*

—

To

Wed.

Men. lues.

1

Railroad Stocks :

1140* j 140* 140* j

United States 6s, 1881
coupon.
—{113*}
do
do
6s, 1881. .registered.
do
6s, 5-20s ('(i'i)coupon. 113* Jll«% 1113* 112*1:13* i
do
10'.**; —i:»9% ion* ion*1
do
6s, 5-20s do regist'd
do
Ill
110* 110*
do
6s, 5-2Os(’lH)c0«/w/J.
do
j
do
6s, 5.20s do regist'd l11ly!ll1l/,M3/,11ll7/,)11v M1 v
do
do
6s, 5.20s (’65) coupon) 111* HlX; ^1* Id)* 111*;.41*
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

Saiur

SECURITIES.

bTOt'KS AND

TOGETHER

82*

W D|

I

5,000
5,600

91

t

82
;

——

85

91

82

82*

6,000

86

6,000
1,000
2,5 00

87

[90*

p.'*4£a«vMIit

THE CHRONICLE.

16

Exports of .Leading Articles from New York.

The

following table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows theexports of leading articles of commerce from the por of New York
since
January 1, 1868. The export of each article to the several porta
for the past week can be obtained by deducting the amount ?n the last,

<EI)e Commercial $ime0.
COMMERCIAL EPITOME.
Friday Night,

July 3.

number of the Chronicle from that here given :
c—

V

with the
intense hot weather, and some political excitement, has brought
approach of the National Holiday, together

The

[July 4,1868.

«

p,

ri

O’- t-ionci
TT 'x?

^

JC

35

vj —1 CO O
™ IS

-•

_

3 5 H Tr o ci'jc*'oVfid
Cl

03

f-n-

=2
^ C '/) O C. W O c - 1iv
SO®(OMwOCC!®l*«©»n
^ r-H
W
.t- as Ci cc
1(5
® iopphocow
trfr^ccr-^ia jcT-Tt-ti-T'soco oaofci C103 co 2faTo io w cs cf ci
c iq o; &ci
w
in 'c
l-®CiMCniOJ
d T-I
THIO
ri Cl t-I
t-1
..

X <7*

CIX

o o co>-icn o co

t* w n co
^
"f
O O OO H O .J t/j t- D Plio n* to
O ’T I
c/j f- 50
3
rH C5

*

rtJOrl'CW

Cl O Cl 03

<7I

'T

.

Pt

n

nearly to a stand still, transactions only to be effected
by accepting lower prices. The exceptions to this remark are
very few.
Cotton has been firmer, and Tobacco steady; but Breadstuffs, Groceries, and many other staples have declined.
We have very little of interest to advise in the Provision
market, business in all styles being very dull, and prices gene¬
rally unsettled. Holders not feeling the want of funds arc
unwilling to press sales, and in most cases ask about former
artes, while buyers refuse entirely to operate except through
necessity, and even then do considerable shopping before
business

Taken altogether the provision

closing transactions.
is in about

flat,

as

a

condition

as

to

have

Leather is

less demand and

been in

scarcely

so

firm.

steady, but less active.

Naval Stores have

materially declined,

Spirits Turpentine

: m
'17"’-*

:
’

03.

- —

£? o? r-'Tf
£ 27 ci *c

.

CJ (Ol

.

more

J.

“v

Ol

1

pa «*

s

■-

i

active.

quiet and prices are without essential
change, but rather firmer, owing to tariff schemes.
Wool has been somewhat depressed by liberal receipts of
the newr clip, but holders are generally firm.
Whiskey has met with a large demand for bonded at 30@
35c, according to quality and other circumstances;
Freights have been quite dull, except in Grain to Great
Britain of which the shipments have been to the full capacity
of the steamers, at 5@6d per bush, with some flour at Is 7-Vd
(gls 9d per bbl. according to port, and a few hundred bales
of Cotton to Liverpool at 3*16d@£d.
Small vessels are
accepting charters for Lumber and Staves.
Jan* 1.

>

00

;

This
week.
Rosm
Tar
Pitch
Oil cake,

Since
Jan.l.

time’(57

8,036 21(5,571

Same

Jan.l. time’67

^

§

2S
377

25,210
6,821

03 1- ©

332,375 2,745,154 1,020,403 Oil, petroleum 13,835 299,659
2,813 187,933
68,180 Peanuts, bags 1,811
24,143
Rye
Malt...
23,103 323,629 274,830 Provisions
43.S69 Butter, pkgs. 11,273 210,9S9
406,818
Barley
35,958 2:43,028
46,318 Cheese
Grass seed..
59,054

455,075
12,139

2,334
■3(55

....

....

....

7,720 Cut meats...
16,8(56 Eggs
281,774 Pork.
41.403 Beef, pkgs...
212,871 Lard, pkgs..

C.ineal, bbls.
O.meal, bags.
Lard, kegs
Buckwheat &
8,272
6,085 bice, pkgs. .
B.W.llour,pkg
4,246 357,755 390,(51(5 j Starch
Cotton, bales.
776
9,078
5,403 Stearine
Copper, bbls..
520
979
7.058 Spelter, slabs.
Copper, plates
213
21,039 Sugar, hhds.&
Dr’d fruit,pkg
13,561
3,268
9,972 bbls
Grease, pkgs.
54
5(55 Tallow, pkgs.
232
Hemp, bales..
6,364 289,(543 183,302 Tobacco,pkgs
Hides, No....
136
3,170
3,137 Tobacco, hhds
Hops, bales..
Leather, sides 48,098 529,257 1,313,5(58 Whisky, bbls.
650
1,193 Wool, bales
3,351
Lead, pigs ...
Dressed hogs,
Molasses, hhds
213
and bbls
12,905 No
10,671
..

.

Naval St ires Crude trp.bbl

bpirits lurp.




Rice,
29

4.729

1,847

27,783

3,690 bush

28,229]

•

JCCJTTTCr^TnOjO
ci
ci
c<^£

1-

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:

7

7

c«

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r-

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—

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•

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•

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^

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^

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K3 T-I

•

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■CC

•

Cl CC IO

■

T-i

.

t-I

003

pos‘t-1

.
.

'T

Cl

T-i jo CO
1Cl i
t- C» CO

iT-igj-r

•

.

;

<?*

ri

Cl T-I

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1=1 IO

t-oig

.
'

-

.

Cl Ki

1(3 TH O

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03

-

03

•

.

•

i- }- >r
r.M CC i-

£ 03
03

,

73

■

to
(/o

"

.

r-« oo-

’

l- X3

C*.

03 cr IO cr.
*-• 04 JJ

r—* rJ~ H CO w
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03
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zl £ 71 *o :

:^03CICI^^ :55:
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r-ici'io rfc1 cf
CC

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TT

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to

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03 03 I-3
m 1.-3

si

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CO

3

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rx

03

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i/3 o

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f-1,1

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-—£3

CO

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JC 33 Cl JO CI 33
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d CO

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:x=

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£, 1"

JO JO

Cl

o 03 O
TT1 01

CC CJ t03

o
CD

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't-iccjO't.jo

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5 S5
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.

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g < .2 pgg

CO *2 03 CO O

•

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~r
J-

•

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.ci

•

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£ t:
CO
03 ^ 03 JO

§
o

I

•
•

CI C*1

•

CC

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,

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.rf « Cl

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; £-03
’jo-

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113 JO

.

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02
o
l-l

JO Cl -o o
ci ci o. o

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tL3

03 O CI f- t- ^ 30 ci C»
■TH^nij r.tc-r t-03

307

(51,335

4,(56S 140,683
1,399 97,251
70
528
550
12

6,087
191

85,970

59,998
8,909
7,282
66,673
8,409

-

2,702

.

.

1'3

01_

Cl

•

Ci

"

o>

o

a
•

•

.

•

•

•

70

• H
-ci

03

•

.

o

cj 10

•

r-

•

cp

•

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.

CO »2 JC »(3
»(3 ~ CJ to
J_ l-

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-j* I— JO

<

(— -«

<03

Ol
JJJ

ri CO

JO

d d

JO
o
~

t

♦

*

JO

—

tH

-3 I/ij

o

C7CC-C CO
03 JO

r-T cTcT

t;th

'

03 t-

JO J13 t-

'1-tro
O 03- >0

CO CC
• GO CO
•

CI 03

-3 73

.0 OCO '-t (•

gf

Ticf

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ci"-3"
Cl

*

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.

y X

•
,

.

03

JO

cr.
00 Ol

--I

.03

03C^t3I

CD

.

rtH

33,52(5

pkgs

533.506 8,812,02-1 3,387,564 Oil, lard.

23,204
179,840
4,124 80,608
542 214,410

f?

C 1(3 O
•CCH
•
•tr 03 ci

.

o

03 Ci

'

:i

11,219
3,310

B</aus
Peas....

o

;;oci •
‘cT

cT cT t— tjT

165,173

Same

18,756
5,637

4,034

•
•

CO JO
JC JC

1

ci (-3 T-I

o^ot-1-

receipts of domestic produce for the week and since Jan. 1
follows:

144
228

;

C3

o* JO 03
CC JC c

■ClOcot•

•"

nd for the same time in 1867, have been as

Flaxseed....

•

•

tlie Week and Mince

Receipts of Domestic Produce for

717,170

CD IO

iji

~

O'"'

g .2

.

Metals have been

Coru
Oats

rr

.

oT '

.

sp

03

05

699,158

r-7 Cl 7?

iJ1

drooping, especially Linseed and

3,247

'

CC CC I—

1

CC d c-

Cl

■Cl

Ashes, pkgs..
217
3,031
Breadstutfs—
Flour bbls..
35,622 532,034
Wheat, bush 97,7243,726,595

u, c cc

•T-jCI03t-C3l.'3TTlO:CCJC'«-i

.

•

rr^ci

*

•

<Vj

Sperm.

week.

O 03 Cl

I

N

Ci

•3

Since

..

—

C<

03

O

This

Cl

T?i

generally declined. Manila Hemp
10c., gold, and Calcutta Linseed at $2 14, gold, to arrive
Boston.
Gummy cloth sold at 2 2c., currency, but is not

The

t-i

Cl

East India Goods have

i

•

•

1

at

■

.CO
03
CJ

JO K3 d
1—1 lO Cl

1.0 Cl Cl

03 O? JO

oo

>

and unsettled.

to

COwtiC;

o

experienced a slight rally, with a large business
for delivery at Philadelphia at 31(V/);»fi on the spot and to
arrive for standard refined in bond, and the close is excited

Crude

-r :c 10

jo

•

Petroleum

and

=

co«

^

Cl

active at the concession.

Oils have been dull

iPiisui
10 TH

TH«f»hVq

s

fO rH

closing dull at 4 4c., and Strained liositis $2 7595, the
latter

•

T—1

ca o

Hides

-~I

.

T—1

•r-i

trade.

.-i

Cl

!►

with

revival of

nothing at the moment to indicate a very early

22 T-i

^

market

have ever seen it,

we

►J

1 sssgs

"I- 33

m

'
’

K3 CC

'

K3 —3

K3 03

co"t-

263,982
294,973

78,242

•
•

15

>,863
115,936
25,613
95,005.
7,305
8,545

•

Tf f- Cl
GO 03
t—1 JO

3 3
— O Ci JC t3 ~ o: 3C »(3 03 |n 03 CJ CJ I-rf—CJCI OTjo^^jOOTfi3i-l
■Otl"J2«T t'00 CO ^
^ErdciocCJiOt-JO—!•*-'Crow* hch
'(3 t- t3
K3 03 GO
3
JC Cl Ci to JC *r
1- Oj
•

• T3 JO

iq
JC

O^i/jOt-CTroi
TTf-t^ 03 t-i
IT- JO -«• CI Cltfcp 03 cfo
Cl
03 CO
03 O

pa

T-I T-I

TC T-T
>CtJ*

03"cf CC 03 cf
Cl 003

ri

t-

hh

Cl

*

03 ^3 xcA &
Ul

103,41S

rti

<V

A

to to to

=

5.507

^2 ^3 ^

.

to

to

M CC
^ O

to to

«

to w m

ci s-1

2

n

tn

to to to to to to to to to to to to w to m &

*■ g

so

to tc 6D

^2

■

•

•

-rt] oj u’j

rx

2

:

btr° c» o o o © o
: ^goooo
•

2,801
678

156

3,543

2,990

O’635

1,759

1,379
37,334
28,890
12,117

5,829

31,683

14,428

g-j

67,766

p

<v

j,

h

47,609
84,207
26,783

Ck

•

•

o i. to

•

•

•

:

•

j,

d^

oj

a n
®

!

J

C

o

a

to'

'PS

b I
°
k-o 2

-fod

:
-

;

.

7

•

a.

cC

o o ooc
S0153*-' 5 r b

pa

.

'J c

pi

a. 93 o

3,964

0)

1 o c^P^MWWojJ
S
„

rough,

fc.

•

cp

•

79,873

•

.Co® oti Oc3

'U P

O

J
c

.

tr

•

:
.

eJ

:

2®

d

?

O

ci

: o o

..

*4000.

*3

Imports of Leading Articles*

to about,

following table, compiled from Custom House returns, show3
foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this port
the last week, since Jan. 1, 1868, and for the corresponding period

The
the
tor

in 1867:

otherwise specified.]

[The quantity is given in packages when not
Since
For
Jan. 1,
the
week.
1868.

For
Since
the
Jan.1.
week.
1868.

1S67.
Molasses

Chinn. Glass 5b Earthcmv’e.
China
Farilicnwarc
Glass
Glassware
Glass plate .
Hattons

40

3,078

3,615
22,275
188,202

100
235
141

36.897
3,005
3.671

846

27,771

48,65!)

Cocoa, hags:..
Coffee, bags
24,383

7.448

10,558

587,55 4

56

245

408.218
230

Gail, tons

....

....

..

Cotton, bales.

....

Hark. Peruv
Blea p’wd’rs
Brims# tns.

251

Cochineal...
Cr Tartar
Gambicr....

^

180
35

...

Rags
Sugar,

104

278

24,873

2,119

431

580

Opium

Champ, bkts

2,550

54,854

1(8

88,<326 Fish

1,268

12,040 Fruits, &c.

Soda, ash...

780

25,566
10,870

Gunny cloth

905

1,76S

40

Hides,dres’d

250

4,252

India rubber...
Ivorv

106
18

17,760
051

130,i 25

143,162

4,606

407,S54

280,701
658,454

6,70,8
2,018

70,953
.

.225,731

636,557

439,683
452,472

111,254

178

46.612

27,501
100 0(5

71,598

COTTON.
Friday, F. M., July 3, 1S6S.

1 SEPT. 1.
SINCE

PORTS.

N.Orleans, June 26.
Mobile, June 26...
Charleston, June 2C
Savannah, Juue 26.
Texas, June 10
New York, July 3*.

Florida, June 26t..
Carolina, Jun. 26
Virginia. June 26..
Other ports,Jun 26*

Great

France Other

Britain.

'580,597

for’gn.
325,733 145,647 100,663
210,282 10,432 14,925
2,036 13,226
88,000
238,406 0,004 0,105
1.625 19,140
39,G70
286,757 26,116 56,027

238,750
486,787
108,460
10S.239

N.

152,008
60,304

STOCK

NORTH.

Total.

TORTS.

30,504
37,3S3

852.713

578,04S

90,449

5,006

235, C39

47,030

104,762

132,955

257,505

225,467

7,109
7,064
5,032

60,435
3GS,900

35,655

4,037

50,324
15.004

170

37.383
8.283

8,283
3,064

18,311

144,715

21,375

....

1,216,042 106,660 222,245 1,634.047 j
1,813,091 1,145,494 101,0501118,662 1,456, lOC'l

i720,000

728,667 08,832

Total this year.. 2,156,734

each of
ports we are in possession of the returns show¬
ing the receipts, exports, &c., of cotton for the week ending
this evening, July 3.
From the figures thus obtained it
appears that the total receipts for the last seven days have
l‘>y special telegrams received by us to-night from

bales (against 2,'/Cl bales last week, 4,011

708,318 206,479

Early in the week, with liberal offerings, the demand was
small and the market dull, but without any quotable change
in prices.
On Tuesday spinners bought more freely, especially
of the lower grades.
On Wednesday, notwithstanding the

unfavorable reports from Liverpool, the demand on the part of
spinners was quite active, with a.considerable speculative move¬
ment, resulting in an upward turn in prices, which has contin¬
ued in spite of the adverse European advices, Middling Up¬
lands being
stock of the

quoted this afternoon at the close at 32 cents. The
higher grades is now very small, and the receipts

i v

continuing extremely limited, holders are very firm. The sales
of the week foot up 13,097 bales, of which 3,515 bales were
taken by spinners, 9,972
bales on speculation, and 210
bales for

The following

export.

the Southern

reached 3,305

smr-

m’ntbto

268,055

Logwood
Mahogany..

26
....

25,561

10,053

Woods.
Fustic.

49

Watches
Linseed

68,7.1

350,124

Nuts.
Raisins.'....

Jewelry, Ac.

Jewelry

51.31

75,267 Rice

Hides, &c.
Bristles

4,304

2,100 nides,ui:drsd. 27,566 3,006,372 5,258,019
35,600 536,896 180,151
Spices, &c.
72,541
Cassia
27
73,125
1,016
30,110
4.614
20,120
Ginger
166,502
23.8SS
128,536
Repper
31,678
3,431
1,346 Saltpetre

3,343
60,141

7

Hemp, bales.. 11,778

15,010

102,503

Oranges....

21.322

7,349

184,251
147,828
647,820

1 TO—

EXPORTED SINCE SEPT.

rec’d

30.225

542.146 1,016,440

3,172

Lemons

3,02 4

.

...

.

Hair

13,

645

11
2S9

'.

40.366
49,066
14.SS3

(Fancy goods.. 26,071

Soda, sal....
Furs

564

4,700
5,225

Wines

Soda, bi-carb

Flax

023,660
10,376

2,026 Articles reported by value.
2 03- Cigars
3 3.279 $276,125
5.103
06,560
ID,87a | Corks

4,041

3

Oils, ess...-;
Oil, Olive...

262,0S0
351,574

023
20

1.718 Wool, bales...

2.652

«...

172.302

hhds,

tcs&bbls.. 13,350

n

Stocks at Dates Mentioned*

,115,054

Tin slabs,lbsl29,115

9,310
2,551

1,017

....

3,138,036
1,435
21,812

10,614
Tin, boxes.. 27,752

84,635

are

Elccelpts and Exports of Cotton (bales) since Sept. 1, and

121.03,
312,404

Steel

to-night

they were at this time a year ago. The follow¬
ing is our usual table showing the movement of cotton at all
the ports since Sept. 1, according to the latest mail returns
We do not include our telegrams to-night, as we cannot
ensure the accuracy or obtain the detail necessary by telegraph.

226,612

04,589
372,412

158,000 bales, while the stocks

bales less than

830,751

1.328.Tobacco
768 Waste..-.
11.847 Wines, &c.

364

....

Gum, Arabic
Indigo
Madder

1,883
5,662

3,068.114

16,13!) Sugar,bxs&bg 12,052
16,151
0,433 Tea

868

1867.

97,100

3,062
274,031
223,570

Spelter,lbs

5.473

12,403

Gums, crude

1.S41

50

Iron,RRb’rs 25,0>7
Lead, pigs.. 5,452

....

6,406
15,001
5,00!)
2,363

117,704

35

Cutlery
Hardware...

....

Drags, tfcc.
321
058

8,820

Metals, <&c.

2,588

062

..

17

THE CHRONICLE.

July 4,1868.]

the closing quotations

are

Upland &

New
Mobile.

Florida.

$ B>

Ordinary
Good Ordinary
Low Middling
Middling

:

Tex.*??

Orleeis

20 ©....
20#©....
30 ©
S0#@
31 ©.... # 31#©,...
32 ©....
32#©....

29%

29#©....
30#©
31#©....
32#@

30%
31%
32%

give the price of middling cotton at tin’s market
previous week, and 3,5*79 bales three weeks since,) each day of the past week :
making the aggregate receipts since September 1, 1807,
Upland &
New
Florida.
Mobile.
Orleans.
Texas.
up to this date, including the returns by telegraph to¬ Saturday
31#©....
31%© ...
32 ©....
32#©....
31%®....
31#©....
32 ©....
32#©....
night, 2,100,039 bales, against 1,823,023 bales for the same Monday..:.'
Tuesday
32 ©....
32#®....
31#©...,
31 %® ...
Wednesday
32 ©32#
32#©32%
31#©32 j
31%©32#
period in 1800 7, being an excess this season over last Thursday
32 ©..
32#® ...
32%©......
32#©....
32#®
32 ©
32#@
32%©..._
season of 337,010 bales.
The details of these receipts for this Friday
week, (as per telegraph) and the corresponding week of 18G7?
The exports of Cotton this week from New York are very
are as follows.
It will be noticed that the Savannah receipts
small, reaching only G9.8 bales, against 1,358 bales last week
are again quite liberal, being
1 ,100 bales for the last seven Below we give our table showing the exports of Cotton from
Below

we

bales the

.

...

days.

^-Receipts.

1

lS07.

1808.

Received this week at—
bales.
New Orleans
Mobile
Charleston
Savannah
Texas

|

2,156

1,101
58
273

415 1
1.737 I

1,160
14!)

1,231 |
1,181 I

286

677

Tennessee, Ac

1|

.—Receipts.-^
Received this week at--

1S68.
3
bales

Florida!

28

North Carolina
Virginia

247

1S67
os
114

320
—

Total

receipts
3,305
Decrease this year....

7,032-

4,627

York, and their direction for each of the last four
weeks ; also the total exports and direction since September
1 1867 ; and in the last column the total for the same period
of the previous year:
New

Exports of Cotton

exports for the week ending to-night reach a total of
only 4,340 bales, of which 4,309 bales were to Great Britain,
and 31 bales to the Continent, while the stocks, as made

(bales) from New York since Sept. 1,1847

The

this evening, are now reduced to 92,721 bales. Below
we give the exports and stocks for the week, and also for the
corresponding week of last season, as telegraphed to us by our
own correspondents at the various ports to-night:
up

Week ending

Exported to

,

G't Britain.
June 26.
1,611
New Orleans
;
Mobile
Chariest on
‘
Savannah—
1,400
Texas
All oilier ports.
1,19!)
..

.

•

,

.

.

•

....

...

,

..

,

,

.

.
•

. .
.

.

.
.

Total....

...

.

4,300

Same week
1867.

•

0 •

....

4,023

4,376
6,085

1S5

1,230

31

4,310

24,257

1,400

Stock——,
1S6S.

0,055

31

....

,

6,773

3,299
2,866
6,506

....

...

...

Total

1,611

...

>

..

>

Cuntin’t. this week.

18()7.
56,107
12,785

3,230

70.491

8,838
10,007
05,480

02,721

187,356

4,700

1,011

foregoing statement it will be seen that, compared
with the corresponding week of last season, there is a decrease
in the exports this week of 19,917 bales, so that the former
increase in the total shipments since Sept. 1, 1807, as com¬
pared with the same period of the previous year is now reduced
From the




1

WEEK ENDING

-

Total
EXPORTED TO

June

June

I

0.

Other British Ports

Total to Gt.

..

....

Havre*
Other French ports

s>

279,398 345,624
7,359
6,057
286,757 351,681
25,013

27,105
6

31

26,116

27,201

100

32,372

34,476

11,385

14,589

6,832

6,582

50,589

55,647

2,172
3,266

1,851

5,438

2,S03

368,900

! 437,332

31

115
1

318'

....

sio

72

Total to N. Europe

1

Gibraltar....
....

Spain, etc

•

..J

....

|
!

....

....

100

543

1

•

•

•

•

....

....

e

....

1

....

•

359

....

310

72

..

225

....

....

Grand Total

567

815

prev.
year.

203

....

Hamburg
Other ports

Total

....

115

Bremen and Hanover

Spain, Oporto and

567

815

to

date.

••••

-

Total French—

All others

1

June
30.

.

471

287

Britain..

23.

'471

287

Liverpool:

June

16.

Same
time

896

e

@

! 1,358 j

698

* The
receipts given for these ports arc only the shipments from
Kentucky, <fcc., not otherwise enumerated.
t These are the receipts at Apalachicola tc March 14, and at
ports of Florida to June 26
i

052

Tenncsse.
the other

Estimate

i

THE CHRONICLE,

18

Receipts of cotton at the port of New York for the week
and since Sept. 1:
This
week.
Bales.

From
New Orleans
Texas
Savannah

Bales.

45,811

1,718

25,840

5(57
87 6
695

-

Mobile
Florida
Total for the week
Total since Sept. 1

Since
This
week. Sept. 1.
Bales. Bales.
£59
97,800
18
27,667
306 100,071
&c..
176 115,394

Since

Sept. 1.

From
South Carolina
North Carolina

Norfolk, Baltimore,

109,333
9,709
14,482

Per Railroad

601,107

The following are the receipts of cotton at Boston,
for the last

tember

Phila-

since

week, and

Sep-

1, 1807:
/—Boston.—,
Last
Since
week. Sep. 1.
42.567
5.119
18.737

Receipts from—
New Orleans
Texas..
Savannah
Mobile
Florida
South Carolina
North Carolina

'

-

..

-

-

^-Philad’phia.—,
Last
week.

Since

Sep. 1.
5,316

^

’. bales.

50

•

31,832

....

•

•

«

....

12,615
4,820

711

+29,317

93,723

Shipping News.—The exports of cotton from the United
States the past week, as per mail returns, have reached

1865. 1866.
Mid. Sea Island 34d. 27d.

Upland...

-..

11%

..

-..

Good.

20
14

..

12
12%-..
13
13

18
12

13
13

11%
11%
11%

33
17

14

14

19%

12%

11%

u%

1867. 1868

18%d.l3%dll%d. 10%
12%
Egyptian.. 17
9%
Broach.... 12
6%
7%
8
Dhollerah. 12%
6%
7%
8

11% 1
n% |

11%
1J%

13%

20

1S65. 1866.

1867. 1868. 1
lSd.
26d. | Mid. Pernamb

1 2%

Mobile
Orleans

1

Since the commencement of the year
been to the following extent:

.

speculation and export have
’

,

^—Actual export

from
Liverpool, Hull and

/—Taken

other outports
4o this date—.
1867.
1868.
bales.
bales.

to thisdate-»
1866,
bales.
bales;
92,130
52,570
4,4(0
15,010

on spec,

1868,

1867,

bales.

American..... .201,510
41,370

Egyptian. &c.. 36,74)
West India, &c 3,180
East India, Ac. 78,640

5,960
850
38.310

Total.... 361,470

102,100

2.460

271,799

1867.

bales.

22,660
664,150

569,859

c

227,900
87,740
12,590

7,2-6

156,392

163,060

K’gdom in

197,607

5,570
6,074

43,080

Actnal

exp’t Irom

122,246
36,018
6,702

77,181
24,582

10,380

Below

1,015,040

we

have been made:

SALES, ETC., OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS.

Total bales
City of Paris, 231

Exported this week from—
New York—To Liver ool, per

steamers Erin. 227
City of Washington, 103
Aus'ialasian, 6.
To Havre, per steamer Ville de Paris, 31
To Bi emen, per ship Car, 1(0
New OiiLEaNs—To Liverpool, per bark Eva, 680
To Havre, per ships Roche ter, 1,259
Bazaar, 2,020
Mobile—To Liverpool, per bark Prairie Bird, 1,455
To Barcelona, per brig Adela, 24 *
Galveston—To Bremen, per bark Iris, 1,343
Norfolk—io Live pool, per baik Pawnee, 44

Total exports of cotton from the United States this week

.

particulars of these shipments, arranged in
form, are as follows :
,

From
New York
New Orleans
Mobile

pool.
567

*

.bales.

our

Exported this week to
Liver-

Havre,

1,455

usual

men.
100

Iona.

Total.

....

