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tfHJEf A WEEKLY NEW YORK, NOVEMBER VOL. 9. Martin Cortis, Successors to BROADWAY, NEW YORK Successors to Bight Drafts on A. 8. Petrie & Co., London, Royal Bank ot Ireland, Dunlin; Bank of Scotland, Edinburgh. C. Grim8haw A Co., Liverpool. Also on Germany, France and Sweden. Duncan, Sherman & Co., BANKERS, CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU STS., Bonds bought and AGENTS Ward, A. F. E. sold on Commission, Government MARTIN, mott, w. b. Special. EN08 RUNYON, Litchfield, NO. 18 NEW YORK. WILLIAM STREET, given to the purchase and sale of Government Securities and Railway Stocks ani Bonds. All orders will be promptly executed. Personal attention will be Lewis A. Stimson, Walteb fi. Colton. Wm. B. Litchfield, Chabl*B H. Dana, COMPANY. A. C. Brown, Lancaster A Co. Baltimore. Kaufman, Southern Securities of every guaranteed. Prices issued weekly and exchanged regularly with current Banking Houses. Refers by permission to Chas. T. Lowndes, EBq., President Bank of Charleston and Agent Liverpool, London and Globe Insurance Co. 8c SECURITIES, Dougherty, RANKERS AND BROKER?, WALL STREET, NEW YORK. Governments, Gold, and all olasses of Stocks and Bonds bought and sold on commission. Orders promptly and carefully executed. Wm. & Jno. O’Brien, B. V. A. Van Dyck, STOCK, BOND AND GOLD BROKER, BANKERS AND BROKERS, NO 68 WALL STREET, BROAD 30 on Com¬ AND TO THE NEGOTIATION OF LOANS, Also, continue to receive money on deposit, subject instant draft, and allow Interest on daily balances. to Jesup 8c Company, BANKERS AND MERCHANTS, 12 PINE STREET, Negotiate tonds and Loans for Railroad Cos., Contract for Iron or Steel Ralls, Locomotives, * Cars, etc. •hd undertake All business connected wltk Railways u BANKERS Sc BROKERS, STREET, NEW YORK, Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold Bought and Sola exclusively on commission. Acconnts of Banks, Bankers and individuals receiv¬ ed on favorable terms. Rbfxrxnoxs J. H. Fonda, Prea. National Mech. C. B. Blair, Pres. Merchants’ Nat, Banking Ass. N. Y. Bank Chicago. CitizensBankoF Louisiana Capital and Reserved Fund AGENCY, $2,500,000, A. D. Selleck, 37 Pine St, N.Y Draw on London Joint Stock “Rank, In sums to Marcuard. Andre A Co Fould A Co, London, Paris points suiting buyers of Sterling or Francs. D. F. JETT x. a. PEARL. Co., Pearl &r BROKERS, AND BANKERS 61 BROADWAY A 19 NEW ST., NEW YORK. Government Securities. Gold, Stocks and Bonds of every description bought and sold on Commission. Southern Securities a specialty. Taussig, Fisher 8c Co., STREET. BANKERS AND BROKERS Broad Street, New York. Buy and Sell at Market Rates No. 32 mission, M. K. i.f.-' J. L. Brownell 8c Bro., Continue to give their attention to the Purchase and sale of Stocks Cooke A Co.; Special attention paid to collections in New York 11 14 WALL STREET. Cashier. State and Canada. Baring, Brothers A Co, GEO. W. DOUGHEBTY. UTLEY, Orin C. Fbost, i Proprietors. Correspondents : Central Nat. Bank.New York: Jay N. Y. State Nat. Bank, Albany, N.Y. Orders solicited and satisfaction NO. GOVERNMENT description, via.: Un- ourrent Bank Notes, State, City and Railroad Stocks, Bonds and Coupons bought and sold on commission. Utlev bankers and dealers in u. s, S. C. CHARLESTON, WM. B. Gans, WM. L. MONTAGUE Watertown, N. Y. 28 BROAD [Successors to Bowlxs, Drevet & Co.] No. 12 Rue de la Palx, Paris. 76 State Street. Boston, 19 William Street, New York Bills on Paris and the Union Bank of London. CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TRAVEL LERS IN ALL PARTS OF EUROPE Frank- 8c lit. V. JORDAN. Dealers In Railway and other Shares current at the New York Stock Exchange. We furnish to, or purchase of, applicants in lots to suit, on favorable terms. E. S. MUNROE A CO. Special, STOCK AND BOND BROKER, Richmond. New York, November 5,1869. E. 8. MUNROE. G. F. Paddock, Mere itt Andrus, BROKERS, RANKERS AND 6$ WALL STREET, NEW YORK, 28 STATE STREET, BOSTON. Lancaster A Co., 19 New Street. and Dana Stimson, E. B. Litchfield, Bowles Brothers & Co., A GEO. F. PADDOCK Sc COM’YS BANK. FOB BARING BROTHERS Sc Munroe 8c Co., S. Stocks and Coupons bought at Market Rates. Collections made In all parts of the I nited States and Canadas. Accounts solicited and Interest allowed on Deposits. CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT, For the use of Travelers abroad and in the United COMMERCIAL CREDITS, For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope West Indies South America, and the United State OF NEW YORK. Dealers in Governments and Specie. ISSUE Spates, available in all the principal cities of the world; also, E. BROKERS, Sc 40 WALL ST., Bankers furnished with Sterling Bills of Exchange, and through pasaage tickets from Europe to all arts ei tha Unitea States ' OFFICE W. B. Mott Sc Co.. STOCK SAML. THOMPSON’S NEPHEW. S. G. 8c G. C. Bankers and Brokers. Runyon, 8c NO. 231. 27, 1869. Bankers and Brokers. Foreign Bills. T3 NEWSPAPER, commercial interests of the united states. REPRESENTING the industrial, and Rider & |oumal rnmnevdat Miww, §aitorag §to»ifot, m& f nssttrawf* lanto’ totte, Hatch, Foote 8c Co., RANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIB GOLD, Ac. No. 12 WALL STREET. ALL UNITED 8TATES to No. 47 Wall Street, New BANKERS DEALERS IN AND and SECURITIES Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and Sold exclusively Interest allowed on Deposit Accounts on Commission. promptly execute orders for the purchase or sa e Gold, State, Federal, and Railroad ** Securities. York. BROKERS, GOVERNMENT Sight Draft. Make collection* on favoradle terms, ol McKim, Brothers 8c Co., SECURITIES, Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS a b others, and allow interest on daily balances, at hjec t Henry STOCK A Sancton, GOLD BROKER NO. 24 NEW STREET, NEW YORK, ROOM 19. ris i Sanlr OF Buy, Sell and We Co., Philadelphia and Washington. YORK at most liberal rates, ail STREET, NEW WALL 20 No. Exchange issuer government bonds. chase and NEW YORK, PHILADELPHIA AND Dealers in U.S. Bonds and Members of Stock and Gold Exchanges in both Cities. Receive Accounts of Banks and Bankers ISSUE BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON HAMBRO&SON, London. B.METZLERS.SOHN & CO.Frankfort JAMES W. TUCKER & CO., Paris. C. J. PRINCIPAL CITIES ; available throughout And Letters of Credit OF CREDIT FOR TRAVELERS, JAY COOKE & CO. AVAILABLE^IN ALL PARTS OF ALEXANDER SMITH CO., & SECURITIES, GOLD, RAILROAD BONDS, STOCKS, etc., bought Sold on Commission. ADVANCES made upon approved Securities. COLLECTIONS mr.ue, and Loans Negotiated. and at Worthington, N. XRMBXR K. Y. STOCK ANB BANKER WALL BROKER, No*. 16 A 18 Nassau Street, the purchase and sale G OVER NMEN Securities Southern hare attention. Collections made on aU Southern especial Points. STOCKS, BONDS RAILWAY Letters FOR of Credit TRAVELLERS, DRAW at Steht or Sixty Days on PARIS, Bills at Sight or Sixty Days, on Interest on Deposits. Accounts received and interest allowed on same. Stocks and Bonds bought and sold at the New York Stock Exchange. RAILROAD LOANS NEGOTIATED Wm. G. Ward. Henry H. Wakd. Railroad, State, City and other Chas. H« Ward. BANKERS, 54 WALL STREET, Dividends and Co., Ward & NEW YORK. Established 1820. James Robb, King & Co., Orders In Stocks, Bonds. curities promptly filled at LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TRAV¬ Deposits in Gold and Currency received and rest allowed on balances exceeding $1,000. No. 56 Wall Street. Gold and Government Se¬ usual rates. Foreign Ex¬ negotiated. Draw Bills on the change UNION RANK OF LONDON. James G. King’s Sons, 54 William Street. Miscellaneous Coupons collected. Co., Warren Kidder & "NO. 4 Orders for Stocks cuted. F^URPER on depot.* YORK. snd Gold Promptlyexe¬ CENT INTEREST ALLOWED Bonds subject tsthsskst tight. inte¬ ELLERS. EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND PARIS. SIGHT DRAFTS ON EDINBURGH & GLASGOW STOCKS AND BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD. AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. commis- on Europe. Sterling Mwrs^&OBXK?B^NSON'&’c6V } LONDON. * Corporate Loans negotiated. Collections made everywhere in the United States, Canada and MAKING LIBERAL ADVANCES. , Securities, sion. AND GOLD, CIRCULAR market Banking Accounts may be opened with us upon the same con¬ ditions ps Currency Accounts. COMMISSION BUY AND SELL ON rent Gold GOLD COUPONS, GOLD AND at f AND in Balances. times, on first-class OF SECURITIES T all Dealers, approved collaterals, our prices, also Coin and Coupons, and execute orders for the purchase and sale of Gold and all New York, DEALERS IN ALL ISSUES Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Exctiauge, DEPOSITS RECEIVED SUBJECT TO SIGHT DRAF And Four Per Cent Interest allowed on Dally date, market rates of interest. We buy, sell and exchange all issues of Government Bonds at cur¬ RS, EXCHANGE, STREET, NEW YORK. Particular attention paid to NK E BA at fixed Co.. & Vermilye or Co. Bliss & Morton, demand on Advances made to ISSUED BY best with National Banks. Certificates of Deposit issued, pay¬ States. COMMERCIAL CREDITS, No, 40 Wall Street, New York. DEPOSITS received and interest allowed at Daily bearing interest at current rate, and available in all parts of the United ALSO, BANKERS, CGOVERNMENT and STATE EUROPE ali Currency or Gold. Persons depositing with us can check at sight in the same manner able AND CIRCULAR LETTERS on Balances of Circular Notes Gold. RAILROAD AND MUNICIPAL LOANS, receive Deposits, subject to Check, allowing interest, and transact a general Banking Business. 14 Europe. allowed Interest as WE NEGOTIATE WILLIAM 32 WALL STREET. liberal sale of Stocks, Bonds and W. on terms. AND OTHER SUPERIOR AND M1SSISS1I P COMPANY, and execute orders lor pur and Bends of LAKE RAILROAD ^ BANKERS, Jay Cooke & York, Banking House of Co., Smith, Randolph & BANKING HOUSE New Financial. Financial. and Btr > ers. er» [November 27,1869 CHRONICLE. fTHE 674 Dry Goods. John J. Cisco Sc Son, BANKERS, STREET, NEW YORK, NO. 59 WALL Extremely Low Prices (Brown Brothers & Co.’s Building,) Receive money on deposit, subject to check at sight allowing interest on daily balances at the rate of iou per centner annum, credited monthly. Issue Certificates of Deposit hearing four cent in terest, payable on demand or at fixed periods. AT \ Union Adams & Co. Negotiate Loans. Execute promptly orders for the purchase and sale of Gold, Government and other Securities on com¬ mission. TO THE WORKING"CLASS.—We are now prepared to furnish all classes with constant employment at home, the whole of the time or for the spare moments. Business new. light and profitable. Persons of either easily earn rom 50c to $5 per evening, and a pro¬ portional sum by devoting their whole time to the businees. Boys and girls earn nearly as much as sex That all who see thi-j notice may send their address and test the business, we make this unparal¬ leled offer: To such as are not well satisfied, we will send $1 to pay for the trouble of writing Fall par¬ ticulars, a valuable sample, which will do to com¬ work on, and a copy of The Peoples Literary mence men. Companion—one of the largest and best family newspapers published—all sent free by mail. Read¬ er, if you want oermanent, profitable work, address E C. ALLEN & CO„ Augusta, Maine, Make collections on all parts and Canada. of the United States FOR o'. J. Osborn. ^ Osborn r & Addison Cammack Cammack, BANKERS, 84 BROAD STREET. Stocks, State Bonds, Gold and Federal Securities, BOUGHT AND SOLD ON Particular Attention paid to invest* \\fE HAVE THIS DAY TRANSFERRED OU pool house will cease from and after this date. M Benjamin will alone sign in liquidation, andhereaftt Tapscott, Bros, & Co. conduct the business in New York under his own fin made for his account. AARON WOLF, )T. ABRAHAM HokfcNUNG, j Lifer poo 1 RESPECTFULLY SOLICIT FROM THE FRIEND of the late firm a continuance of their favors and coi dense.—No. 40 nrtadwsy.Ntw York, November 1086 LEW Is BENJAMIN. Patent Merino Drawers. Scarlet Tashmere Shirts. Scarlet Cashmere Drawers, Cloth and Bnck Gloves. Scarfs and Ties. COMMISSION. ments in Southern State Bonds. v v Interest in the business heretofore conducte in New York under the firm name of A. WOLF & C( to Mr. Lewis Benjamin, whose interest in onr Live GENTLEMEN.. Patent Merino Shirts. FOR YOUTH. Shifts and Collars. Kid and Bnek Gloves, 8C SOUTH STREET, NEW YORK. Issue Sight Drafts and Exchange payable In all parts of Great Britain and Ireland. Credits on W. TAPSCOTT & CO., Liverpool. Ad Tanees made on consignments. Orders for Govern aent Stocks, Bonds and Merchandize exeonted. Patent Merino *hirts. Patent Merino Drawers. Cardigan Jackets. Woolen Hosiery. No. 637 Broadway. November 27,1869] THE CHRONICLE. Financial. Bonds for £Ve. SEVE « i>EK CENT 676 Chicago Park Loan. Mort First gage Convertible Sinking Fund A SEVE V PER CENT GOLD The undersigned Commissioners to super¬ intend the Erection of the SOUTH PARK OP CHICAGO, in the State of Illinois, offer for Sale, at THE AMERICAN EX¬ CHANGE NATIONAL BANK, the BONDS authorized to be. issued by the Gold Bonds various acts of the Legislature of Illinois These Bonds are issued to to pay for the lands to be em¬ provide Danville, Urbana, Bloomington and Pekin Railroad Company means braced within the Park to be erected. Thty are mad<* a lien upon the property and franchise of ihe Park, c nsisting of some Eight Bundled Aer s of land lying within adjace t to the CITY OP CHICAGO The property of South Chicago consisting of the business portion, and wealthiest as we 1 as rapi ily increasing cart of the CITY OF and OFJLLINOIS, mcerest Payable la uoia at the Far- mere’ Loan and Trust Company, New York. Coupons payable First of April and CHICAGO, and October that of the towns of HYDE PARK and LAKE, which are contiguous theieto, amounting in the aggre¬ gate, according to the assessment Free Government Tax year 1809 to 3146,000,< 00 and for the upwards i~, by the terms of the Ac s referred to, irre¬ vocably pledge 1 to their pjymeat. Provision is made for rai iDg money in Total Inane • $2,000,000 each year for the p yment of interest upon Capital Stock• - $3,000,000 the bonds as it shall mature, by the tenor of which the County Cl rk of Cook Couniy, in The Bonds are a first mortgage on the of railway, its rolling stock, depots, machine shops, entire property of the Company lands, and the perty in Lengtii and Topography. road is 117 5-100 miles in length, the only East and West line connecting the Cities of Danville, Lrbana, Bloomington and Pekin on the line of the old Emigrant Road. This section has been justly named the Garden of the West, and is noted for its large agricultural and manufacturiug products, also for its The valuable mines of coal. The local business will make FIRST CLASS PAYING ROAD. the line a Valuable Connections. In addition the Company provide for a large through business, having as MANY VALUABLE CONNEC¬ TIONS EAST AND WEST AS ANY ROAD now in The line has lately been consolidated with the Indianapolis and Danville Road, making over 200 operation. miles under one management. At Indianapolis it connects with the Pennsylvania Central, Baltimore and Ohio, also with several other lines at Danville, with the Toledo, Wabash and West¬ ern, and at Pekin with Peoria, making a new through direct route to Illinois, connecting Philadelphia, New York, Bc#fon and Baltimore with Peoria, Keokuk, Burlington, Omaha and the far Weat. towpleliou of the Hoad. The road Is and per being rapidly constructed, all graded bridged, the track laying at the rate of one mile day, all tlis iron and a large amount of rolling stock provided. The whole road WILL BE COM¬ PLETED BEFORE THE 1ST OF JANUARY NEXT. Profit of the Investment. The bonds average LESS THAN EIGHTEEN THOUSAND DOLLARS PER MILE, are CONVERTI¬ BLE INTO STOCK AT PAR, at the option of the holder, at any time, and may be registered in the name of the owner if desired. The stocks of several of the principal lines of Illinois ..are selling at from above par to nearly 200. There is a reasonable prospect of the stock of this road, at no distant day, selling as high as either of them, which makes the convertible clause a valuable option. We have PERSONALLY EXAMINED THE ROAD, and consider the bonds a CHOICE SECURITY; we therefore take pleasure in recommending them to in¬ vestors as SAFE, PROFITABLE AND RELIABLE. A large portion of the loan has already been sold. We authorized to offer them tor the present at 55 and accrued interest in c urrency, the Company re are serving the right to advance the price without notice. At this price THEY PAY TEN PER CENT in currency -nearly FIFTY PER CENT MORE THAN THE SAME AMOUNT INVESTED IN GOVERNMENTS Gold and all marketable securities received in ex; change at highest market rates. Bonds forwarded by upress free of charge. ^UBNEH BROTHERS) BANKERS, «, • No. 14 Namu-st.. New York which c maty Cliica o and said towns are situ ite, is required upo i ihe certificate of these Commission rs, to levy upon the pro¬ SOUTH CHICAGO, HYDE PARK and LAKJI for such sumi be required fir interest purpos s. A as shall The Kansas Pacific Railway now in successful oper¬ ation lrom Kansas City to Sheridan, proposes to build an extension to Denver, Colorado. The Government has granted Three Millions of Acres of the finest lands in Kansas and Colorado, which are mortgaged for the cut of which the Park sha 1 be erected upon thepr perty benefited and improved thereby. Ample provisions are also m .de for the use of bese bonds in payment of assessments for such benefits As preliminary to the offer of these bo. ds, and in order that no doubt mi^ht be surges ed upon the Acts of the Legislature ebove rtf r ed to, an 1 the powers of the Commissioners, the various qir stious arising uuder them were submitted to and have been passed upon by the Suprerm Couit < f the fcitute of Illinois, the tribunal <jf ia.'t resort in questions aff c iug the con¬ struction of these Acts, and the vuli i y and efficacy of their various provisions, particu¬ larly in relation to assessments and levies, have been affirmed and placed befoul qu stion. The bonds to be issued by these Commis¬ sioners are limited to 3^,000,OjO, and will be of the tenor following, viz : *200,000 to mature in $200,000 “ * “ $ 00,000 “ $200,000 “ “ 2 y’rs $200,000 to mature la 6 y\"g 7 “ $200,000 “ “ 3 “ $200,000 “ “ 8 “ 4 “ $260,000 “ “ 10 “ 5 “ They will bear interest at the rate of seven cent per annum, payable semi-annually, principal and interest to be payable at the American Exchange National Bank in the City security of a loan of $6,500,000. This loan is secured In the most effectual manner. It represents a road in profitable operation, and will open the trade of the Rocky Mountain country, and connect it with the great maiketsof the East. It is considered to be one of the best loans in the market EVEN BETTER IN SOME RESPECTS THAN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. The loan has thirty years to run, principal and in¬ terest payable in gold, semi-annually, The coupons will be payable seveu per cent. semi-annually in either Frankfort, London, or New York, and will be free from Government taxation. The bonds for the pres • ent are sold in currency at 96, with accrued interest. Circulars, maps, and pamphlets sent on application. BARNEY, MORGAN & €0., 53 EXCHANGE PLACE, N. Y, M. K. JESUP & COMP’Y, 12 PINE STREET, N. Y. Gkobge OroYKE, Wm. A. Stephens G. Francis Opdykx. BANKING HOUSE OF Geo. Opdyke & NO. sinking fund for 1 e redemption of the principal of said bands, at, the rate of »ei per ciut in each year, is also provid d lor by the assessment provided by the Ac s ol the Legislature, of the cost of the property LOAN* $6,500,000. relating thereto. OF THE 1 Principal ami Financial. 25 NASSAU Co., STREET, (Corner of Cedar street.) DEPOSITS received from Individuals, Firms, Banks, Bankers and Corporations, subject to check at sight, and interest allowed at the rate of Four per cent per annum. CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT Issued, bearing Four per cent Interest, payable on demand, or after fixed dates. COLLECTIONS made on all accessible points In the United States, Canada and Europe. Dividends and Coupons also collected, and all most promptly accounted for, ORDERS promptly executed, for the purchase and sale of Gold; also, Government and other Securi¬ ties, on commission. INFORMATION furnished, and purchases or ex¬ changes of Securities made for investors. Exchange UoTiATiONS of Loans, and Foreign effected. Lock wo o d & Co., BANKERS, No. 94 BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET. DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT AND OTHER SECURITIES. Interest* allowed npon deposits of Gold and Cun subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned P* Merchants and Bankers upon favorable term*. rency. No. 14 WALL STREET. R. T. Wilson & Co., LATE per of New York. These Bonds are offered at rates which will yield to the takers 8£ to 9 per cent per anunm, according to the length of the Bond, upon their investments, a schedule of which rates had at the American Exchange may be National Bank, in the City of New York, where copies WILSON, CALLAWAY & CO., Bankers and Commission No. 44 BROAD merchants, STREET, NEW ZORC, Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Merchants Bankers and others allowed 4 per rent on deposits The most liberal advauces made on Cotton, 1 obbacco &c., consigned to ourselves or to our correspondent Messrs. K. GILLIAT & CO., Liverpoo of the acta of the Legislature of Illinois, pro viding for the erec ion of such Park, the deci¬ sions of the Supreme Court of Illiuois, upon the same, and such further information relating thereto, as may be desired, may be obtained. Gibson, Beadleston & Co, BANKERS, COMMISSIONERS: John M. Wilson, Gkorgk W Gage, L. B. Siuway, Chauncey T. Bowen, Paul Cornell. Chicago, November 4,1869. Note—Purchasers ol the Bonds may be accom¬ modated by payment of ten per Cent upon the amount taken, and payment of balance by install¬ ment* within sixty days by an a4Juatment of in¬ terest at seven per cent. All of tlae Two Yearn, Tlire© Years and Eight Year* bonds have been aold the preceding Circa ar was is¬ since sued* NO. 50 EXCHANGE PLACE. STOCKS, BONDS. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, FOREIGN EXCHANGE and GOLD bought and aold on the moat favorable terms. INTEREST allowed on deposits either In Currency Gold, subject to check at eight, the same as with or the City Banks. ADVANCES made on all marketable aecurltlaa. CERTIFICATES ol Deposit leaned bearing interest. COLLECTIONS made at all polnta of the UNION and BRITISH PROVINCES. * LOANS negotiated on FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC PRODUCE, in store and afloat. We Invite partlcnlax' attention to this branch of onr bswlnet* in which we nave unusual facilities ” THE CHRONICLE. 676 A OF LOAN WITH $1,500,000, IN PAYABLE INTEREST,AT [November 27, 13(59. GOLD, THE RATE OF EIGHT PER CENT PER ANNUM IN SEMI-ANNUALLY PAYABLE FREE OF IN NEW YORK UNITED PRINCIPAL MATURING IN THIRTY YEARS FROM CITY The undersigned, to offer for sale the as OP OR EUROPE, AS MAY STATES BE GOLD, DESIRED, TAXES, AUGUST, 1869, AND PAYABLE IN GOLD, IN THE NEW YORK. representatives of the ST. JOSEPH and DENVER CITY RAILROAD COMPANY, have the honor - FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS OF THE ST. JOSEPH AND DENVER CITY RAILROAD On their line of Railway which connects St. Joseph with Fort Kearney by rail, amounting to $1,500,000. These bonds are securid by a first and only mortgage to the Farmers* Loan and Trust Company of New York, as Trustee for the holders of these bonds, < f the property of the Company, from St. Joseph, Mo., to Marysville, Kansas, including its railroad, rights of way, franchises, equipments, rolling-stock (engines, cars, coaches, &c.), machine-shops, depots, lands, and all kiEds of property belonging to the Company in Doniphan, Brown, Nemaha and Mar¬ COMPANY, All that mile, on a be issned. February in each year, in New York, London, or Frankfort-on-the Main, at the option of the holder, and at the following equivalents: TOR SIX MONTHS INTEREST ON At New York At London At Frankfort-on-the-Main $1,000 BONDS. $40, gold £ 8 4s 4d ItO flor - On the $500 bonds one-half of these amounts shall Counties, in the State of Kansas, a distance of HI miles, interest is payable free of United States taxes. which is mortgaged to secure the bondholders at the rate of $13,508 The principal is payable in New York, in per can respectively. The gold, Aug. 15,1899. COMPLETED RAILROAD. THE COMPANY HAVE AN AUTHORIZED CAPITAL OF $10,000,000 THEY HAVE THE FURTHER SECURITY by the terms ef the Trust Deed, whereby the Farmers’ Loan and —to which neirly $2,000,000 has already been subscribed, and is Trust Company, as Trustees, are made the sole and absolute custo¬ being expended on the road, and in addition to this the Company dians of the bonds before they are issued, and are not permitted to have a grant from the United States Government at Washington of deliver them or their proceeds until they have proper evidence that 1,600,000 acres of land, ten miles in width—on either side of the the road is graded, tied, ironed, and ready for the rolling-stock, and line—(it is conceded that these lands are of a superior order and then only at the rate of $12,0l;0 per mile for so many miles as shall among the best in the country)—which, at $2 50 per acre, forms an asset of the be thus completed. This is arranged in sections of five miles. Company in the value of $4,000,000. The Company, with its entire Bonds, to be valid, must be countersigned by the Farmers’ Loan property, valued at $6,000,000, free from debt, asks this loan of $1,500,000. and Trust Company. We offer these bonds at the low PARTIES PURCHASING ANY OF THESE BONDS have finds safe and PRICE OF 97 1-2 guaranty that the money they have invested and accrued interest in currency, with the resen ed right to advance an equivalent in value in a completed railroad, costing to build the price without notice. and equip more than double the amount they have invested, all of Governments and other securities received in payment, without which is pledged to pay the principal and interest of the bonds they commission, at their market value. Bonds sent by express, or have purchased. packages received in payment, will be free of charge. Pamphlets, maps and information furnished on application. THE 8ECURITY IS UNDOUBTED ! Parties desiring safe and lucrative investments should lose no The St. Joseph and Denver City Railroad is mainly the extension time in investigating these securities, as the loan is being rapidly of the Hannibal and St. Joseph Railroad, with all its extended con¬ taken up. nections North and East, and the St. Louis and St. Joseph Railroad, with its powerful connections South and East, via St. Louis, both W. P. CONVERSE & lines converging at St. Joseph and connecting immediately with the St. Joseph and Denver City Railroad, traversing through Eastern COMMERCIAL AGENTS, Kansas to the heart of Nebraska, and intersecting the Union Pacific Railroad main line at the City of Fort Kearney, THUS MAKING 54 PINE STREET, NEW YORK, a sure . CO., THE SHORTEST ROUTE KNOWN TO AND THE “ PACIFIC STATES.” CALIFORNIA TANNER & CO., THE DINE 41 miles west from St. tion, and the line to The line from Joseph is in complete and successful Marysville is being rapidly completed. FISCAL opera¬ 49 WALL AGENTS, STREET, NEW YORK Marysville to Fort Kearney is also being rapidly pushed forward. ' A Branch Road is being built from the St. Joseph and Having had all the papers and documents relating to this loan Denver City Railroad at Severance to the Kansas Pacific Railroad, giving examined by competent counsel, and prounced complete and suffi¬ at once a direct route to Denver City. cient, and having personally examined the same, which we find regular and perfect, and having our own engineers examine the THE BONDS road and property, whose reports are satisfactory, we do, with the are Jin denominations of $1,000 and $5,000. They are Coupon utmost confidence and satisfaction, recommend the EIGHT PER bonds, bat may be registered in the owner’s name at the Farmers’ CENT FIRST MORTGAGE GOLD BONDS OF THE Loan and Trust Company, tad by the surrender of the Coupons ST. JOSEPH AND DENVER CITY RAILROAD COM¬ can be converted into a Registered bond, with interest payable to PANY as a SAFE, SUKE AND PROFITABLE INVEST¬ the registered owner. MENT, worthy the attention of capitalists, investors and others. THE COUPONS* W. P. CONVERSE & CO., or the interest, is (made payable on the 15 th days of August and TANNER & CO. gimltffts’ tedtr, (Stonroerrial OftutA §tattwiuj ^Etanitav, and §nmn,« faurnat. A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, REPRESENTING TIIE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES.' NO. 231. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1869. VOL. 9. us out of our present condition and putting us upon a more stable currency basis. Our entire revenue system de¬ ing CONTENTS. THE CHRONICLE. pends for its productiveness upon freedom from any such con¬ 680 vulsion; in fact the whole machinery of the government, its English News Commercial and Miscellaneous National Board of Trade 681 ability to maintain itself under the heavy payments it must News Changes in the Redeeming THE BANKERS GAZETTE AND RAILWAY MONITOR. make, are so intimately connected with the commercial pros¬ Money Market, Railway StockB, I Sa1© Prices N.Y. Stock Exchange 687 U. S. Securities, Gold Market, 688 perity of the country that we may rest with perfect confidence | Railway News 630 Foreign Exchange, New York | Railway, Canal, etc.. Stock List. in the knowledge that nothing will be done by that Court City Banks, Philadelphia Banks I National and 8tate Securities... 690 National Banks, etc 6S4 } Railroad, Canal and Miscellanewhich can result in any sudden tumble in values. Siuthem Securities 683 { 691-2 ous Bond List THE COMMERCIAL TIMES. We should therefore be entirely sure, if the results of this Commercial Epitome 603 I Groceries 697 decision were to be thus disastrous, that the country’s needs Cotton 694 ] Dry Goods 698 Tobacco 696 | Prices Current. 703 would influence and guide the Court in its deliberations. Yet Brcadstoffs 696 i a delay of justice is to the litigants a denial of justice, and nothing but national disaster, as the result of their action, would be an excuse for delay. Such, we think, is the opinion Thb Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine of the Court, and that they do not anticipate any injury to with the latest news up to midnight of Friday. the country from this decision, and do not intend to hold the • The Supreme Court and the Tender Act The Financial Situation Legal 677 678 679 Agents of National Banks-... LatestMonetary and Commercial . 670 . / $()£ CljronuU. question TEEMS OF SUBSCRIPTION—PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. and Financial Chronicle, delivered by carrier to city subscribers, ana mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage,) for The Commercial ions open much longer, would be inferred from the decis¬ In two cases they enforced them, which by already made affecting this subject. ForOne Year *10 00 For Six Months 6 00 He Chbomcle will be sent to subscribers until ordered discontinued by letter. Foetageis 20 cents per year, and is paid by the subscriber at his own poet-offlee. have held contracts valid and have william b. dana, John e. floyd, JR. Anothe- contract under the Confederate Government paid in confederate notes or their equivalent at the maturity of the obligation. In a word, the idea appears to be that the contract must be executed accord¬ ing to the intent of the parties makingit, and that these vexed questions shall be so settled and the statute so interpreted as to work the least possible injury to individuals. With these ideas in view, theD, what is likely to be the decision of the Court on this legal tender question, and what, when made, will be its results ? The Court can come to either one of the two conclusions. First, that the provision in the act making the greenback a legal tender for all debts was void ah initio. Such a decision would not, however, affect obliga¬ tions payable in dollars made since greenbacks came into use as currency; for the Court has already held, as noticed above, that the intent of the parties would in all cases govern, and that they would therefore be payable in currency. Any other construction would impair the contract, and is therefore wholly unauthorized. Hence, after the decision, contracts could be made and business could be transacted in either gold or cur¬ rency, precisely as it can be now. In this particular then, such a determination of the question would work no change in the condition of the country or in the modes of doing busi • ness. The words legal tender would be erased from the United States currency, but they would none the less be legal tender for the payment of all outstanding contracts made since WILLIAM B. DANA & CO., Publishers, 79 and 81 William Street, NEW YORK. ) ) * 1^** Remittances should Post Office Box 4,692. invariably be made by drafts or Post Office Money Orders. THE SUPREME COURT AND THE LEGAL TENDER ACT. Prophets of evil always abundant. In fact it requires to follow their profession that it is no wonder many spend their time in dressing up their imaginary dangers to frighten the timid with. At present the country is full of these self-satisfied individuals who are filling the air with their dismal forebodings. But they lived during the entire period of the war, and in spite of them the country so little skill are or acumen prospered. The rock upon~which every man’s fortune is now to be wrecked, is, according to ttese wise heads, the expected deci¬ sion of the Supreme Court with regard to the Legal Tender Act. That decision will at once, we are told, take off thirty per cent from all values, leave the country without a cur¬ rency, and all commercial matters in inextricable confusion. This certainly is a dark picture, and if there were any real resemblance between it and the probable events of the imme¬ diate future capital would be very timid and business paralyzed. But in the first that the Supreme place may we not challenge the assertion, Court is to render any decision upon these their terms were to be discharged alone by the payment of gold. the Court decided must be questions ? If the results are to be as disastrous to the their issue, and for every contract pubsequently made in which country as these forebodings indicate, certainly that Court such was the intent of the parties to it. How, then, could can see it, and constituted as it at present is, woukL delay any disaster or check to business transaction* moult t . action until a quieter and easier mode could be found for lift¬ [ But it may bo said that the inferior currency (the green- THE 678 . CHRONICLE. back) would be quickly forced out of use by the better (gold) currency, and that hence we would have the severest kind of contraction. This very argument was used when it was pro¬ posed to pass the Gold Contract Bill, and yet how little influence the decisions establishing the principle contained in that bill have had; in fact not the least, in the direction suggested. And in the nature of things why should^TJnited States notes be any the less in use than at present? They would, according to the above mentioned decisions, discharge contracts precisely the same as now; the business of the country would continue as now to be done with them ; and only by very slow degrees would that law assert itself, and then, in a natural, quiet way, as the country became prepared for the change, bring us back to a currency redeemable in the [November 27, 1869 preservation of the nation’s life. to this conclusion the result would issue of would be ner Should the Court come simply be that the present legal tenders would be upheld, but any new issue impossible. Such a decision could not in any man- interfere with, in the least disturb the business or \ of the country. We thus that in the difficulties and dangers suggested by these prophets of evil are merely imaginary, and that the changes effected in our daily transactions by this decision would be very slight. But there is one important in which the whole business interests of the particular country would be benefited. We are now living under continual uncertainty as to whether Congress will or will not issue more currency. Every interest is held in suspense by this doubt. There can be no real vitality given to specie. legitimate Nor need we fear that the Banks would suffer by the action of enterprise so long as this state of affairs continues. But let the Court, and through the Banks the people. Ordinary bank¬ this decision be announced in either way suggested, so that it ing business would be conducted as now, money being loaned is known that no new issue_of greenbacks can be made, and and notes paid, deposits received and checks cashed all in at once a degree of certainty is thrown around the future; kind. The gold decisions and the confederate decision above confidence will increase; capital will become less timid; and referred to would protect the parties to any contract. With the movement towards a more active, legitimate business be regard to Bank currency it might be necessary for Congress fairly inaugurated. May we not, therefore, conclude in view to grant some relief, so that no one could demand specie of of what has been said that a decision of the Supreme Court them for their bills until both they and the country were in such as we have indicated above would be a source not of evil position to resume gold payments. We do not indicate what but of the.highest good to the country. precise action would be necessary, or what should be done. But the Banks are the creatures of Congress, and have become THE FINANCIAL SITUATION. the financial machinery of the country ; the crippling of these institutions would be quickly felt throughout the whole There are not a few persons who express surprise at the commercial body. Hence the power and necessity would depression which still survives in Wall street, and is more or exist for meeting any exigency which the new state of things less visible as well in the, money market as in general busi¬ might make apparent in their business relations with the ness, in the movements of the Produce Exchange and in the country. quotations for government bonds and other securities. These Again, there can be no force in the idea that as a result of numerous symptoms and multiplied results are all dependent such a decision gold would rise in value or more properly on one common malady, and the wonder is that they have speaking greenbacks would depreciate. We have already not been very much worse. The fact is, that during the trou¬ seen that United States notes would perform all the functions bles incident to the gold gamblers’ carnival of September last, of currency they now perform, so long as the business of the many persons were injured who made no sign, and whose country was conducted on that basis. Besides they would now wounds, though not fatal, have left behind an exhaustion and continue to be the notes of the government, and it would as weakness which will require some time to recover from, now be liable for their ultimate payment. Without doubt some I Numerous firms have been carrying larger or smaller amounts provision also would be quickly made for their final with¬ of gold, or stocks, or bonds, and have held fast by their prop¬ drawal; not violent withdrawal so as to disturb the business erty, until very weariness and bitter exhausnon compelled them of the country; but gradually and almost imperceptibly lifting to throw their stocks on the market. There has been much them up to the value of gold. This might be done bv con¬ more of this kind of relief obtained than is generally ima¬ verting them iu fixed amounts at fixed times into compound gined, and in quarters where perhaps it is little suspected, ex¬ notes, as we have often heretofore suggested. cept by a few persons with exceptional ineaus at their com¬ In what has been said we have taken it for granted that the decision of the court would declare the legal tender clause void ab initio. This decision could take. think the court is is the radical form which the There is another conclusion which we most likely to reach, and which would involve possible change in the 6tatus of things, and yet effectually dispose of the question. The Legal Tender act was passed at a time when the nation was struggling for its life, and it was declared by the then President, by a large majority of Congress and of the people, that it was requisite as a war more no measure, as a means of national preservation. Of course that the war might prosecuted without it. We shall not argue the point. As we have stated above, Congress affirmed that it was necessary, and a large majority of the people were of a like opinion. The United States Court can now very reasonably be of the same mind, and declare that though the many will insist that it have been successfully was not necessary; letter of the constitution does not authorize such an act under any ordinary circumstances or condition of the country, yet there is a war power necessarily inherent in any governmental c institution authorizing any and every act which is requisite for see any event J mand. No one who has will wonder at watched financial the with which affairs with any feeling of de¬ pression, after being thus generated, grows, and swells* and spreads itself in a vague way throughout the financial circle. It is, however, extremely easy to mistake the signs and indications which are everywhere rising up around us, and one of the most valuable gifts of the financial man is that of foreseeing when the tide is “ on the turn.’ The present moment is evidently a critical one, and opinions are much divided and at variance as to what changes will be developed in the immediate future. Gold, under the influence of the heavy government sales, and of other obvious causes» a small part of which we have just cited, ha6 6unk to a lower quotation than has been struck since 2‘2d August, ISOS. Gov¬ ernment bonds, after their recent rally, have fallen in price* and in other directions the bear movement has been conspi CUOU8, if not very severe. Now, the question is, what does all this indicate as to the changes which are ahead of us ? U the tide turning? or will ?t ebb out still further? Without attempting to solve this question very fully, it is well to turn care ease a . Ifovenab®* 27, 1869.] 679 CHRONICLE. THE change in the present confused inspection and grad attention to the money market where, perhaps, the solution ing of flour, grain and produce, and the adoption of a uniform really must be sought. . rule. The St. Paul Chamber of Commerce ask the same For twelve months the loan market has been liable to thing, and also that the number of pounds of any article sudden spasms and jerks which began to invade it almost required by law to constitute a bushel be uniform so long as immediately after the election of last fall. It has been sup- the bushel is used. The same Chamber asks also a report osed by some, that political causes contributed in part to the recommending a uniform law in all ihe States with regard to formation of the tight-money clique, as the compact league of the conveyance of lands, the method of sealing such instru¬ speculators was called, which was broken up and went to ments, number of witnesses required, &c., &c. The Execu¬ ieces in the September panic. Whether this rumor be true tive Committee of the National Board request action to make or no, it is certain that a set of very bold, able, adroit and uniform the practice in the United States District Courts, energetic manipulators got control, from time to time, of the when suits for the collection of debts are brought between citi¬ money market, and that we were never safe from their ma¬ zens of different States. The Philadelphia Board of Trade chinations. The influence which these men wielded was as a present a strong resolution with reference to the practice of (rreat frightful spectre, and nobody could know when or how requiring local licenses for trading, whether demanded by State the creature might play its next mischievous tricks, and throw or municipal law. This policy they very justly declare to be Wall street and the whole financial machinery of the country illiberal, vicious and injurious, and they ask the Board to into confusion and disorder. The great overpowering'dread is institute such proceedings as shall put an end, if possible, to gone. The clique is broken up. Its influence has wholly it. The Baltimore Board of Trade propose a Department of disappeared. Wall street has had lopped away this one Commerce at Washington which shall have charge of the diseased part, and the operation, which was a severe one, has foreign aud coastwise shipping, shipbuilding, &c. Another naturally enough been followed by languor and depression. report will be made upon the organization of corporations, . But this cannot last for ever. It will soon be followed by view with a to uniformity, especially in regard a renewed animation. Indeed, there are evident signs of this to the liability of stockholders. The Board of recuperative activity rapidly developing. Trade of St. Louis and Cincinnati seek action with From what has been said two conclusions are obvious. regard to the improvement of their navigation, the removal First, that the chief causes of the depression in Wall street of obstructions, the regulation of bridges over navigable are in the past, that we are receding far from them every day, rivers, etc., thus bringing up in this body the business of the and that they are consequently losing more and more of their late Keokuk Convention. St. Louis also seeks for the pas¬ violence and force. Secondly, that after those who were wounded in the late panic have either recovered or have, like sage of a law by Congress to regulate railroad charges, so that way freight and passengers shall be transported at the • wounded Indians, retired to perish in obscure solitary silence, same rate per mile as through freight and passengers. The then will Wall street find in the money market all the condi¬ tions for lively activity and industrial recupeiation. For let Chicago Board of Trade asks for a double track railway for Wall street once renew its health and the pulsations there of freights from the Mississippi to the Seaboard, the same to be constructed by government. Reports will also be made upon the mighty heart of our financial system be healthy and strong the Niagara Ship Canal, the Northern Pacific Railroad, and and normal, and we shall not have to wait long before the the James River and Kanawha Canal Company; and an¬ vigorous forces of health permeate and throb throughout the most distant part of the system. If thi^ be so, then 'one other asking for an increase in the elasticity of the cur¬ leading need of the financial situation is confidence. If our rency, and favoring the repeal of the law which limits the National Bank circulation to $300,000,000. A report in people were only satisfied that there would be no panic in the favor of an early resumption of specie payments will be made. near future, that we have seen the worst of our financial troubles and that the monetary gloom and lowering terrors of The Baltimore Board of Trade ask the repeal of the law im¬ the past four months are to be followed by brighter and more posing a tax of ten per cent, on the notes of State banks• Some modifications of the tariff* will be sought, and a report propitious days, one of the most formidable difficulties in the favoring a uniform rate of interest at seven per cent, will be way would have been got rid off*. If this theory be correct, then it is evident that the financial maladies which are most made. A law is also to be proposed requiring all American re¬ troublesome at present are not very deep seated, and that one gistered vessels to carry one or more apprentices, and uniform of the duties of the good citizen just now is not to give way coinage will be favorably reported upon. Arrangements will also be made for a more perfect system of reports, and their too much to the rather popular habit of croaking. more frequent interchange among the constituent bodies of Board a our # In 1867 a National Board of Trade, representing thirty- bodies, was organ¬ ized. Its meetings have since been held annually, and next week (Dec. 1) it holds its meeting for 1869 at Richmond, Virginia, at which about one hundred delegates are expected to be present. This National Board is an expression of the unity of commercial interests which now exist in this country, and it is designed to strengthen that unity, and to reduce conflicting customs and laws to uniformity. There are men of large financial ability and commercial experience and repu¬ tation in the Board, men who appear to be able to rise above looal prejudices and temporary policies, and provide for a seven local boards, all of them chartered future which shall include the whole country and all terests. The subjects of discussion at the coming varied and numerous, and we its in¬ meeting ? are give a statement of the most important, as showing the soope of the inquiry propose^The New Orleans Chamber of Commerce ask of the National National Board of Trade. The above outline gives some nation of the convention, and of the NATIONAL BOARD OF TRADE. indication of the determinathe comprehensive range of thought and action of views local and sectional jealousies will be forgotten. An all embracing policy will take the place of one that is restricted and local, and such convention will utter opinions that will be worth heeding all over the country. If they tend to facilitate inter¬ communication, open new business channels, indicate the points of new and special development, and cheapen the cost of transportation, they will be of invaluable service in strengthening and increasing the prosperity of the country. CHANGES IN THE REDEEMING AGENTS OF NATIONAL BANKS. subjects they propose to discuss. Men of will come together, and in the comparison a of National weekly changes arrangement made following are the changes in the Redeeming Agents Btnks for the week ending Nov. 25, 1869. These are famished by, and published in accordance with an with the Comptroller of the Currency. The THE 680 REDEEMING AGENT. NAME or RANH. LOCATION. The National New York. Mohawk.. Mo¬ TheNinth National Bank of New York, approved in place of The Central hawk Valley Bank [November 27, 1869. CHRONICLE. National Bank of New York. District Columbia. The First National The Fourth National Bank of New ' Bank York, a proved in pi ce ol The CenWashington tral Nations’ Bank of New York. The First National The National Park Bank of New York, Wisconsin. Whitewater Bank. approved in place of The Tenth Nationxl Bank of New York. Iowa. The First National The First National Bank of Chicago, Bank... approved in addition to the Ninth Davenport National Bank of New York. The First National The National Park Bank of New York, Nebraska. (ImfthA Kink.T, approved in pla^e of The Central National Bank ef New York. r-B’krate—. 1868.1869. At Paris.... 2* 2* 5 4 Vienna 5 Berlin.... 4 Frankfort 2* 4 1868. 8* l*-2 4 2* . The rates of 4* Turin 5 Brussels ..2* Madrid ...5 4* Hamburg. 2 6 4 . 5 Amst'rd'm 2* 1868.1869. 1869. 1* . .. i—B*k rate-% r-Op. m’kt—» foreign exchange St. PetbV 2* 5 — ? 5 SJi «X GOLD peroz. standard, Bar Gold do fine do Befinable d. South American Doubloons... l*»?tprice peroz. do do United States gold coin AT LATEST DATES. laet price None here. g. 9 77 do do _ 8panlsh Doubloons RATES OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON 5 — are s. fflonetarp and Commercial Cngliol) Ntow L 2*-S — lODV, rather more favorable to this country. The demand for gold for export has been less active, and during the last few days several parcels of bar gold have been seo^ into the Bank. The following quotations for bullion are from the cir¬ cular cf Messrs. Pixley A Co. : " Catest *vw* 5 d @- .. TL 11* @77 •.?,. ® 77 75 78 0 9 — 10* @76 @74 0 o @— — — SILVER. 8. EXCHANGE AT LONDON— EXCHANGE ON LONDON. NOV. 13. Bar Silver Fine do do containing 5 Fine Cake Silver Mexican Dollars peroz. standard nearest. grs.gold.. do per oz. ..... LiTMT OH— time. Amsterdam... Antwerp .Hamburg 18.10*013.11 35.85 035.4) short. 35.15 025.23* Smooths, 12 67*012.72* short. short. short. .... Cadiz Lisbon...... Milan Genoa Naples New York.... Jamaica Havana Bio de Janeiro Bahia NOV. 12. 11.88 @ 25.20 <?h 18. 7*® 35.17*® days. Nov. 13. 60 £vov. 13. 60 days. 8. 44 Oct. 13. 44 Oct. 15. a* 60 days. 11 Oct. 20. Oct. 12. Hong Kong... Ceylon Bombay Madras Calcutta •« 30 days. 48 id 4s id 1 p. c. dls. U ll*d U ll*d U tt)fd * p. c. die. 6mos. 2. Oct. 28. Oct 12. Oct. 27. a 4 18. Sept. 12. 80 days. 11*4. 1113-16 c. pm. 1 p. London, Saturday, Nov. 13, 1869. In the early part of the present week it wa9 anticipated by some that the Bank Directors would venture upon a further rise h the official minimum, but at their weekly meeting held on Thursday no alteration made. The minimum quotation remains, therefore, at 3 per cent At present there is not the slightest prospect that money will become dear. It is admitted, however, in all quarters that the lowest point has now been reached, and that there is the probability of a gradual movement upwards in the quotations. The rise, however, must, under the circumstances, be of a very gradual character, as the demand for money is not at present of each an extensive nature as to necessitate much higher rates, while the supply on the London market alone is more than adequate to our requirements. There is, in addition, a large amount of unemployed nmey at Paris, whero the rate is still one half per cent beneath our own and where sterling bills are discounted on much more favorable terms. This week, for instance, six months bank and prime merchants’ bills, which cannot be discounted here under 3| per cent, have been negotiated at Paris at 2£ per cent, being a differ ence of one-half per cent. A large quantity of this class of paper has been transmitted therefore to Paris, and so long as ouch a course can be pursued with so great au advantage to the borrower on thifl side, the upward movement must be kept in check. It is probable, however, that the new home a«d foreign loans, actual and prospective, must soon influence our own and the Paris market, and it is partly for that reason that money is likely to riee in value to a slight extent The quotitious are now as under : was 1868. 1369. Bank minimum.... 2 ®... 3 @.. Open-market rates: 80and60days*bills 1*®... 3 ®... 8months, bills 1*®2 8 ®... The following aie 1868. *68. Joint stock banks Discount bouses, at call. On the 1869. Per cent. Per cent. 4 months, ba’k bills 2*@2* 6 months' ba'k bills 8*®3 4 and 6 trade bills.. 3 ®8* 8*®... 8*@... 8*®4 the rates of discount allowed by the joint-stock banks and discount houses for .. .. 1, 1 deposits *69. 2 2 none price here. - - U. 8.5-20’e, 1882.... 83*-83* 83*-88* 83 81 -82 81 U. 8. 5-206,18^. ... 81 -82 8 >*-82* 82*-82* 82 U. S. 6-20s, 1885 -82 81 -82 81 -82 81. -82 82*-82* 82*U.S. 6-20b, 1887.. 83*-83* 83*-83* S8*-83* 83*-83* 83*-84 U. S. 10-40s,l»04.... 77*-78 77*-77* 77*-77* 78 -.... 82*-.... 83*-8l 78*-.... ... .. Atlantic & G*t West. 25 -26 consol'd mort.b'ds 25*-25* 25 25*-26* 26*-.... 25*-26* Erie Shares($100).. 21 *-21* 20*-...; 19*-20* 19*-20* 20*-21 20*-20* U’lnois shares ($100) 98*-... 98*-..; 98 '-99 98*-.... 98*-98* 99 -.... : *68. Disc’t houses, 7 days notice, 1* do 14 do 1* *69. 2* 2* following return shows the present position of the Bank of Eng¬ land, the bank rate of discount,the price of Consols, the avergge quota¬ tion for English wheat, the price of middling upland cotton, and of No. 40 mule yarn, fair, second quality, compared with the four previous years: 1865. £ 1866. £ 1867. £ 1869. £ 1868. £ Circulation, including— Bank p jet bills 21,661,131 23,869,581 24,783,830 24,531,337 Public deposits 5,690, H 8 6,145.772 5,145,163 4,744,758 Other deposits * 12,275,016 16,687,127 18,691,673 19,248,711 Government securities 9,741.100 12,804,391 12,319,203 15,485,874 Other securities 19,808,882 19,061,233 16,682,646 16,317,065 Reserve 7,174.973 8,867,762 13,089,156 10,422,535 Coin and bullion...... 13,677.098 17,114,007 22.238,806 19.858,8:0 Bank rate 7 p. c. 2 p. c. 2 p. c. 4 p.c. Consols 89* 89* 94* 91* 3,515,897 17,848,517 13,811,953 16,090,129 9,714,077 18.273,257 8 p. c. 83* 45s. 8d. Price of wheat Mid. Upland cotton... 40 mule yarn, 24,154,913 67s. 2d. 70s. Id. 52s. 3d. 47s. Id. 19*d. 14d. 8*d. 10*d. 12*d. fair 2d 2s. 3*d. quality Two loans have been Is. 8d. Is. *d. Is. l*d. brought forward Ibis week, the one Is. 3d forth* Italian government, and the other for the Metropolitan Board of Works. price of issue beiDg 29$ per bond of £40, being equal to about 73£. The loan will bear 5 per cent interest per annum, but the coupons are to be subject to the Italian income tax. The security on which the loan is held are the National domains. Tbe second loan is for the Board of Works, and is for £2,500,000. It will be in a 8£ per cent stock, but as tenders are invited, no price has yet been fixed. The proceeds are to be devoted to Metropolitan improve¬ The former is for £5,200,000, the ments. After protracted negotiations, it is understood that tbe arrange¬ bringing tbe Turkish loan of £12,000,000 (net) have been completed. It was thought, a few days ago, that the Imperial Otto* man Bank would be the agents here, but it now appears that the: Comptoir d’Escompte have secured the bueinese. The loan is to be in a six per cent stock, and the price of issue about 60 per cent. Provision has also to be made by the government, by the commence-; ment of next January, for the telegraph property taken by it. The sum required will be about £7,000,000; but, up to the present time, the government has been silent on the question. Trade is reported as being more satisfactory in tbe manufacturing districts. There is, however, no activity apparent, but a healthier tone prevails, and a feeling of increased confidence exists. The iron trade is still very firm, and the makers of rails continue to be fully employed. At Manchester, however, much caution continues to be observed owing to the uncertainty which prevails respecting the supply of cotton dur¬ ing the current season. A report from that city states : now ments for Continent, and chiefly in Germany, the value of money con¬ It has now becoma an important matter to watch the movements in the Paris money market, and it may be looked upon as a favorable feature that some impression is now being made on the heavy stock of bullion held by the Bank of France. In the rates of discount, on the continent, this week, very little alteration has taken The flatness which has now prevailed in this market for the last ten days ha* lace. The following are the quotations at the leading cities: continued throughout the present week almost wi hout interruption. Qp Wedner tinues to rule firm. . The | Prom our own Correspondent.! Per cent. Per cent. per oz, last 93*-93* 93*-93* 93*-93* 93*-93* 93*-93* 93*-93* -83* 83 S3* 83*-83* 83*-8% Consols 48. 6 tf.@4?. 6*cZ 4*. 6 *d.® — * p. c. die. Is. 11 13-164. 44 44 —- Monday. Tuesday. Wcd’ay. Thu’ay. Fri’ay. Sat’day Nov. 13. 19* 44 Oct. 16 19* 19* 44 per oz. 1 @ 5* @ 11* @ days, the stock markets have been devoid activity, but there has recently been an improved feeling, and both home and foreign securities are higher in price. Consols have risen more than £ per cent, and all foreign securities have realized ad. vauced quotations. American securities, which were dull in the early part of the week, close with a firm appearance. The highest and low¬ est prices of Consols, and of the principal American securities, on each day of the week, are shown in the following statement: 109 ' — of 119. 0* 5G.05 days. Oct Valparaiso.... Sydney 90 d. — Until within the last two 6.22* short. Nov. 3. Pernambuco.. Singapore 41 tt oz.,laet price, flat s. 6* ® 11* @ Quicksilver, £6 17e. per bottle; discount 3 per cent. c 123.75 8mos. i* 6.27*0 6.27* 1.20*0 1.20* 48*0 49 90 days. 51*0 62 Smonths. 26.80 026.65 ** O “ ** O 44 per Spanish Dollars (Carolus) Five franc pieces. RAT*. • Berlin Frankfort 035.45 TIXB. short. OU.18X ITovTlT 11.18 short. 8months. 35.40 •i Paris.... Paris Vienna DAT*. RATH. d. 5 5 5 4 November 27, 1^69.] THE CHRONICLE. there was a little inquiry for yarns suitable for China, and some sales took place consequence. The business none, however, was not sufficient to give any imetns tothe market, and to-day prices have been irregular. As usual when there has been an absence of business for above a week, even although stooks may be H<rht producers begin to be more anxious to sell, and as contracts approach a ter¬ mination offers which were previously rejected are more readily entertained. This , in feature has beeu more lower marked to day than on any previous day this week, and nrice3 are in nearly all departments than they were on Tuesday, P A novel mode of doing business, hitherto almost unkn wu in this market, "to constant practice in dealing with the raw material, has begun to show although itself, by Intermediate parties between producers and merchants contracting to deliver ya-ns or ffoods one, two, or three months forward, without having made previous arrange¬ ment to ensure their ability to deliver without incurring serious losses should a rise in prices take place. This practice must be open to great risks, and has a ten • dencv to unsettle the market, and in fact almost to drive small plodding tradesmen Open as the market is at present to fluctuations, owing to the precarious out of it. supply of cotton, this speculative mode »f doing business only aggravates the evi The large receipts of cotton at the American ports in the early days of the week noint to the aggregate for the week being large. This has kept the Liverpool market very much iu check, the sales of the week amounting only to 49,700 bales— above 10,000 bales les3 than the total of the estimates made from the daily sales. . The 8S1 1 Liverpool, Nov. 18.**-Cotton has been in fair rt quest through- ut the week, but is still freely offered, and prices have gr dually decl nii in almost every description. The sales of 8< a Island have been quite retail, without any change in prices, whilst the common qualities have been scarcely inquired for. American ha9 been pressed for sate, and shows a decline in the current qualities of ^d to fd per lb. New York advices to the 11th instant quote Middling 24f cents, costing to sell in Liverpool 11 9 16d per lb, by eteimer. Brazil is heavy of sale, and about fd per lb lower. Egyptian continues i i good demand, but the new arrivals are freely off red, and have given way fd to fd per lb. In East Indii fair amount of business h .s been done, but the supply offering continues very abundant, and a decline has been submitted to of fully fd per ib. The transactions*4 to arrive” continue numerous, though at dec ioing prices; the latest quotations are—American, basis of Middling, from Charleston, ship named lid ; Savannah, ship named 11 l-16d; a any port, Noveinbcr-December sh pment lid ; December. January 10 15-16d ; Syrian, basis of Middling Fair, public sales of Colonial wool have been commenced this week. shipment 8fd; Oorarawuttee, fair new Merchants, Decemner-January December-January, been large and amount to nearly 100,000 bales. As overland 9fd; December January shipment 9 1 per lb. The sales of about 30/ 00 bales have been left over from the September series, the the week, ineluding Forwarded, amount to 49,710 bales, of which 4,220 are on to'al supply to be brought forward is about 180,000 bales. The open- to the Speculation, and 7,470 declared for Export, leaving 38,020 bales Trade. iDg sales have been well attended, and both Cape and Australian pro¬ The following are the prices of American cotton : duce has realized an improvement of ^d to Id per lh. i—Fair &—\ /—G’d &—, —Same date 18S3-* Ord & Mid—, fine. g’d fair . Mid. The fourth series of low wool sales were brought to a close at Liver¬ Description. Fair. Good. Sea Island 19 21 23 -26 30 -43 24 2> 30 Stained 8 11 12 -13 15 -17 12 13 pool on the 10th inst. The total supply offered was 38,199 hales. 17 Ord.Gr.Ord. L.Mid. Mid. G’d Mid. The chief interest of the trade has centred in the East India sales, and, Upland 10% 11% 11% -H% 10% 11% Mobile 10% 11% 11% 11% -11% 10% owing to the comparatively large quantity offered, some diflferei.ee of New Orleans 11% 10% 11% lt% -12 11% 12 11% 10% 11% 11% -12 11% opiaion wa9 current as to the probable range of prices compared with Texas.. 12 11% The following are the prices of those of our last July-August series. Domestic wools haviDg ruled middling qualities of cotton at thi* date and since 1866: slugpislily during the past three months, and owing to the rather 1866. 1867. 1868. 1869. 1866. exceptional activity displayed in some branches of the vara manufac- Mid. Sea Island 25d. 18d. 24d. 21d. Mid. Pernamb 14%d. 1867. 1868. 1869 8d. 10%d.ll% Upland.... 14 8# lu% 11% Egyptian. 11 ture, which have caused Noils and Brokes to be not only plentiful but 9 6% »% Mobile.... 14% 8% 10% 11% Broach... 9 6 7% 7% also very reasonable in price, in fact cheaper than for Orleans... 14% 8% 11% 11% Dhollerah 9 6 many years, it 7% 7% was very generally anticipated that East India Annexed is a statement showing the stocks of cotton in wools, which are brought Liverpool and London, and also the stocks of American and Indian produce ascer¬ into direct competition with these classes in boih the blanket and carpet tained to be afloat to those ports : trades, must suffer to a corresponding extent. The opening day veri1868. 1800. Stock in Liverpool ied these expectations, and the result showed ihat Bales 405,460 484,800 although the best London 124,409 80,082 classes, such as Joria9 euitable for carding purposes, and which were American cotton afloat 55,000 76,000 Indian “ 246,291 232, *219 already pretty reasonable at the preceding series, suffered only to a Total small extent, all middle-class whites 831,160 828,051 brought about Id per lb less, and Since the commencement of the year the transactions on middle and low yellows about fd per lb 1 sa, whilst for speculation gray wools not much difference cculd be quoted. With some irregularity as the sales r-Actual export from Liverpool, Hull and Aetna1 progressed, this range of prices has ruled pretty steadily throughout other outports exp’tfrom and of the quantity offered r-Taken on spec, to this date—, to this date-\ only about 2,600 bales were withdrawn. l.K.iu 1869. 1869, 1868. 1868, 1867, 1863 To these must be added nearly 1,000 bales new imports, not offered bales. bales. balee. bales. bales. bales. so that 260.720 73,130 116,7a 157,873 although the shipments now afloat both from Bombay and 177,970 Brazilian... 60,bl0 11,220 36,170 55,552 74,756 89,810 Kurrachee are very light the quantity for 5.. 20,130 8,0S0 our January auctions will 4*»,010 10,383 9,108 10,160 2,250 6.8CS 5,880 2,490 12,811 21,580 probably leach nearly the average generally offered at our quarterly ..341,930 91,600 199,090 278,1 ;9 343,435 616,570 sales. From all accounts machinery in the districts where these wools 571,250 566,310 186,530 467,613 597,483 915,120 are used, must be pretty well employed, but manufacturers complain The following statement shows the sales and imports of cotton for of unremunerative trade, which must be attibuted in some measure to the week and year, and also the stocks on hand on Thursday evening the accumulation of stocks of such wools in a The arrivals have . .. -• .. % . .. “ .... .. ..... .. ... ... - ,.. « - , gradually declining mar¬ ket, and it is to be hoped that the prospects of a slightly better supply of the great staple Cotton, combined with other circumstances, will help to make 6ome progress in the year 1870 towards the return of confidence in the commerce of the world which woul 1 turn the ,of dull and unsatisfactory trade. long tide prices have coutinued to tend downward?. Secondary and inferior descriptions of wheat have, in fact, declined in value to the extent of Is. per quarter. Last week’s importation, although about 400,000 cwt. less than in the preceding week, is about €30,000 cwt. more than in the corresponding period la-st year. Flour jmd Indian corn continue to arrive freely, aud the imports of barley have been recently on a large scale. For last week and rince Sep tember 1, the imports and exports of cereals into anl from the United were as follows : FOR THE WEEK ENDING NOVEMBER . Wheat cwt. Barley..,... O ta..... Teas Beans Indian 1869-70 6. . Import s. Expo ts. 2,0X8,400 5,667 1863-69 1,037 42,695 30,859 191 30,999 38,087 253,008 66,606 146,212 21,334 412,328 136,500 corn Flour 22 880 SINCE THE COMMENCEMENT 07 THE SEASON Wheat Barley V Imports. Exports 392,501 6,439 212,212 240,806 .. 7,721 3,528 • • • • • • a 596 (SEPT. 1).' 1,856,973 343,060 24 118,900 1 3=56 017 •j19 Oati Beans 10,163 15,720 2,694 722,464 8,321 European and Indian Ootton Markets.—Iu reference to these mar* jets, our correspondent in London, writing under the date of Novsmb«p Total 38,020 7,470 To this This date week 1869. 4,220 American..... Brazilian Egyptian West Indian.. East Indian... Total 49,710 3,203,863 3,700.000 1 mports— . To this date 1868. 46,ICO 52,920 StOCKJ * Total. 1868. Same date This 1868. day. 852,045 1,103,881 1,262,250 557,606 4.6,499 629,502 200.509 8,784 174,815 153,135 188 76,732 73,612 79,511 53,015 1,066,661 1,051,555 1,154,731 846 190 81,111 2,603,812 2,939,799 8,326,543 13,404 12,770 80,870 34,150 Dec. 31, 1868. 44,110 82,360 36,900 14,4 0 3,550 300,490 15,360 31,82J 3,410 219,390 434,800 405,460 352,340 17.170 5,8.8 Of the present stock of cotton in Liverpool, 7 percent, is American, against 10 per cent last year. Of Indian cotton the proportion is nearly 80 per cent., against 75f per cent. London, Nov. 13.—The cotton trade opened steadily, but prices have fd to fd per lb. The following are the particulars of imports, deliveries and stocks : since declined to the extent of 1867. Imports, Jan. 1 to November 11....... Bales. Deliveries Stocks, November 11 1868. 218,003 171,199 110,5*34 242,056 221,684 124,409 1869. 263,499 824,959 80,032 Havre, Nov. 12.--The stock of cotton yesterday evening amounted to 72,000 bales, of which 9,00Q bales were American snd 49,000 bales East Indian. It was estimated that 26,165 bales of American and 2,247 bales of East Indian produce were afloat to the port. Bombay, Oct. 80.---Total eailings of the week, 2,00D bales; of which Britain, 1,500 bales. Total sailings in October, 17,500 balee ; 126 674,606 * ... 606 2,646,405 ... I8f .tftUiJ: Average weekly sa’es. Trade, port. tion. Total, 1869. 2868. year. 1868. American..bales. 11,240 1,850 250 12,840 1,076,850 1,449,430 17,540 22,100 Brazilian 6,710 100 293 7, 00 461,390 04^,650 8,<90 1!,l»0 Egyptian 2,890 110 3,000 196,280 222,990 4,000 3,750 Weet Indian.... 1,280 1,283 85, 40 102,0.0 1,640 1,800 East Indian. 15,900 5,910 8,630 25,490 1,333,690 1,281,860 14,930 14,110 315 • k 493 can Peas hiaian com.... Flour SALES, ETC., 07 ALL DESCRIPTIONS. Sales this week. Total , Same Ex- Speculathis period .... Under the influence of large importations, the wheat trade has con¬ tinued in a very inactive state; and as regards inferior qualities of home and foreigo produce, Kingdom, last: to Great total receipts of the week, 4,500 bales. Stock on shipboard estimated 18,500 bales. Receipts becoming more plentiful. Bhownuggert 282r.; 71b grey shirtings, 6r. lr.; 8fib grey shirtings, 6r. 2a. Market activs. at THE 682 Alexandria. Oct. 20 —The receipts of cotton have been unusually large for the period of the year. The dull; and prices have receded {d per lb. Tin following are the par la * ticulars of shipments: From— Nov. 1,1868. to Oct. 28, 1869 Bame “ bales. period 1867-8.. 44 44 “ “ 1866-7 1965-6 1864-6 44 report of the dry-goods trade will be found the 231,38 i 217,173 209.29 47,101 47,587 88,190 70,837 impotlsofdrj EXPORTS FROM MEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. . 226,399 61,893 187,288 169,685 167,008 841,638 our goods for one week laler. The following is a statement oi the exports (exclusive ofspecie)from the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending Nov, 23; TotalU Continent. 'Gt. Britain. 175,037 [November 27, 1869. CHRONICLE 1866. 1867. 1868 $3,466,611 $4,484,083 $3,261,984 168,436,426 166,603,530 145,340,173 SinceJan 1........ $171,903,037 $171,093,613 $148,GO),157 For the week Previously reported.... 412,375 18*9. „ $40S8,183 1 »3,048,1{SJ $177,186^ exports from this port to different countries (exclusive of specie) since January 1, compared with the corresponding time of [ast year, is shown in the following table : The value of English Market Report*—Per Cable. - closing quotations in the markets of London and Liver¬ pool for the past week, have been reported by submarine telegraph as The daily shown in the following summary : ruled firm at 98£ for both money and account. United States five twenty bonds have generally been held firmly, clrsing steady. Railway shares hive not varied materially, and also close steady. United States bonds at Money and Stock Market.—Consols have London Frankfort closed firm. Consolsfor money..... “ 93% 93% 83% 99% 20* 25 for account... ,U. S. 6*8 (6 20’s) 1862.. IHiuoie Central shares. Brie Railway shares .. Atl. & G. W. (consols). The 26 es% 99% 20% 94 94 93% 88% 99% 20% 25% , 93% 93% 83% 99% 21% 25% 93% 93% 93% 83% 99% 20% 25% 93% 93% Fri. Thu. Wed. Tues. Mon. 8at. 83% 99% 21 26 89%-% 89% .... .... Flour, bbl Wheat ctl 44 (California white) 44 Corn (W.mx*d)p. 480 lbs n’w 4i .4 4. old •• Barley (Canadian), per bush (Am. &Can.)per451bs Peas..(Canadian) pr6041bs Tues. s. d. 21 9 Wed. s. d. 21 6 21 8 8 9 28 8 8 9 28 8 8 9 £8 8 8 9 29 6 9 9 9 •• 0 3* *6 3 41 3 8 6 9 3 8 6 9 d. Fri. d. 21 6 8 3 8 8 9 5 29 0 s. 6 3 7 6 3 .... 3" *6 *3*0 41 41 0 40 0 0 Liverpool Provisions Market.—Pork shows a decline of Is., and cheese 6d., while lard has advanced to 74s. Beef and bacon are steady without change. 0. Beef(ex.pr. mess) p. 804 lbs Pork(Etu. pr.mess)D 304 lbs Bacon (Camb.cnl) p. 112 lbs d. 86 112 0 6 67 73 6 * Lard (Ann lerican) Cheese (fine) 6 0 68 6 0 68 6 6 8. 0 6 86 112 67 73 0 86 113 67 78 68 Thu. Wed. Tues. s. d. Mon. 8. d. Sat. 86 111 67 73 68 6 6 0 d. 88 0 111 6 67 6 74 0 €8 0 d. 0 6 6 B. 6 0 Fri. d. 86 0 111 6 67 6 74 0 68 0 b. Liverpool Produce Market. —*ThU market still lules very quiet, the firmness apparent in spirits of petroleum being the only feature worthy of notice, this article having advanced to Is. fid. per gallon of 8 lbs. Prices of the remaining articles show no material change. Rosin (com Wilm.) .per 112 lbs do Fine Pale... 44 8p turpentine Hon. 8. d. Sat. 8. d. 5 6 14 0 27 6 1 10 1 2 46 0 “ Petroleum (std white), p. S lbs. 44 spirits....per8 lbs Tallow (American)..p 112 lbs. 5 6 14 0 27 6 1 10 1 2 46 0 Tues. e. d. 5 6 14 0 27 8 1 10 1 4 46 0 Clover seed. • Mon. 31 15 0 Sat. Linseed oil. per ton... London 31 15 0 Tu. 31 15 0 • • Ttu. Wed. 5 14 27 1 1 a. 5 46 • * d. 5 14 27 d. 6 0 3 10 8. 1 10 1 5 0 Fri. b. d. 6 0 3 0 46 Tb. 31 15 0 5 6 14 0 27 3 1 9% 1< 5 46 0 Fri. 31 15 0 ]Produce and Oil Markets.—Calcutta Linseed has declined Whale oil 6*s., sugar to 39s. 8d.@39s. 6d., and sperm oil to £91. has advanced to £ 11 10. Linseed cakes are unchanged. 0 61 8ugar(No. 12 Dch std) per 112 Sperm oil..... . ... Whale oil 92 0 0 41 10 0 39 9 91 0 0 41 10 0 39 9 91 0 0 41 10 0 39 9 91 0 0 41 10 0 39 6 91 0 0 41 10 0 0 39 6 91 0 o 41 10 0 COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. Imports and 156. Exports for the Week.—The imports this week .... 6,600,699 1,328,454 7,364,971 3,552,029 4,260,495 665,175 1,284,465 1,252,681 . 3,0S9,975 4,132 513 8,132,161 3,390,955 1.858,519 Nov. 19—Schr Westphalia, Jesse Para— 1,279,472 British [gold Nov. 20-Str Alasaa, Asp'nwal— Nov. 18—StrDonau, l ondon 84,452 Mexican dollars.. For ParisMexican dollars... For Bremen— American silver... 8,500 20,320 1,750 Foreign silver $172,074 30,012,582 Previously reported a vital diuv/U van* a9 $30,181636 xoi90 | Same time in Same time in 1868 1867 .$68,481,58011859....' ,. 1SH61 1865 1«t>4 1R63 1861 1860 as The imports follows: , , . T 1862. 3,760 American gold.... 12,700 Total for the week 1,003 Liverpool— 646 Spanish doubloons Carll, American gold.... Nov. 20—Str City of London Gold bars $32,946 Nov. 17—8tr Eagle, Havana— , 24,057,984 44,723,804 • 1858. 57,931,877 11857 27,218,619 11856 44’023,130 j 1855 41,093,105 11854 64.967.049 1 .... ... 1853 3,332,237 j 1852 41,960,886 1 of specie at this port during the past week Lave been Nov. 16-Str Morro Castle, Nov. 15—Str City of Mexico, Vera Cruz— Havana-1 $5,500 Silver. Nov. 16—Str Alaska, Aspiawall— Silver Total for the week Previously reported Gold Nov. 16—Bark • 1,173 Magdalena, Asplnwall— Silver 63 21 ore $6,752 . Total since January Same time 1868 ... ,14,839,037 ,. 1, 1869 .$14,845,789 .. ..... Same time 1867... Same time 1866 6,471,058 2,692.411 9,095,798 following forms present a summary of cer¬ weekly transactions at the National Treasury and Custom House. 1.—Securities held by the U.S. Treasurer in trust for National bank. National Treasury.—The tain An g. 7 14 21 28 4.. 11 ' Sept. ... 40 0 2> 2,084,833 4,593,04) 6,688,611 1,275,390 2,484,222 5'9,029 Paris- 44 Wed. Thu. Tnes. Fri. 0 £10 17 0 £10 17 0 £10 17 0 £10 17 0 £10 17 0 0 60 6 0 60 0 0600 0 60 0 3 0 60 9 Line’dc&ke(obl)p.tn£10 17 Linseed (Calcutta)... . .. following will show the exports of specie from the port of New ending Nov. 20, 1869 : Nov. 16.