216

1,343

Norfolk

2,746

698

3,959
1,701
1,343
44

44

Total

3,310

1,413

216

7,745

By Telegraph.—We have

given above the week’s receipts, exports
reported to us in our telegrams received to-night
ports.
As the following despatches contain some

and stocks of cotton
from the various
other items of

as

news we

give them in full

port.
5,780
15.430 2,970

Egyptian

3,070
!;770
15,890

West Indian
East Indian

Total

10
6,500

American..
Brazilian

New Orleans, July 3—Cotton firmer: middlings 30% cents.
SaPs 545
bales; receipts 341 bales; exports 3,098 bales, t^ales of the week 2,033 bales
Liverpool 1,611 bales; coastwise 2,598 bales ; receipts 1,101 bales; stock by
actual count 6,055 bales.

Mobile, July 3.—Sales <-f (he day 450 ba’es, restricted by the high prices de¬

manded ; middlings 29% cents. Receipts 17 bales; export< coastwise 1,235
bales. Sa!es ol the week 2,005 bales; receipts 53 bales; exports—coastwise
288 bales ; foreign none. Stock 4,376 bales.

Galveston, July

3.—Receipts of the week 149 bales. Exports, foreign,
Stock 1,011 bales. Good Ordinary nominal at 18(gHS%c.

The Growing Crop.—We hear

crop, all our reports
in those sections where the plant has

and

Indian Ootton Markets.—In reference to these

mar

kets, our correspondent in London, writ9s as follows :*
Liverpool, June 20.—The cotton market opened with a flat anc
heavy appearance, and American product declined in value to the
extent of fd per lb.
On less favorable advices from the United States
respecting the crop the market became much firmer, and, in some
instances, a slight advance on the quotations of last week has been
obtained. The chief alteration is a rise of |d. in American cotton.
For latest news respecting the Liverpool cotton market see
Telegraph dis¬
patches at the close of our London letter in a previous part oi this paper,—[AcL
0

UoKKKficiiL & Financial C’hboniqlx.




1868.
1867.
26.570 20,950
9,400
4,730
4,070
3,850
1,430
1,590
10,080 12,500

990

19,390

314,280

3,270
1,780
23,530

148,810
45.750
570,520

.

1,140

ports.

18(58.

1867.

Im-

Same

This
day.

Total.
.

1867.

999,051
322,946

911,2081,220,335
270,656 433,946

361,390
128,670

1,122

126,745

135,983 197,788

58,90

1.386

33,568
234,712

60,590 107,017

356,5791,261,160

11,250
48,690

28,5151,717,0551,735,0163,223,276

611,980

6,119

Total

date Dec. 31.
1867.
1867.
438.780 103,420
1452,420
66,030
56,730
38,990
25,400
13,640 “
141,120
225,380
^

11,217
8,671

East Indian

,

43,620

88,770 2,025,0501,584,630 51,550

To this
date

824,450

447,460

Of the present stock of cotton in Liverpool, 59 per cent is American,
against 53 per cent last year.
Of Indian cotton the proportion is
7£ per cent, against 17 per r.eut.
London, June ‘10.—During the early part of the week the cotton trade
was dull, but at the close there was a
good demand, and the quotations
had

an

upward tendency.

*'
-

There is

Friday, P. M., July 8, 1868.

considerable increase in the exports of crude "
tobacco this week, tbe total at all tbe ports reaching 4,080
a

774 bales, 59 tierces against 2,805 hhds.,
257 cases, 594 bales for the previous seven days.
Of these
exports 1,9.36 hhds., 1,570 cases, 713 bales, 59 tierces were
from New York; 486 hhds. from New Orleans ; 1,633 libels',
and 6 cases from Baltimore; 10 hhds. 9 cases and 61 bales
from Boston and 15 hhds. from Philadelphia. The direction of
the shipments of hhds. was as follows: 829 hhds. to Great
Britain; 1,783 hhds. to Bremen ; 503 hhds. to Amsterdam ;
513 hhds. to Cadiz; 342 hhds. to Vigo ; 46 hhds. to Havre ;
and the balance to different ports. During the same period
the exports of manufactured tobacco reached 70,618 lbsThe full particulars of the week’s shipments from alP the
bhds., 1,585

cases,

_

nothing new this week with regard
continuing very favorable. Even
been backward, the late fine grow,
ing weather has improved its appearance greatly, giviug it a strong
.healthy growth, while the fields are clear of weeds and grass.
In
'Louisiana and vicinity the crop is very forward and promising.
Oi.r
reports from that section are far more encouraging than at any period
Of course there are very many contingencies which
since the war.
ports were as follows :
may affect the maturing plant adversely, but at present the prospect of
Export’d this week from
a good yield in all the cotton growing States are
very fair.
New York
cotton

.European

1867.
717,050
159,490
105,460
50,720
551.910

Average

TOBACCO.

Charleston, July 3.—Cot<on receipts this week 273 ba’es ; exports foreign
none ; coastwise 717.
Stock 6,085 bales. Market lirmer. Middlings 30%(a*31c.

to the

weekly sales.

130

62,230 15,330 11,210

This
week.

Same

period

tion. Total, year.
8,950 40,800 945.(590

70

:

Savannah, July 3.—The receipts this week are 1.160 bales: exports foreign
none; to domestic ports 1,313 bales. Market firm. Middlings 31c., scarce.
Stock 4,700 ba es.

1,499 bales.

Trade,
Brazilian...-,

Total

this

,

Specula-

American—bales. 26.U70

V\vest Indian

*

3,279

Galveston

Ex-

Egyptian

,

Barce-

....

Sales this week.

*

7,745

Bre31

GS0

567
31
1*0
680
3,279
1,455
246
1,343
44

>...

The

-

Fair.

-66
-19

The following
give a list of the vessels in which the week and statement shows the sales and imports of cotton for
year, and also the stocks on baud on the evening of
shipments from all the ports, both North and South, Thursday last, compared with last year:

7,745 bales.

_

36
17

following figures show the price of middling qualities of cotton

Brazil

Reshipments.
t This total does not include the railroad receipts at Philadelphia.

*

9%-10% 11%
9%-10% 11%
9%-lU% 11%
9%-10% 11%

Same date 1867->

,

fine.—, Mid.

at this date since 1865:

26,472

♦

these

New Orleans
Texas

....

110

126

4

Mobile.

29 -30
14-16

S5,154

....

..

216,030

....

322
10
81

3.852
1.555
303

57.940

14,327

....

....

21,322

770

ise

26
13

23
11

Stained

The

G’d &

^-Ord. & Mid—, g’d fair—.

Sea Island

....

18,118

....

14.386
370

Total receipts

Baltimore.-^
Since
Last
week. Sep. 1.
147

203

50

770

^-Fair &

Description.

188
76

21,767

Virginia
New York, *c*
Tennessee, Kentucky, &c...

Brazilian, after declining pd., and East Indian nearly £d., close at last
week’s quotations. The total sales of the week amount to 88/770
bales,
of which 11,210 bales are on
speculation, 15,33'» ba’es declared for
export, leaving 62,230 bales to the trade. The price current of Amer¬
ican cotton, compared with last year’s, are subjoined :

Upland

4,915
:

e

[July 4,1868

°
Hhds. Case. Bales. Tee.
713

Baltimore../

59
m

Boston
New Orleans

m

m

hhds. Pkgs.
....

....

7,326

58,916

e,

61
486

Man’f
lbs.

Stems,

43
.

....

Philadelphia.'
Portland

,

Total this week
Total last week
Total previous week....

Below

••••

.

....

2,805

857

774
594
418

....

....

59

....

.

P5

..

489

8,887
2,815

....

7,369

70,618

309
193

117.694
*

84,245

give our usual table showing the total exports
of Tobacco from all the ports of the United States, and their
we

direction* since November 1. 1867:

1, 1867.

ber

Cases.
1.745

16,080

8,092

15,262

Belgium

1,180
s,ins

1,201

36

Italy

3,677

Hhds.

Britain

Germany

3,527

Ac

Spain, Gibralt.
Mediterranean

1,524

223
621

France

565
218
21

9.201

Holland

57

...

Austria.

Ac

4
219

Australia, Ac

Am. Prov

B N.

220
743

South America
West 1 ndics.

6

8

55,223

Total since Novi

The
above

465
2.865

23
1
10

6,901

37

43
•

•

...

3,565

2,511

70

27-

Francisco
:

otal since Nov 1.

The market has been

•

.

.

231

39,363

2,923

9,940

'

.

.

•

•

•

20
681
172
302

•

•

.

•

•

...

....

less active the past

week.

For

heavy, for the north of Europe; the bal¬
divided between shippers and the regular

cluding 150 lihds.
ance nearly equally
trade.

and we have only to
notice sales of 270 cases State on private terms.
80 cases,
New Ohio, 0-Jc.; 185 cases new Connecticut tillers and sec¬
onds at 12c.@L5c. ; 1,100 cases old Ohio, and State at 6c.
and upward.
There have been large purchases of Seed Leal
throughout Connecticut at very full prices. Spanish and
also been less active,

Seed Leaf has

Kentucky Leaf (hhds.)
Heavy.

Light.

S?4@ 9>£

Logs

Common Leaf .10 @11
Minium
do. 11^(2)13

Good Leaf
do
Fine

@10*£
@13

10
It

Heavy.

15

(2)10

15
17

17

...

Seed Leaf (casts).

(2)18

19

12
6

“

Assorted Lots...

“

Ohio and

New York,

•*

.......

#

35
16
10

(g)3()
(a). 8

7>j@15

....

IS

@20

.

@11

.

@35
@2>

@13
.

.

.

.

(7725

s

i

Pennsylvania Fillers....—

(tm%
(cC 18

New.

Old.
15 (76,70
-

--

Connecticut Wrappers...
Aborted Lots
“
Fillers
New York Assoited Lots
Pfnrmvlvmiin W runners

9

@10>j

5>.@ 7

Common
Good
Fiue

..

Yarn.

I

| lent

80 (7J) 85
95 @100
.105 Cti.110

82 @ 85
107,M@112
95

I I [cut

1 Average lot..i

Manufactured (bxs. in bond.)

and medium
good and line
Blight work—common and medium
good and fine

17#@22
2 i (a.30

Black work—common

'

“

25 Cal5
@85

“

“

OF

MONTHLY STATEMENT

Stock June 1, 1868,
Received since
Total
Sales and

MONTHLY'

STOCKS

OF

SPANISH

TOBACCO.

Cuba,

Havana,
7,715

bales

Yura, Sagua.
734
61)

3,532

1

11,247
4,100

reshipments to June 30

Stock July 1, 1868,
Same time, 1867
Same time, 1866

•••••••••a

.

STATEMENT OF STOCKS

IN

THE

NEW

.

,

494

7,138
•

.

rrs

....

6,5 17

bales
..

‘iio

7,817

TOBACCO»

YORK

175

....

INSPECTION

Ky.
1, 1868, lihds

Received since




lihds)

2,962

3,500

31.734

68,296

24,696

following

for the past
1

the exports of tobacco from

are

week

3,239

13,861

2.265
71,796

267

2,207

267

58

1,093

New Ycik

:
OF

EXPORTS

TOBACCO

YORK.*

NEW

FROM

Lbs.

*

libels.

Cases.

2

46
41

57

134

London

Hamburg

Cub
Danish West Indies
British West Indies
French West Indies ......
Canada
Brili.-di North America.
r_.
British Honduras

•

•

•

.

7,326

.

....

,20

•

«

•

•

10
...

exports in this table to European

....

.

.

.

....

1,202
•

•

•

•

7,326

59

ports are made up

foreign exports for the

•

.

....

22,350
....

....

....

.

11,652

....

.

corrected by an inspection oi the cargo.

The direction of the

....

•

....

.....

713

1,570

.

•

....

,

52

...

.

....

....

05

,

....

.

.

....

.

•

Tot il for week

other ports,

•

.

....

,

6,964
4,60

....

....

1
5

Alrica

The

220

12,118

....

....

m

Argentine Republic

tests, verified and

...%

368

946
285
200

653
513

I’kgs. manuf.

Tcs.

'..,

Liverpool

*

Bales.

58,916

from mail-

week, from the

has been as follows:
Bremen, 1,130 hhds.

From Baltimore—To

and 6 cases

To Amsterdam, 503

hhds.
From Boston—To Honolulu. 1 case
To Kingston, 5 rases awl
Barbadoes, 5 boxes... To Ilayti, 91 halt hales
To British
hhds, 3 eases and 38 boxes.
To Havre, 46 hhds.
From New Orlc ns—To Liverpool, 440 hhds
From Portland—To Matanzas, 2)815 lbs. manufactured

2frbales To
Provinces, 10

From

Philadelphia—To Barbadoes, 15 hhds

ufaetiued.

To Alatauzas, 8 887 lbs. manu-

.

BREADSTUFFS.
Friday, July 3,

dull, and prices of nearly

show the lowest prices for many

1868, P. M.

ail the lead¬

months past.

have caused an indisposition to operate,
holders, who have declined to sell, have been compelled

Various circumstances
and
to

accept lower

prices.

The close, however, is

quite firm.

in only moderate supply, but the
shown much less anxiety to buy, and shippers have
Flour has been

trade have

materially
reduced their purchases. There has consequently been an
irregular decline. The flours which have shown the most
steadiness are the low grades of fresh ground,, in which some
Wheat has been in very

of

reduced supply, and

receipts of early wheat from

expectations

the South are generally aban¬

stocks in store and daily declining
quotations from Liverpool, prices are decidedly lower;
although nearly nominal, there having been little or nothing
done in the past three days.
No. 2 Spring closes nominal at
|L 95, but with rather more firmness on a slight reaction in
the Liverpool market, and holders generally naming $2
Shippers admit liberal orders, but name low figures, and seem
disposed to hold off so long as our market declines.
Corn has arrived freely and been taken quite actively"
for export. The prices of prime mixed declined as low as
02@l 03, but with favorable Liverpool advices there was

doned; but with liberal

more firmness to-day.
The weather
able to the growing crop, and the

is now extremely

favor¬

19

1,388

Total

Stock July 1, ISOS,

24,368

703

61

21,208
7,:01

been at
Mixed.

19

61

28,309
3,529

receipts at Chicago have
The close is $1 04 for Prime
Oats declined to 80c. early in the week, but with
some speculation, mostly in
sympathy with Corn, there was
Other grains are
recovery to-day, closing at 82c. afloat.
a

24,ISO

entirely nominal,

,

—

...

13,172

Total,

Va.AN.C, Ohio,

.......

Delivered sipce

21,797

pkgs
50,945
4,022
703

Md.

WAREHOUSE.

Stock June

689

scarcity is felt.

Foreign (bales).
Havana.

1,558
1,074

2,571

ing staples

Light.
13^@14

....

Selections.

t I*2X@11#

153

The market has been

CURRENCY, PER'LB.

QUOTATIONS IN

186
24

Total

quiet.

manufactured Tobacco are

hhds.
7,219
1,744

2.6(1»

firemen

3,015

T’l sin. Nov. 1—,

pkgs
48,345
3,869

lihds.
7,038

1S1

Virginia..
Baltimore
New Orleans

The

1. 1867.

v—Previously—,

pkgs.

Cadiz

13,278 4,614,759

2,631

580

26.260

171,606

...

Kentucky Leaf the pressure of the demand has been
much less, and prices are scarcely so firm. Some decline is
reported at Western markets, and supplies here are more
liberal. The sales., of the week foot up about 400 lihds., in¬
•

hluis.

From

pkgs. Manfd.
8,917 4,390 835

•

•

,

,

1S3

17.960

55,223

.

YORK SINCE NOVEMBER

NEW

AT

week, and since

follows:

as

This week—>

Lbs.

Bxs A

2,348

11

.10
7

352

Virginia

poriland

Li)

368

RECEIPTS

)

•

7.008

New (trleans

have been

Ohio, Ac

from which, the
283

31
24

152

Philadelphia
sail

23,416

616

6,370

26,892

.*

receipts of tobacco at New York this

Nov. 1

13,27S 4,614,759

Stems
hhds.

cer's.
351

Bates.

60

.

33’ois

41
903
*59

•

2,631

5c9

Tcs. A

17,803

Same time, 1668

Other.

26,260

13,880

•

....

6

-

Cases.

•

•

....

•

31,855
20,815

stock
1867

Total

The

175

.....

17,960

lihds:
20,417

.

7,075

Same time,

13,404

....

following table indicates the ports
exports have been shipped :

From
New York
ball 1 more
Boston

.

1,344

Brooklyn inspection warehouse, July 1, 1868

Stock in

55,570

8,890
264 2,225,202
108,625
1,083
27 ,381
60
8,090 601,713

....

.

19,607

524
61

....

....

....

8,419

Total

....

....

....

....

2

Honolulu, Ac
All others
*

....

....

60
310

30
41

Mexico

....

....

....

716

Indies

Fast

....

....

....

167
559
544

15,577
4,400

lit)
6
43
193
113

1,516

...»

•

....

1,182
1,216

137,617

....

....

125

639

Africa, Ac
China, India.

•

•

1,108

‘2,478 *

Delivered since

lbs.

....

....

•

1,116,985

5,941 hhds.

Brooklyn inspection—Stock June 1, 1868

Received since

Manfd

963
515

hluis.
7

516
4

342

Pkgs.
A bxs.

Stems,

Cer’s
Bales. A tcs.

10.062

To

States since Novem¬

the United

Exports of Tobacco from

Great

19

THE CHRONICLE.

July 4,1868.]

290

1,098

19

61

a

largo daily average.

20
The

THE CHRONICLE.
following

closing quotations:

are

Flour—

Corn

Great Britain.—The

Meal

$5 25® 6
Superfine......
bbl. $0 50® 7 15 Wheat, Spring,
per bush.
1 90.VH 2
Extra State
7 70® 8 40
Red Winter
2 20®
Shipping R. hoop Ohio. 8 25® 9 25
Amber do
2 50® 2
Extra Western, com¬
White
2 55® 2
mon to good
7 65® 8 35 Corn, Western Mix’d new 1 00® 1
Double Extra Western
Yellow
108®...
and St. Louis
9 00®14 00
White
1 18® 1 12
Southern supers
8 73®10 00 Rye
1 70® 1 75
Southern, extra and
Oats, Western cargoes...
l&l®
S2
family
10 25® 14 50
Jersey and State
®
California
10 -00® 12 50 Barley
2 00® 2 25
Rye Flour, fine and super¬
Malt
2 30® I 245
fine
8 00®10 00 Peas Canada
1 30® 1 40
PXjc movement i© tweadstuffs at this market has been as follows*

figures, and

<-

.

,

RECEIPTS

AT

Euglish supplies
drop.

farmer’s

-1S68.For the
Since
Jan. 1.
week.

For the

Since

week.
29,145

Jan. 1.
733,9*5

39,115

Wheat, bush
Corn, bnsh
Rye, bush
Barley, &c., bush

3,460
20,225

147,310

6,710

779,575

156.115

23,127 qrs.. at 67s

39,767

3,869,815

400,170

Wheat.
United States (Atlantic ports)
Canada and other British Colonics....
California

ami (_

hiii

3,605

3,970

.

4.141

.

v

FROM

NEW

YORK

FOR THE

Flour, C. meal, Wheat,

To

bbls.

bbls.

«C*t. Brit. week...

WEEK

AND

Rye,

Earley.
bush.

10,920
162.271
«ince Jan. 1
63 2,779,010
99,169
A. Col. week..
2,635
1,170
since Jan. 1
72,740 39,S53
500
WeNt Ind. wreek.
6,867
3,211
since Jan. 1
182,759 5S,697
400
21
Total exp’t, week 22,242
4,381
162,721
since Jan. 1, 1868 424,509 165,871
2,810,415 152,993
same time, 1867
214,040 85,961
62.599 136,887 860,217

2,763,410

SINCE

bush.

bush.

Oats,

.

89,961
33.990

Philadelphia
Baltimore

35,445
26,952
29,859

122,753
GRAIN

IN

NEW

27,090

44,370
10,770
YORK

10,000

....

69,416

....

4,358

35,000

49,525
127,379
39,303 3,908,182
125,7384,445,158
....

433

3,142
17 085
2,760 510,167
11,327 501,340

66

WAREIIOUSKS.

Wheat

June 22,

■Oat*..

Barley

July 1.

1868.

1867.

612,830
1,335,456
523,416

■Corn

422,078
213,078
298,176
19,939
94,166
17,508

-

575

Rye

40,403

Malt
Peas

22,005
58,242

Total

Lake Ports for tbe week

Corn.

bush.

bush.

197,034

5,665
5,101

120,725
8,340

4,613
1,925

20,094

Barley.
bush.

211,575

206

21.230

87

3,356
7,050

12,833
8,100

353,518 1,223,210
2S3,534 1,101,879

273,819
235,151

100,673 1,170,545

520,959 1,594,556

182,605
738,820

7,325

Correspond^ week,’67.
“

’66.

Comparative receipts at the

same

27 for four years :

20,081

-

....

3,830

1,792
2,020

2,162
8,81()

14,007

117,728

ports, from January 1st to June

-

1808.

Flour, bbls
Wheat, bush

7,520,500

Corn, bush
Oats, hush
Barley, bush
Ryt‘, bush
Total

1807.

1,284,274

4,618,234

4,352,289
13,159,SOS
3,112,662

1866.

.

394,022

1865.

1,596,743

1,160,047

9,189,619

9,088,632
8,110,169
5,705,484
4-19,149
285,174

16,741,033

528,231

5,965,343
354,032

479,467

..

894,527

grain, bush..
23,172.290
21,632,157
33,143,559 23,638,008
Stocks of Wheat in store at Chicago and Milwaukee in
1866, 1867
and 1868, June 27 :
..

come

to

,

1S66.

124,500

650,000

Total

1,436,800

The Growing Wheat Crop.—Ail

continue to be very favorable.
the Chicago Commercial

1S67.

786, S00

Milwaukee, bush

hand.

for business in several

Full details.of the

This
week.

Tca.

•From Janl to date1868.
1867.

29,915,038

....

.pkgs.

185

5,624
575,232
224,582

7.500

boxes.
hhds.
.

1.239
16.021

178,000

302,500

1868.
377,900

600,000

«
..

389,704

316,259

214,465

....

166,441

80,075
274,1910,155

305.193

10,925

....

.

There has been

very quiet trade since our last at prices very
changed from former quotations. Greens have been most
demand, but in all, the sales have been quite limited. Sales have
a

little if auy
in

been made of 3,929 half-chests Greens and 2 931 do natural leaf
Japans
There have been no direct

importation since our last; 185 pa kages
from Bremen are the only receipts of the week. Our total
import into the country, as it anpears below, now reaches 29,915,038
lbs. against 30,674,633 lbs. in the same time in 1867.
No later ad¬

per steamer

vices from China
The following

are

to

hand.

table shows the shipments of Tea from China and
Japan to the United States from June 1, 1867, to May 1, 1868, the date
of latest advices by mail; and
importations into toe United States (not
including San Francisco), from Jan. 1 to date, in 1867 and 1S68:
SHIPMENTS FROM CHINA

&

JAPAN SINCE JUNE 1.

1866-67.

Pouchong

IMFORTS FROM CHINA & JA.
INTO U. s. SINCE JAN 1.

1867-68.
PAN
June 1 to May 1. June 1 to May 1.
lbs. 1,858.829
1,465,033

1868.

1867.

11,627,225

1,480,250
191,774

1,629,639
267,493

11,512,682

3,300

11,118,209

3,300

12,078

749,541
33,024

573,571

1,250,638
5,900,781
1,439,030

1,793,542

182,750

..

Oolong &Nir

11,043,725

Fekoe

Twankay
Hyson skin

689,659
28,190
1,302,452
7,379,936
1,544,066
1,977,267
7,102,769

...

65,157

S,087,001
1,778,881
1,911,326

our

Express, in its last issue, to the effect that, as
the season progresses, the
feeling of satisfaction with regard to the con¬
dition of the crops increases.
A correspondent of the same paper writes
that “June has given us a succession of
timely sunshine and showers,
and it would be difficult to wish
anything better than the appearance
all kinds of grain presents at the
present writing.” As to the acreage
in wheat this season throughout the whole
country, the report of the
Agricultural Department, issued July 2, states that there is an
average
increase, compared with last year, of about eleven per cent Fall
sowing
and about twenty-eight per cent in the breadth of
Spring wheat. Re¬
ports from the South, where the crop has been generally harvested, are
not quite so favorable.
In North and South Carolina and Georgia the
yield per acre is below the average, but owing to the increased area
sown
the aggregate yield will be
large. With regard to Virginia,

535,99 i

TEA.

977,900

advices from the North-west
The substance of them is well stated by

30,674,633
16,776

835,121

22,921

bags.
bbls.

....

Chicago, bush

one

Evening, June 20,1868.

regard to the new crop of tea
imports at the several
ports for the week and since Jan. 1 are given below under
the respective heads.
The totals are as follows :
have

m

293

483^515
456,923

later advices from China in

1,907
1,723
m

23,304

168,681

“ Wait until after the Fourth ” expresses the;sentiment which has
prevailed in business circles, and as a conse¬
quence little has been done. Rio Coffee alone has been quite
firm in price, but even in this transactions have been small.
The imports of the week have included full
average quan¬
tities of sugar and molasses, but
very small receipts of tea or
coffee.
Included in the imports of sugar are 0,272 boxes at
Portland, an unusually large quantity for that port. No

live,

200

4,123

213.565

bush.

a

2,586

♦

respects.

....

r

Q,r?.
16,655

1,262

15,611

Oats.
bush.

1,040,976
19,888
151,946

37,950

unfavorable

.

27,514
74,764

Totals
Previous week

an

1,101,529

43,702

Milwaukee
Toledo
Detroit
Cleveland.

“

Wheat.

20,640

From

Chioago

Friday

The week has been

endivg June 27:

Flour.
l)hls.

9d

GROCERIES.

36,284

2,592,987
at

bush

112,721
3,097,184

...

16,198

June 29 ,
1868.

Receipts

Corn

bush

-

from

1.

JAN.

..

■

Since Jail, 1
Boston

6,443
100,423
20,509

.

•

212
509
511

....

21,677
1,000,492
480,933

•

-

....

11,634

.

213,045

13,600
295,790

fid

I. 0.

,

5,472

230

Same time 1867

Flour
Bbls.
Sacks.
971

1,702

.

France, Spain and Northern Europe..

719.555

285,115

70,115
295,520
1,224,725

FOREIGN EXPORTS

,

Qrs.

8,332,535

'Oats, bush

2,180
16,070

“'“65s

IMPORTS.

4.210,155

588,385

minimum

deliveries.

Week ending June 13, 186S
Same time 1867

1,044,105
188,080

Coen meal, bbls

to

...

.

■

reduced

are now

yet prices continue to

NEW YORK.

-1S6T.

Flour., bbls

[July 4,1868.

Gunpowder

...

33,483,535

+33,302,647

*

All at New York except three
cargoes
t Add to this 372,844 lbs. per “Guam”

thence to New Yora.

■

59,402

1,753,926

6,258,113
1.599,437
1,726 295

5,005,193

4,693,739

*29,915,038

30,674,633

(1,103,400 lbs.) at Boston,
originally shipped to Halifax, and

The above table includes all
shipments to the United States, except
96,642 packages to San Francisco.
The indirect importation since Jan. 1 has been
5,624 pkgs,
COFFEE.
The market

for

Rio

strengthened somewhat by the telegram
8th, has ^held firm throughout the
week, aod quotations for the lower grades were advanced
\ in gold
The market closes
quiet but firm at the advanced figures. In other
k nds there has been less demand
and a weaker
feeling, and quotations
in several kinds are marked down.
Sales embrace 3,466
bags of Rio,
Messrs. Palmer, Harstook <fe Co., of Richmond,
write us that the crop, 200 do of Laguayra, 368 do of Maracaibo, and 500 St. Domingo.
compared with last season, is called a success; on the James River,
The imports of coffee this week have
been very small,
including only
one
however, the result will be less than one-half a crop; south of the
c-rgo of Rio per “ Contest” at New York, of 7,500
bags ; 1,020
bags from Aspinwall, and 219 of sundries.
river there will be two-thirds of a
crop, while in the valley they report
'The stock ot Rio coffee
July 2, and th3 imports fron Jan. 1 to datenearly a full crop.
in 1868 and 1867




from Rio

de Janeiro of June

wore as

follows

:

July 4, 1868.]
Pliiladel.

^ew
In Bags.
Stock
Same date 1SG7.

Imports

in 1867

“

.

York.
145,502
58,519

Balti
more.

.