—Str. 44 Mon. Sat. ... York for the week « Wed. 31 15 0 . New Granada Venezuela British Guiana Brazil OtherS. American ports. All other ports .... 8' *6 6 0 41 0 s. .... .... • *6 8 41 Oats Thu. Mon. s. d. 22 0 Sat. e. d. 2) 0 8 6 8 9 9 9 28 9 4,571,267 15,424,198 1,616,768 2,053,161 5,5:5,076 101,029 3,297,034 2,698,071 7,317,242 66,029 2,520,013 1,982,289 4,178,762 5,134,616 861,994 Other Southern Europe.. Bast Indies China and Japan The 8,172,609 19,181,681 8,895,248 Europe. Australia Britisn N A Colonies Cuba $63,842,99(1 6,874,681 5,*00,373 Other Westlndiea....... Mexico Liverpool Breadstuff's Market.—The continued heavy arrivals of wheat tends to depress the market, and prices show a material decline a9 compared with the close of last week. Flour closed heavy. to Spain . daily closing quotations for U. S. 6’s (1862) at Frankfort were— 89% $95,887,633 Belgium.. Other Northern Same time 1868. 1869. Germany Hayti Liverpool Cotton Market.—See special report of cotton. ' France Holland and ... Frankioit Since Jan. 1, To Great Britain. - 845,054,900 20.801.500 20,014,500 342,500,000 365,964,400 20.909.500 343,133,850 342,916,650 342,905,500 842,892,000 847,893,000 19,518,000 363,435,850 362,931,160 363,620,000 362,933,600 367,774,000 862, OH,000 20.714.500 20,041,000 19,881,000 25 Oct. 2 9 . .. .......... 842,459,950 342,459,950 342,455,950 342,652,250 19,278,000 Nov. 20 342,501,750 861.732.950 361.132.950 362,013,v50 862,060,250 19,273,000 23 80 Nov. 6 19,558,003 19,508,000 19,408,000 361,909,750 2.—National bank currency issued (weekly and aggregate), in return dry goods, and in general merchandise, the for bills destroyed and mutilated bills returned (weekly and aggregate) total being |3,148,831, against 84,152,960 last week, and 84,428,453 the previous week. The exports are $4,088,188 this week, against with the amount in circulation at date: Notes In /—Notes issued for ret’d.—* /—Mutilated notes burned.* 8,890,927 last week, and $4,901,510 the previous week. The exports Week Circulation ending. Current week. Aggregate. Current week. of cotton the past week were 12,645 bales, against 7,925 bales last Aug. 7 299,746,751 141,200 15,282,594 105,540 15,126,028 299,761,839 14 242,347 35,337,975 200.650 15,486,241 week. The following are the imports at New York for week ending 299,720.880 21 130,600 15,486,240 163,80) 15,837,975 299,794,340 28 97,*00 15,747.644 15,492,015 154,040 (for drygoods) November 19, and for the week ending (for general 299,737,660 175 600 15,923;i44 35,769.885 Sep4. 4 146,770 299,742,230 merchandise) November ?0: 11 77,170 16,015,744 15,846,566 92,600 show a decrease in both 44 44 44 44 44 FORBIGX IMPORTS AT MEW TORX TOR THR WEEK. $1,694,768 1887. $831,596 2,840,8*4 2,866,089 $4,685,092 $3,197,684 Previously reported... 256,608,099 1866. Drygoods General merchandise,. Total for the week.. Since Jan. 1 ~ $263,038,191 1868. 44 1869. $959,692 2,697,663 $885,582 2,268,2*9 318,476,362 $8,657,855 219,125,569 $8,148,851 261,114,213 $221,674,046 $222,782,624 $261,268,064 18 25 Oct. 2 9 44 4$ 1 124,300 241,680 2^2,935 107,250 , 15,970,855 16,212.435 16,400,370 16,527,600 130.503 187,800 16,196,244 299,710,130 153,630 270,050 16,637,174 299/118,715 16,807,224 299*135,785 16,892,800 17 124,260 17,080,874 17,309,024 299,W45 228.650 17,879,430 17,482,500 124,480 809,452 17,697,280 208,900 16,383,544 299,763,410 ft 44 23...... “ 164,040 80 231,460 155,170 153,070 Nov. 6 44 13 44 20 264,720 195,750 17,483,474 17,742,926 17,851,826 non 795.655 THE November 27,1869.] CHRONICLE* 6»3 —Fractional currency received from the Currency Bureau by XT. S. half cf the actual capital stock of the Company. While these gentle¬ men did not vote, the? did not endeavor Dy injunction to prevent the Treasurer and distributed weekly; also the amount destroyed: voting; but Mr. Eugene Kelly appealed to and procured from Judge Received. Distributed. Destroy'd Cardoso, of tbe Supreme Court, an injunction forbidding the issuing of Weekending. 918.834 7 118,600 Aog. the extra stock. This was served upon the U 213,800 186,808 801,600 President, Secretaryand Treasurer of the 8 . 237400 21 254,400 870,683 4 179,800 271,000 176,000 109,000 89,600 249,800 691,200 1,024,600 638,764 987,447 1,247,100 893,287 878,600 196,40n 264,700 1,132,700 778,700 1,210,600 1,289,800 1,433,970 828,000 879,614 226,700 1,007,000 643,000 350,990 «*.; Sept. 818,900 18 05 Oct. 996,000 2 o‘* 16 .. 1,879,900 Noy. SO 6 ‘ 20.**. 896,406 176,960 180,800 419,200 421,100 492,197 California.—The steamship Henry Chauaceyi from Aspinwall, arrived at this port Nov. 24, with treasure for the (blowing consignees: Theasure from $6C0 I Ribon & Munoz Manuel Echeuerrla K trout Bros 882 | To al $600 ■ $2,082 and Union Pacific Junction Controversy Settled —Washington, Nov. 28.—The controversy between the Union Pacific and Central Pacific Railroad Companies, concerning the posses¬ sion of the road between Ogden and Promontory Point, the settlement of which was initiated by the act of Congress of last spring, which fixed The Central point of junction at Ogden, has been finally arranged by an agree¬ the two companies as to the price to be paid to the Union Company for that portion of the road constructed by it between Ogden and Promontory, 80 miles. By this arrangement the Central pays to the Union a sum understood to be somewhat in excess of $8,000,000, and comes into the proprietory possession of that portion of tbe road in dispute. These essentials being now settled, both companies will proceed to erect permanent &Dd commodious buildings at Ogden, and tne Treasury Department will issue to the companies the remainder of the subsi iy bonds due to them, except such sum as may be retained to guarantee the final completion and equipment of the roads, in accordan e with the recommendation of the Government Com¬ missioners. Henceforth the two companies will be as one line. Tire Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad.—Richmond, Va., Nov. 25.—The st. ctvholders of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad met to¬ day. The receipts for the fiscal year were $661,297, and the expenses $477,581. An offer was received from some parties in England to take $800,000 of the Company’s stock, bat no action was taken upon it. —Richmond,Ya., Nov. 28—Arrangements were closed yesterday in New York with several prominent capitalists, by which the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad will be completed at ouce. Among the capitalists areW. H. Aspinwall, A. A. Low, O. P. Huntington, Fisk <fc Hatch the ment between and others. —The unfinished portion of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, from Covington to Catlettsbnrgh and Point Pleasant, has been placed under contract. matter Company, and will prevent any further action except by permission of the Courts. in the A Remedy for Rurglarlea.-Now that the burglars are at work the banks again, we think the following letter will be read with interest by the whole community: on To the Editor of the New York Commercial Advertiser—Allow through your columns, to avail myself of the occasion which robbery of the Boylston Bank, in Boston, offers, to call the attention of the public to the safely for securities offered by the Safe Deposit Company of New York, Nos. 142 and 146 Broadway, comer of Liberty street, established for the sole purpose of their safe keeping, and the first of its kind in the world. We give receipts for special deposits of government bonds and other securities, family plate, jewelry, gold, wills and any valuable papers, and guarantee their safety at a charge of one dollar per thousand dollars for a year upon government bonds, and for other me, the articles at low rates. We also rent small safes in our burglar-proof vaults at from $15 to $75 per annum, according to size. Behind our vault, in which are our guaranteed securities and the small safes rented, is a three feet granite wall, which itself forms one side of another vault. The building is absolutely fire-proof, and the most thoroughly watched premises in this city, day and night, including Sundays and holidays, having at night, within and around the premises, not less than thirteen watchmen, and the premises always lighted up through the night, and open to inspection from outside. The pub¬ lic, and especially ladies, for whom a separate desk room is pro¬ vided, are invited to see our premises and mode of business. Desk room is provided for renters to examine their securities, cut off coupons, &c., thus saving any risk of carrying them through the streets, or having them upon their own premises during the day. We make it a point to keep a supply of our safes of all sizes, always ahead of (he demand, adding to their number as required. The banks take such special deposits of securities, &c., as well as cash boxes containing them, with reluctance, there have been several legal decisions that they are not responsible for their safety. Any one interested has only to inquire of bank officers themselves to learn the various risks to which securities and cash boxes thus left with them are exposed. The risks of keeping them in private safes are still greater. Ours is a corporate Company, under special charter, and with a liability of its stockholders to the extent of and in addition to the stock held. Persons out of the city can send their deposits through the responsible express companies. Respectfully, your obedient servant, President of the Safe Francis H. Junks, Deposit Company of New York. —Attention is called to the formation of a co partnership, under style of Litchfield, Dana & Stimsou, for the transaction of a banking and brokerage business. The partners of the firm are the Credit Mobilier case Messrs. Wm. B. Litchfield, Charles H. Dana, Lewis A. Stimson, Commonwealth of $407,483 39* The amount claimed by the Com¬ and Walter E. Colton. Mr. E. B. Litchfield is a special partner in monwealth was $520,546 87. The jury deducted $2,890,600 from the the Qoncem. The names of several of these gentlemen are well nominal value of their dividends, which was over $9,0u0,000. known among financial and railroad men in this city, and we doubt The Wells-Far go Express.—According to special call, a meet¬ not that the new firm will command a large business. ing of the stockholders of the Welle, Fargo & Co.'s Express was held —The business card of Mr. A. C. Kaufman, broker, auctioneer, November 25th. The object of the meeting was to decide whether the and commission merchant at Charleston, S. C., will be found on capital stock of the company should be increased from $10,000,000 to the first page of this paper. Business references are to be regarded $15,000,000, and whether the additional $**000,000 of stock should be as of the utmost importance in all dealings with parties at a distance delivered to the Pacific Express Company, who demand that amount who are not personally known, and we would therefore observe that in order to insure to Wells, Fargo & Co.'s Express the cessation of their Mr, Kaufman refers to a number of firms and individuals of high rivalry. Mr. Eugene Kelly opposed both propositions. The great point standing in Charleston and other cities. claimed in favor of the delivery of five millions of the Wells-Fargo —We call the attention of oar readers to"Messrs. McAlister & Co.'s stock was that the Pacific Express Company had an exclusive contract advertisement, offering Bradley's Patent "Shutter Worker” for sale. over the Central Pacific Railway for ten years. This line covered 800 We believe this improvement worthy of an examination ly manufac¬ miles, for the privileges of which the Wells Fargo Express is expected turers and builders. to pay $5,000,000. The Union Pacific Railroad was 1,003 miles long. An Eight Per Cent Gold Loan.—On the fourth How did the stockholders know that some enterprising gentlemen, such page of this as comprised the Pacific Express Company, would not obtain an ** ex¬ number of the Chronicle will be fonnd a notice of the First Mortgage clusive” contract over the Union Pacific Railroad, and then obtain a Eight Per Cent Bonds of the St. Joseph and Denver City Railroad, of concession of stock from the Wells-Fargo Company ? He did not deny which $1,500,000 (the whole amount authorised) are now offered in that the rights to be conceded by the Pacific Express Company were this market at the very moderate price of 97i and accrued interest. valuable, but he d d deny that they were worth $5,000,000. Mr. Barney said that the Pacific Express had been organized as an We believe that the parties negotiating this loan have determined that opposition to Wells Fargo. The officers had been notified of the fact it shall be taken in a very short time, and have therefore offered it on by friends in California, who. had asked them to come on and make such (erms as could not fail to attract tbe attention of every inve tor. some arrangements to fuse with the opposition. For eighteen months In addition to tbe high rate of interest obtained, amounting to nearly the Pacific Express had damaged the business of tbe Wells Fargo, hav¬ ing offices at all the main stations, and reducing the tariff almost to a 11 percent in currency,(with gold at 130, which is a fair average,) non-paying point. They had a ten years’ exclusive contract over the eome other strong points in regard to these Bonds are aa follows: Central Pacific Railroad, which owned three-fifihs of their stock. He 1. rJhe road is 111 miles long, reaching from St. Joseph, Mo., to considered that the Pacific Express Company had the best of the equa¬ tion. Had he beeD in their place he would not have taken less than Marysville, Kansas, and having very important connections. cne-half of the total stock of the Wells-Fargo Express, since the latter 2. Only $1,600,000 of bonds eanhe issued, which is but $18,508 per could not compete with them. Unless the stockholders decided to mile, and certainly les9 than one half of the cost of construction. carry out the arrangements proposed, it would necessitate a closing of 8. The bonds are placed in the hands of the Fanners* Loan and the concern. Eventually a vote was taken, resulting as follows: In favor of incre&s* Trust Company, and cannot be delivered until each section of five miles mg the capital stock to $15,000,0( 0. 60,658 ; in favor of delivering the is completed, and then only at tbe rate of $12,090 per mile. fextra stock to the Pacific Express Company, 50,658 ; against the first 4. The subscriptions to the capital stock have been nearly $2,000,000, proposition, 344, and against the second, 730. Mr. Kelly and others of the opponents of the oppansion of the capi¬ ani this money is being expended in the construction of the road. tal stock refused to Vote; thus the tote drawn out Was not more than 6. Tbe company has a grant from the United States of 1,600,000 The Credit IWoblller Case.*—Harrisburg, Nov. 25.—The jury in came in at ooe o’clock with a verdict for the the THE 684 of land, which with United States Securities.—The bond market at the ' principal cities are It • may The cause for this is apparent when unequalled safety of such investments. In the first place, the loan constitutes a mortgage upon the property of the city, which is, perhaps, 100 times greater in value than the amount of the loan, or even of the whole city debt. In the present instance the amount of the loan asked is $2/ 00,000, and the property in Chicago upon which it is a lien is assessed at $146,0 0,0C0. A second point of great importance is the fact that cities cannot repudiate their debts, but are liable to be suedfin theAcourts and have judgments recovered against them. Possibly the best confirmation-of the preceding state, mane is iound in the great confidence shown in the Chicago loan, and the rapidity with which it is being taken; some of the issues are al¬ ready quite closed out, The bonds may be had at the American Ex¬ change Bank, which fact is in itself a guaranty of the high character of tbe loan, as we are confident that its officers would not allow the name of the Bank to be connected with any financial transaction alout which there was tbe slightest shade of doubt. offered in the New York market. we consider the sury taking $3,000,000 of for which proposals w:re the amount offered, instead of $2,000,000 issued." Under these influences Sixty, Yesterday and to-day prices have shown a marked weakness, in sympathy with the decline in gold, which appears to have brought upon the market a full supply of bonds* and to-day prices h ive fallen 1@1$ from the highfst figures of the week, Sixty-sevens closing at 114$ Sixty-twos at 114. The following are the closing prices of leadiug government securities, compared with preceding weeks : advanced to 116$ sevens Oct. 22. Oct. 29 Nov. 5. Nov. 12. Nov. 19 Nov U.S.6’8,1881 coup U. S. 5-20’s, 1862coup.... U. S. 5-20’s, 1864 “ .. U. S.5-20’8,1865 44 .. U. S. 5 20’e, 1865, July cpn U S.5-20’s, 1867, coup ..... U* S. 5-20’», 1868, 44 .... U. 8 10-40*8. 44 .... Pacific Sixes 118% 119% 117% 118 110 116% 116 119% 121 119% 120 117% 117% 117% 108% 107% . 107% 107% The bonds purchased THE NOVEMBER COUPONS 112 112% 114% 114% 116% 116 107% 107% 107% 107% 114? 107% 107% Total Bonds now held by •4 “ 1862, COU; 1864, reg 1864, cou 44 “ 44 41 1,210,95 cou the Treasury, $74,844,000, 1865, 1867, 1867, 1868, 1868, 44 44 44 44 1,505,600 new, cou reg cou reg cou ... follows: 21,891,150 4,883,700 .’.. 19,548,100 336,000 2,102,500 State Bonds.—In this class of securities the chief OF THE a3 5-20’s of 1865, new, reg..., $4,309,350 44 5,627,300 . ’68, • 3,064,000 1865, reg 1665, cou 44 • $8,678,900 66,500 3,614,100 5-20’s of 1862, reg 44 • ’65, new, c ’67, reg ’67, cou ’68, reg 44 89,100 • Nov. 24 5-20’s of ’05, new, r $030,600 2,000 35,000 lbd'2, COU. OF THE Mortgage Sinking Fund Bonds of the Port Huron and Lake Michigan Railroad Company will be paid in gold, free of government tax, at the office of S. W. HOPKINS <fc CO., 71 BROADWAY. 113% 113% 116 116% 115% 115% 107% 107% —* 114 Nov. 24. 1865, cou. Seven Per Cent First 113% 113% 116 116% 116% ii7w 117% 115V follows: were as 102,000 COUPONS 117% 115,% 112% 113% by the Government during the past week were Wednesday, $3,000,000, the total offered being $4,695,250. ___ NOVEMBER 118, 115% Purchases of bonds on - THE beginning firmness, principally in consequence of the f reer purchases of bonds for foreign markets; and this tendency was strengthened by the comparative lightness of the offers to the government on its Wednesday’s purchase, and lurther by the Trea¬ Details of the loan will be found in the advertisement on another P&gC' cent of the week showed rather more safely be said that ihe bonds of the most favored securities of any which are Chicago Park Loan, our cent and 15 per cent, and single name at 12^24 per exceptions at 10 per cent. «• ' at 9 per is covered by the lien of this first mortgage, simi¬ larly with all the other property of the company. It is apparent from the facts above stated that this loan is one of the most attractive ever offered in New York, and any of our readers who may have money to invest will certainly do well to examine carefully the details of information given in the advertisement on another page, and obtain further facts, if desired, from the commercial agents of the loan, Messrs. W. P. Converse <fc Co., 54 Pine street, or the fiscal agents^ Messrs. Tanner <fc Co., 49 Wall street. acres [November 27, 1869. CHRONICLE. speculation has centered in the 44 Special tax” issues of North Carolina, which, Seven Per Cent First Mortgage Sinking Fund Bonds of the Peninsu¬ under a free pressure of sale=>; declined from 40 to 34, the new bonds lar Railway Company of Michigan, will be paid in gold coin, free of falling fr^m 37 to 30, and the old bonds from 46 to 4Hf. The Government tax, at the office of Tennessees sympathized in this decline, but in a less marked de¬ S. W. HOPKINS & CO., 71 BROADWAY. gree. On the other hand, Missouri sixes were strong, and sold at 9i@92, on the report that after January 1,1870, the interest would be payable in gold. The Southern securities were also firm, on dtljc Bankers’ ©alette. less active transactions. DIVIDENDS. The The following Dividend has been declared during the past week: FJEB NAME OP COMPANY. Rail row ds. Broadway & 7th avenue. Erie pref scrip WHEN PEK cent.p’y’ble $3 Dec. 1. NAME OV COMPANY. Miscellaneous. Union Petroleum cent.p’y’ble 20 Dec. 1 7 Dec. 15. COMPANY BOOKS CLOSED. Broadway & Seventh Avenue BR Nov. 20 to Dec. 1 Syracuse, Binghampton & New York RR Nov. 20 to Dec. 2 Ohis & Mississippi Railroad preferred Erie preferred New York Gold Exchange Bank Nov. 20 to Dec. 1 Dec. 1 to Dec. 16 Dec. Virginia Sixes, old Virginia Sixes, new Railroad been ^The Money Market.—The main feature in the money marke ha3 been the renewal of ^the outflow of currency to the South and the West. Considerable orders for currency have been received from New Orleans and Savannah, and the remittances to Cincin nati, St. Louis and Louisville, connected with the pork trade, have been quite important. Very singularly, considering the present position of exchange with that city, some considerable remittances have been made to Chicago also. The total shipments of currency for the week have been probably close upon $300,000. This move¬ ment is nothing more than what usually occurs at this season; and the movement having been anticipated and the banks having held themselves prepared for it, the effect upon the market has scarcely been perceptible. In call loans there has been a slight hardening of rates, and 5 per cent transactions have disappeared ; there is, however, at the close oi the week, an ample supply of money at 7 per cent, with a fair amount of exceptions at 6 per cent. IJThe discount market continues active, but an abatement of the late pressure ia observable. The high rates have brought buyers into the market and there is consequently less really first class paper offering. Paper of short date and “ gilt edge ” quality can be negotiated at 1©2 per cent below the late high rates. We quote primejxtpeg, double came, 10(^12 per cent, with exceptions j are the closing prices of State bonds compared : Nov. 19. Nov. 26. Tennessee Sixes, x c 67% 56% Tennessee Sixes, new 61% 51% N< rth Carolii a Sixes, old. 46 * 40% North Carolina Sixes, x.o 37, 80 North Carolina special tax i89% 33 1 to Dec. 8 [Friday Evening, November 26. following with la^t wejk WHEN on the and 50 53 48 53 Nov. 19.Nov. #6, 65% Louisiana Sixes Louisian* Sixes, levee .... 69 Louisiana Eights, leveo... 75 Alabama Eights ... 93 Gee rgia Sevens ..91% 90% Missouri Sixes.. South Carolina Sixes, n’w. 65% 66 59 75 98% 92% 91 65% Miscellaneous Stocks.—Tbe stock market has whole, weak, in sympathy with the hardening tendency the outflow of currency. There has, nevertheless, active speculative movement. The chief inter¬ est has been in the Northwestern shares, in. which there has been a free speculation, based upon the prospects of tbe approaching divi¬ dend and the movements of a combination of prominent operators. The stock is understood to be oversold somewhat largely, and an effort has been made to 44 corner the shorts.” It is stated also that there is an influential movement among the directors, in favor of declar¬ ing a 5 per cent dividend on the common stock, in lieu of the 3$. per cent generally expected ; although it is conceded that there is some uncertainty whether the earnings may enable the company to pay 3$ per cent, and it is acknowledged that money would have to be borrowed in order to pay 5 per cent. The price of the stock has ranged between 70 and 75$. New York Central has been weak, the price having declined to 175$. Reading has been espe¬ cially strong, in expectation of a 5 per ceat cash dividend. Hadin money and been a rather son more River declined from 164 to 155. Pacific Mail, after 55$, fell back to 61. The following have been the owest quotations for the week : to Har’em Paciflo Mail J^ew York Central Erie recovering highest and 135 131% Northwestern 75% 65% 184% do 89% Reading 99% 51 175% 27% 96% Michigan Southern OMO & Mississippi. •.... 90% 90% 87% 26% 81 preferred... Rock Island Fort Wayne St.Paul do preferred i 104% 87 70 84% 70 65% 102% 85% 8 m 159 Withdrawn for export Withdrawn for customs quotations of the regular board following were the closing The 686 THE CHRONICLE. November 27, 1869.] $172,074 2,009,733— 2,181,907 ' 27,929,071 Specie in banks Nov. 20 Cumberland Coal- EJcksilver Canton Co.....*.Mariposa pref.... Pacific Mail...... • New York 26X 12* ' 177 prl Wab. & W’n Tol.. • • 181* 28* 167* 97* 90* 96* 92 122 180* 120 173 • 100 71 120 86** 83* 104* 70* 85* 103* 85 85 135 85* 136 27 70 138* 26* 67* 26* 69* C2* 15* 54* 183* 87* 120 70 85 82* 75* 88* 104* 86* 136* 85* 103* 102* S5 137 26 68 86 138* 26* 82* 62 69 Paris, long do short 60 5.15 Swiss 85*® 36* .. 40*® 40* 40* @ 40* 78*® 78* 71*® 71* Amsterdam Frankfort Bremen Berlin.... Ex-dividend. The following 5.18*®5.18* 35*® 86 40*® 40* 40*® 40* 78*® 78* 71*® 71* 5.18*®5.17* Hamburg 83* 56* 5.16*®5.15 @5.13* 5.18* @5 17* 5.18*®5.18* Antwerp 26* 08* 68* 83* November 19. 108*@ 108* 109 @169* 109*® 109* 5.18*@).17* 5.15* @5.15 5.18*@5.18* 5 18*@5.18* &5*@ 36 40*@ 40* 40*@ 40* 78* @ 78* 71*@ 71* November 12. 108*@108* 108*® 109 109*® 109* 6.17*@5.16* 5.18*®5.17* November 5. London Comm’l. 108 @108* do bkrs’ Ing 108*® 1('8* do do skrL 109*® 109* 12> 82* 70* 83* tendency of rates has been down¬ to-day, when the low price of gold induced rather more buying of bills by importers. There has been a better supply of both cotton and bond bills, especially the latter. 99 88* 960.824 ward until 155 16'* 97* 96* 88* Foreign Exchange.—The 52* 175* 28* 28 83* 80 64 65* - 28 157 ,,,• 70* 84* 105* 27* 67* 81* 64* 8t> Paul\ “ » 75 93* 122* 184 Illinois Central.. Ohio* Miss...... Milw & • 102* 71* 83* 106* 85* preferred « 59 29* 171* 124 gocklslanu.... — Fort Wayne...... 58* 192* 90* and Pitts d. Northwestern.... 61* 15* 52 16* 31* 32* 158* 94* Ciev. 18* 50* 14* Total withdrawn and in banks Excess of reported supply over withdrawals. 26 14 52 16 27* 18 .187* 56* 555^Iouthern.. Michigan Central 26* 14* 52* 16* Brie....-Hudson River..,. 26* 14* 12* 52* 16* 60* 50 Central 28 .27* 26* $30,110,878 November 26^ 108*® 108* 108*® 109 109*® 109* 6.18*@5.17* 5.15*@6.15 5.18* @5.17* 5.18*@5.17* 86*@ 86 40*@ 40* 40*@ 40* 78*@ 79 71* @ 71* * shares, Bank. 6.-.. 13.m« it 19.... it 26.... 528 2.... $66 9. 16.... . 23.... 30 7.... it ... Oct. it 14.... H 28.... 4.... 11.... Nov. It U is.;.. II 25.... road. 90.932 547 Aflf. <? it Im- Rail- Week ending— Sept. K The transactions for the week at the Custom statement shows the volume of transactions in the Stock Exchange for the past and several previous at ■ 613 487 3QG 414 249 409 143 186 404 288 347 312 487 Tele¬ Steam¬ Coal. Mining. pro’t. graph. ship. 436 800 500 2,2 >0 1,525 650 500 113,927 1,200 189 120 450 462 211 150 425 74,3:34 85,102 78,677 108,063 134,947 193,272 600 300 400 100 100 600 1,000 6,400 2,100 1,950 250,293 184,192 1,106 97,695 615 85,482 :1,336 107,407 610 647 102,685 429 75,246 919 236,838 4,650 2,300 2,300 4,700 3,100 2,600 2,700 • 2.939 600 800 400 200 500 906 1,210 1,962 • • • 900 200 700 500 2,600 1.535 1,665 4,011 4 910 2,305 2,955 4,527 2,970 2,299 2,190 2,960 3,210 5,695 3,925 1,820 3,670 6,905 4,815 9,115 5,420 3,337 3,114 4,551 Treasury have been as follows : 105,369 126.669 88,6:3 2.610 2.220 4,150 94,788 86,’5.» 121,7-22 4,606 1- 7.4 15 7,207 4.595 7.193 6,130 8,712 3,1 3 4,1 3 3,128 4,969 4,490 5, 54 Total. $2,162,000 00 $6,238,181 22 Balance, Nov. 12 81,215,491 41 $197 696 69 288,893 04 231,587 12 491,843 29 3,604 415 24 l'K),90'i 124,499 118,066 91, 95 253,863 188.342 15 $^002,737 58 6,020,873 67 $5,534,645 46 3,914,656 81 $87,453,672 63 Payments during week 5,534,646 46 . - Currency, ■ 215,646 275, 07 205,149 113,413 6.926 Payments.- -Receipts.Gold. ‘Currency. Gold. Receipts. Nov. 20... $ 37,000 00 $1,291,744 81 $1,631,534 26 $1,911,8-^8 54 4S *,042 23 248,563 07 463,569 12 414,000 00 32 ,368 50 800,799 57 779,064 13 361,000 00 1,187,714 38 400,928 40 1,746,023 78 301,000 00 *70,551 45 659,372 90 264,609 16 485,000 00 261,000 00 1,643,510 86 1,597,864 67 1,593,5'9 62 Total. c. Sub-Treasury. Custom House. Exp’ss, 8,359 6,105 4,565 House and Sub- 9,935,530 48 6,002,727 53 Balance Nov. 19. Ins-ease Decrease . .$81,919,027 17 $4,931,802 95 703,535 76 1,018,146 14 New York City Banks.—The following statement shows the is a summary of the amount of Government bom) condition of the Associated Banks of New York City for the week and notes, State and City securities, and railroad and other bonds ending: at the commencement of business on November 20,1869: gold at Stock Exchange for the past and several previous weeks: AVBBAGB AMOUNT OF- The following Government Bonds. Wsek ending— 5 Aug. u 12 19.... 26 It ' It Sept. It II II 2 9 16 23. State & City Bonds. 925,500 1,035,500 1,848,000 1,317 000 898,500 1,352,500 747,000 Company Oct. 7 14 28 4 Nov. it 11 11 is II 2o••••• II 11 2,758,900 2,291,550 999,000 937,000 807,500 America Phoenix. City 1,000,000 5.115.100 Chemical Merchants’ Exchange.... National Butchers’ Mechanics and Traders’. Greenwich Leather Manuf. National Seventh Ward.National. State of New York American Exchange Merchants’ Mechanics Union Fulton 5,396,509 4,432,000 6,789,600 3,945,750 3.891.100 3,472,650 Gold Ex- Market.—Although on Mon lay Iasi, I.e change Bank commenced to make clearings for the Gold Exchange, there has been little consequent increase in speculation, the cl arings having ranged between only four and six millions per d.iy, until to-day, when they amounted to twenty millions. Speculation has been too feeble to interfere perceptib y with the course of Die pre¬ mium. The supply of $3,01)0,000 from Treasury salts coining upon a market already so overstocked that as high as 1-32 ol 1 per c- nt pe r day has been charged for carrying it, has bad a decidedly depres ling effect upon the price, which has steadily deelin d to 124£ -the lowest figure touched since the close of the war. A partial we.ik ness in foreign exchange and an enlarged export of bonds to Europe have also had an influence in depressing the premium. There ig a general disposition to refrain from speculation in gold uat 1 some thing is known of the probable complexion of financial legislation the opening of Congress. The following table will each day of the past week : show the course of the gold premium Quotations.' Open- Low¬ High¬ Clos¬ est. ing. ing. est. „ ... ... *nday, “ 26.... 124* Current week 156* Previous week 126* Jan. 1 ’69, to date... 134* * Total Clear ngs. —Balances. Gold. Currency , 126* 126* 126* 126* 126* 125* 126* 126* 125* 124* 126* 126* $6,386,000 $405,550 $547,928 126* 5,822,000 415,700 528,914 4.911,(00 125* 295,530 375,260 124* 12,012,000 837, 67 1,051,625 124* 20,886,0 -0 607,605 1,027,838 126* 124* *49,517,000*2,761,642*8,531,565 127* 162* 124* 126* 124* 126* i^Gener.il movement of coin and bullion at New York, for the week ending Nov' mbr*r 20 : » pecie in banka Nov. 18 Treasure received from California by at eamsr overland “ Imports of specie from foreign porta M>m interest paid out .. . Treasury sales of gold Broadway Ocean $26,755,693 $.... 2,345.012 5,625,341 4,201,128 1,143,166 7.121,337 3.987.455 2,812.207 953,852 536,520 4,535.792 2,993.463 1,392,751 5.938,904 3,219.773 3,327,607 2.251,800 1,953,219 1,029,336 2,802.828 1,0.34,756 42,112 772,950 1,000,000 Hanover Irving 736,202 150,487 1,000.000 1,000,000 1.000.000 1,500,000 750.000 Commonwealth Oriental Atlantic Importers and Park 800,000 North River East River 222$$ Traders’.. 1,500.000 2,000.000 Mechanics’Banking Ass. 500,000 Grocers’ 300.W0 350,000 500.000 5,000,000 8,000,000 Fourth National Central National Second National 300,000 1,000,000 500,000 1,000,000 New York N. Exchange* 300,000 Tenth National 1,000,000 Bowery National 250,000 Bulls Head 200,000 National Currency* 700,000 Ninth National First National Third National 31,071,703 874,542 977,669 5,840.400 900,000 799,250 431,810 854 354 95,985 41,534 137,269 23,771 1,587,765 188,214 113,768 20.600 980,985 29,938 77,963 3.979 167,058 184.954 556,683 92,288 15,700 21.713 163,883 751.852 897,400 5.958 558,231 500,000 563,528 1,463,001 4,618.608 2,359.346 701.714 V85,tl49 1,383.700 1,587.200 1,131 Sol 896,3i0 811,460 122,350 557.861 273,697 748.282 1,602,174 708,009 3.370,443 5,182,198 6,000,512 7,202,269 1,030,871 2.760,226 1,286,105 4,055.100 2,451,169 1, -221,373 2,254,612 1,127.968 1,425,000 4,822,115 1,154,149 1,556,679 1,785,284 1,030,878 16,101,396 II,476.159 1,346.059 4,784,281 3,569,842 4 824,663 1.1S8.101 1,943,100 851,446 1,674,206 215,1S7 373 056 409 042 8,931 28,202 5,555 230,000 449,320 600 321,136 450,000 1,21",667 307,314 192,154 411.985 437,756 2.142,404 1,024.786 360,000 l,587,s94 1,028,000 15,760,191 12,430 807,625 1,273,<‘82 627,284 12.008 2,015 9 3,813 28,248 11,027 535.213 14,028 283,500 891,498 9,617 677 936,841 2,953,293 12,599,135 265,100 1,900,000 9,159,358 1,035,291 270,000 S,999,907 838,521 272,853 290,353 848,479 3,926,676 546.612 795,423 3,786,880 656,115 268.917 83,971 495,700 95,800 913,200 680,347 225,000 14,171 1,716,482 5,562 6.753 216 384 4,906 90,0(0 982,6% 870,400 725,989 7,584,961 4,921 167,020 98,898 502,569 625,931 210,211 1,271.890 231,K5>7 20.100 418.542 952,568 1,165,267 4,S4>,512 1,510,684 389,056 715,821 293,968 709.223 710,000 205,000 640,133 488,531 20 s,720 337,280 10,542 952,409 681,015 620,759 231,310 200,000 426.222 185,000 513,462 2,971.200 2,215,600 1,531,191 1,957,303 2,218,650 88.713 1,182.142 250.000 4,814 852,570 131,863 5,936 4,129 291,031 196,282 2,181,184 130,443 40,608 1.212.873 820,372 1,156.414 83,970,200 253,068,008 204,428 8,174,643 512,952 126.986 147,809 175 495 233,411 8,932 597 2,5: 3,307 342,498 1.067,113 1,135.033 791,729 203,485 265,700 180 224 16,342 T6‘,79i 704,467 598,318 235.321 221,910 547,019 252,210 70,240 66,000 27,929,07134,281,922183,7S4,190 48,455,121 Same as last week. The deviations from the returns of .'-Dec $1,618 893 Loans Inc Inc Specie.* Circulation . . previous week avo rs follows : Deposits. 1,536,627 Legal Tenders.. 24,201 the totals for a Inc. Inc . Specie. tion. $792,466 3,188,062 aeries of weeks past Legal Deposits. Tenders. July 8. 258,368,471 28^20,267 34,217 978 179,929,467 40,737,263 July 10 255,424,942 30,266,912 84,277,945 183,197,239 48,702,728 July 17 . 257,008,889 81,055,450 84,173,437 188*431,701 51,859,706 Loans. 2,000,000- 4,816,009 458,000 390,299 454,674 Germania Manufacture & Builders * 2.998 264,167 176,9-8 593,710 12,568,801 Circula- 6,752 2,099,442 261,92 7 79,490 1,889,400 2,808.851 2.613,832 4,082,500 2,960,395 3,680,476 2,737.863 1,364,765 1,502,430 1,065.550 7.685.223 200,000 Stuyv38ant Eleve ith Ward Eighth National American National 195.720 ...... 1 890,442 1,547,405 30,552 4,000,000 10,147,896 Continental 1,650 54.300 Metropolitan £$$$$ ^$$$$ 488,894 4 53,644 491,703 261,300 332.741 Citizens Nassau Market St. Nicholas., Shoe and Leather Corn Exchange 8^6,074 587,942 833,929 1,448 060 412,500 People’s.... North American 1,784.037 956,888 552,'ill 1,428,709 461,799 ISS’SSS 450,000 Chatham H.4^,724 855,778 6,390.075 4,981,633 2,7-2,701 7,596,169 3,122,255 500.000 Republic The following are 209,815 o30,276 5,515,407 Deposits.Tenders, 6,505,264 3.342,248 1,871,155 4,446,819 2.170.873 1.382,199 2.616.223 2,197,360 1,593,000 422,700 Pacific . Total reported supply 1»922*299 Mercantile Total the transactions of that day being ex. $8,404,892 $5,512132 500,000 I,175,817 2,000,000 4,537,044 5,000,000 9,808,940 10,000,000 23,001,308 1,000,000 8,287.566 1,000,000 2,704.426 Commerce 124* 124* 124* With the exception of Saturday, Clearing House. 300 000 1,235,000 1.500,000 800,000 600,000 200,000 600,000 Manufacturers & Mer.... on Saturday, Nov. 20.... 126* Monday, “ 23 126* Tuesday, “ 23.... 126* Wedu’day, “ 24.... 126* Thursday, “ 25 125* 1,000,000 600,000 Tradesmen’s 220,500 The Gold $933,506 $5,789,933 3,543,441 10,157 3,000,000 2,000,000 1,500,000 3,000,000 I,800,j00 4,606,000 4,340,000 272 000 367,5U0 265,000 313,000 457,400 233,100 293,600 373,600 *H22’2°° 2,050,000 5,315,900 230,000 299,500 341,500 339,000 1,526,000 1,623,500 1,331,000 1,624,000 Circulation. Loans and 4.899.500 3.102.500 5,029,000 332,000 Legal Net Capital. Discounts. Specie. Bahks. Now York Manhattan 8,161,5i.O 4,961,41'G 177,500 1,479,000 1,393,000 130 Total amount. Bonds. 270,0C0 Aggregate Clearings. 846,763,801 676,540,290 711,328,141 [November 27, 1869. THE July 84. 259,641,889 80,079,424 84,110,798 193,602,260 54,271,882 July 81. M0,53P,22fr 27,871,933 84,068.677 196,416,443 56,101,627 Aug. T.i 264,879,857 26,003,925 88,947,985 200.220,068 56,056,834 Aug. 14. 266,505,865 24,154,499 88,992,257 198,952,711 54,730,089 Aug. 21. 262,741188 21,694,510 84.0 &,104 192,021,546 63,070,*81 Ang. SS. aai.012,109 19,469,102 88,999,742 188,754 589 52.792,834 Sept. 4. 262,649,889 17,461,722 83,960,035 191,101,086 65,829,782 Sept. 11. 268,864,583 14,912,066 83,964,196 188,82',324 51,487,867 Sept 18 269,496,034 14,538,109 88,972 759 185,890,130 61,259,197 Sept. 25 263,441,828 13,968,481 33,996,081 180,230,798 50 025,081 Sept Oct. 2 255,239,649 15,902,849 81,169,409 183,124,508 64,209,083 Oct. fi. 250,749,974 21,513,526 34,178.925 179,214,675 62,017,583 Oct. 16. 948,537,984 20,899,070 81,217,114 178,642,936 53,229,5)4 Oct. 23 249,895,073 19,399,701 34,204,431 175,798,819 5 ',037,604 Oct. 80. 250,948,833 21,926 046 34,136,249 180,828,882 62,177,881 Nov. 6. 262,799,450 25,218,066 34,188,668 182,961,848 49,957,590 Noy, 18. 251,180,557 26,755,693 34 212,867 183,754,806 61,095,661 Nov. 20. 253,068,008 27,929,071 84,231,922 183,784.190 48,455,121 558,455,091 arghth............ 614,4 5,487 614,875,6 5b 2,821,6 7 666,660,580 603,801,841 656,889,275 791,753 344 662,419,788 . 989,274,474 . 792,893,772 628,880,852 634.890.262 531.610.262 . 540,450,64r Monday, Nov. Specie Increase Capital. Specie. L. T. Notes. Deposits. Circula $750,000 11,417,090 $37,174 $98,800 $432,705 $441,917 Loans. Blackatone Boston Boylston Columbian... Continental .. Eliot Sve/ett Faneuil Hall.... 1,000,000 Freeman’s 600,000 Globe Hamilton 1.000,000 Howard 1,000,000 750,000 Market 800,000 Massachusetts.. 800,000 Maverick 400,000 Merchants’ 8,000,000 Mount Vernon.. 200,000 ... New England... 1,000,000 North 1,000,000 Old Boeton 900,000 6bawmut 1 000,000 904.652 203,476 249,833 17,707 7,308 3,902 22,967 93,^39 6.780 21,633 16,537 9,203 6,276 7,734 11,869 76,846 2,928 6,551,610 255,a97 686,841 2,807,431 16,i27 2,240,420 83,418 1,862,795 86.782 2,214,951 20,193 Shoe & Leather. 1,000,000 State 2,000,000 3.357,475 3,763,056 1.500,000 600,000 2,000,000 Washington.... 750,000 First 1,000.000 Second (Granite) 1,600,000 Third 300,000 B’kof Commerce 2,000,000 Wk of N. Amer. 1,000,000 B’kofRedemp’n 1,000,000 B’kof the Repub. 1,500,000 City Baffle 1,000,000 1,000,000 Exchange 1,000,000 Hide & Leather. 1,600,000 Revere 2,000,000 ♦Security 200,000 Union Webster Total ♦ 1,000,000 1,530,000 ....... Same as „ 38,489 100.025 685,845 354,720 356,000 242,553 Banks for Date. 114,155 3*6,238 630,675 9,317 71.730 4,707,465 16,054 1,824,325 555,067 798,786 789,731 362,614 695,633 12....... ‘ 19 26 2 29,493 299,015 .- 61,953,853 62,022,??** 3,240,412 2.958.683 3,825,461 687,591 2,375,957 2,650,027 24,345 3,596 63,430 49,771 83,815 751,685 179,250 704,375 245,515 247,358 169,lb9 174,865 139,058 177,303 52,106,010 354,845 527,685 698,185 798.142 797,960 454,734 923,695 599,924 “ 6s, new. 7s, old 44 “ 753,100 965, y39 6s, Levee 8s, Lev^e . . ........ Loans Dec. lac. Specie The following are 12 “ 102,633,948 19 “ 26 Ang. “ “ Sept. A “ Oct. “ “ “ 9 101.44 6,241 102,702,540 .... 16 23 30 103.804,664 103,811,271 102,988,791 103,053,007 6 103,904,546 104.437,227 13 20 104,478,949 27 4 11 18 25 104.375,531 Nov. 1 Nor. 8...... Nov. 15 Nov. 22 Legaltender notes Deposits 25,338,729 105,289,208 104,946,179 104,551,831 m3,662,620 103,410 990 104,084,438 104.506,997 198,877,786 Specie. 3,140,676 3,255,151 3,024,595 2,365,920 2,164,616 2,117,372 1,871,713 1,716,563 1,2*8,474 915,681 518,579 652,197 1,091,712 1,151,254 1,090,130 1,363,721 1,636,219 2,713,228 1,715,308 Legal Tenders. 9,595,668 new . South Caro.ina 6s, o d.. “ Cs, new. 44 Tennessee 44 cx coupons . i 9,541,8*9 9,793,461 10.719,569 10,438,5^6 11,210,664 11,908,': 36 11,792,519 12,371,211 12,747,357 12,950.087 12,767,004 11,913,893 11,376,043 11,3! 9,'86 11,711,185 11,666,147 11,535 128 11,395,690 Philadelphia Banks.—The following of the PhiladelDhia Banks for the week 139,438 331,646 2,509 weeks past: Deposits. Circulation. 84,520,417 35,211.103 37,308,687 36,117,973 34,933,731 35,229,149 37,04!,015 87,362,741 87,086,497 36,917,666 36,88'>,894 31,891,701 34,446, "08 25,335,704 25.825,082 25,254,209 25,514,701 25,279,285 25,244,004 25,200,086 25.202.272 25.227.273 25,277,731 25,307,129 25,321,464 25,388,694 34,877,071 25,313,491 25,212,084 36,896,518 36.007,305 25,321,519 25,329,981 25,336,220 25,338,729 86,310,o64 86,598,951 is the average condition preceding Monday, Novcra ber 22,1869 . . Philadelphia North America Farmers’ & Mech.. Commercial Mechanics’ ... Capital. Loans. Specie. $1,500,090 $5,006,00C$396,000 1,000,000 8,989,252 55,786 2,009,000 4,712,961 26,792 310,000 800,000 BankN.Liberties. 500,000 Southwark 250,000 Kensington 250,000 Penn Township... 500,000 Western 400,000 Manufacturers’.... 670,150 B’k of Commerce.. 250,000 Girard...... 1,000,000 Tradesmen's 200,000 “ , Consolidation 800,000 City Commonwealth ... Corn Exchange.... Union First Third Four i h Sixth. Seventh... _ 400,000 300,000 500,000 30 ,000 1,000,000 300,000 200,000 150,000 250,000 2,835,000 2,280,000 2,505,000 9,500 1,491,200 1,143,844 5,631 1.316.500 1,371,592 1.476.500 835.663 4,926 Total net L. Tend.Deposits. Circulat’n $926,000 $3,498,000 $1,000,000 1.120,54 1 3,061,398 774,000 71S 97S 1,221,719 3,404,981 657,000 1,886,000 433,000 1,128,000 487,000 1,891,000 480,100 299,000 1,346,000' non 478 80T 461,000 219,551 983,300 .222,110 2,910 224,297 963,732 392,023 1,403,832 177,920 235,000 219,628 904,990 593,101 2,410,0) 0 928,391 3,276,000 32,000 848,000 1,267,885 5,609 866,256 1,072,814 246,874 776,733 1,189,318 3",so6 410,940 870,575 999,895 193,711 705,844 1,709,000 2,666 288,000 1,191,000 1,202,000 49,000 886,000 1,402,000 8,659,000 1,168,000 8,128,000 1,000,900 400,000 1,010,200 622,988 161,232 656,153 470,000 111,000 322,000 719,000 2,250 170,000 459,000 • d 4. H 7 44 2d stock 32 70 67 65 44 “ South, Mississippi 1st 450,102 213,820 695,000 178,925 270,000 861,922 212,800 450,006 218,000 798,000 257,168 133,626 185,000 219,100 44 3d “ lsts,8f 44 44 44 “ 44 ■ stock. »k Atlanta, Ga, 8s, bonds.... Augusta, Ga., 7s, bonds 44 2d 3d 2d “ “ . . . 68 55 76 45 67 scrip,....*.... Mobile, Ala., 5s, bonds 8s, 44 Nashville 6s New Orleans 6s bonds.. 10s 44 Norlolk 6s 70 67 78 50 69 95 62 70 70 84 CO 75 .. 60 Petersburg 6s~ 65 Richmond 6s 68 Savannah 7s, bonds 82 f5 .... Wilmington, N. 44C.,6s 8s 721 Railroad Securities. ALABAMA. Montg’ry & West P. 1st, 8s.. 84 89 end " 86 90 Montgomery and Euialla 1st Btate of Alabama Mobile and Ohio, sterling 44 44 Mobi 44 95 8s income. stock & Montg. RP, 1st m.. Mobile & Great North, latsm Selma and Meridian 1st m. 8s Alabama & Tenn. 1st m. 7s. Bel., Rome & Dalt. 1st m. 7s e 99 651 66* 57 30 25 14 80 • ♦ 63 « 67* 321 30 17* 82 75 68 GEORGIA. Georgia RB. 1st mtg 95 97 100 103 Central RR. 1st mtg. 7s 95 97 44 stock 115 L18 Southwestern RR., 1st mtg 91 94 44 stock..... 94 96 Macon and Western s’k 115 : 20 Macon & Augusta bonds 75 77 44 44 end bonds 87* 90 4 44 stock.... 25 30 44 & Brunsw’k end b. 7s 75 7H4 1 #u» if Macon & Brunswick stock 90 95 Muscogee bonds.... 44 44 stock . .... .. 44 ** Atlantic endorsed... fitnplra Gulf 7s bonds 44 stocks... • 22* CAROLINA. 80 and Columbia 6s, |Sparteneburg and Union 60 62* 7s, “ j North Eastern 1st mtg. 6s.. 44 2d 4 6s... end. by State 44 Columbia and Augusta 1st 19 42 76 £9 82 72 7s.. st’ek “ ■ • > • • a 76 34 • • • • . « • m 79 £2 East Tenn. & Georpla 6s 44 Virginia 6s, end 69 61 byStateTenn. 2nds, 7s 60 82 74 80 76 stock.. 41* 42* TENNESSEE. Memp. & Charleston lets, 7s 44 44 44 44 Memphis and Ohio 10s “ 44 62* ' 35 30 15 'Memphis & L. Rock lets, 8s. 20 • 9 82 64 75 2de6s 71 44 £ds 8s 82 “ 4ths8s 70 Orange & Alex. & Man. lets 72 Va. & Tenn lets 6s 66 44 2ds 6a 72 j “ 8ds 6s 61 44 70 4th, 8s 80 Virginia Central Ists, 6s “ 74 2nds, 6s “ 72 3ds, Cs ** 83 4th, 8a “ fund. int. 8s Rich. & Danv. lsi cons’d 6s. 69 44 Piedmont bra’h 70 44 lets 8s 79 80 Southside, 1st mtg. 8s “ 2d m. guart’d Cs.. 60 44 3dm. 6s 25 44 4th m. 8s 25 Norfolk & Petersburg 1 m 8s 80 44 “ 7s 78 itichm. & Petersb. lstm 7s 82 1i 4k 44 2d m 6e 44 44 3dm. 8s 93 76 74 84 72 74 68 - endorsed VIRGINIA. - 6a S3 82i 77 ... 14 44 Fre’ksb’g & Poto. 6s “ • 44 44 4t conv.7e 4 ,Gg ] Richmond & York R 1st 8s.. 77 “ 36 0Jd 44 . • 75 44 . 8s, int 2 mtg, 8s . 74 90 Orange & Alex., lets 6s, 8s, gold bonds, endorsed by 44 72 85 by State 8. Carolina. guar, • • 12* “6s • 44 I 90 «... 60 | 81* 83* 44 iGreenville . 58 & Little Rock & btate 44 44 44 • • 60 Memphis 6s, end. by Memp 44 89 80 60 stock SOUTH • guar’d by Btate S. C 47* 42* 48 (Charleston and Sayannah 6s, 62* I guaranteed by State 8. C.. 65 67 ISouth Carolina Railroad 6s.. 72 75 new..., nphis and CharlestonRaiiroad." 44 4* 71 80 51 6 62* • • 52* I North Carolina 8s 69 75 50 47 Macon 6e, bonds Memphis 6s bonds, old 6s, 44 5 m 7s. Chari. & Rutherf. “ 65 75 80 71 60 Charlotte & 8 Carolina 7s Fredricksburg 6s Lynchburg 6s 44 19 7s g’ Manchester 1 pfd 7s 44 87 83 72* 55 £0 “ 44 80 50 60 72 15 cert, 8s ,70 Wilmington & Weldon 62 49 73 .. 60* N. Or. Jack’n & Opel.lsts, 8e 54 2ds, 8e NORTH CAROLINA. 44* Securlt’es. , 6s 6s, bonds 7s m. Orleans & Jackson 49 , 63* 12 70 48 46 44 2d 57f 51» • 11 .. 2d “ N. « 52, 4S5Teun.l8tm.7f “ . ... LOUISIANA * 1 .... ... Mississippi Cent. 1st mtg. 7 44 44 62 77 40 121 * pref st’l At’anta & West Point stocl • 42* 44, 61 43 2dm 7s 44 41 “ City • Bu Ask Savannah, Albany. & Gulf 7 44 61 Lew. 44 , 38,251,230 MISSISSIPPI AND 5! 1 43 60 . 6s 44 _ • . bonds.. new 44 . register Columbus, 44 34,851,745 10,599,394 10,696,755 10.597.973 10,592,939 10,695,186 10,602,197 38,781,734 38,438,961 44 80 Columbia, S. C Dec. Inc. Inc.. Circulation 10,607,844 37,965,411 Alexandria 6s follow? comparative totals for aseries of Loans. July $629,211 2,080 10,612,042 10,610,055 10,609,1S2 10,598,934 bonds, end. by Savannah. 75 Pensacola & Georgia 1st m7 3 85 44 80 85 87 41 31 69 66 63 e 41 796.143 799,166 396,203 130,000 646,695 495,131 2,073,100 . 7s. new f ouisiana 6s, ex-coupons., 44 new bonds 343,253 1,107,689 60 78 81 85 93 66 60 5? t . . are as 10,608,352 30,608,823 10,611,874 38.833.414 89,212,583 38,945,913 39,169,526 39,345,378 38,485,2S4 37,102,575 37,024,08 > 36,782,298 12,911,135 AsaHI [Bic .. The deviations from last weeks returns 10,618,766 10.614.973 30,610,233 30,608,381 10,610,361 39,506,405 13,175,462 673,475 605,398 30,618,84) 10,618.275 39,141,196 39,020,665 12,820,357 12,380,187 12,438,801 13,104,244 13,278,567 284,668 815,925 Georgia Cs, old 44 last week. Capital 41,821,537 40,140,497 39,834,862 89,160,644 89,717,126 18,335,S5 8 265.111 51,697,924 61.657,364 61,701,059 61,632,214 61,969,081 61,731,495 51,379,807 5s 44 *74,907 436,768 245,288 313,297 136,016 68,899 44 799,660 742,084 625,222 214,629 105,985 187, <<54 165,446 331,959 52,309,62b 52,083,652 51,931,372 61,597,258 51,703.872 62,130.402 State Securities. Alabama 8s 792,466 174,692 1,209,101 216,400 51,932,&H 14,031,449 13,415,493 12,944,886 13,<-76,180 18,618,911 13,530,061 13,047,635 12,977,0i7 13,018,213 13,073,705 12,986,054 13,348,598 13,448.889 Quotations by J, M. Welth Sc A rent a, 9 New Street. 595.613 449,8^4 618,631 ■',621 485,293 456,750 890,?:77 884,869 25,216 236,089 244,256 SOUTHERN SECURITIES. 359,180 998,282 372,720 817,436 4,176,006 118,557 2,838,980 6,00) 1,642,685 19,137 1,877,140 28,660 30 53,937,621 63,140,765 63,128.698 52,463.100 9 Aug. 16 Aug. 23 Aug. 30 Sept. 6 Sept. 13 Sept. 20 Sept. 27 4 Oct. Oct. 11 IS Oct. 25....... Oct. Nov. 1 Nev. 8 Nov. 15 Nov. 22 1,833,550 178,016 1,215,157 2,103,863 842,280 Specie. Legal Tend. Deposits. Loans. 6 893.441 741,696 232,5* 2 881,599 661,959 383,375 Philadelphia series of weeks: a 7011 244,191 640,247 803,) >97 945,313 114,157 Increase. The aDnexed statement shows the condition of the 441,439 853,320 329, It 0 745,123 614,126 974,588 384.931 792,93» 595,966 447,861 792,292 671,043 792,900 3,271,791 84,771 863,219 234,000 869,894 212,434 243,099 370,000 47,350,000 103,877,7861,715,308 11,306,690 36,338,951 Not received. 793,484 1,245,989 1,108,934 60,065 3,281,520 1,115,391 27,533 3,(*'0,555 89,428 1,848,670 19.885 3,555,538 13,590 4,500,115 159,775 Suffolk Traders’ Tremont 620,840 171,828 641,038 166,346 634,718 340,167 655,099 628.031 138,942 143,371 779,534 31,571 298,389 433,200 1,055,134 106,495 501,575 229,428 1,097,236 136,299 788.355 120,100 405,946 304,510 447,993 9 0,342 207,165 107,431 288.356 719 81,923 Circulation . riS follows: are as Legal Tenders.... Decrease. $164 067 Deposits Decrease. 187731 Decrease. $351,689 Aug. 1,669 417,500 175,000 639,884,676 22. 18C9. 2,612,569 3,181,597 1,863,415 1,450,44S 2,113,076 1,889,0.36 2,*85,918 £35,2*6 2,512.688 1,419,686 2,214,564 1.447.682 1,820,171 1,432,183 l,845,f 06 .... 242,000 691,000 16,055,150 61,879,807 005,398 12,911,185 38,251,230 10,602,197 Capital Boston Banks.—Below we give a statement of the Boston National Banks, as returned to the Clearing House, 1,500,000 1,500,000 1,000,010 500,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 200,000 6,525 692,000 Loans July July July Ang. Atlas 255,000 554,000 685,000 1,941,000 427,000 1,064,000 156,000 408,000 .... The deviations from last week’s returns July Atlantic 800,000 Total 2,700 tst.ooo 2,660,000 1,680,000 760,000 1,000,000 Republic. Exchange 570,859,293 481,750,558 Banks. 275,000 Central Bank of ... • • 77* 83 70 72 84 82* 67* 30 30 82* 82* 86 • • • ... . . 75 70 • 75 • . • . ... • • * • IIIIHIW THE CHRONICLE. November 27, 1869.) 687 SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE, aSPKBSENTED BY THB LAST SALS REPORTED OFFICIALLY 01* EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, NOV. 28, TOGETHER WITH THE AMOUNT OF BONDS American Satur. Mon SECCRITIES. STOCKS AND Tues. AND NUMBER OF SHARES SOLD AT BOTH BOARDS IK THE SAME WEEK. Erl. eJ 126* 126% 126% 125% 124% 124% Gold Coin (Gold Rocm.) National: United States 6s, 1881 coupon. 117% do 6s, 1381 ..registered do do do 6s, 5-20s(’62)cow^on 115 & 115* 115% do do 6s, 5-20s do registd 113* 112% 13%' 113 jo do do do d„ do do do do do do do do do do do do 5s, 1874 116 115 107% I075i 107% 107% [ 107% do do preferred....100 55,100 63,050 Chicago, Burlington and QuincylOG 84,000 Chicago and Great Eastern...*.. 100 17,C0t Chicago and Northwestern 100 71% 180.700 do do pref.100 86% Chicago. Rock Island and Pac..l00 103 230,000 Cleveland,Col.Cin.and Ind. ...100 2,0i0 Columbus C. & Ind. Cent... S4% 1,160,000 Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 S3 43,5J0 Delaware, Lackawana and West 50 106% 24,000 Dubuque & Sioux City 1 9 000 Erie 100 26% d > pref 50 49 i Hannibal and ? t. Joseph... ... .100 282,000 Hannibal and St. Joseph pi ef.. 100 108% , . J15% 1115% 115% 115 115% 115% jllo* 115% 114% 116 115% 115% 115% 115% 116 Harlem Hudson River Illinois Central l>-7% :0,% IQ-4Q6.registered. 5s, 107% 107% 107%,* 108 5s, 10-40s ...coupon 5s California, 7s Connecticut os Georgia 6s..... • - Long Island — 9/W do 600 New York Central 91 • Indiana 5s Kentucky 6s Louisiana 6s.. Louisiana 6s Levee Bonds do 8s Levee Bonds Michigan 6s, 1878 . Missouri 8s, 60 60 51,1 00 Tennessee 5s do 6s (old) do 6s, (new) 91%! 91% 91 39% 86 2,000| 109 :09 39% 85% 3,000j 43,0 i)| 319,000 97,000 5,000 44% 37% 33% 44% 38% 35 103 — 66 65% x59 52% 52 % *51 ‘50% »69 s59 52% 52% 52 x58 51% ‘50% 63, (new) (reg.) *... Municipal: 7,500 100 100 100 .100 Com Exchange Fourth.Gallatin Hanover 100 50 1105 108 Hving. ,100 50 Metropolitan *’ 100 107% ,122 123 100 * 115 60 50 100 100 ]’]]]] 114 50 60 75 ;;;*;:ioo , 116 25 : 25 50 Central 100 Cumberland 100 26% Delaware and Hudson... 100 Ashburton 26 26% 120 120 50 wirovemetu.-Boat. Wat. Pow.100 Brunswick City Land — Canton 16* ft1* 10° cT^f^-WesternUnion... .100 T/llfinm. Atlantic Mail Pacific Mail Unlon Navigation ntpress,—.Adams 800 200 36% 36% 86% 85% 85% 35% 2,960 55 52% 51% 52% 52% 62% 100 67% 57% 67% 57% 35 100 600 American and M. Union.100 83% Merchants’ Onion United States 1®ll8t Fargo &Co Gold .100 100 53 100 100 Mariposa preferred.... ..100 16* ct£Bll^er ■ .....100 Tla.nkcr» & Hro. Ass Union Trust..*... 108% 89% 89% 1,882 28 181% 165% 4.660 3,060 1*70 300 365 600 900 800 89% 39% 87% 20% 120 69% 84% 420% 120 12C 68% 68 83% 83% 88 88 8* 87% 182% [182% 181 176% 92% 91% 91% 90% 89% 83 82% 8 • 140 69% 84% 69 508 1,150 4.725 1,389 3.836 1,600 145,500 181 112 26% 26% 26% 87% 99% 85% 86 86% 86% 86% 91 98% 98% 98% 99 69 59 59 Buffalo, N. V & Erie, 1st Central Pacific gold hones ... . 92% 92% 9S% Chicagoand Alton, Sinking Fund, do do 2,174 13,670 850 do 92% 92 100 1st mortgage... Income.... do do 92% "2,000 108 89% 88 88% 87% percent.. 88 94% exten. bonds 34% 34% 35 85 63 52 52% 18% 63 18% 95 13% 108% 16.600 7,000 95 96% "14JC0 4,000 72% 74 74% 75 75% 76% 76 2,50J 75% 90,000 95 1,000 84 81% 79 ’loco 103 118 83% 3,000 12,000 96 88% 98% 8,000 8,000 4.000 1,000 94% do 2d mort.,7s... Milwaukeeand St. Paul, lstmort.. do do 7 3-10 conv do do 8s lstmort 100% 100% 100% 00% do do 1st Iowa... — 86 96 96 Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage... 96 do do 2d mortgage... do construct ion... do 87% do do 6b convertible . New York Central 6s,1883 do do 6s sub bond3. 98 do do 7s, 1876 N. Y. & New Haven 6s New Jersey Central new do do 1 st........ *••••• do do 2d Ohio and Mississippi ,1st mortgage Pacific 7s, guar, by State of Mo Peninsular, 1st Mortgage . f, 101 1C1 Pittsh’g,Ft. Wayne & Chic., lstm, do do do 2d mort. 90 do do 8d mort. 90 do 862 St.Louis,Alton* TerreH, lstm. do do do 2d, pref do do do income. 1,278 St Louis A Iron Mountain, 1st m.. 990 Toledo * Wabash, 1st mort.,ext.. 88% do do 2d mortgage, 81 1,300 94% 95 4,000 20,000 !01% 86% 96 Tlooo 4,000 24,000 5,000 87% 86 85% 85% 12,COO 3, COO 1,000 1,000 97% 91% 5*00 9,000 6,000 94% ;**,600 81 81 83 4,1 CO 81 7,000 6,000 7,000 . 1,600 16 85,000 5,000 4,869 .100 '..... 100 59 American *Wng%-'.Mariposa 800 119 50 wilks Barre 2,300 108% i07% Michigan Southern, SinkingFund. 75 ter: Pennsylvania 28% 29% 109 2d mortgage, 1879 3d mortgage, 1883 4th mortgage, 1880.. do 6th mortgage Galena & Chicago, 1st Great Western, 1st mortgage, 1888. Great Western, 2d mortgage Han. &St. Jos., 1st convertible.. 10ft Stocks 900 88% 109 do 100 .«■ 28% 4,985 5,181 '20 Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1660-72..... Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869. do 2d mort, (S. F.), ’85 103 Illinois Central bonds 83 Lake Shore, div. bonds.... 30 Mariposa Trustee 10s certifica es.. Michigan Central 8s, new, 1882.... 20 Marietta & Cincinnati 1st. 50 ‘. 28% 52% do do do 122% _ Manhattan Merchants Merchants Exchange 110 108 Delaw’e, Lnckawan.A West, lstm. do do do 2d m. Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868 )143 145 100 Market 166% 1C9 14%05 Railroad Bonds: Buffalo and State 1 ine Ponds.. Col., Chi. & Ind. Central 1st do 2d m do 110 100 * 24% 24 83% hicago & Rock Island, 1st No. : 100 25 83 605 450 80 preflO do do 4th mortgage.. 5,000 Cleveland and Toledo, Sink’g Fund Central Commonwealth Commerce Continental American do 7,000 Chicago, R. I. and Pac, 7 < do Miscellaneous do do Cin., riam. & Dayton, 1st Cleveland and Pittsburg, 3d mort.. 6s, 1887 Bank .Stocks American Exchange Bank of America Bank of Republic 74 72% «% 74 74% 87% 88% 88% 88% 104 103% 103% 103% 87 104 Chicago,Burl’ton & Quincy, 8 p. c. 6s, Park Loan Jersey City Water Loan Kings County (is New York 5s, 1870. Seventh ward btate of New York — 22,0 0 Chicago & Milwaukee, 1st mort... 12.8,000 Chic & Northwest., SinVing Fund, 22,0 0 do do Interest b’nde do do 1st mort. consolid’ted do do 92* 92% do Nassau Ninth North River..... Ocean — 50 do Brooklyn 6s, Water Loan . 100 Pitts., F’t Wayue&Chic. guar. 6,50^1 Toledo, Wabash and Western. .100 x59 Vlrgmia6s, (old).. 162% 152 TOO 517 100 pref 4.000 '’hird Avenue 109 65 151 '— 100 26% 26% 101 99% I 1881 South Carolina fis, old South Carolina 6s, new. 162% 120 — 100% 91 91% 40 86 149% 4 otk 10% 10% So. 92% 91 149% 149% 148 20 82% t 60,000 Rome,Watertown &Ogdensbnrg — 13,000 St.Louis, Alton & TerreHaufe.l00 do do pref.100 do 1.000 92 6s, (new) 89% pref... 100 93% 60 87% *. .100 182% Reading. do 6s, (Han. & St. Jos. RR.) New York 6s, 1877 do 68,1873 do 5s,1874 do 7s, State B’yB’ds(coup) do do do (reg.) North Carolina,6 s 6s (new, spec’l tax) do Op, New Jersey do do scrip. Ohio and Mississippi do do Panama * 69% 60 92 161% „..10fi N. Y. Cen hud. R ver consol.. — do do do scrip.. New York and New Haven 100 do * do scrip. _ do do 1877 do 1919 do do do 2,000 Morris & Essex 81 81 6s,cou.,’79,aft.’60-62-65-70 do Ohio 6s, 60 60 .100 Michigan Central do •• (new) . Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860 do Registered, 1860 do do do Marrettaand Cincinnati, 1stprei do do 2d pref Milwaukeeand St. Paul 7s do Chicago Lako Shore and X ich. South... 4/,500 93 Wod Than* PH. 50 21,200 State: 8s 100 10% 92% 100 100 To iet & coupon 56,1874..registered. do Alabama 113% 113% •12% 112% 115% 115% 115% 115% 114% Mob* Too*. Railroad Stocks t 10 Boston, Hartford & Erie $38 000 Central oi New Jersey ....100 92% 92% 5,500 Chicago and Alton 100 150 150 5s, 1871 coupon. 5 s, 1871.. registered. do do do do do 112% 115% 115% 114 6s, Currency do 116% U5% 112% 112% 112% 113% i 118% 113* 6s, 5-20s (’64)coupon 6s, 5.20s do registd 6s, 5.20b C65)coupon 6s, 5.20s do reqist'd 6s, 5.20s (’65n.)<7W 6s, 5.20s do registd do 6s, 5.20s (1867) coup do 6s, 5.20s do regisd do * 6s, 5.20s (1868) coup do 6s, 5.20s do regisd do 6s, Oregon Wai 1881 do 6b, do. (ly'rly) do do do do do do do io r.7 Stur. STOCKS AND SECURITIES. Week’eSale* . do do do do equipment... 10ns. con.... .... 1,100 Long Dock bonds 60 Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw,lst,E.D. Union Pacific, lit mort 8s" 5.QC0 81% 85 15,000 3,000 —.^Wii*P!> n<f» "W" ■ CHRONICLE. THE 638 EXPLANATION OF THE STOCK AND BOND on the next page, Railroad, E. Bridge, $280,000 in 7 per cent, bonds of the St. Louis <fe Memphis Railroad Company. D. R. Garrison, the leader of the party opposed to Mr. Bridge, says that he offered $800,000 in cash for it. son $t)e Railroag Jttonitor. 1. The Table of [November 27. 1869. TABLES. Railroad Items.— Stocks, comprises all Companies of which the stock is sold in any of the Canal and Other The Western Railroad Gazette gives tbe following 1 —The Deny* Pacific Railroad is not yet completed to Evans, aa has been reported. It is open fo 40 miles south of Chey enne, aud it is 20 miles further to Evans. There is one stage line from the terminus to principal cities (except merely local corporations), or upon which dividends are paid. Quotations are always given of the per cent value, whatever the par of the stock may be. The figures just after the name of the company indicate the date of the'CHRONICLE in which a report ol the Company was last published. A star (*) indicates Evans, teased roads; in the dividend column x=eztra; s—stock or scrip. %, The Tables of Railroad* Canal and Other Ronds occupy in all, four pages, two of which will be published in each number.^ In on i another between Evans and Denver. The road will te mpleted to Evans before the winter, however, leaving but 50 miles of staging to Denver these pages the bonds of Companies which have been consolidated are sometimes —Un ler the reorganization the Little Miami road controls the Colum¬ given under the name of Consolidated Corporation. The date given in brackets bus Xenia, Dayton A Xenia, «nd Di too A Western roads. The immediately after the name of each Company, indicates the time at which the state¬ ment of its finances was made. In the “Interest Column” the abbreviation* are as entire capital stock paid up is $3,868,600, and the traveled length follows J. & c J.=January and July ; F. & A-=February and August; M. & S.= 0-=April and October; M. & N.=May and Novem¬ ber; J- & D.=June and December. Q.—J.=Quarterly, beginning with January; Q.—F.=Quarterly, beginning w th Februa Q. M. =Quarterly, beginning with : miles. March and September; A. & 8* The Table of United States and State Securities will be published monthly, on the last Saturday of the month. 4. Quotations of Southern Securities are given in a separate Table. can possibly be made. Railroad Earnings for tlie latest Week Reported.— Road. Week. 1869. Inc. 1863. Dec. ...21 Nov.. .$106,286;$103,037 $3,249 $.... Chicago and All on Chicago and Northwestern Nov... 226,090 257,76» 31,760 3d Nov... Chicago Rock Island and Fac... 111,806 108,281 3,575 Clbveland and Pittsburgh ...2d Nov.. 47.761 52,541 4,7S0 .. ... Lake Shore and Mich. Southern. Marietta and < locinnati ...31 Nov.. ...3d Nov Michigan Central . Milwaukee and St. Paul .... .. .2d N< .. .. 229,275 25", 873 29,697 31.448 . v... .. ...3d Nov... Toledo, Wabash and Western.... • . 178 500 Nov... .. Missouri Pacific Railroad.—A 16th inet., says: The sensation of to- lay Court in selling $600,000 79.613 71 776 • • the 21,598 1,751 89, *27 11,825 114,159 84,341 101,472 • • • • • • • • • • 7,837 ?eput from M. Louis, dated “ in St. Louis 16 the action cf our County Pacific Hailr^ad stock, belonging to the county, for $260,000 cash to Hudson E. Bridge, of this city, wh i has been two years trying to get control of the Pacific directory. A ring” of capitalists in the interest of the present directory bad been formed to get all the city and county stock, amounting to over $1,000,000. Since June last the propcs tion has been pending to transfer this stock for bonds of which will be sent in to-morrow.” Thomas Allen, President of the Iron Mountam Railroad, offered for tbe 6,f 00 sharea of the Mi-rsouri Pacific ptock, which was sold to Hud¬ war, and next for the interest still due these roads is about 450 miles. — Evansville, Ind 1867. 1868. (84 m.) $38,160 $64,463 86,937 61.881 60,029 81,156 81,396 96,481 95,828 121,702 106,835 164,729 174,812 181,297 200,550 Slv.109 328,166 75,871 259,590 251,8 3 262,770 296.422 266,552 842,743 18157. - 8,892,861 .Illinois Central.- 1867. 1868. (708 m.) $647,119 $587,442 524,871 417,071 636,165 414,443 440,271 road 1869. was commenced at $681,656 304,827. Feb... 393,648 Mar... 331,148 April. 345 556. 353,736. .July... 501.666. .Aug.. 501,258. .Sept.. 46 <, 108. Oct.... “Miscellaneous News’ C.'ev Col Cin. &I-> previous page 819,765 $309,->28 240,756 261,145 816,268 821,202 883,507 436,412 565,718 458,190 401,892 869,858 865,404 850,564 751 789 1,101,7*78 423.397 " 522,688 £1,024,045 £1,087,463 §'“'438,825 § 468,879 766,617 ® 556,917 5,683,609 6,617,64; 1.092,378 1.269,934 268,369 301.952 316.708 362.900 1,167,544 1,258 2S4 236.435 193,959 4,358,611 ~ 1869. 1867. 1868 868 . 8,469,819 2,964,089 433,434 ( $92,433 78,970 81.599 84,652 $98,510., Jaw,. 91,660., Feb 98,482 108,461 95,416 95,924 108,413 126,556 121,519 12\065 96,535 J * 106,594 114,716 121,217 142,823 182,387 123,383 109.526.. April 1,294,095 1,279,602 ...Oct... -St. L, Alton A T. Haute.- 869. if 1867. (840 tn.) $180,366 Jan... 216,080. .Feb 221,459. ..Mar... 214,409. .April.. .. . 218.639. ..May.. 228,286. •June.. July . Aug..,. 8ept . .itct Nov Dee. I *«r ... . (21C m.) 149,658 149,842 174,152 168, lb2 171,786 156,005 112,988 220,1t8 219,160 280,840 204.(05 171.499 2.S07 m 1868. (210 m.) $127,594 133,892 149,165 155,888 180,545 140,408 148,9S« 204,596 196,486 171,8(8 157,397 154,162 Year < 1867; (621 m.) $287,674 200,793 270,630 817,052 , 329,078 1,928,862 *788.8*4 205,7.0 293,29(5 262,798 259.408 253 367 341,783 320,025 293,615 136» (329 m.) 304,097 283,669 375,210 302,783 333,952 184,977 313,021 398,99? 464,776 506,295 412,988 1868 1809 (329 m) $343,r90 (820 m.) $384,119 32',636 396,527 411,814 403,646 366,623 304,Ilf 320,880 415,758 869,625 825,501 821,013 892,942 456,974 830,373 511 820 410,825 390,671 4,371,071 329,950 853,569 473,546 400.772 4,570,014 Toledo. Wab- A Western.- /-Union Pacific- 157.379 210,471 174;500 186,8,9 2* *2,238 . Nov... Dec.. 304,810 809,591 364,728 382,996 406,766 851,759 807,948 144.164 , l-\2,869.. Oct (210 m.) $132.6*2 175,950 J 129.383., 1869. 127,817 May. June, uly Aug... 140.473.. Sep.... 121,408 1,258,713 103.558., Mar.., 119,169 . 218,347 271,425 287,451 211 456 Michigan Central.— $94,136 111,037 113,648 109,502 203.690 2,918,317 1869 (251 m.) 72,708 212,509 204,112 230,061 4.797,461 868. •'251 m. 90,526 uly.. 838.717 ...Aug 1,239,785 ...Sep... 192,864 275,220 292,803 328,041 S 1867. (251 tn.) Ohio A Miasissipp i. (825 m.) (349 m.) (840 m.l $45‘,180. $242,798 (211,978 330,233 219,064 231,351 420,77 ‘ 279,647 765,905 460,287 284,729 *52,149 680,844 282,989 2)4,619 678,800 240,186 217,082 5*6,342 284,638 194,455 525,863 822,521 287,557 724,514 865,872 807,122 1,089,811 879,867 288,829 886,066 271,686 272,068 238,861 419,009 f 508,000 ’ ..Year. - 297,625 276,681 297,512 Marietta and Cincinnati- . 1,249,950 276,431 3'8,4"6 1,167,155 341,885 A449,300 !,03*,S18 f444,(24 568,380 <4^0,900 1,321,139 R 566,403 ^558,3S6 579,00» 1,414,231 2*599,548 5=591,209 §581,000 ;*442,274 35 424,59 ...Nov.. ...Dec... ^-Milwaukee A St. Paul.-* 1868. 850.192 236,160 1,094,597 1 208,796 819,441 645,78* (377,053 ) -lt0,840 239,522 247,661 $351,767 297,464 Year ..[11.712,248 13,429,534 m 1lG9. (390m.) $308,587 1,001,892 1869. 1808. (390m.) 242,205 224,621 272,454 1,185,334 ..June. 791,772 (410 m.) $292,047 757,134 774,280 895,712 898,357 880,324 1,063,236 1,451,284 1868. 1869. (454 m.) (520-94 m.) 827,254 1,149,258 807,478 ...May 685,400 (820 m.) (1,152 m.) (1,152 m.) (1,157m.) 696,147 $724,890 $871,218 ..April. 1,20 ,496 1867. 918,088 .Dec... ...Feb.. ...Mar.. 915,020 894,934 1869. i,210,387 .. Jan 790,328 1868. i, 5 4\056 .Nov 7,817,620 m.) 1867 RAILROADS. 1,091,466 1,251,940 .,518,483 1,570,066 • 681,040 1867. May.. • 391.665. June. (861 November 8th, aud was w tu-issed on For other railroad and fina cial items n a ‘ 574,664 • • 558 782 ?89,966 901,030 7,160,991 $339,762. Jan... 608,730 595,355 763,779 823,901 (8*34 m.) Mobile see - 4,508,642 655 046 740.949 661,793 727,809 618,830 1869. (431 m.) 186s. (708 m.) $800,000 toward the by most of the prominent citizens. This road is bi-in? built by Nortlern capitalists. The grading is well advanced, t' e iren has nearly all arrived and an early completion of the road and connection .v.ih New Orleans is promised. The distance is 138 miles. -Lake Shore &M ch. South.- 518,800 572,651 626,248 549,714 477,007 616,494 525,242 709,826 788,580 (280 m.) .212,604 $243,787 $276,116 S218,982 157,832 275,139 §391,308 285,961 267,094 » 485,048 282,165 279,1-21 303 342 563,270 385,510 556,0>0 342,357 f 384,564 532,657 354,244 A4O4.012 611,854 415,983 S 558,100 6 9,783 408,999 *486,196 622.000 426,752 2503.745 359,103 V409,568 330,169 [361,700 2,411,525 $2,800,767 (708 m.) 1868. (280 m.) to subscribe g( --Chicagoft Northwestern-^-Chic., Rock Is.and Pacific Chicago and Alton.— 1869. 690 m.) (850 m.) has voted ana, building of th • Evansville, Carmi and Paducah Railroad. This nukes ihe construction of the road a certainty. —The work of laying the track of the Mobile and New Orleans [tail- MONTHLY EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL *—Central Pac fic—in gold—s the State of Ter nessee, • u a new track, which the Pacific Company ant% run¬ ning centrally through St. 3 ouis county, shortening the route a number of miles. The whole thiig has leen regarded as a grand speculation, out of which certain parties would realize some $2,0 0,000 profits me way or another. The bid of Mr. Brirfgo has broken up the present directory’s “ring,” but great indignation Mill exi>ts amorg the people at the sale of the county’s stock for 60 c< nts on the dollar " h* n 60 has been offered. The City Council, last week, with only one dissenting voice, vote ] to transfer the city’s stock to the January, Gibson or Paci¬ fic party, but it is said that Mayor Cole has written a veto of the bill, was which, the companies claim, should have been paid by the government fur the time it had full possession of the roads. According to the terms of the settlement, as they are reported, the roads are to remain in the control of the con panics, and th y are to pay first the interest due the State of Tennes?<e, but Mie whole an ount of tbe net earnings, after paying this debt, must go to pny the goietnnient demand ; and they give their own bonds, or th> ee.of the State, to tie amount of $3, 00,000. to insure the performance of the contract. The roads concerned are the ast 1 enutssee A Virginia, fiom nosville lo Bristol, on the Virginia line ; the East Tennessee & Georgia, from Knoxville to Daitcn, (ja. ; the Nashville Chattanooga ; and tho Nashville A Northwestern, which extends from Nashville to Hickman, on the Mississippi, but dining the war was operated only to Johnson ville, on the Ter nessee, *8 miles from Nashville. The w! ole kng’h of • • with the Unite 1 States the war by our armies in a dilapidated condition, with ittle or no rollii.g stock. The government put them it) repair and equipped them for its own use. operated them during the war, and at its close delivered them, with the improvements it had made, to the companbs owniug them. It charged the companies for these improvements, amounting altogether to about $2,000( 00 Now. these (ornpanies had received aid from the State of Tennessee, for which they were require ! to pay interest. They failed to pjy this, interest during the war, and the government vhich had posse eion ot their loads did not | av it f r them. So wh n the government pre¬ sented its claims to the .Supreme Court gainst the companies, the comD?i!.ie8 presented counter claims, first for the use of ;he ro i ls during March. 6* No reliable prices of Insurance Stocks ' —The Tennessee Railroad, whose suit terminate I last week, were found during 1868. (521 m.y $278,712 — 1869. 1869. <521 m.) (1052 th.) $2S4,192. Jau. . 265.136 265 137. .Feb... 257,799 352,704. .Mar... 286,825 260,629 311,fc32. .April 8(2,029 .May.. 848,890. .June. 298 844 288,181 810.800 484,208 450,203 429,89 i 823,279 450,246 .Aug.... July. . 470.720. Sept... 422,368. Oct... . 899,488 No*.... Dec 4,013,200 near... 591,450 706,602 02-J559 017,685 755.684 818.617 November 27, 1869.] THE CHRONICLE. 689 RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS Subscriber* will conler a great fiivor by Companies. For afuU*expl»na! ion ofthis table, Bee Railway Monitor, on the pre¬ ceding page. Railroads. u* immediate notice of any error discovered in onr Table*. dividend. Stock Out¬ stand¬ ing. glvingf ■ PRICE. Last paid. Periods. h or Bid. Ask Date. STOCK LIST. a Voi Sanies. full explanation of this table, on the pre- Railway Monitor, ctding page. see I Rate. par Allegheny Valley 50' 2,241,250 Cnlf 1IVV Q KCM om Atlantic and Gulf 100 3.691.200 Atlan. & St. Lawrence* Ocr. If..100 2,494,900 Jan. & July. Atlanta and West Point. Sept. 18.100 1.232.200 Jan. & July. 733,700 Jan. & July. Augusta and Savannah* 100 Baltimore and Ohio 100:18,151,962 April & Oct. Washington Branch* 100 1,650,000 April & Oct. Parkersburg Branch 50 600,000 Quarterly. Berkshire......." 100 Boston and Albany 100 14.934.100 Jan. & July. 800,000 May & Nov. Boston, Con. & Montreal .pref. .100 Boston, Hartford and Erie 100 18.939.800 Boston and Lowell 500 2,169,000 Jan. & July. Boston and Maine. Sept. 18 100 4,550,000 Jan. & July. Boston and Providence 100 3,360,000 Jan. & July. 950,000 June & Dec. Buffalo, New York and Erie*... 100 Burlington and Missouri River .100 do do pref. 100 Camden and Amboy 100 Camden and Atlantic 50 do do preferred.. 50 1,235,000 Old Colony and Newport Orange and Alexandria Oswego and Syracuse 50 July, ’69 59 July, ’69 Oct., ’6'i 124 Oo., ’69 do 46 July, Nov., ’69! ’69! io% io% July, ’69, July, ’69 July, ’69| June, '69 131% 142 142)4 & Aug. Aug.,' Quarterly. 50 38,840,762 May & Nov. 50! 6,004,200 Jan. & July. : 2,400,000'Jan. & July. 50 26,280,850 Jan. & Julv. 100 } 1,099,120;Feb. & Aug. na:; pref 19 96% ’69 Jan., July, Aug., do *’69 ^9% Quarterly. Oct , 99% 117% 118 142 104 32 11 22 106% 1140% do Jan. & July. June & Dec. Jan. & July. 56 55 207% 21§ 108% 109 57% 58 *69 Nov., ’69 50! 1,587,700! April & Oct. oct., ’69 Philadel., Wilming. & Baltimore 50 , 9,084,800 Jan. & July. July, *69 Pittsburg and Connellsville 50; 1,793,926 Pittsburg, Clncin. & St. Louis... 50! 2,'28,000 do pref. r0! s/OO.O 0 Pitts., Ft.W. & C. guar*. Aug. 21.100:19,665,000 Portland and Kennebec (new). ,100: 581,100 Portland, Saco & Ports. Sep. 18.1001 1,500,000 Providence and Worcester ICO! 1,900,000 119)4 Raritan and Delaware Bay* 100[ 2,530,700 Rensselaer and Saratoga con ...100 : 8,000,000 Richmond and Danville 100 4,000,000 Richmond and Petersburg lOOj 847,100 Rome, Watert. & Ogdensburg ..100 2,500,000 134)4 Aug. Feb., ’69! July. July, ’69 & :00i 3,‘69/0. 7,000,000 . 380,000 5,000,000 Feb. do & 100 Philadelphia and Read. Feb. 2 146" 146)4 Philadelphia and Trenton* Philadel., Germant.& Norrist’n* Ocr., ’69; Bid, Ask Rate. | 100; 4,943,420 Jan. 2,063,655 50; 482,400 Feb. 100 Pacific (of Ali-Boun).. Panama Pennsylvania. Mar. 6 Philadelphia and Erie* July, ’69 paid. Last Periods. Date. PAR! Jan. & July. ing. PRICE. DIVIDEND. Stock Out¬ stand¬ 86 12 24 86% ’69 .... July, ’69 June, '69 H2% July, ’69 377,100 April & Oct. Oct.*,* ’*69 8% 731,200 Cape Cod 60 801,905 Jan. & July. July, ’69; Catawissa* 50 1,159,500 Jan. & July. July, ’69 105 110 5 do preferred 50 2,200,000 May & Nov. 'Nov., ’69 Rutland ioo 32 Cedar Rapids and Missouri* —100 5,432,000 do ICO: preferred & Aug. Feb.',' '’69 Feb. 3% do do pref May & Nov. May, "’69 St. Louis, Alton & Terre Haute. 26 28% 100; 2,300,000 Central Georgia & Banking Co..100 4,666',800 June & Dec. June, ’69 56 58 7 do do pref.100 2.040,000 Annually. May, ’69 91 Central of New Jersey 100 15,000,000 Jan. & July. Jan., ’69 91 j* St. do Louis, Jacksonv. & ChicagoMOOj 1,469,429 Central Ohio 50 2,500,000 June & Dec. Dee., ’68 60 Sandusky, Mansfield & Newark.100 901,841 do 500,000 June & Dec. June, ’69! preferred 50 Schuylkill Valley* 50: 576,050 Jan. & July. July, ’69 83 Cheshire, preferred 100 2,085,925 Jan. & July. July, ’69 Shamokin Valley & Pottsville* 50‘ 8 669,450 Feb. & Aug. Ang., ’69 "Chicago and Alton. Mar. 27....100 5.141.800 Mar. & Sept. Sept.,’69 149)4 Shore Line Railway 90 100 685,200 Jan. & July. July, ’69 100! 4 do do preferred 100 2,425,400 Mar. & Sept. Sept..’69 149 159)4 South Carolina 50 5,819,275 152 Chic., Burling. <fc Quincy. Aug. 7.100 13,825,025 Mar- & Sept. Sept., ’69 151)4 South Side (P. & L.) 100 1,363,600 100 4,390,000 Chicago and Great Eastern Southwest. Georgia.* Sep. 11.10) 3.919,900 Feb. & Aug. Aug., ’69 4 Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska*..100 1,000,000 Jan. & July. July, ’69 5 Syracuse, Bingli’ton & N. York. 100 1,814,1801 100 2,227,000 Chicago and Milwaukee* Terre Haute and Indianapolis "6' 50 1.988.150 Jan. & July. July,' *’69 Chicago and Northwest. Aug. 21.100 14.390.101 June & Dec. June, ’69 75)4 Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw 100 2,700,000 do do pref....100 18,159,097 June & Dec. June, ’69 do 88%; 89 do do 1st pref.100 1,700,000 Chic-, Rock Is. & Pac June 12. .100 14,000,000 April & Oct. ct., ’69 103)4 103% do do do 2d pref .100 1.000,000 Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton.100 3,500,000 April & Oct. Oct., ’69 0-8. 78 80 Toledo, Wabash & Western 100 9,387,000 57" 60* * Cincinnati, Riclirn. & Chicago* .100 382,600 do do do pref.100 1 000,000 May & Nov. May, ’69 73 Cincinnati, Sand. & Cleveland.. 50 2,989,090 Utica and Black River 100 l,497,7CO Jan. & July. July, ’69 do do do pref. 50 393,073 May & Nov. Nov., ’69 Vermont and Canada* iai 2.250,000 June & Dec. June, ’69 50 1,676,345 Cincinnati and Zanesville Vermont and Massachusetts 100 2.860,000 Jan. * July. Jan., ’69 Clev ,Col.,Cin.& Bid. May 15..100 10.460.900 Feb. & Aug. Aug.* 75% Virginia and Tennessee '’69, 100 2,941,791 Cleveland and Mahoning* 50 2,056,750 May & Nov. Nov.,’69! do do 555,500 Jan. & July. July, ’69 pref. 100 Cleveland and Pittsburg. Mar 27 50 6,85 ',591 Quarterly. 82 >4 ov.,’691 Western (N. Carolina) 100 2,227,000 Jan. & July. Jan., ’64 Columbus, Chic. & Ind. Central*.100 11,100,000 Quarterly. Oct., ’67j 24 Wilmington and Manchester... .100 1,147,018 Columbus and Xenia* 50 1,786,800 Dec. & June June, ’69 95 Wilmington and Weldon 1,463,775 50 1,500,000 May & Nov. Nov., ’69! Concord Worcester and Nashua 100 1,550,000 Jan. & July July, ’69 Concord and Portsmouth 100 350,000 Jan. & July. July, ’69 Connecticut & Passumpsic, pref.100 2,084.200 Feb. & Aug. Aug., ’691 4'aiial. 100 1,700,000 Jan. & July. July, ’69 Connecticut River 129 50 1,983,568 June & Dec. June, ’69 Chesapeake and Delaware 84 Cumberland Valley 50 1.816.900 April & Oct. April,’69 Chesapeake and Ohio 25 8,229,594 20 25 Dayton and Michigan* 100 2,400,000 Delaware Division* 50 1,683,350 Feb. & Ang. Aug., ’69 90' 92 50 Delaware*... 891,206 Jan. & July. July,' ’69 Delaware and Hudson ia> 15.000,(XX> Feb. & Aug. Aug., ’69 120 123% Delaware, Lackaw. & Western 50 14,100,600 Jan. & July. July, ’69 !lo6" 109% Delaware and Raritan 100 4,999,400 Feb. & Aug. Aug., ’69 Detroit and Milwaukee. June 27.100 452,350 Lcliigb Coal and Navigation 50 8,139,800 May & Nov. May, ’67 67% do do pref.... 50 2,095,000 16 | 10 Monongnhela Navigation Co.... 50 90 728,1a1 Jan. & July. July, ’69 Dubuque and Sioux City* 100 2,142,250 Jan. & July. Inly, ’691 3)4 108 Morris (consolidated) lOi 1,025,000 Feb. & Aug. 26% do do pref. ..100 1,988,170 Jan.