57,000

7,700
b non

M2 non

o’830

1*37*135

10,730

303,679

333,782

New Savan. &
GalOrleans. Mobile, veston.
11,300
3,200
—

124,897

96.519
575,232

535,991

3,200

7,500

55,S82

225,802

2,800

9,711

50,071

outside of this, business has been very quiet; our
quotations are slightly changed in several articles, but not uniformly for
Of Sicily green fruit very little has been sold
either advance or decline.
from first hands.
West India green still continue in liberal supply, and
|s disposed of at good prices.
Annexed are the ruling quotations in first hands.

Layer Raisins ; but

Total.

the

at

the stock at New York July 2, and the imports
several oorts since Jan. 1 were as follows :
Total
New York-^ Boston Pliiladel. Balt. N. Orle’s mport
Stock. Import, import, import, import, import, i 00,032
In bags.
21,278
10,088
Java
+1,150 *44,754
10,088
Of other sort9

Ceylon...,

100

.......

Singapore

4,049

Lagnayra
St. Domingo

4,824

Other

Total

27,931

*

Includes mats, &c.,

2,000

37,800
49,785 mats.

+ Also

reduced to bags.

Ex line to

do Ex f. tofin’st 85©

do

...

95

fair.. S5 © ..
Sup’rto flne.l 00 ©1 05

Uncol. Japan, Com.to
do
do

linest.. .1 40 (a, 1 05

Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair ...
do
Super, to flue. .1
do
Ex flue to finest/!
Gunp. & Imp., Com.to fairl
do
Sup. to fine .1
do
do Ex. f. to finest.l
II. SV. &Tw’kay,C, to fair.
do
do Sup. to line

224,582

11,154

37,487

175,029
151,S92

20,40S

Same’07

12*080

Duty paid-v

»—Duty rai(l-

85 @1 05
Superior to tine.... 1 10 @1 35

do
do

32,3-<2
31,290
25,042

11,154

lb.

Hyson, Common to fair

50.001

33

55,90S
21,178
19,010
22,083

Tea,
Duty: 25 cents per

3,438

1,490

*1.048

15,OSS

Maracaibo

21

the chronicle.

Ex f. to flneatl 10 @1
Oolong, Common to fair... TO ©
do
Superior to fine... 95 @1
do
Ex fine to finest ..1 35 @1
Souc. & Cong., Com. tofair 70 ©
do
Sup’rto fine. 95 ©l
do
Ex f. toflnestl 35 @1

80 @1 10
15 © 1 4>
45 @,1 75

05 @1 20
25 ©l 55

05 @1 90

65 © 70
85© 95

20

85

20

65>

85»
20*
6?»

Coflee.

SUGAR.

Rio, Prime, duty paid
do good

arrivals have influenced the market for raw sugars. Owing to
of holders offering, prices stand unchanged and steady.
There has been no disposition on the part of buyers of any description
to take more largely than their wants necessitated, and the resulting
Large

state

ordinary
Java, mats aDl bags

follows

:

Cuba
, P.Ri.Other Brazil
bx’s. hhds. hhds.hhds. bugs.
3,725 13,079 1,798 233 ....
Portland 0,272
000
....
,

5,080 2,904

....

312

July 2, and imports

Stocks

boxes,

At—

At—
N. York

Boston.

Cuba

,

Baltimore
N. Orleans

....

338

follows
Brazil, Manila

Other

bgs. &c hgs,

PRico.For’n, Tot’l,
*hhds *hhds. *hhds.

,

b’xs. *hhds.

At—
N. York stock
Same date 1807

4S,776
515,730

27.902

70,093

....

44,205

.

2,800

.

5,000

...gold 14}© 15
gold 14}© 15}

11}

li © 11$

do
do
do
do
do

do
do
do
do

do
Loaf...

do 10 to 12
de 18 to 15
do 16 to 18
do 19 to 20
white ....

-

Granulated
(’rushed and powdered

....

12 ©
12J©
14 ©
15}©
14}©
©

16?©
16g©

12|
13}
14$
15}
15f
17
..

...

HI© ...
14 @ 15*

Soft White
do Yellow

Molasses.
Duty

19 gallon.

8 cents

:

19 gall.

New Orleans
Porto Rico
Cuba Muscovado

247

..

©

do Clayed.
Barbadoes...,

..

48 © 70
45 © 48

45. ©

70

Spices.
Duty: mace,

NO
hhds

^

107,7*3“^
54*,722 107
153

root, 5 cents 18 fi>.

Cassia, inmats-gold $lb
Ginger, race and Af(gold)

(gold)

Mace

Nutmegs,

No.l....(gold)

52©
11}©
95©

12

88}©

89

..

..

pepper

cassia and cloves, 2ft;

40 cents; nutmegs, 50;

pimento, 15 ; and ginger

20,232

84,094

...

13,002 235,003
Imp’ts since Jan 1.171,*632193,119 28,283
327
7,987
1,491
do
10,055 6,109
4,094 47,331
do
42,125 38,213 4,424
301 55,537
Philadelphia
do . 43,750 52,00-4 2,572
5,949 33,742
Baltimore
do
10,477 14.217 13,570
485
247 10,101
New Orleans
do
51,151
9,372
Portland
Boston

13

7}© 9

Melado

Hav’a, Box, D.S.Nos. 7 to 9.

P. Rico, Other
hhds. hhds. hlids.
1,271

11}
11}
12}

since Jan. 1, 186S, were as

Cuba.

,

do

*

2,387

Philad'l

gold 15}© 16}

...

Jamaica

11}© 11}
12J© 12}
13 © 14

Cuba, inf. to com. refining . 10}©
do fair to good
do .. Hg©
do fair to good grocery.. 11}©
do pr. to choice
do .. 12}©
do centrifugal
11}©

last week’
against
the total
166,441 boxes
week.are

of the week are considerably above those of
At all the ports for the week the receipts foot up 16,021 boxes
15,987—and 2?,921 hhds. against 14,155 last week, making
receipts to date 335,121 boxes and 3S9,704 hhds., against
and 816,259 hhds. to same date last year.
Details for the
as

gold 13}© I3J
.►..gold 22} & 23}

Porto Rico, fr to gd ref. 19 lb.
do
do
-grocery.
do prime to ch. do

boxes.
The imports

Laguayra
St. Domingo...

gold 14?© 15

gold 15}© 17$

Sugar.

of quiet. Sales comprise 4,275 hhds. of
do of Porto Rico, 13y of sundry other kinds, and 2,720

of the trade has been one

Cuba, 516

fair

do
olo

the firmness

gold 17}© 19

Native Ceylon
Maracaibo...

...gold 16}© 17
gold 10 © 16}

23}©
.. ©
26j©

(gold)
I Pepper,
I Pimento, Jamaiea.(gold)
I Cloves
(gold)

1

and

24}
21
27

Fruit.

.

Duty:

.

Total import ...
Same time 1807

335,121 313,093 49,007
100,441 255,635

Includes barrels

and tierces reduced to

20,344 339,701
00,621 310,259

200
202

52,005 102,100
22,307

57,708

hogsheads.

has continued throughout
For the lower grades there has been no

the week exceedingly

inquiry whatever, and
quotations for these are omitted as none of accuracy can be given. In
the higher grades very little movement has taken place, and these at
reduced prices.
Holders would doubtless make further concessions, but
there is
demand to call them forth.
Sales comprise 411 hhds. of
dull.

Plums and Prunes,5; Shelled Almonds,
2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 1}, Filberts and"
50; Preserved Ginger, 50; Green Fruits,

do Layer
Currants
Citron, Leghorn

Prunes,

box 3 95©4 00
$ S>
11}© 11?

Turkish

Dates

Almonds, Languedoc
do
Provence
do
Sicily, Soft Shell
do
Shelled
Sardines......... 19 ht. box
Sardines
19 qr. box
.

$ fi>

Figs,Smyrna

Raisins,Heedless...$1 }cask 8 50©

MOLASSES
Business in this line

Raisins, Currants, Figs,

Almonds, 6; other nuts,2; Dates,
Walnuts, 3 cents $ lb; Sardines,
19 cent ad val.

27 © 28

Brazil Nuts

Pearl

35 © 36

Macaroni, Italian

7 ©

Sago

32}@ 13
20 © 21

9} Tapioca

24 © 26

Dkikd Fruit—

47 © 50

Blackberries
Peaches, pan

8 © 11

12 © 14
10 © 31
8@ .

Filberts, Sicily
Walnuts, Bordeaux

11}© 11?

17 © IS

19 lb

14©

Apples

28}© 29}
17}©....

Peaches, unpared

►

8}© 9}

33 © 15

20 © 21
8 © Vt

d

no

and 96 do of Demerara.
aggregate receipts of the week have been about
same as
the previous week.
The receipts at all ports foot up
against 14,388 last week. The total receipts at
1 now reach 305,193 hhds., against 274,191 hhds. in 1867.
for the week are as follows.
Ilhds.
Porto Deme¬
Hhds
Porto Dcmeat
•
Cuba. Rico. rura.Other
at—
Cuba. Rico. rara. Other. Philad’a
2,931
20
N. York
5,090
149 140
979 Baltim’re.
323 70
Porto Rico,

the
in
15,611 hhds.,
the ports since Jan.
^Details

The

Portland
Boston

Stocks, July 2,

Portland

44

—

Boston,

kt
44

...<

44

N. Orle’s

Porto
Cuba. Rico.

Iinp’tssince Jan. 1...

Baltimore
NewOrlears

1,057

and imports since Jan. 1,

♦Hhds at—
New York, stock

Philadelphia

...

3,157
305

4,995

16,430
83,478
45,205

rara.

Other

7,298
336

6,832

5S3-

2,015

....

1,659

523
709

818
-

....

foreign. foreign.
23,220
1,795
116,743
12,361

4,217

30,650

....

1868, were as Total.
follows:

Deme-

18,606
380

653279

13,887
15,461

726

46.10S
42,065
66,457

18,144
15,676

...

N. O
bbls.
•

•

•

•

6,576
•

•

•

•

2,281
2,068
....

THE DRY

GOODS TRADE.
Priday, P. M„

July 3, 1868.

salient feature to report of the dry goods mar¬
ket for the week under review.
The activity noticed in our
last has subsided, but though the disposition to purchase
There is

no

choice brands of domestic manufactures—chiefly brown
shirtings and canton flannels—is less prominent, there is still
a confident feeling as to the range of quotations on the open¬
ing of the Fall trade.
Jobbers have, as usual about this period of the year, done
but a mere retail business as regards Spring goods, but even
this serves to diminish the stock remaining in hand, and as
many

taking their half yearly inventory, they make
some concession in odd lots of goods, which course affects the
26,915
the stability of quotations. We must add, however, that for
Includes barrels and tierces reduced to hogsheads.
cases or bales in good order prices are firm. For prints, agents
SPICES.
will probably demand an increase of 4- to 1 cent on present
We have a very quiet bus’nees to report in these.
With no new rates, hut the fact that a leading manufacturer is selling hia
arrivals the stock of pepper is quite light, and prices are steady
medium work at old prices may render this advance somewhat
former figures. The facility with which the market can be replenished
difficult to obtain.
from that of England, which we believe is well supplied, probably
The exports of dry goods for the week ending June 30, and
operates to repress any speculative operations.
since January 1, 1868, and the total for the same time in
FRUITS.
1807 and 1860 are shown in the following table:
We note among the sales of foreign dried fruit some 12,000 boxes
44

....

....

253,95S
227,144

*




212

20,S42
20,132

....

—

8,217
....

22,091

305,193
274,191

30,925
9,155

they are now

1

22

THE
PROM NEW YORK.

Exports to

Danish West Indies
British West Indies
British Honduras..
Africa
Mexico

r-Domestics.—, D, Goods
pkgs.
Val. packages.
2

16
7
450
43
100

Argentine Republic

Hamburg

•

Antwerp
Liverpool

•

•

•

London

•

•

•

n

Havre
Cuba
New Granada
Brazil..'.
Honolulu
British Provinces..

4
■m

We

manufacture,
jobbers:

.

cases.

.

1S2

.

....

20

Checks are neglected.
Caledonia No. 70 27$, do 50 25, do 10 25, do
19, do 11 22$, do 15 27$, Kennebeck 23$, Lanark No. 2 12, Park No.
60 16, do 70 22$, do 90 24,
Pequa No. 1,200 12$, Star Mills 600
10$, do 800 16, Union No. 20 25, do 50 27$.

.

•

.

.

.

90

•

.

r

....

,

2.2.12

30,000

1
3
2
32
7

•

•

....

9,543

6
8

•

303

2,597

....

.

.

.

.

Denims are quiet.
Amoskeag 30,
do CC 22$, Columbian extra 30,

....

....

...

Otis AX A 29, do BB 27, do CO 23,
Thorudikel8, Tremont 20.
slowly, but price* are firm on the best makes.

395
10.000

Pearl River 28, Pittsfield

few

our

Brown Sheetings

....

24

173

$69,692

52

2,566
3,387

90S,173

6,037

734.829

4 144

....

.

•

.

57

24,887

Shirtings are quiet and
quotations shown no
change since our last review ; agents having distributed a great
part of the accumulation of both tine an 1 heavy goods, quota¬
tions are steady, with a
tendency to a further advance, were job¬
bers iuclined to meet their views.
Agawam 86 inch 1.4, Amoskeag A 36 17$, do B 36 17, Atlantic A 36 18, do H 36 17$,
P

and

36

-14$, do .L 36 15, do V 36 144, Appleton A 34 17$,
16, do 80 14, Bedford R 30 104, Boott H 27 11,
do O 34 12$, do S 40 16, do tW 45 19, Commonwealth O 27
8$, Grafton
A 27 9$, Great Falls M 36 14, doS 33 13, Indian Head 36
174, do 30 14J,
Indian Orchard A 40 16, do 0 36
14$, d > BB 36 134, do W 34 124,
do NN 36 16, Laconia O 39
14b do 13 37 144, do E 36 14, Law¬
rence 0 36 17, do E 36
15$, do F 86
do G~84 12.4, do H 27 114,
do LL36 14, Lyman 0 36 154, do E 36
17$, Massachusetts 13B 36 14,
do J 80 13$, Medford 86
16$, Nashua fine O 33 144, do R 36 16, do
E 39 18, Newmarket A 14,
Pacific extra 36 174. do H 36 174. do
L 36 16, Pepperell 6-4 —, do 7-4
274, do 8-4 40, do 9-4 45, do
10-4 60, do 1 1-4 65,
Pepperell E fine 39 16, do R 36 1.5, do O
33 13$, do N 30 12$, do G
30 14, Pocasset F 30 104, do lv 36 14, do 40
17, Saranac fine O 83 14$,do R 86 16. do E 39 18,
Sigourney 36
10,.Stark A 36 17, Swift River 36 18,
Tiger 27 94, Tremont M

Augusta 36

#

•

_

33 11.

a

Bleached Sheetings

and

Shirtings

dull, and on some brands
bought up at lower rates than are
demanded for biles in or ler.
Amoskeag 46 21, do 42 19, do A 36 174,
do Z 33 12, Androscoggin
36 184, Appleton 36 17, Attawaugan XX 36
prices

,

are

irregular,

as

15$, Atlantic Cambric

odd lots

can

are

be

36

27$, Ballou tfc Son 36 15$, Bartletts 36 17,
114, do 80 13$, Bates 36 19, do BB 36 —, do B 38 14*
Blackstone 36 16$, do_L) 36 14, Boott B 86
16,do C 83 13$, do H 28
11, do O 30 14, do R 27 10$, doS 36 14$, do W45 19,
Dwight 36 21$,
Ellerton E42 20, do 27 10, Forrest Mills 36
144,Forestdale 36 18, Globe
27 8$, Fruit of the Loom 36 19, Gold Medal 36
15, Greene M’fg Co 36
13, do 30 11, Great Falla K 36 16, do M 33 14, do S 31 13, do A'
83
16, Hill> Semp. Idem 36 18, do 38 16, Hope 36 15 *, James 36
16, do 83
14$, do 31 13, Lawrence B 3G 15, Lonsdale 36 1 8$, Masonville 36 18,
Mattawamkeag 6-4
do 8 4 —. do 9-4 —, do 10-4 —, Newmarket
C 36 15$, New York Mills 86 28,
Pepperell 6-4 29, do 8-4 45, do 9-4
50, do 10 4 67$, Rosebuds 36 17$, Red Bank 36 12$, do 32 11,
Slater
J. & W. 36 16, Tusearora 22$, Utica 5 4
324, do 6-4 85, do 9-4 624, do
10-4 67$-, Waltlmm X 33
14, do 42 16, do 6-4 27, do 8-4 45, do 9-4 624,
do 10-4 —, Wamsutta 45
82$. do 40$ 29, do 86 25, Washington 38 104.
do 33

,

Brown Drills of the

-

best makes are scarce and
quotations firm.
Androscoggin 11, A moskeag 17, Boott 17, Graniteville D 16$, Laconia
17$, Pepperell 17$, Stark A 17, do H 16$.
Print Cloths were
reported firmer last week at Providence, with
sales amounting to 105,000 pieces, and the
closing price for 64x64 extra
was 8f cents, with a
tendency to a further slight advance.
Prints are quiet and unchanged.
There is but little dark work shown
as
yet by agents, but more activity is expected next week. Notwith¬
standing that Amoskeag are selling at 14 cents, there is a disposition
among manufacturers to hold their Fall
styles at an advance.
Allens 134, American 12$,
Amoskeag 124, Arnolds 11, Cocheco
13$, Conestoga 13$. Dunuell’s 12$-J 3$, Freeman
11, Gloucester 12$-

13$, Hamilton 13$, Home—,Lancaster 12$, London
mourning 124, Mal¬
lory 18-14, Manchester 134, Merrimac D 12$, do pink and purple 15,
do W 15; do chintz 134, Oriental 13$, Pacific
12$, Richmond’s 13$,
Simpson Mourning 124, Sprague’s purple and pink 14$, do blue aud
wh. J.6, do fancy 14, do shirtings 14$,
Victory 104, Wamsutta 10,

Wauregan 114.
Ginghams

neglected.

Allamance plaid 19, Caledonia 35, Glas¬
gow 15-16$, Hampden 16, Lancaster 18, Manchester 13$.
Muslin Delaines are dull, and
prices merely nominal. Armures
20, do plain 20, Hamilton 15-18, Lowell 15-18, Manchester
15-18,
Pacific 16-16, Pekins 24, Piques 22,
Spragues 15.
Tickings are inactive.
Albany 9, American 14, Amoskeag A C A
85, do A 30, do B 25, do C 22, do D 20, Blackstone River 18,
Conestoga
27$, do extra 32$, Cordis 30, do BB 17$, Hamilton 26, do D 20, Lewis¬
ton 36 32$, do 32 30, do 30 26, Mecs. and W’km’s
80, Pearl River 33,
Pemberton A A 27$, do X 17, Swift River 17, Thorndike
18$, Whittecden A 22$, Willow Brook 28$-S0, York 30 25, do 32




are

Corset JuAN^are

Laconia 14,
eatteen 164.

unchanged. Amoskeag 14, Bales 10$, Everetts ] 5,
Naumkeag 14, do satteeu 17$, Pepperell 15, Washington

Cambrics have been
particulars of leading articles of domestic
fairly active for this season of the year. Si’esias
continue quiet.
Pequotcambrics 10$, Superior 8$, Victory H 9, Wash¬
prices quoted being those of the leading ington 10, Wauregan
10$, Blackburn Sileeias 16, Indian Orchard 15,

material

do

,

—,

Cottonadks move
Far. tfe Mec. Casa. 40, Lewiston 40, New York Mills
31$, Plow. L.
tk Anv. 874.

1,339

....

Blue Hill 14, Beaver cr. blue 19
Haymaker 19, Man hester 21, Liu-^

gard’s blue 16, do brown

1,326

28

1880... 60,698

annex a

.

8

.

“

•

•

.

4,801
7,2o0

Total this week..
818 $76,599
Since Jan. 1, 1888
12,4451,220,339
-6arae time 1887....
5,314 741,686
“

pkgs.
...

[July 4,1868.

Stripes are dull.
Alhany 9, American 18$, Amoskeag 23$, Boston
15,, Everett 13, Hamilton 23$, Huymakei 17, Sheridan A 13, do G
14,
Uncasville dark 16, do light 15, Whittenton AA 23, do A
21, do Bii
16, do C 15, do D 12, York 22$.

—

Domestics

42,175

....

Canada

—PROM BOSTON

Val.

$

....

993
980

.

•

$250

.

CHRONICLE.

32$,

Lonsdale twilled 14$,
Victory J twilled 15, Ward 15
Cotton Bags are in
slightly enhanced request, and
in their views.
American
3

agents.are firmer
47$, Lewiston 52$, Stark A 62b do C

bush-67$.

Cotton Yarns are inactive at
unchanged quotations. • 40 for larg9
and 4 !$ cents for small skeins are the
asking rates.
Canton Flannels are active, and the sales in first hands
very large
the Ellerton being sold
up to nearly two thirds of the mill’s production*
Ellerton N. Brown, 29 ; do. O, 25 ; do P, 23
;
Hamilton, 25 ; La-

ccnia, 22; Naumkeag F, 21 ; Bleached ; Ellerton N, 81 ; do.
0,27;
do. P, 26 ;
Naumkeag P, 22 ; remberton A, 26. Chicopee are selling
at 5

per cent off Ellerton
Foreign Dress Goods

prices.

are
quiet, and there is but little doing except
light Summer fabrics, which jobbers are willing to sell at a material
concession, rather than carry them over.

in

Domestic Woolens are dull ; there is a small
inquiry
Lssimeres for the Fall
trade, but next w eek greater
branch of trade is expected.

(

The

following

are

districts:

for low priced
activity in this

the latest reports from the British manufacturing
0

Manchester.—Our market continued very
dull with a drooping
tendency in prices till Tuesday, when, in response to the improvement
in I he cotton market,
any further decline in prices has been arrested.
Yesterday and to-day a fair miscellaneous business has been done in
both yams and goods at a
slight advance upon the depressed rates of
Friday last. - In shipping yarns more business has been d ne at the
lowest prices recently accepted ; for the home trade a
slight advance
has beenobtaioe 1, with a moderate business
only. In cloth the demand
has not been
large for any special makes, but a varied business has
been done
whicl^ i 1 the aggregate has been considerable, and for part a
8
ight advance has been obtained. Rather large offers for India goods
have been made at the lowest
prices lately curr- nt, but these are now
generally refused; hence in this department the transactions have
been limited.
The market closes firm without
auy further advancing

tendency.

Bradford.—The

quantity of wool changing hands is not great, and
of wool coming forward (here seems
The upward tendency of quotations no doubt
tends in some measure to induce caution.
Fair purchases are made
chiefly iu lustre wools, to supply current wants.
while there is a large
quantity
less eagerness to buy.

IMPORTATIONS OF DRY ROODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK,
The importations

2,1868, and the

ary goods at tins

ui

port for the week ending July
1866 and 1867, have been a s

corresponding weeks of

follows:

•’

•

ENTERED for consumption for

THE

WEEK

-1866.--

Pktrs.

.1,309

do
do
do

cotton.,

silk

flax....

Miscellaneous dry goods

.

Total....
WITHDRAWN

2, 1868.

Value.

-1868.
Value

Pkgs.

3! )5
526

$165,726

418
503

$153,383

155,205

103,848

129
343

37,406

148

119,606
79,162
36,673

219
574
<>87

178,379
118,664

$786,569

1.511

$586,372

2,401

$627,839

110.862

206,785

WAREHOUSE

AND THROWN
INTO
THE SAME PERIOD.

Manutactures of wool... 1,976
do
cotton..
554
do
silk.... 206
do
flax
2,554
Miscellaneous dry goods.
60

$739,096

306
162

.

138.586
212,106

441,273
29,867

....

Total
Add cnt’d

Pkgs.

$327,683

2.519
FROM

Value.

523
207 ‘
288
192

...

ENDING JULY

1867.

,

16 4
304
271

THE MARKET

$133,863
50,576
100,442

127.186

50,272

DURING

194

$74,549

48
1 t

17,205

14.0’S

58,886
14,989

228

24.0-22

770

12,281

5,350 $1,560,928
786,569

1,147

forcousu’pt’n 2,519

$358,750

1,541

1,259

686,372

2,401

$142,075
627,889

Totalth’wmipon mak’t. 7,869 $2,347,497

2,688

$915,128

3,660

$769,964

ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD.

Manufactures of wool...
do
do
do

Miscellaneous

cotton..
silk

....

473
116

$192,151
32,455
41,183
22,037
6,388

31

flax....

86

dry goods.

11

Total
717
Add ent dforconsu'’pt,n.2,519

-

$293,914
786,569

T»U1 eutered at the port! 3,236 $1,080,486

866
152

$426,710

47
217
3

50,637

37,874

282
246
32
176

969

1,014

31,331
44,707
10,868

$*160,092
586,372

1,750
2,401

$262,962
627,889

2,826 $1,146,464

*;i5i

$890,851

1,285

1,541

43.902

$108,457
67,599

MANUFACTURED BY

Sewing Silk,

Machine Twist,

and Organzine*,
ORGANZINES FOR SILK MIXTURE

COTTONS AND

the sale of

WOOLENS,

Sole Agents

for

MEUKS.

SILKS FOR

CASSI-

JOHN E. KAHL, Vice

The Hope

NEW YORK,

Street, Boston.

4 Otis

'

210 Chestnut Street,

Baltimore.

10 and 12 German Street,

DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP.
The partnership between the subscribers, under

Skirts', of several makes.

the tirm of

J. H. Brower & Co.,29th
November

Hughes & Co.

the late firm have all

The liabilities of
dated and settled.

LINEN GOODS,

SCOTCH AND IRISH

'SPANISH LINEN,

New

The
under the firm

THREAD

& CO.,

partnership

George Pearce &
FRANKLIN STREET,

New York,

Co.,

1867, *755,057 77.
Insures Property against
the usual rates.

COMMISSION

Emb’s,

58

Handk’fs,

‘Nos. 12 & 14 WARREN

Offer for sale,

NEW YrORK,

F H. Carter, Secretary.
J Gbiswold, General Agent.

rom

Jr. 4k

CLARK,

AND SAL

HAND AND MACHINE

Prospectus.

See

Groot, Secretary.

OF LIVERPOOL

CARR. SODA,

AGENTS*FOR
HORSFORD’S CREAM

plans of Life Insurance have

AND

£2,000,000 Stg,
1,893,220
$1,432,340

Authorized Capital
8ubscribbi> Capital
Paid-up Capital and Surplus

SALjERATUS,

SEWING.

f3?”New and important

been adopted by this Company.
new
Profits available after policies have run one year
and annually thereafter.
JOHN EADIE, President.

Queen Fire Insurance Co
LONDON.

MANUFACTURERS OF
SUP

•

$2,300,000

Nicholas Dk

Old Slip,

End,tGIasgow.

UNSURPASSED FOR

WHISKIES,

Co.,
John Dwight &York,
New

CO’S.

WALL STREET.

ASSETS

tucky.

No. ll

INSURANCE COMPANY,
Ity oi New York.
NO. 40

PARASOLS,

STREET. NEW YORK.

States

In the C

other first-class Distilleries, Ken¬

their own and

LIFE

IN BOND,

AND RYE

Spool Cotton.
Mile

JAMES W..OTIS, President.
K. W. BLEECKEK, Vice Pres

United

MERCHANTS,

BROAD STREET,

Continental.

Manufacturers of

UMBRELLAS AND

Loss or Damage by Fire at

Policies issued and Losses paid at the office of the
Company, or at its various Agencies in the principal
cities in the Urited States.

AND

Byrd & Hall,

IS

Cash

DISTILLERS

FINE BOURBON

JOHN

255,057 77
Capital and Surplus, January 1,

Surplus...

J. M. Cummings & Co.,

NEW YORK,

British and

$500,000 00

Capital.

Cash

June 1st. 1868.

White Goods,

Linen

AVENUE.

*

Importers of

Laces and

114 BROADWAY,
COOPER INSTITUTE, THIRD

INCORPORATED 1823.

liberal

Ranbridge.