& July. July, ’691 do 3)4, ... tO preferred 100 i 175,0a1 Feb. & Aug. Feb.',' '’69 10s. Eastern (Mass.) 100 3,883,300 Jan. & July. July, ’691 4 Ul4% Pennsylvania 50 4.300,000 EastTenn. Georgia, Ocr. 9 100 1,290,067 & Ang. Feb., ’67 Schuylkill Navigation (consol.j. 50 1,908,207 Feb. East Tennessee and Virginia....100 1,902,000 | do' pref. 30 50 2.888,977 Feb. & Aug. Feb., ’67 Elmira and Williamsport* 50 60 500,000 May & Nov. Nov., ’09 jSusquehaniia & Tide-Water 501 2,002,746 do do pref.. 50 80 500, OCX) Jan. & July.! July, ’69! i Union, preferred 50j 2,907,850 Erie. April 17 100 70,000,000 Feb. & Aug.! Feb., ’66. ! *2"Mi 28 % West Branch and Susquehanna. 50; 1,100,000 Jan. & July. Jan., ’65 do preferred 100 8.536.900 ! *48 [Lee., ’69' ; .. Erie and Pittsburg Miscellaneous 50 962,990 ! 58 j 58 100 3,540,000 •Jan. & July.'July,’69! Fitchburg 130% 131 40 j Coal.—American 25j 1,500,000 Mar. & Sept. Mar., ’69 Georgia. May 29 100 4,156,000;Jan. & July.'July, ’691 Ashburton ! 50j 2,500,000 Grand Trunk (Can.).. 100 14,367,950 Butler 25 : 500,000 June & Dec. Dec., ’68 60 cts. Great Western (Can.) 100 17,39-1,695 Cameron Hannibal and St. Joseph 100 1,822,000 Central 100 2,000,000 Jan. & July. July, ’69 50" 57% |*07% 108 ! do do pref....100 5,078,000 1 108% 109 Cumberland 100 5,000,000 26% 26% Hartford N. Haven, Oc:. 23...100 3,300,000 Quarterly. [Sept., ’69! 240 230 Pennsylvania 50 3;200,000 Quarterly. Alig.; ’69 Housatonic, preferred 100 2,000,000 ! [July, ’69j Spring Mountain 50 1,250,0a1 Jan. & July. Jan., ’69 50 Huntingdon and Broad Top* 50 494,380 i I 1 Spruce Hill 10 i,ao,ooo do do pref. 50 190,750 Jan. & July. Jan., ’68, AY ilkesbarre 3% 100 3,400,000 May & Nov, Nov.,'69 70" Illinois Central. Mar. 27 100 25,277,270 Feb. & Aug. Aug., »&>% 186% Wyoming Valley ’69j 100 1,250,000 Feb. & Aug. Aug., ’66 Indianapolis, Cin. & Lafayette,. 50 6,185,897 Mar. & Sent. Sept.,’67| 25 i 28 ; Gas.—Brooklyn 145" : S5 2,ooo,ax> Feb. & Aug. Aug., ’69 .Jeffersonville, Mad. & Iu.,0 -t 30100 2,000,000 Jan. & July. Jan., ’66; 65 j 66 Citizens (Brooklyn) 20 1,200,000 Jan. & July. July, ’69 160 Lackawanna and Bloomsburg.. 50 1,335,000 Harlem 50 1,000,000 Feb. & Aug. Aug., ’69 Lake SI10.& Mich, South. Apl.2‘.10) 35,000, (XX) Feb. & Aug. Alig., ’69 8'% i 88% Jan. & July. July, ’69 Jersey City and Hoboken... 20 386.000 do do guar. 100 533.500 Feb. & Aug. Feb., ’69 Manhattan 50 4,000,000 Jan. & July. July, '69 235 Lehigh and Susquehanna 50 8,739,800 May & Nov. May, ’6Metropolitan 100 2,800,000 Lehigh Valley 50 16,058,150 Quarterly Oct., ’69 New York 2% 1107% 107% 50 1,000,000 May & Nov. May, ’69 Little Miami 50 3,572,400 June & Dec. June, ’69 96 Williamsburg 50 3%) 95 750,000 Jan. & July. July, ’69 Little Schuvlkill* 50 2,646,100 Jan. & July. July, ’69 4% 84 84% Improvement—Canton 731,250 52% 16% Long Island 50 3,000,000 Aug., ’66 Boston Water Power lO) 4,000,000 July,' '’66 15% Louisv., Cin. & Lex., prf. S. p. 11.100 848,315 Ian!’& July. July, ’69 Brunswick City 4'9" do commo 50 1,61 736 Jan. <fe July. Jnlv, ’69 Cary Improvement 62% Louisville and Nashville 100 s,681,500 Feb. & Aug. Aug., ’69 Telegraph—West.Union. hep.25.10) 41,063,100 Jan. & July. Tuly, Louisville, New Alb. & Chicago.100 2,800,000 S* 'acifi • & Atlantic 2 R.OOOfOO Quarterly. Jnlv, SO Macon and Western 100 2,000,000 June Dec. June, ’69 Express.—Adams 100 10.0)0,000 Quarterly. April,’68 57% Maine Central. loo 1.611.500 Amer.Merchants’ Union....100 lSiOOO.OOO Marietta & Cin., 1st prf. ' ng.21. 50 8,130,719 Mar. & Sept. Sept., ’66 United States 10) 6,000,00) Quarterly. Nov'.,' '69 do do 2d pref.. 50 4,460,368 Mar. & Sept. Sept., ’66 Wells, Fargo & Co 10) 10,000,00) do do common 2,029,778 Steamship—Atlantic Mail 100 4.000,000 Quarterly. Dec-',’ ’67 Manchester and Lawrence 1P< 1,000,000 May & Nov. No ".*,’69 Pacific Mail ICO 20,000,000 Quarterly. Sent.,’69 52% 52% Memphis and Charleston. sep.25."5 5,312,725 June* Dec. June, ’69 Trust.—Farmers’ Loan & Trust. 25 1,0)0,000 Jan. & July. July, ’69 Michigan Central. July 24 100 11.197,3-48 .Jan. & July. July, ’69 5 120 National Trust 100 1,000,000 Jan. & July. July, ’69 120% Milwaukee and St. Paul. M av 2 '.1(X 7,151.069 Jan. & July. Tan., ’69 14.9. New York Life and Trust.. .10C- 1,000,00) Fetf. & Aug. '•ug., ’69 68% do do pref... 100 8,188,272 January. Ian., ’69 7 & 10 v 83% 81 Union Trust 100 1,000,000 Jan. & July. July, ’69 Mine Hill & Schuylkill Llaven* 4 50 3,775,6a) Jan. & July. July, ’69 United States Trust lO» 1,500,000 Jan. & July. July, ’69 105% 103 Mississippi Central* 100 2,948,785 Mining.—Mariposa Gold 100 2,836,600 Mobi e* v-ontg. pref Aug. i4.. 1,78s.710 Mariposa Gold, pref .100 8,693.400 Mobile and Ohio 100 4,269,820 do do Trust, certif. 2,824,000 Jan. & July. Montgomery and West Point ...1(0 1,644,104 June & Dec. Dec., ’67 4 Quicksilver. Apt. 27 10C 10,000,000 Feb., ’65 5 gold Morris and Essex* 50 4.823.500 Jan. & July. July, ’69 3J* 87% 88 Nashua and Lowell ICO 5 720,000 Mav & Nov. May. ’69 Nachv. * Chattanooga. Sep. H..100 2,056,541 Naugatuck. Mar.*1 too 1.818.900 Feb. * Aug. Aug., ’69 "4' iis" iis" N, Y. & BROOKLYN CITY PASSENGER RAILROADS. New Bedford and Taunton 100 4 Quotations by A H. Nicolny, Srrck Broker* Auctioneer, 43 Pine Street 500,000 Tan. & July. July, ’69 New Haven & 65 3 70 Northampton 100 1,500,000 Jan. & July. New Jersey 5 joo 6,250,000 Feb. & Aug. Aug., ’69 PAR LAST DIVIDENDS PAID. NAME OF ROAD. STOCK. BID. ASK ns% 120 New London N ortli ern : 95.000 Mar. & !!!'.! 100 4 8ept. Sept.,’68 N. Y. central & Hudson River.. 100 •5,0 0,000 4 Bleecker street and Fulton Ferry. 100 900,000 40 45 cct., ’G. do do certificates. .100 21,491,450 109 200,000 Broadway (Brooklyn) do do old inter, certif..100 22,829,000 4 53" 60" Aug., ’69 Broadway and Seventh Avenue 100 2,100,000 New York and Harlem. 4 132% 133% Brooklyn, Bath & Corey Island... 100 99,850 Apl. 3.. 50 5,500,000 Jan. & July. July, ’69 do do 4 Jan. & July. July, ’69 136 195" 206" prer. 50 1,500,000 Brooklyn City 100 1,500.000 New York and New Haven 5 100 9,000,000 Jan. & July. July, ’69 140 141 Brooklyn City and Newtown 100 400,000 January, i8 0 *i% 80% New York, Prov. and Boston ...100 Brooklyn, Prospect Park & Flatb. 100 254.600 3% 2,000,000 Jan. & July. July, ’69 Norfolk and Petersburg, pref...100 ■•••• 300.500 Brooklyn and Rockaway Beach... 100 144.600 “T Bush wick (Brooklyn) 100 263,200 v? do do guar. .100 137.500 Jan. & July. July, ’69 North Carolina. Oct. 2 6 100 4,000,000 J uly, ’fis Central Park, North & East Rivers 100 1,065,200 35 45 Northern of New Hampshire.... 100 8,068,400 June & Dec. ’ec.,’69 4 Conev Island (Brooklyn) 104 105 66 100 500,000 Northern Central. May 10....... 50 4.798.900 Quarterly. Nov ’69 S5 2 86 80 10 Dry Dock, East B’dway & Battery 100 1,200,000 Northeast. (S. Carolina). May 1. 165 180 898,950 Eighth Avenue 100 1,000,000 j :::: Forty-second St. & Grand St. Ferry 100 748,000 Nov. ’6(),Bemi-*n’l.. 155,000 May & Nov. P*. do 8 P* c*» prof 5% 105 North Missouri I 100 7,700,000 Grand Street & Newtown (B’klyn) 100 170,000 70 ar ii% •north 5s. 74 76 Hudson Avenue (Brooklyn) Feb.. ’69! Pennsylvania 50 8,150,000 100 106,700 Norwich and Worcester *... 5 100 2,863,700 Jan. & July. July, ’69 V2 112 Metropolitan (Brooklyn) 100 194,000 66 Ogdensburg & L. Champ. Sep. 4.100 8,049,100 Annually. Feb., 69 S 63 100 797,320 Ninth Avenue 2 do do 4 100 390,000 April. ’61, quarterly pref.100 1.994.900 April & Oct 102 Second Avenue 67 103 78 )ct., ’69 Ohio and 100 750,000 Nov. ’69, semi-an’l.. Sixth Avenue 5 120 Mississippi. Mar. 20.... 100 19,522,900 26% 26% 100 1,170,000 Nov. ’69, quarterly. Third Avenue 4 190 8% 8,344,400 June & Doc Dec.. ’69' do pref n „ 100 80g Qd Creel and 76 Yah Brunt Street (Brooklyn).. Allegheny River. 50 4,259,460 Quarterly. Oct 191 *% 100, 75,000 • • .... . . „ .... .... . • • • • * * * .... .. .., . ... • •••• .... .... .... • • • • .... •a* it 55* . .... .... . • .. . i?*/ 1?* .... .. .. .... .... .... .... , v. .. .... .... .... * .... ..I, , , , , • A* .... - ... . S’ f ’ THE 690 [November 27, 1869. CHRONICLE. NATIONAL AND STATE SECURITIES. by giving ns immediate notice of any error discovered in our Subscribers will confer a great favor Marked thns * >uutandin< in default for internet are PRICE. interest. Amonnt DENOMINATION. Rat* Bid Payable. Marked thu» * are >uts Landing in default for interest. Loan, funding Public Debt.... I860). Bearing Coin Tnterest - Loan of ’til (act -Tune do *61 ( do 30,’Gl), ^eg.. do ), cpn. Oreg. War(act Mar. 2, ’61), yearly j 13,035,000 5,3*0,01 6 6 Jan. & July do 56 July. 1881 1881 1881 1881 1881 1881 1882 1882 1884 945,000 16 Jan. & July "do ( do do ),iyear. j Loans (acts July 17, ’61, *i 165.923.650 6 Jan. & July 6 do & Mar. 6, ’6.5), cpn i 93,398.950 6 May & Nov. Loan: 5-.0’*(actFeb.25,’62),r^.. 129,-16,55 do do ( do do ), cpn.. 8*6/55, 50 6 Loan: 5-20’s (act Mar. 3, ’61), reg.. 68.610.750 6 May & Nov. 6 do 188* do 6 *,833,050 (& J ne 30 ’64), c/m. 6 May & Nov 1885 Loan: 5-20’e (act Mar. 3,’65), reg.. 64.232,050 do 1885 do ( do do ), cpn.. 139,095,20^’ 6 Loan: 5-20’s (act Mar 3,’65N),rc^.. 90.400.650 6 Jan. & July 1885 do do ),c/m. do ( 24^,598,300 Loan:5-20’s (act Mar.8,’65),rc$r... do 6 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 5 5 5 95.184.0iX) )cpn... 284,404,950 9,850.0C0 do ( do do )cpn . 83,689,350 Loan of’58(act June 14,’58), reg. 5,245 000 do do ),cpn... 11,755.000 ( do Loan of’60(act June22,'60), reg... 6,049,000 do ( do do ).cpn... 973,000 Loan: 10-40’s(act Mar.3,’64),rcg. 197,949,550 do ( do do ),c/m... 66.617.750 Loau ( do do 5-20's (act Mar. 3,’65yregy.. : Bearing Currency Interest— Pacific RR. tt’ds(Jul.l’62&Jul.2,’64 62,180,320 Three percent. Legal Tender cer¬ tificates (act of Mar. 2, ’67) 47/40,000 Navy Pension Fond 14,003.000 6 do 688,000 660,200 •( do ). Sterling Bonde(extended) do do New Bonds ... 473.800 732.800 82,500 . do Mar.&Sept. do Jan. & July lie* 117* 1:7* 112* 112* 114* 1:4* lis" 112* 112* 112* 114* lii* 1887 1887 uT- 115* 1888 1*88 1S74 1874 1871 1871 1904 1904 ill* 1895 May7 & Nov. 1872 do do Jan. & July 1883 1886 1886 do do . . .... 107* 107* ... 107* .... .... 6J 1836 1870 1986 do (Oct., ’69) $4,425,000: New Bonds of 1869 4,425,000 ... CALiroRNiA(Jnly 1,’69) $4,695,500: Civil Bonds ofl857 do . do of 1860 Soldiers* Relief bonds do Bonnty Bonds.. (g dd) 2,691,000 “ ... “ Connbcti’t( Apr.1’69) $6,674,992: WarBonds(May, 61)10or20y’r do do (Oct.,’61) 10 or 20 y’r do do do do do l 93" 19,000 8,400 192,221 134,311 600,000 888,000 200,000 Southern Vermont RR. Loan. Eastern Railroad Loan Norwich & Worces. RR.Loan. Boet Har.f. & Erie RR.(st rl.). Michigan (lan. 1,’69)$3,373,5G0: Renewal Loan Bonds Two Million Loan War Loan Bonds War Bonnty Bonds Ste Marie Canal Bonds Minnesota (June,'69) $300,000: State Buildings Loans do do (new) .. S:oux War Loan 1862 Mississippi (Jan. 1, ’67) $ : State Bonds (Banks)* Missouri (Jan. 1, ’69)$16,084,000: State Bonds Bonds of J867-68 Bonds to North Mo. RR Bonds to Cairo & Fulton RR. Bonds to Platte Co RR Bonds to Iron Mountain RR... S. W. Br. Pacific RR S W. Br. Pacific KK (guar),.. Haunibal & St. Joseph RR.... Nevada (June 1, 1869): $558 760 Bonds of 1865 Bonds of 1S67 N. Hamp. (June 1, ’69)$3,171,010: War Debt of July,’61-’62 do of Sept. 1,1864... . of July 1, 1866....... d<> N. Jersey (Nov.30,’68)$3,096,100: War Bonds of 1861 (tax free).. ’* of 1863 (taxfree) “ of 1864... N. York (Oct. 1868) $44,968,786: Genera] Fund Bonds . Jan. & July do various. • 0 Jan. & July do do do do 85 1874 1&66, Funding Conpons 1857, Free ech’irdOb eld bySta e) 1867, itk'ch. & *piicnl. Fair.... 1869, Mi * & Mex.XJult Canal. 1869, Penitentiary Bonds 1868, N. La. & Texas Bk Maine (Jan. 1, ’69):$5,053,500: Civil Loan Bonds, 1855-61 War Loan of 1861 do do of 1863 Bounty Loan of1863, War Loan of 1864 MARrLAND(S’p.80,’63)$ll,Ti*,l 90: Bonds to RR’s. &(s erling).. ° (currency) .. .... Defence Loan.... Bounty Loan..., Southean Relief M AS8ACHUS.(Oct.l,’69)$27,931,420: State Almshouse Loan *, d<> do* ’ do State Houst Loan Lunatic Hospital. &cM Loan „ ... LunatldHospful (W*st.Ma«*.), ... 1870 1870 1870 !870 1870 1877 1877 var 1879 1879 1879 July May & Nov 1866 1868 .... .... 9S* Apr. & Oct. May & Nov. Mar. & Sept 1872 Jan. & July 1S93 Various. 69-’0( Various. 1886 May & Nov. 1907 80 59 J. J. & F.A 5) J&n. & &July July. .... 6 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 5 6 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 6 M Mar.& --- .... Jonc&Dec 99 1870 ’79-94 • , 90 t r 92 .... 67*' 82 60 <0 1897 1899 1%9 1909 .. . 65*’ 70 70 75 97* 98* 1871 1880 1889 . ... ... do do do do 1870 93* .... 1865 1865 1890 do :94* •«•••••• 1888 1873 May & Nov. Apr. & Oct. do Jan. & July June A Dec . ... . Inclined Plane (1849) 1872 • • • • • • • 453,000 6 2,830,000 6 513,000 2,478,< 00 1,629,000 1,589,000 8,000,000 6 6 6 6 6 7 6 58 760 10 500,000 15 999,200 6 600,000 1,250,000 6 6 1,499,800 1,0**2,900 6 6 6 593,400 700,000 7 2,185,000 7 23,757,000 7 1,189,780 6 800,000 6 2,607,300 6 6,726,8C0 6 2,250,000 6 1,400,000 6 900,000 5 348,107 5 5 5 do do do do do do do do do do • • !!!! .... • • • • •• • • i«« • lf-87 do do do do do do do 76-’91 ’73-’8G July 6 5 4* Bondsloar.ed to RR’s., etc. .* Bonds endorsed for RR’s., etc* Funded Interest (new bonds) * State Bonds (debt proper).... * do do ( do >....* do do ( do ^....* Vermont (^eb., ’69) $’,427,600: War Loan Bonds, coapon do do reg .. .... Virginia (Nov. 1’68)$39,601,083: Dollar Bonds (old), coupon*. do do registered* July var. May & Nov. ’84-’89 Apr. & Oct. ’70-’74 J.,A.,J.&0. Jan. & July do do do J.,A.,J,&0 do do do Jan. & July do J., AJ. &0. do 1877 18 7 Will. 1878 1872 1873 1874 ’75-’77 1875 Will. 1871 1874 Funded Interest (new), coup* do do (new), reg/ Wisconsin ( July,’69) $104,000): War Loan Bond#,..,?,.. . 99 • • % • IS-' 100 139 109 101 101 101 101 101 « • • • • • • • V** • • • • 101* 99" 34* 42* 32” 35 1871 5 5 6 6 Jan. & Jnly Apr. & Oct. Jan & July do Feb. & Aug do do do do do do do 7870 1879 1882 1882 1877 1873 1871 18 2 1872 1877 1877 1882 1882 1,111,000 6 848,000 6 352,453 6 5 6 6 6 Jan. & July 1870 do 1868 do ’77 ’97 do ’76-’79 do 1897 6 6 6 6 Jan. & July do Long. Long. 239,000 6 737,000 6 239,166 5* do Mar.&Sept Apr. & Oct. Jan. & July Feb. & Aug do 1882 1883 1893 1894 103 103 Long. 91* 100* 101 10254 103 106* 106* 108* 96 96 96 96 97 97 97 97 65 70 66 67 57* 51* si* Apr. & Oct. Var. do do Var. Var. 1,398,640 5 1,227,000 201,000 6 6 Jun. & Dec. ’71’78 10,963,000 19,980,032 1,865,000 !• 0,326,801 6 6 5 6 6 Jan. & 101,0001 £8 1870 1875 1881 1886 6 5 3,948,599 91* ’97-’02 do 726,950 1,706,000 91 Jan. A July ’70-’84 S6-’96 do 6 26,957,000 2,196,000 90* Jan. & 5 484,000 2,275,000 1,000,000 1,282,971 90* 90* 1872 9.237,050 Rh. 1st,. (*uly, ’69) $2,933,000: War Bonds of 1S6 a do do of 1863 do do of 1863 do do of 1864 S G'AROLiNA(July,’69)$5,406,468: Fire Loan Stock (act. ’38) do stg («ien on B’k S. C.) State House ti’ke (acts ’56-‘63). Blue R*dge RR b b (act ’54) . New bonds—funding fact ’67).. 90* Jan. & July ’75-’85 90,400 5 .. 90* 1S70 92,850 .. 90 1876 Mar.&Sept. Jon & 90 74-’78 90 ’77-’89 90 ’89-’90 ’74-’b9 90* 7,909.600 Sterling1 bonds (old) coupon* • July 82-’90 do May & Nov 1,642.123 5 4,997,150 Jan. & Jan. & July do do do 176,158 340,000 2 820,750 •• ■ • ’41-’71 Apr. & Oct. 1899) 2,026,170 1,600,000 4,095,309 2,400,000 400,000 3,918,000 (1853) Military Loan (1861) fctock Lean 0867/.. 1872 105 • • • 68-’98 41 Various. ’68-’98 Various. 31 Jan. & July 1900 Jan. & July 1899 ) 112,000 do do (old), 1874 urn do do do 1877 1878 May & Nov 400.000 468.000 Tenne8SEP(Oc.1,’69)$36,394,090: J.,A ,J.&0. # Jan. & July do authorised . 102* 7,000,000 6 j- do 31st Dec., 1875 do 30th June, 1881. do 31st Dec., 1886 Domestic Bonds (Union Loan) Oregon ('opt, ’66) $176,150 : Reliefand Bonnty Bonds Penn’a (Dec 1 ’68) $33472,951 : Stock Loan (of 1840) 93 1886 1890 1879 May & Nov 2,439,900 16.240,000 (special tax) Ohio ( Jan. 1. ’69) $10,521,479: Loan due after 31st Dec., 1870 97 Jan. & July 100,000 100,000 100,000 421.000 (871 1877 1910 1878 July do do 463,000 86,000 3,090,00 91 ’93 1890 73-’83 Jan. & 200,000 1,729,000 596.500 14,335,500 * Sept 1883 Feb. & Ang. do do 1,926,000 25,000 Coupon Bund*(1832) Various. do Jan. & July 2,035,800 do do do ... .... 68-*7' 7.3 Mar. & Sept Mar. &Se t 7 8 Apr. & Oct. 125,000 400,000 New Bonds RR. .... 88-’90 Ap*. & Oct. rai’roads, etc.* i do do ex coup* f Funding Bonds* (new) Jan. July do do 200,000 Bonds lor do Jan. & Various. do ... •. 1894 1894 do Mar. & Sep. ’71-’86 Apr. & Oct. ’69-’71 Apr. & Oct. 18S8 Apr. & Oct. 88-’90 N.Carolina(Oc1.’69)$19,209,945: Mar. & Sep. Jan. & Ju y .... ) ... General Fund Bonds do do Canal Fund Bonds do do do do GO do do do do Geneial Fund Bonds do do do Canal Fund Bonds do do do . 6 ... 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 May&Nov. Aug. 6 6 6 8 6 6 1883, Relief of State Treasury Bonds to various rai Toads. 18* 5, Levee Bonds 3867, do do « • , Bounty Fund Bonds,coupon... do do do registered. 93 81 6 6 6 5 Oari»y Ho-pital do do • May & Nov. 4,379,500 4,000,744 3,505,000 -3,143,096 554,180 Troy & Greenf. RR. Loan(st’g) do ‘ do 966.500 (home) do do (sterling 2,952,400 do do do do do do (sterling) War Loan (currency) Western Railroad Loan (strl’g) do do (sirl’sr; .. Bond-* for Military Purposes Bonds 5 percent Louisiana (June 1,*69)$ 10,583,880: do. • Feb. & May & Nov. 1872 1874 7 6 . oo * ... 5 6 do * : Kansas (Nov. ’68/ $1,095,175 : Bonds issued from’61 to’68.. bonds Fanding Ter. Debt, &c.. Kentucky (Oct, ’68) $1,936,894: Bonds of 1841-’42 Bonds to North. Bank of Ky . Jan. & July Wffi do ’68-’74 6 6 6 /War Loan Bonds oo Jan. & July 6 Normal University bonds Thorn»oaLoan bonds do do lo do do 98 98 98 1885 6 6 . ’63) $1.700,600 do 7 7 6 per act March 12,1868... Western & Atlantic RR. Bonds, War Bonds Indiana (Jai^, State Bonds * April&Oct. ’74-’84 7 Bonds, do do Atlantic & GulfRR. Bonds Illinois (Oct. 15, ’63) *5,999,003: Ill. & dich.CanalB’ds...coupon do do ..regit'd do co sterl’g.coup do do sterl’g . reg Internal I nprovement {new)... Inter st bonis of 1847 Interest stoct of 1857 Refunded Stock bonds 121* June & Dec ’96-’98 do do 1877 1880 1SS3 18SI 500,000 7 (uon-taxab.)(Mav,’65)20y’r Florida (Feb.,’69) $500,000 : do Jan. & July do do do Jan. & July do ’72-’82 do 18&3 . do 7 7 7 7 Jan. & July ’99-’00 6 6 6 6 6 (Nov.,’63)20years (May/64) lOor 20y’r State Bonds Georgia (Oct. 15,’63) $6,271,6*5: Western & Atlantic RR. B *nds 6 220,000 Bounty Fund Loan Payable. Jan. & July 1870 June & Dec. ’70-’72 do 70-’7* May & Nov. 1882 Jan. & July ’7l-’76 do 77-’78 1883 do 1894 do 3,000,000 do do do Coast Defense Loan . Arkansas ... .... .... ... 8 1,941,000 ds do do 5 5 5 5 6 6 168,000 • « do Jan. & July do do Bay Lands Loan. Union Fund Loan 1885 3 3 ... State Securities. Alabama (Jan. 1, ’69) $4,746,800: State Bonds, do do (extended). do Jan. & July do Jan. & July do fan. & Ju’y do Back (ate 150,000 38,000 164,00 General Statutes Loan National [Nov. 1, INTEREST. Amount DENOMINATIONS. A*keo Tables do do 99 100 ’71-’78 July Long. Long. 50* • Jan. & July Long. do Long Jan, A July ’T7-’88 • • • • • 54 • THE November 37, 1869.] *nb»cilber» f ' RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST. will confer a great favor by giving ns Immediate notice of any error discovered In onr Tables. Pages 3 and 4 of Bonds will be published next week. ' CHARAC¬ SECURITIES ISSUED. COMPANIES, AND TER OF rn. INTEREST. Amount Out¬ explanation of this standing full o COMPANIES, AND CHARAC¬ PRICE. 'S 6 S When Where paid. paid. preceding page. £3 >, Bid. •r =« For a full explanation of this Table see “ Railroad Monitor” 00 < on a fdffifw.g*ktoo.000 68). Loud. <t jfOct.1, 1st 2d ^.OW.tiOO).... (Feb-. 1, 69). for Mortgage, MoUgapXfor funding) Id CBAth’Loan) J. & J 1,000,000 1,000,000 802,000 J. & J M.& N A.& O Jet Mart., skg fund (Buff, ext.) 1st Mort. (Franklin Branch).. 2d Mort. (Penn.) 2d Mort. (N. Y.) ;.. M Mort. (Ohio) 4,000,000 400,000 7,144,400 j J ) 3,908,100 ) Consolidated Mort. (1st series). 18,947,500 Consolidated Mort. (2d series). 7,000,000 ««!• Bds of fe h ’53, £l(j0,w6 Sterl! Sfi °5 Nov. l, Ohio (Oct. 1, ’66): ...... of 1850 of 1853 Baltimore Loan of 1855 2d Mort. (N. W. Va. RR.) of ’53 3d Mort. (N. W. Va. RR.) of ’55 Loan Loan BaydeNoq.dcMarquet.(Jan.l ’69) Income Income Bonds of Oct. 1,1865... Bonds of April 1,1866.. Belvidere Delaware (Jan. 1, ’69) : 1st Mort. of 1852 (guar. C. & A.) 2d Mort. of 1854 8d Mort., of 1857 Blue Ridge of S. Car. (Jan. 1, ’69) Dollar Bonds (Western RR) 1st Mort. (old)....1st Mort. (new) 1st Mort. (new) guar, hv Erie... Mass. L. (sec. by 14,000,0001st M.) Boston dc Lowell (Dec. 1, ’68): Convertible Bonds of 1853 Scrip Certificates Mortgage (whart purchase).... Buff., Brad, dk PUtsb. (Oct. 1, ’68): 1stMortgage Buff., Corny dc Pittsb. (Nov. 1, ’68) 1st Mortgage Buffalo dkErie (Nov. 1, ’69). Comp. B’ds (B. & St. Line RR.) Comp. B’ds (B. & St. Line RR.) Comp. B’ds (B. & St. Line RR.). Comp. B’ds (Erie & N’the’6t RR) Comp. B’ds (Buff. & Erie RR.). Buffalo, N. Y. dc Erie (Oct. 1, ’68) 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Burl., C. R.dkMinneso. (July 1, ’69): 1st M. (gold) conv. skg f’d, tax fr Burl, dk Missouri R (Feb. 20, ’69) 1st Mort. (land «& railroad) Bonds conv. Into pref st’k (1st s. Bonds conv. Into pref. st’k (2d s) BondB conv. Into pref. st’k (3d s) Income Bonds r (gold) Amboy (Jan. 1,’ ;69) i, Sterlng Loan, £337,250 Sterling Loan (new) £396,000.... Comdex dk Atlantic (Jan. 1, ’69): 1st Mort. (for Co.) j an. $350,000) i,’69): Catmcissa (Nov. 1, ’68): lit Mortgage Minneso. (J an .1, ’69): lit l?t to w&vorly,14 m.) Hinn.Line,67m.) 'n'Xtesou.R.OJan.1,’69): iland grant) V: ^Jan •1 u69>: SH’ (Atch& Pike’s P. kR.) S* loan) ufiSlSf Georgia (Dec. 1, ’68): 885.500 484,000 • M,& N 3 J. & J New Ycrl 1896 .... A.& O 85>$ A. & O. London. 44 A. & O. A. & O. New York A. & O. London. «4 J. & D. 44 A.& O. A.«fc O. New York J. & J. London. 44 ' A. & O. 85* 100 95 1890 Portland. ... . .... . .... . .... 100,000 150,000 A. & A. & O. 481.500 .... 0Ca 44 44 44 J. J. O.l 44 • . 1st • • . , , • » 93 - „ 93 RR) V,v68)**’ by St. $a- Central RR.) 7 M2KCY** Central RR.).. • . - . t T 98 93 to .... .... 1871 .... 86 745,000 76 204,000 J. <fe J. C ]harlest’n 1881 593,000 2,051,520 798,000 J. & J. A. & O. A. & O. London. Boston. ’ 70-1-6 ’ 69-’71 1S75 400,000 J. & J. Boston. 1881 204,000 150,000 200,000 496,000 F. & A. >few York J. & J Boston. J. & J. New York J. & J. Boston. 18S5 1870 1870 1889 600,000 14,000,000 3,000,000 3,000,000 M. & S. Boston. 44 J. & J. J. & J. New York J. & J. Boston. 1884 1899 1899 1899 J. & J. A.& O. A. & O. 1873 1873 1879 J. & J..New York 18SG 50 18.. GO 44 Albany. Boston. (New 700,000 J. & J. 400,000 100,000 200,000 300,000 2,700,000 2,000,000 380,000 J. & D. New York M.& N .... so* 1st Mortgage (general) Extension Bonds 1st Mort. (Gal. & Chic. Un.RR.) 2d Mort. (Gal. & Chic. Un. RR.) Elgin and State RR. Bonds 1st Mortgage (Peninsula RR.).. Cons. Skg F’d B’ds, conv. 'till ’70 Equipment Bonds. Equipment Bonds. 1st Mort. (Beloit & Madison RR) c Chicago, R. I. dk Pacific (Apr. 1,’69) 1st Mort. (C. & R. I. RR.) 1st Mort. (C., R. I. & P. RR.) c Cincin., Ham. cfc Dayt. (Apr. 1,’69) 1st Mortgage .... • . . ....! 5,000,000 240,000 600,000 1,200,000 1,000,000 2,250,000 J. & J. New York A.& O. New York A. & O. F. & A. M.& N. J. & D. A.&O. London. M. & S. 60 J. & J A.& O. Phil adel. 305,000 Pliiladel. ’69-’97 236,500 F.& A. Philadel. 1882 294,000 1,407,000 A. & O. New York a J. & J. 3,586,000 A. & O. New York ilOO M.& N. New York & J. F.& A Savannah. 505,000 ! 100,000 206,000 988,000 800,000 210,000 New York 1909 942,600 J. & J New York j 1881 600,000 J. & D New York 1899 M.& N Yar New York 1874 397,000 182,000 1,098,000 F.& M.& F.& F. & A N A A A N J J New York 1.249.500 755,000 3.594.500 484,000 1,919,000 1,029,000 200,000 189,000 1,010,000 8,296,000 101,000 1,375,000 363,000 M.& N J. & J J. & J J. & J 1,250,000 M.& N New York 1880 • • J. & J 1885 J. & J New Yorki 1877 F.& M.& J. & J. & 1875 1884 1878 M.& 1898 1915 1874 1871 1888 Q.—F A.& O 60--000 New York New 400,000 J. & J 560.000 J. & J. New York J. & J. 1895 M.& S New York F.& A. J. & D. 1877 1900 1890 M.& N. New York 90 New Yorki 1895 1893 0,000 65,000 350,000 Yorkj 1877 70 1889 J. & D. New J. & J. J. & J. A. & O F.& A. New York M. & S. J. & J. 1878 1876 1873 1873 1,106,489 876,000 M. & S. M.& N. J. & J. M.& N. 1,000,000 J. & J. Charlest’n 1888 821,000 J. & J. New York M.& N. A. & O. J. & J. J. & 1). A. & O. New York F.& A. 18.. 18.. 18.. 18.. 1908 1909 A. & O. New’ York 1897 1,595,000 1,243,000 400,000 300,000 2,000,000 923,COO 24S,(XX ) 7 M.& S 250,00( ) 6 M. & S J. & D 6 500, OCX 295,(XX>. 7 Connecting (Nov. 1, ’68): 10 1870 1896 J. & J> J. & J 1,130,000 Sinking Fund Mortgage . . . Yorki ’69-’85 ’70-’99 1870 1870 York ew 1875 1892 1900 72 75 1905 New YorlI 1890 Boston. 1878 Boston. 1S76 ’76-T 44 |J. & D 88 ML ... ... 1,000,(XX 6 M.& S Philadel. 1900 875,000 6 6 M. & S M.& N New York 799,000 1891 1888 ... 161,000 109,500 Mortgage, guaranteed Cumberland dk reunsyl. (Jan.1,’69): 1st Mortgage I 2d Mort. (skg fund, $20,000 a v’r) I Cumberland Valley (Nov. 1, ’68): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage 85 8 8 A.& O A. & O Philadel. 1904 1908 ... 44 44 ;free 95 IstMort., skg 2d Mortgage 3d Mortgage Toledo Depot ■2,000,000 7 A.& O. New York fimd, $3f),000’ay’r. 2,783,000 6-12,000 703,000 169,500 7 7 7 7 J. & J. New York 1881 44 M.& S. 1884 a A. A O. 1888 M.&S. New York ’si-’fti 140,000 7 7 6 M. & S. Ncwr York 44 J. & D. 44 J. & D. 1879 1879 1879 7 J. & J. New York 6 J. & J. 1905 1905 500,000 6 170,000 100,000 6 J. & J. J. & J. J. <fe J. J. & J. Bonds | Dayton dk Union (July 1, ’68): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Income Mortgage 252,445 1st Mortgage 1st Mortgage 463,000 275,000 135.000 |Dayton <t Western (Dec. 1, ’68): Baltimore. 1st Mortgage bonds State Loan Bonds Guaranteed Bonds 93 Extension Mortgage Bonds j Del., Lack, dk ICftStcrn (Nov. 1,’68): 1890 1st Mort. 1st Mort. 2d Mort. 92 1877 J. & J. New York J. & J. J. & J. J.& J. New York 1880 1872 1884 1876 ’93-’94 £18 (Lack. & Western RR.) skg f’d (East. Ext. RR.) (D., L. & West.) free.. | Des Moines Valley (Jan. 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage Income Mortgage \Detroit dk Milwaukee (Jan. 1, *69): 1st Mortgage, convertible 2d Mortgage 1st Funded Coupons 2d Funded Coupons Bonds of June 30, ’66 (condit’ly) Sterling (Oak. & Otta. RR.) B’us Dollar (Oak. & Otta. RR.) B’ds. (Detr. & Pontiac RR.). 2d Mort, ODetr. & Pontiao BR,). 1st Mort. . 89 1885 1888 1885 1885 1882 730,000 491,200 121,000 Notes (Coupon) tax free 87 1S74 1898 J. & J .. 1st 1887 York! New 400,000 740,000 379,000 341,000 1st Mortgage Columbus dk Xenia (Dec. 1, ’68): 1st Mortgage Connecticut River (Dec. 1, ’68): 1st Mortgage, sinking fund... Connec. d- Pasmnn. R. (Aug. 1,’69): 1870 New York '62-’80 A.& Q. A.& Cous.lst M.SkgF’d for $15,000,000 Consol. 2d Mort. for $5,000.000. Colum. dk Hocking V. (Sept 1, ’6 >); 81 >£ 1S75 1875 1890 M. & S. Charlest’n j.;& j. Cn. dk Ind. (Jan.l, ’69): 2d Mort. (Col. & Ind. Cent. RR.) Income B’ds (Col. & Ind.C.RR.) Constru. B’ds (Chic.& Gt. E.RR) Income B’ds (Cliic. & Gt. E. RR) Union & l.onransn’t. 1st Mort... 87 1895 1895 J. & J. New York ’95-’99 J. & J. 1885 J. & J. 1884 J. & J. ’95-’99 834,000 J. & J. New York 976,000 \Delaicare (Jan. 1, ’69): M.& N & A. M.& S 1,000,000 1,300,000 Col., Chic, dk Ind. Cent. (Apr. 1 ,’69): 1916 M.& S 108 Frankfort. M.&S. New York 997,000 1st M. (C..C.&C.RR) $25,000 a yr 1st Mort. (Bell. & Ind. RR.) 1st M. (Ind., P’b’g & Clev. RR). 2d M. (Ind., P’b’g & Clev. RR.). Cleveland dc Mahoii. (Sept 1, *6j); 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage 1st Mort. (Hubbard Branch) Cleveland dk Pittsburg (Jan. 1, ’69): 2d Mort., for $1,200,000 3d Mort., for $2,000,000 4tli Mort., for $1,200,000....: Cons. Skg F’d Mort.for $5,000,000 Columbia a: Augusta (Oct. 1, ’68): 1st Mortgage 1S85 1887 786,000 1888 1888 1890 1890 July. 941,000 400,000 91 $6 ’69): F.& A. 1,600,000 1,600,000 J. & J. New York J. & J. 1877 1,000,000 guaranteed ,1st Mortgage 1873 1880 490,000 500,000 J. J. 2,977,000 150,000 282,000 Mortgage, guaranteed ? Ci Cincin., Riclim.dc Chic.(Apr. 1,’69): 1st Mortgage, guaranteed 2d Mortgage P. Ci Cincin., Sand.dk Cleve. (July 1,’68): dttv., Col., 46* 1870 1875 1883 1889 1889 1880 1894 O. New York J. 100 5' a Cincinnati <£Jlarti7isv. (Jan.1,’69) 1st Mort. (Sand. & Ind. RR.) 1st Mort. (Sand., Day.& Cin. RR) 1st Mort. (Cine., San.& Clev.RR) Cincinnati dk Zanesv. (July 1, ’68): 1S89 323,220 675,000 1,700,000 867,000 4,665,940 1,632,290 1,846,000 .... 1919 1893 1870 1875 1878 1879 .... ..... 1877 1872 F.& A. New York . 1st 1 A.& J. & J. «fe J. & 3d Mor7 (3. fund,f25,C00 yearly) C Cincinnati dc Indiana (Jan.1,’69): 1st. Morti:a;:e 2d Mortgage, .... | 1898 6,000,000 2d ' ortgage 80 J. dc D.;New York! 1S70 M.& N. 1873 J. & J. ! 1882 M. & S. I 1886 A. & O. York 1893 1888 1,397,000 7,375,000 Interest Bonds (fund, coupons) Mississippi River Bridge Bonds , T 92* .... - - . Ohio (Oct. Preferred Skg Fund (on 193 m.) .... 1877 1,500,000 1,500,000 26,517,000 <£t£?u'J^a/'b7, s-Carolina) Chicago dc Northwest. (June 1,’69): 62 .... 1885 1887 499.500 402,000 2,400,000 1,100,000 Mortgage 2d Mort. (M. & C. RR., 40 miles) 1st Mort. (C. & M. RR., 85miles) . .... 1885 44 1872 Chicago dc Alilwaukee(June 1, ’69): 1st Mort. (C. & M. RR., 45 miles) 60 - (gold) sinking fund... M.& N. 90 1877 Philadel. Chillicothe dc Brunsw. (Julyl,’69): . 1870 Boston. Mortgage Chic.,Danv. dc Vincen. (Apr. 1,’69): 500,000 ’70-*80 York! M.& N. New York J. & J. A. & O. Chicago, Joioa dc Neb. (Jan. 1, ’69); 1st Mort., guaranteed .... • J. & D. I sTcw York M. & S. ] 3rinceton. F. & A. 1,000,000 25,517,000 ® Boston. M.& N. New 2,500,000 Chicago, Cin.dc Zouisv.( J an. 1,’69): 1st .. 2,500,000 -Vi J. O. J. 1st (Trust) Mort 1st (Trust) Mort., convertible.. 2d Mort. (Frankfort), gold 1st Mort. 1867 1875 1880 1885 1890 1873 44 155,000 579.500 1,710,500 5,000,000 Chicago, Bur. dc Quin. (May 1, ’69): 10 500,000 Trust Mortgage Bonds ... . 1890 41 l 1st Mortgage 2d Morta income 1877 1879 1876 1884 1882 1882 1881 1888 1895 Baltimore. J. Mort., sinking fund Chester Valley (Nov. 1, ’68): 1st Mortgage .. .... Q.-J. 1st Chicago dc Allan (Jan. 1. ’69): 1st Mort., sinking fund pref..... ... .... .... .... ... 1898 J. & J.& A. & J. & J. & J. & 1,500,000 (Jan-’6°); te'v • . 1895 1885 »« 1,3-40,800 614.500 600,000 ^new) mmI* 4 C Wash’ton 900,000 uLHortga?e effi • Var. Port.&N.Y ’68-’70 A.& O. Portland. 1871 A. & O. 1884 London. 4* M.&N. 1878 ’69): Dollar Loan for $800,000 Dollar Loan for $675,000 Dollar Loan for $1,700,000 Dollar Loan for $2,500,000 Consol. Mort. Loan for $5,000,000 ^Mortgage 2d Mortgage Where paid. J. & J. Company Bonds of ’70, ’75 <ft ’80. "771,800 1S93 580,000 .... Best., Clint. dkFitchb'gCDec.l, ’63): 1st Mort. (Agric. Br. RR.) of ’64. Bost., Con. dc Montr'l (Apr. 1, ’69): 1st Mort. (71 m.) 2d M. (71 m. «felst 22)4 m.) conv... 2d M. (71 m. & 2d22>< m.) conv... Sinking Fund Bonds Bost., Hart, dc Erie (Dec. 1, ’68): 1st Mort. Ornden <b 1889 101,000 366,000 200,000 Mort., for $2,500,000 Boston dk Albany (Dec. 1, ’68): Albany Loan (Alb.* W.Stkbge) Mass. Sterl. Loans (West’n RR.) 1st California Pacific (Jan. New Yor]k New Yorli J. & J. New York 753,931 863,250 ...... skg fund Loan of 1855, . 2,000,000 Consolidated Mort., free Loan of 1834..... . 8,701,806 ’69): AOan.dcSt.Laicren.ee (June 30. ’69) 1st Mort. (Port. Loan) skg fund 2d Mort. of April 1,1851 Baltimore dc paid. Chester' dc Ch. Br.June.(Jan. 1,’69): 81,500 425,000 ArnnUc (,JPai\*• ’69)\ 1st Mort., skg fund (Pa.)...... 1 1st Mort., skg fund (N. Y.).... 1st Mort., skg fund (Ohio)^ Income Mort Atlantic & Gulf (Jan. 1, When preceding page. Railroads: Mortgage Allegheny Valley standing Cheshire (Dec. 1, ’68): 16,000 p.m Al ex., PXXOX. Out¬ 1 Railroads : t INTEREST. TER OF SECURITIES ISSUED. Amount O cS * ^Table ««« “Railroad Monitor,” on a CHRONICLE. 100,000 6 6 564,000 1,111,000 1,633,000 7 7 2,310,000 462,000 . 44 . j . Philadel. 1908 1875 1875 44 1875 1881 7 A.&O. New York 44 J. & J. 1884 2,500,000 7 1,000,000 8 7 7 VI.* N. New York 44 628,525 877,115 W.& N. ^ 44 r,& j. J J.A N. 44 1.611,689 6 &7 J J.& N. i I.* N. 150,867 6 J f.& N. 51,000 7 Var. 250,000 7 250,000, 8 l .* A, 44 1871 .... 85 75 44 4# IS • * • .... 96 96 1 92 H\ 1877 1875 1875 1875 1875 1886 1878 1873 44 " lit, 1876 J. & J. New York 44 A. & O. 44 M. & S. 8 75 80 1875 44 44 \ 7 ... 81 78 .... 77 .... ft §3 05 THE 692 Subscribers will RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST. confer a great favor by giving ns Immediate notice of any error discovered In our Tables, Bonds will be published next week. Pages 3 and 4 of COMPANIES, AND CHARAC¬ TER OF SECURITIES ISSUED Amount Out¬ For a full explanation of this standing Table see “ Railroad Monitor” on a preceding page. r-« 6 c! P5 PRICE. DC When paid. <1 on a Railroad**: Pennsylvania (Nov. 1, *68): Mortgage, sinking fund East Tenn. A Georgia (July 1, ’69): East 1st Tennessee State Loans Mortgage (old) Mortgage (new) East Tenn. A Virginia (July 1,’6S): Tennessee State Loans Tenn. State Endorsed Bonds... Elm. A Wil'msp't. (Jan 1, ’69) 1st m 5 per cent Bonds Erie Railway (Oct. 1, - ’68): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage, convertible 8d Mortgage 4th Mortgage, convertible 5th Mortgage, convertible Buffalo Branch Bonds Sterling convertible, £800,000... Erie A Pittsburg (Feb. 1, ’6 ): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Consolidated Mortgage European A N. Amer. (Jan. 1, ’69): 1st M., gold (Bang, to Winn,45 m) to N B line,65m) *ct.l,’69): 1st Mortgage of 1852 (Fv. & ill.) 1st Mortgage of 1854 (E & 0.). 7 7 7 J. & J. New York 41 J. & J. 44 M.& N. 1888 1894 1888 450,000 7 7 J. & J. New York 44 J. & J. 1895 1895 1,500,000 7 J. & J. New York 1908 275,000 420,000 739,200 214,000 500,000 1, ’69): Sterling, convertible Dollar, convertible Essex Railroad Bonds New Mortgage % 5 5 6 6 6 J. & J. F.& A. J.& J. M.& S. 506,900 7 M.& S. 1,467,277 640,000 136.400 1st Mort. (Rockville extension) Flint A Pere Marquet. (Jan.l, ’69): 1st Mortgage :. 1,’69): m.) . Georgia— Honds (April 1, ’69).... Ft. W.%Jack.ASaginaw(yLay 1st Mort., guar. ($15,000 p. New Bonds Or. Rapids dk Indiana (J an.l, ’69): Mortgage Grand River Valley 1st (May 1, ’68): <v State of S. Car.. 8,000,000 4,000,000 6,000,000 4,441,000 926,500 186.400 4,844,444 7 7 7 7 7 7 6 900,000 2)0,200 J.& J. A. & O. J. & J. 6 6 J.& J. 1,281,000 1,000.000 1st Mortgage Hannibal A St. Joseph (Jan.18,’69): Land Grant Mortgage Convertible Eight per cent Loan Hart.,Prov. A Fishkill (Jan.l,’69): 1st Mort. (R. I., 26.32 m.) lBt Mort. (Conn., 96.04 m.) Hempjleld (Nov. 1, ’68): 1st Mortgage (Jan. 1, ’69): G., s’k’g fM (gol i). Hudson River (Oct. 1, ’68): 1st Mortgage 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage, sinking fund 8d mortgage Huntingd. A B. 7bpJ/iC.(Nov.l,’68): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Mine Mortgage 1st Mort. L. -• Consolidated Mortgage Illinois Central (Jan. 1, ’69): Construction Construction *. 1892 1880 1876 1898 1896 1880 2862 Philadel. 44 44 1877 1879 1883 90 £8 99 « .. 44 75 - - 889,500 202,000 8 7 7 7 J. & J. New York 1886 8 J. & J. New York 1886 700,000 927,000 1,900,000 500,000 1,200,000 481,000 1.574.500 J. & J. New-York 1886 J. & J. Charlest’n ’81-’86 7 7 J. & J. 6 Philadel. 1883 6 J. & J. New York hS 85 5Sfi?C 7 7 8 10 10 8 10 1881 1883 90 l6t 44 1872 1869 .... .... J. & J. Provide’ce J. & J. Hartford. 7 7 J. & J. Philadel. 1876 1876 7 7 J. & J. F.& A. Bridgep’rt 1877 1885 2,600,000 7 J. & J. New York 1891 1,936,000 110,000 2,000,000 183,000 7 6 7 7 F.& F.& J. & M.& A. New York 44 A. <4 D. 44 N. 1870 1869 1885 1875 416,000 367.500 7 7 7 7 A. & O. 'Philadel. 44 F.& A. 7 A. A. A. A. M.& N. A. & O. & & & & 44 44 O. New York 44 O. 44 O. 44 O. 7 New York * -. t 1,700,000 7 F.& A. New York 1908 272,000 New York 7 J. & J. New York 1888 150,000 7 1,495,000 400,000 8 8 J. & D. New York Philadel. .... 1906 18.. . .... 1st Mort. Convertible 1st Mort Convertible, sink .... fund 1st Mort Convertible 1st Mort Sterling, convertible.. 1st Mort Sterling, non-converti .... Michigan S. A N. Ind. (Mar. 1, ’69): 1st Mort. sinking fund 2d Mortgage 1st Mort. (D., M. & T. RR.) Milwaukee A St. Paul (Jan. 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage (370 miles) 2d Mortgage (370 miles) 1st Mort. (E. Div., Palme 1st Mort. (Iowa & Minn., 220 m.) 1st Mort. (Minn. Central) .... .... 100 li)2 r t 1st Mort. (P. du C., 235 miles).. 2d Mort. (P. du C., 235 miles) .. Milwaukee City Milwaukee ana Western Mineral Point (Jan. 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage - 81 3i 1896 96* 75* 80 .... .... 500,000 7 612.000 897,000 1,961,000 150,000 7 7 7 6 M.& A. & A. & A. & 441,000 8 J. & J. New York 8 .... ... N. New York O. O. 44 O. Cl <4 J. & J. New York 1887 1878 • Pittsburg. F.& A. Philadel. 1897 6 6 6 M.& N. J.&D. Philadel. 1878 91 1898 93* 94* 93* 93* 6 M.& N. New York 1883 82 81 7 A.&O. 1877 97 99 6 7 6 7 J. & F.& M.& M.& 1875 1890 1898 95 2,116,000 7 J. & J. New York 6 6 J. & J. New York *70-*78 81 41 J. & J. 1881 79 85 80 1,424,000 7 94 77 7 7 6 7 J. & J. New York 41 A.&O. 44 M.& N. M.& N. Louisville. 44 J. & J. 44 M.& N. 41 A.&O. A.&O. New York 7 J. & J. New York 6 6 6 6 F.& A. A. & O. F.& A. Boston. J.&D. Boston. 7 7 7 7 F.& F.& M.& M.& 7 7 6 M.& N. New York 44 J. & J. II J. & J. 1880 1885 8 M.& N. New York 1890 1897 800,000 44 .... .... 1,500,000] Philadel. J. New York 44 A. 41 N. N. * 44 1899 1897 849,000 225,000 267,000 27,500 88,000 388,000 6 6 7 * 815,000 140,000 1,095,600 621,000 800,000 807,700 1,050,000 2,500,000 300,000 1,293,000 1,000,000 1,817,937 1,300,000 7 812,000 2,296,000 577,000 500,000 467,489 8 8 8 8 6 • • ... . . • • 1st • 41 Bangor. A. Baltimore. A. London. N. Baltimore. 44 N. 41 .... M. & S. New York 44 A.&O. A.&O. M. & S. London. II M.& sr ’ » » tt 1881 1881 1873 si 1906 1882 78 78 92 79 79 •70-’71 1891 1891 1896 1896 1882 1890 1869 1882 1882 1869 1872 • • . • . . . 400,000 100,000 8 7 44 .... M.& N. New York 44 M.& N. .... 1887 1877 • • • t . .... , ,IM .... .... 95 90 90 loi" ioT* .... New York .... A. New York 41 F.& A. M.& S. J. & J. .... M.& N. New York 41 F.& A. 7 8 A.&O. New York 1876 J. & J. Memphis. ’81-’93 TO J. & J. J. & J. J. & J. 14 Boston. cc Jh <D O O 8 10 8 rt in C BBONIvJLE M.& N. New York M.& N. N.Y.&Mob 1882 M.& N. London. 1882 Var. N.Y.&Mob ’61-’6'i II M.& N. 1876 14 M.& N. 1882 1915 1891 6 J. & J. New York 1890 6 6 J. & J. New York *90-*92 41 1887 A.&O. A.&O. Nashville. 1870 1881 ••• 89 .... .... .... .... mm .... .... M*« 14* .... M.& N. New York 44 F.& A. 10 • 18.. Aug ust 1888 7 7 1,569,000 90 86 1899 1899 1871 1876 129,000 87 1878 1876 1892 J. & J. New York II J. & J. 44 J. & J. .... .... .... IM. ••••,. if ,, .... .... 4M. tele .... .... .... .... • ••• ... 96 96 91* 92* ....... .... t#ll .... 7 J. & J. Bridgep't. 1876 7 J. & J. New York 18.. .... Naw York 18.. .... .... 7 .... .... 7 M.& N. N. Haven. 1888 7 6 J. & J. N. Haven. I« A.&0. 1899 100 1874 « F.4A. New York II F.& A. 1876 1878 84 Loan « (new) for $1,0 |1,0 (H. & H. RR.) New Jersey (Jan. 1, ’69): .... i<tt 117 1st Mort. 1st Mort. 92 .... .... .... 1st Loan 2d Loan 90 - 1898 1898 1873 1891 8 7.3 7 7 8 8 1872 1888 1885 7 7 7 T * .... F.'& 7 8 New York 128,000 794,000 287,000 T 86* 67* 1886 1st Mortgage N. Haven A Northamp .(Dec.1,’68): 66* .... 95 89 8 Mortgage t-- 1885 1877 1876 M.&S. New York 1st .... - 1897 (6 96 7 65 87* 89 (8 2d Mortgage Income (Tenn. & Ala.) .... 1898 1884 1874 ) 1st Mort., endorsed by Tenn... Nashville A Decatur (Oct. 1, ’68): 1st Mort. (State loans) .... 1874 1870 J. & J. New York II A.&O. 44 M.& N. 44 J. & J. Mortgage (new) Morris A Essex (Jan. 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage, sinking fund.... 2d Mortgagee Nashv. AChatmnoogaCJvLly 1,’68): .... .... •90-’91 Income .... ..i-. .... 7 7 8 7 ) Montgomery A Eufala (Jan.l.’69): 1st M. of ’67 on $1,000,000, enaors. Montgom. A W. Point (Mar. 1, ’68): .... • Mortgage, sterling 1899 6,500,000 . ’70-’75 1870 94 96 ’80-’85 91 92 1893 74 75 1898 87* , M.& N. New York A.&O. Philadel. 4* 5,425,000 1,390,000 793,000 3,780,000 270,000 7 8 85* 87 6 • 7 Mortgage Income Bonds Income Bonds Interest Bonds .... .... .... 1885 1893 1874 85 1886 7 1896 800,000 44 44 «••• .... 924,000 Mobile A Montgomery (May 1,’69) 85 • Newburg A New York (Oct. 1.‘68): 1st Mortgage New Haven A Derby (Jan. 1, ’66): M.& S. J. & J. ••• M.& N. New York II M.& N. 44 F.& A. 7 6,728,000 2,693,000 7 68 J. & J. New York 7 7 7 • ’69-’77 82 ’86-’87 76 7 8 g Naugatuck (Jan. 1, ’69): 1st Mort. (convertible) Newark A New York (July 1. ’69): 1,200,000 800,000 250,000 Mm 7 860,000 1st Mortgage for $3,000,000 1.000 2d Mort* >rtgage for! Mobile A Girard ( ’68): 1st Mortgage Mobile A Ohio (Apr. 1, ’68): 1st Mortgage, sterling • 92* 83* 85 1886 i, 18.. 1874 92 96 65 .... Income J. & J. New York 44 M.& S. 80 7 Consolidated Mortgage Missouri R.,FIS.A Gu\f(Jan.l,’69) 68 80 66 78 • • J. & J. New York .... 320,000 10 Mississippi Central (Sep. 1, ’68): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Tenn. State Loan Mississippi A Tenn. (Oct. 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage .... • • 1874 1880 1892 1885 1886 900,000 Michigan Central (June 1, ’69): 18.. 7 800,000 RR.). 1,’69): 1st 7 .. 18.. 1888 • 1893 2,449 500 Arkansas State Loan .... 1888 J. & J. New York 41 A. & O. Mortgage, dollar Mortgage, sterling Memphis A Little Rock (Jan. 1,’69): l6t Mort. (on road and land)... 1C8 115 1,500,000 Income — RR.^ 1st Mortgage, convertible 2d Mortgage Tenn. State Loan 104* 1875 1875 1890 1875 7 7 Mort., s’k’g fund, convert... by Georgia 2d Mortgage 1st Mort. (Scioto & Hock. 81 75 60 2,500,000 500,000 td Mort. 'Cov. & Lex.) 3d Mort. (Cov. & Lex.) K^kuk A St. Paul (Jan. 1, ’69): guar, Memphis A Charleston(d\x\y 80 1870 1875 1872 1895 1st Mortgage 1st Mort. (Ind. Mortgage (Newcastle Br.).. Mort., 1st 1st .... 18.. 6 150,000 887,045 .... 44 2.424.500 Junction, ^Phila.” (Nov. 1, *69): 1st Mortgage, guaranteed Kansas Pacific (July 1, ’69): 1st M. (gold) I’d grant, s’k’g fd Kentucky Central (Jan. 1, ’69): let Mort.. (Cov. 4; Lex.) (Leb. Br. Exten.) [:<VP 41 .... 2.560.500 .. 1). (main stem tR.).. 1st Mort. (P. & K. RR.) Mort. (P. & K. 2d i ,000 Loan (Maine Central).. «... • 41 Redemption Redemption, sterling & Cine.) Indian.Crawf.ADanvj Mayl/69): 1st Mortgage (gold) lndianap. A Vincennes (Feb.I,'69): 1st Mortgage gnar Iowa Falls A Sioux ity( Jan.l,’69): 1st Mortgage, $18,000 per mile Iowa River (May 1, ’69): 1st M. (Eldora RR.) $16.000p. m. Iowa Southern (Jan. 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage, $20,000 per mile.. Ironton (Dec. 1, ’68): 1st Mortgage Jack.,Lans.A Trav.HyCJan.l,’69): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Jamestown A Franklin (Nov.l ,’68): 1st Mortgage Jeff., Mad.A lndianap.(Jan.l,’69): ist Mort. (Ind. & Mad. RR.)... 2d Mort. (Jeffersonville RR).. 1st Mort. (J., M. & Ind. RR)... Louisville (endorsed) Bonds Joliet A Chicago (July 1, *69): 1st Mort., sinking fnnd guar... Joliet A N. Indiana (July 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage, guaranteed Junction, Cinc.& lnd.”(Julyl,’69): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage oan Louisville Loan (Leb. Br. Ext.) Consol. 1st Mort. for $8,000,000.. lacon A Brunswick (Jan. 1, ’69): 95 44 J. & J. • 1871 J. & J. New York 41 J. & J. 41 A.& O. 44 J. & J. 44 A.&O. V 1873 A. & O. New York 44 J. & J. • 7 7 7 7 7 7 500,000 175,000 150,000 farietta A Chicinnati (Jan 1,’69): 1,000,000 737,500 • • * J. & J. New York 1889 ’70-’75 J. & J 477,000 14 * • J. & J. New York 807.500 bulsv., Cin.ALexlng.(JvL\yl,'G&): 1st Mortgage, guaranteed 1st Mort. 18.. (4 * • 88,000 100,000 fund. fo’ct.l 1889 1889 1881 New York * 1880 1885 1890 7 1,489,000 Schuylki iln stem)... Louisville Loan (ma! Louisville Loan (Leb. Br.) 1st Mort. (Memphis Br.) 1st Mort. (Bards own Br.) 7 1875 44 7 1st Mort. 1,520,500 44 10 500,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 2,015,000 1,000,000 1,500,000 png Island , ’68): 1st Mortgage 1st Mort. (H. Poftit extension).. 1st Mort. (Glen Cove Branch).. 1st Mortgsge, new 76 A.&O. M.& S. M.& N. J. & J. 7 7 500,000 1886 1899 J. & J. New York M.& N. F. & A. (extension) Mortgage J 96 80 71 7 7 7 8,955,000 437.500 lndianap., Cinc.A LgfjJan.l,’69) 1st 3 II Vw 89* . 84* « iU / 72 6 6 6 let •o M Bid J. & J. New York Philadel. 7 7 1,262,000 1,917,000 149.500 Louisv: London. (extension) 1st 1st 1st ... 89 57 1888 1891 1875 1882 1890 1898 900,000 500,000 400,000 200,000 200,000 \ehigh A Lackawan. (Nov.l,’68): 1st Mortgage, tax free \ehigh Valley (Nov. 1, ’68): 1880 191,000 100,000 Houston dk Texas Cent. (Jan.l ’69): . 80 500,000 sinking fund .. 1st Housatonic 1st Mortgage, 2d Mortgage Income 68): \ake Erie A Louisville (July 1,’69): 1st Mortgage Xike Shore (July 1, ’68): 1st Mort. (C.t P. & A. RR.) 2d Mort. (C., P. & A. RR.) 3d Mort. (C., P. & A. RR.) 1st Mort.(C. & Tol. RR.) s^k’g f d 2d Mort. (C. &Tol. RR.) Dividend Bonds \ake Sup. A Mississip.ldn\y\(69): 1st Mort. (gold) for $4,500,000... Lawrence (Nov. 1, ’68): 1st Mortgage .... 78 341,000 722,000 150,000 800,000 860,000 Ten per cent Loan Ten per cent Loan 1st Mort. (Quincy & Palmy.RR.) 1st Mort. (Kan. C. & Cam. RR.) .... .... 1888 M.& N. New York (4 M. & S. 44 M. & S. 44 A. & O. 44 J. & D. 44 J. & J. M. & S. London. 7 7 7 „., 96 Philadel. 5 7 + 94 J. & J. New York 4 < J.& J. J. & J. Philadel. 41 A. & O. Harrisb. A Lancaster (Nov. 1, ’68): 1st Mortgage, guaranteed Hartford dk N. Haven (Dec. 1, ’68): 44 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage 92* ’69-’74 1872 1874 1876 1888 J. & J. New York 44 J. & J. 44 J. & J. 6 6 7 ColMm$ta(Oct.l,’68): 1st Mortgage Bonds guar, by 44 6 6 Mort. (guar.) for $1.000,000.. Greenville Boston. London. Boston. Q.-J. 2,199,000 178,000 1,000.000 570,100 1st M.,g’d( Winn Evansv. ACraiqfordw.i let preceding page. paid. **I0*. Where paid. c3 P5 rxickawan.A BloomsbfNov.l, 900,000 660,000 900,000 100,000 Mortgage (1st division) Construct. Bonds (2d division). Sinking Fund Bonds, conv...... Dubuque A SouthicestJJ an. 1,’69): let Dutchess A Columbia (Jan. 1st Mortgage Eastern (Dec. 1, ’68): Mass. State Loan. 1st lien When -4-^ vuu A 00 3 c5 standing X V, « ■a® INTEREST. Amonnt Out¬ 3 >> Where. paid. OMPANIES, AND CHAR AC? • Ci 03 INTEREST. Railroads * Dubuqe A Sioux City (Jan. 1,’69): 1st Mortgage — 1st Mortgage, preferred [November 27, 1869. CHRONICLE. 6 F.&AJ ... .... .... 102 ... .... 190V .... • • • • I**1 THE frorember 27, 1889.J CHRONICLE. Exports of Leading Articles from New York* <£ommcr£ial ®imts. &t)c table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows exports of leading articles of commerce from the port of New York since January 1, 1869. The export of each article to the everal ports for the past week can be obtained by deducting the amount in the last number of the Ohroniolk from that here given. The following the COMMERCIAL EPITOME. Friday Night, Novetnbe 26. Notwithstanding the decline in gold, trade has been main, tained at a fair average the past week, and confidence has rather increased in mercantile circles, as it is believed that the course of gold for ihd next three months has been pretty well discounted, while other circumstan:es affecting business are expected to be rathef favorable than otherwise. Cotton, though lower, closes active with a partial reaction* Breadstuffe have recovered largely from the lowest prices of the week. Groceries have been somewhat variable, though fairly active, especially for Coffees and Sugars, Tobacco has ruled firmer, though the business has been moderate. Hides have continued to move freely at full gold prices while Skins and Leather have been steady. Naval Stores have yielded a little in Spirits Turpentine anc Rosins, but with a more liberal movement at the concession* Oils have been without movement o moment, except a sale of 800 bbls Crude Whale for export on private terms. Petroleum has declined and is somewhat unsettled, with but little demand. East India goods remain quiet, but gold prices are well the close is firm. supported. Metals show dulness and depression. Ingot Copper and Silesian Spelter have slightly declined. Fish and fruit are in steady demand and firm. Hops are quiet but firm ; receipts continue on a very liberal scale. Hay Whiskey has fluctuated widely, ranging hours from $1 03 to $1 10, tax paid, closing at the higher figure. Tallow has slightly declined with gold. Provisions have been active. Hog products on the spot are extremely scarce, though the supply promises to be much better immediately. Higher prices have been paid for both immediate and future delivery. New Mess Pork has sold largely for January and February at $30@31, closing at $30 50; prime steam Lard at 18@18fc., same months, clos¬ ing at 18Jc.; Cumberland Bacon, 14c. in Chicago. There have also been liberal sales of new prime mess beef for ex¬ port, at $27. But the tendency of the whole market for Pro¬ is firm and active. in the past forty-eight visions is rather downward at the close. Butter and cheese continue very dull. Wool has been more active and steady. The sales of California wool have been especially large. Freights have been rather quiet, with a marked decline in grain to Liverpool, closing at 5d. per steam; ship¬ rates for ments of cotton were large yesterday, and the Iteady at 5-16d. Receipts of Domestic The receipts of domestic produce for the week and since Jan. 1 This week. Ashes... pkgs. Breadstuffs— 209 Flour .bbls. 149,579 Wheat .bus. 1,882,026 Corn........ 186,885 Oats 599.727 Bye.......,, 16,665 Malt 25,189 Barley Crass seed. 585,778 862 flaxseed.. 6,262 Feaa.. 4,908 Beans C.meal.bbis 6,199 *581 1,681 B.W.fl’rpkg Cotton.bales. Copjper..bbls. _ rate closes Produce tor the Week and since Jan* !• and for the same time in 1868, have been nlatee. fir’d fralt.pkpr Grease .pigs: Hemp..bales. Hides....No. Bops...bales. Leather Aides 2,310 22,245 204 728 2,926 57 Since Jan. 1. 8,444 17,778 577,943 13,187 26,768 25,790 8,541 8.572 859,816 106,988 60,081 2,544,734 2,802 «••• ■ntiBtont ttna..bbl 9 Cr.turpen- This Since week. Jan.l. 7,285 Same time ’68 Spirits turpen¬ tine 2,336 61,106 58,580 Rosin 16,070 514,548 408,525 Tar 1,658 11,705,362 72,432 84,152 88 Pitch 18,031,151 8,468 8,540 96,972 93*8,856 Oil cake, pkgs.... 3,265 76,100 75 629,289 Oil, lard.T..; 9,990 8,201 591,840 Oil, petroleum... 10,652 760,328 594,243 70358 1,791,627 Peanuts, bags..,. 1,997 89,616 88,325 Provisions— 75,849 Rutter, pkgs.... 21,865 608,820 457,637 Cheese 88,548 1302,045 1,039,811 48,761 1342 Cutmeats 72,628 862,667 70,658 120,273 5,046 191,916 211,075 243,119 1,755 74352 107,895 BeeL pkgs.’ !!!!! 8329 66,695 114,782 917 Xi&rd) pk^s 60362 13,206 74,006 Lard, kegs 648 14,557 570,191 13,578 682 21,594 Rice, pkgs 17,525 11,605 18,425 274,597 176302 9,947 Starch 147 88,095 Stearine 8,956 10308 8,986 746 2,255 1,258 *944 14,912 22,080 489,526 Tallow, pkgs.'!!!! 51373 Tobacco, pkgs... 2,086 105,984 80,646 43 76,155 1,721,500 Tobacco, nbas... 46,556 7,245 Whiskey, bbls.... 6,858 161,024 88,896 Wool, bales 58,880 112,875 55,003 14,736 14361 Dressed hogs No. 8,165,890 1,053,400 22,389,847 10,289,669 7,616,290 817,549 538,246 1,856,016 21,402 46,628 95,252 60,750 81,206 194,540 6,939 9,911 1301 as follows: Same time '68. 20,987 , • a * * • BRjgT. hhds and Rice, rough bosh j 24,072 693 149 THE CHRONICLE Imports of Leading; Articles. BBOXIPTS R»e f\niowijg table, compiled from Custom House returns, show t>efc»rei *n imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this port for the last weak, since Jan. 1,1869, and for the corresponding period ia 1868: . [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] Since Jan. l, 1869. week. For the UIa8s and , Cirthsuware— China 278 68 12,237 56,009 478,984 17,155 8,281 6i 5,325 1,483 7«3 135 .Glass plate, Buttons. >aLtons.. Coffee', ban. gotten Ac.— rugs, bales...., r. 122,548 14$ 17,458 11,017 928,880 2T 2,361 3,147 ' 165 Bark, Peruvian 316a powders..' 375 rinjstone. tons “"'^ieal L Cream Tartar.. 95 5 Gambler Gama crude h . 19,671 25.853 19,34-3 6,102 1,729 47,244 * » 608 --- 154 Arabic... Indigo..... 3,017 5,505 9,272 12S Madcler...? 50 Oils, essence.... 259 OlLOUye * Soda, bl-carb... Soda, sal Soda, asb Flax............... Feta........ Bonny doth - # Opium • 44,453 . - 762 150 77,468 35,254 85,994 6* 586 23 1,834 5,607 83 f 5,634 t. . 15 2,977 104,140 2& 178 bales, 'des, Ifemp, Ac— 7,783 1,475 16,5.0 35,920 2,592 ides, dressed. India rubber..... _ 55u Ivory .... Jeweiery, Ac— 10,280 45.547 Same time 1868. Jan. 1, 1869. week. the 67 63 4,036 4,690 2,811 8,952 Iron, RR bars. Lead, pies 861,851 5,041 652,465 489.688 881,588 10452202 5,300,338 5,745 154.791 237,821 Bpelter, lbs.... ‘ Steel Tin, boxes Tin slabs, lbs.. 18.512 Rags 1,012,453 Shear, hhds, tcs Abbls 1,118 Sugars, boxes & 12,000 bags 6,434 129,475 24,669 1,099,609 794,606 187,161 8,770,248 3,957,825 205 93,501 50,433 2,571 5,0 JS 1,664 382,579 794 025 550,394 9 815,109 42,830 726,855 1,675 6i 2,176 1,1.7 227 1,0:7 107,732 168,665 78,818 91,079 469 8,402 Tobacco 359,316 4,116 29,314 Tea 45,983 25,445 Waste Wines, Ac— Champag’e.bks 17,519 Wines Wool, bales 515 3409 4,181 Articles report’d 12,112 by value— 510 Cigars Corks 1,0:5 Fancy goods.... 116,098 Fish 39,012 Fruits, Ac— Lemons 34,597 Oranges 1,650 Nuts 5,560 Raisins 11,164 7,025 Hides undressed 120,341 Rice .... 657,168 11,749 475,746 9,119 473,527 410,729 2,918 719.463 537,141 5,632 602.090 640,363 13,075 715,593 1,827,602 219,688 9,310,162 6,320,745 241,936 814,630 Spices, Ac— 180,128 Cassia Ginger 7,977 27.990 42,755 18,431 $763,887 $588,9C2 124,464 170,867 41,740 1,931,206 1,SO),747 41,571 892 Pepper 49,685 231,764 ... 2,045 Saltpetre 184,818 .... 115.906 89.221 196,9! 0 13.549 Woods68 JSXSZ:::— 2£97 17 linseed Molasses * ♦ ♦ ,,,,,,,, 1.030 483,594 161,084 1,900 Cork Fustic 2467 1,052 571836 - 177,521 167,318 70,367 , 553 056 81,746 16,729 Logwood Mahogany — 133,741 116,557 216,134 104,170 COTTON. Fbiday, P. M., November 25, 1869. By special telegrams received by us to-night from each of the $7BtJrora ports we are in possession of the returns showing the -eeeiptfl^sports, &c., of cotton for the week ending this evening, November 26. From the figures thus obtained it appears that the total receipts for th e seven days have reached 85,765 bales (against BT,8i£ bales last week, 94,108 bales the previous week, and 95,26g bates three weeks since), making the aggregate since September % 1869, np to this date, 796,822 bales, against 624,758 bales for the Game period in 1868, being an increase this season over last season #£171,564 bales. The details of the receipts for this week (as per -telegraph) and the corresponding week of 1868 are as follows : BXCSIPTS. BKCEIPT8. Rec’d this week at— 1869. 1868. XXPOBTXD SINCE 8KPT. 1868. 232,895 80,437 283,338 60,611 49,823 96,121 84,461 161,925 44,387 Virginia Other ports 87,802 8,590 .... 47,894 2,452 1,211 8,243 *5,i24 945 bales. Qbneiton Bav&Bn&h Texas Tennessee, Ac 27,964 12,802 8,136 15,241 7,435 4,772 Rec’d this week at— 1869. bales. 31,959 Florida 7,183 North Carolina 5,816 Virginia 12,193 Total receipts 4,297 Increase this year 8,293 455 Week ending Nov. 26. G.Brit Contin’t 11,049 1,638 7,322 85,765 5,703 76,989 8,776 corresponding week of Stock. Total this Same w’k 1868. week. 26,996 38,045 20,002 883 833 6,136 2,770 12,640 2,770 2,594 15,234 8*,97i 3,158 12J29 2,741 8,190 1,619 18,536 1,558 Mobile Charleston. Savannah •■*•••••••••• yew York Other porta 1,610 Totftli Total aimee Sept. •••••»-•••••••• • From the 87,040 u..\ 234,146 1,610 88,581 70,621 144,000 378,146 foregoing statement it will be 63,782 282,989 The market the 260 376 1,856 15,645 111,381 27,499 18,823 37,946 7,890 97,898 7,C 31,555 5,734 51,010 76,345 10,776 T.786 19,705 57,83? 64,424 45,995 307,525 62,142 33,282 229,207 212,679 203,170 254,745 past week has shown some weakness in currency rates, due the early part of the week to larger receipts, as given in the daily reports, but later to a further decided decline in gold, while at the same time there was a falling off of id. in the Liver¬ pool quotation, though to day the advices by cable are a shade To-night middling closed firm at 25c., with gold at 124f, against 1274 the middle of last week; hence the gold rate for Cotton has really advanced during that time, while the currency rate has fallen off 4c. Our stock continues light, the demand almost equalling our receipts, so there is but little accumula¬ tion in the hands of receivers. Saturday and Monday the market was quiet, with the quotations 4°- off, hut at the decline offerings were light. On Tuesday there was a further yielding in the quotations of 4c., making 4c. since Friday, and the close was heavy, holders being willing to make liberal concessions. As stated above, this downward movement was due to an increase of receipts as given in the daily telegrams. But the next day there was a falling off in the arrivals at the ports, so that with increased sales the market became steadier. Yesterday (Thursday) with the decline in gold and the lower quotations from Liverpool, the mar¬ ket was weak again; but to-day has been active and firm, and closes with low middling 4c. better, though middlings are still quoted at 25c. For forward delivery there has been more activity, but prices have yielded somewhat towards the close. Sales of this descrip¬ tion reach a total for the week of 9,200 bales (all low middling, or on the basis of low middling), of which 8,150 bales were for November, 200 at 25c., 450 at 24fc., 1,250 at 24fc., 200 at 24.9-16c., 900 at 244c., and 150 on private terms ; 1,100 bales for December, 200 at 24fc., 200 at 244c.,100 at 24fc., 500 at 244., and 100 at 24*c.; 1,900 bales for January, 100 at 24fc., 800 at 24fc., 300 at 24$c., 700 at 24fc., 200 at 244c., 100 at 244c., and 200 January 10, at 244c.; 750 bales for February, 150 at 254c., 100 at 254c., 200 at 25c., 100 at 244c, and 100 at 24§c.; 1,800 bales for March, 100 at 25|c., 200 at 254c., 700 at 25c., and 800 on private terms; also 250 bales for March and April, on private terms. The total sides for immediate delivery this week foot up 16,638 bales (includ ing 1,960 bales to arrive), of which 5,445 bales were taken by spinners, 908 bales on speculation, 10,085 bales for export, 200. bales in transit, and the following are the closing quotations: better. 1869. Florida. Ordinary Good Ordinary T,ow per lb. Middling* Below we Mobile. 23*®.... 23*®.... 24*®.... 24*®.... 25*®.... 24 ®.... 24*@ 25 Middling <§>.... ' New Orleans. 28*® 24*® 25*® 25*® Texas. 24 0.... 24*i ... 25*0.... 25*0.... give the total sales of cotton and price of middling each day of the past week: at this market Total sales. Saturday Monday Tuesday Thnraday Friday.. Upland and Mobile. New Orleans. 1,930 2,477 2,171 8,301 2,590 4,169 25*®.... 25*®.... 25*®.... 25*®.... 25*®.... 25*®;... 25*®.... 25*®.... 25*®.... 25*®.... 25*®.... 25*®.... 25*®.... 25*®.... Florida. 25 25 25 25 ®.... ®.... ®,... ®.... Text*. 25*0.... 26 0.- 25*®.... 25*0.... 25*®.... 25*0...: 1868. 98,671 42,539 16,505 42,026 31,370 25,000 15,000 94,696 27,275 9,761 32,042 16,700 27,145 271,171 217,619 10,000 seen that, compared with week of last season, there is an increase in the xporte this week pf 16,839 bales,while the stocks to-night are 53,452 ales more than they were at this time a year ago. The following • pur usual table showing the movement of cotton at all the ports from Sept. 1, to November 19, the latest mail dates. We do not include pur telegrams to-^ght, as we cannot insure the accuracy or obtain the detail necessary, by telegraph. ‘he corresponding 1,830 6,143 receipts, as made up to¬ again smaller than anticipated, though in excess of last week’s total. New Orleans and Mobile arrivals are still held in check by the low state of the rivers. The rains of the last two weeks hare given them temporary relief, but the long, dry autum has left the streams at so low a point that it will require farther heavy rains to put them in good boating condition. As a result of the decreased receipts, crop estimates, are, in the South especially, being cut down. It is .also stated that the October frost did more injury along the Atlantic coast than was at the time reported, But a very few weeks now will serve to settle this crop question, and, in the meantime, any exact figures given are, to say the l#rt ’ ./t. '* premature... ' r*“/ ; Irdia Cotton.—Messrs. Nicoi(& Co. writes as follows; Bombay, Tmh regard tolhe crop pt VmM: Receipps and Crops.—The week's New Orleans 20,336 NOETB. POETS 133,783 559,787 713 832 last season, as telegraphed, to us from the various ports to-night: Exported to— 'Total 1868. The exports for the week ending this evening reach a total Of 70,621 bales, of which 37,040 were to Great Britain and 33,581 bales go the Continent, while the stocks at all the ports, as made up this evening, are now 271,171 bales. Below we give the exports and stocks for the week, and also for the SHI 197,106 .... Upland and NtF--QrJesns Other France foreign iotaL 43,651 16,425 4,124 12,610 710,557 Total this year irrimrA 28,167 16,852 29,327 6,035 77,129 41,843 10,964 4,021 21,207 63,252 7,008 TO— m’tsto Great Britain. 1869. few Orleans Mobile Charleston Savannah Texas New York Florida north Carolina.. 1 1. 3,269 Hardware 6.950 SIN OB 8BPT. PORTS. Total last year. Metals, Ac— Cutlery 84J07 23,332 1,234 Since For Same time 1868. [November 27, 186S-, night, are November 27, 1869.] THE CHRONICLE. We can now apeak with aome degree of certainty regarding the probable out-turn of die coming crop aa the monaoon is closed, and in every district, with the excep¬ tion of Hingunghat, the weather is now all that con’d be desired for bringing the plants to matority. The rain had hardier passed off at Hingunghat, we regret to lay, at the date of our last advice, but still we are informed no serious injury has resulted to the crop so far, and as the character of the weather throughout the whole Berar has undergone a complete change, we may reasonably hope to have a more fevorable report from Hingunghat within the next few days. Berar—-AH reports in estimating the Oomrawuttee crop a larger one than that of last year, but owing to the lateness of the rain the earliest pickings will be a fortnight later in coming to market. Hingunghat—Has a much greater area of cotton under cultiva¬ tion, and will certainly give us considerably more cotton than last year, even allow¬ ing for possible damage to some of the low lying lands from the late excessive rain. Broach and Gnierat—Will also be a little latter than last year, but the yield prom¬ The following are the receipts of cotton deJphia and BnJlTru be a very full average; the weather keeps fine and dry, and the crop around Broach is said to be coming on very rapidly. Locusts have done muoh destruction in the districts beyond Ahinedabad to the cereal orops, but they appear to have spared the cotton plant. Dhollerah and Kattywar—These districts have had a fine monsoon, and from all the information we can collect we believe we shall have a fuller crop than that of last season. Dharwar—These districts will now be receiving the benefit of the northeast monsoon rains, which will do much good to the cotton plants, as the country has had barely sufficient moisture as yet. The plants asm ises to everywhere reported to be in fine condition, and the general opinion from the dis¬ trict Is that we are certain to have a larger yield than that of last year. We do not 1 ok for the very first arrivals of new Hingunghat or Oomrawuttee before the end re at New York, Boston, Phihfor the last week, and since September 1,1869 : NEW YORK. BOSTON. PHILADELPHIA BALTTMORE. RECEIPTS PROM- This week. agree . 695 New Orleans. Texas This week. Sept. 1. 2,277 Savannah Mobile Florida South Carolina. North Carolina.. Since 4,282 £6 22,761 9,651 60,5*0 4,234 1,821 4,678 44,326 1,640 1,4*3 842 North’rn Ports. This Since week. Septl. f1\ 6,614 174 419 860 535 5S7 4! 964 590 535 1,731 1,936 2,946 294 194 • • • ...A . 7 30,9C0 2,(69 14,500 212 This Sir ce week. Septl. Septl. 11,631 17 Virginia Since • 1,320 9,211 1,338 13.970 665 8,817 '214 K 4.303 1,447 1,124 13,820 33 283 117 Tennessee, &c. Foreign 3,505 Total this year 18,912 206,4*8 6,479 36,450 1,190 10,217 2,508 *3,057 Total last year. 21,787 186,334 5,444 1,057 8,923 2,0931 19,041 • ••• ... 419 1,674 2,784 6 .... . 35,887 of November. Shipping News.—The exports of cotton from the United States the likely now to see tlie effect of the opening of the Suez pist week, a* per latest mail returns, have reached 45,735 bake. So Canal upon tlie marketing of tlie India crop. The expectations of far a* tlie Southern ports are concerned, these are the same exports Europe are clearly indicated in the depreciation of freights around reported by telegraph, and published in the Chronicle fast Fri¬ the Cape of Good Hope, and the preparations making for carrying day, except Galveston, and the figures for that port are the exports for two weeks back. With regard to New York, we include the manifests large cargoes through the Canal from India by steamer. Con¬ only up to Tuesday night, to make the figures correspond with the offi¬ tracts, via Suez, are being offered from Bombay to Liverpool, at cial week. Below we give a list of the vessels in which these ship¬ pound, and as the outward cargo would promise to be profit¬ ments from all ports, both North and South, have bsea mado: per able, it is thought that even a less rate will be possible. Exported this week from— Total bales We are Spinners Purrchases.—Some surprise is expressed at the con. tinned small purchases of our spinners notwithstanding the decline of about 1$ cents per pound. The reason for this is evident, and must continue to operate so long as there is any doubt with regard to the extent of the crop. The Dry Goods trade is very dull while the future prospect is no better, and yet rates are below cost of production. For instance, standard sheetings are to-day selling at 15jc; one pound of low middling Cotton (24c) will make 2.85-100 yards of cloth, and the expense and waste of making up the pound of cotton is claimed now to be 25c. The cost, therefore, of produc¬ ing 2.85-100 yards of standard sheeting would be 49c, or about 17.1-5c per yard; the selling price, as stated above, is 15$c. Or if we take prints the result is equally unsatisfactory. With such facts, then, before our spinners, they are compelled to be very care¬ ful in their purchases. The price they pay for Cotton (that is whether it is high or low) is of no importance to them so long as it is about the lowest of the season, and so long as they do not purchase more than the country will consume of goods at the price given. At present they are running on short time, and are taking about enough, some say a little more than enough, to meet their consumption. At 25c for Middling Uplands the general opinion among our spinners is that they will not be able to work up any more Cotton than last year. Gold, Exchange and Freights.—Gold has fluctuated the past 124$ and 126$, and the close to-night was 124f. Foreign exchange at the close exhibits rather more activity and firmness, the low price of gold having stimulated free purchase* by importers. The closing rates were 108$@109 for prime bank¬ ers, 60 days; 109$@109£ for sight, and 108$@108£ for London commercial. Freights closed at 9-32@5-164 by steam, and 3-16d. by sail to Liverpool; l$c. by steam and £c. by sail to Havre ; $d by steam to Hamburg, and lc. by steam and £c. by sail to*"Bremen. The exports of cotton this week from New Yorls^fotf an increase from last week, the total reaching 12,645 bales, against* U9H 5 bales last week. Below we give our table showing the exports of cotton from New York, and their direction for each of the last four \|eeks; also the total exports and direction since September 1, 1869; and in the last column the total for the same period of the previous year: Exports of Cotton (bale*) Arons New York since Sept* 1,18€9 WEEK ENDING EXFOBTED TO Nov. Nov. 2. Liverpool 9. 8,793 18,745 40 8,831 18,756 744 H&vie. .... 714 Total French. Hamburg Other ports Total to N. Europe. Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar &c Ail others Total Spain,etc...... Grand Total Liverpool, per steamers City of Boston, 841....Penn¬ sylvania, i,897... Nemesis. 4«9....Nebraska. 2 353 Malta, 466 —Helvetia, 3X01. ...City of London, 877....Ships W. G. Russell, 407 British Princess, 123 To Hamburg, per steamers * estphalia, 1,059.... Han monia, 1,249... To Bremen, per steamer Donan, 900 New Orleans—To Liverpool, p rbarkE. A Kennedy, 2,233. To Havre, per brig Martha A. McNeil, 3,9£8 Per ship Geneive. — — 4,100 to Nov. 6.48J 9,437 23. • 470 • • • # • • • • i«m 11,017 * . • ••• • • • • • • • • . • ■ • 781 • • • « • To Bietnen, per steamer To Rotterdam, per ship 4,697 1,404 934 1,148 14 25 2,044 812 The 45,785 particulars of these shipments, arranged in follows aa u$ual form, our Bre- Ham- Liver- Lon- Barce¬ Rotter¬ dam. Genoa. lona. pool. don Havre, men. bnrg. '400 New York.. 9,437 New Orltans 2,238 7,033 6,204 Mobile. 4,312 Charleston.. 4,697 1,211 934 Savannah... 1,401 Texas 1,143 Vera Cruz. 12,646 1,101 700 110 15,601 • • • • 7,935 25 4,866 28,231 By Telegraph 312 • • from 12,645 1,101 110 714 45,735 Liverpool— Liverpool, November 26, 4-30 P. M.—The market closed firmer, with sales reaching 14,000 bales, 3,000 of which were taken for speculation and export. The , stocks at and afloat for Liverpool each ofthelast four weexs: Nov. 26. Nov. 19. 66,000 75JOOO 106,000 10,000 Total sales Sales for export U>006 7,009 M 5,000 888,000 23,000 290,000 115,000 Sales on speculation Total stock Stock of American Total afloat. American afloat Trade Report.—The market for yarns 420,000 29,009 285,609 100,009 Nov. 5. 67,000 S'SJJ 8,000 24,000 423,009 898,000 81,OCO 841,009 68^009 Oet.19. - 1|9,009 323,000 49,009 and fabrics at Manchester Is steady. The following table will show the daily closing prices European and Indian Cotton 7,041 for the week. tbe close of tbe London letter* 5,121 8 • • • • 15,645 • • ~m 25 9,233 8,143 2,561 49,129 •as • • 14 9,881 .... sales of the week have been 66,000 bales, of which 10,000 were taken for export and 5,000 on speculation. The stock in port is estimated at 388,000 bales, of which 25,000 are American. The receipts cl the week have been 83,000 bales, of which 10,000 are American. The stock at sea, bound to this port, is estimated at 290,000 bales, of which 115,000 are American...... ~ • •; For the convenience of our readers we give the following, showing the sales see • • • Batur. Price Midd. Uplands.... UK®.... *• •* Orleans..... " “ TJp. to arrive • • • i • • • 97,898 • • • • Wednes. Thurs. UK®—. 821:::: U*®.... mi SjfS:::: ....®..,. ....®.«». ...*®.... Markets will be found at TOBACCO. Friday, P. M., November £6,1869. • 13,697 • U#®.... Tues. Mob. • 7,884 • 1,148 2,044 77,129 7*049 • 16,436 14 Boston Baltimore 25 2,308 .... Total. .... 8,814 8,903 are : 49,104 • * . Upland. 1,211 Total 77,439 8,593 • ,900 2,233 Leipzeig, 2,044 Boninger, 812 prev. year. 900 • 2.303 Up and To Havre, per brig Mary M. Francis, 328 Sea Island and 883 Savannah—To Liv rpool, per b»rk Sagadahoc, 1,404 Uplands To Havre, per schooner David Ames, 934 Uplands Texas—To Liveipoo: per bark Walter. 1,148 Boston- To Barcelona, per bark Young Turk, 14 Baltimore—To London, per steamer Leipzeig, 25 7,041 • 9,437 To Brennn, per steamer Hirover, 2,735....Per ship Georgina, 2,419. 5,204 To Barcelona, per brie Proieta, Tr O TOO To Geno i. per bark Chidtconue. 1,101 1,101 To Yera C; uz, per schooner Ysaheita, 219 (half ba’es) 110 Mobile—To Liverpool, per ship Progress, 4,312 4,312 To Hamburg, per brig Schwan, 653 , 653 Charleston—To Liverpool, per steamer Darien, 163 Sea Island and 1.904 Upland... per bark A. B. Wyman, 14 Sea Is.and and 2.616 date 5,124 • » a « i • .... 781 1,745 1,441 • • • 9,437 664 1,975 '859 * C64 • .... 1,089 • 6,480 Same time r| 7,081 156 Nov. 16. • ••• Other French ports Bremen and Hanover Total 11 Other British Ports Total to Gt* Britain. New Yokk—To ... week between • • 828 628 70,195 r There is a decrease in the exports of crude tobacco this week, the total from all the ports reaching 1,378 hhds., 280 oases, 1,849 bales, and 188 pkgs, against 3,021 hhds, 168 cases, f.34 bales and 446 hhds stems for tbe previous seven days. Of these exports for this week 1,082 hhds., 181 # 696 THE CHRONICLE. 1,191 bales and 148 pkg3. were from New York; 248 hhds., 7 cases and 658 bales from Baltimore; 37 lihds from New Orleans; 11 hhds 54 cases and 40 pkgs from cases Boston. The direction of the lows: To Bremen, 235; to to Hamburg, lJ4 the shipments of hhds. was as fol¬ Genoa, 1,040; to London, 37; and the balance to different ports. During ; period the expoits of manufactured tobacco reached 126,348 lbs., of which 75,104 lbs. were to Liverpool. The full particulars of the shipments from all the ports were as same follows: 243 11 Boston Philadelphia Hhds. Man’d. Tea. Stems. Pkgs. lbs. Hhds. Cases. Bales. 181 1,082 1,191 New York 7 54 • - 653 • • .... i , .... • . .... 143 i 37 Portland .... .... • • • • 33 • • • • 1,378 3,021 Total previous week... - .... 1,849 534 138 133 73 446 27 1,686 126,348 98,326 51,741 Below we give our usual table showing the total export of ■Tobacco from all the ports of the United States, and their direction, since November 1, 1869: To Great Britain.. •' Cer’s Cases. 530 Belgium 131 • Pkgs. hhds. A bxs. ••• «V* 3,610 719 Holland Denmark Stems, Bales. A tcs. *145 1,269 • 1*075 Prance “ii 153 Spain, Gibralt. Ac Mediterranean 24 Genoa Dutch West Indies British North American Colonies 1,040 • • • • • • • • • • • *339 *564 Africa, &c China, India, &o.. • • ••• • • • • • • • • V 283 •. ***** *.::*. .... **64 Australia, Ac ‘*41 » 124 03 i Honolulu, Ac • • • • 1 3 "io AJ1 others Total since Nov 1.... following 963 Hhds. 26 • • • * • « • • • • •••• • the • • 1 10 British West Indies Cuba Mexico ivew Granada — — San Francisco. 52 .... Portland • • Total since Nov 1. * .... * * * .... • • * 4,063 Virginia 10 1 Baltimore New Orleans.... • Ohio, Ac • 107 Other hhds. • • • - 262 32 .... Total • • 118 • • — but not very - — - 1963 active. 1,014 14S 10 0 Total 1,082 181 • 1,191 143 120,318 From Baltimore—To Bremen—198 hhds, 2 cases and 658 bales To London 30 hhds To St. Pierre Miquelon—20 htidg and 6 cases. From New Orleans—To Bremen, 37 hhds. From Boston—To Bombay—52 rases ...To Demerara—1 case....To Halifax and Charlottetown—15 half boxes, 20 pkgs, 1 hhds. ...To the Province# 1 case, 5 hf boxes.., .To Other Foreign, 10 hh^s. Frcm San Francisco—To Victoria—35 cases ...To Honolulu—3 do. From Charleston—To Liverpool, 20 hhds. ' * The exports in this table to European ports are made up from ifests, vended and corrected by aD inspection of the cargo. man BREADSTUFFS. Friday, November 26, 1869, P. M. ' The market the past 983 • • * • MS .... ~4o4 • • 126 93 337 10 t 4,980 6,179 73 25 857 • 649 42 ... Tioi 6,943 w j vvuv mu v m vv The market for Kentucky Leaf has been b.ut moderately active. The business has amounted to only about 500 hhds, and has been restricted mainly to the medium and better grades, and about equally divided between shippers and consumers. The lower grades of Kentucky Tobacco are scarce, and held for such extreme prices that they are neglected by buyers. The in the range of 10@14c. unsettled, rather tending upward, owing to the great strength developed by the staple in the growing districts. The sales include about 400 cases Ohio, old and new crop, mainly on private terms, but including a line of the crop of 1868 at 20c; also about 200 cases Connecticut, mainly Wrappers of the crop of 1868, at 45@75c. Spanish Tobacco has been fairly active, and prices have im¬ proved on the reports of damage done by the Revolutionists in Cuba; sales for the week amount to 350 bales at 3lc gold, in bond, and $1@1 20 currency, duty paid. Manufactured prices paid were mainly Seed Leaf has been Tobacco has been in good demand ers are inclined to look for still sales of considerable higher prices, though to effect parcels, from the wharf, inside prices accepted. Circumstances point to liberal receipts of Flour all winter, by rail and coastwise vessels. Southern Flour has been quiet but firm. Rye Flour has improved. must still be Cornmeal remains dull and unsettled. Wheat opened the week very depressed, with prime No. 2 Spring down to $1 24, and Amber Winter $1 33. The receipts continued unexpectedly large. We received lower quo¬ tations from Liverpool, and there -was considerable (—T’lsin.Nov.l— hhds. pkgs 73 • 276,418 1. 1869. 4,51C .... 9 • week, and since pkgs 116 92 25 750 28^533 — — ‘25 few days has gradually assumed a some previous irregularity, and at the close the tendency is slightly upward, in the Lee 2*,678 of the decline in gold. Flour has continued to arrive very freely, both by rail and boat, averaging more than 20,000 bbls per day. On Monday 40*098 .... 473 .... ^-Previously—. 1,669 .... * .... RECEIPTS AT NEW YORK SINCE NOVEMBER <—This week—, hhds. pkgs. 2*085 — Cnica.... 7,383 • The receipts of tobacco at New York this Nov. 1 have been as follows: From * .... 963 „ 250,904 25,514 152 .... * iii: 5,141 • 473 • .... • .... 4 • c02 • ;;;* Virginia/. 161,911 Stems Bxs. A Lbs. hhds. pkgs. ManPd. cer’s. 3 *371 10*793 0 64 .... .., New Orleans... • • 152 802 • •••• Tcs. A Bales. 2,908 1,157 717 7 386 2,269 Boston • « shipped: Cases. 2,475 • 4,068 table indicates above exports have been Prom • • 5,141 • • » 3,328 4,010 , 1,191 last, with the dull accounts from Liverpool, there was a mate* rial giving way in prices, and a half panicky tone pervaded 36,841 the market, but ou Wednesday some speculative strength i,dii was infused from the West: large lines were withdrawn from the market, and the close is 15@20e per bbl higher for the 473 454 276,418 common grades than the lowest figure? of the week. ' At this ports from which the improvement there is no disposition to press sale3, and hold¬ *39 * • • ’iso 48 25 B. N. Am. Prov... South America.. West indies Bast Indies Mexico 10 11 stronger tone, though not without .... Austria lbe. *<5,104 £0,015 69 Hamburg lbs. S • • 58 199 ManTd Pkgs, Manl’d • a i • 32C Italy Bales *.