And F. W. HAYES

American Fire
Insurance Co.,

North

of

for the transaction of a general commission
and have such arrangements as to enable them to
•offer their friends and former correspondents
facilities upon consignments.
Strmt attention will be given to such interests as
may be intrustud to our care.
J. H. BROWER.
B. B. BLYDENBURGH.

CO, Belfast.

Secretary.

INSURANCE.

OFFICE

business

DICKSONS’ FERGUSON &

.*150,000
$222 433

JACOB REESE, President

FIRE

•

J. H. Brower & Co.,

Sole Agents for

—

Insures against Loss or Tamageby
favorable as any responsible Com¬

JAMES E, MOORE,

York, June 1st, 1808.

PARTNERSHIP.
subscribers have this day formed a

WHITE GOODS,

PATENT LINEN

This Company
Fire on terms as
pany

BRANCH OFFICE 9

DUCKS, DRILLS,

LINEN CHECKS, &c.,

been liqui¬

Cash Capital —'..
Assets, June 1, 1S67

J. H. BROWER.
W. II. SELLERS.
B. B. BLYDENBURGH.

CHURCH STREET,

198 A 200

70 & 72

mutual consent,

dissolved by

was

1867,

Commission Merchants,

Importers A

Company

BROADWAY,

Philadelphia.

Cl#.,

CHASE, STEWART A

Fire Insurance
OFFICE NO. 92

LEONARD BAKER A CO.,

GREER’S CHECKS.
Also, Agents for the Sale of
Fine 6-4 Scotch Coatings; Oxford, Cadet, and Fancy
Jeans, B. & VV. Checks and Fancy Tweeds; Shirting
Flannels : Ginghams, Ticks, and Balmoral

;

New York.

CHENEY & MILLIKEIM,

JOSEPH

George

Schumann, Secretary.

ugo

ARNOLD &: SON,
102 Franklin Street,

President.
President.

RUDOLPH GARRIGl S,

ORDER.

SPECIAL PURPOSES TO

EDWARD H.

$876,815 50

TOTAL ASSETS

AGENTS:

COMMISSION MERCHANTS.

WALKER STREET

21

376,815 50

SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1868

Foulards and Florentines,
Pongee Handkerchiefs,
Silk Warp Poplins,
Silk Dress Goods,
Belt Ribbons

J. F. Mitchell,

C. B. &
,

MERCHANTS,

Several Mills.

Of

$500,000 00

CAPITAL,.

Trams

STREET,
FINE

Sole Agents lor

ASH

Co.,

175.BROADWAY, N. Y

No.

Cheney Brothers.

PEABODY,
GOODS COMMISSION

Germania Fire Ins.

AMERICAN SILKS.

JENKINS, VAILL &
46 LEONARD

Insurance.

Commercial Cards.

Dry Goods.

DRY

23

THE CHRONICLE

July 4,1868.]

Special Fund of $200,000

SODA.

TARTAR.

Deposited in the Insurance Department at Albany
United States Branch, No. 117 Broadway, N. Y.
GEORGE ADLAJtD, Manager.
William H. Ross, Secretary.

THOS.

RUSSELL, Sole Agent.

CHAMBERS STREET, N.Y.

88

■

Insurance.
*

TheodorePolhemus& Co.
Manufacturers and

Dealers in

'

COMPANY,

FELTING DUCK, CAR COVER¬
RAVENS DUCK, SAIL TWINES
‘'ONTARIO” SEAMLESS BAGS,

Company,

Insurance

COTTON SAIL DUCK
And all kinds of

OF

&(J.

'

“

L. J.

Also, Agents
A

*

United States Banting Company,
full supply all Widths and Colors always iu stock.
59 Broad Street, New York.

E. A. Brinckerhoff,
J. Spencer Turner,

Theodore Polhhmtts,

H, D. Polhemus, Special

Edward Lambert & Co.,
NO.

12

WALL

J.

$400,000 00
206,634 79

capital

Surplus
Gross Assets

....

<

Assets

President.

Liabilities
NSURANCE

AGAINST LOSS AND DA 4AGE
FIRE.

BENJ. S.

Remsen Lane ,

$4,650,938 2T
37 7,668 46

July 1,1867

BY

J... $606,634

.v

50,144

Tota iLiabilities

GOODNOW, Secretary.

WALCOTT Presl

Secretary J
THE

SingerManufacturingCo.
BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
4 58

Proprietors and Manufacturers of the world re¬

nowned

NEW YORK

LNO.




Cash

.

STREET.

SPECIALITY
COMMERCIAL F A P E I*.

HEN DEE,

July 1st, 1867.

.

$3,000,000.

CAPITAL

STREET.

•

Charter Perpetual.

Incorporated 1819

AWNING STRIPES.”

No. 45 WALL

HARTFORD.

COTTON CANVASS.

ING, BAGGING,

Fire Inmrance

Hanover

JEtna

#41,

62 w

AGENCY
STREET.

^ALEXANDER, Agent,

SINGER
for

SEWING MACHINES,

family use and manufacturing purposes. Brancnee

>ndiAgeuclesTthn,ughputthe civilized world, ££N2>

24

THE CHRONICLE.
6 4 O

M I L E S
OF THE

Union

[July 4,1868.
Miscellaneous.

r'

-

Mansfield, -Freese
Railroad
Brownell,

Pacific

Bankers and Commission

Are now finished and in operation.
Sixty miles of track have been laid this Sprint;, and the work along the
whole line between the Atlantic and tlie
Pacific States is being pushed forward more rapidly than ever
before. More than twenty thousand men are
emploj'ed, and it is not impossible that the entire track, from
Omaha to Sacramento, will be finished in 18G‘J
instead of 1870. The means provided are ample, andulltha
energy, men and money can do to secure the completion of this

GREAT
at the earliest

NATIONAL

WORK,

possible day, will be done.

The UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY
receive

NO. 50 BROAD

&

Merchant*,

STREET, NEW YORK,
TT. S. Bonds,Coin, Stocks, Grain,
Flour, and Pro¬
visions Bought and Sold on Commission
only.
Liberal advances on consignments.
Particular at¬
tention--given to collections. Four per cent, interest
allowed on deposits.
J. L MANSFIELD,
Vicc-Pres. 1st Nat. Bank Decatur, Ill.
J. L. BROWNElL,
Pres, of the Open Board Stock
Brokers, N Y
I. M. FREESE & CO.,
Commission Merchants, Chicago, Ill.
FREESE A; COMPANY,
Bankers, Bement, Ill.

:

J. L. Brownell & Bro.,
BANKERS &

I.—A GOVERNMENT GRANT
”

J

Ol the right 01 way, and all necessary timber and other materials
found along the line of its’opcrations.

BROKERS,

28 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK.
Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold
Bought and Sold exclusively on commission.
Accounts of Banks, Bankers and Individuals received
,

favorable terms.
References:
J. H. Fonda, Pres. National Mecta. Banking Ass., N.Y.
C. Jf. Blais., Pres’t Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago.
on

II.—A
Or

12,800

acres of land to the

donatiou, and will lie

GOVERNMENT

mile, taken in alternate sections

a source

of

large

on

GRANT

each side of its road,

This is an absolute

revenue in the future.

First

National
OF

on

the various sections to be built.

and It is

$100,000

Isaac Freese, Pres.
T. W.

Thirty-year Bonds, amounting to from $10,000 to $-18,000

to4ie surmounted

DECATUR, ILL.

Capital...

III.—A GOVERNMENT GRANT
Of United S ates

per mile, according to the difficulties
The Government takes a second mortgage as
security,

expected that not only the interest but the principal amount may be paid in services rendered
by tne
Company in transporting troops, mails, &c. The interest is now much more than paid in this
way, besides
securing a great saving in time and money to the Government.

L. Mansfield, Vice-Pros.
Freese, Cashier.
Prompt- attention given to collections on all accessi¬
ble points in the Northwest;

IV.—A GOVERNMENT GRANT
right to issue its own FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS, to aid in building the road, to tlie same amount as
Bonds, issued lor the same purpose, and no mokk. The Government Permits the Trustees

the United States

J.

Freese &

Company,

RANKERS,
Bemci.t, 111.,

,

Of the

Bank,

A Regular Banking and Exchange business transac¬
ted. U. S. Bonds and Coin bought and sold. Capi¬
talists can make desirable Real Estate Investments
through our House. Correspondence solicited.

for the First

Mortgage Bondholders to deliver the Bonds fo the Company only as the road is
completed, and
by United States Commissioners and pronounced to be in all respects a first-class
railroad, laid with a heavy T rail, and completely supplied with depots, stations, turnouts, car
shops, locomoives, cars, &c.
after it has been examined

M.

I.

Freese &

Co.,

■

COMMISSION

MERCHANTS,

Chicago, III.,
Advances made on Consignments. Eastern orders
for all Western products solicited." Prompt and care¬
ful attention given.

V.—A CAPITAL STOCK SUBSCRIPTION.
From the stockholders, of which Over Eight Million Dollars have been
paid in upon the work already

tloue, and which will be increased

as

the wants of the Company require.

Lockwood &
BANKERS.

NO. 94 BROADWAY & No. G WALL STREET.

VI —NET CASH EARNINGS
On its Way Business, that already amount to more than the interest
•earnings are no indication of the vast through business that must follow
but they certainly prove that

on

the

the First

DEALERS

IN
GOVERNMENT
OTHER SECURITIES.

Mortgage Bonds.

TIKise

opening of the line to the Pacilic

upon such a property,

AND

Interest allowed upon

deposits of Gold and Currency,
Gold loaned to Merchants
favorable terms.

tubject to Check at Sight.
and Banker* upon

‘
.

FIRST MORTGAGE

Co.,

TIIE

r

i

BONDS

National Trust

costing nearly three times their amount,

Company

OF THE Cf.TV OF NEW

YORK,

NO. 3.'1G BROADWAY.

Are Secure

Beyond

any

Capital One IBlIIi

Contingenoy.

n

Dollars.

CHARTERED BY THE STATE
The Union Pacific Bonds

run thirty years, are for $1,000 each, and
have"coupons at&ched. They bear
payable on the tlrst days of January and July at the Company’s otlice in the City.of New
York, ac the rate of Six Per Cent in Gold. The principal is payable in gold at maturity. The price is
102, and at the present rate of gold, they pay a liberal income on their cost.

annual interest,

The
reserve

Company believe that these Bonds, at the present rate,
the right to advance the price at any time.

are the cheapest security in the market, and
Subscriptions will be deceived in New York.

Parties subscribing will remit the par value of the Bonds and the accrued interest in
currency at. the rate
of Six Per Cent per annum, from the date on which the last coupon was paid.

Subscriptions will be received

n

New York

'

At the

'

Dartlts II. Manoam, Pres,

James Mejirkll, Sec.

Receives

deposits and allows FOUR PER CENT.
INTEREST on daily, balam es, Subject to Check at

Sight.

SPECIAL DEPOSITS for six months, or more, may
be made at live per cent.
The Capital of ONE M LI-ION DOLLARS is divid¬
ed among over 500 shareholders, comprising many

gentlemen of large wealth and financial experience,
wlio are also personally -liable t<» depositors lor all ob¬
ligations of the. Company to double the amount of
their capital stock.
As the NATIONAL TRUST
COMPANY
receives
deposits in large or small
amounts, and permits them to lie drawn as a whole or
in part bv CHECK AT SIGHT and WITHOUT NO¬

TICE, allowing- interest on all dailv balances,
parties can keep accounts in this Institution with
special advantages of security, convenience and
profit.

Company’s Office, No. 20 Nassau Street,
AND BY
t

John J. Cisco & Son, Bankers, No. 59 Wall Street

Fisk

&

Hatch,

BANKERS AND DEALERS IN
And

by the Company’s advertised Agents throughout the United States.

Remittances should he made in drafts

;
-

arge

by return express.

other funds par in New

York, and the bonds will be sent free of
Parties subscribing through local agents will look to them for their safe delivery.
or

A PAMPHLET AND MAP FOR lSGShas

just been published by the. Company, giving fuller Information

han Is possible In an advertisement, respecting the progress of the work, the resources of the
country
raversed by the road, the means for construction, and the value of the bonds, which will be sent free on
application at the Company’s office, or to any of the advertised agents.

GOVERNMENT

-

SECURITIES,

NO. 5 NASSAU STREET,"NEW YORK

-

Buy and sell, at market rates, all descriptions rof
United States Securities, and give especial attention
to the conversion of '#

SEVEN-THIRTY NOTES
Into the

NEW FIVE TWENTY BONDS OF 13G5 AND 1SG7.
Certificates of Deposit issued, Deposits received and
Collections made.
Also, General Agents for*

JOHN J
i-




i

^

CISCO, Treasurer New York.

Central Pacilic Railroad
gage

Bonds,

First Mort¬

July 4,1868.]

THE CHRONICLE.
The

Eailiwag ittonitor.
Railroad Earnings
the

pare

(weekly).—la the following table we com¬
reported weekly earnings (gross and per mile) of several

leading railroads for five weeks in 1867 and 1868

:

Western Union

Telegraph Company, at their recent halfyearly meeting, presented the following exhibit of revenue and ex¬
penses for six months, ending July i, 1868 :
Gross

January
February

18G7.

117,668

4 4

121,0-6
95,073
102.394
90,825
323,244

4 4

44

it

44

44

it

-

4 4

It

i t

4 4

11

219,101

L

247,597

.1st,May. )
2d,
“
J

44

u

211.9S4
214,974

1

“
“
4th, “

44

Michigan Central✓

f- 1,152 -{

2d,
3d,

44

;;

f

•

&

3d, “
4th, “

4.4

6

C

4 4

u

4

4

Western Union
b ;

44

(4

44

44

44

44

“

»

82,116
89,615
92,043

423,827
283,415
266,913
252,278
364,937

1867.
232
23!)
187
202
179

1868.
196
166
162
176
181

280
184
186
190
2i5

368
246
231
219
215

'

2!)0
25!)
216
235
255

70,263

82,203

67,186

73,992

L
f

72,874
82,927

SI,013
82,921

1

77.324

I

116,326
71,065
‘V41
11,747

297
272
288
259
284

158

84,833
77,753

1

2S5

}- 524 H
|
1st, June |
2d, “
J
l
.2d, May.
f
3d,
“
)
l ISO \
4th, “
|
1st, June
3d,
J
t

k

.

73,976

99,300
84,269

I

1-

3d,
“
2d, June

“
3d,
J
Michigan Southern..,. .2d, May. )
-

62,677

1

44

1.

1S68.

158
191
226

100,138
118,SIS

147

86,147

135
141

104
155

65

70
80
170
91
101

11 232
22,337

81,450
12,608
14,505
30,649

15,577

16,444

14,340

OOP

IS, 209

62
124
86
7!)

°

Secretary of the Treasury has
sept to the Senate a statement of the amount of United States
bonds issued to the several Pacific railroad companies, accompanied
by the amount of accrued interest thereon to June 15, and the
amount repa d by said companies under the fifth section of the act
Of July, <1864:
Inter. Accrued.

640,< 00

1.112,000

19,554 85
$2,134,197 60

$28,129,000

$504,992
408,864
388,4SO
394,533
451,477
474,441
462,674

(280 m.)

J une..

371.543

459,370

541,491

497,250
368,581.

.

■Erie

(79S in.)
$1,185,746
987,936
1,070,917
1,153,441
1,101,632
1,243,636
1.208.244
1,295,400
1,416.101
1.476.244

.Oct
.Nov

..

.

.Dec
.Year

$906,759 $1,031,320 ...Jan,

..Feb.,
..Mar..

917,639
1 [139,528

.April.
..May

1,217,143

1,122,140

.

..

.June..

.

J uly..
..Aug
.

1,239,024

1,416,001

..Sep...

1,444,745
1,498.716
1,421,881

1,041,115

1,041,646

>14,596,413 14,139,264

..Oct...
..Nov..

..Dec...

4

..Year..

..

: 1867.

(524 m.)

(524 m.)

277,234
412,715
413,970

$ 305,857
‘ 311,088
379,761
391,163
358,601

$312,846

418,024
384,684

304,232
312,879
428,702
487,867

338,858
381,401
429,177
496,655
429,548
352,218

370,757

4,650,328

..

..

...July...

..

.
..

„

...Aug*..
Sep...
Oct....
m.Nov...
Dec...
w
.Year..
^

Pitt8b.,rFt.W.,& Chicago.
1866.

1867.

1868.

(468 in.)

(468 in.) (468 m.)

$>59,982

$542,416 492,691
525,498 692,754
627,960 681,189
590,557 774,103
586,484 611,914
507,451
537,381
606,217
069,037
784,801
690,598

480,9S6
•662163

599,8.«;

682,61)
633,667
552,378
648,201
064,920
757,441
079,935
555,222

7*467)213




.

.

,

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

..Year

..

(708 in.)
$519,855. ..Jan.

490,666

613,330

6,546,741

7,160,991

.May,
..J uly.
..Aug..

525,242

709,326
738,530

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

823,901
727,809

.

.

.Year

--

1,135,461
1,285,911
1,480,929

845, &53

1,093,731
934,536
1,1' 1,693
1,.388,915

.

.April.
..May..

;,

.June

..

..July..
..Aug..
...Sep..,

•.

.Nov.
.Dec...

935,857
..

Year..

i

..Mar...

.April..

167,301

168,162

..May..

168.699
167,099

171,736
156,065

166,015
222,953
198,884

172,933

$178,119

~

.

.

113,504
112,952

123,802

123,383

•

,

.

.

(740 m.)

$131,707

$340,511

123,404
123,957
121,533
245,598
244,376
208,785

•

•

•

•

•

Sep...

..Oct...
.Nov...

.

1

.Dec...

..

/

•

•

<

.

.

,

,

.

#

*

.

•

•

,

,

•

•

•

,

•

..

325 *91

304,810

.July..

304,917
396,248

309,591
364,723
882,996
406,756

Nov....

177,364

171,499

264,741

351,759
307,948

*+Year~ 2,251,525

2,207,930

^.Year-

8,694.975

3,783,820

354,830

284,729
282,989
240,185
234,633
822.591
365,372

1868.

(840

m.

$211,978
231,851
265,906
252,149
*04.619

217,082

f!

379.367

272,063

3,380,583 3,459,319
Western Union.1866.

...Jan...
...Feb...

$237,674 $278,712
200,793 265.793

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

U

336,066

(521 m.) (521m.)

.June.,

219,064
279,647

310,762

1868.

263,259
292,385
260,629

,

302,425
281,613

Year.,
1867.

$242,793

278,701

.

•

270,630
317,052
329,078

•

1867.

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

.

.

369,625

Mississippi.—n

(840 rn.) (840 m.)

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

.

,

326,880
415,758

4,371,071

Ohio Sc

277,423
288,180
258,924
247,262
306,454

$343,319
304,815

330,373

1866.

1868.

(285 m.)

412.933

..Year.. 4,260,125

2,538,800

349,117

333,952
284,977
313,021
398,993
464,776
506,295

.

326,288

129,287

436,065

862,783

365,196
335,082
824,986
859,645
429,166
498.649
414,604
308.649

..Aug...
..

1868.

(285 in.)
$304,097
283,669
375,210

265,796
837,158
843,736

248,109

270,300
316,433

„

(351,600

$282,438

..July..

-V

•

416,359

256,407

g 558,200

(285 m.)

333,281 ...Mar...
485,629 .April..
565,718, ..May...
.June..

213,097. .April.
.May...

133,392 ..Feb...
149,165. Mar...

4,105,103

262,031
316,389
401,900

$127,594 ..Jan...

m.

3,466,923

Year..

301,275

(521 m.)
$226,059
194,167

(210

S.415,4(»0

267,541

276,416

1866.

345,027
2-260,268

£ 428,474

350 884 ...Feb..

188,815

328,539

®

(740 m.)
$868,484 ...Jan...

•

308,891

f 404,600

.June..

.

•

2*1,900
362,800
288,700

^517,702

.April..
..May...

.

•

1,258,713
1867.

317,977

.

.

•

.

m.

$283,600

274.8C0

^400.941

v.Jan.^
.Feb...
..Mar...

.
.

114,716
121,217
142,823
132,387

1868.
(452

Michigan Central.—
1867.

•

•

224,621
272,454
280,283
251,916
261,480

1866.

98,482

96,535
1< 6,594

230,340
204,0 >5

219,160

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

(410 m.)
$292,047

277-505

306,693
238,926

.

108,461

244,834
212,226

.Oct....'

..July,.
..Aug...
...Sep...

1867.

(228 m.)
$241,395
183,385
257,230
209,099

.June...

81.599

96,3S8
103,373
98,043
106,921
104,866

*'

.April..
..May...

.

84,652
72,768
90,526

.Feb...

.

..Mar...

$92,433

.Aug..-.
.Sept...

Aug.,..
Sept.*.

..Jan...

•

78,976

220,788

•

1866.

Toledo, Wab. & Western.-

r-St. L, Alton St T. Haute.
1868.
1866.
1867.

155,893
192,138

July...

..Feb..
..Mar

.

1,211,108

(210 m.)
$149,658
149,342
174,152

.June..

..Jan...

•

1,732,673

..

•

$94,136

(275 in.)

...Oct...,

(210 in.)

..Jau...
..Feb...

$
•

9,424,450 11.712,248

1866.

(692 m.)

earn¬

Chic., Rock Is.and Pacific.—

/-Milwaukee Sc St. Paul.-*

1,530.518

14,143,215

$145,389 13
112,281 57
$257,620 70

1868.

(1,032 m.)(l, 152 m.)(l, 152m.)
$590,767 $696,147
$741,926
459,007 574.664
S00,787
613,974 757.134
855 611
624,174 774,280. 1,068,959
880,993 895,712 1 206,796
925,983 898,357 1,167,544
808,524 880,324
797,475 l,0'-8,824
1,000,086 1,451,2S4
1,200,216 1,508,883
1,010,892 1,210,387
712,359 918,088

1,201,239

1S68.

1867.

1867.

85,447
84,357
SI,181

.June.

n

PRINCIPAL RAILROADS.

$90,411

..Feb.
40!).684. ..Mar.

488,088.

524,871
417,071’

1,075,773
1,227,286

$944,328 (.4

preceding year.
fund from the current
amounts to the sum of #1,19 >,728 92.

-Marietta and Cincinnati.—*
1867.
1866.
1868.1
(251 m.) (251 m.)
(251 in.)

1868.

1867.

OF

Dec....

573,726

7,242,126

.

477,007
516,494

.

4,613,743

539,435
423.341

ings of the road, now

569,250
567,679
480,626
578,253
571,348
661,971
588,219
504,066

.

84,500 00
81,835 33
646,170 63-3,526,651 60

Making an excess of net earnings of

407,754...April.

$371,011 . fan. . $1,086,360
895,887
339,736. .Feb...
381,497 . Mar.-, 1,185,745
455,983. April.. 1,190,491
4C0,4S6. ..May... 1,170,415
..June.. 1,084,533

$2,714,545 64

Leaving of net earnings, above all expenses
been, it will be seen, in excess of those for the
31,1867
W hiie the expenses have been less by

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

3,892,861

(692 m.)
$901,571

•;

The earnings have
year ending May

440,271

(692 m.)

(524 m.)

41,888 68 $4,470,879 64

The ordinary operating expenses, including local
taxes, have been
.
There have been paid into the sinking fund during
the year
Taxes on dividends, receipts, &c
;
interest and exchange

411,605

1866.

1868.

$2,480,974 16
1,721,506 97
256,513 88

Miscellaneous....,,
Mail service

.June.

408,999

$647.11!)

EARNINGS.

Pas-sengers.

341,181. ..May.,

415.982

(70S m.)

annual report of this
1, 1868, has just been issued,

Freight

1861)

330,169

(708 in.)
$603,053
505,266
505,465

Railroad.—The

Central

GROSS

/—New York Central.—*

r-Mich. So. & N. Indiana.-.
1866.

Michigan

-Chicago & Northwestern—,

426,752
359,103

1866.

available for July

$878,486

company tor the year ending June
from which we take the following:

—Illinois Central.

(775 in.)

1,118,731
1,071,312

.

3,695,152

Railway.^1868.
1867.
"

(775 m.)

per

(280 in.)
$259,539. ..Jau..
296,496 ..Feb.
261,599. ..Mar.,
270,386. .April.

282,165

321,597
387,269
322,638
360,823
323,030

expenses,

earnings for the sit months, endmg January 1, 1868,
mainly appropriated in payment of bonds maturing in 1867, as
statement published in January, 1868.

EARNINGS

335,510
342,357
354,244

271,246

July...
.Aug...
.Sept...

5,476,276 5,094,421
1S66.

26!), 249
329,851

•

380,796
400,116
475,257
483,857
477,52S
446,596
350,837

528,618526,959

290,111

all

over

479,161

were

186S.

$243,787
157,832
235,961

.

'

£1,321,160 SO

(280 in.)

$226,152
222,241

$1,350,598

year over those of the
The amount invested in the sinking

1867.

$394,771 .Jail—
395,286 .Feb...
318,219 illarch
421,098 .April..
355,447. May...

(507 in.)
$361,137
377,852
438,046
443,02!)

(507 m.)

months,

during the past

MONTHLY

1866.

1868.
(507 in.)

lSOt.

350,000
.

The net

—Chicago and Alton.—

-Atlantic & Great Western

350,000

-

construction, six
months, to Juue 30 (two months estimated)
$135,563
Purchase of telegraph stocks
42,586
Sinking fund, six months, at $20,000Jper month
120,000
Interest on b >uds, ,-ix months
171,000
Purchase of real estate
V
3,011-

483,869 45
244,669 50

42,930 09
67,671‘ 74

...

COMPARATIVE
1866.

592,*621’85

27.382 03

320,000
960,000

Total....

Repayments.

$744,951 51
761,887 88460,710 ?0

$7,020,000
11,097,000
6,080,000

$602,257
575,900
335,947 June, estimated 550,000
May, estimated.^

Total net profit, six months, to July 1
Of which hnn been appropriated for

Net profits for the six
dividend

tl

$356,349

April

315,855

EXPENSE8.

Pacific Railroad Bonds.—The

Railroad'1.
Central Pacific...
Union Pacific, i
Union Pacific. E. D
'.
Western Pacific.
Central branch Union Pacific
Atchinso.n and Pike Peak/
Sioux City and Pacific

Expenses.

Receipts.

Expenses.
$366,446

$539,794
690,183
587,962

Current

Gross

Current

Receipts.
March

road.
Railroads,
Atlantic & Gt. Western.3d, [May. 1
f
1
4th, “
|
1st,-June. y 507 ■{
“
2d,
i
|
4ih, “
J
L
Chicago and N. West’n 4th,Mav. )
(
‘U
1
1st, June

25

..Mar...

April..
..May...
.

..Jane..
~

July..

.Aug...
.Sept...
.Oct....
.Nov..

Dec..
~

,

Year.*

(157 m.)

1867.
(180 m.)

45,102
36,006
39,299
43,333
86,913
102,686
85,508
60, by 8
84,462
100,308
75,248

$39,679

54,478

64,718

814,081

774,907

27.666

36,392
40,-no
67,862
60,568
58,262
78,525
126,496
119,667
79.431

188)
(180 mK

$46,41®
40,70®
89,108

49,831

70,143

•

*1

[July 4,1868.

THE CHRONICLE.

26

STOCK LIST.

RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS
Subscribers will confer a

Dividend.

COMPANIES

tar

Railroad.

100

Ohio

Baltimore and

Washington Branch*
Parkersburg Branch....

.

2

Jan. ’68

3%

10C1
50

June & Dec D< c. ’07
Jan. & July July *08

2%

•

do

do

50

4,000,800

50 2,000.000
400,(HHi
50

preferred
Cheshire, preferred

100 2,017,82'
Chicago and Alton,
1(H‘ 3.880.500
do
preferred.. 100 2.425.400
Chic. Bur. & Quincy,
10' 12,500,000
Chicago and Great Eastern.. .100 4,390,000
ZJhicago, Iowa & Nebraska*... 100 1,000,000
Chicago and Milwaukee* ...100 2,227,000
Chicago & Nor’west
100 13,232,490
*.

A pr.
June A Dec June
June
do
December. Dec.
Mar A Sep. Mar.
Mar & Sep. Mar.
Mar. & Sep. Mar.

....

130~

125

71

72

5

Chicago, Rock Isl. & Pacific..100
Cine., nam. & Dayton
100 3,521,064 April A Oct Apr.’68

.