*7 London Bremen from the United States since Novem¬ ber 1, 1869. Hhds. . Germany Hhds. Cases. Liverpool — * Exports of Tobacco YORK.* .... .... 280 163 615 742 ... NEW New Ycili The direction of the foreign exports for the week, from the other ports, has been as follows: 40 .... .... San Francisco. prices. week: EXPORTS or TOBACCO FROM 126,348 . .. New Orleans.. Philadelphia following are the exports of tobacco from the past Argentine Republic ELrp’d this week from The The or [November 27,186 j. at full money pressure among holders, all which gave buyers But with some restoration of speculative confidence, on Wednesday, holders withdrew samples largely, in fact the offerings became unusually limited; freights to Liverpool declined 2fd, and thus enabled shippers to pay some advance in the face of the decline in gold. To-day we had better accounts from Liverpool, with shit pers needing wheat, and about 60,000 bushels, No. 2 Spring, sold at $1 25 in store, and $1 28@$1 30 afloat, closing at the higher figure, or about six cents above the lowest point of tbe week. Corn and Oats have been fully sustained by speculation based upon light stocks, and anticipated small receipts during the winter months, except at high cost. Rye has latterly done rather better, but remains scarce and quiet. Barley has ruled very heavy till towards the close. Barley Malt is very unsettled. the advantage. The Canada Pdas very dull and nominal. following are closing quotations : Flour— WheaLSpring, per bus a. *l 10® 1 8S 1 15® 1 82 1 36® 1 88 Extra Western, com¬ 1 42® 1 65 mon 1 60® ...• Double Extra Western Corn,Western Mix’d,new l 08® 1 1} and St. Lonis 5 75® 8 60 Yellow new 1 12® 1 15 Southern supers 5 26® 5 75 White new @ 1 Southern, extra and Rye 105® 118 family 6 00® 8 76 Oats. 63® jW California ® Kye Flour, fine and super fine 4 75® 6 00 Peas, Canada J 15© 1 40 Corn Meal 4 75® 6 40 Superfine.......# bbl. $4 70.® Extra State 5 10 20® 6 60 Red Winter. Amber do White 5 10® 6 35 White California 6 .... til:::::::;.;....;. The movement in breadstuff* at this market has been m !S3j8 follow*: THE CHRONICLE. November 27, 1869.] RECEIPTS AT For the week. 866,615 £ 9,995 49,135 2,608,220 7,462,425 189,555 542,290 11,676,750 18,181,656 647,585 2,338,610 10,053,215 10,363,020 bush- ...578,055 Parley, &c. bash.... Flour, C. meal, Wheat, Rye, Barley. bbls. bush. bnsb. bush. bbls. To cf, Brit. week.... * Since Jau.l 699,357 week.. 3,855 11,593 .... 35 236,130 Oats. busb. 607,577 16,493,434 175 2.200 225 29,107 2,465 516,611 Friday Evening, November 26, 1889. With only a fair activity in the various markets, the gene¬ ral tone has been heavy and the tendency of prices downward. 147,524 of discount of mercantile paper which has been obtained has been insufficient to counteract it to any extent. Inland freights 11,349 81,171 3.847 steady, but the interior purchasers seem indifferent as to availing themselves of the opportunity to avoid a future are 528,978 10 advance. Raw Sugars have been weak and declining close dull with no inquiry from refiners and throughout, and little from the trade, and unsupported by any further news of damages to the crop in Cuba, either inflicted or prospective. Refined have depreciated steadily, and thus taken away another sup¬ port from the market for the raw material. In Molasses the only noticeable transactions have been the new crop of New Orleans, which is arriving freely, and as it supplies the want for fine Molasses which the stock of foreign here could not fill, it is sold readily, and hitherto mostly by auction. The prices, though of course below those for the following tables, prepared for the Chronicle by Mr. E. H. Walker, of the New York Produce Exchange, show the grain in sight aod the movement of breadstuff's to the latest mail dates : The STORE IN YORK AND NEW BROOKLYN WAREHOUSES. -1869.-Nov. 20. Nov. 13. 2,974,181* Wheat, bush Com, bush Oate, bush — 1868. Nov. 21. 2,440,993 947,983 822,6,’0 133 354 31,‘JOO 10,185 Barley, bush Rye, bush Peas, bush Malt, bush 1S67. Nov. 22. 2,355,273 2,433,504 2,268,417 2^8,850 855,424 615,401 51,954 31,700 5,499 1,518,664 2,062,849 3,168,450 61,98} 32,523 72,021 601,350 171,764 11,825 68,155 5,046,2 »0 4,062,954 Including about 120,000 bushels Califonra! 7,741,026 7,490,057 65,209 Total grain, bush 373,4 .. RECEIPTS AT LAKE PORTS Flour* bbls. Chicago 42,292 Milwaukee Toledo Detroit Cleveland 27,510 24,675 3,050 THE WEEK ENDING Corn. bush. bush. NOV. Oats. 20. Barley. bush. Rye. bush. (56 lbs.) (32 lb*.) (48 lbs ) (56 lbs.) 10 ‘,797 153,679 79,329 13,964 9,069 8,172 4,659 V07 18,809 18,0o0 65,112 1,02) 1,623 4,383. 4,630 6,759 2,750 33,220 1,200 J 343,751 529,923 21.423 Totals FOR Wheat. bush. (60 lbs ) (196 lbs.) At " . 82,390 60,486 27,100 118,950 1,010,650 133.053 191,011 186,9:0 19,391 163,435 1,471,297 Correspond’#“ week, 69. 93,027 517,784 567. 92,117 809,831 ‘66. 149,864 7>2,398 ’65. 107,433 9:0,279 854,352 2*>5,46i 472 373 239,526 326,919 24',903 178,679 20,^93 32,984 42,75S 57,142 210,928 22,759 55,520 50,354 'Previous week “ Comparative Receipts at the inclusive, for four yeafs same 202,783 ..bbls. Wheat 225,804 177,333 244,656 4 bush. ports, from January 1 to Nov. 20, 1868 591,516 T1 (JO 3,791,1S6 1,302,733 1 G16.4i7 87,236,016 81,615,722 27,872,103 29,890,524 13,697,176 2,734,195 28,574,498 2,256,674 75,S85.52) 1,946,031 521,621 29,463,0*9 13,509,490 2,514,095 3,740,853 heads. The totals are as 80,785,730 August 1st to Nov. 20, inclusive, for four 1869. .bbls. 18:8. 1,749,902 At N. York. this Week. Tea 1,992,983 • • • • 40,967,464 38,054,934 34,642 39,095 2,890 1,094,546 288,334 2,075 572 774 4,814 1,465 542,741 757,3C0 348,617 1,030,688 1,069,005 455,491 554,(61 400,808 899,512 4S7 18,477 13,156 33,902 Sugar. Sugar. Sugar. ^.hhds. .... Molaet TEA. 1866. 1,900,650 a The trade in invoices was, during the earlier part of the week, at stand-still, and though some improvement has been apparent sub¬ sequently, the aggregate of the week’s business is covered by a 6mall figure. The source of the dulness may be found in the decline 6,622,097 10,033,776 in gold, and the general lethargy of mercantile business. Rumors 2, *)45,863 Janey 1,54 V7r0 have been afloat during the week, of a sale of some importance in *ye 747,760 1,07S,416 Japan teas previous to arrival, which have finally crystallized into Total grain, bushels.... 44,895,S12 47,078,839 47,530,36.3 36,478,760 the report of G,OO0 half chests sold by the Doon. Prices for greens Eastward Movement from Chicago, Milwaukee, Toledo and C'eve- have been quite well sustained; for other kinds they are somewhat Iand, including rail shipments from the former three places fer week unsettled, but without decline. The sales are 4,979 half chests of greens, 2,700 do. of Oolongs, and 1,0C0 do. Japans. ending Nov. 20, 1869: No imports are reported during the past week. Advices from China are not of later date than those Flour, Wheat, Corn, Oats, Barley, Rye, previously given. Wheat busbds. 23,364,226 ;... 12 617,949 Com 21,139,647 10,314,0)1 12,129,252 2,109,265 1,395,674 . 2 2*655,*‘41 11,466,666 15,548,809 14,285,649 4,037,833 1,512,462 1,094,507 . m bbls. . weekending Nov. 20...122,864 Previous week tor. week, 1868 1867. 1866 ‘ 1865 bush. busb. bush. bush. bush. 852,818 267,301 872,396 482,150 450,227 502,359 321,29) 301,212 29,808 11,116 287,507 10,251 5,338 179,996 6,078 193,581) 46,598 36,345 317,208 115,104 253,425 6,167 119,334 631,406 72,590 663,879 64,766 901,227 136,055 870,435 72,715 321,86) Shipments from same 67,984 64,400 53, COFFEE. For fine quality of Brazil coffee the market has been firm and the demand active, and the low grades also have met with a good inquiry. The medium grades, however, are neglected; with light offerings on the part of holders prices have been sustained. Among the sales of the week is one of some 3,700 hags of Santoe, re¬ Comparative ports, including rail, (excepting shipped Cleveland) from the opening of navigation to and including Nov. 20, for In West from Hamburg attracted by the better market found here. Indian little has been done. 4,300 mats of Java were sold four years: for consumption to-day, which is the only movement in East 1868. 1869. 1867. 1866. Indian. The sales are 12,482 bags of Rio, 8,727 bags of Santos, 1,C05,935 2,409,910 2,088,459 2,090,136 and 4,300 mats of Java. Wheat,bush 19 056,186 20,573,091 18,784 062 82,846,728 Imports of Rio Coffee for the week have been quite liberal, including tom, bush 21.528,8)2 20,716,864 25,616,647 83,704,758 cargoes by the following vessels: “ North America” 5,845 bags, 44 Man13,423 453 9,247,167 8,202,335' 9,891,270 son” 4,500 bags, “Fairlina” 3,695 bags, 44 N. Struve” S,5!9 bags, 44 Sile¬ 241,336 268,532 3,404,778 1,220,608 «je, 863,77 L 394,385 1,080,273 1,418,890 sia” (Hamburg st-amer) 2,929 bags, 44 Doris Brodersen” 5,540 bags, Anna” 4,001 bags. Of other sortB the receipts have been 1,563 bags 52,045,172 62,401,648 60,745,544 65,291,712 of Laguayra per steamer 44 Hammooia824 bags of Jamaica, and 992 grain IN BIGHT” nov. 20, 1869. bags from Carthagena. The stock of Rio Nov., 95 and imports since Jan. 1, are as follows: Wheat. Corn. Oats. Barley. • .... ... 44 bush. In \fc ?ewr Ycek £^lcaS;0 £ •* Milwaukee AfliS*6 aoat • • • lakes for Buffalo and Oswego bneh. bush. 947,983 220,771 822,620 12,701 1.684,607 345,013 813,117 183,864 152.189 322.189 583,230 49,171 .8.W4/M9 897,000 76,021 ^ Total at all ports From Jan 1 to date—* 1868. 1869. Tea (indirect import) . years : 1867. 2,0,2,570 2,113,862 every- follows: 57,525,067 12,315,629 for thing but the medium grades, though the latter are without any decline, and in other descriptions the light stocks have served to keep prices very firm. Teas have moved slowly, Greens bringing full prices, while the other kinds have been somewhat irregular. Imports of the week have been more liberal, particularly of Rio Coffee, receipts of this sort amounting to 33,902 bags. Sugar and Molasses have come in more freely than last week. No imports of Tea are reported. The imports at New York for the week, and at the several ports since January 1, are given below under their respective 1866. 3,413,078 1,641,523 29 41,98!,887 12,684,367 Flour. 22,616 first few lots received, are full and satisfactory For Brazil Coffee there has been a good demand : 1?09. And from 44 20. .8,232,653 13. .7,489,513 GROCERIES. Corn bush 61,943 7,202 .... 1^993,481 1.894.856 1,187430 2,246,250 1,893,644 1,350,858 6..7,582,772 2,6? 0,212 1,886,479 1,473479 80..7,787,842 8,487,872 2,230,600 1,459,250 23. .7,616.550 8,876,551 2,655,405 1,099,221 Oct. 16. .6,926,069 4,121,749 1,878,748 563401 Oct. 2 .5,659,455 4,723,838 1,658,584 41 44 4,576 48,628 1,659,197 71,699 5,687,573 1,1869.1311,231 126,30217,201,199 144,060 1868.. 833,835 176,694 5,157,803 152,993 Since Jan. 1 from— 'Boston.... 165,181 29,068 50 133,147 30,802 749,8^6 Philadelphia, Baltimore 303,110 26,459 772,674 Flour 39,808 “ 687 Since Jail. * 191,144 44^584 Gold has steadily declined, which has had .some influence in 4,376 depressing matters, and the slight improvement in the rates 687 59,931 Bame time, IN 180,884 “ 17,000 1,337,802 *2?, 101 1 202,878 nreotlnd, week.. 4,788 Since Jan. 1 303,325 Total exp’t, week 25,501 Since Jan. 96,115 from new tore for the week and SINCE JAN. 1. PORKIRN exports n,A. Col. 549,750 Total in store and in transit Nov. “ 44 Nov. “ 44 Nov. “ “ Oct. 44 Oct. 2,547,046 306.520 1,168,425 . 478.753 waukee for week Since Jan. 1. 106,7.0 4,545 183,955 22,454,810 bush 249,659 .. ■1868. , 2,987,8-0 Floor, hbs...... Corn meal. hols. Corn, Afloat on N. Y. canals fer tide Water 1,712,575 Rail shipments from Chicago and Mil¬ TORE. ■1£69.-t For the Since week. Jan. 1. ' Bye, NEW 697 New In Bags. York. Stock.. 99,213 Same date 1868. 153,103 Pliila- delphla. Balti- New Savan.A Orleans. Mobile, 21,100 4,500 1,000 2,700 1,500 82,005 more. Gal- veeton. .... Total. 124,818 191,608 1,70) 8,200 J 282,343 95,441 26,866 500 2,*00,1,094,546 13,736 678,898 in 1858. 693,068 Imports 44 233,514 71,459 18,061 5,800 1,080,688 I THE CHRONICLE 698 the Of other sorts the stock at New York, Not. 26 aod the imports at B6Tir&l ports sines Jan. 1 were as follows: ^ New York-'. Boston Philadel. Balt. N.Orles <a oq o> 8tock. Import, import, import, import, import. In ban 15-B Jiv* t560 *45,762 *17,375 2 © ae. 1,109 13,366 *4,834 Singapore 943 Ej 4) 17,109 .|4 Ceylon.... •••• •• . • , - rt — Maracaibo Laguayra St.jDomingo 52,229 1,158 1,443 7,593 1,163 L254 l‘008 40.440 21,125 22,778 1,003 1,379 1,246 293,864 47,849 207 288,834 8«5,5o7 bags. + Also 14,245 mats. Janeiro, 26th October, 1869.—Messrs. Boje A dr Report statesSince our last very Co.’s Market of 24th ult. we have to report to-day of animated market, which lasted from 25th ult. to 2d inst., caused by the better advices from Europe and your side. Transactions up ttf 8th October amounted in all to about 106,000 hags, of which 68,000 to the United States, and at a rise of about 200—800 rs. on our last quo¬ tations. Since departure of the English mail little business ha9 been done. Holders have continued as firm as before and owing to the small supplies of merely 6.000 bags per day from the interior, suc¬ ceeded to obtain their last rates for about 70,000 bags which changed hands till then. Business altogether has been very sluggish during last week. Exchange closes firm at Bank Bills 19d, Private Bills 19^ to J. We estimate coffee sales in the interval, for the United States 84,000 tags, for Europe, Ac., 92->000 bags, total, 176,000 bags. last report dated 24th Vessels sailed for the United States since our Septemb. in the r same especial importance. bbls. of African which came in At auction 590 bags and 174 currency. A cargo of cloves last, was sold previous to arrival. Our finger sold at 13Jc. since our quotations remain unchanged. FRUITS. In Foreign Dried Fruits there has been no change of importance in the position of the market. There is a good demand, and with the approach of the holidays a still more active trade is anticipated. Several vessels are now due, however, and buyers are awaiting their arrival previous to stocking themselves fully. Prices are un¬ changed. Iu Domestic Dried there has been considerable inquiry Apple*. Southern are taking the place this year of all other kinds, and the finer kinds of sliced are realizing high prices. For the lower priced, especially those of heavy cut, there has been some inquiry for export from German shippers; at the close the market for Includes mats, &c., red need to Rio & 0* 1^246 224,589 9,137 41,958 Total lame *68 * 64,859 18,190 6,976 Other movement of [November 27, 1868, • • • • • :; * • .••••• with together period sailed for Europe 88 vessels, Total bags of coflee Vessels cleared and ready for eea Vessels loading or about to load for the United SUGAR. States is shade less active for all kinds. Blackberries are dull at about In Peaches there has been a fair trade, and prices are firm shore selling at 18@20c. In green fruit, Mediterranean, per steamer have been more abundant, and the prices are lower. At auction from steamer Messina Oranges sold at $2 40@$3 05 per box; Pa¬ lermo do., at $2 15@$2 30; Malaga do., at $2 75. Messina Lemons at $4 00; Palermo do., at $3<§>$3 10, and Malaga at $2 20 and jobbers prices from store for the same are not much In West Indian fruit Havana Oranges are in moderate supply, and a 13c. different! Cocoanuts' are the only Baracoa $35, Carthagena $60 per M. Green Apples are active, holders having no disposition to retain them longer than necessary, as the frosty weather sets in, and especially as they are realizing good prices. i S!!’!!!? 130,051 fruit are sold from the dock at $4, from store and inLots of good smaller par¬ 233*621 cels they bring $4 25@$4 50. Cranberries are steady at $10@>$12 per bbl. 19,3U0 We annex ruling quotations in first bands : After the noticeable firmness which prevailed at the time of our last report and continued on Saturday last, raw sugars^ have steadily declined in strength. Quotations are \ lower, anu prices are weak at the reduction—in fact by some they are made lower still. The selling at $8@$9 other Kind per a lower price. as last quoted. bbl, here, and sell Dutt: 25 cent* per lb. Duty paid Hyson, Common to fair... do do 78 ® 85 90 ®1 00 Superior to fine.... Ex fine to finest.. .1 06 @1 30 V’g Hyson, Com. to fair... do Super, to fine.. /—Duty paid- do Ex f. tofin’st 68 © 81 Unool. Japan, Com.to fair.. 80 @ 86 do Snp’rto fine. 85 @ 90 Ex f. to finestl 05 @1 20 do do 72® 78 depreciation has resulted mainly from the decreasing demand from 82 @1 05 Oolong, Common to fair... 65 ® 7fl refiners, who have felt obliged to contract their purchases to keep do Exnnetoflnest.1 20 @1 45 do Superior to fine... 75 ® 85 do Ex fine to finest ..100 @1 80 pace with the narrowing markets for their own products. The Ganp. & Imp., Com.to fair 85 @1 00 do Bono. & Gong., Com. tofair 80 ® f-6 Sup. to fine 1 00 @1 25 trade have bought some, but without any steady purpose, and not do do Ex.r.tofinest.1 30 @1 80 do Snp’rto fine. 90 ® 95 enough to interpose any obstacle to the downward movement. H. Sk.&Tw’kay,C,tofair. 65 @ 70 do Ex f. to finestl 15 ©1 85 The fall in gold has assisted also to render the market heavy. do do Sup. to fine 72 @ 80 Coffee* Refined sugars -have steadily declined, and close ^c. lower than at Duty : When imported direct in American or equalized vessels from the the date of our last report, and inactive. The stock of sugar place of its growth or production; also, the growth of countries this side the in bags ha* been reduced by the export in first hands of 26,000 Cape of Good Hope when imported indirectly in American or equalized ves bags to Canada. The sales of raw sugars include 1,68 L hhds. of »els^5 cents per lb.; all other, 10 per cent ad valorum in addition. do. Prime, duty paid ...gold 111® 12 Native Ceylon gold 174® 151 Cuba, 234 do. of Porto Rico, 79 do. of Demerara, 236 do. of BarMaracaibo good gold 104® 11 .gold 161$ 29 badoes, and 1,687 boxes of Havana. do fair gold 94® 10 Laguayra —gold 16 J@ 18 St. Domingo, in bond gold —gold 84® 9 Imports for thd week at iNew York, aod stock on hand November 26 do ordinary ® 10 o were as Java, mats anlbags ....gold 23 ® 28f follows: Cuba, bxs. Cuba, P. Rico, Other, Brazil, M’nila,&c ♦hhds. ♦hhds. " bgs. bgs. ♦hhds. 749 2,513 2,075 Imports this week Vi tm 66,789 41,743 17,966 103,494 31,768 35,131 Stock on hand Same time 1868 « “ 1867 - 1,562 — 176,401 44,375 17,903 Imports at the several ports since Jan. 1 have been Boxes 1869. 1868. Imp’s since Jam 1, at New York 368,038 217,675 * « “ “ “ ** “ « “ “ “ “ “ “ “ Portland.. Boston.... Philadel.. Baltimore. N. Orleans Total * 1809. follows: Brazil, Manila bags. bags. ,—*Hhds < 1868. 1869. 1869. 320,298 323,819 135,786 388.743 9,902 ; 11,426 67,167 70,437 12,600 159,626 69,058 72,298 49,650 66,501 63,688 10,955 9,815 12,398 18,886 64,296 31,575 56,523 46,991 32,302 81,476 65,809 8,858 34,836 572,774 455,491 as 542,741 554,061 208,991 548,869 „ ~ Jamaica .. .....gold 15 ® 10 Sugar. . Duty : On raw or brown sugar, not above No. 12 Dutch standard, 3; on white or clayed, above No. 12 and not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refined, 2%; above 15 and not over 20, 4; on refined, 5; and on Melado 2% cents perl do do ui/ to 20 144® 14{ Cnba, inf. to 00m refining.. 101® 104 do fair to good do white .... 14 ® 15 do do ... 114® Ilf do prime Porto Rico, refining grades. 11 ® 11{ 114® .. do fair to good grocery.. Ilf® 12 do grocery grades . Ill® 13 do pr. to choice do .. J 24® 124 Brazil, bags I0f® 111 do oentrifugalhhds &bx» 10 ® 13 Manila, bags 101® 11 do Melado 6 ® 8f Hards ® 154 do molasses White sugars, A 947? 11 141® .. do do B ® 144 flav’a, Box, D.S. Nos. 7 to 9. 10f® IU do do do 10 to 12 ljj® 13 do do extra 0 141® 14j do do de 18 to 15 121® 18 Yellow sugars 134® 141 do do .do 16 to 18 13|® 144 _ Molasses* _ Duty : 8 cents # gallon. Hew Orleans (new)... 9 gall. 83 ® 88 Porto Rico 50 ® 77 Cuba Muscovado, refining... 48 ® 65 Including tierces and barrels reduced to hhds. do 40® 45 Claysd. 45 ® Barbadoes... Spless* Duty: maoe, 40 oents; nutmegs, 50; cassia and oloves, 20; pimento, 15; and ginger root, 5 oents V lb. Cassia Batavia.gold, #ft 41® 42 Pepper, in bond...(gold) Cassia, in mats ..gold §}fi> 42® 44 Pepper, Singapore HOLA8SES. We have but little improvement in the peppw 60 and activity of foreign to 101® W 25® 351 report The stock here, though it is small and gradually diminish¬ do Sumatra ® 12« ing, is not of the quality desired by purchasers, and difficult to dis¬ Ginger,raoe and Af(gold) 12 ® 1 30 Pimento, Jamaica.(gold) 26 ® 55i Mace (gold) 18 ® 184 pose of. Domestic, on the other hand, supplies the wanted quali¬ Nntmegs, casks do in bond...(gold) 1 05 ® 1 10 S4® 4; do cases Penang. 1 10 ® 1 15 Cloves ties, and sells readily at fair prices. It is mostly brought forward ..(gold) 26® 281 Fruit. by public sale, and so far, as the receipts are yet limited, rates have Duty: been quite well sustained, though naturally showing a recession Almonds, Raisins, Currants, Pigs, Plums and Prunes,5; Shelled Almondf, 6; other ants,2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 14, Filberts and from the extreme prices obtained for the small lots, which consti¬ Walnuts, 3 oents # 9>; Sardines, 60; Preserved Ginger, 50; Grsen Fruits, tuted the first of the receipts. The sales include 1,092 bbls. of New # oent ad val. ®8 # q r. box 171® 18 Orleans, 195 hhds. of Demerara, 351 do. of Porto Rico, and 92 do. Raisins,beealess nw # mat 4 85® 50 Sardines.. do Layer, new. $ box Figs,Smyrna # ft •• ® of Cuba. do Valencia.old# lb 15 ® do New 18 ® • • per ft do do l new The receipt* of the week at New York, and the stock on hand Novem¬ 18 ® Brazil Nuts ; • ® 14 ® 144 Filberts,Sicily « Currants, new # fi> 15 § 15 ber 25, were rs follows : Citron, Leghorn ® 96 Walnuts, Bordeaux,new. P. Rico. Demerara. Other. Cuba. N.O. Prunes, Turkish 12® Macaroni, Italian @ 18 ♦Hhds. ♦Hhds. *Hhd«. *Hhdi. Bbls. Dates Dried Fruit— ® 12 843 40 582 Imports this week. 487 Almonds, Languedoo 28 ® Apples, Southern..# ft 8 ® »» do Piovslos 20 ® 23 do do sliced 10 ® U* .... . „ .. .. _ x .... .. . fitoekonhand.. “ same 8,718 time 1868... 8.165 1,164 2,245 2,060 1,222 200 Imports at the several ports since Janaary 1 have been as follows : do do Sardines Sieilv, Soft Shell Shelled, Spanish # hi. box ® 16 89 ® 40 ® 81 .. .. Blackberries Peaches, pared new Peaches, nnpared 1§ @ ^ 18 @ 84© 11 N.O. *Hhdi , 1869. 1868. .... 29,968 168,273 56,238 .... 91,207 1 at New York Portland Boston 1869. 14,567 Baltimor* New Orleans... * 65,5'4 762 77,487 23,801 18,199 2,722 899,512 Philadelphia... 18,477 484 Including tierces and barrels reduced to hhds. 8PIGES. There has been a THE DRY GOODS TRADE. bbls, steady demand from jobber*, without any Friday, P. M.« November 26, 1861. The market remains in statu quo. A report of its features present time can hardly do more than notice some variations in the general quiet and dulnes9 which at the few prevails. Prices, having been reduced previously to low figures, do not show a further decline, at least not in the nominal quotations although it is a well known fact that in period^ of extreme quiet in trade, concessions will usually be made to effect sales* THE November 27, 1869.] CHRONICLE. 699 TT there Quite a noticeable point in the market is the fact that jL not enough buyers in the city to induce iobbers to ^re rmt pnoua-h buyers in the city to induce jobbers to offer “drives,” and very few of these are to be found now, where a few weeks ago a dozen instances might have been found in the city, of goods offered below market prices to attract at¬ The principal business doing is upon mail orders from different parts of the country for goods required to keep Cotton, although quoted lower, can hardly up assortments. be called weaker, so far as the sales for future delivery i ndieate the feeling upon the market. Sales for January delivery tention. fraction below curient rates, and for higher prices than those now current. Financially there is little change to notice in the feeling among merchants ; there is still great difficulty in discountins every class of commercial paper, rather from a disinclina¬ tion on the part of bankers to enter into time engagements than from any other reason; as to collections, no particular complaint is made. The exports of dry goods for the past week, and since Jan¬ uary 1, 1869, and the total for the same time in 1868 anc 1860 are shown in the following table: , are made at a mere February at PROM NEW YORK. FROM B08T0N. Domestics. Val. pkgs. would be sold before the middle of December at 11$ cents; and his reason for this rather suprising announcement he cited the immense competition now going on in this line, and which he was positive would lead to another break in the market. We confess we are rather in¬ credulous on this point unless cotton should decline materially, but a short period will prove beyond cavil the correctness or incorrectness of this theory. Allens 12, American 12$, Amoskeag—, Arnolds 10$,Cone¬ __ stoga 12$, Dunnell’s 12$, Freeman 10$, Gloucester 12, Hamilton 18$, Home 8$, Lancaster 12, London mourning 11$, Mallory 12, Manchester 12$, Merrimac D 12$, do pink and purple 15, do W 14, Oriental 12, Pacific 12$, Richmond’s 12, Simpson Mourning 12, Sprague’s purple and pink 18$, do blue 13$, do shirtings 18$, Wamsutta 9$ Print Cloths are still inactive. Printers will not operate on, the low mrrgins presented to them, and speculators appear to have given the article do attention whatever. Stocks of standards are small, andholders in consequence are quite firm in their views, probably believing that printers w ill be forced to meet before long in preparing for the spring trade. Standard 64 cloth is held at 7|- cents, while other grades range from 6 to 7$ cents as to quality. The Providence Journal of last week, referring to that market, says it is very dull. Most of the New England printers are running very slack, some stopped entirely. The following are the sales: 2,000 pieces 66x60, 6$c, light; 3,000 pieces 66x60, 6-fc, standards ; 35,000 pieces 64x64, 7fc, extra; 7,000 pieces 64x64, 7fc, extra ; 6,000 pieces 64x64, 7$c, standards. Total, 63,000 pieces. Most sales were on thirty days, if on longer time with interest added at bank rates. Ginghams are rather qu.et. Stocks are well closed out, and better ac¬ tivity is expected before the opening of the spring season. Allamance Exports to pkgs. AVal. plaid, 18$ ; Amoskeag, 17 ; Bates, 17 ; Caledonia, 14 ; Clyde, 11 ; EarlsChina 1,272 $..15,317 Cut*.... 42 6,405 ton, 22$@25 ; Glasgow, 16; Gloucester, 14$; Ha iley, 14; Hampden, 16 ; Hayli,. 18 3,111 Hartford, 13 ; Lancaster, 17 ; Lancashire, 15; Pequa, 12$; Park Mills 6 424 Dutch West Indies. 14 : Quaker City, 14 ; Roanoke, 12$; Union, 18. ■» Mexico 186 22,568 13 3,277 Muslin Delaines steadily maintain a quiet distribution at unchanged Liverpool 2 1,280 London rales. The majori y of these goods offered during the past season have 4 575 British West Indies. been in excellent taste, and buyers have signified their appreciation of 12 3,210 New Granada 6 the designs by the large amount they have absorbed. St. Pierre Hamilton, 20; 36 British Provinces... Tycoon Reps, 27$; Lowell, 20; Manchester, 20; do all wool, 42$; 52 31 Pacific, 20 ; do Armures, 20 ; do plain, 21 ; do Robe de C, 22$ ; do, $8,332 Total this week.. 1,524 $147,825 4,899 6,296 plain Oriental, 20 ; do Anilines,22$ ; do Serges, 2 ..$; do Alpacas, 22$; 994,6S7 SiaceJan. 1,1869. ..19,835 2,125.3 >6 7,611 4,565 1,43S,210 Same time 1868 22,529 1,356,813 do do 6-4, 26 ; Percales 4-4, 31; Perkin Lustres, 18. 33,620 1860 81,406 Canton Flannels are moving with moderate activity. Fine grades We annex a tew particulars of leading articles of domestic are in fair demand and rates are quietly maintained. Biown—Amoskeag manufacture, our prices quoted being those of the leading A A 32, do A 24, Ellerton N 27, do O 24, do P 21$, Great Falls F 28, Laconia 18$. Bleached—Amoskeag A 26, do B 25, Ellerton W H 42, jobbers: do N 80, Great Falls F 25, Naumkeag F 19. Brown Sheetings and Shirtings.—The business in this line has Other Cotton Goods are dull and inactive, although prices arbeen restricted to small lots, chiefly on orders. Sjme few transactions of moment have taken place from first bauds ou private terms, prob- tolerably firm at the reductions previously made. There is no p •f ably moved for cost, at prices below current rates. H lders appear ticular class of goods which demand special notice. '< Woolen Goods are very dull, and the market is very weak. The eaDguine of an improvement, and are therefore little disposed number of houses going out of businese in this line, and who are closing to press sales at present q rotations. Stocks of fine browns are still in limited supply. Agawam F 36 12, Amoskeag A 36 out their stocks, has served to unsettle the market. Overcoatings are dull and quiet. 1 \ 15$, Atlantic A 36 15$, doH 86 15, do P 86 12$, do L 86 14, Appleton Cloths are in little inquiry, and concessions from the market rates A 86 15, Augusta 36 14$, do 80 13, Broadway 86 12$, Bedford R 309f, Boott H 27 11, do O 34 12, do S 40 14, do W 45 19, Com¬ are easily obtainable. Cassimereh are still flat and in no demand whatever. monwealth O 27 8, Grafton A 27 9, Graniteville AA 36 15$, do EE 36 Flannels and Blankeis are moving moderately in small quantities 14$, Great Falls M 86 18,doS 83 11$, Indian Head 36 15$, do 30 18, In¬ dian Orchard A 40 16, do C36 13$, do BB36 12, do W 3411$, doNN 36 for the purpose’ of keeping up assortments. Shawls still enjoy a good demand for choice styles and medium, and 14$, Laconia O 39 14$,do B 87 14, do E 36 12$,Lawrence A 36 12$, do C 8616, doF86 13, do G 34 12$, do H 27 11, doLL36 12$, Lyman 0 36 14, lower grades are slightly improved from last week. Rates are firmly do E 36 16$, Massachusetts BJ3 86 18, doJ 80 12, Medford 36 14, Nashua maintained, and, upon the whole, the market presents a very satisfac¬ fine S3 14,do 36 15$, do E 40 18, Newmarket A 12$, Pacific extra 36 15$, tory appearance, the transactions exceeding, as they do, the amount doH36 16, do L 80 13$, Pepperell 7-4 —, do 8-4 85, do 9-4 40, do done for many previous seasons. Imported Dress Goods are in the same condition as last week. 10-4 46, do 11-4 —, Pepperell E flue 89 15, do R S6 14, do O 83 13, do N 80 12$, do G 80 IS, Pocasset F 80 10, do K 36 13$, do Canoe Some lew particular standard styles are in request, and, being rather 40 16$, Saranac fine O 33 14, do R 36 15$. do E 89 17$, Sigourney 86 scarce, are held firmly at quotations; while others are offered at re¬ 10$, Stark A 36 15, Swift River 86 12, Tiger 27 9, Tremout M 83 11. ductions,and even then transactions are limited to insignificant amounts, Oleaohed Sheetings and Shirtings have been, comparatively except in cases where the goods are very desirable, when they seldom speaking, very dull,as there is usually more or less demand for them to go begging for takers. The season, which is now well over, has not supply existing wants. Notwithstanding the low prices at which lead¬ been as satisfactory to importers as anticipated at the commencement. ing standards in this line can be obtained, buyers appear little disposed to opeiate IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORE* beyond supplying their imme liate wants,and in consequence the trade lags, despite ihe facts that storks are limited and that orders The importations of dry goods at tins port for the week ending Nov. far future delivery from first hands c nnot he placed except at 26,1869, and the corresponding weeks of 1867 and 1868, have been as value, or, in other words, at an advance of from 1 to 2$ — , Domestics. » Dry Goods, packages. . • f prices. Amoskeag 46 19, do 42 17$, do 54 24, American A 86 12$, Androscoggin L 86 16$, Auburn 36 —, Attawaugau XX 86 12$, do X 86 10, Atlantic Cambric 36 24. Ballou <fc Son 36 14$, do 31 11$, Bartletts 36 15$, do S3 14, do3113$, BatesXX 3617$, doB 33 14, Blackstone 36 16, do D 87 13$. Boott B 36 15,doC 8318;, do E 36 12$, do H 28 11$, do O 80 12$, do R 28 10, do W 46 19$, Clarks 86 20, Dwight 40 21, Ellerton 10-4 50, Forestdale 36 16, Fruit of the Loom 86 17, Globe 27 8, Gold Medal 86 14$, Greets M’fgCo36 12, do 31 10$, Great Falls Q 86 16$, do J 83—,doS 81 12, do A 32 14, Hills Semp. Idem 36 16, do 88 14$, Hope 86 14$, lames 86 14$, do 83 13$, do 81—, Lawrence B 86 15, Lonsdale 36 16$. Masonville36 17,Newmarket 0 86 14,New York Mills 86 22$, Pepper¬ ell 8-4 32$, do 8-4 40, do 9-4 46, do 10-4 50, Rosebuds 86 16$, Red bank 36 11$, do 33 10$, Slater J. <fc W. 36 —, Tuscarora 86 18, Utica 5-4 ~H,do 6-4 37$, do 9-4 62$, do 10-4 67$, Waltham X 8S —, do 42 18, 9° 6-4 32$, do 8-4 40, do 9-4 45, do 10-4 60, Wamsutta 46 28, do 40$ 26,do 36 20, Washington 38 9$. Brown Drills are quiet.' Transactions are limited to immediate re¬ cents ou current quirements with no demand for export. Amoskeag 17, Graniteville D 16, Hamilton 17. Laconia 17 Peppered 17, Stark A 17, do H 14. . Prints have fallen off considerably in inquiry during the week under review, although rates are steadily maintianed at our quotations. The are offered adords no margin to the printer, taking into consideration all expenses, and, in view of this, many assert fbat bottom has been touc ied and that any change must be no advance. 0a the other hand a leading jobber, one who is generally correct in his price at which these goods opinions, too, informed us that he had little doubt but that Prints follows: ENTERED FOR CONSUMPTION FOR THE WEEK ENDING NOVEMBER -1868.Value Pkgs. 534 $192,122 386 119,426 614 390,511 867 166,494 845 96,940 1867.- Pkgs. 297 Manufactures ol wool.. do cotton. 238 265 do silk.... do flax.... Miscellaneous dry gooas». 272 . . Total .1,640 WITHDRAWN FROM Value. $105,5S6 70,793 175,546 93,006 78,706 3,246 $623,637 $956,493 WAREHOUSE AND THROWN INTO THE SAMS PERIOD.. $117,410 85,215 54,789 20,913 128 36 247 88 29,530 48,650 68,060 e,iae consu’pt’nl,540 $261,109 523,637 3,346 Total th’wn xpon maket2,464 $784,746 3,995 $1,231,288 $117,592 924 . . . . Total Add ent’d for 32,600 _ $264,790 966,493 749 Pkgs. 563 490 356 * Value. 1,199 $184,581 140,545 251,786 158,862 284 114,617 3,892 $850,341 THE MARKET SCO 298 Manulactures of wool.. do cotton. 120 do silk.... S6 518 do flax.... Miscellaneous dry goods 262 26,1869. -1869.- 833 170 66 889 at 3 1,076 2,893' DUB1X# $114,072 47,218 82,397 105,197 91.841 $870,65} 850,341 3,968 $1,290,996 THE SAME PERIOD. 335 236 $89,839 KNTKRBD FOR WAREHOUSING DURING Manulactures of wool... do cotton.. do silk do flax 204 $78,053 178 26 goods. 9 83,078 21,445 46,922 1,626 Miscellaneous dry 166 117 H * ro 406 675 ' 30,821 50,691 87,293 89,416. $338,650 Total 57•> Add ent d lor consr’p t’n.L&so $tsr,i34 1,484 Total entered at the porta,118 $708,761 4,730 $1,244,543 523,637 8,248 *956^493 80 87 889 171 933 2,893 $85,554 29,425 38,766 85,459 84,302 $818,906 850,341 3,314 $1,168,847 THE 700 Railroad^. Pacific Mutual Insur ance B.W HOWARD BUILDING, 178 BROADWAY. New York, January 18th. 1869. The following: Statement of the affairs of the Com¬ pany Is published in conformity with the requirements of Section 13 of its charter : Outstanding: Premiums January 1.1868 $119,049 43 Premiums received from Jan. 1, to i*ec. 31, 1868 inclusive 524,448 47 No Blsk« have been taken upon Time or upon Huilf of Vessels. Premiums marked off as Earned, during: the period as above $533,034 41 Paid for Losses and Expenses, less ravings, Ac., during the same period 251,484 90 Return Premiums 40,86 3 74 TheCompanf has tbe following asset COTTONS AND $71,949 81 United States and other stocks... 552,648 53 Loans on bt^cks drawirg interest 138,700 (X) due the Company, estimated at AMERICAN SILKS. ChENEY' ..y Brothers. machine Twist. Sewing 611k* Organzluee* INE ORGANZINES FOf. SILK MIXTURE CAS6I- Foulards and Silk Dress 102 Franklin CHENEY <fc .HILL THEODORE: SON, Street, New York. LEONARD BAKER 6c COT TONS AILDUCK And all kinds oi Street, Philadelphia CHASE, STEiVAUT Sc Cfi., 10 and 12 German Street, Baltimore. COTTON CANVAS, FELTING DUCK, CAR COVER ING, BAGGING, RAVENS DUCK. SAIL TWINES &C. “ONTARIO’ SEAMLESS BAGS, “ AWNING STRIPES.” Also, Agents United States Bunting Company, A full supply all Widths and Colors always 1q stock 13 6c 15 Lispenard Street* E. A. Bbinckerhoff, J. Spencer Tunner. C. B. & CO., Duck, 6c ST 89 Leonard Street* New Yerk. For the Sale SHOE COTTONS Thos. H. Bate & DRILLED-EIEO Co., . Fishing Tackle* NO. 50 We o Shirts, 160 BROADWAY, NEW YORK* EXTRA QUALITIES OF \merican Bar & Foreign Iron, Including all the usual sizes aud shapes oi ULSTER In lots to suit ‘ IRON, purchasers, EGLESTON BROTHERS 6c CO., j ’ won to EglestoL, B&ttell & Co., 166 SOUTH STREET, NEW YORK ■ . DAVIS, Broker, 58 BROADWAY Cor NEW YORK, of Exchange Place. Steamship Companies. COMPANY’S THROUGH LINE PACIFIC Mail STEAMSHIP SALERATUS* Old SODA, AC*, To California & China, Slip, New York* Touching at Mexican Port# SCOTCH PIG IRON, All the approved Brands of No* Scotch Pig Iron, AND 2 IN YARD, ON DOCK, AND TO ARRIVE. CARRYING THE UNITED STATES purchasers. Apply to HENDERSON No. 7 Bowling Green, New York. Domestic ROPE 6c and Bagging, IRON FOR SALE BY T. B. Carter & 144 Water Street. dates N wajll, connecting via ranama with one of the Company’s Steamships irom for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at Also, BALE ‘ when those BROTHERS, Borneo MAILS. On the 5th and 21*t of Each Month* Leave PIER 42 NORTH RIVER, foot of Canal street ' In lots to suit Gunny, . BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Wool No John Dwight 8c Co., r«f. Ij Shipman, prepared to make cash advances upon Wool, on the spot or in transit. are Miscellaneous. SUPER CARB. Fine E. J. Shipman CHRISTY NEEDLES, WOOLEN?. WOOL BROKERS, MANUFACTURERS OF MANUFACTURERS OF AND Mills & MANUFACTURERS OF Co., HATTERS, AND GENTS’ FURNISH* GOODS, oi &bm. Mills Brothers, York WORKS. PATERSON, NE W JERSEY Street, to AGENTS THREADS, NO. 1 WARREN STREET, NEAR BROADWAY. NEW YORK. r &• J. F. Mitchell, MANUFACTURERS LISPENARD STREET. Beebe Theodore Polhemub. H. D. Polhemub, Specia COMMISSION MERCHANTS. Fish Hooks and NOS. 13 6c 15 T heodorePolhemus&Co. 99 Chambers Street, Corner Church Street, New \ Have removed from C9 Broni Brown and Bleached Goode. Manufacturers and Dealers in Street, Boston. CO., 210 Chestnut Columbus, Eagle, Thorndike H. B. & C. Brown and Bleached Sheetings, Hingham, Farmers’ AA andSwilt River Brown Sheet¬ ings, 40-in. Reeky Mountain Duck, Bear, Raven’s Duck (KEN, 4 Otis Barbour POLHEMUS 6c Cotton Strlpea. Awning, Thorndike. B.C., Otis CC, Mount Ver : EDWARD II. ARNOLD 6c TWINES, FLAX, ETC. Removal. Ticks. Cordis ACE. Goods, PURPOSES TO ORDER. A GENTS , Sulloways Blue Denims. Columbian Heavy, Otis AXA. BB, CC. D, O. E, G Union, Arlington, Oxford, Mt. Vernon, Beaver Cree AA, B8, CC, Thorndike, C. Haymaker, Palmer, Bos ton, Northfleld, Pawnee, Farmers’ and Mechanics >«rown Denims. Columbian XXX, Otis BB, Warren A.B.D.X. BLEA. AND BROWN. Belt Ribbons. SILKS FOR SPECIAL ’ Otis Co., Pepper and Gilmanton Mills’ Shaker Socks, &c., &c. non, LINEN THREADS, CARPET THREADS. SEWING MACHINE THREADS. GILL NETT TWINES. FISH LINES. Miscellaneous. Dress Good4,34 and 64 Ronbaix Warren FF Fine Sheeting*. John K. Myers, A. C, Richards, G. D. H Gillespie C. E. Mllnor, , * Otis Hosiery Milk. And Arlington Mills, Shaker Flannels. Cordis : Alex. M. Earle, Oliver K. E ing. Wm. T. Blodgett C. H. Ludington, Martin Bates, J. L. Smallwood, Moses A. Hoppock Thomas Eakiu, Bnll, H. C. South wick, Horace B. Claflln, Wm. Hegeman, W. M. Richards, James R. Taylor, Ephraim L. Corning 1 Adam T. Bruc6, A. S. Barnes, Albert B. Strange, Egbert Starr, A. Augustus Low, A. Wesson, Oean F. Fenner, John A. Hadden Emil Beineman, William Leconey, Jehial Read, John A. Bartow, John R. Waller. JOHN K. MYERS, President. WILLIAM LECONEY, Vice-President. THOMAS HALE, Secretary. Pepper Hosiery Milk, Company, Cloth, Imner Chines, Alpacas, Reps Coburgs, &c..