..

05%
|

09

138

!

155

*

**

75%

79%
105% 105%
*

*

*

Dubuque and Sioux
do
do

Quarterly.

Eastern,

[Mass)

East Tennessee
East Tennessee

Elmira and
do

Erie,

Williamsport*.. . 50
do
pref. 50

100
100

....

100

Fitchburg

Georgia

Hannibal and St. Joseph

do

do

100

1(H)

Housatonic preferred

100
1(H)

Hudson River

Huntingdon and Broad Top *. 50
'

do
Illinois Central,

do

prel. 50

100
Indianapolis, Cin.* Lafayette 50
Jeffersouv., Mad. & [ndiunap.100
Joliet and Chicago*
1(H)
1(H)
Joliet and N. Indiana
^ackawauna,and Bloomsburg 50

50
1(H)

^ehigh Valley
Lexington and Frankfort

50
50

Little Miami

Lfittle Schuylkill*
ixmg Island.

50

Louisville and Frankfort
50
Louisville and Nashville
100
Louisville, New Alb. & Chic. .100

100
100
Marietta & Cincinnati,1st pref 50

Macon ana Western
Maine Ce itral

do
do

do
Common

2d pref.. 50

and Lawrence

..100

Memphis & Chariest
Michigan Central, ..'

100
100
Michigan Southern & N. Ind..l00
do

do

guar.

1(H)

Milwaukee &P- duChicu
l(!d
do
do
1st pref. 1(H)
2d pref. 100
do
do
Milwaukee and St. Paul
1(H)
do
preferred..
Mine Hill * Sch’lkill
-

«

100

Haven* 50

Mississippi Central *
100
Mississippi & Tennessee^ . 100
Mobile and Ohio
100
Montgomery and West Point.100
Morris and Essex
50
Nashua and Lowell
100
Nashville & Chattanooga
100
...

Naugatuck ...L

New Bedford and Taunton

100

.100
New Haven * Northampton..10
100
New Jersey,
New London Northern.. .. 100
^ .Orleans, Opel. & Gt. WestlOO

ft

4s
5

.

72%

Apr. ’08

3
5

Indianapolis.. 50 1,983,150
Toledo, Peoria, & Warsaw.. .100 1,115,400
Terre Haute &

4

...

....

125

5

....

XoikCentral




July 08
& July July ’68
•

•

do
do
preferred.100
Utica and Black River
KK)
Vermont and Canada*
1(H)
Vermont and Massachusetts. .100

118

..

100

3%
4

Virginia Central,
Virginia and Tennessee

119%

do
Western (N.

...

•

May ;58
July 65
F«b. 60
Jan, ’08

4
7
4

July 68

Jan. '68

Quarterly. July '08

May ’07

i April & Oct

Apr. ’OS

84

.

■

.|i

...

129%

3%

•

•

.

.

3

88
220

4
4

139%

do

pref. 1(H)

.

.

July July '68

6

•

•

*

•

•

•

....

48
.

J

•

» « •

48%
••

•

•

izCr

....

1

Jan. A

July

Jan. ’64

•

• •

•

2,94 ,791

•

•

*

4
i

....

July July '68 5%

75

Jan. A

50

June A Dec
Feb. A Aug
Feb. A Aug
Feb. A Aug

50
1(H)

June '68

Aug. ’67
Feb. '(58
Feb. ’68
May A Nov May '07
Jan. A July .Ian. ’6S

100

(consolidated)
preferred
,

....

•

•

...

100

Carolina)

f

f.-.i! Morris
Jj do

....

••

69
1,000,000 May A Nov M«y '68 3%
1,460,800 Jan. A J ulv July ’68 4 1(X)%
4
2,250,000 June A Dec J nne’GS
57%
2,800,000 Jan. A July J •>". ’08 1%

Lehigh Coal and Navigation . 50
i37%;| Monongahela Navigation Co. 50

.

Jan. A

908,4(H*

'..1(H)

Canal.
1 j Chesapeake and Del
Delaware Division*
Delaware and Hudson
Delaware & Raritan,

.

90

....

....

...

•

j

....

....

t

1,631,310

10<*
•1
)[jan. & July Jan. *08 3% 157% 158-,! Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.).. 1(H) l 908,207
50
) Feb. A Aug. Aug. 'OS 5,8s
50
do
52 ' |
prefer.: 50 2’,888,977
Mar. & Sep Sep.’07 4
i Susquehanna & Tide-Water .. 50 2,002,740
Jan. & July Jan. ’0% 5
Union, preferred
'.. 50 2,907,850
* *
Quarterly. \pr. ’08 1%
.

•

.

Y
Aug Feb. ’OS

....109 3,953.079

70%,, Worcester and Nashua.

70%

75%

Ii
i

60

2%
3%

Feb. A

Western Union (Wis. & Ill.).....
Wilmington and Manchester. 100

...

May & Nov
Jan. & July
’Feb. & Aug
I January.
IJan. & July
HJan. & July

-V

•

....

1(H) 5,700,000

Toledo, Wab & West

....

il5

1st prel.100
2d pref. 100

do
do

do
do

.

1(H) 1,305,0(H)

.100 3.203,900
Syracuse, Bingh’ton & N. Y..100 1,314,130

....

....

3

50 5,819,275

South Carolina
South Side (P. * L.)
South West. Georgia

....

....!

*

.

3%

July July ’08
July July '68

••••«.

•

1(H)
pref. 100 5,253,830

Hartford AN.IIaven

Manchester

....

July July '08
July July ’6s

.

preferred

do

Jan.

...

06"

*6 s.

Feb. ’67

3,160,000

....

....

100

& Georgia.. .100
& Virginia 100

2.409,307

•

....

pref. ..100

...

; •

4,000,000

....

3% 105>4 103%
2%

July July '08
Oct. '07
Dec & June Dec. 07
viay * Nov May '68
Jan. & July July OS

Jan. &

100

City

•

....

.

pref. ..100

do

do

•

.

—

•

....

•

.

....

79

..

100

Detroit and Milwaukee

94

•

•

•

scrip. 100

do

do

•

..

....

78%
75%

Ss

•

Jan. &
Jan. &

,

o

139%

....

Cincin.,Richm’d & Chicago *.100
Cincinnati and Zanesville. .. 50 1,070,345
89% 59%
Cleveland, Col., Cin. & Iud.. .100 10,450,000 F<*b * Aug
May & Nov May ’08 4
Cleveland & Mahoning*
50
99
ioi i
Jan. & July Ju y *6s 3%
Cleve, Pain. A Ashta
100
87% 87%
5,411,925 Quarterly/ July ’08 2
Cleveland and Pittsburg
... 50

594,201

....

•

138%

302.950

Delaware*
50
Delaware, Lacka., & Western 50

....

t

♦

*

....

....

5,2.x
OS 2% 124
3
3
3
5
5
5

iApr. & Oct

•

145

....

58%' 59

a*.

1/

—.

....

••

3

*08
’08
’07
'08
’OS
'6S

Jan. &
Jan. &

125

...

,,,,

21

June'08 l()s
June ’08 Ids
14,000.000 April A Oct Oct. ’67 5

Cleveland and Toledo
50
Columbus & ludianap. Cent.. 100
Columbus and Xenia*
Concord...;
Concord and Portsmouth
10"
Conn. & Passuinp. pref
100
Connecticut River
10u
Cumberland Valley.
50
Dayton and Michigan *
100

898,950
155,000 May & N ov

Ask

..

July July 6S

Jan. &

rate Bid.

Date.

Periods.

,

«...

....

pref. .100 4,789,125

do

do

1

135

June & Dec Tune 'OS

10<- 13,000,000 Quarterly.

‘

•

....

5

2,200,009 May & N<iv May ’6-

5t’
*..100
Georgia & Bana’g Co.lOn

do

•

paid.

92
2.303,000 Jan. & July July ’68 3
67*'
Feb. ’68 3
Ogdensb. A L. Champlain —1(H) 3,023,500 Annually.
1()3 % ’03%
do
preferred.100 1,000,006 Apr. & Oct Apr. ’68 4
29% 30
Ohio and Mississippi,
100 20,226,604
do.
preferred. .100 3,500,000 June & Dec June ’08 3%
3
92% 93
Old Colony and Newport.....100 4,848,320 Jau. & July July ’68
2,063,655
and Alexandria
Orange
100
J~
482,4(H) Feb. A Aug Feb * ’68
Oswego and Syracuse
50
328
100 7;ooo.ooo Quarterly, July ’68 6
Panama
105**
22,097,978 May & Nov May ’68 3c5r •04%
Pennsylvania...
....
50
Jan. & July
Philadelphia and Erie*
50 5.990.700
-do
do
preferred .. 2,400,001 Jan. & J uly
90 ’
£s
90%
and Reading
hila.
50 23,856,101 Jan. & July July *08 5 136
Phila., Germant. & Norrist’n* 50 1,569.5W Apr. & Oct Apr. ’68 4 ^11% 112 '
Pliila., Wilming. & Baltimore. 50 9,058,300 Jan. & July July ’08
Pittsburg and Connellsville... 50 I,770,129
09% 109"%
Pittsb., Ft. W. & Chicago
100 II,500,000 Quarterly. July ’68 ’2%
3
Portland & Kennebec (new). .100
579.500 Feb. A Aug. Feu. ’08
loo" i66%
3
Portland, Saco, & Portsm'th.100 1,500,000 June A Dec J une ’08 4
Providence and Worcester... .100 1,8)10,000 Jan. A July July '68
Raritan and Delaware Bay*.. .1(H 2.530.700
T~
Rensselaer & Saratoga consollOO 2,500,000 April A Oct Apr. ’(58
Richmond and Danville
..1(H) 2,000,000
847,100
Richmoud & Petersb...... ...100
5
Rome, Watert. *Ogdensb’g..l(H) 2,400,000 Jan. A July July/68
30
Rutland
100
Feb.& Aug. Feb. ’68 3%
do
1(H)
preferred
40
St. Louis, Alton, * Terren... 1(H) 2.300,000
7
do
do
pref.lOd 2,040,000 Annually. May ’68
St. Louis, Jacksonv. & Chic.*lC0 1,409,429
Sandusky, and Cincinnati
50 2,989,0(H)
do
do
pref. 50
393,073 May A Nov Nov. ’67 3
901,311
Sandusky, Mansf. & Newark.llX)
>
570,050 Jan. A July July ’68 2%
Schuylkill Valley*..
50
eb. ’68 3
809.450 Feb. A Aug
ShainokiuVal. & Pottsville*. 50
Shore Line Railway.
035,2(H) Jan. A July Jan. ’68 3
..1(H)

10

v

do
preferred
Cedar Rapids & Missouri

Central
Central of New Jersey
Central Ohio

147

.

Last

0,785,05. Jan. & July July ’68 4
1.500.0(10 Jan. A July July *68 4
6,000,000 Jan. & July July ’68 5
1,755,281 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 3
300.500
137.500 Jan. & July Jan. ’08 3%
4
3,068,400 J une & Dec; June ’08
Quarterly. May ’68 2
4,648,900

.

.....

.

.

.

137
131

3%

1.159.500

50

Catawissa*

....

....

1.590.500
5,0tH ,<UK) Feb. & Aug Feb ‘ ’68 5"
378,455
7-V,500
7 1,920 Jan. & July jau ’68 3%

1(MI
• 50
preferred 50

56

14

0,(HM),000 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’68

Iff*

River.100

Cape Cod.."

.

...

....

4
5
5

Jan. & July July ’08
950 000 June * Dec Dec. *67

* Erie*. .100
:

.

•

.

.

5
3

3,300,000

Providence... —100

Burlington* Missouri
Camden and Amboy,
Camden and Atlantic.

....

....

•

Boston ana

•

54

3%

Quarterly. July “68 1%

50
Biossburg and Corning*
loo
Boston and Albany
Nov. *07
Boston, Con & Montreal,prof. 100 1.340.400 May & Nov.
Boston, Hartford and Erie.... 100 14,884,000 Jan. &
July July *68
Boston and Lowell —....—500 1,970,000
Boston and Maine,
10J 4,070,974 Jan. & July July ’68
Buffalo, New York,
Buffalo and Erie

•

FRIDAY

Stock

iw York and Harlem
50
New York & Harlem pref
*><
N. Y. and New Haven
100
New York, Prov. & Boston.. .1(H)
Norfolk & Petersburg, pref. .1(H)
o
do
guar. 100
Northern of New Hampshire.4(H)
Northern Central,
50
North Eastern (S. Car.)
do
8p. c., pref
North Carolina
.....1(H)
North Missouri
100
North Pennsylvania
50
Norwich and Worcester
1(H)

«...

•

roads

discovered In our Tables.
Dividend.

LIn dividend col. x = extra, c =
standing.
cash, s — sloi'k.

....

.100

lt'rbshiri1*

July ’OS

COMPANIES
thus * are leased

out¬

'

July ’68 3%
122%
Apr. ’68 4
1.050,000 April & Oct Apr. ’68 5

10‘*

Savannah*

Augusta &

Marked

Last pa id.
rate Bid. Ask.
Date.

Periods.

1,774.824
2,494,000 Jan. & July
l,252,HR) Jan. * July
733,700 Jan *July
18,151,902 April .v Oct

Susquehanna....1(H)

Atlantic* St. Lawrence*.... 100
Atlanta & West Point.
100

i

FRIDAY

Stock
Marked thus"*'are leased roads
out¬
In dividend col- x = extra, c
standing.
cash, s — stock.

lbany and

immediate notice of any error

great favor by giving us

Feb.
Feb.
Feb,
Feb.

3
3
8

A Aug
A Aug Feb. ’68
A Aug;Feb.
& Aug;Feb.
l>

5
3
5

..

•

^

•

•

•

•

•

•

140*
44%

45^*

...

.

..

■r * •

5

....

....

•

.

.-.

20
43

...

....

a

Jan. &

July July ’68

4

....

Susquehanna. 50
Wyoming Valley
50
West Branch *

....

.,,. _

Quarterly. July '08 2% 111%

Jan. & July Jan. ’68
June * Dec June ’07
Jan. * July July ’08
Aug. ’00
1 Jan. & July July ’08
5 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’68

) Mar.

....

....

99%

43

2
3
4

Miscellaneous.
Coal.—American

....

....

•

.

.

•

Ashburton
Butler

J

Consolidation..

•

•

•

•

•

Central
Cumberland....

....

&.July
Irregular.

Jan.

’s00,0(X)

25 1,500,000 Mar. A Sep.

& Sep

4

....

....

....

45

Mar. ’68

52

r

Pennsylvania
Spring Mountain
Spruce Hill

J

Jan.
Oct.

50 2,500,000
500,*HK) Jun. & Dec. Dec. ’67
26
1(H) 5,000,000
1(H) 2,000,000 Jan. & July July ’68
...100 5,000,000

50 3,200,000 Quarterly.
50 1,250,000 Jan. & July
30
.......
10 1,000,000
Sep. ’00 38.
Wilkesbarre
100 3,400,000 Apr. & Oct
Sep. ’00 3 8. 10
■Wyoming Valley.
100 1.250.000- Feb. A Aug
(Jos.—Brooklyn
25 2,000,000 Feb. & Aug
May ’08 v
Citizens (Brooklyn)
135
20 1,200,000 Jan. * July
Miir.’OS 3
Harlem
50 1,000,000 Feb.& Aug
117% 117%'
July ’68 5
Jersey City & Hoboken.. 20
386,000 Jan. & July
May ’68 10s 91% | 91%
Manhattan
50 4,000,000 Jan. & July
Feb. ’68 6
(X)
Metropolitan
100 2,800,000
......
50 1,000,000 May & Nov
New Yorx
Feb.’67 8
104% 104%;

* Sep

3 Mar.

112

....

4
2

Apr. 68

)
)

)

3

i’ioo,0(K)

May ’08

31%
192

Jan.'’67
22

....

May & Nov

%

•

5
0 Jan. & Julj
): Feb. & Aug
0 Feb. & Aug

.

•

-

•

155

Feb. ’08
Jan. ’08
Jan. ’68

195

.

•

.

•

.

.

Aug. ’06
Aug. ’67

J»n. ’68

.

.....

176

!

6

February...

0 February... Feb. ’67
3 Jan. & July
2
January. Jan. ’67
0 Jan. & July July "6$

7
5
4

•

*

:::: i
i

0

4! June & De<3 Dec. ’0' 4
>0|Mar. & Sey) Mar. ’6' 3% $
K) May & Not j May ’&5 5
Feb. & Aujy Feb. ’6f5
Jan. & Jul y Ju’y ’61S
Jan. A Jul

Feb. & Au g Feb.
Mar & Sep Sep.
.

’A3
’6 7

OOjFe &Au g Feb. ’6

3

5
4
3
5

4
3

burg

Imjn'ovemeni. Canton

78%j

•

7

14
X)
H)
H)
30
00
25

William

99
64%! 65
78
98

i

50

May ’08

750.000 Jan. & July Jan. ’08

16%

731,2*0
July ’GO
4,000,000
Telegraph.— Western Union. 100 40.359,400 Jan. & July Ju'y ’07
Express.—Adams
100 10.000,000 Quarterly. Apr. ’68
American
500 9,000,000 Quarterly. May ’68
Boston Water Power

Merchants’ Union
United States

100

100 20,000,000
....I0u 6.000,000

Quarterly. Dec.'

’66

Wells, Fargo & Co..

18

.,.100 10,tt00,000
j Steamship.—Atlantic Mail
100 4,000,000 Quarterly. Dec. ’67
loo 20,000,000 Quarterly. Dec. ’67
Pacitic Mail..
Trust.—Farmers’ L. & Trust.. 25 1,000,000 Jan. & July July ’68
100 1,000,000 Jan. * July July ’68
National Trust
i
New York Life* Trust.. 100 1,000,000 Feb. & Aug Feb.’68
Union Trust
100 1,000,000 Jan. * July'Ju'y ’68
United States Trust...100 1,500,000 Jan. A July Jan. 68
*•*'! Mining—Mariposa Gold
100 5,097,600
134}i 134%
Mariposa Gold Preferred.100 5,774,400
#

...

...

.

...

•

.

4

Quicksilver♦,.,•*** 5.,.t .10610»QQ0,00C!

Feb ’65 5s'ti

48

49%

17

17%
34%
53%
47%
25%

34%
53%
47
25

46%
24%

47

?4%
30

lOOji

100%

27

THE CHRONICLE.

July 4, 1868.]

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.—Page 2.
will appear fu this place next week.

Bond U»t Page 2

Funded Debt
given in detail in the 2d col
nmn ii is expressed by the figures
in brackets after the Go's name.
Where thdptal

*

757,001

sinking fund, (X. Y.)

Mortgage

HUantwd.St. [auo. 1st Mort
2d Mortgage
do

7
7
7
7
7
7
7
6
6
6

do
do
do
do
Jan. & July
do
do
do

1

!S

4,3l9,5i(,
0.41,000
804,000

304,0001
200,000

7
6

000. oco

3,900,000

new.;..

Boston and Lowell: Bonds o'Juy ’5
do
of Oct. :861

•378 o J
•.()(),• M (

Buffalo d Erie: Common Bonds....

400,000

do
do

do
do

100,000

....

200,000;

...

Buffalo. X. Y. and Erie ($2,395,000):
let Mortgage
2d Mortgage
Burlington <fc Missouri:
Bonds conv.‘into pref. stock

2,000,000!

330,000
000,000!

000,00'.'

do
do
do
Land mortgage bonds .
Cimden and Amboy ($10,264,403):
Dollar Loans
do
do
Dollar Loan

3,209,320
321,400
075,000

........

1,700,000

...

807, (MM)
4,001,700

Consolidated ($5,000,000) Loan
Sterling £359,550 at $4 ^4
Canieu and Atlantic: 1st Mortgage

•

....

....

.

.

.

.

1806

.

.

.

•

....

...

Jan. *fc Juh
do

95*
95*

Ap’l A Oct.

1885

97

2d Mortgage
1st d 2d Funded Coupon Bonds..
Detroit and Pontiac R.li
do
do
Bonds of June 30, 1806
De'rait. Moure* & 7oledo: let Mort.
Dubuove and Siouoc City :
1st. Mort. Bonds 1st Div
Construction Bonds 2d Div

Sinking Fund,

bonds
Eastern, Mass. ($l,77'*,4t'(i):

97*
•

•

....

.

...

..

•

•

•

•

5 per

•

.

Chicago d Northwest. ($10,251,000):
Preferred Sinking Fund

"* ]‘

3,0(M),000

till 1870

3,010,<XM)
4S4.(MM)j

*'' "

750JMM)

105,0'. 4)1

d.Pacific:

’’ ’ 2,200,000j 10

Mortgage (C. A R. I.)
do
(C li. I., * Pac).
tine., Ham. d Dayton ($1,759,000)
2d Mortgage
,

1,250,(MM I

....

....

....

Feb. A Augl

•

....

•

....

70
53

OS'
50

873
1879
J’lie A Dec. 1870
May <fc \ov 1873
Jan. A July 1882

do

Ap’l & Oct.

Jail. & July 1870
1875
do
April & Oct 1893

1,397. (MM)
0,003,000

77.

2d Mort. Bonds
3d
do
tier eland d Pittsburg : 2d
3d Mortgage convertible

! 4th

do

Consol.

'

Broking Fund

77

Mortgage

77
Mortgage

92
90

97

-

•

1st

.

Mortgage
do

Passumpsic R. ; 1st mort"
vinbertand Valley: (356,100) 1st Mon

vrn. and

2d

do
wyton and Michigan:
1st Mortgage..;

».

'

795,000
534,!MM)
5(M),(MM)

1,000,000
1,000,000
1,130,000
1,003,(KM)
1,096,(XX)
135,000

mware: 1st Mort gage (912,25

^Bonds guaranteed

*»a., Lac lea. d Western:
1st Mortgage,
sinking fund
do

rJ™a.and West. 1st Mort

May

Tan. &

Jul)

Sterling convertible (.€800,000)...
fled' Pittiburg; 1st. Mortgage
Gal. d Chic. IT.
1st Mortgage,
2d
do.

92

102>,
94*

do

Elgin and State KR. Bonds
Georgia
Grand Junction : MortgageGreat West., III.: 1st Mort., W, Div.
1st Mortgage Whole Line

95

1st
2d
3d

April & Oct

do
do

sinking fund

May d Nov.
•Ian. d lulv

‘1892

do

do

7

: Sole mort.Bonds

94

May d Nov. 1900

Cue d Dec

101

1876
1905
1910

250,(MM i
573,8'Mi

101,000

169,500
5(K).000

100,000 6
1,111,000: 7
1,003 000 7
504,000 7
oo-*,iw <

Ap’l d Oct
do

1875
Wch A Sep 1881
Jan. & July 1871

April d Oct

2,310,000,’ 8 Ap’l & Oct

1877

May A Nov. 1875

574,000
1,000.(HM
570,(X)0

3,000,000
4,(HH),0(Ki
6,(HX),(HHi
4,441,000
920,500
3,875.520
9(0,000

Redemption bonds
Sterling Redemption bonds

1.

Illinois d Southern Iowa : 1st Mort
Indiana Central: 2d Mortgage
Indianapolis and Cine. ($1,302,284)
1st Mortgage
;
Jelfe rsonville, Madison d Indian a polls.
.

1st

Mortgage

Jeffersonville

RR., 2d Mort
Indianap. A. Madison RR., 1st M..
Joliet d Chicago : 1st Mort., sink. f.
Joliet and X. Indiana: 1st Mortgage

Lack a wanna d. Blown sb urg 1st Mort
do

2d

Extension..

1877
M’ch & Sep 1879
1883
do

103

1880
June & Dec 1888

91
88

May & Nov.
7
7
0
7
7

d«>
Extension........
La Crosse d Milwaukee :

Mortgage, Eastern Division...

2d
do
do
IHi igh Valley : 1st Mortgage
Little Miami: 1st Mortgage
Little Schuylkill:

....

{M’ch A Sep'1875
Jan. A July|1882
{April <fc Octjlt>75

Mortgage (guarrantei d)

7tX),(XX)
927,(XX)

2,(55,000
3,S90.(XX)

do
Ajiril A

Mortgage (Main stem)
(Memphis Branch)

Oct'l8Sl

Jan. A Juh 11883
Jan. A July 1883
Jan. & July 1873
1876
do

(Leb. Br. Extreme)..
($4,422,335) :

Mortgage,

307,500

1870
Feb. A Any 1875

April A Oct
April A Oct

2,499,000
2,503,(KM)

do
do
do
Feb. A Ann
Jan. A July

1875
1875
1890
1875
1882
1866

500,0(M)

Jan. &

1806

416,000

303,000
3(H),(XM)

1,980,000
397,0(H)
012,5(H)
485, (XX)
800,(XX)
!MM),(HX)
909

000!

903,0(H)
1,000,(KX)
1,437,0(H)

April A Oct

.-..

$400,(KX) Loan Bonds..'.
1st Mortgage (City Bangor) Bonds
2d
do
(P.& K.RR.) Bonds..
Memphis cfe Chari.: 1st Mort. bonds
2d Mortgage bonds
Michigan Central, ($0,968,988).

July

April A Oct 1906
April A Oct 1873
May A Nov 1881
Jan. «fc July
Jan. & July
Jan. A July
March & Sep

April «fc Oct
May A Nov

May A Nov
July
May & Nov
May A Nov
Jan. A

1882
1874
1875
1885
1880

Mobile and Ohio ($7,904,021) :....
Income bonds

• #,

KHJ

1872
1809
1873
1883

April A Orf 1877
Jan. A July 1S75
Feb. A A ill' 1890
May A Nov 1893

1,500,000

1897

150,000

Jan. A JuP

var.

May A Nov.

var.

2,272,750

Feb. A Aug
May A No\

1891

do

1,594,000
207,000

600,000

’ 1,095,000

‘315,200

000,000
300,(XX)

94*

890

1885

Feb. A Aug 90-’9t
June & Dec. 70-’71

Apr. A Oct.

1874

Feb. A Aug. 1870

1,294,()(X)

May A Nov 1880
Jail. & July 1887

1,294,500

March ASey 1809
April & Oct 1882

no*
113*

1885
do
1S77
Feb. & Aug 1808

101* 101*

1,000,000

May »fe Nov.

Jan. A

July

Jan. A July
April A Oct
Jan. & July

1893
1884

96

98

92
89

90

1891

Jan. & July 1876
do
1870

94\321

May A Nov. 1867

4,593,0001

Sterling bonds

118

1890

878,141 8

2d Mortgage..

Interest bonds,

*

847,500
5(M),(KX)
175,(HH)

824, (Ha

do

1(0

Feb. A Aug ’09-’70 02
99
J’ne A Dec 1885
May Nov. 1875 101

4,000,000

..

76^ 78*

jl868

:

.....

100

Aug!l882

189,000 6 |
, do
878
389,000 7
do
{70-75
927,000 6 Jau. & Jnly|lS70
l,000,tXHl!l0 'April & Oct'1868
1,455,000 ) 7 Feb.
AugjlSSS
2,500.000; 7 May & Nov.{1893
July.
320,000! 7
1868
700,(XX) 7
do
1868

1,.’XX),000

Extension Bonds (Hunter’s Point).
do (Glen Cove Br.)
do

97* 98

'April & Oct

1,919,0001 7 Feb. *

900, ()(X)
9(X),(JOO

Mortgage

Convertible

99

97^

1,173,000 7 ;May «Sr Nov.'1875
200,000 7 !Jan.,& July|1884

Sinking Fund do
207,000
Mich S. d X. Indiana: ($9,135,840)
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
4 784,000
2d
do
2,693,000
Goshen Air Line Bonds
637,000
Milwaukee d Prairie da Chien :
1st Mortgage, sinking fund,,
390,500
Milwaukee and St. Paul:
1st Mortgage
5,361,000
2d
do
1,500,000
Income Bonds
Iowa & Min., 1st mort
2,000,000
Mississippi d Tennessee ($1,542,141)/
1st Mortgage
600,000 7

Tan. & July 1881
Vl’chd oept 1884
do
81-’94
fan. t Juh 1875
1875
do'

Jan. & July 1872
Feb. «fc Aug 1874
1885
do
Ap’l & Oct. 1888
'Jan. & July 1880
j April & Oct 2862

30-1,000

do 0 per cent

McGregor Western 1st Mortgage
Maine Central: ($2,733,800)
$1,100,000 Loan Bonds

80

1894

May & Nov. 1888

0,090,500

Construction bonds, 1S75

1st
2d

76

July 1883

Illinois Central:

1st

95

do

710,000

2d
do
Consolidated mortgage

1st Mortgage
1st Mortgage

1873
1875

Sej

Jan. A

2,(XX),(MX)
183,000

Huntingdon d Broad Top($1,056,245):
1st Mortgage

1st

1892

M’ch A

3(H),000
660,000
900, (HK»,

633,000

Louisville and Nashville ($5,165,000):

1880

do

1875

us.

924,000

250,000

1,837,780

3,437,750

Mortgage

Louisville, Cincinnati d Lexington

Feb. A Aug 1873
M’eh & Sep IS70
Jau. & Julv 1874

vari<

600,000 7

1st Mortgage, sinking fund
Long Island :
1st Mortgage.

18—
18—
1878

042,000

)...7

<1

various.
1678
Feb. & Aug 1886
1886
Feb. & Aug 1816

250,000

370,000

.

(incl. in C. d X. W.):
sinking fund

Marietta d: Cincinnati

fan d July
May it Nov.
M’ch d Set

Wrott and MJwaukee ($7,151,198): /
lit Mortgage, convertible
**.,($2,500,000 7




]

.

Mississippi Fiver Bridge Bonds..

1st

91

1890

fan. & July 1885
do
ISSO

2,837,090

7

100

1885
S95
d Nov 1893

2,021,000
092, (XM)

109,(00

So

WJfoinesVaRey

425,000

1,00 i,(HM)

Vvuedicut River: 1st Mort

Toledo Depot Bonds

99
95

Jan. A Juh
do
‘

3,200,0

Sinking Fund Mortgage
Mortgage Bonds of 1S06

2d

°

($2,746,280)1
7 *
Indianapolis Central)

inland and Toledo
(dumb'is d

B’ds

...

do

Harrisburg d Lanc'r : New D. B’ds
Hartford d New Haven : 1st Mort..
Ha rtf. Iron, d Fishkill :
Hudson River (0,394,550):

1.880

1,300,000

.

Cles., Pain. d Ashtabula: 1st M.

convertible...........

.

•

Cleveland, Col. ami Cine. ($425,000):
Bt Mort (payable $25,000 per year)
Cleveland d Mahoning ($1,752,400):
1st Mortgage
do

May & Nov

;

3d
do
dncinnafi Richmond d Chicago ’.*. 1
Cincinnati d Zanesville 1st Mort".!

3d

1890

1,250,000
500,(MM)
560,000

,

1870

convertible

2nd do
do
Greenville & Columbia: 1st,Mort
Bonds guaranteed by State
Bonds unsecured
Hannibal d St. Joseph ($7,177,600):
Land Grant
Mortgage
Convertible Bonds.

J’ne A Dec. 1877
May & Nov 1S72

Jan. «fc July
do

do
do
do
do

2d M oi’tgage

....

j 1865

Feb. A Aug 1.885
1885
do
May A Nov. 1803
F.M A.ifcN. 1915
Fob. A Aug! 1885
A nr. A Oct. 1ST!
May &Nov. 08-’71

cent. Bonds

3d
4th
5th

.

1st
1st

<&

s

May & Nov 1804

1,000.000

100,OCO

Railway ($22,370,982):
1st Mortgage (extended)

....

«

Chicago, flock Island

rO

“E &
Ps

Erie

.

....

.

Equipment Bonds
Equipment, Bonds

Payabh

a

•394,(HX
750,000

East Pennsylvania: Sink. Fund B’ds
Elmira W Williamsport : 1st Mort..

2d

...

conv.

34

•r-

1,005,640

do

,

do

....

■880
1,740,222 0
Jail. A July 1873
400,00(1'
408,000
Ap’l & Oct. 1879
2d Mortgage
Feb.-«fc Aug 1882
141,(HHt
Gitawma : ($202,500) 1st Mortgage.
Mar. A Sep 1875
78«,0(H)
Central Georgia: 1st Mortgage......
101
102
Feb. & An; 1870
900,(KM)
Central of Xe.iv Jersey : 1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
May A Nov 1875
000, (KM)
Central Ohio : 1st Mort.
2,500,000; 0 M’ch & Sep 1890
Central Pacific of Cal.: 1st mortgage 7,330,000i 0
Convertible Bonds.
1,500,0001 0
Cheshire: Bonds
'"**
073,200 0 Jan. & July ’75-’80 95'
Chicago and Alton
1st Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref
May A Nov. 1877 105
441,(MM)
Jau. A July 1893
1st
do
*.
2.4(M),(K)0
2d
do
income
Ap’l & Oct. 1883
1,100,000
Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,458,250):
110
Jan. A July 1883
Trust Mortgage (S. F.)
3,317,(KM)
;...
78 h 80
Ap’l A Oct. 1895
Chicago and Gt. Eastern 1st Mort..
5,000,000
Chicago and Milwaukee :
Jan. & July 1898
1st Mortgage (consolidated)
861,000

1st Mortgage
Interest Bonds.
Consol. S. F. Bonds,
Extension Bonds

ing.

do

do

....

....

conv.

Mortgage, convertible

....

-

do
1875
Feb.it Aug. 1883
May A Nov. 1889
J’ne A Dec. 1893

.

....

18-^4
1875
1880

April & Oct 1S70

...

....

May A Nov. 1878

Jan. & Julyi 1899

.

.

....

0

1S05
do
do
1889
Mar. & Sep.11884

*

•

J’ne * Dec. 1877
M’ch A Sep 1885
Feb. A Aug 1887
April A Gel ’68-’71
Jan. A July '70 ’70
April & Oct 1875

7

....

.../

6
6
6
5
6
6

400,500
745,000

llartforel and Erie.

do
do

Ap’l A Oct.

....

....

Jan. A July '70-’79
1870
do
Ap’l & Oct. 1810

1,000,000

........

do

expressed by the figures

in brackets after the Co’s name.

....

347,000 7

I

do

it is

FRIDAY

,

1

....

7

701,000
370.000

do
2d mort..
BiUMere be ih ware :
let Mort. (guar. C.aud A.)
2d Mort.
do
........
3d Mort.
"*
Boston & Albany: Sterling Bonds...
Albany Bonds
Dollar Bonds
-...4
.
Boston. Cone. At J/0/i£;£«/($1,O5O,OOO):
”

«

C a

INTEREST.

DESCRIPTION.

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

75

1877
1882
1879
1881
1876
1888
1884
1895

t)
6
6

.

do
let
Sinking Fund Bonds

i

Ap’l A Oct.

(S. F.)1855

Mortgage.

Ask’d

•H

6

co

'

'

_

Btllefon/aine
Bellefonlaine <fe Ind., 1st mortgage
Iud. Pitts. A Cleveland, 1st mort.

'

Ap’l A Oct.

...

:

do

7

1,500,00;

(Portland)

of1S64

Baltimore and Ohio: Mort
do
do
1850
do
do
1S53

Boston,

Payable.

...

Sterling Bonds.

Princpal payble.

1aK te.

ing.

T3

j

Railroad:

do
do
let Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ohio)
Id
do )
do
let Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Butf. ex
Consolidated Bonds

let

outstan

)

(Callroad :
Atlantic d Gt. Western ($2^,999,900):
1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.)
Id
do
do

id

Amount

'

in not

1st

FRIDAY

interest.

DESCRIPTION.

do
do

691,900

do

1882
3882
1876

•C

THE CHRONICLE.

28

INSURANCE STOCK LIST.

PETROLEUM STOCK LIST.
Marked thus
Bid. Askd

Companies.

Allen Wright

10

par

..10

Bergen Petroleum
Bliveu

i

50

Bennehoff Run
•

•

•

*

..

Bradley Oil

'5
10

.

Brevoort

.

..

Buchanan Farm
Central

Cherry Run Petrol’m.
Cherry Run special...

#

.

50
...

47
33

48
45
-

...

..

Empire City

....

5 i__

.,

•

.

.

-

•

....

1 00

“5
5
5

•

•

*

.

3 00

....

•

....

....

•

•

•

...

1

•

10

•

•

•

•

...

25

5
..10

....

...

....

Hoffman

...

Adventure
^Etna

.

4

.

.

Lafayette
Lake Superior

11

17

Amygdaloid

2
4%

Atlas
Aztec

13%

Bay State..

.

2 40

5%
4%
1%

11 Minnesota

15

Ij

—

jjNaumkeag

Calumet
Canada
Charter Oak
Central
Concord

5
4

National

Native

1

20%
1
1%

i! Pontiac

5%
16
—

—

5
2

Hancock
Hanover
Hilton

2 75

Hope

.

3 00

.

Hec a
Hulbert

40 00:

5
8

Metropolitan * t. .ICO
Montauk (B’klyn) 50
Nassau (B’klyn).. 50
National
7%

21

2%
3

Winthrop

208,33)
350,OR
581,43t>
225,585
289,191
279,261
312,0S9
180,2bf
192,688
399,o£2
280,551
259,089
438.750

Jan. and July.
Jan. and July.
Jan. and July.
Jan. and July.
Jan. and July.
Feb. and Aug.
March and Sep
May and Nov.
Feb. and Aug.
June and Dec.
Feb. and Aug.
Jan. and July.
Jan, and July.
35^,764 Feb. and Aug.
293,943 Jan. and July,
f 51,889
do
do
213,472
417,194 Feb', and Aug.

63

800.000

200,000
150,000

20

164,44'
26 150,000
Phoenix + Br’klyn 50 1,000,000 .,099,8 2
Reliei
50
200,000 227,003
Republic*
10" 300,000 480,549
Resolute*
100
200 000
127,448
25 200,000 256,' 87
Rutgers’
St. Mark’s
25
150,000
95,099
St. Nicholast
25
150,000
172,618
Security t
50 1,000,000
943,185
Standard
50
200,000
270,958

4%

....

GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST.

Ad^ Elmore

Alameda Silver
American Flag
Atlantic & Pacific
Bates & Baxter
Black Hawk
Senton
Bob Tail
Boscobel Silver
Bullion Consolidated

par

Hamilton G.&
Holman

—

.

Companies.

10

—

25
G. & S

Washington

Kipp & Buell

—

LaCrosse

—

Washington *t...100
WilliamsburgCity 50

Liberty

—

Yonkers & N. Y.100

5
.

—

..

—

—

Quartz Hill
Heynolds
Rocky Mountain

—

1
4 25

—

First National

10

1

Companies.

—

5
—

60

;

Bleeck.St.&Fult.F. 100 $900,000
Broadway (B’klyn) 100 290.000

pa~

5

—

20

3 70

..

Jan. and

Aug.’654
Dec.’67 5
Feb .’68.6

July’6810
Jan’68.10
Feb’6871

Jan. ’68.5

July ’t85
Ju y’68.5
*■

f

eb.’68.4

July ’68.4

Jan. ’6>.5

Jan.’68 7

J’ne’64.5
Apr.’BS.S

July’68.7
Tan.’68.5
10

10

10

July’68 7

Jan’66.3i
July’65.5

Jan.’68 5
May ^65.6

Feb ’68.5

July’68.5

Jan.’68.5
-

12
-

10
10

J’y’f8.8i

Feb’68.10
Apr ’65.5

J’y’67.3*
July'68 5
July'68.5
Jan.’66.5
Jan.’(8.5

Jan.’65.5
12

July’68.5
Jan.68’.5

July’65.6
July ’68.5
Feb.’68 5
Ma-,’68.5

July’68.5
Jan. ’68.5

July’67.5
Jan 686
Jan. ’68.5

Jan. ’68.7
Jan ’685
Jan.’ 68.5

Jan’68.?J
Jan ’68.5

July’68.6
July’68.5
Jan’68.10

July’66.5
July’68 5
July’OlO
Juy’68.6
July’68 5
Jan.’68.6

July.

Feb*’68.6
Jan. ’68.5

Jan*’68.5

Apr.’68.5
Jan.’68 8

July ’68.5

Feb. 68 5

July’68 5

July.

Jan. ’68.6
Jan. ’68.5

do
do
do

Jan’68.3*

J'y’66.3*

do

Feb.’686
Feb.’67 5

Feb. and Aug.

do

Ang.‘67 5

Jan. and July.
Feb. and Ang.
Jan. and July.
do
212,314
224,012 Feb. and Ang.

,

F’b.’66.3i
JaD. ’68.5

July’68.5

Feb/68.5
Feb.’68.6
Jan. *68.5

222,577 Feb. and Ang.
178,717 Jan. and July.
359.405
do
642,353 Feb. and Aug.
190,206 F°b. and Ang.
281,451 Jan. and July.
553,716
do

Dividend.
Date.

Price
p.ct bid.

Jan.’68.5
Feb.’68.5
Feb. ’685
Jan. ’685

July '68.5

8

...

...

....

CO 4PANIE8.

....par

Wallkill Lead
Wallace Nickel
Rutland Marble..
Russe.. Fi.e
Savon do Terre

Bid. Aekd

..

..

—

25
—
—

25
—

5

*’1867“ 5* *

Eighth Avenue.... 190

1867

42d St. & G’d SL F. 100

May ’68

Har. Br., M. & Ford
Ninth Avenue
Second Av.fN. Y).
Sixth Av. (N Y,)..

5

‘7
••

100

Third Av. (N. Y.).. 100

V.BruntSt&E.Bas

12

100

100
100

...

R. E. Mor.
35,000
1st Mort. 1,50C,000
1st Mort.
80,000
1st Mort.
498,810
1st Mort.
300,000
1st Mort.
20.000

107,700

P’k,N.&E R 100 1.031,500
Conevlsl. & B’klvn 100
500,000
D.D’k, E. B d’y.&c. 100 1,200.090
Cent

Tudor Lead

Bonded Debt.

40,000
1867

& 7 Av.NY 100 2,100,000 1867
3%
99,850
B’klyn, Bath & C. 1.100
488,100
Brooklyn City
50 1,500.000 Feb/68 3
B’k’nC. fr-Rid’w’d. 100
164,000
B’k’n C. & Rocfc. B.

Long Island'Peat..
—

l

I B’klyn Cent &Jam. 100

Vanderburg

Saginaw, L. S. & M..
.100

do
Jan. and

B’f, way

10

MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.
Bid.! Askd;

Par. Capital
paid in. i

—

10

iTexas

Companies.

Mar’68.5

25

i Twin River Silver..... .100

-

Gunnell Gold
Gunnell Union

Jan ’68.5

Jan. 68.5
reb ’68.5

CITY PASSENGER RAILROAD STOCKS & BONDS.

Symonds Forks.........

—

Gold Hill

....

Seaver
Sensenderfer
Smith & Parmelee

—

Fall River

....

Owyhee
People’6 G. & S. of Cal.

,25

—

2

Ophir Gold.

■-

Edg 'hid ..
Empire Gold

4ac.68.3t

.

—

Des Moines
.Downieville

—

Manhattan Silver... ...100 110
Midas Silver
—
Montana...-,
5
New York
10
New York & Eldorado
—

—

Consolidated Gregory.. .100




50

Harmon

10

Foster Iron
*
Lake Superior Iron.
Bucks County Lead,
PeuboLead
Mauhar Lea-d
Phenix Lead
Iron Tank Storage

200,000
200,000
1 50,000
250,000
400,000
393,700
250,000
500,000

50

Columbia G. <fc S
Combination Silver....

Copake Iron

If 0
25

Tradesmen’s
25
United States.... 26

2

50' Hope

200,000

Sterling *
Stuyvesant

85

100

—

Burroughs
Central.

Corydon

Star

Bid. lAskd

S.b’dspar —

J
e’64.,5
Jan.’08.6

229,250
uo
199,287 Feb. and Aug.

People’s

Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares.
+ Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares
% Capital $200,000, In 20,000 shares.
Capital of Lake Superior companies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares

Bid. AskdM

365.325

210,000 '291,309

100

Park
Peter Cooper

*

Companies.

Last paid

200,000
N.Y.Fire and MarlO
273,68" Feb. and Aug.
Niagara.
50 1,000,000 1,060,509 Jan. and July.
:
North American* 50
500,000 541,409
do
North River
25
350,000 -393,829 April and Oct.
Pacific'.
25
200,000 281,546 Jan. and July.

11
1%
1%
Q
1

1865 1866 1867

,

New Amsterdam. 35
N. Y. Equitable 3 35

11%

,.

100
100

Meehan’ & Trade’ 25
Mechanics (B’kly) 50
Mercantile
10°
-Merchants’
50

5%

West Minnesota
Winona

33

Knowlton

2 00

Washington

19
10

25

Manhattan
Market*

1

Toltec
Tremont
Victoria
Vulcan

1

Huron
Indiana
Isle Royale*
Keweenaw

Lorillard*

25

6%

...J Superior

Humboldt

Hungarian

8

76

25

Longlsland(B’kly) 50

21 50

6%

Star

100

Lamar..
Lenox

Salem
%
Seneca
1
Sharon
%
Sheldon & Colnmfcian.21
South Pcwabic
17
South Side
2

1%

.

Lafayette (B’klyn) 50

—

.

30

Knickerbocker... 40

.10

Ridge

25

King’s Co’ty(Bkln 20

—

.Rockland
ISt. Clair
St. Louis
St. Mary’s

—

2

Irving

—

Resolute

100

Jefferson

7 00

-10%

i Providence
Quincy t

1

Hamilton

International

63

34

,

25
50

1'0

Import’&Traders 25

5%
3%

Princeton

1%

Franklin
French Creek
Gardiner Hill.
Girard
Great Western

7
50
.

80

Hope

Periods.

200,000 226.092 Jan. and July.
277.681 Jan. and July.
250,000
600,000 1,432,697 Jan. and July.
400,000 385.101 March and Sep
300,000 425,060 April and Oct.
200,000 246,090 Jan. and July.
200,000
do
226,229
150,000 134,011 Feb. and Aug.
204,000 273,792 Jan. and July. 10
150,000 123.101
do
do
150,000 160,963
do
200,000 204,720
147,066 May and Nov.
150,000
200,000 232,520 j Feb. and Aug.
500,000 597,413;Jan. and July.
200,000 222,2071 Jan. and July.
1,000.000 2,385,6571Jan. and July.
200,000
272.173 Feb. and Aug.
200,000 187,065 April and Oct.
200,000 198,456'jan. and July.
150,000
185,2*8
do
400,000
426,752
do
144.613
do
200,000
do
2,000,000 2,393,915
do
150,000 159,630
500,000
59S,322
do
200,000
do
217,103
do
200,000 204,664
5' 9,480 Feb. and Aug.
500,000
do
200,000 233,253
200,010
257,458 March and Sep
150,000 179,876 Jan. and July.
280,000 324,352
do
124,836
150,000
do
300,000 419,774
do
150,000
do
175,845
do
200,000 301,939
do
1,000,000 1,214,615
500,000
do
648,755
do
200,000 351.173
•
200,000
260.750
do
do
150,000 15' ,991
do
200,000 215.453
200,000 269, SS6
do
do
300,000 303,462
do
150,000 179,766
150,000 275,8M
do
233.405
do
200,000

50

Howard
Humboldt

11

5 Portage Lake

j

10

Evergreen Bluff

4
11%

|Pittsburg & Boston. ..-5%

|

1%
3%

Excelsior

Cliff

Petherick
Pewabic
Phoenix

75

—

Everett

1

—

Ogima
Pennsylvania *

j

3%i

Edwards

2

North western
Norwich

2 519 75

2%j

Empire

3 00

5%

! I North

—

Dudley
Eagle River

20

New York

24,%: 19

Dacotah
Dana
Davidson
Delaware
Dev«n
Dorchester.

1%

! New Jersey Consol... .10

—

Copper Creek
Copper Falls
Copper Harbor

Milton

j

400,000

Firemen’s
17
Firemen’s Fund.. 10
Firemen s Trust. 10
Fulton
25
Gallatin
50
Gebhard
100
50
Germania
Globe
;...... 50
Great Westem*t.l00
Greenwich
25
50
Grocers’
Guardian...—
Hamilton
15
Hanover
50
Hoflinan
50
Home
100

88

6%

I

250,000
300,000
200,000

.100
.100

Exchange..,.

8

—

.

Excelsior

2

5

Caledonia

210,000

Exchange.. 50
Eagle
40
Empire City
100

4%

Boston

300,000

70

Clinton
100
Columbia*
100
Commerce (N.Y.).IOO
Commerce (Alb’y)lOO
Commercial
50

paid 1

jMesnard
;

20

Commonwealth
Continental *

6

17)6
2%

Bonemian

Citizens’

Bid. Askd

Man dan
Manhattan
Mass
Medora

3 50

300,000
200,000
153,000

...

Mendotat
Merrimac

3 00

1%
1

Allouez
American

25
25
17

..

Corn

Madison

25%
3

Albany & Boston
Algomah

200,000
200,000

.......

66

5
2 80

300,000

City

ic

14

Companies.

paid 3

Bowery (N. Y.)
Broadway
Brooklyn

V

*

1 Bid. 'Askd

$v00,000
300,000
200,000
200,000
250,000
250,000

—

COPPER MINING STOCK LIST.
Companies.

Adriatic..
25
jEtna
50
American*
50
American Exch’e.100
Arctic....'
50
Astor
25
Atlantic (Br’klyn) 50
Baltic
25
Beekman
25

DIVIDENDS

Capital. Netas’ts

....

—

(t)

write Marine Risks.

•

....

Jan. 1, 1868.

(*) are

participating, &

—

10
Rynd Farm
S uthern
Sherman & Barnsdale...
Union
10
United Pe’tl’mF’ms.... 2
10
United States

....

• •

•

.

1

Excelsior
First National
Germania.
G’t Western Consol..

....

•

•

....

5

Oceanic
Oil <’reek
Pit Hole Creek
Rathbone Oil Tract

....

—

.

.

....

—

....

•

....

Columbia Oil

2
2

N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons

*

....

Clinton Oil

...

Manhattan
Mountain Oil
National
N. Y. & Alleghany
New York & Newark...
N. Y. & Philadel.

.

....

—

Ivanhoe

.

....

5
..10
.100
2
5

Brooklyn

HamiltonMcClintockpar

on

....

Bid. Askd

Companies.

....

[July 4* 1868.

Nov *67

v
12

i

1st Wort.
1st Mort.
1st Mort.
1st Mort.
1st Mort.
Real est.
1st Mort.
1st Mort.
1st Mort.

1st Mort.
....

550,000
148.000 1873
672,000

^127,150 1873
134,500
124.000

167,000
700,000

1,280,000

Drug’s and

PRICES CURRENT.

.

duties noted
JJ a discriminating duty of 10 per
\d val. is levied on all imports
rtr

In

addition to the
that have

Hass

reciprocal

no

'treaties with the United States.
&T On all goods, wares, and meru*dise, of the growth or produce of
£22# East of the Cape of Good
VL, when imported from places this
Me 'of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty
TlO per cent, ad val. is levied tn ad¬
dition to the duties imposed on any such
imported directly from the
of their growth or produc¬
ts ‘.Raw Cotton and Raw Silk excepted.
The tor in all cases to be 2,240 fib.
Andi0**#—Duty: 2i cent?
fi>.
012U0B) and upward^ fi>
8© ..
iahes—Duty: 15 $ cent ad val.
Pot, 1st sort... $ 100 3b 8 25 © 8 00
Pearl, 1st sort
9 8T @ 10 00
Beeswax—Duty,20 $ cent ad val.
American yellow. $ fi>
47 © 50
Rone*-Duty: on invoice 10 $ ct.
Bio Grande shin $ ton43 00 ® ....
Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val.

utxilts when

•hue or places

BpSot

t

-

134
Breadstuff*—See special report.
81©

'(hackers

Bricks#

hard, .per M.10 50

Common
Crotons

@11 50

20 00 @21 00
Philadelphia Fronts...40 00 ©

Bristles—Duty, 15 centshogs
1« ft.

Amer’n,gray &wh.
Batter

hair

$fi> 45 @2 00

4

and Cheese*—Duty:

cents.

Butter-

35
29
27
29

Fresh pnil
—. .
State firkins, prime .
State firki bp, ordinary

35
32
29
33
29
32
26

©
@

©

©
26 ©

State,hi-flrk., prime..

State, hf-flr ., ordin’y
We'sntubs, prime ...
Welsh tu’te, ordinary.
Western, good
Western, fair
Penn,, dairy, good.. .
Penn., dairy, fair

28
25
30
30
25
25
28
28
25

©
@
@
@
@
©
@

31

_

29
30

27

25 ®
@

Canada
Grease.
Chee*e—

..

..

©
©

..

••

14 @
_. ^
12 ©

15

12|@
"

Factory prim e... $ lb
Fa tory fair
ha m Dairies prime..
Farm Da ries fair. ...
Farm Fa'ries c immon
Skimmed

Balaam Porn. 50 cents

Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 ^ cent
val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum Damar, 10 cents per 3b;
Gum Myrrh, Gum
Senegal, Gum
Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 ^
cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub¬
limed Iodine, 75; Ipeoac and Jalap,
50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil
Anls, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange,
50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬
mot, $1 $ fib ; Oil Peppermint, 50
$ cent ad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic
Acid, 4 cents
3b; Phosphorus, 20
$ cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬
low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50cents
$ 3b: Quicksilver, 15
cent ad
val.; Sal J2ratus, 1} cents $ 3b; Sal
Soda, 4 cent $ fi); Sarsaparilla and
Senna, 20 ^ cent ad val.; Shell Lac,
10; Soda Ash, 4; Sugar Lead, 20 cents
$ 3b; Sulph. Quinine, 45 $ cent ad
val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 $ oz.;
Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents
$ 3b; Sal Ammoniac, 20; Blue Vit¬
riol, 25 $ cent ad val.; Etherial Pre¬
parations and Extracts, $1 $8 Bb; all
ad

others quoted below* free.

Alcohol, 95 per cent.
Aloes, Cape
$ fi>
Aloes, Socotrine
Antimony, Reg. of, g’d
Argols, Crude
Argols, Refined, gold.
Balsam Copivi
Balsam Tolu
Balsam Peru
Bark Petayo

ton of

2,000 30

71

..(gold)

Guayaquil do ...(gold)

11 @
71®

(gold)

..

Sheading, &c., old..

Bhea;hing,yellow met* 1
Bolts, yeilow metal,..

Pisr Chile
American Ingot

@

18 @

26 @

33
_

20

26 @

@

22J@

33}

Cordage—Duty,tarred,3; nnv-rred

Manila, 2| other untarred, 34 cents
»ft.

Manila,

$ lb

Tarred Russia
Bolt Rope, Russia.....

Corks—Duty, 50 $ cent
1st Regular,qrts $ gro
do Superfine
1
1st Re nlar, Pints
Mineral
Phi&l

20}®
..

@

..

@

184

22

ad val.
65 @ 70
40 @ 1 70
3' @
60
50 @
12 ©

Gttton—See epeoial report.




2!}

70

40

85

4 81}@ 5 124

20 @

21

.. @
73 @

90
75

1|@

Cutch

Epsom Salts

33 @
33 @

..

“

15 @
34 @

25
33
50

Copperas, American ..
Cream Tartar, pr.(gold
Cubebs, East India....
Extract Logwood
Fennell Se d

Flowers,Benzoin.$ oz.
Gambier
gold

35

14 @

14
29

28j@
30 @
I5i@

16
4

3}@

10}@

17 @
80 @
44$

60

41
0O

1 75 @ 95
90 @
Ginseng, Southern... 1 05 @
Gum Arabic, Picked..
45 @ *75
Gum Arabic, Sorts...
81 @ 85
85
Gum Benzoin
SO @ 86
Gum Kowrie
84 @
Ginn Gedda
gold 144@ 354
Gum Damar
44 @ 474
Gum Myrrh,East India
- ©
Gum,Myrrh, Turkey.
55 @ 33
Gum Senegal.
@
GumTragaeanth,Sorts 35 @ 40
Gamboge

Ginseng,
-

"

(gold)

@

Cochineal, Hon (gold)
Cochineal,Mexic’n(g’d)

Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot,
2|; old copper 2 cents ^ 30; manu¬
factured, 35 $ cent ad val.; sheathing
‘ipper and yellow metal, in sheets42
hohes long and 14 inches wide,
Weighing 14 @ 34 oz. $ square foot,

Sheathing,new..$ fl>

@ 3
..