&c. B'lknap & Grafton nap A Shirtings, Flannels, Rob Roys, Cassimeres.Repellauta Cottonades, Domestics, Boys’ Check’, Sulloways Florentines, Pongee Handkerchiefs, Silk Warp Poplins, order of the Board. 1RUaT£ £v * Sumner Falls Mills,’. ’ Gilmanton Hosiery Milk AAA, BB, Duck A A.B., Thorndike A.C Swift River, Palmer, New England. MERES. Interest, Ontatn tiding Cer.ifi ates of the Coin* p auy of the is«ueof lb<>4, will be redeemed and paid in cash, to tbe holder.? tnereof, or their legal representatives, on an I alter Tne-day. the 2d day of February next, from which date interest thereon will cease The Certificates to be produced at tne time of payment and cancelled. A I dviden t in Act ini of FORTY Per Cent is declare t m .‘he not amount of Earned Pivmi ms for tbe year -nd «g December 31st, 1368, for which Certificates will beis-me i on and after Tuesday, the sixth day of April next. Belknap Mills, Company, Grafton Mills, Hosiery. MANUFACTURED BY $1,163,334 87 Six Percent. Company, 5V Of Severs! Mil. / 24,437 f 7 the outstanding Certificates of Profits will be paid t>»tbe bold *rs thereof, or their lezal represent .tivcs, on and alter Tuesday the 2d day of February next. The whole of the « ' AGENTS FOR THE ial lia^s aud $8! 3,2'4 31 Premium notes and bills receivable 254,512 95 Subscription notes in advance of premiums 76,010 0 • Total assets WOOLENS, Co., New York Devonshire Street. Boston. Warren Cotton Mill6, Boston Buck Company, Cordis Mills, Sole Agents for the sale of Cash in bank and on hand on 3 Columbian Mfg IT GOODS COMMISSION MERCHANT!. . claims 94 Franklin Street, STREET, Otis $618,497 90 THIS COMPANY HAS ISSUED NO POLICIES, EX¬ CEPT ON CARGO AND FREIGHT FOR THE VOYAGE. and other 92 Thorndike Total amount of Marine Premiums isuraace * 14 46 LEONARD S. & Eben Wright & PEABODY, i. Re-1 Dry Goods. JENKINS, VAILL & J OHN COMPANY.! - [November 27,1369 Dry Goods. ^ OFFICE Til-THS , CHRONICLE. Vn« MANZANILLO Panama with steamers io* AND CENTRAL AMERICAN connecting at SOUTH PACIFIC PORT8. One hundred pounds baggage v allowed each aaun* baggage througn, am* attend to ladles and children without tors. Baggage received on the dock tha day heiore Baggage-masters accompany TIES, Co., xrgeon on board. Medicine ana attendance ircc. Px>r passage tickets or lurtber information apply to the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, foot o Canal street, North River, New York. F* R* BABY* Agent* THE November 27,1869] Office of Morton, Bliss ft Co., New York, October 1st, 1869. WALTER H. BURNS this dav irum our New York and day from uu > > RETIRES _ London firms, M0RX0N> BLISS & CO. un mitted lrt. WALTER WATSON (late Agent for the Bank America, New York), is this day ad¬ a 1869‘ partner in our ’firm. New York, October MORTON, BLISS ft CO. Page, Richardson & Co., Gilmore, Dunlap & Co., BANKERS, 70 State JOHN ROSE (late Minister of Finance for Canada) joins our firms this day, The Hon. nrtmtnion ot Tlie City Bank, ^LONDON. lVIunroe Jk Co. J AND > PARIS. MarcutrJ, Andre & Co.,) Circular Notes available for Travelers in all parts of & ett 28 State Co., Bills of Exchange, Governments, Bonds 0 Advances A CO., OF CHINA AND JAPAN. Advances made on consignments of chandlze. LONDON PARIS AND approved mer W. B. Hayden Jos. Hutcheson. Hayden, Hutcheson &Co BANKERS, 8. 13 NO. STREET, HIGH COLUMBUS, OHIO, — Southern Bankers. Foreign and Dome 3 tic Williams&Guion, New York. 71 Wall Street, London. Liverpool. SD( Advances made oji consignments tojour CorresjmndenteVand orders for the purchase of Merchandi se, stocks and Bonds, executed by Cable or Mail. issued, available Travelers’ and Commercial Credits issued^ a n all parts of Europe, &c. - - — ^ Freedman’s BANKERS. New York, AND 85 BRIJHL. Business. Savings Bank Central Office BRANCHES AT Baltimore, Norfolk, Richmond, New Berne, Wil¬ mington, Raleigh, Charleston, Beaufort, Augusta, (Ga.), Savannah. Macon, Jacksonville, Tallauasse, Mobile, Huntsville, New Orleans, Vicksburg, Mem- £hls, Nashville, Chattanooga, Louisville, St. Louis iartinsburg, New York and Washington. Collections promptly made. Tnese Banks are for the Colored principal cities of Germany. Switzerland, Agland, France, Sweden, Norway, Holland, Bel¬ gium, Russia, Italy, Spain, Denmark, &c. Issue Letters of Credit for 'rravelers, available in all parts of Europe. Edward C. Anderson, Jr. BANKER, PACTOR AND Commission Farmer, Hatch & Co., 78 BROADWAY AND 5*7 NEW STREET. Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and sold exclusively on commission. Accounts of Banks and Bankers received. Collec¬ tions made in the United States, British Provinces and Europe. &c. CoMilwaukee, Wis. Borg, Merchant, Savannah, Ga. DEALERS IN Collections promptly remitted for Orders solicited for the purchased sales of Produce and Securities. Prompt attention guaranteed. New York Correspondents: Lawrence Bros. & Co. In connection with the Manhattan Savings Bank Memphis, Tenn. Lancaster & STATE in St. Louis. ESTABLISHED 1837. Capital paid in ...S3,410,300 ..... Bank, having reorganized as a National Bank Is now prepared to do a general banking business. Government Securities, Coin, Gold Dust And Bullion bought and sold at current rates. Special attention given to collections throughout the West Janes H. Britton, Pres. Chas. K. Dick on e Sam’l A. Gaylord & Co., No. 1113 Hain No. SO SOUTH Payson, bankers and brokers, STREET, NEW YORK, Brokers, SAINT LOUIS MO. W. M. F. Hewson, BROKER, EX¬ Street, Richmond, Va. STREET, BALTIMORE, MARYLAND. Morton, Galt & Co., BANKERS, 150 West Main Street, Louisville, Ky., dealers in Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Government Bonds and ail Local Securities. Give prompt attention to collections and orders for investment of funds. S. McClean J.. L. Levy, & > Co., BANKERS. PITTSBURGH BROKER S TO CK Bond NO. 823 NORTH TdIRB STREET. Office No. 21 West Third Street, Cincinnati, Ohio Refer to: All Cincinnati Banks, and Messrs. LOCKWOOD & Co., New York. Co., LANCASTER, BROWN Sc CO., No. 23 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK. PA. AND Bonds and Gold OtisD.Swan, Gep. P. Payson, Wm. S. Alexander,jr. Of the New London and Paris for Sale. STOCK BROWN, LANCASTER Sc CO., STREET, NEW YORK. Government Securities, Stocks, "Ought and sold on commission. on NATIONAL BANK OF THE OF MISSOURI. Special attention given to consignments of Cotton. Gold, Stocks, Bonds and Foreign and Domestic Exchange, bought and sold. BANKERS AND STOCK AND CHANGE BROKERS, Southern and miscellaneous Securities 50 WALL Drafts Edward P. Curtis Cashier Bills of Exchange drawn on London, Paris, E. J. Farmer ft Co., C. J. Hatch & Swan & LOUIS, MISSOURI. Buy and Sell Exchange on all the principal oities of the United States and Canadas. Also Stock and BANKERS & BROKERS, No. 41 PINE BANKERS, people. Deposits are now $1,250,000. D. L. EATON, Actuary. J. W. ALVORD, Pres’t. JAY COOKE & CO., New York Correspondent. Co., Benoist & ST. Washington, D. €., at DRAW IN SUMS TO SUIT Levy & L. A. This the Cleveland, O. Exchange General Banking, Collection, and The Leipzig, Saxony, BROAD ST. a CHARTERED BY CONGRESS IN 1865, ~ Knauth, N achod &Kuhne Do NATIONAL Her. S. Petrie & Co., Gnlon & Co., . ON FOR SALE; made on approved securities. Special facilities Collect? susboth r CHECKS P. Haydhn. HEARD AUGUSTINE Btocksf^old, Commercial Paper, and all Negotiable ^terest allowed on Deposits subject to Sight Drait accessible HADE at all COLLECTIONS Street, Boston, AGENTS FOR Dftftlers in GOVERNMENT BONDS. points and remitted ior on day oi payment. Ever WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK. GOLD, SILVER and all kinds of Europe and the East. HANKER^ NO. 53 West Fourth Street. CINCINNATI, OHIO. Dealers in Co.,) BURNS 4 CO. Co., 110 Sc 1 and Robert Benson A Irtlc? will be continued under the style of MORTON, HOSE 4 CO. Soutter & 108 Street, Boston. Bills of Exchange, and Commercial and Travelers’ Credits Issued on Bartholomew House Bank,) London, October 1st, 1869. J L p MORTON, Western Bankers. Boston Bankers. Financial. .fSitffhNorth 701 CHRONICLE. York Stock Exchange. Exchange Dealer, STREET, 23 CARONDELET ’ Blake Brothers & Go., NEW ORLEANS. J. L. Levy. General Partner Partner in Commendum E. J. Hart. . 52 Wall Street. New York. Collections made on all points. Second National Bank, TITUSVILLE, PENN., Capital - v 8200,000 Deposited with U. S. Treasurer o secure Circulation aud Deposits 500,000. G. C. HYDE, Cashier. CHAS. HYDE, Pres’t. AND, 28 STATE STREET, BOSTON, EXCHANGE ON LONDON. And Sterling BANKERS Credits, Stocks. Government Securities, Stocks Bonds, and Gold, bought and sold strictly on Commission. For Sale. John P. Marquand, STREET, George H. B. Hill Stocks, Bonds and Gold, bought and Sold on com mission. Business Paper Negotiated. Henry Patent SHUTTER WORKER.-The BROKERS, Meigs, undersigned respectfully r«. quest Capitalists and Manufacturers to call upon them at once and examine Banker and io* ftbove NEW and most EFFICIENT and £BAUTiCAL improvement*. It opens, closes and (Formerly cashier of 1he Metropolitan Bank, and late SSALtho Window Blind from the inside, is BTTTFmrJfa wAith, TENANTS, LANDLORDS BUILDERS. Apply immediately to W, S most and MCALISTER ft CO*. 178 Broadway. N.Y. Broker, No. 27 Wall St., J. M. Weith & Arents, Late J. M. Weith ft Iuveitment# carefully attended to. Co., DEALERS IN SOUTHERN AND MIS¬ CELLANEOUS SECURITIES, No. Loans NEW STREET. Negotiated. Lounsbery & Fanshawe, BANKERS St Member ot New York Stock Exchange, of the firm of H. Meigs, Jr., ft Smith). Offers his services lor the purchase and sale of Gov¬ ernment and all other Stocks, Bonds and Gold..Interest allowed on deposits Geo. Arents J. M. Weith, New York. sell Massachusetts and New York State DBADLEY’S AND 37 WALL dealers in commercial paper. Buy Marquand, Hill & Co., No 8 WALL BROKERS, STREET. NEW Y0UK. Government Securities Geld and Foreign Bxehaage. 2C0VAS r. LQVNUBSST, A CWHAUV ». FaimtAWS m 702 CHRONICLE. THE Miscellaneous. Fire Insurance Kountze, NO. 62 Deposits received from Banks and Individuals, sub sight, and Interest allowed thereon at ect to check at FOUR PER CENT per annum. Collections made throughout the United States, the bought and soid. C. Hardy 8c Cash $5,150,931 71 The Trustees, in conformity to the Charter of to* C mpany, submit the following statement affaire Springfield Son, Street, New York. INSUrtANCE CO., SPRINGFIELD, MASS. Cash Execute orders at the New York Stock, Government and Gold Exchanges, In person, and transact a Gen ' •ral Banking. Exchange, and Brokerage Business Capital 1_|Providence Washington Munroe AMERICAN 8c INSURANCE COMPANY, OF PROVIDENCE, R. I. Co., Cash Capital Assets.... BANKERS. NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, NO. 8 WALL American I SCRiNCE STREET, NEW YORK. Issue Ciioular Letters of Credit for Travellers in all parts of Europe, etc., etc. Exchange on Paris, OF I AS. A. Stoker, Taylor 8c Co., NASSAU NEW STREET, YORK. North Sight and Time Bills on LONDON, LIVERPOOL, on American ary, 1868, to 31stDecember, 1868..\ Losses paid during the period $6,807,91$ 85 $3,081,080 49 I v..$1,383,230 61 - ] _ ^ . 4 ..12,214400 ea wise........... ,r.. r:..: ? Real estate and bonds and mortgagee Fire BRANCH OFFICE 9 COOPER INSTITUTE Company has the following as- stock, city bank and other stocks... $7,8©I,<1SB ft Loans secured by stocks and other-. '*'* 210,000 Interest, and sundry notes and claims due the Company, estimated at ' / . Total amount of assets. (D 290,530 83 2,953,267 53 405,548 86 Premium notes and bills receivable.'. Cash in bank ! ..;.. vv r. BROADWAY, COMMISSION. COLLECTIONS made in all parts of Europe. Premiums marked off from 1st Janu¬ United States and State of New York INSURANCE. 114 policies have been issued upon life risks; nor upon fire risks dis¬ The ALEXANDER, Agent. OFFICE $9,34^972 lj No sets, viz.: Insurance Co., SDINBURGH and DUBLIN, PARIS, BREMEN, AMBURG, BERLIN, FRANKFORT-ON-THEMAIN, VIENNA. etc. STOCK8, BONDS and GOLD BOUGHT AND SOLD 2,563,002 31 expenses BANKERS. 21 1868 Total amount of marine premiums — $20 hOOO 00 $324 345 60 FIRE $6,732,969 8? Policies not marked off Reports of premiums and COMPANY, . on 1st J anuary, same PROVIDENCE, R. I. Cash Capital Assets Premiums connected with marine risks. 8200,000 00 $ 392 .425 52 PARIS, John Munroe 8c Co., of& the 31st December, 1868 : Premiums received on Marine Risks, Irom 1st January, 1868, to 31st Dec., on 1888 $500,000 00 $901,6S7 11 Assets... Co., NEW YORK, JANUARY 26, 1869. $3,000,000 00 Capital FIRE A ITIAKINE No. 4 Wall Mutual Insurance Comp’y, HARTFORD, CONN. Assets H. Atlantic STREET. iEtna Insurance Europe. Governments Securities WALL OFFICE OF THE Agency, NEW YORK. 52 Wall Street. New York. British Provinces and Insurance Insurance. BANKING HOUSE OF Luther [November 27 1869 $13,660,881 31 THIRD AVENUE. Six per cent interest on the outatand* INCORPORATED 1823. White, DeFreitas 8c Rathborne, Bankers and 245,911 93 Capital and Surplus, July 1st, Exchange. February next. 1868, $745,911 93. Brokers, 17 Broad St. 1 terest allowed on Deposits. Refer to WM. H. COX, Esq National Back. lug certificates of profits will Be pal# to the holders thereof or their legal representative on and after Tuesday the Second or $500,000 00 - Surplus Cash Government Securities, Gold, Stocks and Bonds, bought and sold exclusively on Commission at the New York Stock Cash Capital The outstanding certificates of the Issue «4 1865 will be redeemed and paid to the holl¬ ers thereof, or their legal representatives, on an# after Tuesday the Second of Februait next, from which date all interest thereon w#i Insures Property against Loss or Damage by Fire at he usual rates. Policies issued and Losses paid at the office of the Company, or at Its various Agencies in the principal cities in the UDited States. , Cashier Mechanics JAMES W. OTIS, President. R. W. BLEECKER, Vice Pres cease. F H. Cabtbk, Secretary, f. Gkiswold, General Agent. Norway and Swedes Iron WM. JESSOP Sc AND © and 133 and 135 Federal street, Boston. They have also In stock their usual supply of every description of bar and Sheet Steel. of the Company, for the year ending 3 lit December. 18*89 for which certificates willbi LONDON. CAPITAL Subscribed Capital Paid up Capital and Surplus £2,000,000 Stg. l,893,22G ; $1,432,840 AUTHORIZED Importers of Norway & S\* edes Iron, Including UB, JE.B, SF, and other brands, which they offer for sale at 91 and 93 John street, New York Issued on By order of the Board, No. 117 Broadway, N. Y J, H. GEORGE ADLARD, M .nager William H. Ross, Secretary. Pascal Iron Works, Philadelphia. anufactnrers of Wrought Iron Tubes, Lap Welded Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools, Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools, &c. OFFICE AND WAREHOUSES: 15 GOLD M. Baird WORKS. & Co., All work accurately fitted to gauges and thorough¬ ly Interchangeable. Plan, Material, Workmanship. Finish and Efficiency fully guaranteed. GKO. BUB3TH AM. OH AS T. PABBT EDINBURGH. Coke A. P. Paul Spofford, Royal Phelps, STREET, NEW YORK. EZRA WHITE, Manager. CHAS. E. WHITE, Assistant Manager. Pillot, FIRE INSURANCE HARTFORD, CONN. Pig Iron Losses promptly adjusted Agents, STREET.] Bnrdctt, Fergm*^ Wm. Samuel G. WfiBd, Sturgis, William S. BmdWi Samuel L. HUMl dOBtfs G. De Forest. 9 by the Agents here, andpald NO 50 WILLIAM Charles P. Robert O. Henry K. Bogert. John d. Jones, president* H. Kellogg, Pres in current money. EZRA WHITE Sc SONS, Sheppard Gandy, Francis Skiddy, CO., Capital and Surplus $1,400,000. . Dodge, James Bryce, Daniel S. Miller. FIRE INSURANCE COMP AN V OF HARTFORD, CONN. Capital and Surplus $2,000 000. Gko. M. Coit, Sec’y. Geo. L. Ch,\.se, Prea’t. Sec’y. . David Lane. Hartford D. W. C. Shilton, James Low, B. J. Howland, Benj. Babcock, Robert B. Mintorn* Caleb Bar stow, Russell, Lowell Holbrook, R. Warren Weston, UNITED STATES BRANCH OFFICE, OF FOUNDRY, FORGE AND WHITE Joseph Gaillard, Jr, C. A. Hand, Gordon W. Bnrnhaffi Frederick Channel R. L. Taylor, Geo. S. Stephenson, William H. Webb, Charles H. PAID UP CAPITAL AND ACCUMULATED FUN PHOENIX r Wm. C. Pickersgill, Lewis Curtis, ©F AND William E. PHILADELPHIA. MATTHEW BAIRD. Dennis, W. 0. H. Moore, Henry Coit, Mercantile Insurance Co LONDON Jones, Charles AND 50 WILLIAM LOCOMOTIVE J. D. $14,044,635 31 IN GOLD. STREET, NEW YORK. BALDWIN TRUSTEES: North British Boiler Flues, Gas Works Castings and Street CHAPMAN, Secretary* THE Morris, Tasker 8c Co., Sixth of April and after Tuesday, the next. Special Fund of $200 000 Deposited^in the Insurance Department at Albany. United States Branch, the thfj A Dividend of Forty Per Cent i* declared on the net earned premiums Queen Fire Insurance Co OF I IVERPOOL SONS, The certificates to be produced at of payment and canceled. I ,\ \ ? CHARLES W. H. H. J* D. DENNIS, Tice-Pred#«#ft MOORE, 2!l VlCO-F HEWLETT* 84 VI©*f 4. 4 Duties on The Oil lemon Oil peppermint, pure Oil vitriol CURRENT. PRICES half-firkins, choice. Western, prime Penn., dairy, good “actory prime Factory Farm Farm Farm ... 46 Sperm, patent f* fi> 56 Stearic 14 ounce. 25 Adamantine.... 14 ounce. 20 Reflned sperm, city....... .... Dry cod Mackerel, No. 1, shore No. 1, Halifax No. 1, Bay No. 3, No. 2, Halifax Mac’rel,No. 8, Mass.,large. Mackerel, shore, No. 2 Mac’rel, No. 3, Mass.,med. Salmon, pickled, No. 1 Salmon, pickled # tee Herring, scaled $ box. Herring, No. 1 Herring, pickled # bbl. Mackerel, Mackerel, Mackerel, Mackerel, COPPER- ....@ @ 33 @ 20 @ ....@ @ ® 22 @ 70 40 Calcutta standard... Balsam tolu Balsam Peru Bark petayo ® Camphor, refined Cantnarides Carb. ammonia, in bulk. ;.@ 3 87* _ 14* .... 4*@ .... 19 • 1 • • • • 1 • 17*@ Coriander seed 11 Cochineal, Hondur..gold Cochineal, Mexican. “ 80 ... @ @ .© Tampico Bogota 12 90 80 Porto Cabello Maracaibo Truxillo Copperas,'American Cream tartar, pr ...gold Cubebs, East India Cutch.i Epsom salts 30 @ 28 6 Exrtact logwood Fennell seed 10 Flowers, benzoin..$ Gambier Gamboge Ginseng, Western Ginseng, Southern Gum Gum Gum Gum oz. 30 gold 8 75 1 12 70 benzoin kowrie Gumgedda gold Gum damar Gum myrrh, East India.. Gum myrrh, Turkey.... Gum Senegal Gum tragacanth, sorts.. Gum tragacanth, w. f flakey flyd. potash, gold Fr. Bahia © @ @ @ @ ® * Chili Payta _ 50 29 Maranham © ® Pernambuco Bahia Matamoras Maracaibo Savanilla Wet Salted Hides— —® on Buenos Ayres..#ft Rio Grande 55 55 @ ....@ 65 ® .... California 33 70 Para New Orleans Ipecacuanha, Brazil Jalap, in bond. ....gold Lac dye Licorice paste, Calabria. Licorice paste, Sicily. Licorice paste, fc fep., solid 50 60 @ 75 45 @ 24 /m Madder. gold Fr. EXF.F. “ Manna, large flake Manna, small flake Mustard seed, Cal.... lustard seed, Trieste.., futgalls, blue, Aleppo.. anis l cassia i ourrency “ feWflWftVLMwnMiii ,...«* & 12* 16* 7*® 16 ® “ “ 11* 6 22 @ 23 22 22 21*@ 21* 21*@ 21*@ 20 @ 17 @ 17*@ Crop of 1868 8 60® 866 HORNS- Hill? 8x, Rio Grand# C5t extra pale $ft 8 @2 @2 @4 @5 @9 @ 20 60 25 50 00 11 City thin, obi., in bbls.^t ton.42 00® .... “ in bags 51 00® — West, thin, obl’g, In bags.. .47 00@48 00 18 @ OILS— Olive, Mars’es, qts (cur¬ rency) $ case Olive, in casks —gall. 21 18 13 19 Linseed, city 3R gall. Whale, crude Northern.. Whale, bleached Sperm, crude ?, Sperm, winter bleached. Lard oil, prime Red oil, city dist., Elain Red oil, saponified 18 ,® 19 17>4© 18* @ 15 “ 18*@ 19 “ “ “ “ 15 16 cur. “ @ 17* 14 17 @ 18 20*© 21* 19 @ 20 " 12*@ 12*© 11*@ @ 11*@ PAINTS— Litharge, city # ft Lead, red, city Lead, white, Amer.,pure in oil. Lead, white, Amer.,pure dry. . Zinc, white, American, dry, No. 1. Zinc, white, American, 12* No. 1, in oil. 12* Zinc, white, French, dry Zinc, wh., French, in oil Ochre, yel., French, dry Ochre, “ ground. In oil Spanish bro., dry.# 100 ft Span, bro., gr’d In oil.# ft gold. 11 @ 11* “ “ ** cur. 11*@ 11 9 11 @ @ @ 12 11* 10 11* Paris 12 @ 13* 18 88 80 25 @ ® @ @ V ft 1 08 ©.. 1 65 @1 70 1 87*®.... 1 45 @1 57* @ 85 @ 90 10*@ 10*© .... 11 11 1311* 8 @ 8* 9 @ 11*@ 12 11* 13 16 @ ,... 5 @ 10 18 @ 28 ® .... © 8 00 85 @ VO. ...®8 00 tifff U .... © 2 20 2 00 Brandy— ^-# gall.- ptard,Dupuy & Co..gold. 5 Pinet, Castilfon & Co Hennessy ** Leger Freres “ Marett & Co 5 5 5 5 5 4 8 3 “ Other foreign brands '* Rum—Jam., 4th proof. “ 50®17 Of 50®18 00 50@10 00 50@10 00 00@lfi00 50® 4 5 50® 8 7» 00® 550 . 106® 107 English, cast English, spring English blister English machinery English German 18 # ft 28 @ 9 ® 11* 11*@ 19 12*® If 14 @ 16 10*® 16 American blister American cast Tool. American spring.... 44 10 American machinery 44 American German.. 44 SUGAR—See special report. TALLO W— 'io' 10*® u 87 # ft,gold ® 44 88*@ 82 ® 44 English Plates, char. I. C..# box 8 12*® 8 8T* Plates, I. C. coke 675 @7 87* Plates, Terne charcoal @ 6 00 Plates, Terne coke 7 75 ® 8 26 TOBACCO—See special report. WINES— Madeira # gall. Sherry 8 50® 7 08 l 25® 9 00 2 00® 8 60 Fort Burgundy port gold Lisbon 85® 1 “ 2 25® SM “ Sicily, Madeira 44 Red, Span. & Sicily... 44 Marseilles Madeira... 44 Marseilles port 44 Malaga, dry 44 Malaga, sweet 44 Claret Claret # cask # doz. 100®1 2f 90® 135 70® ■ 80® 1 69 1 00® 1 IB 1 10® 1 26 85 00@60 00 44 44 2 60® 9 90 WOOL- Amer., Saxony fleece.# ft 55 Amer., fall blood merino. 50 Amer., * and * merino 45 Amer., native® * merino 46 Amer., combing domestic 58 Extra, pulled 40 Superfine, pulled 42 No. 1, pulled 86 California, fine, unwashed 80 California, medium, 44 26 California, common,44 22 44 21 Valparaiso, South Am., merino, 44 80 South Am.,mestiza,“ 27 South Am., creole, 44 18 South Am., Cord’a, wash. 27 Cape G. Hope, unwashed.. 84 East India, washed 80 Mexican, unwashed 17 Texas, fine. SO Texas, medium 28 30 Texas, coarse @ ® ® @ ® ® .. ZINC— ® @ ® ® @ @ @ ® @ @ @ ® ® @ @ ® ’ Sheet 11*@ W #» FREIGHTS— 0 26 @5-16 ® H.goods.#ton 25 0 @80 0 SAIL.-—\ , ». d. d. 8-16 | 0 W ». © ®a 22 6 ©25 Oil @60 0 @ ®... C’n,b*b.#bu ® Wheat..b. & b. 6 0 @..., @ 7* Beef .....# tee. 7 0@.... ...,®4 C Pork #bbl. 8 6 @4 0 ....@8 0 To Havre : d)y sail. Sc. $ c. Cotton.; # ft *® Tobacco # hhd. 8 00 @ 10 00 Tallow...it V ft ® * Lard ® 1^ .... .... .. so 22 ... Crude, in bulk 30 @ Refined in bond, prime L. J|. to W. (11Q®11I test) ....© Bitf iCSJ # ft .... 88 25 @ 2 75 00 @16 00 6 @ China clay # ton.28 00 @29 00 @ 1* Chalk #ft Chalk, block # ton.28 00 @24 00 ® 2* Barytes, American..# ft .... @ PETROLEUM— 26 Crude, 40®47 gray.# gall. 25*@ „ _ 4*@ gold /—STEAM.—> s. d. s.d. .... ® uk® Timothy, reaped.#hush. 4 00 Canary #bnsh. 4 00 ® 5 00 To Livebpool: Cotton # ft Flour ....# bbl yellow, dry.... 15 Whiting, Amer. .# 100 ft 3 00 Vermillion, China... # 1b 90 26 © 11*® white^ No. 1....... 2 75 Vermillion, Trieste Vermillion,Tlemans Cal¬ ifornia, Vermillion, Amer., com. Venet.red (N. C.) # cwt. 2 Carmine, Tieman’s..# ft IS Plumbago 73 77 45 ® 50 Chrome, 19 89 S3 15 @ 16 18*@ 14 IS @ 13* 10 ® 11 .... © @ Parafllne, 28 & 30gr. lubr. 15 13 @ @6 00 47*@ .... 12*@ 90 @ 95 96 @1 00 Straits 13* 13* 14 12 00 Bank 16*@ 13 @ gold. 15 @ 16 “ ....@ — “ “ “ " 44 V ft Palm 14 do 1869 (good to prime) Bavarian .... .... 4 50 6 00 OAKUM OIL CAKE— ... 19* Cuba(dutyp’d)gold#gall 8 pale “ 15*® # ft pure Crude Nitrate soda SEEDClover ^ 3 75 @8 90 2 50 @2 55 @2 90 2 60 @2 70 @ 46* 46 2 12 @.... 2 10 2 25 2 75 SALTPETRE— TIN— Banca Straits 26 strained No. 2 No. 1 “ .... HOPS— ® 22*® “ 44 Liverpool,gr’nd.# sack .... ® 1 66 Liv’p’l fine, Ashton’s, g’d .... @ 2 80 Liv’p’l fine, Worthingt’s 2 85 ® 2 40 American, prime, country and city..# ft TEAS—See special report. 27 18 Turpentine, soft 280 ft Tar, N. County ^ bbl. etc Tar, Wilmington Pitch, city Spirits turpentine. $ gall. Rosin, common...^ 280ft 46 @ STEEI^y 88 Yellow metal Zinc NAVAL STORES- 42 00 00 6 25 shoe, fd (6d.).. W ft 45 ® bush. 00 100 tt4 75 ® Copper Turks Islands ..# Cadiz St. Croix, 3d proof... 44 44 Gin, different brands Domestic liquors—Cash. Brandy, gin & pure sp’ts in b 1 15® 1 26 Rum, pure 1 15® 1 25 MOLASSES—See special report. NAILS— Horse 18*© Manilla & Bat. buff.. Vtt HONEY— 2 00© 95 “ “ Calcutta, dead green.... Calcutta, buffalo # ft Licorice paste, Greek... Madder, Dutch 21 “ “ Minas Sierra Leone cash Gambia and Bissau Zanzibar East India Stock— Calcnt. city sit. # ft gold ©850 ® 2 75 39 17* SALT 50 00 50 00 .. B.A.&Riogr.kip#ftgld 2S*@ 24* ® 8 70 80 @ “ “ “ “ “ “ “ City sl’ter trim. & cured Upper Leather Stock— 12*® 1 37* and T^Lg gold Iodine,resublimed Texas Dry Salted Hides— ® @ @ 40 RioHache Curacoa Port au Platt Western 60 @ 3 81 70 38 Arabic, picked.... Arabic, sorts Ayres..Vft gold Montevideo Rio Grande Orinoco California San Juan Matamoras Vera Cruz 9 @ 32 00® 33 00 $ M.2 75 ® .... Hemlock...3x4, per piece @ “ ‘f .4x6,22® .bds, 23® Spruce hds, “ 31 @ plk 1* in. “ do 2 in. 85® 18® strips, 2x4 “ per M. ft. 18 00® 21 00 . Carolina # 100 ft 7 25 ® 7-75 Rangoon, dressed. .gold 5 50 @ 6 00 In bond *.... 2 87*® S 35 SPIRITS— 00 60 00® 70 00 Clear pine Laths 19* Plates, for’n .#100#.gold 6 12*@6 26 # ft 9 @ 12 Plates, domestic SPICES—See special report. 6® 7 75 00® 85 00 P@ 9 22@ 1 25 Oak and ash 45 00© 60 Maple and birch .-.. 30 00® 45 White pine box boards ... 23 00® 27 Wh. pine merch. box b’ds. 27 00@ 30 Lard RICE— g^Ja^am medium to super’r. 8 00® 11 21 150 ® 1 75 45 00@ 45 50 00@ 55 45 00® 45 70 00© 80 Shoulders 8 25®10 00 9 25®10 80 @ 7 26 8 50® 9 00 7 00® 7 2i 8 00® 9 SO Canton,re-rld,falrtoexdo 7 25® 9 00 @ Bird’s-eye maple, logs $ ft Black walnut 3F M. ft Bl’k walnut, logs $ sup. ft. Bl’k wain, figured & blist’d Yel. pine tim., Geo.,^M.ft. White oak, logs, $ cub. ft. White oak, plank, $ M. ft. Pop. &W.W'd, b’ds & pl’ks Cherry boards and plank . ®J 17*@ 12 @ 18 @ # ft Hams......; Tsatlee, No. 2,4 & 5. .# ft. Tsatlee,re-rld,No. 1,2, &8 Tsatlee, usual Taysaams, usual, No. 1 & 2 Taysaam, No.8 and4 Taysaams, re-rld, N o 1,2,8 81 @ 31 50 Beef hams QJT XT “ Dry Hides— Buenos 8 @ 80 LUMBER- 21 45 @ @ 28 00 33 50 @i 4 00 @1 11 00 @1 Hemp, foreign 42 ® 45 38 @ 45 28 © 81 Rockland, common.^ bbl Rockland, heavy 6 00@ 8 00 14*@ 11 *@ gold Jute HIDES— • Carraway seed LIME— 250 00@255 00 gold.280 00®390 00 # ft Tampico ... “ Clinch Italian 23 79 5> 03 20 il 50 . middle. Cut, 4d.®60d. Russia, clean .... 3 25 3 25 Castor oil 82 @ Chamomile flowers, # ft 85 © 31 Chlorate potash ... .gold SO @ Caustic soda “ .@ 4 85 Cardamoms, Malabar “ .... 3*@ @ ® © @ “ .... Manila Sisal @ “ .... 00 @ 46 00 21 78 78 1 90 “ 45® 6 00® 5 50® 40 # bbl.82 50 Pork, prime mess Pork, prime Beef, plain mess Beef, extra mess Lins’d Am. rough.# bus. 2 40 @ 2 45 Lins’dCalc’a.Bost’n, g’d 2 17*@ 2 20 Lins’dCalc’a,N. Y’k, “ 2 22*@ .... light... 80 @ 31 California, heavy. 26*© 28 “ middle 80 @ 31 “ light.. 80 @ 81 Orinoco, heavy . • 26 @ 28 “ middle. 29 @ 80 “ light.... 29 @ 80 85 @ 40 rough gooa damaged... 25 @ 28 poor “ ... 20 @ 28 “ — .. « “ HAYNorth River, in bales $ 100 ft for shipping 65 ® .... HEMPAmerican dressed..ft ton.270 00@320 00 American undressed @ .... light.. “ “ gold 27 ® .... “ 27 ® .... Hog, Western, unwash.cur. 8 ® 10 3 50 -® 14*® 3 ® 85 @ “ Rio Grande, mix’d, $ ft Buenos Ayres, mixed. @ middle rough slaughter Heml’k,B. A.,&c., heavy @ 38 ® 42 38 @ 42 heavy. “ “ rcSnorting, in 1 ft canis'trs.# ft 88® 1 08 @ ..... “ 38 “ .... Deer 2*@ .. “ 10 00® — 23 50@25 00 @35 00 55@ — 4 50® 6 50® Meal 46 @ 27 “ Shipping and mining Kentucky rifle 12*@ 13 ® 25 @ Berries, Persian....gold Bicarb, soda, N’castle“ Bi chromate potash Bleaching powder Borax, refined Brimstone,era. #ton gld45 Brimstone, Am. roll #ib Brimstone, flor sulphur. Camphor, crude (in bond) gold light “ ® ® — —@ .... 16 00@17 00 20*@ 40 @ 40 middle.... “ “ crop, @— ,-cash,# ft—, .... “ Blasting (B).... # 25 ft keg. 4 00® © 3*@ 50 @ Annato, good to prime . Antimony, reg. or...gold Argols, crude Argols, refined gold Arsenic, powdered. “ Assafoetida ,, Balsam capivi .yard ® 44 GUNPOWDER— 2 25 @ $ lb 17 @ 8 50 “ 26 50@27 00 GUNNY CLOTH- DRUGS AND DYESAlcohol, 95 per cent..... Alum “ 72 62 28 00@28 50 @ @6 87* “ Oak, slaughter, heavy 6 00®.... @ 6 85 .5 75 Residuum PROVISION S— Pork, mess Refined, @6 55 net.9 50 LEATHER— 5 00@ FRUITS—See special report. GROCERIES—See special report. GUNNY BAGS— Calcutta, light & h’yy, p. c. 16*@ COTTON—See special report. Aloes, Cape Aloes, Socotrine Pipe and sheet Bar 6 50® 7 50 FLAXWestern, g’d to prime. # ft 20 55 ® 70 40 @1 70 35 @ 50 @ ® 45 12* “ $ bbl. # bbl. Pickled scale Pickled cod — 50 12 English 6 35 « 11 .... — 44 German .... @ gold.6 35 @6 50 Spanish 60 00® $ quint. # 100 ft Galena ..cur. FISH— — LEAD- “ cur. Sapanwood,Manila .... Mineral Phial 44* gold 25 00® 35 C0@ 40 00 Limawood Barwood .... Rods, *@3-16 inch 100 00@155 00 Hoop 125 00@180 00 Nail, rod #ft 8*® 9* Sheet, Russia 10*® 11* Sheet, sing., doub. & treb. 5*@ 7 Rails, Eng. (gold). .# ton. 56 50@ 57 00 Rails, American 76 00@ 77 00 # ton.150 00® .... Fustic, Cuba. “ “ .80 00® .... Fustic, Tampico gold 17 00@ .... Fustic, Jamaica “ 17 00@ — Fustic, Savanilla “ 15 00® 16 00 Fustic,Maracaibo.... “ —@16 00 Logwood, Laguna “ 84 00® .... Logwood,Campeachy “ 28 00® .... Logwood, Honduras. “ 25 00® .... Logwood, Tabasco... “ 29 00@ . . Logwood, St. Domin.gold 17 00@ 18 00 Logwood, Jamaica 17 00@ 18 00 (bond) (gold) #ft 14*@ 27*® Maracaibo do do Guayaquil do do .... 10 @ 8*@ St.Dommgo do do COFFEE.—See special report. Sheathing, &c.,'Old Sheathing, yel. metal,new Bolts, yellow metal Yellow metal nails American ingot CORKSlst regular, quarts, $ gro. do superfine 1 1st regular, pints . DYE WOODSCamwood gold, Caracas Braziers’ dry ex. . COCOA— Bolts 10*@ 44 @ 12*® 120 00@ 120 00® Band Horse shoe . .... Newcastle gas, 2,2401b @ .... Liverpool gas cannel 13 00@ — Liverpool house cannel... 17 00®18 00 Anthracite,$ ton of“2,000 ft 9 50@10 50 # lb @ Ravens,light $ pce.15 00 @ Ravens, heavy 17 00 @ 1, # yd ® Scotch, G’ck,No. Cotton,No. 1 “ ..<; @ COAL— Sheathing, new 50 © 38 DUCK— ®.... ®.... ® 20 ©.... 2 00® # ft Etosendale 25 @ 20 @ Shell lac Soda ash ’ CANDLES- C Senna, Alexandria Senna, East India 35 Seneca root 15 ® 1( 11*® 14 10 @ 1< Skimmed 80 12 Verdigri9, dry & Vitriol, blue 16*@ 11 dairies, fair dairies, common 11* ....@ 11 @ Tapioca Sib 17 ® 1? 16 ® 1 < lair dairies, prime .... ....@ 1 75 New’le, rei.g’d STORE PRICES. Bar, Swedes, ordin.sizes..140 00® — Bar, Eng. & Amer., refined 95 00@100 00 Bar, Eng. & Amer.,com’n. 87 50@ 90 00 Scroll 120 00®180 00 Ovals and half round 120 00@145 00 (80 p. c.) .gold 2 12*® 2 19 Sugar lead, W’e .... “ 28 @ 29 Sulp. quinine, Am., $ oz @ 2 25 8 70 @ .... Sulphate morphine, “ Tartaric acid (clirystal) .... gold # ft. 51 @ 30 ® 3. 33 © £ 30 @ 31 34@ 3* 26 ® 3 38 © 4 @ 3i Western, fair.., Penn., dairy, prime @ 11 @ ammoniac, ref. gold. Sal soda, 35 @ 3.. State, half-firkins, ordin’y Welsh tubs, prime "Welsh tubs, ordinary .... Sarsaparilla,H.,g’d,in b’d Sarsaparilla, Mex. “ Sal 42 @ 4C State 84*@ 20 Salaeratus SO @ 55 40 @ 4E firkins..... Pig, Scotch, No. 1 150 @800 8 @ Sago, pearled cheese— firkins, prime State 90 @ 3 00 76 © 77 Suicksilver hubarb, China it 88V00 40 00© 42 00 dreamery pails. 21 85 @ 40 00© 41 00 87 00® 38 00 95 00® .... 86 00@ — 34 50® 37 00 Pig, American, No. 1 Pig, American, No. 2 Bar,refined, Eng. & Amer. Pig, American Forge 2 50 @ 3 00 2 50 Phosphorus Prussiate potash,Amer. A|^St # 100 lb 7 37*@ 7 62* BlmSeri4n7ellow...^ft 39 © 40 BRh) Grande skin. .# ton @ .... BBEADSTUFFS—See special report. butter and @ Oxalic acid sort IRON— @860 345 ... gold.10 00 @10 50 Opium,Turkey Foreign Imports were pub- Tmed in the Chronicle of August 14. BlS° fronts Philadelphia 703 THE CHRONICLE. November 27,1869 ] .... Measurement goods # ton 10 00® Petroleum • 6 00® To Melboubee, # foot. 25® 1... To San Francisco, by Clipper: Measurement goods # ft 0 15 @ 0 15 ... .. Heavy good*.ft Nalls # keg. 0 4ft Petroleum. .# c. of 10 gall. 0 45 R’rotd Iron. # ton of2340 ft .... fMfl @ 0 60 @ 0 io a eufi THE NAYLOR & N.B.FALCONER& CO NEW IMPORTERS OP Umbrella AND FANCY House, opposite Bank of England. PIIILA., 203 So. 4th stree RAILS, TYRES, Frogs, and all other Steel Material for LONDON, K. C. Railroad Iron, Old Rails, Railway Use. STREET, Bessemer HOUSE IN LONDON: NAYLOR, RENZO N CO., A 34 Old Broad Street, Between Walker and Llspenard. who give special attention to as For Boston Daily. well as orders for Iron RAILWAY SECU¬ Correspondents In America: _ Messrs. Jay Cooke & Co., New York, Messrs. Jay Cooke & Co., Washington, Messrs E. W. Clarkh Co., Philadelphia, Mr. J. Edgar Thomson, Philadelphia & Old Rails, Scrap Iron and Metals. Novelty Rails, &c. U. S. BONDS AND AMERICAN RITIES NEGOTIATED. Railroad Iron, Miscellaneous. Materials, Smith, Bartholomew BOSTON, CAST STEEL Glnghama^ Ac*, NO, 2JT CnURCH Iron and Railroad Gilead A. CO., 80 State street. CAST STEEL Cast Steel VELVETEENS, Alpacas and YORK, 99 John street. British D ress Goods, VELVETS. .[November 27,1869 Iron and Railroad Materials. Dry Goods. STAPLE CHRONICLE. Works, S. W. Hopkins London. & Co., Street, 58 Old Broad AND Nos. IT A 83 Liberty Street, metropolitan steamship to.»s Corner OUTSIDE LINE OF 69 Broadway, New York. TOWN, COUNTY, CITY, STATE, AND Buildings. Railroad Bonds, COMPRISING NEPTUNE, NEREUS and GLAUCUS, 2,000 Tons Each, SAILING TUBS DA 1 S.THURSD AYS & SAT CRD AYS Jan© k inttljMfr, AND W Asland, Wm. P. Clyde and P. Sandford 1,000 Tons Each, SAILING ON INTERMEDIATE DAYS. From PIER 11 N. R., at 5 P. M. Connecting at Boston with Fitchburg, Boston and Lowell, Boston and Maine and Eastern Railroad, and New York with the Erie Railway. Freights taken and through rates given to and from all points on the above Roads and their connections. No charge lor Wlmrfarge in Boston. * WM. P. CLYDE, Genl. Snpt. and Agent, Pier II N.R. H. M. WHITNEY, Agent, Central Battery Wharfs, Boston* tn For Railroad tlon with the American Railroad Iron, Street Rails and Light Rails for Mines. Companies and Contractors in connec purchase and sale of both Foreign and Railroad Iron AND Street, New York. am 71 Broadway, New York, Negotiate in Europe and America every description 0 Palm and Ornamental Iron Works of all kinds for .Neptune Steamers, A EQUIPMENTS. Railroad T , We beg to call the attention of Managers of Bail, ways and Contractors threughout the United States and Canada to our superior facilities forexecutin* orders at manufacturers prices, for all descrlDtloniof both AMERICAN and FOREIGN OLD RAILS AND SCRAP PURCHAS¬ ED AND SOLD, AGENTS FOR THE CELEBRATED Railroad Iron. We always in a position to furnish all sizes, pat¬ weight of rail for both steam and horn roads, and In any quantities desired either for IMME¬ DIATE OR REMOTE delivery, at anv port in the are terns and BURDON SPIKES. United States or Canada and eurrent market always at the very lowest We are also prepared to Sup¬ prices. ply Henry Lawrence & Sons, Thomas MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE J. Pope & Bro. ' METALS. FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC USE. 292 PEARL STREET, NEAR m FRONT STREET, NEW YORK BEEKMAN STREET NEW YORK - ^ IRON. SCHNITZER, S3 CENTRAL IRON. Wm. D. WHARF, BOSTON. IRON McGowan, IRON BROKER. Offer for sale 73 WATER Liquorice Sticks and Paste. ** Iron Cotton Ties ** Opium and Persian Berries. Canary and Hemp Seed, SUPERIOR OF Piss, Raisins, Boxwood, Otto Boses, Ac QUALITY, WITH OR WITHOUT BUCKLES, FOR Francis Spies, No. 66 South the New Rails. Orders for Foreign Rails, both Steel and Iron, will be taken for transmission by Mail or through the eabls to our LONDON 245 Pearl Street. v Street, New York, ADVANCES MADE ON APPROVED SHIPMENTS Merchandise to my Mends in Sonth America, British ^ Spanish West Indies, Great Britain, India and Australia. Cheapest and Best. BUTLER’S PATENT COTTON TIES, FOR BALING COTTON. for execution at a fixed price in Sterling or on com¬ mission at the current market price abroad when tbs order is received in London; shipments to be mad* at stated periods to ports in America and at the low¬ est possible rates of heights. Address S. W. The Liverpool& Lon¬ don & Globe Ins. Co. AffetsGoldS 17,690,390 Affetsinthe U. States 1 45' 2,000,000 William St. ROPE. WIRE STEEL, CHARCOAL and.B. B., of the very belt quality, suitable for Ships, R'gging. Suspension Bridges. Guys, Derricks, Inclined Planes, Hoisting purposes, &c. A Large Stock constantly on hand at JOHN W. MASON A CO.’S, * ] 43 BROADWAY Iron Cotton Ties. CO TTON Fair, for strength and simplicity. For sale very cheap. - QUIN A ARNOLD, Agents, 48 BROAD STREET. Hopkins & Co., 62*** VI Broadway, New York. This Tie is made of,the best Belgian Iron, and re¬ ceived the highest premium at the Louisiana State Insurance. HOUSE, 68 OLD BROAD STREET, D. LITTLEJOHN A CO., (Formerly with Messrs Moses Taylor & Co.) » OLD RAILS IN TBADE FOR NEW furnished, receiving the difference in cash, and allow¬ ing the highest tqarket price for their Old Rails, and, If necessary, receiving the latter after the delivery 01 CHEAP. SALE GENERAL SHIPPING AND COMMISSION MERCHANT, Rails, approved lengths. Contracts for both IRON AND STEEL RAILS will be made payable in United States currency for America, and in either currency or gold (at the option of the buyer) for Foreign; when desir¬ ed, we Will contract to supply roads with their monthly or yearly requirements of STEEL OR IB0N ST., PITTSBURGH, PA. Wools of ewery descriptions. Gums Bessemer Steel of American and Foreign manufacture, rolled to any desired pattern and weight for linial yard and 0! RAILS, taking their MEDITERRANEAN GOODS. T. Companies. TIES MANUFACTURED BY THE Patent Nut & Bolt C (LIMITED). Iron Cotton Ties. Birmingham, on hand,- and for sale in to suit purchasers. Apply to quantities WILLIAMS A GUI ON. The undersigned, Sole Agents in New York, for the ■ 71 • sale and distribution of the ARROW TIE AND SELF-FASTENING WROUGHT IRON BUCKLE TIES. Cotton, For E IRO N LOCK BEARD’3 V XT Manufactured by J. J. McCOMB, Liverpool, respect¬ fully solicit orders for delivery in New York or other ports iu the United States, or at Liverpool. SWENSON, PERKINS A CO., , ,80 BEAVER STREET. SELF- X Unsurpassed fc ment. Wallst. AND V viWTNO TIES, - ’ md Rapidity of Adjust¬ •: a. « n * rro..