.

Carraway Seed
Coriander Seed..

Coffee*—See special report.

Bolts
Braziers’

....

17 @

Chlorate Potash
Caustic Soda

8i

3 cents $ 30.

...

Ammonia,

Chamomile Flow’s^3b

Hi

St. Domingo

54

Sul¬

Castor Oil

17

Maracaibo do

,

I lor

Cardamoms, Malabar

>■„

16 @
..
@

V ft

$

34

Carbonate
in bulk

....

.

334

•
.. @
phur
Camphor, v>r.de, (in
bond)
(gold)
.
@
Camphor, Refined
1 10 @
Cantharides
1 65 @

6 50 @ 7 50

Cocoa—Duty,3 ceuts $ 30.
Caracas (in bond)(gold)

4?

44@

32}@

@

$ lb

s 2,24030. 9 50 @ ..
Llverpo lGasCann~l..ll 00 @12 00
Liverp’l House CannellO 00 @17 00

$

44

18*

..(gold).37 00 @3S 00
Roll

Brimstone,

Newcastle G

Anthracite.

31

@
..

Crude

ton

Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $ ton
of 28 bushels SO 30 to the bushel;
other than bituminous, 40 cents $ 28
bushels of80 Bo $ bushel.

@

45
27 @

4|@

Brimstone, A m.

'cement—Rosendale$bl... @ 1 75

Liverpool Orrel

@
3
25 @
40
85 @
95
1 30 @
© 8 50

castle, gold

Brimstone.

24

..

Bi Chromate Potash

23

Chains—Duty, 21 cental 30.
One inch & upward^ 30
7*®

18 @
23 @

,a.......

Bleaching Powder
Borax, Rellned

li4

@

..

Berries, Persian, gold.
Bl Carb. Soda, New¬

9

3u @
21 @

Stearic
Adamantine

..

Annato, goodtoprime.

Arsenic, Powdered “
Assafoetida

....

..

Alum

10

©
@

@
@
21
75 @
85
3}@
3l
60 @ 1 25

.

1G

9
3

Caltaaya

:

flenzola Extract Logwood, <j$ cent.;
3b; and Gamboge, 10 Flowers

131

11 ©

$ 1b

Bark, 30 $ cent ad val.: BlCarb. Soda,
14; Bi Chromate Potasn, 3 cents $ 3b;
Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $ 1003b ;
Refined Borax, 10 cents $ 3b ; Crude
Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone, $10
$ ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 $ ton, and
15 $ cent ad val.; Crude Camphor,
30; Refined Camphor, 40 cents ^ 3b.;
Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.;
Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents
$ Bb; Caster Oil, $1 $ gallon; Chlo¬
rate Potash, 6 ; Caustic Soda, 14;
Citric Acid, 10 ; Copperas, 4; Cream
Tartar, 10 ; Cuhebs, 10 cents $ Sb ;
Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20
$ cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent

13J

12 @

Dyes—Duty, Aloohol,

gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ fib;
Alum, 60 cents $ 100 lb; Argote, 6
rents $ 3b ; Arsenio and Assaftedati,
20; Antimony, Crude and Regulus.
10; Arrowroot, 30 & cent ad val
Balsam Copalvi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30;

2 50 per

Candles—Duty,tallow, 2£; sperma¬
ceti and wax a; «t earine and ada¬
mantine, 5 cents $ fib.
Befined sperm, city...
45 @ 47
55 @ 3i
Sperm,patent,. . .$ lb

.

29

THE CHRONICLE

1868.]

July

West

Tragacanth, w.
flakey.gold
Hyd. Potash, Fr. and
Gum

60 @

1 00

(gold) 8 70 @ 8
Resublimed... 6 50 @
Ipecacuanha, Brazil... 8 On @ 3

Eng
Iodine,

Jalap, in
Lac Dye

bond gold...

Licorice Paste,Calr.bria
Licorice, Paste, Sicily.

Licorice Paste Spanish
..
Solid
Licorice Paste, Greek.

Madder,Dutch., (gold)
do, Frenohj EXF.IP.do

85 @
25 @

37 @
24 @

*>©

31 @

121©

15 @

80

75
90
55
40
25
80
..

13

70 @
95 @

Manna,large flake.... 1
Manna, small flak e....
Mustard Seed, Cal....
Mustard Seed, Trieste.
Nutgalls Blue Aleppo

1 75

10
7i@
14 ©
..
85 @
(rh 8 80
..

Oil Ante
.....
Oil Cassia
@3 50
Oil Bergamot
6 874® 7 00
Oil Lemon
3 75 @ 8 80
Oil Peppermint,pure.
...
@ 6 50
Oil Vitriol
24®
..

.

...

.

..

Opium, Turkey.(gold) 7 10 @ 7 124
@
83
Phosphorus
.... @ 1 00
Prussiate Potash..,...
35
£31©
78 @ 80
Quicksilver

Oxalic Acid

2 25 @ 3 25
@
8

Rhubarb,China
Sago, Pea. led
Salaratus

20 @

-..

8@

SalAm’n’ac, Ref (gold)
d
Sarsaparilla,H .g’d in b’d
Sarsaparilla, Mex.
“

©
35 ©
25
2 '

©
©
374©

Senna, Alexandria....
Senna, Eastlndia
She’l Lac
8oda Ash

30
14
36
28

25 ©

•

\

.

1J

1}@

Sal Soda. Newcastle “

Seneca Root.

84

(80$c.)(g’ld)

50

24@2 7-1G

25
©
@ 2 25
6 85 @
52
51 ©
Tart’c Acid. .(g’ld)$Bb
Hi
©
Tapioca.
60
50 @
Verdigris, dry&ex dry
11
10 ©
Vitriol, Blue

Sugar L’d, W’e...
**
Sulp Quinine, Am^ oz
Sulphate Morphine. “

..

....

Duck—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val.
Ravens,Light. .<$ pee 16 00 @
Ravens, Heavy
...Ji8 0o @
Scotch, G’ck, No.l $?y
@
Cotton,No. 1
$ y*
58 @

....

72

Dye Woods—Duty free.
Cam wood, go:d,
ton .... @160 00
Fustic,Cuba “
..32 00 @ 33 10
@ 24 00
Fustic, Tampico, gold
Fustic, Jamaici, “ 23 00 @ 24 00
Fustic, Savanilla “ 22 50 @ 23 00
Fustic,Maracaibo, “ 22 00 @
Logwood, La.’ una “ 28 10 @
@
Logwood, Cam.
“
1
ogwood, Hond
“ 19 00 @ 20 00
....
Logwood, tabasco “
.... ®
Logwood,St D"m. “ 20 00 @ 21 00
Logwood,Jamaica u 16 CO ©
Limawood
“ 75 0J @ 85 00
@ 26 00
Bar wood
“
.

...

....
..

Sapanwood,Manila“

....

@ 60 00

Feathers—Duty: 30 ^ centad val.
Prime Western...^ fi)
85 @
90
75 @
80
Tennessee.,

Fisli—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 3b.
^ cwt. 6 00 @ 7 25
Dry Cod
Pickled Scale... $ bbl. 5 00 @ 6 25
Pickled Cod....$ bbl. 6 25 @ 6 50
Mackerel, No. 1, Mass
22 25 @22 f0
shore

Mackerel,No.l,IIalifax22 00
Mackerel,No. 1, Bay..23 00
Mackerel, No. 2, Bay.. 18 00
Mackerel, No. 2, Ha axl9 00
Mac’el,No.3,Mass. l’ge ....
Mackerel, No. 8, H’faxlO 50
Mac, No. 3, Mass, med
Salmon, Pickled, No.1.26 00
Salmon,Pickled,^tce
Herring,Scaled^ box. 40
Herring, No. 1
Herring, pickled^bbl.

@22
@23
@18
©2
© 9

50
25
50
50
50
@11 00

@ 8 50

@27 00

@
@
25 @

....

6 00 @ 9 50

Flax—Duty: $15 $ ton. "
$ 3b

North River

a5
28

16 @

*4

special report.

Fruits—See

Deer, Arkansas .gold
Florida

do

....

..

gold

..

or Window
Polished Plate not over 10x15 inohes,
24 cents $ square foot; larger and
not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents $
square foot; larger and not over 24
x39 inches 6 cents ^ square foot
above that, and not exceeding 24x60
inches, 20 cents ^ square foot; all
above that, 40 cents $ square foot

<*la«K—Duty, Cylinder

on

unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and
lOx

Common Window, not exceeding
15 inches square, 14; over that,

and

16x24, 2; over that, and not
24x30 ,24; all over that, 8 cents

not over
over

$ fi).
American

Window—1st,2d, 8d, and 4th

qualities.

Subject to a discount of 45@50 $ cent.
6x 8 to 8x10. $ 50 ft 6 25 @ 4 75
8x1! to 10x15
6
llxlt to 12x18
7
13x16 to 16x24..
8
18x22 to 18x30
10
20x30 to 24x30
12
24x31 to 24x36
14
25x36 to 26x40
16
2.-X40 to 30x48' .......18
24x54 to 82x56........20
82x5> to 34x60.
24
34x62 to 40x6 >
26

75 @ 5 00
50 @ 5 50
50 © 6 00
00 © 7 00

00
00
00
00
00
OO
00 @-l 00
Frer.ch Window—1st. 2<*, 3d. and 4th
qualities. (SI ngleThick) Nov
te
of Mar. 11 Discount 45@r>o# cent
At Kt.o8*10 3950 feet b 50 0) 6 25
Sxll to 10x15
9 00 © 6 75
11x14 to 12x18
10 i 0 @ 7 50
11 00 © 8 00
13x13 to 16x24
18xi2 to 18x30
1< 50 @ 9 00
20x30 to 24x3 »
16 50 @10 00
24x31 to 24x36
18 00 @i2 00
25x36 to26x40
20 00 @16 00
28x40 to 30x48.(3 qlts).22 00 @18 00
S4x54 to 32x56.(3 q ts) 24 CO @20 OO
32x58 to 34x60 (3 qlts).27 00 @23 00
English sells at 35@4U $ ct. off above
50
00
00
00
50
00

© *
@ 9
@10
@14
@16
@1^

rates.

Groceries—See special report.
Gunny

Bag:*—Duty, valued at

$ square yard, 3; over

cents or less,

10, 4 cents $ fi)
Calcutta, light & h’y %
18©
Gunny Cloth—Duty, valued at 10
or less $ square yard, 3; over
10,4 cents $ fib.

cents

Calcutta, standard, y’d

22] @

221

Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20
fib, 6 cents $1 fib, aio

cents or less $
20
cent ad

val.:

over

20 cent* $

fib, 10 cents $ fib and 20 $ cent ad va.
Blasting(B) ^ 25Bb keg .. @ 4 00
Shipping and Mining.. .. @ 4 50
Kentucky Rifle
6 50 @
6 00 @
Meal....
5 50 @

Deer

Sporting, in 1 fib canis¬
ters $ fib
.
86

..

@ 1 06

Hair—Duty free.

RioGrande,mix’d$fi'gold28 @
Buenos Ayres, mixed
“ 25 @
Hog,Western, unwash.cur 9 @
.

281
25l

Ilay—North River, in bales$ 100 fiba
forshipping
70 @ 75
Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila.
$25; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sunc
and Sisal, $15 $ ton; and fampi
1 cent $ fib.
Amer.Dressed.$ ton 270 00@290 00
do

175 0o@i80 00

Undressed

Russia, Clean..(gold) 24 '0@24>t0
Italian
(>old) 230 00@;<40 (0
Manila..$ fi>..(gold)
10 @
loj
Sisal
@
..

-

Skins —Du*y, 10$ cent
Beaver,Dark..^ skin 1 OU @ 4 00
do
Pale
76 @ 2 50

@
@

(gold)

Jute

6 @

61-

Furs and

5 00 @i2 00

Bear, Black
Jo

2 00 @ 8 00

brown

80 @

Badger
Cat, Wild
do House

25®

10 @

.

Fisher,
Fox, Silver

.

do Cross
do Red
do Grey
do Kitt

30 @

50

00
00

00
50

60

50

50 © 2 00
5 00 @20 00
1 00 @ 3 00

Lynx
Marten, Dark
do
pale
Mink, dark
do pale

4 00 @ 8
5 00 @50
3 00 @ 5
25 © 1
25 @

50
60

...

Otter

3 00 @ 8 00
1 00 @ a 00
2 50 © T 00

15
12
5 @ 12
70 @ 1 CO
80 @ 1 CO

Musquash, Fall
Opossum
Raccoon

Skunk, Black...

Skins—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val.
874®
434
Goat,Curacoa$ 3b cur.
42. @
474
do Buenos A...cu*.

.^old

do
do

Vera Cruz

do
do

Matamoras.gold

Tampico.. .gold

Payta
cur.
do Cape
cur.
Deer,San J uan $ 3d gold
do Central America
do
do
do
do

Honduras,.gold
Sisal
gold
gold
Para
Vera Cruz .gold

do
do

Missouri...gold
lexas..~..&old

...

@

&
@
43 @
45 @
414@
45 @
..

..

@

46 @
45 @
..

..

@
@

5i
55

45
50
••

474
46
474

50
45

Hides—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salt¬
ed and Skins 10 ^ cent ad val.
Dry Hides—
Puenos Ayres^plbg’d
Montevideo
do
do
Rio Grande
do
fMnoco
do
California
....

....

do

San Juan
Maiauioras

do
do

VeraCruz

A’ampico

Bogota

PortoCabollo
Maracaibo
TruxiLo
Bahia
Rio Ha.he
Curacoa
8. Domingo

..

do
do
do
do

do
do
do

do

&

Pt. au P.att.. do
do
Texas
do
Western

Dry Salted Hides-

20 :@

211

2H@
2il@
@
@
19l@
16(@
16 @
IS @
17 @
17 @
14 @
15 @
Hi©
14 @
13 @

22
22

11 @

13
36
15

..

..

14 @

13

@

uo

j

35 @
15 @

do
Pernamouco.... do
do
BaMa

..

20
20
171
18
Id
18
38
15
19
154
15
15

l2i@
32<@
12 @

llili

Payta

gold

Maranham

Matamoras
Marac.iiiio
Savanilla
.

do
do
...

do

18»($
12 @
12 @

Wet Salted Hides—
Bue Ayres.tt> g’d.
RioGt vude
do
Calife.aia
do
Para
do
New Orleans...cur
....

City Bi’hter trim.*

cured.

Ill©
Hi©
12i@

121
121
Ilf
111
13

22|®

13

@
1>1©
..

THE CHRONICLE.

30
White
ext.

Kip
# It gold

J. A. & Rio Qr.

..

@

23

20
21

27 @
22®
@

Sierra Leone., cash
Gambia & Bissau.
Zanibar
East India Stock—
.

Calcutta,city sl’hter

Id @i 16i
Sp. gold green 12*® 13*
:utta, dead

buffalo,'# lb
Manilla & Batavia,
buffalo
# fl>

12*®

do

jy
Honey-Duty,20
-

.

13

@

3eut $ gallon.

“Cuba (duty paid! (g< Id

# fl)

82

40

25 @

35

25

10 @

Horns—Duty, 10 $ cent, ad val.
Ox, Rio Grande... # C 7 0'*® ....
Ox, American
5 09® 6 00
India Rubber-Duty, 10 # cent,

# fl)

East India

®

Carthagena, <fcc....
IndifiTO—Duty FREE.
Bengal
(-old)#ib 1
(gold)
(gold)

45

(3*

10 (31 2 05
75 <gl 1 40
•k5
70
10
80

.(gold)

..

@ 1 00
@
95
@ 1 45
@ ' 05

.(gold) 1
Caraccas
....(gold)
Iron—Duty, Bars, 1 to 1* cents# lb.
Railroad, 70 cents # 100 lb ; Boiler
and Plate, 1* cents # lb; Sheet, Band,
Hoop, and Scroll, 1* to 1 g cents # lb;
Pig, $9 # ton; Polished Sheet, 3
cents # lb.
Pig, Scotch,No 1.
# ton 39 00®42 00
Pig, American,No. 1
@39 09
Pig, American, No. 2 . 35 0'@b» 00
Bar, Refl’d n.iig«feAmer 81 lO@S7 50
Bar, Swedes, assorted
Hizes(ingold)
87 50® 90 00
....

>

t—S

i ore

Bar Swedes,ordinary
sizes

Prices—»

®150 00

Bar,English and Amer¬
95 00®100 Of)
ican, Refined

do
do Common 85 00® 90 00
Scroll
125 0 ®l /0 (Mi
Ovals and Half Round 120 (K)®150 00
Band
125 00®
Horse Shoe....
125 00®
to

..

'

Rods,5-8®3-16inch.. 100 00® 160 00
Hoop
...133 00® 185 00
# lb

Sheet, Russia
Sheet, Single,
and Treble

9 ®

10

18*®

Nail Rod

19*

5®

7

Double

Rails, Eng. (g’d)# ton 51 50® 52 00
do American
79 00® So 00
Ivory—Duty, 10 # cent ad val.
East India, Prime #tb 3 00® 3 15
East Ind, Billiard Ball 3 0® 3 25
African, Prime..
..
2 62*® 2 87*

African,Scrivel.,W.C. 1 25® 2 25
Lead—Duty, Pig, $2 # loo lb ; Old
Lead, 1* cents # lb; Pipe and Sheet,
2* cents # ft>.
Galena

...:..# 100 lb

....

®

....

(gold) 6 35 ® 6 37*

Spanish...

(gold) 0 25 ® .6 50

German

....(gold) 6 30 ® 6 87*

English

net

Bar

net

PipoandSheet

..

®10 00

..@12 00

Leather—Duty: sole 35, upper 80
# cent ad val.
-—cash. # lb.—.

Oak,sl’hter,heavy# lb

88 @

40

middle
do
light..
docrop,heavy
do
middle

33 ®
So ®

38 @
42 ®

42
46

light..

42 ®

44

Oak, rough slaughter.

38®

Heml’k, B. A.,<fce.,h’y

28®

46
29

do

28* @
28* @
2t>*@
27* @
27*@
24 *@
27 @
2:*@
85 @
24 @

30
80

19*@

22

do

do
do
do
do

•

do

1

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

.

do

’

middle.

do
light.
Califor., heavy
do middle.
do
light.
.

do

Orino.,heavy.
do
do

middle

light.

rough

good damaged

do

poor

44
40

27

28*
28*

Vo*
oc

28*
39
27

Lime—Duty; 10 # cent ad val.
Rockland, com. # bbl.
® 1 25
..
do

heavy

® 2 25

Whi’.e

wood B’ds & Pl’k. 45 00 ® 55 00

Cherry B ds & Plank 7ft 00 ® 80
Oak and Ash.
4 i 00 ® 60
® 45
Maple and B*rch ... 8C
0 ®125
Brack Walnut
S PAVES—

White Oak,
West -uuni




hhd.,
At

...

-•*

00
00

00
00

@*135 00

22 @

27

Plumbago

@
6
# ton. ...30 00 @31 00
# lb.
@
1*
Chalk, block
# ton23 00 @24 00
Barytes,American#Ib .... @
li
Barytes Foreign
e@ ....

..

China clay,
Chalk

..

..

.,

..

..

...

Cedar,

do

*;•

w ft..

St.

115

..

do

25 ®

do, prime white
Naptha, refined. 70

7@

10

30,@

Nuevitas....

40
14
14
JO
15

'li* @
8 @
J1 @

Mansanilla
Mexican
Honduras
..

(American wood)..
Cedar, Nuevitas
do
do
do

14 @

Florida.# c. ft.
Rosewood, R. Jan. # lb
Bahia

6

Horseshoe,f’d (6d)#tt>
Copper
Yellow metal
Zinc

..

....

Hams,

10
75
8
6

.

12

..

@

26®

Cadiz

83 @

do fine,

AOrthingt’s 2 60 @ 2 65

pale.

...

..

Crude
Nitrate soda

10 @

gold

10*
4*

4*@

Seeilx—Duty; linseed, 16 cts; hemp,
# cent# lb; canary, .fl # bushel of
60 lb; and grass seeds, 30 # cent

3 75 @ 4 50
5 00 @ 6 00
6 Oo @ 7 00

ad val.
’Clover.,f.

Oakum—Duty fr.,# Ib
S@
11
Oil (!akc-Duty: 20 # cent ad val.
City thin obl’g, in bbls.
# ton.61 00 @62 M0
do
in bags. 53 oO®59 90
West, thin obl’g, do
@56 IM)

•

10*@
5* @
25 @
90 @
60 @
<4 @
2 17*@

#Eb
Timothy,reaped # bus
# bus
Canary..
Ilcnip
Link'd Am.romrh#0us
do Calc’n,Bosi’n,g’d
do do New Yk,g’d

2
5
2
2
2

...

-

seed, 23 cents; olive and salad
oil, in bottles or flasks, ^I : burning
fluid, 50 cents # gallou; palm, seal,

rape

Buck

.

Paints—Duty:

..

white lead, red
lead, and litharge, dry or ground in
oil, 3 cents # tt>; Paris white and
on

whiting, 1 cent # lb; dry ochres,56
cev.U # 100 lb: oxidesofzini,
cents
lb ; ochre,ground in oil,| 50
# loo
; Spanish brown 25 # cet tad val;
China clay, $5 # ton p Venetian red
and vermilion 25 # cent ad val.;
white chalk, $10 # ton.
Litharge,City... .#tt>
10*@
11
Lead, red, City
1(*@
n
white, American,

pure,

in oil

.

white, American,

@

14

dry

12®

Zinc,white, American,
dry, No. 1
do white, American,

12*

9 @

2 65
2 15
2 20

9 00 @ 9
8
Canton,re-reel.Nol@2 8 5:1 @ 8
Canton. Extra Fine... 8) CO @ !)
do

f0
50
75
25
11 00 @i3 25

medium,No3@4. 8 (/() @

Japan, superior
do
Medium
China thrown..

-

9 00

@lo (JO

liomii.al

SjM^ltcr—Duty: in pigs, bars, and
plates, $i 50 #100 lbs.
Flates. for.#100 lb gold
6 25® 0 35
do
domesitc # lb
lo @
10*
Spices.

-

Bee special report.

Spirits -Duty: Brandy, for first proof
$8 # gallon ; Gin, ruin and whiskey,
lor first proof, $2 50 # gallon.
Brandy, (Jtard, Dnpuy
&
o..(gold) # gal. 5 20 @13 00
Brandy, Piuet, tlast.ilI011 &> Co(gold) 5 00 @17 00
do

Ilenoessy(gold) 5 50 @18
Marett tfc Co(g’d) 5 50 @10
do Lege. Freres do 5 0» @10
do oth for. h’ds(g’d) 4 40 @ 9
Ruin, Jam., 4th p.(g’d) 4 50 @ 4
do
St. Croix,
3d
proof. ..(gold) 3 50 @ 3
Gin, dill', hrandsjgoldj 3 00 @ 4
Vomext ic Liquors—Cash
Brandy,gin&p.spi’ts in b 25 @
Rum, pure, in bond..
25 @
Whiskey, in bond
30 @
do

00
00
to

(R)
85
75
75

30

9*

pui e,

No. 1,in oil

do
do

9 @

White,Fronch,dry
white, French, in
oil.......

12

12J®
1J @

..

Ochre,yellow, French,
dry
do
tiround, in oil..
Spanish brown, dry #

2*@
8 @

2?
10

100 lb
V 00 @ 1 >25
do
gr’d in oil.# fl>
8@
9
Paris wh., No. 1. ....
2*@
3

Chrome, yellow, dry..
Whiting, Amer

15 @
„

.

35
35

Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued
at 7 cents # tb or under, 2*
ceuts;

7 eouts and not above II, 3 cts
# lb; over II cents, 3* cents # fl>
and 10 # cent ad val. (Store prices.)

over

17

35

..@

g

Vermilion,China, # tt) 1 15 @ l 80

val.
Iron No. 0 to 18
No. 19 to 26
No. 27 to 36....

English, cast, # tt)
English,spring...

.

.

English blister

hnglish machinery....

English German
American blister.
American cast
Tool
American spring do

American

ma>h’y do
American Herm*0,dQJ

18 @
10 @

10 @

23
lz*
20
16
16
17
22
13

@
10 @

14
13

Jl*@

l'*@
14 @
Ht@
21 @
..

20@25 # ct. ofT list.
30 # ct. off list
35 # ct. off list

Telegraph, No. 7 to il
Plain
Brass (less

20

Copper

...#lb
cent )
do

10*@
43 @
58 @

per

.

..

./

Wool—Dttty: Imported in the“or-

diimry condition as now and hereto¬
fore practiced.” Class 1 — Clothing

Woofs—The value whereof at the last

place whence exported to the United
States is 82 cents or less # lb,'10
cents # lb and 11 # cent, ad val •
over-32 cents # tt>, 12 cents # lb and
10 # cent, ad val ; when imported
washed, double these rates Class
2.— Combing Wools--T\w value where¬
of at the last place whence exported
to the United States is 32 cents.br
less # lb, 10 cents # lb and 11 #
cent ad val. : over 32 cents # lb, vi
cents # tt> and 10 # cent, ad val.
Class 3.
Carpet Wools and other
—

sindlar Wools—The value whereof at
thedast place whence ex ported to the
United States is 12 cents or less #
fl>, 3 cents # tt>; over 12 cents # lb,

6 cents # tt>.
Wool of all classes
imported scoured, three times the
duty as if imported unwashed.

1^*@

No. 12

..

..

...

Silk—Duty: free. All thrown silk,
35 # cent*
Tsatlees, No. I@3.# ft* 10 00 @11 25
Taysaams, superior,

cocoa

....

2 60
0 25

Sliot—Duty: 2J cents # B).
# lb
Drop
11 i@

Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and

nut, 10 # cent ad val.;
sperm and whale or other fish (for¬
eign flsheries,) 20 # cent ad val.
Olive, Mar’s, qs (gold*
per case ..
@ 4 12*
do in casks.# gall.. 2 4 ’
@
Palm
# tb
13 @ "13*
Linseed, city... # gall, 1 07 @
Whale, crude
8)@
85
do bleached winter
@
;*0
1 90 @ 2 00
Bperm,crude
do
wint. unbleaeh. 2 20 ®
Lard oil, prime winter 1 15 @
Red oil,city dist Elaiu
90® r..
do saponified, west’ll 1 00 @1 05
Bank
77
@
Straits
.*.
80 @
Paralline, 28 & 80 gr.
Lubricating
30 @
40
Kerosene
(free).
36 @

Wire— Duty: No. 0 to 18, uncovered
$2 to $3 5. # 100 lb, and 15 # cent ad

.

Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2* cents;
refined and partially refined, 3 cents;
nitrate soda', 1 cent # lb.
Refined, pure
# lb
@
14

....

extra

Sicily Madeira..(gold) 1 00 @ l 25
Red, Span. & Sicily(g)
90 @ 1 00
Marseilles Mad’ra(g’d)
70 @
85
Marseilles Port.(gold)
80 @ 1.60
Malaga dry
(gold) 1 00 @ 1 25
M daga, sweet... (gold) 1 10 @ 1 *25
Claret
gold.# cask35 00 @(!i) (10
Claret
gold.# doz 2 65 @ 9 u)

-

Liverpool,gr’nd# sack 1 75 @ 1 89
do fin",Asiilon’s(g’d) 2 50 @

..

Stores—Duty: spirits of
turpentine 39cents # gallon; crude
Turpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20
# cent ad val.
Turpent’e, 9'f(.#280ft> 4 ()4 @ 4 25
Tar, N. County # bbl. 3 75 @ 4 00
Tar, Wilmington
5 25 @ 5 50
Pi'.ch City
@ 3 50
SpMtsturpentine #g
43 @
43*
Rosin, com’n. # 280 lb 2 70 ®
do strained anuNo 2.. 2 7o*@ 3 18*
No. 1
Palo

cent, ad val.; over 50 and not over
-100, 50 cents # gallon and 25 # cent
ad val. ; over $1 # gallon, $1 # gal¬
lon and 25 # cent ad val.
Madeira
.-....# gall. 3 50 @ 7 00
-Sherry
1 25 @ 9 00
Port
2 00 @ 8 50
Burgundy port..(gold)
75 @ 1 25
Lisbon
...(gold) 2 25 @ 3 50

Salt—Duty: sack, 24 cents # 100 Ib;
bulk, 18 cents # 100 lb.
Turks Islands# bush.
45 @

Naval

do
do
do

Wines—Duty : Value not. over 50 cts
# gallon, 20 cents # gallon, and 25 $

17*

Rice—Duty: cleaned 2* cents # lb.;
paddy 10 cents, and uncleaned 2cents
# tt>.
Carolina ....-.# 100 tblO 50 @11 25
Rangoon Dressed, gold
6 25 @ 6 75
duly paid.

37*® 6 50
27 @
80
40 @
18 @

Tobacco.—See special report.

17
13

....

Shoulders
Lard

ITIolasaes.—See special report.
Nui I*—Duty ; cut 1
wrought 2*;
horse shoe 2 cents # Ib,
Cut, 4d.@6l*d. # 100 tt> 4 75 @ 5 00
Clinch

17*

..

12*

..

Residuumr.... ..# bbl. 2 25 @ 3 75
Gasoline.
Provlsious—Duty: beef and pork,
1 ct: nuns,bacon, andlard,2 cts #lb
P.*rk,new mess,# bbl^7 (!5 @27 75
27 7> @28 00
Pork, old mess
Pork, prime mess
2400 @24 25
do prime,
22 25 @23 60
Beef, plain mess
15 00 @20 50
do extra mess.....-.20 50 @24 75
do bams
2600 @35 < 0

20
13
13

12®
12®
8®
25 ®
5 @
4 @

Mansahilla
Mexican

do

grav.,

50

30
34
35

12 @

cent ad val.
Plate and sheets
and
terne plates, 25 per cent, ad
val.
Banca
# lb (gold)
@' 97
Straits
(gold) 21 @ 24
English
(gold)
21*@
24
Plates,char. I.C.# boxll 50 @12 .'0
do
I. C. Coke
9 50 @lu 50
Terne Charcoalll 00 @11 fo
do
Terne Coke.... 9 00 ® ....
do

••

•••

@210*00

Tin-Duty: pig,bars,and block,15»

22

.17 @

test)
Standard white

do

Domingo,

logs
do
do
do
do

do

try and city # fl),..

16*

@
33*@
@

Refined, free, 8.W....
do
in bond,piime
L. S. to W. (11()@

Rose-

10 ®

.

do

i2!*@
16 @
33 @

in bulk

00

Teas.—See special report.

refined, 40 ;ents # gallon

Crude,40@47grav.#gal

cent ad val

# ton..100

Sugar.—See special report.
Tallow—Duty :l cent# fl).
American,prime, coun¬

Petroleum—Duty :crude,20 cents;

ivodil—5Uityfree.

ami

SioUy

,

k»HuogftP.v St. Pnmin-

Oils

Sumac—Duty; 10 #

...

ditiio fan y,

Lumber^ Woods, Slaves,cfc.

—Duty; Lumber,20 # cent ad val.;
Staves, 10 # cent ad vul.; Rosewood
and Cedar, frke.
Spruce, East. # M ft IS 00 ® 20 a0
35 00 @ 40 00
Southern Pine
White Pine Box B’ds 23 00 @ 27 00
White Pino Merch.
Box Boards
27 00 ® SO 00
Clear Pine
60 00 ® 70 00
Laths, Eastern. # M 3 00 ® 3 06

Amer.com..

Venet. red (N.C.)#cwt 2 85 @ 2 90
Carmine,city made# tt)16 00 @20 U0

..

ITEA DING-White Oak
double bbl
240 00®

do

Poplar an«.

do

..

do
Port-au-Platt,
crotches
do
Port-au-Platt,

®
@

—

...

ordinary logs

S2j@

Para, Medium
Para, Coarse

Oude
Madras
Manila
Guatemala

Vermillion, Trieste
1 10 @ 1 12
do
Cal. & Eng.. 1 15 @ 1 2»

# M. @275 0 0
pipe, heavy
®225 00
pipe, light.
@175 00
pipe,culls.
®170 00
pipe,culls,It
®110 00
hhd.,extra.
@235 00
hhd.,heavy
@175 00
hhd.,light.
@11'* 00
@100 00
hhd., culls.
bbl.,extra.
@150 00
bbl.,heavy.
@115 00
do
bbl.,light..
@ 90 00
do
@ 60 00
bbl., culls.-.
Fed oak, hhd., h’vy.
@120 00
do
hhd., ligbt..
@ 80 00
HEADING —White
^ak lihd
@140 00
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

_

20 (31

Bavarian

ad val.
Para, Fine

pipe,

a

^

# gall.
83 (2l
If ops—t 5 coui« # hi.
Crop of 1867
do of 1866

oak,

[July 4,1868.

Am., Sax’y fleece.# lb
do full blood Merino
do y. <fc % Merino..
do Native & X Mer.

Combing
Extra, pulled..
Superfine pulled
do

55 @

48 @
45 @

47

■ 50 @

....

55
4!)
48
36
33
30
25

43 @
42 @
80 @ 28 @.

.

No 1, pulled. .
Califor , tlne.nnwash’d
medium do
do
do
common, do

Valpraiso,

60
53
52

48 @

26 @

22 @
28 @

do

South Am.Merino do
do
Mest.izado
Creole do
do
do
Coniova,
washed

30

.

3*1 @

37
32
24

28 @
20 @

34 @
32 @
38 @
20 @
19®
28 @
25 @
21U@

Montevideo,com.washd
Cape G.Hope,unwash’d
East India, « ashed....
Mexican, unwashed...
Texas, Fine
^l’exas, Medium......
Texas, Coarse.,

37
;15
42
4t»
21

32'
28
25

Zinc—Duty : pig or block, $1 50 #
100 1bs.; sheets 2* cents # fl).
Sheet
# fl)
12 @ 13
FreifflitsTo Liverpool (st.enm):«. d.
s.
.Cottoi
# UD
3-16 @
Flour
.......#bbl.
@ 1

....

9
15 (* @
Oil
@30 0
Corn,b'k& bags# bus,
@
5
Wheat, bulk and hags
5*
4@
Beef
@3 0
# tee.
^
Pork.
*
@ 2 0
..# bbl.
..

Heavy

Hods...#ton

...

..

..

..

To London

(sail)

Heavy goods. ..#
Oil....

Flour
Petroleum
Beef
Pork....

...# bbl. 1

Wheat..

# tee.
# bbl.
# bush.

..
,.

@2 9
@19
5 @

4*

@

$
# ®>

Beef and pork. .# bbl.
Measurem. g’ds.# ton i0
Lard, tallow, ont m t
eto^..

....

@50

Corn
To Havre:

Cotton

6 @15 0
@25 0'
4*@

ton 12

# tt>

c

|

1 @

..

@ ^
00 @12 00
..

*@

Ae'ies,pot&pT,#ton 10 On @12 01

31

THE CHRONICLE.

.Julj|{4, 1868.J

Insurance

Insurance.

Miscellaneous.

-

Homceopathic

FIRE!

LARGE

Pacific Mutual Insurance

Brooklyn, May 15,1868.
Marvin & Co., New York,
Gentlemen,—Our planing mill, with Fifty Thousand
feet of lumber -was destroyed by fire last night, and
we are happy to say your Alum and Dry Plaster Safe
preserved our books, papers, and money in excellent

COMPANY,

Mutual Life Insurance Co

Messrs.

order.
We want another and larger one, and will call on
you as soon as we have time.
Yours truly,
SHEARMAN BROS.

red hot for several hours, and the cast
iron feet were actually melted.
It can be seen at our store, NO. 965 BROADWAY.
This Safe was

PERFECT

New

York, January 11, 1868.

Premiums received from Jan. 1

to Dec, 3l,

$149,480 75

?.>6,6l3 S7

1867, inclusive....

$946,OOP G2

Total Amount of Marine Premiums.

THIS COMPANY HAS ISSUED No POLICIES EX¬
CEPT ON CARGO AND FREIGHT FOR THE
Voyage.

SAFES

Savings,

$827,041 19
608,2:0 41

74,421 12

The Company has the following;
Cash in Bank and on hand
.$81,029 81
11.S.and other stock (II.S.$188,100). 476,‘-UH 88
Loans on Stocas drawing interest.. 66,550 00

Marvin’s

assets

Chrome Iron

Spherical

‘..'79,584 45

Bills Receivable

Subscription Notes in advance of Premiums
and other claims due the
Company, estimated at

91,438 94

lie-ln'Urunee

Total Asset 8.

Six P

r

52,477 92

$1,050,878 95

r

Company offers to insurers all the advantages
by any responsible company in re¬
spect to terms and plans of insurance, and, in addition
to low' rates on ordinary lives, it makes a still further
reduction to those using the Homceophatic- practice.
Persons about to insure are invited to give our
Tills

hitherto afforded

proposals

the outstanding Certificates of Profits will be paid
holders thereof, or their legal representatives
and alter Tuesday, the 4th day of February next.
The remaining Fitly Per Cent ot the

to the
on

DIRECTORS.

thereof, or their legal re >resentatives, on and after
Tuesday, the 4th day of February next, from which
The Ceriiucates to
date interest thereon will cease.

Catalogue.

&

PRINCIPAL

Co.,

D. D. T. MARSHALL, President.
JAMES CUSHING, Jr., Vice President.
ELIZUK WRIGHT, Consulting Actuary.
E. A. STANSBURY, Secretary.
A HALSEY PLUilMER, Assistant

York.
Philadelphia.

st, Cleveland, Ohio.

in the principal cities
throughout the United States.

And for sale by our agents

THE

produced at the time of payment and cancelled.
Dividend in Script of FIFTEEN Per Cent, is de¬
of Earned Premiums for tlie
year ending December 81st, 1867, lor w hich certificates
will be issued on and after Die first day oi June next.

North British

Mercantile Insurance Co

AND

William Leconey,

Myers,

Alex, M. Earn;,

Chas. H. Ludingion,,

Moses A. Hoppoek,
W. H. Mellen, ’

UNITED STATES BRANCH,

50 WILLIAM

STREET, NEW YORK.

B. W. Bull,
Horace B. Claflin,

Jos. L. Small wood,
Thomas Eakin,
Henry C. South wick,

Subscribed

Win. Hegeman,

Accumulated f unds

Adam T. Bruce,

Annual

A. S. Barn

Steamship Companies.

James R. Taylor,

s,

Egbert Starr,
A.

Albert B. Strange.

Wesson,

JOHN K. MYERS, President.
WII LIAM LEcOxiEY, Vice-President.

NORTH AMERICAN

New

Sailing Arrangements

20th of Every Month.
or the day before when these dates fall on Sunday,
from Pier No. 46 North River, foot King st., at noon.
JUNE 5.—Steamer SANTIAGO DE CUBA, connect
ing with new Steamsh’p OREGONIAN.
JUNE 20.—Steamship GUIDING STAR, connecting
with new steamship NEBRASKA.
The 6tli Sc

These
and are

Steamships are

expressly fitted for this trade,

unsurpassed for Saiety, Speed, Elegance, and
Comfort, and tiWr rates lor Passage and Freight will
always be as low as hy any other Line.
For further particulars address the undersigned at
Pier No, 46, North River, New York:
'

I). N. CARRINGTON, Agent.
WM. H. WEBB, Fresident.

CHARLES DANA Vice-President,
No. 51 Exchange Place, N.Y.
PACIFIC MAIL

Home Insurance
OFFICES
O. 135

Co.,

:

BROADWAY, NEW YORK, AND 151
TAGUE STREET, BROOKLYN.

Capital
Assets, Jan. 1, 1868

Losses

MON

$2,000,000 OO
3,6*3,896 78
107,490 55

Liabilities

SHEPPARD GANDY, Esq..of Sheppard

H

CHAS. J. MARTIN, President.

HARTFORD, CONN.

OF

Capital and Surplus $2,000,000.

J. H. WASHBURN, Secretary.
GEO. M. LYON, Asst. Secretary.
T. B. GREENE, 2d Asst. Secretary.

Geo. L. Chase, Pres’t

Seq’y.

Geo. M. Coit,

PHOENIX

FIRE

INSURANCE:

OF HARTFORD,

CO.,

CONN.

Capital and surplus $1,200 000.
Sec’y.
H. Kellogg, Pres t

W. B. Clark,

I A

SPRINGFIELD FIRE AND MARINE

.

INSURANCE

COMPANY,

SPRINGFIELD, MASS.

Mall,

month (except when t hose dates fall or.
Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for.
ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad,
with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama
for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO.

7

Capital and Surplus $700,000.
J, N. Dunham, Sec’y.
E. Freeman, Pres
-

CONNECTICUT FI RE INSURANCE CO
OF HARTFORD,

JBEST SIXC 0BD

(^WARRANTED

SPQULTUimif

aOUJOHBS,

JULY:

M.

CONN.

Capital $24 5,000.
Bennett, Jr„ Sec’y.
J. B. Eldredge, Pres’t

Losse

promptly adjusted by the Agents here, and paid
in current money.

1st—Ocean Queen, connecting with Golden City.
11th—Henby Chauncey, connecting with Montana
Suren—Arizona, connecting with Sacramento.

WHITE, ALLYN Sc CO., Agents,
NO. 50 WILLIAM

Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with
1st and 11th for

Steamers for South Pacific ports:
Antral American Porte. Those of
zanillo.

1st touch at Man¬

Haslett McKim.

«£

Paisley} 5eaflan3*

Canal street, Norm xvWer, New

Yor*.

Offices To Let,
On BROADWAY, BROAD
WALL, Apply to
Jf *v

Robt. McKim,

Jno. A. McKim.

BANKERS,
62 WALL STREET*

and NEW Streets ne
MATTHEWS,

STREET.

McKim, Bros. & Co.,

One hundred pound

An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and
attendance free.
For passage tickets or farther information, app
Et the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, oof




AR TFO R D

INSURANCE COMPANY

FIRE

Wet of every

allowed each adult.

Manager.

LORD, DAY & LORD, Solicitors.
DABNEY". MORGAN & Co., Bankers.

A. F. WILLMARTH, Vice-President.
D. A. HEALD, 2d Vice-President.

LEAVE TIER NO. 42 NORTH
ER, FOOT o : Canal street, at 1
o’clock noon, on the 1st, 11th, an

Baggage cnecsed through.

Gandy & Co

TZ C^ALLYN,E’} Assoc*ate Managers
CHAS. E. WHITE, Assistant

And Carrying: the Uni#
Slates

promptly adjusted and paid in this Country.

Desiring to deal directly w'ith its Customers, this
Company w'ill hereafter make a rebate from the Pre¬
mium on Risks in the City, equal to the .Commission
heretofore paid as Brokerage.

STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S

Californ

Currency at option of Ap

CHAS. H. DABNEY, Esq., Chairman.
of Dabney, Morgan & Co
SOLON HUMPHREYS, Esq
of E. I). Morgan & Co
AYMAR CARTER, Esq
of Aymar & Co
DAVID DOWS, Esq
of David Dows & Co
EG1KTO P. FABBKI, Esq
of Fabbri & Chauncey
SIMEON B. CHITTENDEN, Esq.,
oi'S. B. Chittenden &

THROUGH LINE

To

Income

Policies issued in Gold or

plicant.

$10,000,000
12,695 OOO
4,260,635

Capital

New' York Board or Management:

OPPOSITION TO MONOPOLY.
i

(IN GOLD):

CAPITAL AND AiSETS

THOMAS HALE, Secretary,

COMPANY.

THROUGH LINE TO CALIFOHN1A,
VIA PANAMA RAILROAD.

1809.

ESTABLISHED IN

Win. T. Blodgett,

Lewis Ruckman,

EDINBURGH.

AND

LONDON

John A. Hadden,
Oliver K. King,
Dean li. Fenner,

Margin Bates,
Frederick B. Betts.

'

OF

John A. Bartow,

A. Augustus Low,
W. M. Richards,
G. D. H. Gillespie,
C. E. Milnor,

Ephraim L. Corning,

STEAMSHIP

cular

Send fo

Agents and Solicitors wranted.

A

A.C. Richards,

No. 265 Broadway, New
No. IOS Bauk

Sec’y.

STEWART L. WOODFORD, Counsel.
EDWARD M. KELLOGG, M. D.,
JOHN W. MITCHELL, M. D..
Medical Examiners.
A. COOKE HULL, M. D., Medical Director.

clared on the net amount

John K.

WAREHOUSES.

No. 7 21 Chestnut st,

4

TRUsiRES :

time.

Marvin

National Bank.

Kelly, Pres’t of 5th

John Simpkins, 29 Wall Street.
Wm. C. Duntou, of Bulkley, Dunton & Co., 4 John St.
Peter Lang, ot Lang & Clarkson, 4 Front Street.
Wm. B. Kendall, of Bigelow Carpet Co., 65 Duane St.
Hiram W. Warner, late Warner & Loop, 882 5th Ave.
uharles L. Stickney, 299 Bowery.
William Radde, Publisher, 550 Pearl Street.
Thomas B. Asten, 124 East 29th Street.
G. B. Hammond, Tarrytow'n, N. Y.

be

Burglar’s Implements for any length Of

Please send for

State N. Y.

Jas. Cushing, Jr., of Leroy W. Fairchild & Co.
Edward E. Karnes, of H. B. Claflin & Co.
Elisha Brooks, of Brooks Bros., 468 Broadway.
Hon. Rich’d B.Connolly, Comptroller of N. Y. City,
Robert T. Sewall, of Sewall <& Pierce, 62 Broadway.
George G. Lake, of Lake & McCreery, 47l Broadway.

Outstanding Certift-eates of the Com¬
pany of (lie Issue of (863,
w ill he redeemed
and paid in cash, to tlie holders

Burglar Safe

careful examination.

D. D. T. Marshall. 157 East 34th;Street.
Hon. Stew art L. Woodford, Lieut. Gov.

Cent. Interest.

on

Will resist all

a

Hon. Richard

$626,877 64

Premium Notes and

LOWER RATES.

NEW PLANS AND

Time

No Risks Slave keen taken upon
or upon Hulls ol' Yessils.
Premiums marked <>ff as Earned during the

period as above...
:
Paid for Losses and Expenses, less
&c., during the same period
Return Premiums

231

NO.

The following statement of the affairs of the Com¬
pany is published in conformity with the requirements
oi Section 12 ot its charter :

Outstanding Premiums, Jan. 1, 1867

of New York,
BROADWAY,

Of tke City

TRINITY BUILDING, 111 BROADWAY.

,

Interest allowed on deposits subject to drafts!
eight, and special attention given to order* from

ftnwptocw*

1

THE CHRONICLE.

32
Commercial Cards.

Brand &

Iron and Railroad

Gihon,

Materials,

NEW

YORK,

110 DUANE STREET.

CAST STEEL

GOODS,

BOSTON,

PHILA.,

80 State street.

99 John street.

Jobbing: and Clothing: Trade.

Cast Steel

W.

S.

203 So. 4th stree

Frogs, and all other

TYRES,

Agents for the sale of
WHITE

HOUSE IN LONDON

—

-■■■

DUCK, AC

PHILADELPHIA PA..

Alfred Savidge &

;

Co.,

11

-

■

■

“

■

'

as

well

Gano, Wright & Co.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Cotton, Flour, Grain and Provisions
NO. 27 MAIN ST., CINCINNATI, O.

W. H. Sehieffelin & Co.,
Importers and Jobbers of

as

Old

All

the

STREET,

IN

NE \V

1

YARD, ON DOCK, AND TO ARRIVE.
Apply to

BROTHERS,
Green, New York.

No. 6 Bowling

LOCOMOTIVE

M. Baird

&

WORKS.

Co.,

PHILADELPHIA.

BAIRD’.

GEO. BURNHAM.

J. Pope & Bro.
METALS.

T. PARRY

Morris, Tasker & Co.,
Manufacturers

Works, Philadelphia.

Wrought Iron Tubes, Lap Welded
Boiler Flues, Gas Works Castings and Street
Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools,
Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools, &c.

292 PEARL STREET, NEAR BEEKMAN STREET

NEW YORK

CHAS

Ill

J

YORK

OFFICE AND

WAREHOUSES

ARCHITECTURAL

Old Ralls Re-rolled or Exchanged for new.

67 WALL STREET, NEW YORK,

Henry Lawrence & Sons,
MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE

:

192 FRONT STREET, NEW YORK.

The Novelty

Iron Works,

NOS. 77 & 83 LIBERTY STREET,
CORNER OF BROADWAY, N Y,
Manufacture
Plain and Ornamental Iron Work for Buildings
Complete Fire proof Structures—Columns, Lintels,
Floors, Roofs, Castings, Shutters, Vaults, Safes, ete.,
of Cast hr Wrought Iron, Also, Iron Bridges, Iron
Piers, etc.
I
*
HY. J. DAVISON,)
WM. W. AYRES, > Agents,
J. HEUVELMaN.)

NOTICE TO THE CONSUMERS OF THE

GENUINE

SWEDISH

DANNE-

MORA IRON.

New Iron Safes
FOR
-

SALE

VERY

CHEAP.

The advertiser having taken in trade two Fire and

Buiglar Proof Safes will sell them for Cash much he*
low cost. The Safes are perfectly new, never having
been removed from the store of the manufacturer
and are ot the best make and patent.

Address

SAFE," P.O. Box 6,650.

Townsend & Yale,
9O9 92 Sc 94 FRANKLIN

Lawrence

1 beg to announce that I have this day entered into
a contract with Messrs. W. Jessop & Sons, of Sheffield
for the whole Annual Make of the above Iron, which
in future, will be stamped

^^LEUFSTA, W. JESSOP Sc SONS.
And to which I request the special attention of the
trade.

Leufsta, in Sweden, 29th April, 1807.
CARL EMANUEL DE GEER, Proprietor.
WM. JESSOP & SONS, in referring to the above
notice, beg to inform dealers in, and consumers oi,
Iron and Steel, that they are prepared to receive orders
for this Iron, and for Blister and Extra Cast Steel
made from the Iron, at their establishments, Nos. 91 &
93 John Street, New York, and Nos. 133 & 135 Fed¬
eral

RAILS,* taking their

OLD RAILS IN TRAD?? FOR NEW
furnished, receiving the difference in cash, and allow¬
ing the highest market price for their Old Bails, and,
if necessary, receiving the latter after the delivery oi

the New Bails.
Orders for Foreign Rails, both Steel and Iron, wilt
be taken lor transmission by Mail or through the cable
to our

LONDON

Keystone Knitting Mills.
Germantown Hosiery Mills#

Blackstone Knitting Mills#

Bristol Woolen Mnf’g Co.

Glastonbury Knitting Co.

Pennsylvania Knitting Co#
Winthrop Knitting Co.

Cayudutta Glove Work**
Bronx Tap# Company*

13

OUSE,

58 OLD BROAD

STREET,
fixed price in "Sterling

for execution at a
or on com¬
mission at the current market price abroad when the
order is received in London'; shipments to he made
at stated periods to ports in America and at the low¬
est possible rates of freights. Address

S. W.

Hopkins

be Co.,

69 Sc 71 Broadway, New York.

To Iron Manufacturers.
beg to announce to the proprietors aud mana¬
of Rolling Mills and Iron Manufacturers through¬
United States and Canada, that we are con¬
stantly receiving from both American aud Foreign
We

gers

out the

Railroad Companies heavy

shipments of

Rails.

Old

We are, therefore, always in a position to furnish to
consumers any quantity desired lor immediate or
remote delivki:y at all points in the United states
and Canada, and when required will contract to supply

mills with their monthly or yearly consumption at
the lowest current market prices.
We are also prepared to transmit by mail or through
the cable to our

LONDON

HOr?E,

53 OLD BRO AD STREET,
Orders for old rails oil' ol Foreign Railroads

for.

shipments at stated periods to any ports in America
at a fixed price in sterling or for execution on com¬
mission at the current market prices abroad when
the order is received in London.
In this department
of our business our facilities are unsurpassed and our
experience unequalled by any house in America. Our
yearly transactions in Old Rails being very much
greater than all other houses combined. Address

W.

S.

Hopkins &York,
Co.,

69 Sc 71 Broadway, New

Gilead A.
15 LANGHAM PLACE,

Smith,
LONDON,

W.’

RAILROAD

IRON,
BESSEMER RAILS,

Street. Boston.

STEEL TYRES,
AND METALS

Scovill

Manf’g Co.




rolled to anv
yard and of
approved lengths. Contracts for both IRON AND
STEEL RAILS will be made payable in United States
currency for America, and m either currency or gold
(at the opt on of the buyer) tor Foreign; when desir¬
ed, we will contract to supply roads with their
monthly or yearly requirements of STEEL OR IRON

STREET.

Agents for

Rails,

of American and Foreign marufacturc,
desired pattern and weight for linial

DEPARTMENT

*

FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC USE,

*

OF

FOREIGN A AMERICAN RAILROAD

IRON, OLD AND NEW,
Pig, Scrap Iron and other Metals, Lo¬
comotives, Railroad Chairs A Spikes.

ply

o

15 GOLD STREET, NEW YORK.

F. & F. A. Dana,

We arc always in a position to furnish ail sizps, pat¬
terns and weight of rail.for both steam and hor-e
roads, and in any quantities desired, either for IMME¬
DIATE OR REMOTE deliver, at anv port in the
United States oi Canada and always at the very lowest
current market prices.
We are also prepared lo sup¬

Bessemer Steel
BALDWIN

Pascal Iron

Thomas

Companies.

i

Railroad Iron.

In lots to suit purchasers.
HENDERSON

MATTHEW

PERFUMERY, AC.

WILLIAM

Rails, Scrap Iron and Metals.

approved Brands of No.
Scotch Pig Iron,

Indigo, Corlte, Sponges,
AND 172

*

We beg to call the attention of Managers of Rail¬
and Contractors throughout the United States
and Canada to our superior faciuties for executing
orders at manufacturers prices, for all descriptions of

All work accurately fitted to gauges and thorough
ly interchangeable. Plan, Material, Workmanship,
Finish, and Efficiency lully guaranteed.

DRUGS,
170

-

both AMERICAN and FOREIGN

——■

-

*•

FANCY GOODS,

HOUSE, 58 OLD BROAD ST*

To Railroad

SCOTCH PIG IRON.

in
1

-

'

—

p

1

'

-

LONDON

ways

SUGARS, SYRUPS MOLASSES, COF¬
FEES, RICE, AC., AC.
_

CO.,

Railroad Iron,

■

Brokers

Railroad Iron,

who give special attention to orders for

FLAX SAIL

City and

BONDS,

In connection with the purchase and sale of

:

R E N Z O N A
34 Old Broad Street,

BURLAPS, BAGGING,

County,

STATE

Steel Material for

NAYLOR,

LINENS, Sc C,

Broadway, New-York,

Railroad, Town,

Railway Use.
WILLIAM GIHON & SONS’

Hopkins & Co.,

69 A- 71

Negotiations of euery description of

RAILS,
CAST STEEL

In fall assortment for the

Iron ?nd Railroad Materials.
ESTABLISHED 1856.

NAYLOR & CO.,

Importers Sc Commission Merchants*.

IRISH Sc SCOTCH LINEN

[July 4, 1868.

Mnfg. Company,
Manufacturers of

SHEET

BRASS BUTT

METAL,
HINGES,

Gilt, Lasting, Brocade, and Fancy Dress Buttons,

Kerosene Oil Burners
And

8

negotiated, and Credit and Exchange provided for

U. S.

BRA*s,

GERMAN SILVER PLATED

Railroad Bonds and U.S. and other Americrn Securi

Lamp Trimmings,

And Importers and Dealers in every Description ol

Photographic Goods.
NO. 4 Beekman street & 36 Park Row, New Yoke,

Manufactory, Watebbury, Ct.

or

Continent.

Consignments solicited on the.usual terms of any of
the staples.
Special Counting and Reception Rooms available for
Americans in London, with the facilities usually found
at the Continental Bankers.

Street

Cars, Omnibuses.

JOHN STEPHENSON Sc CO.,
MANUFACTURERS.
New York,